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Dive into the research topics where Ann M. Mehringer is active.

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Featured researches published by Ann M. Mehringer.


Addictive Behaviors | 2003

Smoking patterns and abstinence effects in smokers with no ADHD, childhood ADHD, and adult ADHD symptomatology

Cynthia S. Pomerleau; Karen K. Downey; Sandy M. Snedecor; Ann M. Mehringer; Judith L. Marks; Ovide F. Pomerleau

Cigarette smokers are known to be overrepresented among adults with Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD). To date, however, no attempt has been made to determine the extent to which a lifetime diagnosis of ADHD may be associated with smoking even in the absence of current symptomatology. We hypothesized that nicotine dependence and abstinence effects-especially effects relevant to ADHD symptomatology-would be more pronounced in adult ADHD smokers in comparison with those who reported childhood ADHD symptoms only. Results indicated that, in contrast to controls without ADHD symptomatology, both adult and childhood ADHD groups were significantly more likely to experience a number of nicotine withdrawal symptoms, including irritability and difficulty concentrating; in no instance did the ADHD groups differ from one another in this regard. Thus, studying people with childhood symptoms of ADHD, even in the absence of an adult diagnosis, may shed light on the known association between smoking and ADHD.


Journal of Substance Abuse Treatment | 2000

Short-term weight gain in abstaining women smokers.

Cynthia S. Pomerleau; Ovide F. Pomerleau; Rebecca J. Namenek; Ann M. Mehringer

Although most studies of weight gain following smoking cessation assess long-term change, weight gain during the critical period immediately following cessation may be more salient to the smoker for whom fear of weight gain constitutes a serious barrier to cessation. The current study examined weight change in 20 highly dependent women smokers provided with monetary incentives to abstain for 1 week, along with concomitant changes in cotinine. Abstaining smokers (n = 7) gained 3.1 pounds, compared with 0.3 pounds in women who continued to smoke (n = 13). Across all subjects, change was significantly negatively correlated with final plasma cotinine concentration and marginally negatively correlated with percent cotinine reduction. Weight gain in women abstainers in the luteal phase of the menstrual cycle exceeded that in women abstainers in the follicular phase; a significant interaction such that continuing smokers showed no phase-related differences in weight suggests that the effect was not an artifact of perimenstrual increases in eating or fluid retention. Although long-term weight gain has been shown to be positively associated with success in quitting, little is known about the effects of short-term weight gain. Since many weight-concerned individuals either do not attempt to quit or terminate their quit attempts very early, it may be that if weight gain can be postponed beyond the first few fragile days of cessation, women with strong weight concerns may actually be good candidates for success.


Addictive Behaviors | 2000

Effects of menstrual phase and smoking abstinence in smokers with and without a history of major depressive disorder

Cynthia S. Pomerleau; Ann M. Mehringer; Judith L. Marks; Karen K. Downey; Ovide F. Pomerleau

Although considerable progress has been made towards understanding the role of menstrual cycle phase in smoking, little is known about the possible effects of menstrual phase upon nicotine intake, withdrawal symptomatology, and craving in women with psychiatric cofactors. Fourteen women with and without a history of Major Depressive Disorder (MDD) were studied during five biologically-confirmed phases over the course of one menstrual cycle: smoking logs, salivary cotinine, and ratings of craving and withdrawal were collected daily. During a second cycle, subjects remained abstinent for 3 consecutive days during the postmenses and premenstrual phases. Although a significant omnibus F-test emerged for cigarettes per day across phases during ad libitum smoking, only trends were observed post hoc and supported midcycle rather than premenstrual elevations. There were no significant phase differences for cotinine. Withdrawal symptomatology was markedly elevated during smoking abstinence and in women with a history of depression. but showed no evidence of phase effects. Thus, the hypothesis that depressed individuals would be differentially affected by phase and abstinence was not strongly supported by our results, though overall elevations emphasize the need for special attention to withdrawal severity in this population. Craving was significantly elevated during smoking abstinence and was significantly higher during postmenses, consistent with the midcycle elevation in smoking rate, but showed no group differences. Our findings overall lend little support for the need to control for menstrual phase under conditions of ad libitum smoking. The strong association of self-reported menstrually related dysphoria during abstinence with both craving and withdrawal symptoms, however, is consistent with an exacerbation of smoking abstinence effects in women with severe menstrual symptomatology.


Journal of Pediatric Surgery | 2015

Enteral autonomy in pediatric short bowel syndrome: predictive factors one year after diagnosis

Farokh R. Demehri; Lauren Stephens; Emma Herrman; Brady T. West; Ann M. Mehringer; Meghan A. Arnold; Pamela I. Brown; Daniel H. Teitelbaum

PURPOSE This study examined predictors of achieving enteral autonomy among pediatric short bowel syndrome (SBS) patients remaining on parenteral nutrition (PN) beyond one year. METHODS A retrospective single-institution study of 171 pediatric SBS patients (defined as ≥50% small bowel (SB) loss or ≥60 days of PN with onset before 6 weeks of age) was performed. Multivariate Cox proportional hazards analysis was conducted, with subgroup analysis of patients on PN for ≥1 year (n=59). Primary outcome was successful wean from PN. RESULTS Over a follow-up of 4.1±4.8 years, 64.3% of children weaned from PN. Mortality was 15.2%. Presence of ≥10% expected SB length (hazard ratio [HR] 6.48, p=0.002) or an ileocecal valve (ICV; HR, 2.86, p<0.001) predicted PN weaning. Of those on PN ≥1 year, the wean rate was 50.8%, and ICV no longer predicted weaning (p=0.153). Predictors among those on PN ≥1 year were: ≥10% expected SB length (HR, 8.27, p=0.010), intestinal atresia (HR, 4.26, p=0.011), and necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC, HR, 2.84, p=0.025). CONCLUSIONS SBS children on PN ≥1 year continue to wean from PN, and those with ≥10% of predicted SB length, NEC, or atresia are more likely to do so. These findings may help direct management and advice for these challenging patients.


Journal of Substance Abuse Treatment | 2003

Prolonged nicotine patch use in quitters with past abstinence-induced depressed mood

Ovide F. Pomerleau; Cynthia S. Pomerleau; Judith L. Marks; Sandy M. Snedecor; Ann M. Mehringer; Rebecca J. Namenek Brouwer; Karen K. Saules

To test the efficacy of sustained nicotine patch use among at-risk smokers, 55 smokers with a history of abstinence-induced depressed mood were randomly assigned to either Nicotine Maintenance or Standard Treatment following preliminary high-dose patch treatment. The Nicotine Maintenance group received 21 mg transdermal nicotine for 8 additional weeks; the Standard Treatment group followed a tapered dosing regimen. Significant differences favoring the Nicotine Maintenance group were found in self-reported craving but not withdrawal. No difference was observed in continuous abstinence or in relapse rates. When dropouts who did not relapse during patch use were classified as successful, however, the Nicotine Maintenance group had significantly lower relapse rates. Rate of lapse in the Nicotine Maintenance group during post-trial tapering did not differ significantly from that in the Standard Treatment group during tapering in the trial, suggesting that the benefits of sustained dosing may persist only as long as dosing continues.


Journal of American College Health | 2007

Actual versus perceived risk of cervical cancer among college women smokers.

Karen K. Saules; Neo Vannest; Ann M. Mehringer; Cynthia S. Pomerleau; Keleigh M. Lee; Anthony W. Opipari; A. Rees Midgley; Lewis J. Kleinsmith; Ananda Sen; Sandy M. Snedecor

Cervical cancer is a well-established smoking-related illness, but many at-risk women are unaware of this link. Objective: The authors designed this study to (1) investigate the relationship of smoking behavior with the history of abnormal Pap test results, sexual history, and perceived risk of cervical cancer and (2) determine whether self-classified smoking status (and hence perceived risk) corresponds with actual smoking behavior in a college student population. Participants and Method Summary: College women students (N = 135) completed a survey assessing smoking history, health history, sexual risk behavior, and risk awareness. Results: Relative to those who had not smoked in the past month, current smokers (n = 36, or 27% of the total sample) perceived themselves to be at higher risk for developing cervical cancer, but did not demonstrate increased awareness of specific cervical cancer risk factors, including smoking. Twenty-eight percent (10 of 36) of past-month smokers did not define themselves as current smokers. Conclusion: The authors conclude that antismoking and health-related messages targeting smokers may misfire for individuals who do not define themselves as smokers but are nonetheless at risk for smoking-related consequences and escalating use.


Nicotine & Tobacco Research | 2005

Nicotine Dependence, Depression, and Gender: Characterizing Phenotypes Based on Withdrawal Discomfort, Response to Smoking, and Ability to Abstain

Ovide F. Pomerleau; Cynthia S. Pomerleau; Ann M. Mehringer; Sandy M. Snedecor; Raphaela Ninowski; Ananda Sen


Addictive Behaviors | 2004

Relationship of onset of cigarette smoking during college to alcohol use, dieting concerns, and depressed mood: results from the Young Women's Health Survey.

Karen K. Saules; Cynthia S. Pomerleau; Sandy M. Snedecor; Ann M. Mehringer; Minden B Shadle; Candace Kurth; Dean D. Krahn


Journal of Attention Disorders | 2001

The Assessment of Hyperactivity and Attention: Development and preliminary validation of a brief self- assessment of adult ADHD

Ann M. Mehringer; Karen K. Downey; Leslie M. Schuh; Cynthia S. Pomerleau; Sandy M. Snedecor; Howard Schubiner


Addictive Behaviors | 2006

Differences in smoking-related variables based on phenylthiocarbamide "taster" status.

Sandy M. Snedecor; Cynthia S. Pomerleau; Ann M. Mehringer; Raphaela Ninowski; Ovide F. Pomerleau

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Karen K. Saules

Eastern Michigan University

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Karen K. Downey

Eastern Michigan University

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Ananda Sen

University of Michigan

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