28 research outputs found

    Information Technology to Support Improved Care For Chronic Illness

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    BackgroundIn populations with chronic illness, outcomes improve with the use of care models that integrate clinical information, evidence-based treatments, and proactive management of care. Health information technology is believed to be critical for efficient implementation of these chronic care models. Health care organizations have implemented information technologies, such as electronic medical records, to varying degrees. However, considerable uncertainty remains regarding the relative impact of specific informatics technologies on chronic illness care.ObjectiveTo summarize knowledge and increase expert consensus regarding informatics components that support improvement in chronic illness care.DesignA systematic review of the literature was performed. "Use case" models were then developed, based on the literature review, and guidance from clinicians and national quality improvement projects. A national expert panel process was conducted to increase consensus regarding information system components that can be used to improve chronic illness care.ResultsThe expert panel agreed that informatics should be patient-centered, focused on improving outcomes, and provide support for illness self-management. They concurred that outcomes should be routinely assessed, provided to clinicians during the clinical encounter, and used for population-based care management. It was recommended that interactive, sequential, disorder-specific treatment pathways be implemented to quickly provide clinicians with patient clinical status, treatment history, and decision support.ConclusionsSpecific informatics strategies have the potential to improve care for chronic illness. Software to implement these strategies should be developed, and rigorously evaluated within the context of organizational efforts to improve care

    Best practice guidelines for the molecular genetic diagnosis of maturity-onset diabetes of the young

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    Member of the EMQN MODY group: Gisela GasparAIMS/HYPOTHESIS: Mutations in the GCK and HNF1A genes are the most common cause of the monogenic forms of diabetes known as 'maturity-onset diabetes of the young'. GCK encodes the glucokinase enzyme, which acts as the pancreatic glucose sensor, and mutations result in stable, mild fasting hyperglycaemia. A progressive insulin secretory defect is seen in patients with mutations in the HNF1A and HNF4A genes encoding the transcription factors hepatocyte nuclear factor-1 alpha and -4 alpha. A molecular genetic diagnosis often changes management, since patients with GCK mutations rarely require pharmacological treatment and HNF1A/4A mutation carriers are sensitive to sulfonylureas. These monogenic forms of diabetes are often misdiagnosed as type 1 or 2 diabetes. Best practice guidelines for genetic testing were developed to guide testing and reporting of results

    ER stress in rodent islets of langerhans is concomitant with obesity and β-cell compensation but not with β-cell dysfunction and diabetes

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    Objective: The objective of this study was to determine whether ER stress correlates with β-cell dysfunction in obesity-associated diabetes. Methods: Quantitative RT-PCR and western blot analysis were used to investigate changes in the expression of markers of ER stress, the unfolded protein response (UPR) and β-cell function in islets isolated from (1) non-diabetic Zucker obese (ZO) and obese female Zucker diabetic fatty (fZDF) rats compared with their lean littermates and from (2) high-fat-diet-fed fZDF rats (HF-fZDF), to induce diabetes, compared with age-matched non-diabetic obese fZDF rats. Results: Markers of an adaptive ER stress/UPR and β-cell function are elevated in islets isolated from ZO and fZDF rats compared with their lean littermates. In islets isolated from HF-fZDF rats, there was no significant change in the expression of markers of ER stress compared with age matched, obese, non-diabetic fZDF rats. Conclusions: These results provide evidence that obesity-induced activation of the UPR is an adaptive response for increasing the ER folding capacity to meet the increased demand for insulin. As ER stress is not exacerbated in high-fat-diet-induced diabetes, we suggest that failure of the islet to mount an effective adaptive UPR in response to an additional increase in insulin demand, rather than chronic ER stress, may ultimately lead to β-cell failure and hence diabetes

    Association of the KCNJ11 Variant E23K with Type 2 Diabetes in Indo-Trinidadians

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    Objective: To examine the effect of genetic variation in KCNJ11 on the risk of Type 2 diabetes mellitus in Trinidadians. Methods: The coding and bordering intron-exon regions of the KCNJ11 gene were sequenced in 168 diabetic and 61 non-diabetic subjects who historically were thought to be of South Asian Indian ancestry, as well as 66 diabetic and 59 non-diabetic subjects of African ancestry. Allele and haplotype frequency differences were calculated between cases and controls and linkage equilibrium was assessed across the KCNJ11 region. Results: We identified novel missense mutations in both subject groups including A94P and R369C in a diabetic Indo-Trinidadian subject, S113G in a non-diabetic Indo-Trinidadian subject, and S118L in a diabetic Afro-Trinidadian subject. It is unknown if these mutations are pathogenic as other family members were not available for study. Additionally, the common variant E23K was associated with Type 2 diabetes in the Indo-Trinidadian group (OR = 1.797 [1.148–2.814], p = 0.0098). Conclusions: Rare variants in KCNJ11 are segregating in the Indo- and Afro-Trinidadian populations and further studies are needed to determine their contribution, if any, to the overall prevalence of diabetes in these groups. Common variants such as E23K may increase the risk in the Indo-Trinidadian population. Keywords: KCNJ11, E23K, Type 2 diabetes, Indo-Trinidadian "La Asociación de la Variante E23K de KCNJ11 con la Diabetes de Tipo 2 en Indo-Trinitenses" LG Boodram, K Miyake, MG Hayes, GI Bell, BN Cockburn RESUMEN Objetivo: Examinar el efecto de la variación genética en KCNJ11 sobre el riesgo de la diabetes tipo 2 en trinitenses. Métodos: Las regiones codificantes y las regiones de la frontera intrón-exón del gen KCNJ11 fueron secuenciadas en 168 sujetos diabéticos y 61 no diabéticos – históricamente de ascendencia del sur de la India – así como 66 sujetos diabéticos y 59 no diabéticos, de ascendencia africana. Se calcularon las diferencias de la frecuencia de los aleles y los haplotipos entre los casos y los controles, evaluándose asimismo el equilibrio de ligamiento de la región de KCNJ11. Resultados: Se identificaron novedosas mutaciones de sentido erróneo en ambos grupos de sujetos, incluyendo A94P y R369C en un sujeto indo-trinitense diabético, y S118L en un sujeto afro-trinitense diabético. No se sabe si estas mutaciones son patogénicas ya que no se disponía de otros miembros de la familia para estudiar el caso. Además, la variante E23K estaba asociada con la diabetes tipo 2 en el grupo indo-trinitense (OR = 1.797 (1.148–2.814), p = 0.0098). Conclusiones: Variantes raras en el KCNJ11 se están segregando en las poblaciones indo – y afro-trinitenses, y se requieren estudios ulteriores para determinar si de algún modo contribuyen a la prevalencia general de la diabetes en estos grupos. Las variantes comunes como la E23K pueden aumentar el riesgo en la población de indo-trinitense. Palabras claves: KCNJ11, E23K, diabetes tipo 2, indo-trinitense

    "A wild and wondrous ride": CDC field epidemiologists in the east Pakistan smallpox and cholera epidemics of 1958 "Uma louca e maravilhosa jornada": epidemiologistas de campo do CDC nas epidemias de varíola e cólera do Paquistão Oriental em 1958

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    In mid-April of 1958 the Government of Pakistan summoned the press to announce a grave need for international aid to cope with smallpox and cholera epidemics in East Pakistan. In response, and with the backing of the US State Department, Dr. Alexander D. Langmuir, chief epidemiologist of the CDC, led a team of epidemiologists to assist authorities in Dacca strengthen their immunization programs. Langmuir's superiors hoped for a Cold War advantage, but he saw an opportunity for trainees in the Epidemic Intelligence Service to learn about public health in a developing country. Langmuir later described the episode as a "wild and wondrous ride," but it had been more like a nightmare: the East Pakistan health department had collapsed; a popular movement had taken over vaccination and squandered vaccine supplies; hostile journalists had questioned the Americans' deeper motives; and a professional rivalry opened between the Americans and a British epidemiologist named Aidan Cockburn. By the time the epidemic subsided in July 1958, 30 million Bengalis had been vaccinated for smallpox but another 20,000 had succumbed to the disease. This episode was CDC's first sustained foreign intervention, a precursor to its extensive role in the 1970s helping WHO eradicate smallpox from Bangladesh.<br>Em meados de abril de 1958, o Governo do Paquistão convocou a imprensa para anunciar a urgente necessidade de auxílio internacional para lidar com epidemias de varíola e cólera no Paquistão Oriental. Em resposta, e com o apoio do Departamento de Estado dos Estados Unidos, Dr. Alexander D. Langmuir, chefe de epidemiologia do CDC em Atlanta, liderou um time de epidemiologistas para auxiliar as autoridades em Dacca a reforçar seus programas de imunização. Os superiores de Langmuir ansiavam por demonstrações de capacidade dos EUA na Guerra Fria, mas ele vislumbrou uma chance para o Serviço de Inteligência Epidemiológica aprender sobre saúde pública em países em desenvolvimento. Langmuir descreveu o episódio como uma "jornada louca e maravilhosa", porém pareceu mais um pesadelo: o departamento de saúde do Paquistão Oriental entrou em colapso; um movimento popular assumiu a vacinação e desperdiçou suprimentos de vacinas; jornalistas hostis questionaram as motivações ocultas dos americanos; e iniciou-se uma rivalidade profissional entre americanos e o epidemiologista britânico Aidan Cockburn. No final da epidemia, em julho de 1958, tinham sido vacinados trinta milhões de bengalis contra varíola, mas outros vinte mil sucumbiram. Esse episódio foi a primeira intervenção sistemática do CDC no exterior

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    Alterations of DNA methylome in human bladder cancer

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    Bladder cancer is the fourth most common cancer in men in the United States, and its recurrence rate is highest among all malignancies. The unmet need for improved strategies for early detection, treatment, and monitoring of the progression of this disease continues to translate into high mortality and morbidity. The quest for advanced diagnostic, therapeutic, and prognostic approaches for bladder cancer is a high priority, which can be achieved by understanding the molecular mechanisms of the initiation and progression of this malignancy. Aberrant DNA methylation in single or multiple cancer-related genes/loci has been found in human bladder tumors and cancer cell lines, and urine sediments, and correlated with many clinicopathological features of this disease, including tumor relapse, muscle-invasiveness, and survival. The present review summarizes the published research on aberrant DNA methylation in connection with human bladder cancer. Representative studies are highlighted to set forth the current state of knowledge, gaps in the knowledgebase, and future directions in this prime epigenetic field of research. Identifying the potentially reversible and ‘drugable’ aberrant DNA methylation events that initiate and promote bladder cancer development can highlight biological markers for early diagnosis, effective therapy and accurate prognosis of this malignancy
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