Maternal Grandmother Invests Most

Author(s):  
Mirkka Danielsbacka ◽  
Antti O Tanskanen
Keyword(s):  
1978 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 45-58
Author(s):  
Sun Tsai-hua
Keyword(s):  

Psico-USF ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 21 (3) ◽  
pp. 635-649 ◽  
Author(s):  
Élide Dezoti Valdanha-Ornelas ◽  
Manoel Antônio dos Santos

Abstract Studies show that family relationships can act as mediating agents in triggering and maintaining the symptoms of anorexia nervosa (AN), especially the mother-daughter relationship configuration, which contains unconscious elements transmitted inter-generationally. This study aimed to understand the role of intergenerational psychic transmission in the articulation of anorexic symptoms in a young woman in treatment. Three generations of women of the same family were interviewed: maternal grandmother, mother and daughter, all diagnosed with AN. Some psychic contents that could not be elaborated were identified in the reports and these were, subsequently, converted into legacies transmitted to later generations. Feelings of inhibition and shame regarding sexuality and the female body, transmitted from grandmother to mother and from mother to granddaughter, seem to have blocked the emotional development in all generations. Incorporating these findings into treatment may facilitate the processing of the transmitted unconscious contents, contributing to the reorganization of the family's psychodynamic functioning.


2021 ◽  
Vol 2021 ◽  
pp. 1-5
Author(s):  
Signe Faurschou ◽  
Dorte L. Lildballe ◽  
Lisa L. Maroun ◽  
Morten Helvind ◽  
Maria Rasmussen

In this clinical report, we describe a male infant and his mother, who had similar congenital heart defects. They were both diagnosed neonatally with total anomalous pulmonary venous connection (TAPVC) in combination with other heart defects. Neither of the two had any other organ malformations or dysmorphic facial features. SNP-array identified a central 22q11.2 microdeletion in the male infant and his mother as well as in the maternal grandmother and maternal aunt. The mother and the maternal aunt additionally harbored a 15q11.2 BP1-BP2 microdeletion. The maternal grandmother was unaffected by heart disease. However, heart computed tomography scan of the maternal aunt revealed a quadricuspid aortic valve. Additionally, the maternal grandmother and the maternal aunt both had significant learning disabilities. Rarely, TAPVC has been described in patients with the common 22q11.2 microdeletions. However, to the best of our knowledge, TAPVC has not previously been reported in patients with this small central 22q11.2 microdeletion. Haploinsufficiency of TBX1 was originally thought to be the main cause of the 22q11.2 microdeletion syndrome phenotype, but TBX1 is not included in the atypical central 22q11.2 microdeletion. Previous reports have suggested an association between TAPVC and the 15q11.2 BP1-BP2 microdeletion. Our report does not support this association as the maternal aunt, who harbors both microdeletions, is unaffected by TAPVC, and the male infant affected by TAPVC does not harbor the 15q11.2 BP1-BP2 microdeletion. Our findings support that genes located in the central 22q11.2 region are important for heart development and that haploinsufficiency of these genes plays a crucial role in the development of the rare heart defect TAPVC.


2021 ◽  
Vol 8 (2) ◽  
pp. 425-475
Author(s):  
Nada Yousuf Al-Rifai

Ahmad Shawqi was raised in the royal palace, where his maternal grandmother – who sponsored him after the death of his mother – was a favoured maid at Khedive Ismail. Shawqi studied law in Egypt and Paris, and when he returned to Egypt, he became poet Laurette for Khedive Abbas Helmy II. Although Shawqi was brought up in the royal palace, as a poet, he felt the pulse of the Egyptian people and felt their pain and dreams. After the First World War broke out, in 1915, Shawqi was exiled to Spain where he was swept away by longing for his homeland. During his exile, the 1919 revolution erupted in Egypt, and his longing for his homeland intensified, and obsessed his heart and soul. Exile was the greatest ordeal that Shawqi went through in his life. In exile, he did not find relief except when resorting to his poetry, to which he revealed the pains of his heart. He also visited the memorials of the Muslims and their reign and civilization in Seville, Cordoba, and Granada. This resulted in Shawqi composing his lengthy poem “Arab countries and the greats of Islam”. Shawqi’s poems are considered masterpieces for their sincerity of emotion and beauty of description. Perhaps the most famous of these is The Seeniya; rhyming with the letter S, entitled “The Journey to Andalusia”, and his other longing poem, “The Nouniya; rhyming with the letter N”, in which he opposed the famous medieval Arab Andalusian poet, Ibn Zaidoun.


2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (6) ◽  
pp. 372
Author(s):  
Giangennaro Coppola ◽  
Grazia Maria Giovanna Pastorino ◽  
Luigi Vetri ◽  
Floriana D’Onofrio ◽  
Francesca Felicia Operto

An Italian family with familial hemiplegic migraine (FHM) with the absence of mutations in the known genes associated with this disorder, namely ATP1A2, ATP1A3, CACNA1A, and SCN1A, has recently been reported. Soon afterward, whole exome sequencing allowed the identification of the carrier status of a heterozygous ATP1A4 mutation c.1798 C >T, in four affected members of this family. Here we compare the clinical symptoms of the affected family members with those from the other FHM families linked to mutations in the known genes associated with this disorder. A further two-year follow-up, including clinical response to carbamazepine administered to the proband and the maternal grandmother due to a worsening of the migraine symptoms, is reported. The clinical condition of the proband’s brother, carrying the same mutation and suffering from congenital ventricular and supraventricular extrasystoles, isdiscussed as well.


1881 ◽  
Vol 26 (116) ◽  
pp. 564-566

M. H., single, 29; maternal grandmother insane.—Admitted November, 1878. Neuralgia and sleeplessness given as causes of insanity. Ten weeks before admission was suicidal, and tried to get out of the window. Felt something urging her to suicide, and also felt inclined to kill children. She felt she was doomed to everlasting punishment. She heard voices whispering bad words to her, and she saw evil spirits.


1944 ◽  
Vol 4 (13) ◽  
pp. 629-654

By the death of Clive Cuthbertson on 16 November 1943 science has lost a most interesting personality. After a distinguished career in the Indian Civil Service from which he retired in 1896 owing to ill health, he became interested in science. Born on 29 November 1863 Cuthbertson was the youngest of the seven children of William Gilmour Cuthbertson and his wife Jane Agnes. He wrote in his personal memoir that his ancestors and relatives were not distinguished in any way with one possible exception in that to the best of his belief his maternal grandmother, whose maiden name was Priestley, was related to Joseph Priestley. Cuthbertson’s father was a bank manager in China, Burma and South Australia. He took his son with him so that Clive spent most of his childhood in those countries. They returned to London in 1878 when Clive was fifteen years old


1988 ◽  
Vol 34 ◽  
pp. 581-607

Joseph Stanley Mitchell was born in Birmingham on 22 July 1909, the eldest of three children born to Joseph Brown Mitchell and Ethel Maud Mary Arnold, both of whom were schoolteachers and for whom education was always of prime importance. His maternal grandmother, born in 1848, was unusually progressive in her belief in the importance of education for women, and his maternal grandfather, a quiet and thoughtful man, who worked in the construction of machine tools, had an inventive turn of mind and was the author of several patents. Joseph’s mother was an outstanding pupil at, eventually, St Mary’s College, Cheltenham. Her interests included music (she played the violin), poetry, handicrafts and needlework, at which she was particularly skilful. She developed an illness after Joseph’s birth so that his first year was spent in the care of his Aunt Gertrude who had married into the de Saulles family, protestant refugees from Switzerland whom Joseph recognized as an early influence in his liking for languages and whose profession as makers of optical instruments likewise aroused his interest.


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