PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Dialysis patients' anxiety and depression linked to physical impairments

Researchers call for more studies of exercise to improve mental health

Dialysis patients' anxiety and depression  linked to physical impairments
2014-05-28
(Press-News.org) LOS ANGELES – (May 28, 2014) – With the rate of chronic kidney disease on the rise among older Americans, researchers seeking to improve patients' quality of life studied a group of adults undergoing hemodialysis and found their higher rates of depression and anxiety could be associated with their impaired physical exercise capability and reduced daily physical activity, according a new study published online by the Journal of Renal Nutrition.

The researchers studied 72 relatively healthy maintenance hemodialysis patients and compared them to 39 healthy adults who were not on dialysis. They found significantly higher rates of anxiety and depression among the dialysis patients, than among the adults who were not on dialysis. They also found the dialysis patients suffering from depression and anxiety had the greatest impairments in physical exercise performance and daily physical activity.

"Adults undergoing dialysis often have less daily physical activities than other adults, but little was known about what, if any, effect this reduced activity had on their mental state," said Joel D. Kopple, MD, Los Angeles Biomedical Research Institute (LA BioMed) lead researcher. "Our study found an association between reduced daily physical activities and depression and anxiety. Also, the capacity to perform physical exercise was diminished in these patients. These findings provide a strong rationale for studying whether increased daily physical activity can reduce depression and anxiety among adults undergoing dialysis."

Each person enrolled in the study took walks, climbed stairs and engaged in other physical activities so that researchers could determine their physical abilities. The researchers gauged their depression and anxiety using standardized tests and found 43% of the dialysis patients had anxiety and 33% suffered from depression. In comparison, only 2.5% of the adults who were not on dialysis had anxiety and only 5% of them suffered from depression.

Approximately one in 10 Americans has some form of chronic kidney disease, and the incidence of chronic kidney disease among people ages 65 and older more than doubled between 2000 and 2008, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Hemodialysis is a life-preserving treatment for hundreds of thousands of Americans with kidney failure. It is a medical procedure to remove fluid and waste products from the blood and to correct electrolyte imbalances. This is accomplished using a machine and a dialyzer, which is sometimes described as an "artificial kidney."

"Research is important to improve the quality of life of patients undergoing dialysis," said Dr. Kopple. "With the growing population of people undergoing dialysis, this research is growing in importance."

INFORMATION: About LA BioMed Founded in 1952, LA BioMed is one of the country's leading nonprofit independent biomedical research institutes. It has approximately 100 principal researchers conducting studies into inherited diseases, infectious diseases, illnesses caused by environmental factors and more. It also educates young scientists and provides community services, including prenatal counseling and childhood nutrition programs. LA BioMed is academically affiliated with the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA and located on the campus of Harbor-UCLA Medical Center. For more information, please visit http://www.LABioMed.org

[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Dialysis patients' anxiety and depression  linked to physical impairments

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Dads who do chores bolster daughters' aspirations

2014-05-28
Fathers who help with household chores are more likely to raise daughters who aspire to less traditional, and potentially higher paying, careers. So finds a new study that suggests how parents share dishes, laundry and other domestic duties plays a key role in shaping the gender attitudes and aspirations of their children, especially daughters. While mothers' gender and work equality beliefs were key factors in predicting kids' attitudes toward gender, the strongest predictor of daughters' own professional ambitions was their fathers' approach to household chores. ...

Sight for sore eyes: Augmented reality without the discomfort

Sight for sore eyes: Augmented reality without the discomfort
2014-05-28
WASHINGTON, May 28—Augmented reality is increasingly becoming… well … a reality. Smartphone apps can point out restaurants as you scan the street with your phone camera or even identify constellations when you point your phone at the night sky. And goggle-like devices—akin to Google Glass—that you wear on your head can superimpose computer-generated images onto your direct view of the physical world. But one major limitation of this kind of augmented reality (AR) technology is that moving back and forth between a 2-D image on the screen and a 3-D world in front of you ...

Experimental trial represents promising step toward universal antidote for snakebite

Experimental trial represents promising step toward  universal antidote for snakebite
2014-05-28
SAN FRANCISCO (May 28, 2014) – A team of researchers, led by Dr. Matthew Lewin of the California Academy of Sciences and Dr. Stephen P. Samuel of Trinity College Dublin, Ireland has taken another promising step toward developing a universal antidote for snakebite. Last summer, the team tested the effectiveness of a nasally administered antiparalytic drug on mice injected with high doses of Indian cobra (Naja naja) venom. Mice injected with otherwise fatal doses of venom outlived and in many cases survived after being treated with the antiparalytic agent, neostigmine. These ...

Crow or raven? New birdsnap app can help!

Crow or raven? New birdsnap app can help!
2014-05-28
New York, NY—May 27, 2014—Researchers at Columbia Engineering, led by Computer Science Professor Peter Belhumeur, have taken bird-watching to a new level. Using computer vision and machine learning techniques, they have developed Birdsnap, a new iPhone app that is an electronic field guide featuring 500 of the most common North American bird species. The free app, which enables users to identify bird species through uploaded photos, accompanies a visually beautiful, comprehensive website that includes some 50,000 images. Birdsnap, which also features birdcalls for each ...

Coating stents with vitamin C could reduce clotting risks

2014-05-28
Every year, more than 1 million people in the U.S. who have suffered heart attacks or chest pain from blocked arteries have little mesh tubes called stents inserted into their blood vessels to prop them open. The procedure has saved many lives, but it still has potentially deadly downsides. Now scientists are reporting in the ACS journal Langmuir that coating stents with vitamin C could lower the implants' risks even further. Eagappanath Thiruppathi and Gopinath Mani note that today's stents have come a long way since their first introduction. Today, they come coated ...

Social networks linked to better health for older adults, studies find

2014-05-28
WASHINGTON - Having regular positive interactions with family and friends and being involved in several different social networks can help older adults be healthier, according to new research published by the American Psychological Association. "Close connections with others are likely to promote but can also sometimes detract from good health by shaping daily behavior that directly affects physical health," said Lynn M. Martire, PhD, of The Pennsylvania State University. Martire and Melissa M. Franks, PhD, of Purdue University, were guest editors for a special issue ...

Flame retardant exposure linked to lower IQs -- study

2014-05-28
A new study involving Simon Fraser University researchers has found that prenatal exposure to flame retardants can be significantly linked to lower IQs and greater hyperactivity in five-year old children. The findings are published online today in the journal Environmental Health Perspectives. The researchers found that a 10-fold increase in PBDE concentrations in early pregnancy, when the fetal brain is developing, was associated with a 4.5 IQ decrement, which is comparable with the impact of environmental lead exposure. SFU health sciences professor Bruce Lanphear ...

A more earth-friendly way to make bright white cotton fabrics

2014-05-28
With a growing number of consumers demanding more earth-friendly practices from the fashion world, scientists are developing new ways to produce textiles that could help meet rising expectations. They report in the ACS journal Industrial & Engineering Chemistry Research one such method that can dramatically reduce the amount of energy it takes to bleach cotton while improving the quality of the popular material. Quan Zu and colleagues point out that the cotton industry's current whitening techniques require bleaching the natural fiber at very high temperatures with hydrogen ...

Better catalysts for the petrochemical industry

2014-05-28
Zeolites are among the substances which can accelerate chemical reactions – they are known as catalysts. Usually applied in pellet form, the industrial production of gasoline from crude oil without zeolites is today inconceivable. The chemical reactions occur on their surface. Fortunately, these are very large for zeolites: the catalysts are interspersed with nano-sized pores and microscopic channels through which gaseous or liquid reactants penetrate and the products later can leave. One of the main industrial problems with the use of zeolites is that the reaction side ...

MRI catches breast cancer early in at-risk survivors of childhood Hodgkin lymphoma

MRI catches breast cancer early in at-risk survivors of childhood Hodgkin lymphoma
2014-05-28
(TORONTO, Canada – May 28, 2014) – The largest clinical study to evaluate breast cancer screening of female survivors of childhood Hodgkin lymphoma (HL), who are at increased risk because they received chest radiation, shows that magnetic-resonance imaging (MRI) detected invasive breast tumours at very early stages, when cure rates are expected to be excellent. The finding, published online today in the American Cancer Society Journal Cancer (doi: doi/10.1002/cncr.28747), underscores the need for at-risk childhood HL survivors and primary care physicians to be aware ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Novel machine learning model can predict material failure before it happens

Hereditary Alzheimer’s: Blood marker for defective neuronal connections rises early

Nature-based activity is effective therapy for anxiety and depression, study shows

New genomics tool accelerates biomedical breakthroughs

DNA methylation entropy: A new way to track and predict aging

Mount Sinai Fuster Heart Hospital recognized by Press Ganey for patient experience excellence

Nurturing now, thriving later: The lasting power of affectionate mothering

A step toward harnessing clean energy from falling rainwater

Term or permanent life insurance? A new study offers guidance

Ultrafast multivalley optical switching in germanium for high-speed computing and communications

Simulating protein structures involved in memory formation

Forward genetics approach reveals the factor responsible for carbon trade-off in leaves

The most distant twin of the Milky Way ever observed

New method to deliver cell therapies in critically ill patients on external lung support

Climate-related trauma can have lasting effects on decision-making, study finds

Your cells can hear

Farm robot autonomously navigates, harvests among raised beds

The bear in the (court)room: who decides on removing grizzly bears from the endangered species list?

First study reveals neurotoxic potential of rose-scented citronellol at high exposure levels

For a while, crocodile

Scientists find evidence that overturns theories of the origin of water on Earth

Foraging on the wing: How can ecologically similar birds live together?

Little birds’ personalities shine through their song – and may help find a mate

Primate mothers display different bereavement response to humans

New pollen-replacing food for honey bees brings new hope for survival

Gene-based blood test for melanoma may catch early signs of cancer’s return

Common genetic variants linked to drug-resistant epilepsy

Brisk walking pace + time spent at this speed may lower risk of heart rhythm abnormalities

Single mid-afternoon preventer inhaler dose may be best timing for asthma control

Symptoms of ice cold feet + heaviness in legs strongly linked to varicose veins

[Press-News.org] Dialysis patients' anxiety and depression linked to physical impairments
Researchers call for more studies of exercise to improve mental health