2,026 research outputs found
Cerebrospinal fluid biomarkers as a measure of disease activity and treatment efficacy in relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis
Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) biomarkers can reflect different aspects of the pathophysiology of relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis (RRMS). Understanding the impact of different disease modifying therapies on the CSF biomarker profile may increase their implementation in clinical practice and their appropriateness for monitoring treatment efficacy. This study investigated the influence of first-line (interferon beta) and second-line (natalizumab) therapies on seven CSF biomarkers in RRMS and their correlation with clinical and radiological outcomes. We included 59 RRMS patients and 39 healthy controls. The concentrations of C-X-C motif chemokine 13 (CXCL13), C-C motif chemokine ligand 2 (CCL2), chitinase-3-like protein 1 (CHI3L1), glial fibrillary acidic protein, neurofilament light protein (NFL), and neurogranin were determined by ELISA, and chitotriosidase (CHIT1) was analyzed by spectrofluorometry. RRMS patients had higher levels of NFL, CXCL13, CHI3L1, and CHIT1 than controls (p < 0.001). Subgroup analysis revealed higher NFL, CXCL13 and CHIT1 levels in patients treated with first-line therapy compared to second-line therapy (p = 0.008, p = 0.001 and p = 0.026, respectively). NFL and CHIT1 levels correlated with relapse status, and NFL and CXCL13 levels correlated with the formation of new magnetic resonance imaging lesions. Furthermore, we found an association between inflammatory and degenerative biomarkers. The results indicate that CSF levels of NFL, CXCL13, CHI3L1, and CHIT1 correlate with the clinical and/or radiological disease activity, providing additional dimensions in the assessment of treatment efficacy
Cerebrospinal fluid growth-associated protein 43 in multiple sclerosis
Neurodegeneration in multiple sclerosis (MS) correlates with disease progression and reparative processes may be triggered. Growth-associated protein 43 (GAP-43) exhibits induced expression during axonal growth and reduced expression during MS progression. We aimed to evaluate if GAP-43 can serve as a biomarker of regeneration in relapsing-remitting MS (RRMS) and whether disease-modifying therapies (DMTs) influence GAP-43 concentration in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). GAP-43 was measured using an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay in 105 MS patients (73 RRMS, 12 primary progressive MS, 20 secondary progressive MS) and 23 healthy controls (HCs). In 35 of the patients, lumbar puncture, clinical assessment, and magnetic resonance imaging was performed before initiation of therapeutic intervention, and at follow-up. CSF GAP-43 concentration was significantly lower in progressive MS compared with HCs (p = 0.004) and RRMS (p =  < 0.001) and correlated negatively with disability (p = 0.026). However, DMTs did not alter CSF GAP-43. Interestingly, in RRMS CSF GAP-43 levels were higher in patients with signs of active inflammatory disease than in patients in remission (p = 0.042). According to CSF GAP-43 concentrations, regeneration seems reduced in progressive MS, increased during disease activity in RRMS but is unaffected by treatment of highly active DMTs
Prevalence and severity of cardiac abnormalities and arteriosclerosis in farmed rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss)
Cardiovascular disease may pose a major threat to the health and welfare of farmed fish. By investigating a range of established cardiovascular disease indicators, we aimed to determine the prevalence, severity and consequences of this affliction in farmed rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) from an open cage farm in the Baltic Sea, an open cage farm in a freshwater lake, and a land-based recirculating aquaculture system. We also aimed to identify environmental, anthropogenic and physiological factors contributing towards the development of the disease. The majority of trout possessed enlarged hearts with rounded ventricles (mean height:width ratios of 1.0-1.1 c.f. similar to 1.3 in wild fish) and a high degree of vessel misalignment (mean angles between the longitudinal ventricular axis and the axis of the bulbus arteriosus of 28-31 degrees c.f. similar to 23 degrees in wild fish). The prevalence and severity of coronary arteriosclerosis was also high, as 92-100% of fish from the different aquaculture facilities exhibited coronary lesions. Mean lesion incidence and severity indices were 67-95% and 3.1-3.9, respectively, which resulted in mean coronary arterial blockages of 19-32%. To evaluate the functional significance of these findings, we modelled the effects of arterial blockages on coronary blood flow and experimentally tested the effects of coronary occlusion in a sub-sample of fish. The observed coronary blockages were estimated to reduce coronary blood flow by 34-54% while experimental coronary occlusion adversely affected the electrocardiogram of trout. Across a range of environmental (water current, predation), anthropogenic (boat traffic intensity, hatchery of origin, brand of feed pellets) and physiological factors (condition factor, haematological and plasma indices), the hatchery of origin was the main factor contributing towards the observed variation in the development of cardiovascular disease. Therefore, further research on the effects of selective breeding programs and rearing strategies on the development of cardiovascular disease is needed to improve the welfare and health of farmed fish
YKL-40 is a CSF biomarker of intrathecal inflammation in secondary progressive multiple sclerosis
YKL-40 (CHI3L1) is a glycoprotein predominantly produced by reactive astrocytes in chronic active MS lesions, which are common in secondary progressive MS. In this study, YKL-40 was investigated in different stages of MS and in relation to MRI findings. YKL-40 levels in CSF samples from two independent patient cohorts of MS patients were determined with ELISA. CSF YKL-40 was increased in patients with active relapsing–remitting MS and correlated with the number of gadolinium enhancing lesions. Patients with secondary progressive MS had similar high levels of YKL-40, whereas not active relapsing–remitting MS patients had YKL-40 levels comparable to healthy controls
Searching for hidden mirror symmetries in CMB fluctuations from WMAP 7 year maps
We search for hidden mirror symmetries at large angular scales in the WMAP 7
year Internal Linear Combination map of CMB temperature anisotropies using
global pixel based estimators introduced for this aim. Two different axes are
found for which the CMB intensity pattern is anomalously symmetric (or
anti-symmetric) under reflection with respect to orthogonal planes at the
99.84(99.96)% CL (confidence level), if compared to a result for an arbitrary
axis in simulations without the symmetry. We have verified that our results are
robust to the introduction of the galactic mask. The direction of such axes is
close to the CMB kinematic dipole and nearly orthogonal to the ecliptic plane,
respectively. If instead the real data are compared to those in simulations
taken with respect to planes for which the maximal mirror symmetry is generated
by chance, the confidence level decreases to 92.39 (76.65)%. But when the
effect in question translates into the anomalous alignment between normals to
planes of maximal mirror (anti)-symmetry and these natural axes mentioned. We
also introduce the representation of the above estimators in the harmonic
domain, confirming the results obtained in the pixel one. The symmetry anomaly
is shown to be almost entirely due to low multipoles, so it may have a
cosmological and even primordial origin. Contrary, the anti-symmetry one is
mainly due to intermediate multipoles that probably suggests its
non-fundamental nature. We have demonstrated that these anomalies are not
connected to the known issue of the low variance in WMAP observations and we
have checked that axially symmetric parts of these anomalies are small, so that
the axes are not the symmetry ones.Comment: 18 pages, 10 figures, 2 tables. Consideration and discussion
expanded, 5 figures and 1 table added, main conclusions unchange
Measuring energy dependent polarization in soft gamma-rays using Compton scattering in PoGOLite
Linear polarization in X- and gamma-rays is an important diagnostic of many
astrophysical sources, foremost giving information about their geometry,
magnetic fields, and radiation mechanisms. However, very few X-ray polarization
measurements have been made, and then only mono-energetic detections, whilst
several objects are assumed to have energy dependent polarization signatures.
In this paper we investigate whether detection of energy dependent polarization
from cosmic sources is possible using the Compton technique, in particular with
the proposed PoGOLite balloon-experiment, in the 25-100 keV range. We use
Geant4 simulations of a PoGOLite model and input photon spectra based on Cygnus
X-1 and accreting magnetic pulsars (100 mCrab). Effective observing times of 6
and 35 hours were simulated, corresponding to a standard and a long duration
flight respectively. Both smooth and sharp energy variations of the
polarization are investigated and compared to constant polarization signals
using chi-square statistics. We can reject constant polarization, with energy,
for the Cygnus X-1 spectrum (in the hard state), if the reflected component is
assumed to be completely polarized, whereas the distinction cannot be made for
weaker polarization. For the accreting pulsar, constant polarization can be
rejected in the case of polarization in a narrow energy band with at least 50%
polarization, and similarly for a negative step distribution from 30% to 0%
polarization.Comment: 11 pages, 12 figures; updated to match version accepted for
publication in Astroparticle Physics (only minor changes
Identification of a serum biomarker signature associated with metastatic prostate cancer
Purpose: Improved early diagnosis and determination of aggressiveness of prostate cancer (PC) is important to select suitable treatment options and to decrease over-treatment. The conventional marker is total prostate specific antigen (PSA) levels in blood, but lacks specificity and ability to accurately discriminate indolent from aggressive disease. Experimental design: In this study, we sought to identify a serum biomarker signature associated with metastatic PC. We measured 157 analytes in 363 serum samples from healthy subjects, patients with non-metastatic PC and patients with metastatic PC, using a recombinant antibody microarray. Results: A signature consisting of 69 proteins differentiating metastatic PC patients from healthy controls was identified. Conclusions and clinical relevance: The clinical value of this biomarker signature requires validation in larger independent patient cohorts before providing a new prospect for detection of metastatic PC
Crossing the Dripline to 11N Using Elastic Resonance Scattering
The level structure of the unbound nucleus 11N has been studied by 10C+p
elastic resonance scattering in inverse geometry with the LISE3 spectrometer at
GANIL, using a 10C beam with an energy of 9.0 MeV/u. An additional measurement
was done at the A1200 spectrometer at MSU. The excitation function above the
10C+p threshold has been determined up to 5 MeV. A potential-model analysis
revealed three resonance states at energies 1.27 (+0.18-0.05) MeV (Gamma=1.44
+-0.2 MeV), 2.01(+0.15-0.05) MeV, (Gamma=0.84 +-$0.2 MeV) and 3.75(+-0.05) MeV,
(Gamma=0.60 +-0.05 MeV) with the spin-parity assignments I(pi) =1/2+, 1/2- and
5/2+, respectively. Hence, 11N is shown to have a ground state parity inversion
completely analogous to its mirror partner, 11Be. A narrow resonance in the
excitation function at 4.33 (+-0.05) MeV was also observed and assigned
spin-parity 3/2-.Comment: 14 pages, 9 figures, twocolumn Accepted for publication in PR
Three-body correlations in Borromean halo nuclei
Three-body correlations in the dissociation of two-neutron halo nuclei are
explored using a technique based on intensity interferometry and Dalitz plots.
This provides for the combined treatment of both the n-n and core-n
interactions in the exit channel. As an example, the breakup of 14Be into
12Be+n+n by Pb and C targets has been analysed and the halo n-n separation
extracted. A finite delay between the emission of the neutrons in the reaction
on the C target was observed and is attributed to 13Be resonances populated in
sequential breakup.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, submitted to PR
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