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1.
medRxiv ; 2023 Nov 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37987014

ABSTRACT

Mutations in the X-linked endosomal Na+/H+ Exchanger 6 (NHE6) causes Christianson Syndrome (CS). In the largest study to date, we examine genetic diversity and clinical progression, including cerebellar degeneration, in CS into adulthood. Data were collected as part of the International Christianson Syndrome and NHE6 (SLC9A6) Gene Network Study. Forty-four individuals with 31 unique NHE6 mutations, age 2 to 32 years, were followed prospectively, herein reporting baseline, 1-year follow-up, and retrospective natural history. We present data on the CS phenotype with regard to physical growth, adaptive and motor regression, and across the lifespan, including information on mortality. Longitudinal data on body weight and height were examined using a linear mixed model: the rate of growth across development was slow and resulted in prominently decreased age-normed height and weight by adulthood. Adaptive functioning was longitudinally examined: a majority of adult (18+ years) participants lost gross and fine motor skills over a 1-year follow-up. Previously defined core diagnostic criteria for CS (present in >85%) - namely nonverbal status, intellectual disability, epilepsy, postnatal microcephaly, ataxia, hyperkinesia - were universally present in age 6 to 16; however, an additional core feature of high pain tolerance was added (present in 91%), and furthermore, evolution of symptoms were noted across the lifespan, such that postnatal microcephaly, ataxia and high pain threshold were often not apparent prior to age 6, and hyperkinesis decreased after age 16. While neurologic exams were consistent with cerebellar dysfunction, importantly, a majority of individuals (>50% older than 10) also had corticospinal tract abnormalities. Three participants died during the period of the study. In this large and longitudinal study of CS, we begin to define the trajectory of symptoms and the adult phenotype, thereby identifying critical targets for treatment.

2.
J Patient Rep Outcomes ; 5(1): 40, 2021 May 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34009504

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The 12-item Medical Outcomes Study Sleep Scale (MOS Sleep Scale) has been used to capture patient-reported sleep problems in hundreds of studies. A revised version of the MOS Sleep Scale (MOS Sleep-R) was developed that uses simplified response sets, provides interpretable norm-based scoring, and has two recall versions (one-week or four-week). The objective of this study was to evaluate the psychometric properties (reliability and construct validity) of the MOS Sleep-R using data from a representative sample of U.S. adults. METHODS: Standardization of raw scores into norm-based T-scores (mean = 50, standard deviation = 10) was based on data from a 2009 U.S. internet-based general population survey. The internal consistency reliability of multi-item subscales and global sleep problems indices for both one-week and four-week recall forms of the MOS Sleep-R were examined using Cronbach's alphas and inter-item correlations. Construct validity was tested by comparing item-scale correlations between items within subscales with item-scale correlations across subscales. Scale-level convergent validity was tested using correlations with measures including generic health-related quality of life (i.e., SF-36v2) and other relevant outcomes (e.g., job performance, number of days in bed due to illness or injury, happiness/satisfaction with life, frequency of stress/pressure in daily life, the impact of stress/pressure on health, and overall health). RESULTS: The one-week and four-week recall forms of the MOS Sleep-R were completed by 2045 and 2033 respondents, respectively. The psychometric properties of the one-week and four-week forms were similar. All multi-item subscales and global index scores showed adequate internal consistency reliability (all Cronbach's alpha > 0.75). Patterns of inter-item and item-scale correlations support the scaling assumptions of the MOS Sleep-R. Patterns of correlations between MOS Sleep-R scores with criterion measures of health-related quality of life and other outcomes indicated adequate construct validity. CONCLUSIONS: The MOS Sleep-R introduces a number of revisions to the original survey, including simplified response sets, the introduction of a one-week recall form, and norm-based scoring that enhances interpretability of scores. Both the one-week and four-week recall period forms of the MOS Sleep-R demonstrated good internal consistency reliability and construct validity in a U.S. general population sample.

3.
Front Psychiatry ; 11: 504, 2020.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32581878

ABSTRACT

Experiences of child maltreatment are associated with a host of adverse mental and physical health outcomes in adulthood. Altered reactivity to psychosocial stress exposure may partially explain known associations between early experiences of maltreatment and later life health. The present study focuses on examining whether experiences of child maltreatment are associated with physiological reactions to initial and repeated psychosocial stress in adulthood. To this end, 44 healthy adults (52% male, aged 18-65) completed the Childhood Trauma Questionnaire to provide information about exposure to child maltreatment and completed the Trier Social Stress Test (TSST) on 2 consecutive days. Peripheral blood was collected prior to as well as 30 and 120 min following the TSST on each day. Plasma Interleukin-6 (IL-6) and gene expression of IL-6, IL-1ß, nuclear factor-kB (NF-kB), and inhibitor of kB (IkB) were measured from each blood sample. Total CTQ scores were unrelated to plasma IL-6 and gene expression (ps > .10) but a history of childhood physical neglect was associated with increased interleukin-1ß (ß =.35; p =.02; R2 =.19) and nuclear factor-kB (ß =.30; p =.046; R2 =.13) expression following initial stress. Following repeated exposure to the TSST, childhood physical neglect was associated with increased plasma IL-6 reactivity (ß =.34; p =.02; R2 =.16) and increased expression of nuclear factor-kB (ß =.31; p =.04; R2 =.08). Finally, childhood physical neglect was associated with decreased habituation following repeated exposure to the TSST. Other CTQ subscales were not related to plasma IL-6 and gene expression when considered individually. Results from this study are suggestive of a unique effect of childhood physical neglect on the physiological stress response following initial and repeated exposure to a common psychosocial stressor. This provides important directions for future research because the effect of childhood physical neglect on long-term neglect are not well understood and in need of further investigation.

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