1.Proximal effect of anxiety on non-suicidal self-injury behaviors in adolescent patients with depression and the intervention efficacy of modified cognitive behavioral therapy: an ecological momentary assessment study
Shaonan HUANG ; Jun KONG ; Zheng LIU ; Yi ZHANG ; Weijuan ZHANG ; Xiao WANG ; Xiucheng TANG ; Jiansong ZHOU
Sichuan Mental Health 2025;38(5):414-420
BackgroundIn recent years, the prevalence of depression among adolescents has risen steadily, alongside an increasing prominence of non-suicidal self-injury (NSSI) behaviors in this population, which may elevate suicide risk and constitute a serious public health problem. Negative emotions such as anxiety and depression are closely related to NSSI behaviors. Previous studies have predominantly relied on retrospective reports, limiting the ability to dynamically capture temporal relationships between emotional fluctuations and NSSI behaviors. Moreover, cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) often lacks targeted design to address proximal triggers in interventions for NSSI behaviors. ObjectiveTo verify that anxiety as a proximal trigger factor for NSSI behaviors in adolescent patients with depression, and to evaluate the efficacy of modified CBT integrated with ecological momentary assessment (EMA) data in alleviating their anxiety and self-injury urges. MethodsA prospective cohort study design was adopted. A total of 132 adolescent patients with a history of NSSI behaviors who were treated at Jiujiang Fifth People's Hospital from January to December 2024 and met the diagnostic criteria for depression in the Diagnosed and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, fifth edition (DSM-5). A smartphone-based EMA application to conduct natural situation emotions on participants for 14 consecutive days. The monitoring period spanned from 10∶00 to 22∶00 daily, with randomized assessments pushed every 2 hours. The assessment tools included the Self-rating Anxiety Scale (SAS) and the negative affect subscale of the Positive and Negative Affect Schedule (PANAS), with real-time recording of NSSI behaviors and emotional states before and after their occurrence. Repeated measures analysis of variance was used to compare the dynamic changes in the scores of each scale before and after the episodes of NSSI behaviors. A modified CBT was administered to 83 participants who completed EMA data collection, with sessions conducted once weekly for 12 weeks. Anxiety levels were accessed using the SAS, and the self-injury urges was evaluated using the Ottawa Self-injury Inventory (OSI) before and after the intervention. ResultsEMA data revealed that SAS scores were significantly higher during the 1-2 hours before NSSI episodes compared to baseline periods [(56.19±11.06)vs.(52.83±10.25),P<0.01]. SAS scores were positively correlated with the NSSI behavioral scores (r=0.460,P<0.01,95% CI:0.310-0.580). After receiving modified CBT intervention, adolescent patients with depression demonstrated statistically significant decreases in both SAS scores [(52.30±8.10) vs.(48.70±7.30),t(82)=4.820,P<0.01,Cohen's d=0.420] and the OSI self-injury impulse subcale scores [(12.80±2.70) vs.(9.60±2.50),t(82)=5.170,P<0.01,Cohen's d=0.510] compared to their pre-intervention levels. ConclusionAnxiety may serve as a proximal trigger for NSSI behaviors in adolescent patients with depression. Modified CBT integrating EMA data could potentially alleviate their anxiety level and self-injury urges. [Funded by Science and Technology Plan Project of Jiangxi Provincial Health Commission (number, SKJP220227629)]
2.Review and reflections on research and application progress of lifestyle medicine in depression intervention
Xia CAO ; Zheng ZHANG ; Hui CHEN ; Sihong LI ; Xianliang CHEN ; Jiansong ZHOU
Chinese Journal of Psychiatry 2025;58(5):322-330
Depression poses a severe threat to human health, placing a heavy burden on society and families. Yet, challenges remain in prevention and treatment. Lifestyle medicine aims to use evidence-based lifestyle interventions to prevent, treat, and even reverse chronic progression. Exploring breakthroughs in depression intervention prevention and treatment from the perspective of lifestyle medicine presents an opportunity for interdisciplinary research. Future research should focus on leveraging implementation science, cost-effectiveness analysis, and understanding optimal pathways and mechanisms of action. This article provides a review of this important topic.
3.G protein-coupled estrogen receptor alleviates lung injury in mice with exertional heat stroke by inhibiting ferroptosis.
Ziwei HAN ; Jiansong GUO ; Xiaochen WANG ; Zhi DAI ; Chao LIU ; Feihu ZHOU
Chinese Critical Care Medicine 2025;37(3):268-274
OBJECTIVE:
To investigate whether the G protein-coupled estrogen receptor (GPER) can attenuates acute lung injury in mice with exertional heat stroke (EHS) by inhibiting ferroptosis.
METHODS:
Sixty SPF-grade male C57BL/6 mice were randomly divided into four groups: normal control group (control group), EHS model group (EHS group), dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) solvent group (EHS+DMSO group), and GPER-specific agonist G1 group (EHS+G1 group), with 15 mice in each group. All mice underwent 14 days of adaptive training at 24-26 centigrade before modeling, and the EHS model was established using a high-temperature treadmill device. After successful modeling, the mice were allowed to cool naturally at room temperature. In the EHS+G1 group, 40 μg/kg of the GPER-specific agonist G1 was slowly injected intraperitoneally immediately after modeling. In the EHS+DMSO group, 40 μg/kg of DMSO was slowly injected intraperitoneally immediately after modeling. The control group received no treatment. Five hours after modeling, abdominal aortic blood was collected, and lung tissues were harvested after euthanasia. The lung coefficient was calculated to evaluate lung injury. Lung histopathological changes were observed under a light microscope after hematoxylin-eosin (HE) staining, and a lung histopathological score was assigned. Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) was used to detect serum levels of tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF-α), interleukin-1β (IL-1β), malondialdehyde (MDA), and Fe2+ in lung tissue. Immunofluorescence was used to detect the expression of glutathione peroxidase 4 (GPX4). Real-time polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) was used to detect the mRNA expression of GPX4, ferroportin 1 (FPN1), and ferritin heavy chain 1 (FTH1). Western blotting was performed to detect the protein expression of GPX4, FPN1, and FTH1.
RESULTS:
Compared with the control group, the lung coefficient and lung histopathological score were significantly increased in the EHS group. HE staining showed significant thickening and unevenness of the alveolar septa and alveolar walls, partial alveolar collapse, and extensive erythrocyte, inflammatory cell, and plasma-like material extravasation in the alveolar spaces. Serum levels of TNF-α, IL-1β, MDA, and Fe2+ were significantly elevated. Immunofluorescence staining showed a significant decrease in GPX4-positive expression in lung tissue. Western blotting and RT-PCR showed significantly reduced protein and mRNA expression of GPX4, FPN1, and FTH1 in lung tissue. Compared with the EHS group, the EHS+G1 group showed a significant reduction in lung coefficient and lung histopathological score [lung coefficient (mg/g): 3.9±0.1 vs. 4.6±0.3, lung histopathological score: 4.2±0.2 vs. 6.9±0.2, both P < 0.05]. HE staining revealed reduced severity of lung tissue fluid extravasation, inflammatory infiltration, decreased hemorrhage, and less severe alveolar structural damage. Serum levels of TNF-α, IL-1β, MDA, and Fe2+ were significantly reduced [TNF-α (ng/L): 44.3±0.2 vs. 64.6±0.3, IL-1β (ng/L): 69.3±0.4 vs. 97.8±0.2, MDA (nmol/L): 2.8±0.3 vs. 3.6±0.5, Fe2+ (nmol/L): 0.021±0.004 vs. 0.028±0.004, all P < 0.05]. Immunofluorescence staining showed a significant decrease in GPX4-positive expression in lung tissue (fluorescence intensity: 35.53±2.41 vs. 16.45±0.31, P < 0.05). RT-PCR and Western blotting showed significantly increased mRNA and protein expression of GPX4, FPN1, and FTH1 in lung tissue [mRNA expression: GPX4 mRNA (2-ΔΔCt): 0.44±0.05 vs. 0.09±0.01, FPN1 mRNA (2-ΔΔCt): 0.77±0.17 vs. 0.42±0.14, FTH1 mRNA (2-ΔΔCt): 0.75±0.04 vs. 0.58±0.01; protein expression: GPX4/β-actin: 0.96±0.11 vs. 0.24±0.04, FPN1/β-actin: 1.26±0.21 vs. 0.44±0.14, FTH1/β-actin: 0.27±0.12 vs. 0.15±0.07; all P < 0.05]. However, there were no statistically significant differences in any of the above indicators between the EHS+DMSO group and the EHS group.
CONCLUSION
Activation of GPER can attenuate EHS-related lung injury in mice, and its mechanism may be related to the activation of the GPX4 signaling pathway and inhibition of ferroptosis.
Animals
;
Mice, Inbred C57BL
;
Male
;
Mice
;
Heat Stroke/metabolism*
;
Receptors, G-Protein-Coupled
;
Ferroptosis
;
Receptors, Estrogen
;
Acute Lung Injury/metabolism*
;
Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha/metabolism*
;
Interleukin-1beta/metabolism*
;
Lung Injury
;
Lung/metabolism*
4.Shift work and workplace violence on healthcare workers' physical and mental health: The mediating role of job burnout
Zheng ZHANG ; Huijie XU ; Yusheng TIAN ; Jiansong ZHOU
Journal of Environmental and Occupational Medicine 2025;42(4):436-443
Background With the continuous development of the healthcare industry, healthcare workers face increasing pressure, including long-term shift work and workplace violence from patients or their relatives. This not only affects the physical and mental health of healthcare workers but may also negatively impact the quality of patient care and the efficiency of medical services. Objectives To analyze the pathways through which shift work and workplace violence affect healthcare workers' self-rated health and depression symptoms, explore potential mediating role of job burnout, and conduct subgroup analyses to reveal differences among various groups. Methods Data were collected from
5.Review and reflections on research and application progress of lifestyle medicine in depression intervention
Xia CAO ; Zheng ZHANG ; Hui CHEN ; Sihong LI ; Xianliang CHEN ; Jiansong ZHOU
Chinese Journal of Psychiatry 2025;58(5):322-330
Depression poses a severe threat to human health, placing a heavy burden on society and families. Yet, challenges remain in prevention and treatment. Lifestyle medicine aims to use evidence-based lifestyle interventions to prevent, treat, and even reverse chronic progression. Exploring breakthroughs in depression intervention prevention and treatment from the perspective of lifestyle medicine presents an opportunity for interdisciplinary research. Future research should focus on leveraging implementation science, cost-effectiveness analysis, and understanding optimal pathways and mechanisms of action. This article provides a review of this important topic.
6.Constructing a multidisciplinary and multi-stakeholder collaborative model for monitoring and preventing suicide risk in adolescent depression
Zheng ZHANG ; Bohao CHENG ; Zhengqian JIANG ; Jiawei ZHOU ; Yanyue YE ; Huajia TANG ; Hui CHEN ; Sihong LI ; Jiansong ZHOU
Chinese Journal of Psychiatry 2024;57(1):12-17
The prevention and treatment of adolescent depression and suicide represent a current focal point. Therefore, it is crucial to understand the risk factors for suicide in adolescents with depression, scientifically monitor suicide risk, and conduct a multidisciplinary collaboration. There is still a lack of authoritative, evidence-based guidelines in China on how to assess suicide risk early time and how to take targeted prevention. This paper introduces the bio-psycho-social joint intervention model, aiming to help clinicians comprehensively assess the suicide risk in adolescents with depression. The author discussed comprehensive assessment methods and a collaborative system involving family, school, medical, and community entities working together as more effective interventions.
7.Application of transcranial direct current stimulation in the treatment of depression
Xiucheng TANG ; Zheng ZHANG ; Xiuling ZOU ; Jiansong ZHOU
Chinese Journal of Psychiatry 2024;57(8):473-478
Depression, as a complex affective mental disorder, brings a considerable burden to patients and society. At present, pharmacotherapy, psychotherapy, and traditional physical therapy methods cannot fully meet clinical needs. Therefore, seeking new treatment methods has become an urgent matter. In recent years, transcranial direct current stimulation, as a non-invasive neuromodulation technique, has attracted widespread attention and research in the field of depression treatment. This article briefly reviews the research progress of transcranial direct current stimulation in treating depression.
8.Development of digital therapy in the diagnosis and treatment of psychiatric disorders
Zheng ZHANG ; Zhengqian JIANG ; Jiali LIU ; Xia CAO ; Jiansong ZHOU
The Journal of Practical Medicine 2024;40(18):2513-2519
Digital therapy shows promise in providing precise assessments and enhancing the efficacy of treatments for mental illness,offering advantages such as convenience,flexibility,and the potential to reduce costs by shifting towards preventive care.This article reviews the development and benefits of digital therapy in mental health care and discusses the challenges it faces,including concerns over privacy,ethics,security,acces-sibility issues,digital divides,and the lack of sufficient clinical validation and standardization.It also highlights specific risks to mental health patients and explores potential future developments such as integration with brain-computer interfaces and neurofeedback,the use of robot therapists based on large language models,applications of virtual reality or the metaverse,and combinations with traditional physical treatments and medications.The author calls for urgent policy recommendations to refine regulations,establish unified evidence standards,enhance train-ing and education for healthcare providers and patients,and to build multidisciplinary collaborative mechanisms to advance personalized and effective digital therapy in mental health.
9.Constructing a multidisciplinary and multi-stakeholder collaborative model for monitoring and preventing suicide risk in adolescent depression
Zheng ZHANG ; Bohao CHENG ; Zhengqian JIANG ; Jiawei ZHOU ; Yanyue YE ; Huajia TANG ; Hui CHEN ; Sihong LI ; Jiansong ZHOU
Chinese Journal of Psychiatry 2024;57(1):12-17
The prevention and treatment of adolescent depression and suicide represent a current focal point. Therefore, it is crucial to understand the risk factors for suicide in adolescents with depression, scientifically monitor suicide risk, and conduct a multidisciplinary collaboration. There is still a lack of authoritative, evidence-based guidelines in China on how to assess suicide risk early time and how to take targeted prevention. This paper introduces the bio-psycho-social joint intervention model, aiming to help clinicians comprehensively assess the suicide risk in adolescents with depression. The author discussed comprehensive assessment methods and a collaborative system involving family, school, medical, and community entities working together as more effective interventions.
10.Application of transcranial direct current stimulation in the treatment of depression
Xiucheng TANG ; Zheng ZHANG ; Xiuling ZOU ; Jiansong ZHOU
Chinese Journal of Psychiatry 2024;57(8):473-478
Depression, as a complex affective mental disorder, brings a considerable burden to patients and society. At present, pharmacotherapy, psychotherapy, and traditional physical therapy methods cannot fully meet clinical needs. Therefore, seeking new treatment methods has become an urgent matter. In recent years, transcranial direct current stimulation, as a non-invasive neuromodulation technique, has attracted widespread attention and research in the field of depression treatment. This article briefly reviews the research progress of transcranial direct current stimulation in treating depression.

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