Objective
ICD‐11 introduces post‐traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and complex PTSD (CPTSD) as two distinct trauma‐related disorders. Using the International Trauma Questionnaire (ITQ) as ...disorder‐specific measure, this study is the first to examine the factorial and construct validity of ICD‐11 PTSD, CPTSD and the ITQs’ applicability in children.
Methods
Two hundred and eight Austrian foster children completed a set of standardized measures. Excluding participants who reported not having experienced any kind of trauma, a final sample of 136 children completed the ITQ. Factorial and construct validity of ICD‐11 CPTSD and psychometric properties of ITQ scales were assessed by factor analysis and latent class analysis.
Results
Confirmatory factor analysis supported the two‐factor higher‐order model of ICD‐11 CPTSD in children by high factor loadings and excellent model fit. Reliability and regression analysis evidenced psychometric adequacy and discriminant validity of ITQ scales. Latent class analysis substantiated construct validity of ICD‐11 CPTSD, identifying a CPTSD (22.8%), PTSD (31.6%) and low symptoms class (45.6%). The CPTSD class showed highest rates of childhood trauma, comorbid psychopathology and functional impairment.
Conclusion
Factorial and construct validity of ICD‐11 CPTSD was evidenced in children for the first time using precise descriptions of ICD‐11 symptom content, supporting the reliability and validity of the ITQ in children.
Background
A preponderance of behavioural symptoms is assumed to be the main difference in the manifestation of symptoms of post‐traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in people with intellectual ...disability (ID). However, no study so far has assessed the relationship between challenging behaviour (CB) and PTSD. The present study aims to explore this relationship by exploring whether CB is directly related to trauma exposure or whether this relationship is mediated through core symptoms of PTSD.
Methods
Trauma exposure and current symptoms of PTSD were assessed in 43 adults with mild to moderate ID. Parallel versions were administered to 43 caregivers, including the Aberrant Behaviour Checklist to measure CB. Bayesian mediation analyses were conducted using self‐rated and informant‐rated data.
Results
The self‐report data showed no associations of CB with trauma exposure or PTSD symptoms. The association between informant‐rated trauma exposure and irritability was mediated by severity and frequency of PTSD symptoms. The associations between informant‐reported trauma exposure and the Aberrant Behaviour Checklist subscales hyperactivity and inappropriate speech were mediated by PTSD symptom severity.
Conclusions
The relationship between trauma exposure and CB was mediated by PTSD symptoms. PTSD core symptoms should be considered as underlying causes of CB, highlighting the necessity to explore trauma biography and symptoms of PTSD. The improvement of self‐report assessment in people with ID is an important task for future studies.
Damage to DNA is often caused by oxidative reactions. In one such process, an electron is lost from a base, forming its radical cation. Further reaction of the radical cation can lead to permanent ...change, which results in mutation. This Account is a report on oxidative damage to DNA caused by irradiation of anthraquinone derivatives, which are either randomly bound to the DNA or attached to it covalently at specific locations. Radical cations introduced in the DNA by the excited quinone cause damage both near to it and far away. We describe a mechanism for long-range charge transport in DNA that depends on its spontaneous structural distortion, which we call phonon-assisted polaron hopping. This mechanism, and its extension, provides a framework for understanding the reactions and charge-transport properties of DNA.
Worldwide 2–3 million cases of keratinocyte carcinoma (KC) are diagnosed annually. Sun‐related knowledge is essential for adequate protection against solar ultraviolet radiation (UVR), the main risk ...factor for KC. The goal was (i) to provide an updated overview of primary prevention against KC including skin cancer‐related knowledge, attitudes and sun protection behaviour (SPB) of outdoor workers, the general population and medical professionals as well as (ii) to evaluate the effectiveness and acceptability of sun protection programmes. We conducted a systematic review of articles indexed for MEDLINE on PubMed using selected MeSH terms and keywords related to the studied topic as well as an extensive hand search of publications between 1 January 2012 and 31 December 2018. We identified 51 relevant cross‐sectional studies and 22 interventional studies. Sun‐related knowledge and attitude showed substantial differences with some alarming results, including people who had not even heard about skin cancer before. Reported SPB varied enormously between the included studies, with none of the studies providing an overall sufficient SPB in their examined sun protection measures. However, sun protection programmes using new technologies seem to have great potential to increase sun‐related knowledge and SPB. In countries worldwide, particularly in those where KC is not yet a public health issue, UVR protection should be promoted by healthcare institutions and authorities, politicians, cancer foundations and dermatologists to increase awareness as well as SPB and to decrease the worldwide burden of KC.
We investigate (via finite-element analyses) the factors that may affect the accuracy of micro-compression measurements (see, e.g., Uchic et al. Uchic MD, Dimiduk DM, Florando JN, Nix WD. Science ...2004;305:986). Based on these simulations, we suggest guidelines for the development of accurate micro-compression experiments in terms of fillet to post radius ratio, post aspect ratio, post taper, and system alignment.
Aqueous solutions of the achiral, monomeric, nucleobase mimics (2,4,6‐triaminopyrimidine, TAP, and a cyanuric acid derivative, CyCo6) spontaneously assemble into macroscopic homochiral domains of ...supramolecular polymers. These assemblies exhibit a high degree of chiral amplification. Addition of a small quantity of one handedness of a chiral derivative of CyCo6 generates exclusively homochiral structures. This system exhibits the highest reported degree of chiral amplification for dynamic helical polymers or supramolecular helices. Significantly, homochiral polymers comprised of hexameric rosettes with structural features that resemble nucleic acids are formed from mixtures of cyanuric acid (Cy) and ribonucleotides (l‐, d‐pTARC) that arise spontaneously from the reaction of TAP with the sugars. These findings support the hypothesis that nucleic acid homochirality was a result of symmetry breaking at the supramolecular polymer level.
Homochiral domains appear in supramolecular assemblies formed by the achiral monomers 2,4,6‐triaminopyrimimidine and a modified cyanuric acid. These samples become uniformly homochiral when as little as 0.1 % of a chiral cyanuric acid monomer is added, or when there is at least a 6 % ee in samples containing both enantiomers of the chiral monomer.
Fully dense nanocrystalline tungsten (nc-W) with extremely high strength (∼3.0
GPa under quasi-static compression and ∼4.0
GPa under dynamic compression) has been obtained by high-pressure torsion ...(HPT) at low temperature (500
°C). The nanocrystalline microstructure is revealed by transmission electron microscopy (TEM). The grain boundaries (GBs) are mostly of the large-angle type. High-resolution TEM (lattice images) suggests that the GBs are clean and well defined (atomically sharp). GBs are non-equilibrium and of a high-energy nature. Edge dislocations are present within the grains. The authors hypothesize that these edge dislocations, combined with a depleted impurity concentrations along pre-existing GBs, contribute to enhance the ductility of nc-W. Under dynamic compression, the specimens exhibit localized shearing followed by cracking and subsequent failure, similar to their ultrafine-grain (UFG) counterparts processed by equal-channel angular pressing plus cold rolling, and to many other body-centered cubic metals with UFG/nanocrystalline microstructures. The shear band width in the HPT-processed nc-W is much smaller (shear band width <5
μm) than that observed in the UFG counterparts (shear band width ∼40
μm).
We present quasi-static, room temperature compression data for Pd
40Ni
40P
20 metallic glasses, with specimen sizes ranging from the submicron to several millimeters in diameter. We observe no change ...in deformation mode over this range. At all sizes, plastic flow is localized in shear bands, which are accompanied by sudden strain bursts. This metallic glass shows only a modest increase in strength in going from bulk to micrometer-sized specimens. We show that stress gradients in tapered specimens can complicate measurement of the yield strength of metallic glasses in microcompression. Estimates of yield strength based on the minimum cross-sectional area implicitly assume that yielding is controlled by a maximum effective shear stress criterion. An alternative is the shear plane yield criterion, in which the minimum shear stress on the shear band trajectory determines yield. Application of this criterion in tapered microspecimens reinforces the notion that metallic glasses possess relatively size-independent mechanical properties.
Background: The 11th edition of the International Classification of Diseases (ICD-11) introduces Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) and Complex Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (CPTSD) as two distinct ...trauma-related disorders. Numerous studies support the proposed symptom structure of ICD-11 CPTSD in adults, but only a few studies have examined CPTSD symptom structure in children, reporting diverging results. To assess ICD-11 CPTSD in children, the International Trauma Questionnaire (ITQ) was recently adapted for children and adolescents (ITQ-CA), with no validated German version available yet.
Objective: This study aimed (1) to test the symptom structure of ICD-11 CPTSD in a sample of trauma-exposed foster children using the ITQ-CA, and (2) to examine the concurrent, convergent and discriminant validity of the German ITQ-CA.
Method: Altogether, 161 Austrian foster children completed a set of standardized measures, resulting in a final sample of 135 trauma-exposed foster children meeting the inclusion criteria. Psychometric properties of the ITQ-CA were assessed using confirmatory factor analysis (CFA), bivariate correlations and multivariate regression.
Results: CFA supported ICD-11 CPTSD symptom structure in children as a two-factor higher-order model with PTSD and Disturbances in Self-Organization (DSO) as correlated factors with very good model fit, while a one-factor higher-order model also fitted the data very well. High factor loadings and excellent levels of internal reliability evidenced the psychometric adequacy of the ITQ-CA. Concurrent and convergent validity were evidenced by high correlations between ITQ-CA scales and criterion variables (PTSD symptoms, depression, anxiety, dissociation, lifetime traumatization). Discriminant validity was partly supported by PTSD and DSO being differently predicted by exogenous criterion variables.
Conclusions: CPTSD symptom structure in children is in support of the ICD-11 conceptualization. The reliability and validity of the German ITQ-CA are evidenced for the first time, identifying it as an easy-to-use screening instrument to assess ICD-11 PTSD and CPTSD in children. Further implications and areas for upcoming studies are discussed.
* CPTSD symptom structure in children supports the ICD-11 conceptualization.* The German ITQ-CA was validated as a viable screening instrument to assess ICD-11 PTSD and CPTSD in children.* PTSD and DSO were associated with lifetime traumatization, depression, anxiety and dissociation.
Nominally pure nanocrystalline metals do not remain nanostructured under extreme conditions of intense heating and or deformation preventing the study of their physical response under such ...conditions. Here we present the coupled effect of temperature and strain rate on the mechanical response of a thermally stabilized nanocrystalline Cu alloyed with 10at% Ta. Compressive mechanical testing was performed from 24 to 1000°C and strain rates ranging from quasi-static (10−1s−1) to dynamic (104 s−1) rates. The response of this material exhibits a maximum quasi-static yield stress of 1.05GPa at room temperature and an approximate yield stress of 0.5GPa at 600°C, with an apparently linear temperature response. In contrast to pure coarse-grained Cu, our assessment indicates that this Cu-based composite derives its properties from a combination of very small Cu-rich grains and well-dispersed Ta clusters and nanometer (<10nm) size Ta precipitates. Such microstructural features translate into a strong resistance to coarsening even after extensive exposure to elevated temperatures and high rates of deformation.