275 research outputs found
Short-Term Prognosis of Juvenile Myocardial Infarction: Role of Plasma Viscosity
In our early research1 regarding the hemorheological pattern in
patients with acute myocardial infarction (AMI) with a mean
age of 61.45 + 10.99 years, we showed that the major hemorheological
parameters were almost normalized 2 weeks after
the acute event. In the last decade, we focused on hemorheological
parameters in juvenile myocardial infarction (JMI),
defined as AMI in patients aged 45 years, in the \u2018\u2018Sicilian
study on juvenile myocardial infarction\u2019\u2019
Analysis of the Blood Viscosity Behavior in the Sicilian Study on Juvenile Myocardial Infarction
Considering the role of hemorheology in coronary circulation, we studied blood viscosity in patients with juvenile myocardial infarction. We examined whole blood viscosity at high shear rate using the cone-on-plate viscosimeter Wells-Brookfield \ubd LVT and at low shear rate employing a viscometer Contraves LS30 in 120 patients (aged <46 years) with myocardial infarction, at the initial stage and subsequently 3 and 12 months after. At the initial stage, patients had an increased whole blood viscosity in comparison to normal controls. This hemorheological profile was not influenced by the cardiovascular risk factors, nor by the extent of coronary lesions, even if some differences were evident between patients with ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) and non-STEMI (NSTEMI). The blood viscosity pattern at the initial stage did not influence recurring ischemic events or the onset of heart failure during an 18 months\u2019 follow-up. The neutrophil to lymphocyte ratio did not affect the blood viscosity pattern. We reevaluated 83 patients 3 months after and 70 patients 12 months after the acute coronary syndrome, and we found that the hemorheological parameters were still altered in comparison to normal controls at both times. We observed an impairment of the hemorheological pattern in young patients with myocardial infarction, partially influenced by the infarction type (STEMI and NSTEMI) and persisting in the long term
Mouse model of panic disorder: Vulnerability to early environmental instability is strain-dependent.
AbstractEarly life experiences and genetic background shape phenotypic variation. Several mouse models based on early treatments have evaluated shortâ and longâterm phenotypic alterations and explored their molecular mechanisms. The instability of maternal cues was used to model human separation anxiety in outbred mice, one of the etiopathogenetic factors that predict panic disorder (PD). Application of the repeated crossâfostering (RCF) protocol to inbred strains (C57 and DBA) allowed us to measure differential responses to the same experimental manipulation. Ultrasounds emitted during isolation indicated that after RCF, pups from both strains lose their ability to be comforted by nest cues, but the frequency modulation of separation calls increased in RCFâC57 and decreased in RCFâDBA mice. No strainâspecific difference in olfactory ability explained these responses in RCFâexposed mice. Rather, disruption of the infantâmother bond may differentially affect separation calls in the two strains. Moreover, the RCFâassociated increased respiratory response to hypercapniaâan endophenotype of human PD documented among mice outbred strainsâwas replicated in the C57 strain only. We suggest that RCFâinduced instability of the early environment affects emotionality and respiratory physiology differentially, depending on pups' genetic background. These strainâspecific responses provide a lead to understand differential vulnerability to emotional disorders
A simple method to analyze overall inidividual physical fitness in firefighters
none8noThe aim of the present study was to identify the main components that determine firefightersâ level of physical fitness using a stair climbing test. The age, weight, height, body fat and VO2max of the firefighters were recorded before the trial and %HHR was recorded during the stair climbing. Non-linear modeling of heart rate reserve time series and PCA (Principal Component Analysis) was applied to the data to isolate a small number of variables that quantify overall individual physical fitness. The heart rate reserve was represented as a function of time using a the sum of linear and trigonometric functions. Four main factors that influence performance, obtained from PCA analysis, emerged (78.2% of total explained variance): the capacity to carry the extra-load (22.8% of total variance); the effect of body fat (19.6% of total variance); the influence of age in the task (19.3% of total variance); the overall fitness level (16.4% of total variance). This approach allowed us to make a rapid assessment of each subjectâs fitness level. Such an assessment could be used in planning individualized functional training programs to improve each firefighterâs job performance and reduce injuries, and hence save time, energy and financial resources.openA.R. Calavalle; D. Sisti; G. Mennelli; G. Andolina; M. Del Sal; M.B.L. Rocchi; P. Benelli; V. StocchiCalavalle, ANNA RITA; Sisti, Davide; Mennelli, G.; Andolina, G.; DEL SAL, Marta; Rocchi, MARCO BRUNO LUIGI; Benelli, P.; Stocchi, Vilbert
Elevated miR-34a expression and altered transcriptional profile are associated with adverse electromechanical remodeling in the heart of male rats exposed to social stress
This study investigated epigenetic risk factors that may contribute to stress-related cardiac disease in a rodent model. Experiment 1 was designed to evaluate the expression of microRNA-34a (miR-34a), a known modulator of both stress responses and cardiac pathophysiology, in the heart of male adult rats exposed to a single or repeated episodes of social defeat stress. Moreover, RNA sequencing was conducted to identify transcriptomic profile changes in the heart of repeatedly stressed rats. Experiment 2 was designed to assess cardiac electromechanical changes induced by repeated social defeat stress that may predispose rats to cardiac dysfunction. Results indicated a larger cardiac miR-34a expression after repeated social defeat stress compared to a control condition. This molecular modification was associated with increased vulnerability to pharmacologically induced arrhythmias and signs of systolic left ventricular dysfunction. Gene expression analysis identified clusters of differentially expressed genes in the heart of repeatedly stressed rats that are mainly associated with morphological and functional properties of the mitochondria and may be directly regulated by miR-34a. These results suggest the presence of an association between miR-34a overexpression and signs of adverse electromechanical remodeling in the heart of rats exposed to repeated social defeat stress, and point to compromised mitochondria efficiency as a potential mediator of this link. This rat model may provide a useful tool for investigating the causal relationship between miR-34a expression, mitochondrial (dys)function, and cardiac alterations under stressful conditions, which could have important implications in the context of stress-related cardiac disease
Detection of influenza virus in urban wastewater during the season 2022/2023 in Sicily, Italy
Introduction: Seasonal influenza generally represents an underestimated public health problem with significant socioeconomic implications. Monitoring and detecting influenza epidemics are important tasks that require integrated strategies. Wastewater-based epidemiology (WBE) is an emerging field that uses wastewater data to monitor the spread of disease and assess the health of a community. It can represent an integrative surveillance tool for better understanding the epidemiology of influenza and prevention strategies in public health. Methods: We conducted a study that detected the presence of Influenza virus RNA using a wastewater-based approach. Samples were collected from five wastewater treatment plants in five different municipalities, serving a cumulative population of 555,673 Sicilian inhabitants in Italy. We used the RT-qPCR test to compare the combined weekly average of Influenza A and B viral RNA in wastewater samples with the average weekly incidence of Influenza-like illness (ILI) obtained from the Italian national Influenza surveillance system. We also compared the number of positive Influenza swabs with the viral RNA loads detected from wastewater. Our study investigated 189 wastewater samples. Results: Cumulative ILI cases substantially overlapped with the Influenza RNA load from wastewater samples. Influenza viral RNA trends in wastewater samples were similar to the rise of ILI cases in the population. Therefore, wastewater surveillance confirmed the co-circulation of Influenza A and B viruses during the season 2022/2023, with a similar trend to that reported for the weekly clinically confirmed cases. Conclusion: Wastewater-based epidemiology does not replace traditional epidemiological surveillance methods, such as laboratory testing of samples from infected individuals. However, it can be a valuable complement to obtaining additional information on the incidence of influenza in the population and preventing its spread
Postnatal Aversive Experience Impairs Sensitivity to Natural Rewards and Increases Susceptibility to Negative Events in Adult Life
Evidence shows that maternal care and postnatal traumatic events
can exert powerful effects on brain circuitry development but little
is known about the impact of early postnatal experiences on processing
of rewarding and aversive stimuli related to the medial prefrontal
cortex (mpFC) function in adult life. In this study, the
unstable maternal environment induced by repeated cross-fostering
(RCF) impaired palatable food conditioned place preference and disrupted
the natural preference for sweetened fluids in the saccharin
preference test. By contrast, RCF increased sensitivity to conditioned
place aversion (CPA) and enhanced immobility in the
forced swimming test. Intracerebral microdialysis data showed that
the RCF prevents mpFC dopamine (DA) outflow regardless of
exposure to rewarding or aversive stimuli, whereas it induces a
strong and sustained prefrontal norepinephrine (NE) release in
response to different aversive experiences. Moreover, the selective
mpFC NE depletion abolished CPA, thus indicating that prefrontal
NE is required for motivational salience attribution to aversionrelated
stimuli. These findings demonstrate that an unstable
maternal environment impairs the natural propensity to seek pleasurable
sources of reward, enhances sensitivity to negative events
in adult life, blunts prefrontal DA outflow, and modulates NE release
in the reverse manner depending on the exposure to rewarding or
aversive stimuli
Structure and Function of Iron-Loaded Synthetic Melanin
We describe a synthetic method for increasing and controlling the iron loading of synthetic melanin nanoparticles and use the resulting materials to perform a systematic quantitative investigation on their structure 12property relationship. A comprehensive analysis by magnetometry, electron paramagnetic resonance, and nuclear magnetic relaxation dispersion reveals the complexities of their magnetic behavior and how these intraparticle magnetic interactions manifest in useful material properties such as their performance as MRI contrast agents. This analysis allows predictions of the optimal iron loading through a quantitative modeling of antiferromagnetic coupling that arises from proximal iron ions. This study provides a detailed understanding of this complex class of synthetic biomaterials and gives insight into interactions and structures prevalent in naturally occurring melanins
Recommended from our members
Hematopoietic Cell Transplantation in Patients With Primary Immune Regulatory Disorders (PIRD): A Primary Immune Deficiency Treatment Consortium (PIDTC) Survey.
Primary Immune Regulatory Disorders (PIRD) are an expanding group of diseases caused by gene defects in several different immune pathways, such as regulatory T cell function. Patients with PIRD develop clinical manifestations associated with diminished and exaggerated immune responses. Management of these patients is complicated; oftentimes immunosuppressive therapies are insufficient, and patients may require hematopoietic cell transplant (HCT) for treatment. Analysis of HCT data in PIRD patients have previously focused on a single gene defect. This study surveyed transplanted patients with a phenotypic clinical picture consistent with PIRD treated in 33 Primary Immune Deficiency Treatment Consortium centers and European centers. Our data showed that PIRD patients often had immunodeficient and autoimmune features affecting multiple organ systems. Transplantation resulted in resolution of disease manifestations in more than half of the patients with an overall 5-years survival of 67%. This study, the first to encompass disorders across the PIRD spectrum, highlights the need for further research in PIRD management
What makes you not a Buddhist? : a preliminary mapping of values
This study sets out to establish which Buddhist values contrasted with or were shared by adolescents from a non-Buddhist population. A survey of attitude toward a variety of Buddhist values was fielded in a sample of 352 non-Buddhist schoolchildren aged between 13 and 15 in London. Buddhist values where attitudes were least positive concerned the worth of being a monk/nun or meditating, offering candles & incense on the Buddhist shrine, friendship on Sangha Day, avoiding drinking alcohol, seeing the world as empty or impermanent and Nirvana as the ultimate peace. Buddhist values most closely shared by non-Buddhists concerned the Law of Karma, calming the mind, respecting those deserving of respect, subjectivity of happiness, welfare work, looking after parents in old age and compassion to cuddly animals. Further significant differences of attitude toward Buddhism were found in partial correlations with the independent variables of sex, age and religious affiliation. Correlation patterns paralleled those previously described in theistic religions. Findings are applied to spiritual, moral, social and cultural development and for the teaching of religious to pupils of no faith adherence. The study recommends that quantitative psychometrics employed to conceptualize Buddhist values by discriminant validity in this study could be extended usefully to other aspects of the study of Buddhism, particularly in quest of validity in the conceptualization of Buddhist identity within specifically Buddhist populations
- âŠ