667 research outputs found
Hypospadias as a novel feature in spinal bulbar muscle atrophy
Spinal and bulbar muscle atrophy (SBMA) is an X-linked neuromuscular disorder
caused by CAG repeat expansions in the androgen receptor (AR) gene. The SBMA
phenotype consists of slowly progressive neuromuscular symptoms and
undermasculinization features as the result of malfunction of the AR. The latter
mainly includes gynecomastia and infertility. Hypospadias is also a feature of
undermasculinization with an underdeveloped urethra and penis; it has not been
described as part of the SBMA phenotype but has been suggested to be associated
with a prolonged CAG repeat in the AR gene. This study includes the first
epidemiologic description of the co-occurrence of hypospadias and SBMA in
subjects and their male relatives in Swedish population-based health registers,
as well as an additional clinical case. One boy with severe hypospadias was
screened for mutations in the AR gene and was found to have 42 CAG repeats in it,
which is in the full range of mutations causing SBMA later in life. We also
detected a maximum of four cases displaying the combination of SBMA and
hypospadias in our national register databases. This is the third case report
with hypospadias in association with CAG repeat expansions in the AR gene in the
full range known to cause SBMA later in life. Our findings suggest that
hypospadias may be an under diagnosed feature of the SBMA phenotype and we
propose that neurologists working with SBMA further investigate and report the
true prevalence of hypospadias among patients with SBMA.Swedish Research Council, K2012-64X-14506-10-5Stockholm City CouncilFoundation Frimurare Barnhuset in StockholmSwedish Research Council through the Swedish Initiative for Research on Microdata in the Social And Medical Sciences (SIMSAM), 340-2013-5867Accepte
Nationwide population-based cohort study of psychiatric disorders in individuals with Ehlers-Danlos syndrome or hypermobility syndrome and their siblings
Background: To assess the risk of psychiatric disorders in Ehlers-Danlos syndrome (EDS) and hypermobility syndrome.
Methods: Nationwide population-based matched cohort study. EDS, hypermobility syndrome and psychiatric disorders
were identified through Swedish national registries. Individuals with EDS (n = 1,771) were matched with comparison
individuals (n = 17,710). Further, siblings to individuals with EDS who did not have an EDS diagnosis themselves were
compared with matched comparison siblings. Using conditional logistic regression, risk of autism spectrum disorder
(ASD), bipolar disorder, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), depression, attempted suicide, suicide
and schizophrenia were estimated. The same analyses were conducted in individuals with hypermobility syndrome
(n = 10,019) and their siblings.
Results: EDS was associated with ASD: risk ratio (RR) 7.4, 95 % confidence interval (95 % CI) 5.2â10.7; bipolar disorder:
RR 2.7, CI 1.5â4.7; ADHD: RR 5.6, CI 4.2â7.4; depression: RR 3.4, 95 % CI 2.9â4.1; and attempted suicide: RR 2.1, 95 % CI 1.
7â2.7, but not with suicide or schizophrenia. EDS siblings were at increased risk of ADHD: RR 2.1, 95 % CI 1.4â3.3;
depression: RR 1.5, 95 % CI 1.1â1.8; and suicide attempt: RR 1.8, 95 % CI 1.4â2.3. Similar results were observed for
individuals with hypermobility syndrome and their siblings.
Conclusions: Individuals with EDS and hypermobility syndrome are at increased risks of being diagnosed with
psychiatric disorders. These risk increases may have a genetic and/or early environmental background as suggested by evidence showing that siblings to patients have elevated risks of certain psychiatric disorders.NonePublishe
Registers of the Swedish total population and their use in medical research
The primary aim of the Swedish national population registration system is to
obtain data that (1) reflect the composition, relationship and identities of the
Swedish population and (2) can be used as the basis for correct decisions and
measures by government and other regulatory authorities. For this purpose, Sweden
has established two population registers: (1) The Population Register, maintained
by the Swedish National Tax Agency ("Folkbokforingsregistret"); and (2) The Total
Population Register (TPR) maintained by the government agency Statistics Sweden
("Registret over totalbefolkningen"). The registers contain data on life events
including birth, death, name change, marital status, family relationships and
migration within Sweden as well as to and from other countries. Updates are
transmitted daily from the Tax Agency to the TPR. In this paper we describe the
two population registers and analyse their strengths and weaknesses. Virtually
100 % of births and deaths, 95 % of immigrations and 91 % of emigrations are
reported to the Population Registers within 30 days and with a higher proportion
over time. The over-coverage of the TPR, which is primarily due to underreported
emigration data, has been estimated at up to 0.5 % of the Swedish population.
Through the personal identity number, assigned to all residents staying at least
1 year in Sweden, data from the TPR can be used for medical research purposes,
including family design studies since each individual can be linked to his or her
parents, siblings and offspring. The TPR also allows for identification of
general population controls, participants in cohort studies, as well as
calculation of follow-up time.NonePublishe
A Color Mutation Model of Soft Interaction in High Energy Hadronic Collisions
A comprehensive model, called ECOMB, is proposed to describe multiparticle
production by soft interaction. It incorporates the eikonal formalism, parton
model, color mutation, branching and recombination. The physics is conceptually
opposite to the dynamics that underlies the fragmentation of a string. The
partons are present initially in a hadronic collision; they form a single,
large, color-neutral cluster until color mutation of the quarks leads to a
fission of the cluster into two color-neutral subclusters. The mutation and
branching processes continue until only pairs are left in each small
cluster. The model contains self-similar dynamics and exhibits scaling behavior
in the factorial moments. It can satisfactorily reproduce the intermittency
data that no other model has been able to fit.Comment: 24 pages including 11 figures in revtex epsf styl
A Multi-Phase Transport model for nuclear collisions at RHIC
To study heavy ion collisions at energies available from the Relativistic
Heavy Ion Collider, we have developed a multi-phase transport model that
includes both initial partonic and final hadronic interactions. Specifically,
the parton cascade model ZPC, which uses as input the parton distribution from
the HIJING model, is extended to include the quark-gluon to hadronic matter
transition and also final-state hadronic interactions based on the ART model.
Predictions of the model for central Au on Au collisions at RHIC are reported.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figure
Randomized assessment of imatinib in patients with acute ischaemic stroke treated with intravenous thrombolysis
BackgroundImatinib, a tyrosine kinase inhibitor, has been shown to restore bloodĂą brain barrier integrity and reduce infarct size, haemorrhagic transformation and cerebral oedema in stroke models treated with tissue plasminogen activator. We evaluated the safety of imatinib, based on clinical and neuroradiological data, and its potential influence on neurological and functional outcomes.MethodsA phase II randomized trial was performed in patients with acute ischaemic stroke treated with intravenous thrombolysis. A total of 60 patients were randomly assigned to four groups [3 (active): 1 (control)]; the active treatment groups received oral imatinib for 6 days at three dose levels (400, 600 and 800 mg). Primary outcome was any adverse event; secondary outcomes were haemorrhagic transformation, cerebral oedema, neurological severity on the National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale (NIHSS) at 7 days and at 3 months and functional outcomes on the modified Rankin scale (mRS).ResultsFour serious adverse events were reported, which resulted in three deaths (one in the control group and two in the 400Ăą mg dose group; one patient in the latter group did not receive active treatment and the other received two doses). Nonserious adverse events were mostly mild, resulting in full recovery. Imatinib ameliorated neurological outcomes with an improvement of 0.6 NIHSS points per 100 mg imatinib (P = 0.02). For the 800Ăą mg group, the mean unadjusted and adjusted NIHSS improvements were 4 (P = 0.037) and 5 points (P = 0.012), respectively, versus controls. Functional independence (mRS 0Ăą 2) increased by 18% versus controls (61 vs. 79; P = 0.296).ConclusionThis phase II study showed that imatinib is safe and tolerable and may reduce neurological disability in patients treated with intravenous thrombolysis after ischaemic stroke. A confirmatory randomized trial is currently underway.Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/136298/1/joim12576_am.pdfhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/136298/2/joim12576.pd
Relaxed selection and mutation accumulation are best studied empirically : reply to Woodley of Menie et al.
Correction to: replay to Woodley of Menie et al. 10.1098/rspb.2018.1427.Peer reviewe
Mode of obstetrical delivery and type 1 diabetes : a sibling design study
OBJECTIVES: We investigated the association between cesarean section (CS) and
type 1 diabetes (T1D), and if the association remains after accounting for
familial confounding by using a sibling-control design. METHODS: We conducted a
population-based cohort study of all singleton live births in Sweden between 1982
and 2009, followed by sibling-control analyses. T1D diagnoses were identified
from the Swedish National Patient Register. Mode of delivery was categorized into
unassisted vaginal delivery (reference group), instrumental vaginal delivery
(IVD), emergency CS, and elective CS. The statistical analysis was conducted in 2
steps: firstly log-linear Poisson regression with aggregated person-years by
using the full cohort; secondly, conditional logistic regression for
sibling-control analyses. The sibling analysis included siblings who were
discordant for both mode of delivery and T1D. RESULTS: In the cohort analyses (N
= 2 638 083), there was an increased risk of childhood T1D among children born by
elective CS (adjusted relative risk [RR] = 1.15 [95% confidence interval:
1.06-1.25]) and IVD (RR=1.14 [1.06-1.23]) but not emergency CS (RR = 1.02
[0.95-1.11]) when compared with children born by unassisted vaginal birth.
However, the effect of elective CS and IVD on childhood T1D almost disappeared
and became nonsignificant in the sibling-control analyses. CONCLUSIONS: The
present findings suggest a small association between elective CS and IVD and T1D.
The sibling-control results, however, suggest that these findings are not
consistent with causal effects of mode of delivery on T1D and may be due to
familial confounders such as genetic susceptibility and environmental factors.NoneAccepte
Infant tidal flowâvolume parameters and arousal state
This version is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution NonCommercial Licence 4.0. For commercial reproduction rights and permissions contact: [email protected]: Infant lung function can be assessed with tidal flowâvolume (TFV) loops. While TFV loops can be measured in both awake and sleeping infants, the influence of arousal state in early infancy is not established. The aim of the present study was to determine whether TFV loop parameters in healthy infants differed while awake compared to the sleeping state at 3 months of age.
Methods: From the population-based Scandinavian Preventing Atopic Dermatitis and ALLergies in children (PreventADALL) birth cohort, 91 infants had reproducible TFV loops measured with ExhalyzerÂź D in both the awake and sleeping state at 3 months of age. The TFV loops were manually selected according to a standardised procedure. The ratio of time to peak tidal expiratory flow (tPTEF) to expiratory time (tE) and the corresponding volume ratio (VPTEF/VE), as well as tidal volume (VT) and respiratory rate were compared using nonparametric tests.
Results: The mean (95% CI) tPTEF/tE was significantly higher while awake compared to the sleeping state: 0.39 (0.37â0.41) versus 0.28 (0.27â0.29); with the corresponding VPTEF/VE of 0.38 (0.36â0.40) versus 0.29 (0.28â0.30). The VT was similar, while the respiratory rate was higher while awake compared to the sleeping state: 53 (51â56) breaths·minâ1 versus 38 (36â40) breaths·minâ1 .
Conclusion: Higher tPTEF/tE, VPTEF/VE and respiratory rate, but similar VT while awake compared to the sleeping state suggests that separate normative TFV loop values according to arousal state may be required in early infancy.publishedVersio
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