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Apr 15, 2021
Medicalxpress.com
PRESS RELEASE

New research from the Florida State University College of Medicine has found that the personality trait neuroticism is consistently associated with a higher risk of developing the brain disorder Parkinson's disease. The research by Professor of Geriatrics Antonio Terracciano and team, published in Movement Disorders, found that adults in the study who scored in the top quartile of neuroticism had more than 80% greater risk of Parkinson's, compared to those who scored lower on neuroticism.

 

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Naar part of team landing NIH grant to study obesity in Black adolescents and their caregivers

Sylvie Naar, Florida State University College of Medicine’s director of the Center for Translational Behavioral Science, is a co-principal investigator on a one-year, $765,000 research grant awarded by the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute of the National Institutes of Health (NIH).

Teaming on the project with colleagues from the University of South Carolina’s School of Medicine Columbia and Wayne State University, they are developing a “Clinical Trial of the Fit Families Multicomponent Obesity Intervention for African American Adolescents and Their Caregivers: Next Step from the ORBIT Initiative.” 

Their study will test Fit Families for Black adolescents with obesity and their primary caregivers in the South. The initial participants in the study are being recruited in South Carolina, but Naar’s goal is to bring the program to North Florida and South Georgia for a multi-site study if the project is successful.

Fit Families, developed in Detroit, Mich., is a multi-component intervention with a unique approach of rewarding youth for weight loss, as well as their caregivers who model weight loss behaviors through physical activity and self-monitoring of dietary intake.
 

CTBR Director Dr. Sylvie Naar

Press Release

FSU College of Medicine Research Links Parkinson's Disease and Neuroticism

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
 
CONTACT: Bob Thomas, FSU College of Medicine
(850) 645-9205; robert.thomas@med.fsu.edu
 
April 2021

 
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — New research from the Florida State University College of Medicine has found that the personality trait neuroticism is consistently associated with a higher risk of developing the brain disorder Parkinson’s disease.
 
The research by Professor of Geriatrics Antonio Terracciano and team, published in Movement Disorders, found that adults in the study who scored in the top quartile of neuroticism had more than 80% greater risk of Parkinson’s, compared to those who scored lower on neuroticism.
 
“Some clinicians think that the anxiety and depression is just the result of Parkinson’s,” Terracciano said. “However, our findings suggest that some emotional vulnerability is present early in life, years before the development of Parkinson’s disease.”
 
The effects were similar for women and men and across socioeconomic strata. Furthermore, the association was virtually unchanged in models that excluded incident cases within the first five years of follow-up and remained significant in models that accounted for demographic variables and other risk factors, including smoking, physical activity, anxiety and depression.
 
Three similar studies have published results consistent with Terracciano’s findings, but with smaller sample sizes. Collectively, they provide a “pretty robust and replicable” assessment of the link between neuroticism and Parkinson’s, Terracciano said.
 
“It kind of gives you a better understanding of the risk factors for the disease and what could be a contributing cause,” he said. “This is one of many [factors], but the evidence is convincing.”
 
Globally, an estimated six million people suffer from Parkinson’s disease — about 1% of all older adults — making it the second most common neurodegenerative disease after Alzheimer’s. The causes of Parkinson’s disease are not well understood, but scientists believe genetic and environmental factors contribute to its onset.
 
Neuroticism is a personality trait that measures individual differences in the tendency to experience negative emotions, vulnerability to stress, inability to resist urges and self-consciousness. It is one of the five major personality traits known as the “Big Five” or five-factor model of personality and is one of the most studied psychological dispositions for its relevance spanning normal to abnormal emotional functioning.
 
Neuroticism has been linked to mood disorders and Alzheimer’s, but there have been fewer studies on its prospective connection with Parkinson’s.
 
“Individuals who score high in neuroticism are at higher risk for poor health outcomes across the lifespan, particularly in the domain of mental health and neurodegenerative diseases, including Alzheimer’s disease and related dementias,” Terracciano said.
 
Central to Terracciano’s research was a large-scale study by the UK Biobank, which recruited nearly a half-million individuals ages 40-69 between 2006 and 2010, and collected data obtained over nearly 12 years of follow up. A baseline assessment measured neuroticism. There were 1,142 identified cases of Parkinson’s ascertained through UK National Health Service electronic health records or death records up to 2018.
 
“Anxiety and depression are comorbid with Parkinson’s disease,” Terracciano said. “Many people with Parkinson’s tend to be anxious or tend to get depressed. Part of that could be due to the disease and how it alters the brain and can have an influence on emotions. Part could be a psychological reaction of having a diagnosis of the disease.”
 
Parkinson’s is a long-term degenerative brain disorder that causes progressive decline of motor and physical functions. As the disease progresses, nerve cell damage in the brain causes dopamine levels to drop, leading to symptoms such as tremors, slow movement, stiffness and loss of balance. Dopamine is known as a “feel-good” hormone involved in reward, motivation, memory and attention in addition to regulating body movements.
 
Terracciano led the research team, which included Damaris Aschwanden, a post-doctoral researcher in the FSU Department of Geriatrics, and Angelina Sutin, professor in the FSU Department of Behavioral Sciences and Social Medicine. Researchers from the University of Montpellier in France; the National Research Council, Sant'Anna Institute and Tor Vergata University of Rome in Italy; and the University of Cambridge in the United Kingston contributed to this study.
 

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Apr 14, 2021
Tallahassee Democrat
PRESS RELEASE

Tallahassee Memorial HealthCare and the Florida State University College of Medicine are discussing the establishment of an academic medical center, which would strengthen the 20-year relationship between the two institutions. An academic medical center is a hospital that partners with teaching institutions to offer a combination of clinical care, research and education. Such partnerships are desired because they can lead to new technologies, therapies, and clinical trials not always available at other hospitals.

Dr. Julia Sheffler awarded KL2 Scholar grant

Apr 13, 2021

Congratulations to Dr. Julia Sheffler for receiving a KL2 Scholar award through the NIH National Center for Advancement of Translational Science (NCATS). The KL2 is for two years and offers up to 75 percent protected time for research, $20,000 per year for research-related activity and $2,500 per year for travel.

The KL2 award is a Mentored Career Development Award to support newly trained clinicians appointed by an institution for activities related to the development of a successful clinical and translational research career. 

KL2 Scholars also have a number of other special opportunities and privileges, including:

  • • Advice and oversight from the KL2 Multidisciplinary Advisory Committee to support your career development.
  • • Opportunity to participate in the Southeast CTSA Consortium Preceptor Program with visits to other CTSA preceptors for advice and assistance with your research.
  • • Additional special K Scholar seminars and workshops
  • • K to R Boot Camp Programs

Dr. Sheffler is an Associate Professor in the Department of Behavioral Sciences and Social Medicine, working in the Center for Translational Behavioral Science as Director of the Integrative Science for Healthy Aging program.