-
9 Beiträge
-
0 Fotos
-
0 Videos
-
Male
-
14/09/1978
-
Follower 0 Menschen
© 2026 Webyourself Social Media Platform
Deutsch
Neueste Updates
-
Results We found that DHA prevented cell proliferation in K562 cells through inhibiting aerobic glycolysis. Lactate product and glucose uptake were inhibited after DHA treatment. Results showed that DHA modulates glucose uptake through downregulating glucose transporter 1 (GLUT1) in both gene and protein levels. The cytotoxicity of DHA on K562 cells was significantly reversed by PKM2 agonist DASA-58. Pyruvate kinase activity was significantly reduced after DHA treatment, decreased expression of PKM2 was confirmed in situ. https://www.selleckchem.com/products/1-azakenpaullone.html Conclusion The present study implicated that DHA inhibits leukemia cell proliferation by regulating glycolysis and metabolism, which mediated by downregulating PKM2 and GLUT1 expression. Our finding might enrich the artemisinins' antitumor mechanisms.Introduction Peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor γ (PPARγ) plays a key role in glucose, which is a ligand-mediated transcription factor. The lipid homeostasis often serves as a pharmacological target for new drug discovery and development. Materials and methods In the research, we synthesized a series of piperine derivatives and then used a fluorescence polarization-based PPARγ ligand screening assay to evaluate the agonistic activity of PPARγ. Then, we cultured human normal hepatocytes, which were treated with 100μM compounds 2a, 2t or 3d. Then, the levels of PPARγ gene were determined so as to show whether the compounds could activate or inhibit the expression of PPARγ. Results A total of 30 piperine derivatives were synthesized and evaluated. Compound 2a was identified as a potential PPARγ agonist with IC50 at 2.43 μM, which is 2 times more potent than the positive control rosiglitazone with IC50 at 5.61μM. The human hepatocytes cells were cultured and treated with compounds 2a, 2t or 3d as described in the "Materials and Methods" section. We found that compounds 2a, 2t and 3d could activate PPARγ by 11.8, 1.9 and 7.0 times compared with the "blank", with compound 2a activation being the most significant. Molecular docking studies indicated that the piperine derivative 2a stably interacts with the amino acid residues of the PPARγ complex active site, which is consistent with the results of the in vitro PPARγ ligand screening assay.Background Gilteritinib, a novel, potent FLT3/AXL inhibitor, was recently approved in Japan and USA for the treatment of adult patients who have relapsed or refractory acute myeloid leukemia (AML) with a FLT3 mutation. Purpose and methods In this study, we aimed to develop and validate a sensitive and simple ultra performance liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry (UPLC-MS/MS) method for the quantification of gilteritinib in plasma and to investigate whether CYP3A4 inhibitors (fluconazole and itraconazole) could influence the pharmacokinetics of gilteritinib from a drug-drug interaction study in rats. Sample preparation was done by a simple protein crash with acetonitrile containing the internal standard (IS) pirfenidone, followed by UPLC-MS/MS quantification. Results The assay was successfully validated in a 1-500 ng/mL calibration range for gilteritinib, where the lower limit of quantification (LLOQ) was set at 1 ng/mL. The intra-day and inter-day precisions for gilteritinib were less than 10.6%, and the accuracies were in the range of -14.5% to 11.1%. Recovery and matrix effect of the analyte and IS were acceptable, and the analyte was stable during the assay and storage in plasma samples. The validated UPLC-MS/MS method was successfully applied to a drug-drug interaction study between gilteritinib and CYP3A4 inhibitors (fluconazole and itraconazole) in rats. Itraconazole significantly increased the exposure of gilteritinib, and affected the pharmacokinetics of gilteritinib in rats, not fluconazole. Conclusion A further clinical study should be conducted to investigate the effect of itraconazole on the metabolism of gilteritinib in subjects.Purpose Autophagy caused by ischemia/reperfusion (I/R) increases the extent of cardiomyocyte damage. Melatonin (Mel) diminishes cardiac injury through regulating autophagy and mitochondrial dynamics. However, illustrating the specific role of mitophagy in the cardioprotective effects of melatonin remains a challenge. The aim of our research was to investigate the impact and underlying mechanisms of melatonin in connection with mitophagy during anoxia/reoxygenation (A/R) injury in H9c2 cells. Methods H9c2 cells were pretreated with melatonin with or without the melatonin membrane receptor 2 (MT2) antagonist 4-P-PDOT, the MT2 agonist IIK7 and the sirtuin 3 (SIRT3) inhibitor 3-TYP for 4 hours and then subjected to A/R injury. Cell viability, cellular apoptosis, necrosis levels and oxidative markers were assessed. The expression of SIRT3 and forkhead box O3a (FoxO3a), mitochondrial function and the levels of mitophagy-related proteins were also evaluated. Results A/R injury provoked enhanced mitophagy in H9c2 myo A/R injury through suppressing excessive mitophagy by activating the MT2/SIRT3/FoxO3a pathway. Melatonin may be a useful candidate for alleviating myocardial ischemia/reperfusion (MI/R) injury in the future, and the MT2 receptor might become a therapeutic target.Introduction In this study, the encapsulation of fentanyl citrate as an opioid drug with hydrophobic nature in the nanostructured lipid carrier (NLC) is performed. Methods For encapsulation of fentanyl citrate drug, hot homogenization method is used. The pharmacokinetics of encapsulated fentanyl citrate for pain relief of rats are investigated. The influence of important variables such as the ratio of liquid lipid to the total amount of lipids, surfactant type and concentration on the particle size is investigated using response surface method. Results Results show that the optimal NLC size is about 90 nm with PDI value around 0.2 and zeta potential of -25±4.01 mV. Characterization analysis of optimal nanostructure shows successful encapsulation of the drug in nanostructure with a spherical morphology of the NLC structure. Results of drug release from commercial fentanyl citrate ampoule and NLC form indicate a control drug release from the NLC within 72 hours in comparison to the commercial ampoule. In vivo studies show that fentanyl citrate-loaded NLC not only has the potential to relieve pain in doses equal to commercial drug but also it can reduce the dose of the drug about 50%.
Results We found that DHA prevented cell proliferation in K562 cells through inhibiting aerobic glycolysis. Lactate product and glucose uptake were inhibited after DHA treatment. Results showed that DHA modulates glucose uptake through downregulating glucose transporter 1 (GLUT1) in both gene and protein levels. The cytotoxicity of DHA on K562 cells was significantly reversed by PKM2 agonist DASA-58. Pyruvate kinase activity was significantly reduced after DHA treatment, decreased expression of PKM2 was confirmed in situ. https://www.selleckchem.com/products/1-azakenpaullone.html Conclusion The present study implicated that DHA inhibits leukemia cell proliferation by regulating glycolysis and metabolism, which mediated by downregulating PKM2 and GLUT1 expression. Our finding might enrich the artemisinins' antitumor mechanisms.Introduction Peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor γ (PPARγ) plays a key role in glucose, which is a ligand-mediated transcription factor. The lipid homeostasis often serves as a pharmacological target for new drug discovery and development. Materials and methods In the research, we synthesized a series of piperine derivatives and then used a fluorescence polarization-based PPARγ ligand screening assay to evaluate the agonistic activity of PPARγ. Then, we cultured human normal hepatocytes, which were treated with 100μM compounds 2a, 2t or 3d. Then, the levels of PPARγ gene were determined so as to show whether the compounds could activate or inhibit the expression of PPARγ. Results A total of 30 piperine derivatives were synthesized and evaluated. Compound 2a was identified as a potential PPARγ agonist with IC50 at 2.43 μM, which is 2 times more potent than the positive control rosiglitazone with IC50 at 5.61μM. The human hepatocytes cells were cultured and treated with compounds 2a, 2t or 3d as described in the "Materials and Methods" section. We found that compounds 2a, 2t and 3d could activate PPARγ by 11.8, 1.9 and 7.0 times compared with the "blank", with compound 2a activation being the most significant. Molecular docking studies indicated that the piperine derivative 2a stably interacts with the amino acid residues of the PPARγ complex active site, which is consistent with the results of the in vitro PPARγ ligand screening assay.Background Gilteritinib, a novel, potent FLT3/AXL inhibitor, was recently approved in Japan and USA for the treatment of adult patients who have relapsed or refractory acute myeloid leukemia (AML) with a FLT3 mutation. Purpose and methods In this study, we aimed to develop and validate a sensitive and simple ultra performance liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry (UPLC-MS/MS) method for the quantification of gilteritinib in plasma and to investigate whether CYP3A4 inhibitors (fluconazole and itraconazole) could influence the pharmacokinetics of gilteritinib from a drug-drug interaction study in rats. Sample preparation was done by a simple protein crash with acetonitrile containing the internal standard (IS) pirfenidone, followed by UPLC-MS/MS quantification. Results The assay was successfully validated in a 1-500 ng/mL calibration range for gilteritinib, where the lower limit of quantification (LLOQ) was set at 1 ng/mL. The intra-day and inter-day precisions for gilteritinib were less than 10.6%, and the accuracies were in the range of -14.5% to 11.1%. Recovery and matrix effect of the analyte and IS were acceptable, and the analyte was stable during the assay and storage in plasma samples. The validated UPLC-MS/MS method was successfully applied to a drug-drug interaction study between gilteritinib and CYP3A4 inhibitors (fluconazole and itraconazole) in rats. Itraconazole significantly increased the exposure of gilteritinib, and affected the pharmacokinetics of gilteritinib in rats, not fluconazole. Conclusion A further clinical study should be conducted to investigate the effect of itraconazole on the metabolism of gilteritinib in subjects.Purpose Autophagy caused by ischemia/reperfusion (I/R) increases the extent of cardiomyocyte damage. Melatonin (Mel) diminishes cardiac injury through regulating autophagy and mitochondrial dynamics. However, illustrating the specific role of mitophagy in the cardioprotective effects of melatonin remains a challenge. The aim of our research was to investigate the impact and underlying mechanisms of melatonin in connection with mitophagy during anoxia/reoxygenation (A/R) injury in H9c2 cells. Methods H9c2 cells were pretreated with melatonin with or without the melatonin membrane receptor 2 (MT2) antagonist 4-P-PDOT, the MT2 agonist IIK7 and the sirtuin 3 (SIRT3) inhibitor 3-TYP for 4 hours and then subjected to A/R injury. Cell viability, cellular apoptosis, necrosis levels and oxidative markers were assessed. The expression of SIRT3 and forkhead box O3a (FoxO3a), mitochondrial function and the levels of mitophagy-related proteins were also evaluated. Results A/R injury provoked enhanced mitophagy in H9c2 myo A/R injury through suppressing excessive mitophagy by activating the MT2/SIRT3/FoxO3a pathway. Melatonin may be a useful candidate for alleviating myocardial ischemia/reperfusion (MI/R) injury in the future, and the MT2 receptor might become a therapeutic target.Introduction In this study, the encapsulation of fentanyl citrate as an opioid drug with hydrophobic nature in the nanostructured lipid carrier (NLC) is performed. Methods For encapsulation of fentanyl citrate drug, hot homogenization method is used. The pharmacokinetics of encapsulated fentanyl citrate for pain relief of rats are investigated. The influence of important variables such as the ratio of liquid lipid to the total amount of lipids, surfactant type and concentration on the particle size is investigated using response surface method. Results Results show that the optimal NLC size is about 90 nm with PDI value around 0.2 and zeta potential of -25±4.01 mV. Characterization analysis of optimal nanostructure shows successful encapsulation of the drug in nanostructure with a spherical morphology of the NLC structure. Results of drug release from commercial fentanyl citrate ampoule and NLC form indicate a control drug release from the NLC within 72 hours in comparison to the commercial ampoule. In vivo studies show that fentanyl citrate-loaded NLC not only has the potential to relieve pain in doses equal to commercial drug but also it can reduce the dose of the drug about 50%.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 20 Ansichten 0 BewertungenBitte loggen Sie sich ein, um liken, teilen und zu kommentieren! -
ini-breaks and refreshers during major procedures.Objectives Knot tying is a fundamental surgical skill. Existing knot tying models assess tying efficiency and errors but do not address respect for tissue. Development of a model that assesses tissue displacement during knot tying may provide a good surrogate for respect for tissue, allow detection of expertise, and offer an improved training platform for skill acquisition. This study aimed to develop a novel, low-cost, knot tying board (KTB) that collects objective, automated metrics of knot displacement, and assesses knot displacement by level of surgical expertise. Design The novel KTB was developed in collaboration between engineering students and surgical educators. Joystick potentiometers were incorporated on 2 parallel rubber tubes to measure vertical and horizontal displacement while tying. Participants used a standardized technique to tie 1- and 2-handed knots. Differences in time and tubing displacement were compared among junior residents (postgraduate year 1-2), senior residents (postgraduate year 3-5), and attending surgeons; p less then 0.05 was considered statistically significant. Setting This study was conducted at the Indiana University Surgical Skills Center in Indianapolis, IN. Participants Forty-seven residents and faculty participated in the study (26 juniors, 14 seniors, 7 attendings). Results KTB development required 100 hours and $70.00. The attending surgeons tied 2-handed knots faster and with significantly more vertical tubing displacement than residents. Senior residents tied knots significantly faster but with similar tubing displacement as juniors. Similar trends were found for 1-handed knots. Conclusions A novel, low-cost KTB was developed to measure knot displacement as a surrogate for tissue handling. The new performance metric of vertical knot displacement proved more sensitive in detecting performance differences among groups compared with horizontal knot displacement. This board and its novel metrics may promote the development of robust knot tying skill by residents.Objective There is growing evidence supporting the benefits of preferred music on task performance, however there is a paucity of data regarding the potential impact on surgical and procedural learners. This study aims to assess the effects of nonpreferred music on surgical and procedural learners. Design This was a single-blinded, randomized crossover trial in which each participant completed a survey regarding their demographic information and music preferences. Each participant then completed 3 training tasks, and 2 repetitions of the evaluative task while listen to music. Tasks were completed using a Da Vinci Skills Simulator Si. Setting All tasks were completed in a live operating room at the University of Kansas Hospital, a tertiary care center. Participants Medical students at the University of Kansas Medical Center were recruited by email to participate. In total, 31 medical students completed the experience. Results Thirty-one participants participated in this study. Group 2 (preferred music first, nonpreferred music second) showed no significant change in their test scores (72.73 vs 74.33, p = 0.34). However, Group 1 (nonpreferred music first, then preferred music) showed significant improvement between trial runs (70.31 vs 81.88, p less then 0.001). There was no significant difference between the initial runs for each group. When analyzed irrespective of group assignment, there was a significant increase in scores for preferred music vs nonpreferred music (77.45 vs 72.26 p = 0.025). Conclusions Participants showed expected improvement with task repetition. This improvement may have been offset by exposure to nonpreferred music during repeat runs. Our findings suggest that the impact of music was nearly as large as the impact of prior exposure to the task. This may have implications for environmental conditions during resident procedural training, especially early in residency training when new tasks are being introduced and the skill level of the learner is still low.Purpose Initial work on the validity evidence used to support the Fundamentals of Endoscopic Surgery (FES) performance exam as a measure of technical competency showed a strong relationship to clinical experience. Despite this evidence, there is a perception among some program directors that the exam cannot be successfully passed without practice on a simulator. https://www.selleckchem.com/products/jnj-64619178.html We assess the validity of this perception. Methods Deidentified data from the initial FES skills examination (prior to the 2014 FEC requirement) was reviewed, and 335 unique participants with reported simulation experience demographics were identified. Self reported data analyzed included gender, total clinical endoscopy procedure experience (1-150, 151-300, >300), and endoscopy simulator training hours (0, 1-5, 6-10, 11-20, >20). Final FES skills exam scores, and pass/fail designations for each participant were reported by the FES program staff. Continuous variables were compared between groups using one-way analysis of variance with post-hoc analysirnible predictor of passing, even when controlling for SE (odds ratio = 2, 95% confidence interval 1.4-2.9, p less then 0.001). Conclusions FES skills examination data collected on participants completing the examination before the FEC requirement shows no demonstrable relationship with self-reported training experience on a simulator but confirms a strong relationship with clinical endoscopy experience. This lends further evidence to the validity of the FES exam as a marker of clinical endoscopic skill.Title Variable experience in microsurgery and flap-based procedures among Canadian plastic surgery residents. Objective Plastic surgery residencies are transitioning toward a competency-based education model. It is not known whether trainees can realistically achieve proficiency in microsurgical techniques during their training. This study aims to define the operative experience in the core microsurgical flap procedures among Canadian plastic surgery residents. Design Microsurgical core procedural competencies (CPCs) have been described. A retrospective review was conducted, evaluating case logs recorded by graduating plastic surgery residents at 10 Canadian English-speaking training programs between 2004 and 2014. Perceived role and competence scores were also collected and analyzed. Setting University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada; University of British Columbia, Vancouver, **, Canada. Results Among 27 microsurgical CPCs, 2082 procedures were logged and each resident performed an average of 37.9 (±21.7) procedures.
ini-breaks and refreshers during major procedures.Objectives Knot tying is a fundamental surgical skill. Existing knot tying models assess tying efficiency and errors but do not address respect for tissue. Development of a model that assesses tissue displacement during knot tying may provide a good surrogate for respect for tissue, allow detection of expertise, and offer an improved training platform for skill acquisition. This study aimed to develop a novel, low-cost, knot tying board (KTB) that collects objective, automated metrics of knot displacement, and assesses knot displacement by level of surgical expertise. Design The novel KTB was developed in collaboration between engineering students and surgical educators. Joystick potentiometers were incorporated on 2 parallel rubber tubes to measure vertical and horizontal displacement while tying. Participants used a standardized technique to tie 1- and 2-handed knots. Differences in time and tubing displacement were compared among junior residents (postgraduate year 1-2), senior residents (postgraduate year 3-5), and attending surgeons; p less then 0.05 was considered statistically significant. Setting This study was conducted at the Indiana University Surgical Skills Center in Indianapolis, IN. Participants Forty-seven residents and faculty participated in the study (26 juniors, 14 seniors, 7 attendings). Results KTB development required 100 hours and $70.00. The attending surgeons tied 2-handed knots faster and with significantly more vertical tubing displacement than residents. Senior residents tied knots significantly faster but with similar tubing displacement as juniors. Similar trends were found for 1-handed knots. Conclusions A novel, low-cost KTB was developed to measure knot displacement as a surrogate for tissue handling. The new performance metric of vertical knot displacement proved more sensitive in detecting performance differences among groups compared with horizontal knot displacement. This board and its novel metrics may promote the development of robust knot tying skill by residents.Objective There is growing evidence supporting the benefits of preferred music on task performance, however there is a paucity of data regarding the potential impact on surgical and procedural learners. This study aims to assess the effects of nonpreferred music on surgical and procedural learners. Design This was a single-blinded, randomized crossover trial in which each participant completed a survey regarding their demographic information and music preferences. Each participant then completed 3 training tasks, and 2 repetitions of the evaluative task while listen to music. Tasks were completed using a Da Vinci Skills Simulator Si. Setting All tasks were completed in a live operating room at the University of Kansas Hospital, a tertiary care center. Participants Medical students at the University of Kansas Medical Center were recruited by email to participate. In total, 31 medical students completed the experience. Results Thirty-one participants participated in this study. Group 2 (preferred music first, nonpreferred music second) showed no significant change in their test scores (72.73 vs 74.33, p = 0.34). However, Group 1 (nonpreferred music first, then preferred music) showed significant improvement between trial runs (70.31 vs 81.88, p less then 0.001). There was no significant difference between the initial runs for each group. When analyzed irrespective of group assignment, there was a significant increase in scores for preferred music vs nonpreferred music (77.45 vs 72.26 p = 0.025). Conclusions Participants showed expected improvement with task repetition. This improvement may have been offset by exposure to nonpreferred music during repeat runs. Our findings suggest that the impact of music was nearly as large as the impact of prior exposure to the task. This may have implications for environmental conditions during resident procedural training, especially early in residency training when new tasks are being introduced and the skill level of the learner is still low.Purpose Initial work on the validity evidence used to support the Fundamentals of Endoscopic Surgery (FES) performance exam as a measure of technical competency showed a strong relationship to clinical experience. Despite this evidence, there is a perception among some program directors that the exam cannot be successfully passed without practice on a simulator. https://www.selleckchem.com/products/jnj-64619178.html We assess the validity of this perception. Methods Deidentified data from the initial FES skills examination (prior to the 2014 FEC requirement) was reviewed, and 335 unique participants with reported simulation experience demographics were identified. Self reported data analyzed included gender, total clinical endoscopy procedure experience (1-150, 151-300, >300), and endoscopy simulator training hours (0, 1-5, 6-10, 11-20, >20). Final FES skills exam scores, and pass/fail designations for each participant were reported by the FES program staff. Continuous variables were compared between groups using one-way analysis of variance with post-hoc analysirnible predictor of passing, even when controlling for SE (odds ratio = 2, 95% confidence interval 1.4-2.9, p less then 0.001). Conclusions FES skills examination data collected on participants completing the examination before the FEC requirement shows no demonstrable relationship with self-reported training experience on a simulator but confirms a strong relationship with clinical endoscopy experience. This lends further evidence to the validity of the FES exam as a marker of clinical endoscopic skill.Title Variable experience in microsurgery and flap-based procedures among Canadian plastic surgery residents. Objective Plastic surgery residencies are transitioning toward a competency-based education model. It is not known whether trainees can realistically achieve proficiency in microsurgical techniques during their training. This study aims to define the operative experience in the core microsurgical flap procedures among Canadian plastic surgery residents. Design Microsurgical core procedural competencies (CPCs) have been described. A retrospective review was conducted, evaluating case logs recorded by graduating plastic surgery residents at 10 Canadian English-speaking training programs between 2004 and 2014. Perceived role and competence scores were also collected and analyzed. Setting University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada; University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada. Results Among 27 microsurgical CPCs, 2082 procedures were logged and each resident performed an average of 37.9 (±21.7) procedures.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 25 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen -
Rationale, aims and objectives Three-dimensional (3D) medical images are shown to patients during clinical consultations about certain health conditions. However, little is known about patients' experience of viewing them. The aim of this qualitative study was to explore the impact of sharing 3D medical images with patients during a clinical consultation about hip surgery, from the perspective of patients, health care professionals, and lay representatives. Method Interviews were conducted with 14 patients who were shown their own 3D medical images during their clinical consultation and four health care professionals conducting consultations within one orthopaedic outpatient clinic. In addition to interviews, 31 lay representatives participated in six focus groups. The focus groups aimed to gain a broader understanding of the advantages and concerns of showing patients their medical images and to compare 3D and two-dimensional (2D) medical images. Interviews and focus groups were audio-recorded, transcribed verbatim, and analysed using thematic analysis. Results Three themes were developed from the data (a) the truthful image, (b) the empowering image, and (c) the unhelpful image. Focus group participants' preference for 3D or 2D images varied between conditions and groups, suggesting that the experience of viewing images may differ between individuals and conditions. Conclusions When shown to patients during an orthopaedic clinical consultation, 3D medical images may be an empowering resource. However, in this study, patients and focus group participants perceived medical images as factual and believed they could provide evidence of a diagnoses. This perception could result in overreliance in imaging tests or disregard for other forms of information.Guideline authors, researchers and pharmaceutical companies may find it helpful to have access to information about the use of the Dermatology Life Quality Index (DLQI) in national and international guidelines and disease registries. In 2008 we identified only two countries using the DLQI in national guidelines or registries, the UK and Sweden1 .This number has since greatly increased, influenced by the Rule of Tens concept2 , a simple way to define current psoriasis disease severity.A supramolecular/synthetic method has been devised to affix a sterically hindered substituent onto a fullerene guest encapsulated in a tubular host. A two-wheeled complex of (C59 N)-(C59 N) with a tubular host was oxidatively bisected to afford a C59 N+ cation captured in the tube. The C59 N+ cation in the tube was then trapped by ethanol or water, which led to an oxy substituent pinned on the guest. The guest motions within the tube were modulated by the pinned substituent, and up-and-down flipping motions were halted by an ethoxy substituent. A hydroxy substituent, however, was ineffective in halting the flipping motions, despite the tight-fitting relationship between the tubular host and the spherical guest. Theoretical calculations of the dynamics revealed that the flipping motions were assisted by OH-π hydrogen bonds between the guest and the carbon-rich wall and that sliding motions of the OH group were also facilitated by deformations of the tube.The ethanolic extracts of many plants have been used in alternative medicine. The present study aimed at evaluating the antioxidant, cytotoxicity, and anticancer potential of cactus and lupin ethanolic extracts compared to utoral drug (UT) on the colon Caco-2 cancer cell line. Bioactive components, cytotoxicity of Caco-2 cell cycle, and gene regulation of apoptosis genes were studied by HPLC, flow cytometer, and RT-PCR, respectively. Lupin extract (LE) contained high bioactive components and antioxidant potential. The predominant phenol, flavonoid, and sterol in LE were rosmarinic acid (2,004.8 μg/ml), quercetin (9,912 µg/g), and ergosterol (2.77 µg/g). LE and its mixture with utoral showed high cytotoxicity and effective potential in regulation of gene expression of proapoptotic and antiapoptotic genes in Caco-2 cells. In conclusion, LE and cactus extract (CE) could be considered as natural preparations with high anticancer properties against Caco-2 cells. LE had the highest anticancer potential among the tested preparations. PRACTICAL APPLICATIONS The study demonstrated that lupine and cactus extracts have high potential as anticancer substances. These natural extracts can be used to prepare therapeutic mixtures or foods.Triple-stranded helicates were obtained by metal-templated multicomponent reactions of bispyridyloxime ligands with arylboronic acids. The helicates feature two hexa-coordinated MII ions (M=Fe, Zn, or Mn), which are embedded in a macrobicyclic ligand framework, and two arylboronate ester capping groups. The latter can be used to introduce functional groups such as pyridines, aldehydes, nitriles, and carboxylic acids in apical position. The functionalized helicates have the potential to be used as nanoscale building blocks for more complex assemblies, as evidenced by the synthesis of a 3 nm-sized trianglimine.Pain is common and refractory in spinal cord injury (SCI). Currently, most studies evaluated pain in male-predominant traumatic-SCI. Also, concomitant secondary pain syndromes and its temporal evolution were seldom reported. We aimed to prospectively describe the main and secondary pain and its associated factors in inflammatory-SCI evaluating neuromyelitis optica (NMO) patients. In-remission NMO patients underwent neurological, imaging and autoantibody evaluations. Questionnaires detailing main and secondary pains, functional state, mood, catastrophising, quality of life (QoL) and "non-motor symptoms" were used at two time points. Pain was present in 53(73.6%) of the 72 patients included. At-level neuropathic pain was the most common main pain syndrome, affecting 32 subjects (60.4% of those with pain). Over 70% (n=38) of this cohort reported two pain syndromes. https://www.selleckchem.com/products/terephthalic-acid.html Those without pain were significantly younger (26.1±12.7 y.o. in those without pain and 40.1±12.5, 37.2±11.4 y.o. in those whose main pain was neuropathic and non-neuropathic, respectively, p=0.001), and no differences in the inflammatory status were observed between groups. On follow-up, one-fifth (n=11) had a different main pain syndrome from the first visit. Pain impacted QoL as **** as disability and motor strength. Pain is a prevalent and disabling non-motor symptom in NMO-SCI. Most patients experience more than one pain syndrome which can change in time even in the absence of clinical relapse. Age of the inflammatory-SCI was a major determinant of pain. Acknowledging temporal changes and multiplicity of pain syndromes in NMO-SCI may give insights into more precise designs of clinical trials and general management of pain in SCI.
Rationale, aims and objectives Three-dimensional (3D) medical images are shown to patients during clinical consultations about certain health conditions. However, little is known about patients' experience of viewing them. The aim of this qualitative study was to explore the impact of sharing 3D medical images with patients during a clinical consultation about hip surgery, from the perspective of patients, health care professionals, and lay representatives. Method Interviews were conducted with 14 patients who were shown their own 3D medical images during their clinical consultation and four health care professionals conducting consultations within one orthopaedic outpatient clinic. In addition to interviews, 31 lay representatives participated in six focus groups. The focus groups aimed to gain a broader understanding of the advantages and concerns of showing patients their medical images and to compare 3D and two-dimensional (2D) medical images. Interviews and focus groups were audio-recorded, transcribed verbatim, and analysed using thematic analysis. Results Three themes were developed from the data (a) the truthful image, (b) the empowering image, and (c) the unhelpful image. Focus group participants' preference for 3D or 2D images varied between conditions and groups, suggesting that the experience of viewing images may differ between individuals and conditions. Conclusions When shown to patients during an orthopaedic clinical consultation, 3D medical images may be an empowering resource. However, in this study, patients and focus group participants perceived medical images as factual and believed they could provide evidence of a diagnoses. This perception could result in overreliance in imaging tests or disregard for other forms of information.Guideline authors, researchers and pharmaceutical companies may find it helpful to have access to information about the use of the Dermatology Life Quality Index (DLQI) in national and international guidelines and disease registries. In 2008 we identified only two countries using the DLQI in national guidelines or registries, the UK and Sweden1 .This number has since greatly increased, influenced by the Rule of Tens concept2 , a simple way to define current psoriasis disease severity.A supramolecular/synthetic method has been devised to affix a sterically hindered substituent onto a fullerene guest encapsulated in a tubular host. A two-wheeled complex of (C59 N)-(C59 N) with a tubular host was oxidatively bisected to afford a C59 N+ cation captured in the tube. The C59 N+ cation in the tube was then trapped by ethanol or water, which led to an oxy substituent pinned on the guest. The guest motions within the tube were modulated by the pinned substituent, and up-and-down flipping motions were halted by an ethoxy substituent. A hydroxy substituent, however, was ineffective in halting the flipping motions, despite the tight-fitting relationship between the tubular host and the spherical guest. Theoretical calculations of the dynamics revealed that the flipping motions were assisted by OH-π hydrogen bonds between the guest and the carbon-rich wall and that sliding motions of the OH group were also facilitated by deformations of the tube.The ethanolic extracts of many plants have been used in alternative medicine. The present study aimed at evaluating the antioxidant, cytotoxicity, and anticancer potential of cactus and lupin ethanolic extracts compared to utoral drug (UT) on the colon Caco-2 cancer cell line. Bioactive components, cytotoxicity of Caco-2 cell cycle, and gene regulation of apoptosis genes were studied by HPLC, flow cytometer, and RT-PCR, respectively. Lupin extract (LE) contained high bioactive components and antioxidant potential. The predominant phenol, flavonoid, and sterol in LE were rosmarinic acid (2,004.8 μg/ml), quercetin (9,912 µg/g), and ergosterol (2.77 µg/g). LE and its mixture with utoral showed high cytotoxicity and effective potential in regulation of gene expression of proapoptotic and antiapoptotic genes in Caco-2 cells. In conclusion, LE and cactus extract (CE) could be considered as natural preparations with high anticancer properties against Caco-2 cells. LE had the highest anticancer potential among the tested preparations. PRACTICAL APPLICATIONS The study demonstrated that lupine and cactus extracts have high potential as anticancer substances. These natural extracts can be used to prepare therapeutic mixtures or foods.Triple-stranded helicates were obtained by metal-templated multicomponent reactions of bispyridyloxime ligands with arylboronic acids. The helicates feature two hexa-coordinated MII ions (M=Fe, Zn, or Mn), which are embedded in a macrobicyclic ligand framework, and two arylboronate ester capping groups. The latter can be used to introduce functional groups such as pyridines, aldehydes, nitriles, and carboxylic acids in apical position. The functionalized helicates have the potential to be used as nanoscale building blocks for more complex assemblies, as evidenced by the synthesis of a 3 nm-sized trianglimine.Pain is common and refractory in spinal cord injury (SCI). Currently, most studies evaluated pain in male-predominant traumatic-SCI. Also, concomitant secondary pain syndromes and its temporal evolution were seldom reported. We aimed to prospectively describe the main and secondary pain and its associated factors in inflammatory-SCI evaluating neuromyelitis optica (NMO) patients. In-remission NMO patients underwent neurological, imaging and autoantibody evaluations. Questionnaires detailing main and secondary pains, functional state, mood, catastrophising, quality of life (QoL) and "non-motor symptoms" were used at two time points. Pain was present in 53(73.6%) of the 72 patients included. At-level neuropathic pain was the most common main pain syndrome, affecting 32 subjects (60.4% of those with pain). Over 70% (n=38) of this cohort reported two pain syndromes. https://www.selleckchem.com/products/terephthalic-acid.html Those without pain were significantly younger (26.1±12.7 y.o. in those without pain and 40.1±12.5, 37.2±11.4 y.o. in those whose main pain was neuropathic and non-neuropathic, respectively, p=0.001), and no differences in the inflammatory status were observed between groups. On follow-up, one-fifth (n=11) had a different main pain syndrome from the first visit. Pain impacted QoL as much as disability and motor strength. Pain is a prevalent and disabling non-motor symptom in NMO-SCI. Most patients experience more than one pain syndrome which can change in time even in the absence of clinical relapse. Age of the inflammatory-SCI was a major determinant of pain. Acknowledging temporal changes and multiplicity of pain syndromes in NMO-SCI may give insights into more precise designs of clinical trials and general management of pain in SCI.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 15 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen -
Aims Type 1 diabetes (T1D) is a chronic autoimmune disease leading to progressive loss of pancreatic beta cells. Interferon (IFN)-α plays a critical role in the crosstalk between pancreatic beta cells and the immune system in early insulitis. In human beta cells IFNα signals through JAK1 and TYK2, leading to endoplasmic reticulum stress, inflammation and HLA class I overexpression. IFNα, acting synergistically with IL-1β, induces apoptosis. Polymorphisms in TYK2 that decrease its activity are associated with protection against T1D, and we hypothesized that pharmacological inhibitors that specifically target TYK2 could protect human beta cells against the deleterious effects of IFNα. Materials and methods Two TYK2 inhibitors provided by Nimbus Lakshmi Inc, were tested in human insulin-producing EndoC-βH1 cells and human islets to evaluate their effect on IFNα signaling, beta cell function and susceptibility to viral infection using RT-qPCR, western blot, immunofluorescence, ELISA and nuclear dyes. Results The two TYK2 inhibitors tested prevented IFNα-induced human beta cell gene expression in a dose-dependent manner. They also protected human islets against IFNα+IL-1β-induced apoptosis. Importantly, these inhibitors did not modify beta cell function or their survival following infection with the potential diabetogenic coxsackievirus CVB1 and CVB5. Conclusions The two TYK2 inhibitors tested inhibit the IFNα signaling pathway in human beta cells, decreasing its pro-inflammatory and pro-apoptotic effects without sensitizing the cells to viral infection. The pre-clinical findings could pave the way for future clinical trials with TYK2 inhibitors for the prevention and treatment of T1D. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.Chiral aromatic alcohols have received **** attention due to their widespread use in pharmaceutical industries. In the asymmetric synthesis processes, the excellent performance of alcohol dehydrogenase makes it a good choice for biocatalysts. In this study, a novel and robust medium-chain alcohol dehydrogenase RhADH from Rhodococcus R6 was discovered and used to catalyse the asymmetric reduction of aromatic ketones to chiral aromatic alcohols. The reduction of 2-hydroxyacetophenone (2-HAP) to (R)-(-)-1-phenyl-1,2-ethanediol ((R)-PED) was chosen as a template to evaluate its catalytic activity. A specific activity of 110 U mg-1 and a 99% purity of e.e. was achieved in the presence of NADH. An efficient bienzyme-coupled catalytic system (RhADH and formate dehydrogenase, CpFDH) was established using a two-phase strategy (dibutyl phthalate and buffer), which highly raised the tolerated substrate concentration (60 g l-1 ). Besides, a broad range of aromatic ketones were enantioselectively reduced to the corresponding chiral alcohols by this enzyme system with highly enantioselectivity. This system is of the potential to be applied at a commercial scale.Aims Sex differences in associations between several risk factors and myocardial infarction (MI), including diabetes, have been found in general populations. Whether similar differences are observed in patients with diabetes is unknown. Materials and methods 11,065 (42% women) participants with type 2 diabetes in the ADVANCE trial and its post-trial follow-up study, ADVANCE-ON, were included. Cox regression models were used to estimate hazard ratios (HRs) for associations between risk factors and MI (fatal and non-fatal) by sex, and the women-to-men ratio of HRs (RHR). Results Over a median of 9.6 years of follow-up, 719 patients experienced MI. Smoking status, smoking intensity, higher systolic blood pressure (SBP), HbA1c , total and LDL cholesterol, duration of diabetes, triglycerides and BMI and lower HDL cholesterol were associated with an increased risk of MI in both sexes. Furthermore, some variables were associated with a greater relative risk of MI in women than men RHRs were 1.75 (95% CI 1.05-2.91) for current smoking, 1.53 (1.00-2.32) for former smoking, 1.18 (1.02-1.37) for SBP, and 1.13 (95% CI, 1.003-1.26) for duration of diabetes. Although incidence rates of MI were higher in men (9.3 per 1,000 person-years) compared with women (5.8 per 1,000 person-years), rate differences associated with risk factors were greater in women than men, except for HDL cholesterol and BMI. https://www.selleckchem.com/products/otx015.html Conclusions In patients with type 2 diabetes, smoking, higher SBP and longer duration of diabetes had a greater relative and absolute effect in women than men, highlighting the importance of routine sex-specific approaches and early interventions in women with diabetes. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.Experiments have revealed **** about top-down and bottom-up control in ecosystems, but manipulative experiments are limited in spatial and temporal scale. To obtain a more nuanced understanding of trophic control over large scales, we explored long-term time-series data from 13 globally distributed lakes and used empirical dynamic modelling to quantify interaction strengths between zooplankton and phytoplankton over time within and across lakes. Across all lakes, top-down effects were associated with nutrients, switching from negative in mesotrophic lakes to positive in oligotrophic lakes. This result suggests that zooplankton nutrient recycling exceeds grazing pressure in nutrient-limited systems. Within individual lakes, results were consistent with a 'seasonal reset' hypothesis in which top-down and bottom-up interactions varied seasonally and were both strongest at the beginning of the growing season. Thus, trophic control is not static, but varies with abiotic conditions - dynamics that only become evident when observing changes over large spatial and temporal scales.Objectives To describe the characteristics of fibromyalgia among Nigerian patients and assess the sensitivities of the American College of Rheumatology (ACR) criteria of 1990, 2010, 2011, and 2016 for making the diagnosis of fibromyalgia. Methods Consecutive patients diagnosed clinically with fibromyalgia by a rheumatologist were assessed. ACR criteria for fibromyalgia of 1990, 2010, 2011, and 2016 were applied to each patient. Polysymptomatic distress scores (PSD) were calculated from the Widespread Pain Index and Symptom Severity Scores. Sleep was assessed using the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index; fatigue by the Fatigue Severity Scale and the severity of fibromyalgia was determined using the Revised Fibromyalgia Impact Questionnaire (FIQR). Results A total of 660 new patients were seen out of which a diagnosis of fibromyalgia was made in 114 (17.3%). The mean age of the patients was 44.6 ± 15.6 years and females accounted for 84.2%. Twenty-one (18.4%) patients had changed or quit their jobs due to fibromyalgia.
Aims Type 1 diabetes (T1D) is a chronic autoimmune disease leading to progressive loss of pancreatic beta cells. Interferon (IFN)-α plays a critical role in the crosstalk between pancreatic beta cells and the immune system in early insulitis. In human beta cells IFNα signals through JAK1 and TYK2, leading to endoplasmic reticulum stress, inflammation and HLA class I overexpression. IFNα, acting synergistically with IL-1β, induces apoptosis. Polymorphisms in TYK2 that decrease its activity are associated with protection against T1D, and we hypothesized that pharmacological inhibitors that specifically target TYK2 could protect human beta cells against the deleterious effects of IFNα. Materials and methods Two TYK2 inhibitors provided by Nimbus Lakshmi Inc, were tested in human insulin-producing EndoC-βH1 cells and human islets to evaluate their effect on IFNα signaling, beta cell function and susceptibility to viral infection using RT-qPCR, western blot, immunofluorescence, ELISA and nuclear dyes. Results The two TYK2 inhibitors tested prevented IFNα-induced human beta cell gene expression in a dose-dependent manner. They also protected human islets against IFNα+IL-1β-induced apoptosis. Importantly, these inhibitors did not modify beta cell function or their survival following infection with the potential diabetogenic coxsackievirus CVB1 and CVB5. Conclusions The two TYK2 inhibitors tested inhibit the IFNα signaling pathway in human beta cells, decreasing its pro-inflammatory and pro-apoptotic effects without sensitizing the cells to viral infection. The pre-clinical findings could pave the way for future clinical trials with TYK2 inhibitors for the prevention and treatment of T1D. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.Chiral aromatic alcohols have received much attention due to their widespread use in pharmaceutical industries. In the asymmetric synthesis processes, the excellent performance of alcohol dehydrogenase makes it a good choice for biocatalysts. In this study, a novel and robust medium-chain alcohol dehydrogenase RhADH from Rhodococcus R6 was discovered and used to catalyse the asymmetric reduction of aromatic ketones to chiral aromatic alcohols. The reduction of 2-hydroxyacetophenone (2-HAP) to (R)-(-)-1-phenyl-1,2-ethanediol ((R)-PED) was chosen as a template to evaluate its catalytic activity. A specific activity of 110 U mg-1 and a 99% purity of e.e. was achieved in the presence of NADH. An efficient bienzyme-coupled catalytic system (RhADH and formate dehydrogenase, CpFDH) was established using a two-phase strategy (dibutyl phthalate and buffer), which highly raised the tolerated substrate concentration (60 g l-1 ). Besides, a broad range of aromatic ketones were enantioselectively reduced to the corresponding chiral alcohols by this enzyme system with highly enantioselectivity. This system is of the potential to be applied at a commercial scale.Aims Sex differences in associations between several risk factors and myocardial infarction (MI), including diabetes, have been found in general populations. Whether similar differences are observed in patients with diabetes is unknown. Materials and methods 11,065 (42% women) participants with type 2 diabetes in the ADVANCE trial and its post-trial follow-up study, ADVANCE-ON, were included. Cox regression models were used to estimate hazard ratios (HRs) for associations between risk factors and MI (fatal and non-fatal) by sex, and the women-to-men ratio of HRs (RHR). Results Over a median of 9.6 years of follow-up, 719 patients experienced MI. Smoking status, smoking intensity, higher systolic blood pressure (SBP), HbA1c , total and LDL cholesterol, duration of diabetes, triglycerides and BMI and lower HDL cholesterol were associated with an increased risk of MI in both sexes. Furthermore, some variables were associated with a greater relative risk of MI in women than men RHRs were 1.75 (95% CI 1.05-2.91) for current smoking, 1.53 (1.00-2.32) for former smoking, 1.18 (1.02-1.37) for SBP, and 1.13 (95% CI, 1.003-1.26) for duration of diabetes. Although incidence rates of MI were higher in men (9.3 per 1,000 person-years) compared with women (5.8 per 1,000 person-years), rate differences associated with risk factors were greater in women than men, except for HDL cholesterol and BMI. https://www.selleckchem.com/products/otx015.html Conclusions In patients with type 2 diabetes, smoking, higher SBP and longer duration of diabetes had a greater relative and absolute effect in women than men, highlighting the importance of routine sex-specific approaches and early interventions in women with diabetes. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.Experiments have revealed much about top-down and bottom-up control in ecosystems, but manipulative experiments are limited in spatial and temporal scale. To obtain a more nuanced understanding of trophic control over large scales, we explored long-term time-series data from 13 globally distributed lakes and used empirical dynamic modelling to quantify interaction strengths between zooplankton and phytoplankton over time within and across lakes. Across all lakes, top-down effects were associated with nutrients, switching from negative in mesotrophic lakes to positive in oligotrophic lakes. This result suggests that zooplankton nutrient recycling exceeds grazing pressure in nutrient-limited systems. Within individual lakes, results were consistent with a 'seasonal reset' hypothesis in which top-down and bottom-up interactions varied seasonally and were both strongest at the beginning of the growing season. Thus, trophic control is not static, but varies with abiotic conditions - dynamics that only become evident when observing changes over large spatial and temporal scales.Objectives To describe the characteristics of fibromyalgia among Nigerian patients and assess the sensitivities of the American College of Rheumatology (ACR) criteria of 1990, 2010, 2011, and 2016 for making the diagnosis of fibromyalgia. Methods Consecutive patients diagnosed clinically with fibromyalgia by a rheumatologist were assessed. ACR criteria for fibromyalgia of 1990, 2010, 2011, and 2016 were applied to each patient. Polysymptomatic distress scores (PSD) were calculated from the Widespread Pain Index and Symptom Severity Scores. Sleep was assessed using the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index; fatigue by the Fatigue Severity Scale and the severity of fibromyalgia was determined using the Revised Fibromyalgia Impact Questionnaire (FIQR). Results A total of 660 new patients were seen out of which a diagnosis of fibromyalgia was made in 114 (17.3%). The mean age of the patients was 44.6 ± 15.6 years and females accounted for 84.2%. Twenty-one (18.4%) patients had changed or quit their jobs due to fibromyalgia.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 25 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen -
Furthermore, LINC00641 could bind to miR-497-5p and reduce its expression, but indirectly increase the BDNF expression, which was considered as a protective factor in neural injury and activated TrkB/PI3K/Akt pathway.
Collectively, LINC00641/miR-497-5p/BDNF axis was validated to be an important signaling pathway in modulating ketamine-induced neural injury.
Collectively, LINC00641/miR-497-5p/BDNF axis was validated to be an important signaling pathway in modulating ketamine-induced neural injury.Shortage of oxygen and nutrients in the brain induces the release of glutamate and ATP that can cause excitotoxicity and contribute to neuronal and glial damage. Our understanding of the mechanisms of ATP release and toxicity in cerebrovascular diseases is incomplete. This review aims at summarizing current knowledge about the participation of key elements in the ATP-mediated deleterious effects in these pathologies. This includes pannexin-1 hemichannels, calcium homeostasis modulator-1 (CALHM1), purinergic P2X7 receptors, and other intermediaries of CNS injury downstream of ATP release. Available data together with recent pharmacological developments in purinergic signaling may constitute a new opportunity to translate preclinical findings into more effective therapies in cerebrovascular diseases.Parkinson's disease (PD) is a common neurodegenerative disease in the elderly with a pathogenesis that remains unclear. We aimed to explore its pathogenesis through plasma integrated metabolomics and proteomics analysis. The clinical data of consecutively recruited PD patients and healthy controls were assessed. Fasting plasma samples were obtained and analyzed using metabolomics and proteomics methods. After that, differentially expressed metabolites and proteins were identified for further bioinformatics analysis. No significant difference was found in the clinical data between these two groups. Eighty-three metabolites were differentially expressed in PD patients identified by metabolomics analysis. These metabolites were predominately lipid and lipid-like molecules (63%), among which 25% were sphingolipids. The sphingolipid metabolism pathway was enriched and tended to be activated in the following KEGG pathway analysis. According to the proteomics analysis, forty proteins were identified to be differentially expressed, seven of which were apolipoproteins. Furthermore, five of the six top ranking Gene Ontology terms from cellular components and eleven of the other fourteen Gene Ontology terms from biological processes were directly associated with lipid metabolism. In KEGG pathway analysis, the five enriched pathways were also significantly related with lipid metabolism (p less then 0.05). Overall, Parkinson's disease is associated with plasma lipid metabolic disturbance, including an activated sphingolipid metabolism and decreased apolipoproteins.Alzheimer's disease (AD) is the major cause of dementia, characterized by the presence of amyloid-beta plaques and neurofibrillary tau tangles. https://www.selleckchem.com/products/sn-001.html Plaques and tangles are associated with sleep-wake cycle disruptions, including the disruptions in non-rapid eye movement (NREM) slow wave sleep (SWS). Alzheimer's patients spend less time in NREM sleep and exhibit decreased slow wave activity (SWA). Consistent with the critical role of SWS in memory consolidation, reduced SWA is associated with impaired memory consolidation in AD patients. The aberrant SWA can be modeled in transgenic mouse models of amyloidosis and tauopathy. Animal models exhibited slow wave impairments early in the disease progression, prior to the deposition of amyloid-beta plaques, however, in the presence of abundant oligomeric amyloid-beta. Optogenetic rescue of SWA successfully halted the amyloid accumulation and restored intraneuronal calcium levels in ****. On the other hand, optogenetic acceleration of slow wave frequency exacerbated amyloid deposition and disrupted neuronal calcium homeostasis. In this review, we summarize the evidence and the mechanisms underlying the existence of a positive feedback loop between amyloid/tau pathology and SWA disruptions that lead to further accumulations of amyloid and tau in AD. Moreover, since SWA disruptions occur prior to the plaque deposition, SWA disruptions may provide an early biomarker for AD. Finally, we propose that therapeutic targeting of SWA in AD might lead to an effective treatment for Alzheimer's patients.Resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging (rs-fMRI) is an immensely powerful method in neuroscience that uses the blood oxygenation level-dependent (BOLD) signal to record and analyze neural activity in the brain. We examined the complexity of brain activity acquired by rs-fMRI to determine whether it exhibits variation across brain regions. In this study the complexity of regional brain activity was analyzed by calculating the sample entropy of 200 whole-brain BOLD volumes as well as of distinct brain networks, cortical regions, and subcortical regions of these brain volumes. It can be seen that different brain regions and networks exhibit distinctly different levels of entropy/complexity, and that entropy in the brain significantly differs between brains at rest and during task performance.Sensory loss involves irreversible behavioral and neural changes. Paradigms of short-term limb immobilization mimic deprivation of proprioceptive inputs and motor commands, which occur after the loss of limb use. While several studies have shown that short-term immobilization induced motor control impairments, the origin of such modifications is an open question. A Fitts' pointing task was conducted, and kinematic analyses were performed to assess whether the feedforward and/or feedback processes of motor control were impacted. The Fitts' pointing task specifically required dealing with spatial and temporal aspects (speed-accuracy trade-off) to be as fast and as accurate as possible. Forty trials were performed on two consecutive days by Control and Immobilized participants who wore a splint on the right arm during this 24 h period. The immobilization modified the motor control in a way that the full spatiotemporal structure of the pointing movements differed A global slowdown appeared. The acceleration and deceleration phases were both longer, suggesting that immobilization impacted both the early impulse phase based on sensorimotor expectations and the later online correction phase based on feedback use.
Furthermore, LINC00641 could bind to miR-497-5p and reduce its expression, but indirectly increase the BDNF expression, which was considered as a protective factor in neural injury and activated TrkB/PI3K/Akt pathway. Collectively, LINC00641/miR-497-5p/BDNF axis was validated to be an important signaling pathway in modulating ketamine-induced neural injury. Collectively, LINC00641/miR-497-5p/BDNF axis was validated to be an important signaling pathway in modulating ketamine-induced neural injury.Shortage of oxygen and nutrients in the brain induces the release of glutamate and ATP that can cause excitotoxicity and contribute to neuronal and glial damage. Our understanding of the mechanisms of ATP release and toxicity in cerebrovascular diseases is incomplete. This review aims at summarizing current knowledge about the participation of key elements in the ATP-mediated deleterious effects in these pathologies. This includes pannexin-1 hemichannels, calcium homeostasis modulator-1 (CALHM1), purinergic P2X7 receptors, and other intermediaries of CNS injury downstream of ATP release. Available data together with recent pharmacological developments in purinergic signaling may constitute a new opportunity to translate preclinical findings into more effective therapies in cerebrovascular diseases.Parkinson's disease (PD) is a common neurodegenerative disease in the elderly with a pathogenesis that remains unclear. We aimed to explore its pathogenesis through plasma integrated metabolomics and proteomics analysis. The clinical data of consecutively recruited PD patients and healthy controls were assessed. Fasting plasma samples were obtained and analyzed using metabolomics and proteomics methods. After that, differentially expressed metabolites and proteins were identified for further bioinformatics analysis. No significant difference was found in the clinical data between these two groups. Eighty-three metabolites were differentially expressed in PD patients identified by metabolomics analysis. These metabolites were predominately lipid and lipid-like molecules (63%), among which 25% were sphingolipids. The sphingolipid metabolism pathway was enriched and tended to be activated in the following KEGG pathway analysis. According to the proteomics analysis, forty proteins were identified to be differentially expressed, seven of which were apolipoproteins. Furthermore, five of the six top ranking Gene Ontology terms from cellular components and eleven of the other fourteen Gene Ontology terms from biological processes were directly associated with lipid metabolism. In KEGG pathway analysis, the five enriched pathways were also significantly related with lipid metabolism (p less then 0.05). Overall, Parkinson's disease is associated with plasma lipid metabolic disturbance, including an activated sphingolipid metabolism and decreased apolipoproteins.Alzheimer's disease (AD) is the major cause of dementia, characterized by the presence of amyloid-beta plaques and neurofibrillary tau tangles. https://www.selleckchem.com/products/sn-001.html Plaques and tangles are associated with sleep-wake cycle disruptions, including the disruptions in non-rapid eye movement (NREM) slow wave sleep (SWS). Alzheimer's patients spend less time in NREM sleep and exhibit decreased slow wave activity (SWA). Consistent with the critical role of SWS in memory consolidation, reduced SWA is associated with impaired memory consolidation in AD patients. The aberrant SWA can be modeled in transgenic mouse models of amyloidosis and tauopathy. Animal models exhibited slow wave impairments early in the disease progression, prior to the deposition of amyloid-beta plaques, however, in the presence of abundant oligomeric amyloid-beta. Optogenetic rescue of SWA successfully halted the amyloid accumulation and restored intraneuronal calcium levels in mice. On the other hand, optogenetic acceleration of slow wave frequency exacerbated amyloid deposition and disrupted neuronal calcium homeostasis. In this review, we summarize the evidence and the mechanisms underlying the existence of a positive feedback loop between amyloid/tau pathology and SWA disruptions that lead to further accumulations of amyloid and tau in AD. Moreover, since SWA disruptions occur prior to the plaque deposition, SWA disruptions may provide an early biomarker for AD. Finally, we propose that therapeutic targeting of SWA in AD might lead to an effective treatment for Alzheimer's patients.Resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging (rs-fMRI) is an immensely powerful method in neuroscience that uses the blood oxygenation level-dependent (BOLD) signal to record and analyze neural activity in the brain. We examined the complexity of brain activity acquired by rs-fMRI to determine whether it exhibits variation across brain regions. In this study the complexity of regional brain activity was analyzed by calculating the sample entropy of 200 whole-brain BOLD volumes as well as of distinct brain networks, cortical regions, and subcortical regions of these brain volumes. It can be seen that different brain regions and networks exhibit distinctly different levels of entropy/complexity, and that entropy in the brain significantly differs between brains at rest and during task performance.Sensory loss involves irreversible behavioral and neural changes. Paradigms of short-term limb immobilization mimic deprivation of proprioceptive inputs and motor commands, which occur after the loss of limb use. While several studies have shown that short-term immobilization induced motor control impairments, the origin of such modifications is an open question. A Fitts' pointing task was conducted, and kinematic analyses were performed to assess whether the feedforward and/or feedback processes of motor control were impacted. The Fitts' pointing task specifically required dealing with spatial and temporal aspects (speed-accuracy trade-off) to be as fast and as accurate as possible. Forty trials were performed on two consecutive days by Control and Immobilized participants who wore a splint on the right arm during this 24 h period. The immobilization modified the motor control in a way that the full spatiotemporal structure of the pointing movements differed A global slowdown appeared. The acceleration and deceleration phases were both longer, suggesting that immobilization impacted both the early impulse phase based on sensorimotor expectations and the later online correction phase based on feedback use.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 22 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen -
We conclude by summarizing progress in current research, identifying areas for future exploration in drug development and nanotechnology, and discussing future prospects for management of this disease. Copyright ©2020, American Association for Cancer Research.The DNA-binding of two salphen-like metal complexes of nickel(II) (1) and zinc(II) (2) was investigated in different ionic strength solutions by absorption spectroscopy. The data analysis allowed us to obtain the values of their extrapolated DNA-binding constant in physiological conditions, with DNA-binding strength in the order Ni > Zn, and to give relative weight to the electrostatic and non-electrostatic contributions to their DNA-interaction. Understanding waste generation flow is vital to any evidence-based effort by policy-makers and practitioners to successfully manage construction project waste. Previous research has found that accumulative waste generation in construction projects follows an S-curve, but improving our understanding of waste generation requires its investigation at a higher level of granularity. Such efforts, however, are often constrained by lack of quality "bigger" data, i.e. data that is bigger than normal small data. This research aims to provide an anatomy of waste generation flow in building projects by making use of a large set of data on waste generation in 19 demolition, 59 foundation, and 54 new building projects undertaken in Hong Kong between 2011 and 2019. We know that waste is generated in far from a steady stream as it is always impacted by contingent factors. However, we do find that peaks of waste generation in foundation projects appear when project duration is at 50-85%, and in new building projects at 40-70% of total project time. Our research provides useful information for waste managers in developing their waste management plans, arranging waste hauling logistics, and benchmarking waste management performance. The global amount of soybean and wheat produced is about 350 and 750 million metric tons every year, respectively. In consequence, huge amounts of waste are produced from them. https://www.selleckchem.com/products/mln2480.html The aim of this work was to employ two wastes -soybean husk and flour mill waste- to produce high quantities of alpha-amylase enzyme. The substrate composition and the culture conditions were assayed to improve alpha-amylase production by solid-state fermentation employing the fungus Aspergillus oryzae. The maximum productivity of the enzyme was achieved using a culture substrate composed of the two wastes, at 45% soybean husk and 55% flour mill by-product, without pre-treatment, at an incubation temperature of 30 °C. The optimal incubation time (6 days), yielded a very high alpha-amylase activity (47,000 U/g dry substrate) at low-cost. The enzymatic extract obtained was characterized by LC-MS, providing a complete profile of the proteins produced during the solid-state fermentation on these two wastes. Then, the extract was purified in a single-step by size-exclusion chromatography and the recovery and the purification factor of alpha-amylase enzyme were about 83% and 6, respectively. The system was scaled up 50 times and yielded a similar enzymatic activity (45,900 U/g of dry substrate). A new type of biocatalyst was developed to facilitate the biochemical decomposition of 4-chlorophenol (4-CP) in this study. Oxydoreductases that catalyze the initial steps of 4-CP biodegradation were immobilized on a synthetic inorganic enzyme support. Type-X zeolite, a high-surface area support, was synthesized from coal fly ash, on which nickel ions were plated by impregnation (Ni-zeolite), followed by the effective immobilization (77.5% immobilization yield) of recombinant monooxygenase (CphC-I), dioxygenase (CphA-I), and flavin reductase (Fre) isolated from Pseudarthrobacter chlorophenolicus A6 and Escherichia coli K-12, respectively. The retained catalytic activity of the enzymes immobilized on Ni-zeolite was as high as 64% of the value for the corresponding free enzymes. The Michaelis-Menten kinetic parameters vmax and KM of the immobilized enzymes were determined to be 0.20 mM·min-1 and 0.44 mM, respectively. These results are expected to provide useful information with respect to the development of novel enzymatic treatments for phenolic hydrocarbon contaminants. Biooil produced via biomass pyrolysis includes an aqueous-acidic phase and a dense and rich organic phase. The aqueous phase has a low heating value and is considered a waste stream. In this study fractional condensation was employed to separate the liquid product of birch bark pyrolysis into an aqueous pyrolysis condensate (APC) and a dense biooil fraction. The APC contained high amounts (~100 g/kg) of acidic acid (AA) and was investigated for anaerobic digestion (AD). The AA in the APC could be converted to biogas, however, it contained elevated concentrations of microbial inhibitors (24 g/kg total phenolics). The inhibiting effect could be mitigated by acclimatization of the microbial population, which in turn converted some of the additional organics. The production of methane further improved with the addition of biochar to adsorb some of the inhibitors. The results imply that a waste product can be converted into a potential energy carrier. A novel biomaterial FeCl3/CaCl2/KH2PO4 modified municipal sludge biochar (FCPC) was synthesized. And the impacts of critical factors such as HRT, temperature and C/N ratio on simultaneous denitrification, dephosphorization and Cd(II) removal were investigated. Results show that the highest nitrate removal efficiency reached 92.22% (8.49 mg·L-1·h-1) in test group A and approximately 100% (9.19 mg·L-1·h-1) in test group B. Very low phosphate concentrations (approximately 2.50 mg/L) were detected in the effluent. The average removal efficiency of Cd(II) reached 86.40% (4.42 mg·L-1·h-1) in experimental group A and 90.15% (4.61 mg·L-1·h-1) in experimental group B. Gas emissions and biological precipitation in the bioreactors were monitored, further to confirming contaminant removal mechanisms. Additionally, Cupriavidus H29 was found to contribute dominantly to the FCPC bioreactor activity.
We conclude by summarizing progress in current research, identifying areas for future exploration in drug development and nanotechnology, and discussing future prospects for management of this disease. Copyright ©2020, American Association for Cancer Research.The DNA-binding of two salphen-like metal complexes of nickel(II) (1) and zinc(II) (2) was investigated in different ionic strength solutions by absorption spectroscopy. The data analysis allowed us to obtain the values of their extrapolated DNA-binding constant in physiological conditions, with DNA-binding strength in the order Ni > Zn, and to give relative weight to the electrostatic and non-electrostatic contributions to their DNA-interaction. Understanding waste generation flow is vital to any evidence-based effort by policy-makers and practitioners to successfully manage construction project waste. Previous research has found that accumulative waste generation in construction projects follows an S-curve, but improving our understanding of waste generation requires its investigation at a higher level of granularity. Such efforts, however, are often constrained by lack of quality "bigger" data, i.e. data that is bigger than normal small data. This research aims to provide an anatomy of waste generation flow in building projects by making use of a large set of data on waste generation in 19 demolition, 59 foundation, and 54 new building projects undertaken in Hong Kong between 2011 and 2019. We know that waste is generated in far from a steady stream as it is always impacted by contingent factors. However, we do find that peaks of waste generation in foundation projects appear when project duration is at 50-85%, and in new building projects at 40-70% of total project time. Our research provides useful information for waste managers in developing their waste management plans, arranging waste hauling logistics, and benchmarking waste management performance. The global amount of soybean and wheat produced is about 350 and 750 million metric tons every year, respectively. In consequence, huge amounts of waste are produced from them. https://www.selleckchem.com/products/mln2480.html The aim of this work was to employ two wastes -soybean husk and flour mill waste- to produce high quantities of alpha-amylase enzyme. The substrate composition and the culture conditions were assayed to improve alpha-amylase production by solid-state fermentation employing the fungus Aspergillus oryzae. The maximum productivity of the enzyme was achieved using a culture substrate composed of the two wastes, at 45% soybean husk and 55% flour mill by-product, without pre-treatment, at an incubation temperature of 30 °C. The optimal incubation time (6 days), yielded a very high alpha-amylase activity (47,000 U/g dry substrate) at low-cost. The enzymatic extract obtained was characterized by LC-MS, providing a complete profile of the proteins produced during the solid-state fermentation on these two wastes. Then, the extract was purified in a single-step by size-exclusion chromatography and the recovery and the purification factor of alpha-amylase enzyme were about 83% and 6, respectively. The system was scaled up 50 times and yielded a similar enzymatic activity (45,900 U/g of dry substrate). A new type of biocatalyst was developed to facilitate the biochemical decomposition of 4-chlorophenol (4-CP) in this study. Oxydoreductases that catalyze the initial steps of 4-CP biodegradation were immobilized on a synthetic inorganic enzyme support. Type-X zeolite, a high-surface area support, was synthesized from coal fly ash, on which nickel ions were plated by impregnation (Ni-zeolite), followed by the effective immobilization (77.5% immobilization yield) of recombinant monooxygenase (CphC-I), dioxygenase (CphA-I), and flavin reductase (Fre) isolated from Pseudarthrobacter chlorophenolicus A6 and Escherichia coli K-12, respectively. The retained catalytic activity of the enzymes immobilized on Ni-zeolite was as high as 64% of the value for the corresponding free enzymes. The Michaelis-Menten kinetic parameters vmax and KM of the immobilized enzymes were determined to be 0.20 mM·min-1 and 0.44 mM, respectively. These results are expected to provide useful information with respect to the development of novel enzymatic treatments for phenolic hydrocarbon contaminants. Biooil produced via biomass pyrolysis includes an aqueous-acidic phase and a dense and rich organic phase. The aqueous phase has a low heating value and is considered a waste stream. In this study fractional condensation was employed to separate the liquid product of birch bark pyrolysis into an aqueous pyrolysis condensate (APC) and a dense biooil fraction. The APC contained high amounts (~100 g/kg) of acidic acid (AA) and was investigated for anaerobic digestion (AD). The AA in the APC could be converted to biogas, however, it contained elevated concentrations of microbial inhibitors (24 g/kg total phenolics). The inhibiting effect could be mitigated by acclimatization of the microbial population, which in turn converted some of the additional organics. The production of methane further improved with the addition of biochar to adsorb some of the inhibitors. The results imply that a waste product can be converted into a potential energy carrier. A novel biomaterial FeCl3/CaCl2/KH2PO4 modified municipal sludge biochar (FCPC) was synthesized. And the impacts of critical factors such as HRT, temperature and C/N ratio on simultaneous denitrification, dephosphorization and Cd(II) removal were investigated. Results show that the highest nitrate removal efficiency reached 92.22% (8.49 mg·L-1·h-1) in test group A and approximately 100% (9.19 mg·L-1·h-1) in test group B. Very low phosphate concentrations (approximately 2.50 mg/L) were detected in the effluent. The average removal efficiency of Cd(II) reached 86.40% (4.42 mg·L-1·h-1) in experimental group A and 90.15% (4.61 mg·L-1·h-1) in experimental group B. Gas emissions and biological precipitation in the bioreactors were monitored, further to confirming contaminant removal mechanisms. Additionally, Cupriavidus H29 was found to contribute dominantly to the FCPC bioreactor activity.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 22 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen -
The Cronbach's alpha of the scale was 0.806, whereas the Cronbach's alpha of the subscales ranged from 0.739 to 0.797. The intraclass correlation coefficient of the two-week test-retest scores was 0.84. The university, gender, year level and family type predicted the students' compassion competence. CONCLUSION The Arabic version can be used to measure Arabic-speaking nursing students' compassion competence in clinical areas. © 2020 John Wiley & Sons Australia, Ltd.BACKGROUND A host of studies show Leptin (LEP) G19A polymorphism is correlated with the risk of various cancers, but the connection of this polymorphism with bladder cancer (**) risk has not been reported. MATERIALS AND METHODS This association was in explored in a case-control study involving 355 ** cases and 435 controls (all Chinese Han). Polymerase chain reaction-restriction fragment length polymorphism was conducted to genotype LEP G19A polymorphism. Analyses of allele and genotype distribution were evaluated using chi-square test. Continuous data were assessed by an independent samples t test or one-way ANOVA test. Odds ratio (OR) and 95% confidence interval (CI) were determined by logistic regression. RESULTS LEP G19A polymorphism was significantly associated with a lower risk of ** (AA vs GG adjusted OR, 0.40, 95% CI, 0.20-0.83, P = .013; AA + GA vs GG adjusted OR, 0.70, 95% CI, 0.52-0.93, P = .015; AA vs GA + GG adjusted OR, 0.45, 95% CI, 0.22-0.91, P = .026). In addition, A allele was associated with decreased risk for ** (A vs G OR, 0.70, 95% CI, 0.55-0.89, P = .003). Stratified analyses by females, non-drinkers, and non-smokers all returned considerable relations. Furthermore, LEP G19A polymorphism was correlated with tumor size, tumor node metastasis, and distant metastasis in ** patients. CONCLUSIONS LEP G19A polymorphism is associated with a less risk of **. © 2020 The Authors. Journal of Clinical Laboratory Analysis published by Wiley Periodicals LLC.BACKGROUND Identifying predictors for general cognitive training (GCT) success in healthy older adults has many potential uses, including aiding intervention and improving individual dementia risk prediction, which are of high importance in health care. However, the factors that predict training success and the temporal course of predictors (eg, do the same prognostic factors predict training success after a short training period, such as 6 weeks, as well as after a longer training period, such as 6 months?) are largely unknown. METHODS Data (N = 4184 healthy older individuals) from two arms (GCT vs control) of a three-arm randomized controlled trial were reanalyzed to investigate predictors of GCT success in five cognitive tasks (grammatical reasoning, spatial working memory, digit vigilance, paired association learning, and verbal learning) at three time points (after 6 weeks, 3 months, and 6 months of training). Possible investigated predictors were sociodemographic variables, depressive symptoms, number of training sessions, cognitive baseline values, and all interaction terms (group*predictor). RESULTS Being female was predictive for improvement in grammatical reasoning at 6 weeks in the GCT group, and lower cognitive baseline scores were predictive for improvement in spatial working memory and verbal learning at 6 months. CONCLUSION Our data indicate that predictors seem to change over time; remarkably, lower baseline performance at study entry is only a significant predictor at 6 months training. Possible reasons for these results are discussed in relation to the compensation hypothesis. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.CsPbI3 inorganic perovskite has exhibited some special properties particularly crystal structure distortion and quantum confinement effect, yet the poor phase stability of CsPbI3 severely hinders its applications. Herein, the nature of the photoactive CsPbI3 phase transition from the perspective of PbI6 octahedra is revealed. A facile method is also developed to stabilize the photoactive phase and to reduce the defect density of CsPbI3 . CsPbI3 is decorated with multifunctional 4-aminobenzoic acid (ABA), and steric neostigmine bromide (NGBr) is subsequently used to further mediate the thin films' surface (NGBr-CsPbI3 (ABA)). The ABA or NG cation adsorbed onto the grain boundaries/surface of CsPbI3 anchors the PbI6 octahedra via increasing the energy barriers of octahedral rotation, which maintains the continuous array of corner-sharing PbI6 octahedra and kinetically stabilizes the photoactive phase CsPbI3 . Moreover, the added ABA and NGBr not only interact with shallow- or deep-level defects in CsPbI3 to significantly reduce defect density, but also lead to improved energy-level alignment at the interfaces between the CsPbI3 and the charge transport layers. Finally, the champion NGBr-CsPbI3 (ABA)-based inorganic perovskite solar cell delivers 18.27% efficiency with excellent stability. Overall, this work demonstrates a promising concept to achieve highly phase-stabilized inorganic perovskite with suppressed defect density for promoting its optoelectronic applications. © 2020 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim.PURPOSE To reduce the use of mechanical restraints, Safewards was introduced to a ward in a psychiatric hospital in Poland. DESIGN AND METHODS Three aspects of Safewards were applied for 8 months. The comparison time period was the same time frame of the previous year. FINDINGS Restraint use dropped by 24%, and the number of patients restrained dropped 34%. The duration of restraint remained at 2.8 days per episode. PRACTICE IMPLICATIONS Simple techniques aimed at promoting positive interactions between staff and patients can reduce the frequency of restraints. https://www.selleckchem.com/products/myk-461.html © 2020 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.CD1d-restricted invariant natural killer T (iNKT) cells constitute a common glycolipid-reactive innate-like T-cell subset with a broad impact on innate and adaptive immunity. While several microbial glycolipids are known to activate iNKT cells, the cellular mechanisms leading to endogenous CD1d-dependent glycolipid responses remain largely unclear. Here, we show that endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress in APCs is a potent inducer of CD1d-dependent iNKT cell autoreactivity. This pathway relies on the presence of two transducers of the unfolded protein response inositol-requiring enzyme-1a (IRE1α) and protein kinase R-like ER kinase (PERK). Surprisingly, the neutral but not the polar lipids generated within APCs undergoing ER stress are capable of activating iNKT cells. These data reveal that ER stress is an important mechanism to elicit endogenous CD1d-restricted iNKT cell responses through induction of distinct classes of neutral lipids. © 2020 The Authors. Published under the CC BY NC ND 4.0 license.
The Cronbach's alpha of the scale was 0.806, whereas the Cronbach's alpha of the subscales ranged from 0.739 to 0.797. The intraclass correlation coefficient of the two-week test-retest scores was 0.84. The university, gender, year level and family type predicted the students' compassion competence. CONCLUSION The Arabic version can be used to measure Arabic-speaking nursing students' compassion competence in clinical areas. © 2020 John Wiley & Sons Australia, Ltd.BACKGROUND A host of studies show Leptin (LEP) G19A polymorphism is correlated with the risk of various cancers, but the connection of this polymorphism with bladder cancer (BC) risk has not been reported. MATERIALS AND METHODS This association was in explored in a case-control study involving 355 BC cases and 435 controls (all Chinese Han). Polymerase chain reaction-restriction fragment length polymorphism was conducted to genotype LEP G19A polymorphism. Analyses of allele and genotype distribution were evaluated using chi-square test. Continuous data were assessed by an independent samples t test or one-way ANOVA test. Odds ratio (OR) and 95% confidence interval (CI) were determined by logistic regression. RESULTS LEP G19A polymorphism was significantly associated with a lower risk of BC (AA vs GG adjusted OR, 0.40, 95% CI, 0.20-0.83, P = .013; AA + GA vs GG adjusted OR, 0.70, 95% CI, 0.52-0.93, P = .015; AA vs GA + GG adjusted OR, 0.45, 95% CI, 0.22-0.91, P = .026). In addition, A allele was associated with decreased risk for BC (A vs G OR, 0.70, 95% CI, 0.55-0.89, P = .003). Stratified analyses by females, non-drinkers, and non-smokers all returned considerable relations. Furthermore, LEP G19A polymorphism was correlated with tumor size, tumor node metastasis, and distant metastasis in BC patients. CONCLUSIONS LEP G19A polymorphism is associated with a less risk of BC. © 2020 The Authors. Journal of Clinical Laboratory Analysis published by Wiley Periodicals LLC.BACKGROUND Identifying predictors for general cognitive training (GCT) success in healthy older adults has many potential uses, including aiding intervention and improving individual dementia risk prediction, which are of high importance in health care. However, the factors that predict training success and the temporal course of predictors (eg, do the same prognostic factors predict training success after a short training period, such as 6 weeks, as well as after a longer training period, such as 6 months?) are largely unknown. METHODS Data (N = 4184 healthy older individuals) from two arms (GCT vs control) of a three-arm randomized controlled trial were reanalyzed to investigate predictors of GCT success in five cognitive tasks (grammatical reasoning, spatial working memory, digit vigilance, paired association learning, and verbal learning) at three time points (after 6 weeks, 3 months, and 6 months of training). Possible investigated predictors were sociodemographic variables, depressive symptoms, number of training sessions, cognitive baseline values, and all interaction terms (group*predictor). RESULTS Being female was predictive for improvement in grammatical reasoning at 6 weeks in the GCT group, and lower cognitive baseline scores were predictive for improvement in spatial working memory and verbal learning at 6 months. CONCLUSION Our data indicate that predictors seem to change over time; remarkably, lower baseline performance at study entry is only a significant predictor at 6 months training. Possible reasons for these results are discussed in relation to the compensation hypothesis. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.CsPbI3 inorganic perovskite has exhibited some special properties particularly crystal structure distortion and quantum confinement effect, yet the poor phase stability of CsPbI3 severely hinders its applications. Herein, the nature of the photoactive CsPbI3 phase transition from the perspective of PbI6 octahedra is revealed. A facile method is also developed to stabilize the photoactive phase and to reduce the defect density of CsPbI3 . CsPbI3 is decorated with multifunctional 4-aminobenzoic acid (ABA), and steric neostigmine bromide (NGBr) is subsequently used to further mediate the thin films' surface (NGBr-CsPbI3 (ABA)). The ABA or NG cation adsorbed onto the grain boundaries/surface of CsPbI3 anchors the PbI6 octahedra via increasing the energy barriers of octahedral rotation, which maintains the continuous array of corner-sharing PbI6 octahedra and kinetically stabilizes the photoactive phase CsPbI3 . Moreover, the added ABA and NGBr not only interact with shallow- or deep-level defects in CsPbI3 to significantly reduce defect density, but also lead to improved energy-level alignment at the interfaces between the CsPbI3 and the charge transport layers. Finally, the champion NGBr-CsPbI3 (ABA)-based inorganic perovskite solar cell delivers 18.27% efficiency with excellent stability. Overall, this work demonstrates a promising concept to achieve highly phase-stabilized inorganic perovskite with suppressed defect density for promoting its optoelectronic applications. © 2020 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim.PURPOSE To reduce the use of mechanical restraints, Safewards was introduced to a ward in a psychiatric hospital in Poland. DESIGN AND METHODS Three aspects of Safewards were applied for 8 months. The comparison time period was the same time frame of the previous year. FINDINGS Restraint use dropped by 24%, and the number of patients restrained dropped 34%. The duration of restraint remained at 2.8 days per episode. PRACTICE IMPLICATIONS Simple techniques aimed at promoting positive interactions between staff and patients can reduce the frequency of restraints. https://www.selleckchem.com/products/myk-461.html © 2020 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.CD1d-restricted invariant natural killer T (iNKT) cells constitute a common glycolipid-reactive innate-like T-cell subset with a broad impact on innate and adaptive immunity. While several microbial glycolipids are known to activate iNKT cells, the cellular mechanisms leading to endogenous CD1d-dependent glycolipid responses remain largely unclear. Here, we show that endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress in APCs is a potent inducer of CD1d-dependent iNKT cell autoreactivity. This pathway relies on the presence of two transducers of the unfolded protein response inositol-requiring enzyme-1a (IRE1α) and protein kinase R-like ER kinase (PERK). Surprisingly, the neutral but not the polar lipids generated within APCs undergoing ER stress are capable of activating iNKT cells. These data reveal that ER stress is an important mechanism to elicit endogenous CD1d-restricted iNKT cell responses through induction of distinct classes of neutral lipids. © 2020 The Authors. Published under the CC BY NC ND 4.0 license.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 23 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen -
stem. These findings provide a differential proteomic profile of co-culture in A. johnsonii and P. fluorescens, and have potential applications in QS and the regulation of spoilage potential.Probiotic strain Eurotium cristatum was isolated from Chinese Fuzhuan brick-tea and tested for its in vitro activity against aflatoxigenic Aspergillus flavus. Results indicated that E. https://www.selleckchem.com/products/ldn193189.html cristatum can inhibit the radial growth of A. flavus. Furthermore, this inhibition might be caused by E. cristatum secondary metabolites. The ability of culture filtrate of strain E. cristatum against growth and aflatoxin B1 production by toxigenic A. flavus was evaluated in vitro. Meanwhile, the influence of filtrate on spore morphology of A. flavus was analyzed by scanning electron microscopy (SEM). Results demonstrated that both radial growth of A. flavus and aflatoxin B1 production were significantly weakened following increases in the E. cristatum culture filtrate concentration. In addition, SEM showed that the culture filtrate seriously damaged hyphae morphology. Gas chromatography mass spectrometry (GC/MS) analysis of the E. cristatum culture supernatant revealed the presence of multiple antifungal compounds. Real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction (RT-qPCR) analysis showed that the expression of aflatoxin biosynthesis-related genes (aflD, aflQ, and aflS) were down-regulated. Importantly, this latter occurrence resulted in a reduction of the AflS/AflR ratio. Interestingly, cell-free supernatants of E. cristatum facilitated the effective degradation of aflatoxin B1. In addition, two degradation products of aflatoxin B1 lacking the toxic and carcinogenic lactone ring were identified. A toxicity study on the HepG2 cells showed that the degradation compounds were less toxic when compared with AFB1.Staphylococcus capitis is an opportunistic pathogen often implicated in bloodstream infections in the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU). This is assisted by its ability to form biofilms on indwelling central venous catheters (CVC), which are highly resistant to antibiotics and the immune system. We sought to understand the fundamentals of biofilm formation by S. capitis in the NICU, using seventeen clinical isolates including the endemic NRCS-A clone and assessing nine commercial and two modified polystyrene surfaces. S. capitis clinical isolates from the NICU initiated biofilm formation only in response to hyperosmotic conditions, followed by a developmental progression driven by icaADBC expression to establish mature biofilms, with polysaccharide being their major extracellular polymer substance (EPS) matrix component. Physicochemical features of the biomaterial surface, and in particular the level of the element oxygen present on the surface, significantly influenced biofilm development of S. capitis. A lack of highly oxidized carbon species on the surface prevented the immobilization of S. capitis EPS and the formation of mature biofilms. This information provides guidance in regard to the preparation of hyperosmolar total parenteral nutrition and the engineering of CVC surfaces that can minimize the risk of catheter-related bloodstream infections caused by S. capitis in the NICU.Using a combination of short- and long-read DNA sequencing, we have investigated the location of antibiotic resistance genes and characterized mobile genetic elements (MGEs) in three clinical multi-drug resistant Acinetobacter baumannii. The isolates, collected in Bolivia, clustered separately with three different international clonal lineages. We found a diverse array of transposons, plasmids and resistance islands related to different insertion sequence (IS) elements, which were located in both the chromosome and in plasmids, which conferred resistance to multiple antimicrobials, including carbapenems. Carbapenem resistance might be caused by a Tn2008 carrying the bla OXA-23 gene. Some plasmids were shared between the isolates. Larger plasmids were less conserved than smaller ones and they shared some homologous regions, while others were more diverse, suggesting that these big plasmids are more plastic than the smaller ones. The genetic basis of antimicrobial resistance in Bolivia has not been deeply studied until now, and the mobilome of these A. baumannii isolates, combined with their multi-drug resistant phenotype, mirror the transfer and prevalence of MGEs contributing to the spread of antibiotic resistance worldwide and require special attention. These findings could be useful to understand the antimicrobial resistance genetics of A. baumannii in Bolivia and the difficulty in tackling these infections.Salmonella Enteritidis is the most prevalent food-borne pathogen associated with egg-related outbreaks in the European Union. During egg colonization, S. Enteritidis must resist the powerful anti-bacterial activities of egg white (EW) and overcome ovotransferrin-imposed iron-restriction (the most important anti-bacterial mechanism of EW). Many pathogens respond to iron restriction by secreting iron-chelating chemicals called siderophores but EW contains a siderophore-sequestering "lipocalin" protein (Ex-FABP) that is predicted to limit the usefulness of siderophores in EW. S. Enteritidis produces two siderophores enterobactin, which is strongly bound by Ex-FABP; and the di-glucosylated enterobactin-derivative, salmochelin (a so-called "stealth" siderophore), which is not recognized by Ex-FABP. Thus, production of salmochelin may allow S. Enteritidis to escape Ex-FABP-mediated growth inhibition under iron restriction although it is unclear whether its EW concentration is sufficient to inhibit pathogens. Furthe we confirm the preference (16-fold) of Ex-FABP for the ferrated form (K d of 5.3 nM) of enterobactin over the iron-free form (K d of 86.2 nM), and its lack of affinity for salmochelin. In conclusion, our findings show that salmochelin production by S. Enteritidis enables this key egg-associated pathogen to overcome the enterobactin-sequestration activity of Ex-FABP when this lipocalin is provided at levels found in EW.Zinc (Zn) is a trace element essential for life but can be toxic if present in excess. While cells have import systems to guarantee a vital Zn intracellular concentration, they also rely on export systems to avoid lethal Zn overload. In particular, the opportunistic pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa possesses four Zn export systems CadA, CzcCBA, CzcD, and YiiP. In this work, we compare the importance for bacterial survival of each export system at high Zn concentrations. We show that the P-type ATPase CadA, and the efflux pump CzcCBA are the main efflux systems affecting the bacterium tolerance to Zn. In addition, cadA and czcCBA genes expression kinetics revealed a hierarchical organization and interdependence. In the presence of high Zn concentrations, cadA expression is very rapidly induced (15 min). Our present data show that the fast responsiveness of cadA to Zn excess is due to its transcriptional activator, CadR, which is constitutively present on its promoter and promptly activating cadA gene expression upon Zn binding.
stem. These findings provide a differential proteomic profile of co-culture in A. johnsonii and P. fluorescens, and have potential applications in QS and the regulation of spoilage potential.Probiotic strain Eurotium cristatum was isolated from Chinese Fuzhuan brick-tea and tested for its in vitro activity against aflatoxigenic Aspergillus flavus. Results indicated that E. https://www.selleckchem.com/products/ldn193189.html cristatum can inhibit the radial growth of A. flavus. Furthermore, this inhibition might be caused by E. cristatum secondary metabolites. The ability of culture filtrate of strain E. cristatum against growth and aflatoxin B1 production by toxigenic A. flavus was evaluated in vitro. Meanwhile, the influence of filtrate on spore morphology of A. flavus was analyzed by scanning electron microscopy (SEM). Results demonstrated that both radial growth of A. flavus and aflatoxin B1 production were significantly weakened following increases in the E. cristatum culture filtrate concentration. In addition, SEM showed that the culture filtrate seriously damaged hyphae morphology. Gas chromatography mass spectrometry (GC/MS) analysis of the E. cristatum culture supernatant revealed the presence of multiple antifungal compounds. Real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction (RT-qPCR) analysis showed that the expression of aflatoxin biosynthesis-related genes (aflD, aflQ, and aflS) were down-regulated. Importantly, this latter occurrence resulted in a reduction of the AflS/AflR ratio. Interestingly, cell-free supernatants of E. cristatum facilitated the effective degradation of aflatoxin B1. In addition, two degradation products of aflatoxin B1 lacking the toxic and carcinogenic lactone ring were identified. A toxicity study on the HepG2 cells showed that the degradation compounds were less toxic when compared with AFB1.Staphylococcus capitis is an opportunistic pathogen often implicated in bloodstream infections in the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU). This is assisted by its ability to form biofilms on indwelling central venous catheters (CVC), which are highly resistant to antibiotics and the immune system. We sought to understand the fundamentals of biofilm formation by S. capitis in the NICU, using seventeen clinical isolates including the endemic NRCS-A clone and assessing nine commercial and two modified polystyrene surfaces. S. capitis clinical isolates from the NICU initiated biofilm formation only in response to hyperosmotic conditions, followed by a developmental progression driven by icaADBC expression to establish mature biofilms, with polysaccharide being their major extracellular polymer substance (EPS) matrix component. Physicochemical features of the biomaterial surface, and in particular the level of the element oxygen present on the surface, significantly influenced biofilm development of S. capitis. A lack of highly oxidized carbon species on the surface prevented the immobilization of S. capitis EPS and the formation of mature biofilms. This information provides guidance in regard to the preparation of hyperosmolar total parenteral nutrition and the engineering of CVC surfaces that can minimize the risk of catheter-related bloodstream infections caused by S. capitis in the NICU.Using a combination of short- and long-read DNA sequencing, we have investigated the location of antibiotic resistance genes and characterized mobile genetic elements (MGEs) in three clinical multi-drug resistant Acinetobacter baumannii. The isolates, collected in Bolivia, clustered separately with three different international clonal lineages. We found a diverse array of transposons, plasmids and resistance islands related to different insertion sequence (IS) elements, which were located in both the chromosome and in plasmids, which conferred resistance to multiple antimicrobials, including carbapenems. Carbapenem resistance might be caused by a Tn2008 carrying the bla OXA-23 gene. Some plasmids were shared between the isolates. Larger plasmids were less conserved than smaller ones and they shared some homologous regions, while others were more diverse, suggesting that these big plasmids are more plastic than the smaller ones. The genetic basis of antimicrobial resistance in Bolivia has not been deeply studied until now, and the mobilome of these A. baumannii isolates, combined with their multi-drug resistant phenotype, mirror the transfer and prevalence of MGEs contributing to the spread of antibiotic resistance worldwide and require special attention. These findings could be useful to understand the antimicrobial resistance genetics of A. baumannii in Bolivia and the difficulty in tackling these infections.Salmonella Enteritidis is the most prevalent food-borne pathogen associated with egg-related outbreaks in the European Union. During egg colonization, S. Enteritidis must resist the powerful anti-bacterial activities of egg white (EW) and overcome ovotransferrin-imposed iron-restriction (the most important anti-bacterial mechanism of EW). Many pathogens respond to iron restriction by secreting iron-chelating chemicals called siderophores but EW contains a siderophore-sequestering "lipocalin" protein (Ex-FABP) that is predicted to limit the usefulness of siderophores in EW. S. Enteritidis produces two siderophores enterobactin, which is strongly bound by Ex-FABP; and the di-glucosylated enterobactin-derivative, salmochelin (a so-called "stealth" siderophore), which is not recognized by Ex-FABP. Thus, production of salmochelin may allow S. Enteritidis to escape Ex-FABP-mediated growth inhibition under iron restriction although it is unclear whether its EW concentration is sufficient to inhibit pathogens. Furthe we confirm the preference (16-fold) of Ex-FABP for the ferrated form (K d of 5.3 nM) of enterobactin over the iron-free form (K d of 86.2 nM), and its lack of affinity for salmochelin. In conclusion, our findings show that salmochelin production by S. Enteritidis enables this key egg-associated pathogen to overcome the enterobactin-sequestration activity of Ex-FABP when this lipocalin is provided at levels found in EW.Zinc (Zn) is a trace element essential for life but can be toxic if present in excess. While cells have import systems to guarantee a vital Zn intracellular concentration, they also rely on export systems to avoid lethal Zn overload. In particular, the opportunistic pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa possesses four Zn export systems CadA, CzcCBA, CzcD, and YiiP. In this work, we compare the importance for bacterial survival of each export system at high Zn concentrations. We show that the P-type ATPase CadA, and the efflux pump CzcCBA are the main efflux systems affecting the bacterium tolerance to Zn. In addition, cadA and czcCBA genes expression kinetics revealed a hierarchical organization and interdependence. In the presence of high Zn concentrations, cadA expression is very rapidly induced (15 min). Our present data show that the fast responsiveness of cadA to Zn excess is due to its transcriptional activator, CadR, which is constitutively present on its promoter and promptly activating cadA gene expression upon Zn binding.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 26 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen -
nctional preservation. Our nerve-sparing technique can reproducibly simplify this complex procedure.Study objective Hysteroscopy is considered the gold standard technique for the diagnosis and management of intrauterine pathology allowing to "see and treat" in one session if desired (1-3). Pain and inability to enter the uterine cavity are the most common limitations of hysteroscopy, especially when performed in the office setting (4-7). Cervical stenosis is a common hysteroscopic finding frequently encountered in postmenopausal women, especially in patients with history of cervical procedures such as cone biopsy.(8) It represents a challenge even for the most expert hysteroscopist. Overcoming the stenosis of the external cervical os is technically more demanding than when facing the obliteration of the internal os. The aim of this video article, is to illustrate the use of simple techniques allowing to safely identify the location of the external cervical os and to overcome the difficulties in entering the uterine cavity during in office hysteroscopy in patients with severe cervical stenosis including compe location of the external cervical os is determined. In cases where the external cervical os was not clearly recognized, the cervix was gently probed with the use of the uterine palpator, grasper or scissors. Recognition of landmarks of the cervical canal provides reassurance of the adequate identification of the external cervical os and facilitates using the correct plane of dissection that leads into the uterine cavity. Additional maneuvers useful to navigate the endocervical canal to overcome stenosis of the internal cervical os are also illustrated. Conclusion The combination of a delicate technique and operator experience will allow to overcome the challenge of cervical stenosis in an office setting. Adopting the presented tips and tricks to enter the uterine cavity in the presence of severe cervical stenosis will reduce the rate of failed hysteroscopic procedures decreasing the need to take patients to the OR and the use of general anesthesia.Background Telehealth use has been increasing over the last decade. Studies have shown that patients have a positive attitude towards incorporating telehealth into their healthcare. Significant uncertainty remains over reimbursement policies that vary widely between states and by payer. Objective Explore the clinical, operational, and financial feasibility of a home telehealth (HTH) program in a pediatric Allergy & Immunology (A&I) clinic. https://www.selleckchem.com/products/sn-38.html Methods A&I Physicians defined use cases they deemed appropriate for HTH appointments. Established patients in the A&I clinic were approached to complete an attitudes and perception survey. Patients meeting the use case definitions were asked to participate in the pilot program. After their HTH appointment took place, they completed a validated satisfaction survey. Our institution's revenue cycle management team provided reimbursement data. Results Patient attitudes toward HTH were generally favorable. 51 HTH appointments were offered and 46 appointments were made. 37 appointments were completed successfully among 32 unique patients. Patients were very satisfied with the HTH experience. 36 out of 37 encounters were reimbursed by 19 different public and private payers. Payers on average reimbursed ±6% of the expected allowable for an equivalent in-person visit. Conclusion Patients showed reservations about HTH initially but were very satisfied with their experience. Both private and public payers reimbursed HTH the same as in-person appointments. HTH is both well accepted by patients and financially viable.Background In children less then 2 years old, studies evaluating the value of skin ***** tests (SPT) and specific immunoglobulin E (sIgE) results to predict persistence or resolution of egg allergy (EA) are limited. Additionally, the value of egg yolk (EY) sIgE and fresh egg (FE) SPT has not been well characterized. Objective We investigated the optimal decision points for outgrowing (ODP fo ) allergy with both SPT and sIgE tests for egg allergen preparations. Methods SPTs for FE, egg white (EW), EY, sIgEs for EW and EY and oral food challenges (OFC) were performed in children with suspected EA. Reactive patients strictly avoided all dietary egg. After one year, EA was re-evaluated with repeat OFC, SPTs, and sIgEs. Results Eighty-one children, median age 7 months (range 2-24 months) were enrolled. Four children with a history of anaphylaxis and 60/77 children with a positive challenge underwent egg elimination. The 1 year follow-up challenge test was performed on 59 children. Twenty-seven reacted to egg. No persistent patient had a follow-up SPT for FE ≤4mm (p less then 0.001; 100% PPV, 56% NPV for outgrowth). The diameters of the initial SPT for FE decreased 50% or more in half of the patients who outgrew EA. The ODP fo for follow-up sIgE for EY and EW were ≤2.1 kU/L (86.2% PPV) and ≤4.0 kU/L (84.6% PPV), respectively. Conclusion A diameter of SPT for FE ≤4mm and sIgE values of ≤2.1 kU/L for EY and ≤4.0 kU/L for EW have good PPV for outgrowth of EA under two years of age.Objective This in vitro study evaluated the caries status of the smooth surface surfaces in the primary molars using DIAGNOdent pen, Vistacam iX, and Bitewing radiography compared to the histologic assessments. Methods 68 primary molars were selected, and their mesial or distal caries status were determined using DIAGNOdent pen, Bitewing radiography, and Vistacam iX. To achieve reference standards, the teeth were sectioned and directly assessed by a stereomicroscope. The ** Nemar test was used to compare the sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy of the methods. The spearman rank correlation coefficient (r) was also determined to compare the extent of caries with histology. The statistical significance level was set at α = 0.05. Results Regarding D1 as a cut-off point for histological assessments, sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy of DIAGNOdent pen were 82%, 75%, and 80% while the values were 63%, 100% and 62% for bitewing radiography and 56%, 100% and 59% for Vistacam iX. Regarding D3 as a cut-off point for histological analysis; Sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy rates of DIAGNOdent pen were 71%, 86% and 80% while these values were 71%, 73% and 72% for bitewing radiography and 50%, 78% and 67% for Vistacam iX.
nctional preservation. Our nerve-sparing technique can reproducibly simplify this complex procedure.Study objective Hysteroscopy is considered the gold standard technique for the diagnosis and management of intrauterine pathology allowing to "see and treat" in one session if desired (1-3). Pain and inability to enter the uterine cavity are the most common limitations of hysteroscopy, especially when performed in the office setting (4-7). Cervical stenosis is a common hysteroscopic finding frequently encountered in postmenopausal women, especially in patients with history of cervical procedures such as cone biopsy.(8) It represents a challenge even for the most expert hysteroscopist. Overcoming the stenosis of the external cervical os is technically more demanding than when facing the obliteration of the internal os. The aim of this video article, is to illustrate the use of simple techniques allowing to safely identify the location of the external cervical os and to overcome the difficulties in entering the uterine cavity during in office hysteroscopy in patients with severe cervical stenosis including compe location of the external cervical os is determined. In cases where the external cervical os was not clearly recognized, the cervix was gently probed with the use of the uterine palpator, grasper or scissors. Recognition of landmarks of the cervical canal provides reassurance of the adequate identification of the external cervical os and facilitates using the correct plane of dissection that leads into the uterine cavity. Additional maneuvers useful to navigate the endocervical canal to overcome stenosis of the internal cervical os are also illustrated. Conclusion The combination of a delicate technique and operator experience will allow to overcome the challenge of cervical stenosis in an office setting. Adopting the presented tips and tricks to enter the uterine cavity in the presence of severe cervical stenosis will reduce the rate of failed hysteroscopic procedures decreasing the need to take patients to the OR and the use of general anesthesia.Background Telehealth use has been increasing over the last decade. Studies have shown that patients have a positive attitude towards incorporating telehealth into their healthcare. Significant uncertainty remains over reimbursement policies that vary widely between states and by payer. Objective Explore the clinical, operational, and financial feasibility of a home telehealth (HTH) program in a pediatric Allergy & Immunology (A&I) clinic. https://www.selleckchem.com/products/sn-38.html Methods A&I Physicians defined use cases they deemed appropriate for HTH appointments. Established patients in the A&I clinic were approached to complete an attitudes and perception survey. Patients meeting the use case definitions were asked to participate in the pilot program. After their HTH appointment took place, they completed a validated satisfaction survey. Our institution's revenue cycle management team provided reimbursement data. Results Patient attitudes toward HTH were generally favorable. 51 HTH appointments were offered and 46 appointments were made. 37 appointments were completed successfully among 32 unique patients. Patients were very satisfied with the HTH experience. 36 out of 37 encounters were reimbursed by 19 different public and private payers. Payers on average reimbursed ±6% of the expected allowable for an equivalent in-person visit. Conclusion Patients showed reservations about HTH initially but were very satisfied with their experience. Both private and public payers reimbursed HTH the same as in-person appointments. HTH is both well accepted by patients and financially viable.Background In children less then 2 years old, studies evaluating the value of skin prick tests (SPT) and specific immunoglobulin E (sIgE) results to predict persistence or resolution of egg allergy (EA) are limited. Additionally, the value of egg yolk (EY) sIgE and fresh egg (FE) SPT has not been well characterized. Objective We investigated the optimal decision points for outgrowing (ODP fo ) allergy with both SPT and sIgE tests for egg allergen preparations. Methods SPTs for FE, egg white (EW), EY, sIgEs for EW and EY and oral food challenges (OFC) were performed in children with suspected EA. Reactive patients strictly avoided all dietary egg. After one year, EA was re-evaluated with repeat OFC, SPTs, and sIgEs. Results Eighty-one children, median age 7 months (range 2-24 months) were enrolled. Four children with a history of anaphylaxis and 60/77 children with a positive challenge underwent egg elimination. The 1 year follow-up challenge test was performed on 59 children. Twenty-seven reacted to egg. No persistent patient had a follow-up SPT for FE ≤4mm (p less then 0.001; 100% PPV, 56% NPV for outgrowth). The diameters of the initial SPT for FE decreased 50% or more in half of the patients who outgrew EA. The ODP fo for follow-up sIgE for EY and EW were ≤2.1 kU/L (86.2% PPV) and ≤4.0 kU/L (84.6% PPV), respectively. Conclusion A diameter of SPT for FE ≤4mm and sIgE values of ≤2.1 kU/L for EY and ≤4.0 kU/L for EW have good PPV for outgrowth of EA under two years of age.Objective This in vitro study evaluated the caries status of the smooth surface surfaces in the primary molars using DIAGNOdent pen, Vistacam iX, and Bitewing radiography compared to the histologic assessments. Methods 68 primary molars were selected, and their mesial or distal caries status were determined using DIAGNOdent pen, Bitewing radiography, and Vistacam iX. To achieve reference standards, the teeth were sectioned and directly assessed by a stereomicroscope. The Mc Nemar test was used to compare the sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy of the methods. The spearman rank correlation coefficient (r) was also determined to compare the extent of caries with histology. The statistical significance level was set at α = 0.05. Results Regarding D1 as a cut-off point for histological assessments, sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy of DIAGNOdent pen were 82%, 75%, and 80% while the values were 63%, 100% and 62% for bitewing radiography and 56%, 100% and 59% for Vistacam iX. Regarding D3 as a cut-off point for histological analysis; Sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy rates of DIAGNOdent pen were 71%, 86% and 80% while these values were 71%, 73% and 72% for bitewing radiography and 50%, 78% and 67% for Vistacam iX.0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 36 Ansichten 0 Bewertungen
Mehr Storys