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Dive into the research topics where Markus Kaski is active.

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Featured researches published by Markus Kaski.


International Journal of Cancer | 2006

Cancer incidence of persons with Down syndrome in Finland: A population-based study

Kristiina Patja; Eero Pukkala; Reijo Sund; Matti Iivanainen; Markus Kaski

Individuals with Down syndrome (DS) have a predisposition to leukaemia and testicular cancer, but data on the incidence of cancers are yet sparse. A cohort of 3,581 persons with DS was identified from a National Registry of Finnish persons with intellectual disability collected between 1978 and 1986 and followed‐up for cancer incidence until 2002. Standardised incidence ratios (SIRs) were defined as ratios of observed number of cancer cases to those expected from the national cancer incidence rates, by age and sex. The overall cancer risk was equal to that of the general population, but a significantly high risk of leukaemia (SIR 10.5, CI 95% 6.6–15.8) and testicular cancer (SIR4.8, CI 95% 1.8–10.4) was found.


Journal of Attention Disorders | 2008

Adults With ADHD Benefit From Cognitive—Behaviorally Oriented Group Rehabilitation: A Study of 29 Participants

Maarit Virta; Anita Vedenpää; Nina Grönroos; Esa Chydenius; Markku Partinen; Risto Vataja; Markus Kaski; Matti Iivanainen

Objective: In clinical practice, a growing need exists for effective nonpharmacological treatments of adult ADHD. The authors present results from a cognitive—behaviorally oriented psychological group rehabilitation for adult ADHD. Method: A total of 29 adults with ADHD participated. Rehabilitation consisted of 10 or 11 weekly sessions. Participants were assessed with self-ratings (checklist for ADHD based on the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders , Beck Depression Inventory II, Symptom Check List-90 [SCL-90], Brown ADD Scale for Adults [BADDS]), and the ratings of their significant others (BADDS) 3 months prior to treatment, at the beginning of treatment, and at the end of treatment. Also, the Wender Utah Rating Scale questionnaire was completed prior to rehabilitation. Results: Rehabilitation resulted in reduced self-reported symptoms in 16 ADHD-related items of SCL-90, BADDS total score, and BADDS subdomains of activation and affect. Conclusion: Results suggest that cognitive—behavioral group rehabilitation can be suitable in treating adult ADHD. (J. of Att. Dis. 2008; 12(3) 218-226)


Journal of Intellectual & Developmental Disability | 2011

Healthcare and guidelines: A population-based survey of recorded medical problems and health surveillance for people with Down syndrome

Tuomo Määttä; Joonas Määttä; Tuula Tervo-Määttä; Anja Taanila; Markus Kaski; Matti Iivanainen

Abstract Background Medical problems are described in a population of persons with Down syndrome. Health surveillance is compared to the recommendations of national guidelines. Method Case records from the specialised and primary healthcare and disability services were analysed. Results A wide spectrum of age-specific medical and surgical problems was described. Congenital heart defects and middle ear infections were mostly experienced by younger people, while thyroid disease, epilepsy, and Alzheimers disease were frequent among older people. Psychiatric disorders and behavioural problems were frequent in all age groups. Conclusions Health surveillance remained insufficient, despite the guidelines available. A joint effort by healthcare and disability service providers is required to ensure that the medical needs of people with Down syndrome are adequately met across their entire lifespan. An active provision of healthcare and monitoring for this vulnerable group is needed.


Neuropsychiatric Disease and Treatment | 2010

Short cognitive behavioral therapy and cognitive training for adults with ADHD – a randomized controlled pilot study

Maarit Virta; Anita Salakari; Mervi Antila; Esa Chydenius; Markku Partinen; Markus Kaski; Risto Vataja; Hely Kalska; Matti Iivanainen

In clinical practice, a growing need exists for effective non-pharmacological treatments of adult attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). Here, we present the results of a pilot study of 10 adults with ADHD participating in short-term individual cognitive- behavioral therapy (CBT), 9 adults participating in cognitive training (CT), and 10 controls. Self-report questionnaires, independent evaluations, and computerized neurocognitive testing were collected before and after the treatments to evaluate change. There were distinctive pre-hypotheses regarding the treatments, and therefore the statistical comparisons were conducted in pairs: CBT vs control, CT vs control, and CBT vs CT. In a combined ADHD symptom score based on self-reports, 6 participants in CBT, 2 in CT and 2 controls improved. Using independent evaluations, improvement was found in 7 of the CBT participants, 2 of CT participants and 3 controls. There was no treatment-related improvement in cognitive performance. Thus, in the CBT group, some encouraging improvement was seen, although not as clearly as in previous research with longer interventions. In the CT group, there was improvement in the trained tasks but no generalization of the improvement to the tasks of the neurocognitive testing, the self- report questionnaires, or the independent evaluations. These preliminary results warrant further studies with more participants and with more elaborate cognitive testing.


Journal of Sleep Research | 2001

Neurological impairments and sleep–wake behaviour among the mentally retarded

Niki Lindblom; Hannu Heiskala; Markus Kaski; Lea Leinonen; Antti Nevanlinna; Matti Iivanainen; Maija-Liisa Laakso

The objective of the present study was to evaluate the relationship between the sleep–wake behaviour and neurological impairments among mentally retarded people. The sleep–wake behaviour of 293 mentally retarded subjects living in a rehabilitation center was studied by a standardized observation protocol carried out by trained staff members. The protocol consisted of brief check‐ups of the subjects’ sleep–wake status at 20‐min intervals for five randomly chosen 24‐h periods during 4 months. From the raw data five sleep–wake behaviour variables were formed. The data concerning the subject characteristics (age, body mass index (BMI), gender, degree of mental retardation, presence of locomotor disability, that of epilepsy, blindness or deafness and the usage of psychotropic medications) were collected from the medical records. Two main findings emerged: (1) severe locomotor disablity, blindness and active epilepsy were found to be independent predictors of increased daytime sleep and increased number of wake–sleep transitions and (2) the subjects with a combination of two or all three of these impairments had a significantly more fragmented and abnormally distributed sleep than those with none or milder forms of these impairments. Age, BMI, degree of mental retardation and the studied medications played a minor role in the sleep disturbances of the study population. Finally, deafness was not found to be associated with any of the measured sleep–wake variables.


Journal of Attention Disorders | 2010

Cognitive-Behaviorally-Oriented Group Rehabilitation of Adults with ADHD: Results of a 6-Month Follow-Up.

Anita Salakari; Maarit Virta; Nina Grönroos; Esa Chydenius; Markku Partinen; Risto Vataja; Markus Kaski; Matti Iivanainen

Objective: Recently, novel psychological treatments for adult ADHD have been reported with promising results. However, studies about long-term treatment effects are scanty. The authors study effects of cognitive-behaviorally-oriented group rehabilitation during a 6-month follow-up. Method: Participating in the rehabilitation were 29 adults, of whom 25 were reached 3 and 6 months later. ADHD and other psychiatric symptoms were assessed with self-ratings (Brown ADD Scale for Adults, Symptom Check List—90 [SCL-90], 16 ADHD-related items of SCL-90, Beck Depression Inventory). Participants from the pretreatment period served as their own controls. Results: Participants having improvement in ADHD symptoms during treatment (n = 11) maintained most of the benefit during follow-up. They also had a decrease in other psychiatric symptoms, but this did not fully persist through the follow-up. Of all participants, 72% found their overall situation improved as compared to the pretreatment situation. Conclusion: Results suggest that cognitive-behaviorally-oriented group rehabilitation of ADHD adults might have long-term benefits.


Journal of Inherited Metabolic Disease | 2006

Sleep disturbances in aspartylglucosaminuria (AGU): A questionnaire study

Niki Lindblom; Satu Kivinen; Hannu Heiskala; Maija-Liisa Laakso; Markus Kaski

SummarySleep disturbances are common in many progressive metabolic encephalopathies. The possible presence of disturbed sleep–wake behaviour in the lysosomal storage disorder aspartylglucosaminuria, has not been previously studied, however. The sleep–wake behaviour of 81 patients with aspartylglucosaminuria (AGU, age 3–55 years, median 22 years; 42 female and 39 male) and 49 controls (age 2–57 years, median 18 years; 25 female and 24 male) was assessed through a postal survey. A slightly modified version of the validated Basic Nordic Sleep Questionnaire was used. Fifty-eight per cent of the AGU patients were reported to suffer daily from a sleep-related problem (controls 31%, p < 0.01). In AGU adults (age >17 years) and children (age ≤17 years), the corresponding figures were 52% and 61%, respectively (control children 22%, p < 0.05 and control adults 38%, p = 0.06). In AGU children, settling difficulties were reported to occur significantly more commonly than in control children. Children with AGU were also reported to snore more often than were the controls. Adults with this disorder were found to suffer from severely fragmented night-time sleep, which was experienced as highly distressing by the parents and other caregivers. A long night sleep period was reported to be common in the ageing AGU patients (AGU 9.5 ± 1.7 vs controls 7.2 ± 1.0 h, mean ± SD, p < 0.001). Parents and caregivers also often complained about disturbing movements during sleep in AGU patients. In conclusion, both children and adults with aspartylglucosaminuria were reported to display several types of sleep disturbances significantly more commonly than healthy controls.


Journal of Intellectual Disability Research | 2014

Age‐specific prevalence of intellectual disability in Finland at the beginning of new millennium – multiple register method

Hannu Westerinen; Markus Kaski; Lauri J. Virta; Fredrik Almqvist; Matti Iivanainen

BACKGROUND In the national study of multiple registers in 2000, the average prevalence of intellectual disability (ID) was 0.70%, with marked differences by age group (range 0.38-0.96%) - what are these differences in detail, and can they be understood? METHOD This study was based on two national health registers and six social benefit registers. Prevalence of ID was calculated by 1-year age cohorts. RESULTS The multiple register prevalence of ID increased steadily from 0.20% in the first life year to 0.74% (male: 0.90%, female: 0.58%) at 10 years. For boys, the rate fell to 0.71% at 11 years. For both sexes, a steady increase was noted in the distribution up to 40 years (male: 0.84%, female: 0.73%), followed by a sharper increase to the maximum prevalence (male: 1.19% at 48 years, female: 1.05% at 50 years). At the pension age of 66 years, a sudden drop to 0.49% occurred for men and women. Different registers gave very different age distributions. CONCLUSIONS By examining the data by 1-year age cohorts, and by understanding the role of each register, it could be deduced that a proportion of cases in younger age groups is lacking, and a remarkable proportion of elderly ID persons is missing from the pooled data. The findings were more difficult to interpret, if the data were grouped into bigger age groups.


Chronobiology International | 2002

Sleep fragmentation in mentally retarded people decreases with increasing daylength in spring.

Niki Lindblom; Hannu Heiskala; Markus Kaski; Lea Leinonen; Maija-Liisa Laakso

We studied the sleep–wake behavior of mentally retarded people from late winter to early summer at 60°N. During this time the daylength increased 8 h 51 min. The data were collected by observing the sleep–wake status of 293 subjects at 20-min intervals for five randomized 24h periods (=recording days). The intervals during which the individual recording days of the same order (1st, 2nd, etc.) were carried out, were called recording periods. Consequently, there were five recording periods, each containing 293 individual recording days. Even though there was overlap among the recording periods, the median daylength from one period to another increased approximately by 100 min. In the initial statistical analysis, the number of wake–sleep transitions was found to differ significantly among the five recording periods (Friedman test, p<0.001). The mean ranks in the Friedman test suggested that the number of wake–sleep transitions was highest during the 1st and lowest during the 5th recording period. In further statistical analyses using a program for mixed effects regression analysis (mixor 2.0) it was found that the increase in daylength during the study period was associated with a simultaneous decrease of approximately 0.5 wake–sleep transitions in the whole study population (p<0.001). The decrease in the number of wake–sleep transitions was significant only in the subgroups of subjects with a daylength change of more than 350 min between the 1st and 5th recording days (Wilcoxon tests, p<0.005). This suggests that after a marked prolongation of the natural photoperiod, the reduction in sleep episodes was more probable than after smaller changes in daylength. It is concluded that the sleep of mentally retarded people living in a rehabilitation center at a northern latitude is more fragmented in winter than in early summer and that the change is related probably to the simultaneous increase in the length of the natural photoperiod. The sleep quality of persons living in institutional settings might be improved by increasing the intensity and/or duration of daily artificial light exposure during the darker seasons.


European Journal of Paediatric Neurology | 2009

Childhood growth and development associated with need for full-time special education at school age

Minna Mannerkoski; Laura Åberg; Marianne Hoikkala; Seppo Sarna; Markus Kaski; Taina Autti; Hannu Heiskala

OBJECTIVE To explore how growth measurements and attainment of developmental milestones in early childhood reflect the need for full-time special education (SE). METHODS After stratification in this population-based study, 900 pupils in full-time SE groups (age-range 7-16 years, mean 12 years 8 months) at three levels and 301 pupils in mainstream education (age-range 7-16, mean 12 years 9 months) provided data on height and weight from birth to age 7 years and head circumference to age 1 year. Developmental screening was evaluated from age 1 month to 48 months. Statistical methods included a general linear model (growth measurements), binary logistic regression analysis (odds ratios for growth), and multinomial logistic regression analysis (odds ratios for developmental milestones). RESULTS At 1 year, a 1 standard deviation score (SDS) decrease in height raised the probability of SE placement by 40%, and a 1 SDS decrease in head size by 28%. In developmental screening, during the first months of life the gross motor milestones, especially head support, differentiated the children at levels 0-3. Thereafter, the fine motor milestones and those related to speech and social skills became more important. CONCLUSION Children whose growth is mildly impaired, though in the normal range, and who fail to attain certain developmental milestones have an increased probability for SE and thus a need for special attention when toddlers age. Similar to the growth curves, these children seem to have consistent developmental curves (patterns).

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Lauri J. Virta

Social Insurance Institution

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