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

Depression after heart attack: Threat perception has to be addressed

2013-01-14
(Press-News.org) "Survivors of heart attacks are three times more likely to develop depression during the first six months after their heart attack, than people with no heart disease. If left untreated this contributes to a worse prognosis, for instance further cardiac events and possibly death. The causes for this high prevalence of depression after heart attacks are still unclear," said Prof. Claus Vögele, Professor of Clinical and Health Psychology at the University of Luxembourg and lead author of the publication entitled "Cardiac Threat Appraisal and Depression after First Myocardial Infarction".

Thirty-six cardiac patients were interviewed five to fifteen days after their first heart attack, six to eight weeks later, and again six months later. They were questioned on their level of fatigue, general health, disease-specific symptoms, work, and family. Depression levels were assessed with questionnaires and clinical diagnoses were established using a structured, clinical interview. To investigate their individual ways of coping with this experience, patients were questioned on rumination, affiliation seeking, threat minimisation, information seeking, and seeking meaning in religion.

The findings are among the first to show that the way patients think about their heart attack has an immediate effect on the likelihood of developing depression. For example, if they continue to perceive their heart attack as a serious threat then they are more likely to experience depression, even weeks after the attack. On the other hand, if patients have ways to focus their thoughts on their recovery and know how to ask for support from their friends and family, then this risk for depression is much reduced.

"These results can be used to help patients to have a more positive outlook on life, even after such a dramatic and life-threatening event", said Prof. Vögele, who is head of a research group on Self-regulation and Health at the University of Luxembourg. "Psychological interventions in the immediate time after the infarct, for instance during the first two weeks, may protect patients from developing depression, and thereby contribute to a smooth recovery."

### END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

2 new studies show why biodiversity is important for pollination services in California almond

2 new studies show why biodiversity is important for pollination services in California almond
2013-01-14
Agricultural demand for pollination is growing more quickly than the supply of honey bees, the dominant species managed for crop pollination. Increasing the efficiency of pollination represents a way of increasing crop yield without any increase in agricultural intensity or area. A study recently published in the Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences (9 Jan 2013) 1, shows that the pollination effectiveness of honey bees in California almond orchards was greater in the presence of other bees. Almond is a crop highly dependent on honey bee pollination ...

How does your garden glow?

2013-01-14
Nature's ability to create iridescent flowers has been recreated by mathematicians at The University of Nottingham. The team of researchers have collaborated with experimentalists at the University of Cambridge to create a mathematical model of a plant's petals to help us learn more about iridescence in flowering plants and the role it may play in attracting pollinators. An iridescent surface appears to change colour as you alter the angle you view it from. It is found in the animal kingdom in insects, inside sea shells and in feathers, and is also seen in some plants. ...

How do happiness and sadness circuits contribute to bipolar disorder?

2013-01-14
Philadelphia, PA, January 14, 2013 – Bipolar disorder is a severe mood disorder characterized by unpredictable and dramatic mood swings between the highs of mania and lows of depression. These mood episodes occur among periods of 'normal mood', termed euthymia. Prior research has clearly shown that brain emotion circuitry is dysregulated in individuals diagnosed with bipolar disorder. It is thought that these disturbances impair one's ability to control emotion and contribute to mood episodes. Continuing this line of research, the January 15th issue of Biological Psychiatry ...

Global warming has increased monthly heat records by a factor of 5

2013-01-14
Monthly temperature extremes have become much more frequent, as measurements from around the world indicate. On average, there are now five times as many record-breaking hot months worldwide than could be expected without long-term global warming, shows a study now published in Climatic Change. In parts of Europe, Africa and southern Asia the number of monthly records has increased even by a factor of ten. 80 percent of observed monthly records would not have occurred without human influence on climate, concludes the authors-team of the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact ...

Protein identified that can disrupt embryonic brain development and neuron migration

Protein identified that can disrupt embryonic brain development and neuron migration
2013-01-14
Interneurons – nerve cells that function as 'dimmers' – play an important role in the brain. Their formation and migration to the cerebral cortex during the embryonic stage of development is crucial to normal brain functioning. Abnormal interneuron development and migration can eventually lead to a range of disorders and diseases, from epilepsy to Alzheimer's. New research by Dr. Eve Seuntjens and Dr. Veronique van den Berghe of the Department of Development and Regeneration (Danny Huylebroeck laboratory, Faculty of Medicine) at KU Leuven (University of Leuven) has identified ...

Research makes connetion between tubal ligation and increase in cervical cancer rates

2013-01-14
Women who have a tubal ligation – the surgical tying or severing of fallopian tubes to prohibit pregnancy – have less frequent Pap smears, which puts them at an increased risk for cervical cancer, according to research recently released by a team that included Cara A. Mathews, MD, a gynecologic oncologist at the Program in Women's Oncology at Women & Infants Hospital of Rhode Island. The findings were part of the National Cancer Institute-funded study "Study to Understand Cervical Cancer Endpoints and Determinants" being conducted when Dr. Mathews was a fellow at the ...

Liver controls wasting in cancer

2013-01-14
Cachexia or wasting is a condition affecting up to 70 percent of cancer patients, depending on the type of cancer. It is characterized by a dramatic loss of body weight that is independent of food intake. Cachexia is seen particularly often and most pronounced in patients suffering from cancers of the digestive tract and the lungs. They may lose up to 80 percent of body fat and skeletal muscle. Muscle loss leads to weakness and immobility of patients and poorer response to treatment. An estimated 20 percent of cancer deaths are considered to be a direct consequence of cachexia, ...

Dynamic, dark energy in an accelerating universe

Dynamic, dark energy in an accelerating universe
2013-01-14
This press release is available in Spanish. It was cosmology that drew Irene Sendra from Valencia to the Basque Country. Cosmology alsogave her the chance to collaborate with one of the winners of the 2011 Nobel Prize for Physics on one of the darkest areas of the universe. And dark matter and dark energy, well-known precisely because so little is known about them, are in fact the object of the study bySendra, a researcher in the Department of Theoretical Physics and History of Science of the UPV/EHU's Faculty of Science and Technology. "Observations tell us that ...

NRL designs multi-junction solar cell to break efficiency barrier

NRL designs multi-junction solar cell to break efficiency barrier
2013-01-14
WASHINGTON -- U.S. Naval Research Laboratory scientists in the Electronics Technology and Science Division, in collaboration with the Imperial College London and MicroLink Devices, Inc., Niles, Ill., have proposed a novel triple-junction solar cell with the potential to break the 50 percent conversion efficiency barrier, which is the current goal in multi-junction photovoltaic development. "This research has produced a novel, realistically achievable, lattice-matched, multi-junction solar cell design with the potential to break the 50 percent power conversion efficiency ...

Using lysine estimates to detect heat damage in DDGS

2013-01-14
URBANA – Distillers dried grains with solubles (DDGS) are a good source of energy and protein in swine diets. However, they can be damaged by excessive heat during processing, compromising their nutritional value. University of Illinois researchers have found that it is possible to assess heat damage by predicting the digestibility of lysine in DDGS. Excessive heat causes some of the lysine in DDGS to bond with sugars and form Amadori compounds. The lysine bound in these compounds is called unreactive lysine; pigs cannot digest it. Lysine that is not bound is referred ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

JAMA names ten academic physicians and nurses to 2025 Editorial Fellowship Program

New study highlights role of lean red meat in gut and heart health as part of a balanced healthy diet

Microporous crystals for greater food safety – ERC proof of concept grant for researcher at Graz University of Technology

Offline versus online promotional media: Which drives better consumer engagement and behavioral responses?

Seoultech researchers use machine learning to ensure safe structural design

Empowering numerical weather predictions with drones as meteorological tools

From root to shoot: How silicon powers plant resilience

Curiosity- driven experiment helps unravel antibiotic-resistance mystery

Designing proteins with their environment in mind

Hepatitis B is a problem for a growing number of patients on immunosuppressive medications

Adults diagnosed with ADHD may have reduced life expectancies

Rare pterosaur fossil reveals crocodilian bite 76m years ago

Thousands of European citizen scientists helped identify shifts in the floral traits of insect-pollinated plants

By the numbers: Diarylethene crystal orientation controlled for 1st time

HKU physicists pioneer entanglement microscopy algorithm to explore how matter entangles in quantum many-body systems

Solving the evolutionary puzzle of polyploidy: how genome duplication shapes adaptation

Smoking opioids is associated with lower mortality than injecting but is still high-risk

WPIA: Accelerating DNN warm-up in web browsers by precompiling WebGL programs

First evidence of olaparib maintenance therapy in patients with newly diagnosed homologous recombination deficient positive/BRCA wild-type ovarian cancer: real-world multicenter study

Camel milk udderly good alterative to traditional dairy

New, embodied AI reveals how robots and toddlers learn to understand

Game, set, match: Exploring the experiences of women coaches in tennis

Significant rise in mental health admissions for young people in last decade

Prehab shows promise in improving health, reducing complications after surgery

Exercise and improved diet before surgery linked to fewer complications and enhanced recovery

SGLT-2 drug plus moderate calorie restriction achieves higher diabetes remission

Could the Summerville ghost lantern be an earthquake light?

Will the U.S. have enough pain specialists?

Stronger stress response in monkeys helps them survive

Using infrared heat transfer to modify chemical reactions

[Press-News.org] Depression after heart attack: Threat perception has to be addressed