49 research outputs found

    BMC Nephrol

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    BACKGROUND: To describe the quality of life of adolescents initiating haemodialysis, to determine the factors associated with quality of life, and to assess coping strategies and their impact on quality of life. METHODS: All adolescents initiating haemodialysis between September 2013 and July 2015 in French paediatric haemodialysis centres were included. Quality of life data were collected using the "Vecu et Sante Percue de l'Adolescent et l'Enfant" questionnaire, and coping data were collected using the Kidcope questionnaire. Adolescent's quality of life was compared with age- and sex-matched French control. RESULTS: Thirty-two adolescents were included. Their mean age was 13.9 +/- 2.0 years. The quality of life score was lowest in leisure activities and highest in relationships with medical staff. Compared with the French control, index, energy-vitality, relationships with friends, leisure activities and physical well-being scores were significantly lower in haemodialysis population. In multivariate analyses, active coping was positively associated with quality of life and especially with energy-vitality, relationships with parents and teachers, and school performance. In contrast, avoidant and negative coping were negatively associated with energy-vitality, psychological well-being and body image for avoidant coping, and body image and relationships with medical staff for negative coping. CONCLUSIONS: The quality of life of haemodialysis adolescents, and mainly the dimensions of leisure activities, physical well-being, relationships with friends and energy-vitality, were significantly altered compared to that of the French population. The impact of coping strategies on quality of life seems to be important. Given the importance of quality of life and coping strategies in adolescents with chronic disease, health care professionals should integrate these aspects into care management

    Structure and N-acetylglucosamine binding of the distal domain of mouse adenovirus 2 fibre

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    15 pags, 8 figsMurine adenovirus 2 (MAdV-2) infects cells of the mouse gastrointestinal tract. Like human adenoviruses, it is a member of the genus Mastadenovirus, family Adenoviridae. The MAdV-2 genome has a single fibre gene that expresses a 787 residue-long protein. Through analogy to other adenovirus fibre proteins, it is expected that the carboxy-terminal virus-distal head domain of the fibre is responsible for binding to the host cell, although the natural receptor is unknown. The putative head domain has little sequence identity to adenovirus fibres of known structure. In this report, we present high-resolution crystal structures of the carboxy-terminal part of the MAdV-2 fibre. The structures reveal a domain with the typical adenovirus fibre head topology and a domain containing two triple ß-spiral repeats of the shaft domain. Through glycan microarray profiling, saturation transfer difference nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, isothermal titration calorimetry and site-directed mutagenesis, we show that the fibre specifically binds to the monosaccharide N-acetylglucosamine (GlcNAc). The crystal structure of the complex reveals that GlcNAc binds between the AB and CD loops at the top of each of the three monomers of the MAdV-2 fibre head. However, infection competition assays show that soluble GlcNAc monosaccharide and natural GlcNAc-containing polymers do not inhibit infection by MAdV-2. Furthermore, site-directed mutation of the GlcNAc-binding residues does not prevent the inhibition of infection by soluble fibre protein. On the other hand, we show that the MAdV-2 fibre protein binds GlcNAc-containing mucin glycans, which suggests that the MAdV-2 fibre protein may play a role in viral mucin penetration in the mouse gut.This research was sponsored by grant BFU2014-53425-P (to M. J. v. R.), coordinated grants CTQ2015-64597-P-C02-01 and CTQ2015-64597-P-C02-02 (to J. J. B. and F. J. C., respectively), grant BFU2015-70052-R (to M. M.) and the Spanish Adenovirus Network (AdenoNet, BIO2015-68990-REDT), all from the Spanish Agencia Estatal de Investigación. Financial support to M. M. from the CIBER of Respiratory Diseases (CIBERES) from the Spanish Institute of Health Carlos III is also acknowledged. These grants are co-financed by the European Regional Development Fund of the European Union. A. K. S. and T. H. N. were recipients of pre-doctoral fellowships from La Caixa and CSIC-VAST, respectively. The expression vectors were designed and created in Hungary, and this was financed by the Hungarian Scientific Research Fund (OTKA K100163). M. K. thanks Enterprise Ireland for a Commercialisation Fund grant (CF/2015/0089), A. K. acknowledges the National University of Ireland for a Cancer Care West Hardiman PhD scholarship and L. J. acknowledges the EU FP7 programme in support of the GlycoHIT consortium (grant no. 260600). This work was supported by R01 AI104920 (to J. G. S.) from the National Institute for Allergy and Infectious Diseases (www.niaid.nih.gov). S. S. W. was also supported by the Helen Riaboff Whiteley Endowment to the University of Washington and by Public Health Service, National Research Service Awards T32 AI083203 from the National Institute for Allergy and Infectious Diseases and T32 GM007270 from the National Institute of General Medical Sciences

    Is the Concept of Quality of Life Relevant for Multiple Sclerosis Patients with Cognitive Impairment? Preliminary Results of a Cross-Sectional Study

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    Background: Cognitive impairment occurs in about 50 % of multiple sclerosis (MS) patients, and the use of self-reported outcomes for evaluating treatment and managing care among subjects with cognitive dysfunction has been questioned. The aim of this study was to provide new evidence about the suitability of self-reported outcomes for use in this specific population by exploring the internal structure, reliability and external validity of a specific quality of life (QoL) instrument, the Multiple Sclerosis International Quality of Life questionnaire (MusiQoL). Methods: Design: cross-sectional study. Inclusion criteria: MS patients of any disease subtype. Data collection: sociodemographic (age, gender, marital status, education level, and occupational activity) and clinical data (MS subtype, Expanded Disability Status Scale, disease duration); QoL (MusiQoL and SF36); and neuropsychological performance (Stroop color-word test). Statistical analysis: confirmatory factor analysis, item-dimension correlations, Cronbach’s alpha coefficients, Rasch statistics, relationships between MusiQoL dimensions and other parameters. Principal Findings: One hundred and twenty-four consecutive patients were enrolled. QoL scores did not differ between the 69 cognitively non-impaired patients and the 55 cognitively impaired patients, except for the symptoms dimension. The confirmatory factor analysis performed among the impaired subjects showed that the structure of the questionnaire matched with the initial structure of the MusiQoL. The unidimensionality of the MusiQoL dimensions was preserved, and th

    Posture and movement in very preterm infants at term age in and outside the nest.

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    Place: GermanyOBJECTIVE: The objective of this study is to evaluate the use of nests on general movements (GM) and posture in very preterm infants at term age. METHOD: Seventeen high-risk preterm infants-less than 30 weeks of gestation (GA)-underwent a video recording, lying in supine position, with or without nest. Posture, GM quality, and movements made around the child's midline, as well as abrupt movements and frozen postures-in extension or flexion of the four limbs-were analyzed. RESULTS: Nest did not modify quality of GM. Children significantly adopted a curled-up position. The nest system was associated with an increase in movements toward or across the midline, as well as reduction of the hyperextension posture and head rotation movements. Frozen postures in flexion or extension, as well as abrupt movements of the four limbs, were reduced but not significantly. CONCLUSIONS: Nest helps very preterm infants to adopt semi-flexed posture and facilitates movements across the midline and reduces movements of spine hyperextension, without GM global quality modifications

    Quality of life of early school-age French children born preterm: a cohort study.

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    International audienceOBJECTIVES: To describe the health-related quality of life (HRQL) of a cohort of children aged 6-10 years who were born preterm; and to determine whether sociodemographic factors, neonatal features and neurocognitive status were affecting their HRQL. STUDY DESIGN: All singleton infants born between 24 and 32 weeks of gestation between January 1997 and December 2001 at the study hospital, who were still alive in 2007 (age 6-10 years), and who had undergone complete clinical paediatric follow-up were included in the study. Maternal and perinatal data were obtained by chart review and regular clinical examination. The 'Battery for Rapid Evaluation of Cognitive Functions' (BREV) was used for cognitive evaluation when children were aged 4-8 years. HRQL data were collected in 2007 using the 'Vécu et Santé Perçue de l'Adolescent et de l'Enfant' (VSP-A) questionnaire (parent version). The HRQL of the preterm children was compared with that of a French reference population. RESULTS: Of 202 children who fulfilled the inclusion criteria, 82 children participated in the study. Their mean age was 7.9 years [standard deviation (SD) 1.4], mean birth weight was 1130.0 g (SD 361.4), 23 children were born before 28 weeks of gestation, 46 were female and 11 had major neurocognitive disorders. These data were not significantly different for the non-respondents (n=120). Parents of preterm children reported a significantly lower perception of HRQL of their child compared with parents of children in the reference population, as reflected by VSP-A global index scores and scores for the 'body image', 'vitality', 'psychological well-being' and 'school performance' dimensions. In multivariate analyses, three factors were found to be significantly associated with at least one dimension in the VSP-A scale in the preterm children: presence of major neurocognitive disorders, negatively correlated with 'vitality', 'relationships with friends', 'physical well-being' and 'school performance' dimensions; maternal parity, positively correlated with the 'psychological well-being' dimension; and socio-economic status of family, positively correlated with the 'relationships with friends' dimension. The maximum R(2) was 15%. CONCLUSION: In addition to neurocognitive disorders, other variables such as socio-economic status of the family have a significant impact on the HRQL of preterm children at 6-10 years of age. Given the low proportion of variability in HRQL explained by the models, there is a need to explore other factors (e.g. environmental)
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