This study aimed to evaluate serum brain-derived neurotrophic factor levels, stress, and quality of life in leprosy patients, and to explore their interrelations. A cross-sectional study was conducted Show more
This study aimed to evaluate serum brain-derived neurotrophic factor levels, stress, and quality of life in leprosy patients, and to explore their interrelations. A cross-sectional study was conducted from September 2024 to May 2025 at 3 hospitals in Medan, Indonesia, involving 45 leprosy patients aged โฅโ18 years who met inclusion criteria. Serum brain-derived neurotrophic factor levels were measured using ELISA, stress was assessed using the Perceived Stress Scale-10, and quality of life was evaluated through the WHOQOL-BREF questionnaire. Descriptive statistics, Shapiro-Wilk normality test, and Spearman's rank correlation were used for analysis. The mean serum brain-derived neurotrophic factor level was 7.38ยฑ3.37 ng/mL. Patients with multibacillary leprosy without reaction had higher brain-derived neurotrophic factor levels than those with type 1 or type 2 reactions. Stress levels were mild in 42.22% and severe in 28.89% of patients. Quality of life scores varied widely. A strong negative correlation was found between brain-derived neurotrophic factor and stress (r=-0.953, p<โ0.0001), and a strong positive correlation between brain-derived neurotrophic factor and quality of life (r=0.962, p<โ0.0001). These findings suggest that serum brain-derived neurotrophic factor levels are associated with psychological well-being in leprosy patients and may serve as a potential biomarker for mental health monitoring in this population. Show less
The Indonesian island of Sulawesi harbors a highly endemic and diverse fauna sparking fascination since long before Wallace's contemplation of biogeographical patterns in the region. Allopatric divers Show more
The Indonesian island of Sulawesi harbors a highly endemic and diverse fauna sparking fascination since long before Wallace's contemplation of biogeographical patterns in the region. Allopatric diversification driven by geological or climatic processes has been identified as the main mechanism shaping present faunal distribution on the island. There is both consensus and conflict among range patterns of terrestrial species pointing to the different effects of vicariant events on once co-distributed taxa. Tarsiers, small nocturnal primates with possible evidence of an Eocene fossil record on the Asian mainland, are at present exclusively found in insular Southeast Asia. Sulawesi is hotspot of tarsier diversity, whereby island colonization and subsequent radiation of this old endemic primate lineage remained largely enigmatic. To resolve the phylogeographic history of Sulawesi tarsiers we analyzed an island-wide sample for a set of five approved autosomal phylogenetic markers (ABCA1, ADORA3, AXIN1, RAG1, and TTR) and the paternally inherited SRY gene. We constructed ML and Bayesian phylogenetic trees and estimated divergence times between tarsier populations. We found that their arrival at the Proto-Sulawesi archipelago coincided with initial Miocene tectonic uplift and hypothesize that tarsiers dispersed over the region in distinct waves. Intra-island diversification was spurred by land emergence and a rapid succession of glacial cycles during the Plio-Pleistocene. Some tarsier range boundaries concur with spatial limits in other taxa backing the notion of centers of faunal endemism on Sulawesi. This congruence, however, has partially been superimposed by taxon-specific dispersal patterns. Show less