17 research outputs found

    Efficacy of Lactic Acid Bacteria (LAB) supplement in management of constipation among nursing home residents

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Constipation is a significant problem in the elderly, specifically nursing home and/or extended-care facility residents are reported to suffer from constipation. Lactic acid bacteria (LAB) are beneficial probiotic organisms that contribute to improved nutrition, microbial balance, and immuno-enhancement of the intestinal tract, as well as diarrhea and constipation effect. The objective of this study was to investigate the efficacy of this LAB supplement in the management of nursing home residents.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>Nineteen subjects (8M, 11F; mean age 77.1 ± 10.1) suffering with chronic constipation were assigned to receive LAB (3.0 × 10<sup>11 </sup>CFU/g) twice (to be taken 30 minutes after breakfast and dinner) a day for 2 weeks in November 2008. Subjects draw up a questionnaire on defecation habits (frequency of defecation, amount and state of stool), and we collected fecal samples from the subjects both before entering and after ending the trial, to investigate LAB levels and inhibition of harmful enzyme activities. Results were tested with SAS and Student's t-test.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Analysis of questionnaire showed that there was an increase in the frequency of defecation and amount of stool excreted in defecation habit after LAB treatment, but there were no significant changes. And it also affects the intestinal environment, through significantly increase (<it>p </it>< 0.05) fecal LAB levels. In addition, tryptophanase and urease among harmful enzyme activities of intestinal microflora were significantly decreased (<it>p </it>< 0.05) after LAB treatment.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>LAB, when added to the standard treatment regimen for nursing home residents with chronic constipation, increased defecation habit such as frequency of defecation, amount and state of stool. So, it may be used as functional probiotics to improve human health by helping to prevent constipation.</p

    A Multiinstitutional Consensus Study on the Pathologic Diagnosis of Endometrial Hyperplasia and Carcinoma

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    BACKGROUND: The purpose of this study was to examine the reproducibility of both the diagnosis of endometrial hyperplasia (EH) or adenocarcinoma, and the histologic grading (HG) of endometrioid adenocarcinoma (EC). METHODS: Ninety-three cases of EH or adenocarcinomas were reviewed independently by 21 pathologists of the Gynecologic Pathology Study Group. A consensus diagnosis was defined as agreement among more than two thirds of the 21 pathologists. RESULTS: There was no agreement on the diagnosis in 13 cases (14.0%). According to the consensus review, six of the 11 EH cases (54.5%) were diagnosed as EH, 48 of the 57 EC cases (84.2%) were EC, and 5 of the 6 serous carcinomas (SC) (83.3%) were SC. There was no consensus for the 6 atypical EH (AEH) cases. On the HG of EC, there was no agreement in 2 cases (3.5%). According to the consensus review, 30 of the 33 G1 cases (90.9%) were G1, 11 of the 18 G2 cases (61.1%) were G2, and 4 of the 4 G3 cases (100.0%) were G3. CONCLUSIONS: The consensus study showed high agreement for both EC and SC, but there was no consensus for AEH. The reproducibility for the HG of G2 was poor. We suggest that simplification of the classification of EH and a two-tiered grading system for EC will be necessary.This study was partly supported by research fund of Chungnam National University in 2007

    Effect of physical activity on the cardiometabolic profiles of non-obese and obese subjects: Results from the Korea National Health and Nutritional Examination Survey.

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    BACKGROUND:Physical inactivity is an important but often neglected risk factor for various cardiovascular diseases. We hypothesized that physical inactivity might have deleterious effects on metabolic health in obese and non-obese subjects. METHODS:We evaluated the effect of physical activity on the cardiometabolic profiles of a nationwide cohort of non-obese and obese individuals who did not have overt cardiovascular diseases. A total of 3,830 study subjects were divided into two groups based on their body mass index (BMI). Within each BMI group, participants were divided according to their physical activity level. To ascertain their cardiometabolic profiles, we collected data regarding the homeostasis model assessment-estimated insulin resistance (HOMA-IR) index, high-density lipoprotein (HDL)-cholesterol level, systolic blood pressure, heart rate, and high-sensitivity C-reactive protein (hsCRP) level. RESULTS:Physically inactive subjects demonstrated markedly elevated HOMA-IR index and heart rates in each BMI category, even after adjustments for baseline covariates. They also tended to have worse profiles for HDL-cholesterol, systolic blood pressure, and hsCRP levels. A significant elevation in cardiometabolic risk was noted across the four physical activity/obesity groups (p<0.05). HOMA-IR index was largely affected by obesity, but within each BMI category, physical inactivity independently elevated the risk for worsening insulin resistance. In addition, physical inactivity significantly increased the risk of elevated heart rate in both non-obese and obese individuals. Notably, the detrimental effect of physical activity on heart rate was not modified by obesity. CONCLUSIONS:Physical activity was associated with favorable cardiometabolic risk profiles with regard to insulin resistance status and heart rate level in both BMI groups. Our results suggest that increasing physical activity could be a helpful strategy for improving the cardiometabolic health in the Korean population, regardless of obesity status

    Complex interaction of fasting glucose, body mass index, age and sex on all-cause mortality: a cohort study in 15 million Korean adults

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    International audienceAims/hypothesis: The aim of this work was to examine whether synergistic associations with mortality exist for BMI and fasting blood glucose (FBG) and to identify FBG–BMI combined subgroups with higher mortality according to sex and age. Methods: A total of 15,149,275 Korean adults participated in health examinations during 2003–2006 and were followed up until December 2018. Mortality HRs of 40 FBG–BMI combined groups were assessed by Cox proportional hazards models. Results: During a mean 13.7 years of follow-up, 1,213,401 individuals died. A J-shaped association was seen between FBG and all-cause mortality for all BMI categories. Those with BMI &lt;20 kg/m2 had the highest mortality for any given FBG level, followed by those with BMI 20–22.4 kg/m2. The detrimental effect of elevated FBG was greater among leaner individuals than more corpulent individuals. Moreover, the synergistic adverse effects of hyperglycaemia and leanness was stronger in younger adults than in older adults. Compared with the reference group (overweight with normoglycaemia), age- and sex-adjusted HRs of the leanest with normoglycaemia (BMI &lt;20 kg/m2 and FBG 4.4–5.2 mmol/l), overweight with diabetes (BMI 25–27.4 kg/m2 and FBG ≥10.0 mmol/l) and leanest with diabetes (BMI &lt;20 kg/m2 and FBG ≥10.0 mmol/l) were 1.29, 2.59 and 11.18, respectively, in those aged 18–44 years and 1.56, 1.72 and 2.87, respectively, in those aged 75–99 years. The identification of BMI–FBG subgroups associated with higher mortality was not straightforward, illustrated by the group with FBG 6.1–6.9 mmol/l and BMI 20–22.4 kg/m2 having a similar or higher mortality compared with the group with FBG 7.0–9.9 mmol/l and BMI ≥22.5 kg/m2. In women aged &lt;45 years with FBG &lt;6.9 mmol/l, those with BMI ≥27.5 kg/m2 had the highest mortality, whereas individuals with BMI &lt;20 kg/m2 had the highest mortality for each given FBG level in other age and sex groups. Conclusions/interpretation: Leanness and hyperglycaemia interact together to increase mortality in a supra-multiplicative manner, especially in younger adults; the interactions of BMI, FBG, sex and age with mortality are complex. [Figure not available: see fulltext.]

    PSEN1 p.Thr116Ile Variant in Two Korean Families with Young Onset Alzheimer’s Disease

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    An in depth study of PSEN1 mutation p.Thr116Ile (c.335C&gt;T) is presented from two Korean families with autosomal dominant inheritance. Clinical manifestation of our patients included memory loss, attention deficits, visuospatial dysfunction, agnosia, aphasia, apraxia, and personality changes, which occurred in their 30s. PSEN1 Thr116Ile was initially discovered in an Italian patient and two French families with early onset Alzheimer&rsquo;s disease (EOAD) with similar age of onset. To verify the possible pathogenic mechanisms of mutation, in silico predictions and 3D modeling were performed. Structure predictions revealed significant aberrations in first hydrophilic loop (HL-I loop). The hydrophobic isoleucine could alter the loop orientation through increased hydrophobic contacts with the surrounding amino acids. Mutation could destroy a possible hydrogen bond between tyrosine 115 and threonine 116, which may affect the loop conformation. HL-I was confirmed as a conservative region of PSEN1, which may be critical in PSEN1 functions. An additional pathogenic mutation, PSEN1 Thr116Asn, was also found for the same residue, where the patient presented young onset AD (YOND). Other mutations in HL-I loop, such as Tyr115His and Glu120Asp, were described in patients with YOND, supporting the critical role of HL-I loop in PSEN1 activity

    Multi-neuron connection using multi-terminal floating–gate memristor for unsupervised learning

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    Multi-terminal memristor and memtransistor (MT-MEMs) has successfully performed complex functions of heterosynaptic plasticity in synapse. However, theses MT-MEMs lack the ability to emulate membrane potential of neuron in multiple neuronal connections. Here, we demonstrate multi-neuron connection using a multi-terminal floating-gate memristor (MT-FGMEM). The variable Fermi level (E F) in graphene allows charging and discharging of MT-FGMEM using horizontally distant multiple electrodes. Our MT-FGMEM demonstrates high on/off ratio over 105 at 1000 s retention about ~10,000 times higher than other MT-MEMs. The linear behavior between current (I D) and floating gate potential (V FG) in triode region of MT-FGMEM allows for accurate spike integration at the neuron membrane. The MT-FGMEM fully mimics the temporal and spatial summation of multi-neuron connections based on leaky-integrate-and-fire (LIF) functionality. Our artificial neuron (150 pJ) significantly reduces the energy consumption by 100,000 times compared to conventional neurons based on silicon integrated circuits (11.7 μJ). By integrating neurons and synapses using MT-FGMEMs, a spiking neurosynaptic training and classification of directional lines functioned in visual area one (V1) is successfully emulated based on neuron’s LIF and synapse’s spike-timing-dependent plasticity (STDP) functions. Simulation of unsupervised learning based on our artificial neuron and synapse achieves a learning accuracy of 83.08% on the unlabeled MNIST handwritten dataset. © 2023, The Author(s).11Nsciescopu
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