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OBJECTIVE Persons with Huntington's disease (HD) often have communication difficulties and cognitive impairments, making mental health assessment difficult. Informants close to the patient are often included in assessments. The authors investigated effects of informant presence during assessment of persons with HD. METHODS Data for four subsamples from ENROLL-HD were examined manifest for HD (N=4,109), premanifest (N=1,790), genotype negative (N=1,041), and family members with no genetic risk (N=974). Assessment interviews with and without an informant present were identified, and the subsamples were compared on three subscales of the short-form Problem Behaviors Assessment affect, apathy, and irritability. Differences in scores between participant-only and informant-present interviews were examined via multiple regression, controlling for demographic, disease-related, and individual confounds. RESULTS Significant differences in apathy and irritability scores were found between participant-only and informant-present conditions for the premanifest, manifest, and genotype-negative subsamples. Affect subscale scores were not influenced by informant presence. When the analysis controlled for confounds, informant presence significantly increased irritability scores in the manifest, and genotype-negative groups and significantly increased apathy scores in the manifest group. CONCLUSIONS Apathy may have been systemically underreported in participant-only interviews, which supports previous findings that persons with HD underreport mental health symptoms. When an informant was present, irritability scores were higher for both HD and non-HD individuals, suggesting that underreporting via self-report may be attributable to non-HD factors. Informant contributions to apathy assessments may be particularly important for persons with HD. Clinicians should note potential underreporting regarding irritability and affect, which was not remediated by informant presence.An assessment tool, "Assessing a Student with a Rare Disease," was developed by the Specialized Health Needs Interagency Collaboration program and introduced at NASN's 51st annual conference in Denver, Colorado. The goal of the tool is to support the school nurse as the medical expert in the educational setting by using a comprehensive prompt to gather information about the student's health condition and the possible impact on student's medical, cognitive, and behavioral needs at school.A better understanding of the expectations and needs of the families of nursing home residents is needed for a constructive and sustainable relationship of mutual trust. The objective of this study was to understand the expectations of families of nursing home residents described in the literature. A systematic integrative review of the literature was conducted. After a rigorous selection made by two researchers, independently, 53 articles were selected out of 1,094 results. selleck chemicals The expectations of families are quality care, consideration complying with human dignity of the resident, collaboration, honesty, and mutual confidence that ties together families, staff, and physicians. This study reveals that families consider themselves as a strength for a resident's support services, in line with Gottlieb's strength-based approach. This approach offers promising implications for practice and for a new type of management in nursing homes based on strong values.Addressing women's intimate partner violence (IPV) perpetration is essential not only to their partners' safety but also to their own as, for women who are victims of IPV, their IPV perpetration may be a risk factor for their own revictimization. Although many studies have examined risk factors for women's IPV perpetration, results diverge with regard to whether demographic and mental health variables are reliable predictors. Results of several studies have demonstrated that when IPV victimization is examined concurrently with perpetration, demographic and mental health variables are no longer significant correlates. However, this research has been limited in that the type of IPV examined has been restricted to physical, psychological, and sexual abuse. In addition, some demographic variables (e.g., sexual orientation) have yet to be adequately examined. The current study extends this literature by concurrently assessing demographic, mental health, and IPV victimization variables as correlates of IPV perpetraBackground. Intermittent hypoxia can induce respiratory neuroplasticity to enhance respiratory motor outputs following hypoxic treatment. This type of respiratory neuroplasticity is primarily mediated by the activation of Gq-protein-coupled 5-HT2 receptors and constrained by Gs-protein-coupled 5-HT7 receptors. Objective. The present study hypothesized that the blockade of 5-HT7 receptors can potentiate the effect of intermittent hypercapnic-hypoxia on respiratory function after cervical spinal cord contusion injury. Methods. The ventilatory behaviors of unanesthetized rats with midcervical spinal cord contusions were measured before, during, and after daily acute intermittent hypercapnic-hypoxia (10 episodes of 5 minutes of hypoxia [10% O2, 4% CO2, 86% N2] with 5 minutes of normoxia intervals for 5 days) at 8 weeks postinjury. On a daily basis, 5 minutes before intermittent hypercapnic-hypoxia, rats received either a 5-HT7 receptor antagonist (SB269970, 4 mg/kg, intraperitoneal) or a vehicle (dimethyl sulfoxide). Results. Treatment with intermittent hypercapnic-hypoxia induced a similar increase in tidal volume between rats that received SB269970 and those that received dimethyl sulfoxide within 60 minutes post-hypoxia on the first day. However, after 2 to 3 days of daily acute intermittent hypercapnic-hypoxia, the baseline tidal volumes of rats treated with SB269970 increased significantly. Conclusions. These results suggest that inhibiting the 5-HT7 receptor can transiently improve daily intermittent hypercapnic-hypoxia-induced tidal volume increase in midcervical spinal contused animals. Therefore, combining pharmacological treatment with rehabilitative intermittent hypercapnic-hypoxia training may be an effective strategy for synergistically enhancing respiratory neuroplasticity to improve respiratory function following chronic cervical spinal cord injury.
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