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  • Article
    Anegawa E, Kotorii N, Ishimaru Y, Okuro M, Sakai N, Nishino S.
    PLoS One. 2015;10(12):e0143909.
    The purpose of this study is to clarify the effects of chronic powder diet feeding on sleep patterns and other physiological/anatomical changes in mice. C57BL/6 male mice were divided into two groups from weaning: a group fed with solid food (SD) and a group fed with powder food (PD), and sleep and physiological and anatomical changes were compared between the groups. PD exhibited less cranial bone structure development and a significant weight gain. Furthermore, these PD mice showed reduced number of neurogenesis in the hippocampus. Sleep analysis showed that PD induced attenuated diurnal sleep/wake rhythm, characterized by increased sleep during active period and decreased sleep during rest period. With food deprivation (FD), PD showed less enhancement of wake/locomotor activity compared to SD, indicating reduced food-seeking behavior during FD. These results suggest that powder feeding in mice results in a cluster of detrimental symptoms caused by abnormal energy metabolism and anatomical/neurological changes.
    Digital Access Access Options
  • Article
    Monteiro CE, Cobelo-García A, Correia Dos Santos MM, Caetano M.
    Sci Total Environ. 2021 Mar 15;760:143909.
    Rhodium and platinum are amongst the less studied elements in estuarine waters and the understanding of their speciation analysis and environmental fate remains limited. In this study, we address the occurrence and discrimination of soluble/insoluble Rh and Pt species in aquatic systems, as well as their potential transport. Particulate and dissolved (< 0.45 μm) rhodium (RhP and RhD) and platinum (PtP and PtD), respectively, were determined in the water column of contrasting environments during neap (NT) and spring (ST) tide semi-diurnal cycles: in the upper Tagus estuary (VFX) and near the mouth, close to a wastewater treatment plant outfall (ALC). Both elements were analyzed by AdCSV and ICP-MS, as well ancillary parameters were determined. Concentrations of Rh and Pt followed the tidal regime, presenting higher concentrations during low tide. Concentrations of RhP (0.1-5.1 ng g-1) and RhD (0.03-0.12 ng L-1) were lower than PtP (1.0-25.6 ng g-1) and PtD (0.1-11.7 ng L-1), respectively. Concentrations found in ALC were higher than VFX, except for RhD, mirroring anthropogenic inputs attributed to automotive catalytic converters and an additional Pt source originated in Pt-based compounds. Distribution coefficients (KD) of 104 were computed and were independent of the salinity gradient. The speciation analysis done at VFX during NT showed that truly dissolved forms measured by AdCSV represented 39 ± 9% of total Pt in the water column, while total filter-passing species measured by ICP-MS were higher, 65 ± 14%. Pt speciation was controlled by its dissolved forms, whereas particulate Rh forms represented the bulk value (> 65%). The potential transport evaluated at downstream station indicated recirculation within the estuary and export towards the Atlantic Ocean, with higher concentrations associated with the ebb opposing to the flood. These results show estuaries as important pathways to introduce PGE in coastal regions, transferring them towards the ocean.
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  • Book
    edited by Mark E. Maruish.
    Contents:
    pt. I. General considerations
    pt. II. Psychological assessment instruments and procedures
    pt. III. Examples of integrated healthcare programs. Part I. General Considerations
    ch. 1. Introduction / Mark E. Maruish
    ch. 2. The history of fragmentation and the promise of integration: a primer on behavioral health and primary care / Benjamin F. Miller and Samuel H. Hubley
    ch. 3. Uses of psychological assessment in primary care settings / John H. Porcerelli and John R. Jones
    ch. 4. Necessary training for psychologists working in primary care settings / Jeffrey L. Goodie, Catherine M. Ware, and Christopher L. Hunter
    ch. 5. Selection of psychological measures and associated administration, scoring, and reporting technology for use in primary care settings / Mark E. Maruish
    ch. 6. Screening for psychiatric disorders in primary care settings / Leonard R. Deogatis
    ch. 7. Clinical and program monitoring and outcomes assessment for behavioral health in primary care / Kent A. Corso. Part II. Psychological assessment instruments and procedures
    ch. 8. The clinical interview in integrated primary care / Alexa J. Connell and Amber Hewitt
    ch. 9. Screening for Depression / Paula Rhode Brantley and Phillip J. Brantley
    ch. 10. Geriatric depression scale / Elizabeth A. DiNapoli and Forrest Scogin
    ch. 11. Assessment of suicidal risk / Julia A. Harris, Erika M. Roberge, Kent D. Hinkson Jr, and Craig J. Bryan
    ch. 12. Assessment of anxiety in primary care / Amber A. Martinson, Julia R. Craner, and Renn U. Sweeney
    ch. 13. Assessment of stress / Phillip J. Brantley and Paula Rhode Brantley
    ch. 14. Screening for cognitive impairment / Michael D. Franzen
    ch. 15. Substance abuse screening and assessment in primary care settings / Santina Wheat, Candice Norcott, and Mary R. Talen
    ch. 16. Assessment of pain in primary care settings / Robert J. Gatchel, Richard C. Robinson, Andrew R. Block, and Natalie N. Benedetto
    ch. 17. Posttraumatic stress disorder in integrated primary care: strategies for effective implementation of screening and assessment / Jonathan P. Mother and Yajaira Johnson-Esparza
    ch. 18. Assessment of sleep disorders in primary care / Skye Ochsner Margolies, Bruce D. Rybarczyk, Allison Baylor, and Sarah Griffin
    ch. 19. Assessment of eating behavior in primary care / Karen E. Stewart, Autumn Lanoye, Laura Milliken, and Vanessa Milsom
    ch. 20. Assessment of health status and health-related quality of life / Mark E. Maruish
    ch. 21. Assessment of disease impact / Martha S. Bayliss, Mark Kosinski, and Jacob B. Bjorner
    ch. 22. Symptom checklist-90-revised, brief symptom inventory, and BSI-18 / Leonard R. Derogatis
    ch. 23. Using the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory-2-Restructured Form (MMPI-2-RF) in behavioral medicine settings / Ryan J. Marek and Yossef S. Ben-Porath. Part III. Examples of integrated healthcare programs
    ch. 24. Improving care for a primary care population: persistent pain as an example / Patricia J. Robinson and David Bauman
    ch. 25. Psychological assessment in the Veterans Health Administration (VHA) model of integrated primary care / Lisa K. Kearny, Laura O. Wray, Katherine M. Dollar, and Andrew S. Pomerantz
    ch. 26. The Virginia Commonwealth University primary care psychology training network / Bruce D. Rybarczyk, Karen E. Stewart, Paul B. Perrin, and Zachary Radcliff
    ch. 27. Implementation of the primary care behavioral health model at a federally qualified health center / Neftali Serrano, Meghan Fondow, and Elizabeth Zeidler Schreiter.
    Digital Access TandFonline 2017