12 research outputs found
Linear and nonlinear parameters of heart rate variability in ischemic stroke patients
Introduction
Cardiovascular system presents cortical modulation. Post-stroke outcome can be highly influenced by autonomic nervous system disruption. Heart rate variability (HRV) analysis is a simple non-invasive method to assess sympatho-vagal balance.
Objectives
The purpose of this study was to investigate cardiac autonomic activity in ischemic stroke patients and to asses HRV nonlinear parameters beside linear ones.
Methods
We analyzed HRV parameters in 15 right and 15 left middle cerebral artery ischemic stroke patients, in rest condition and during challenge (standing and deep breathing). Data were compared with 15 age- and sex-matched healthy controls.
Results
There was an asymmetric response after autonomic stimulation tests depending on the cortical lateralization in ischemic stroke patients. In resting state, left hemisphere stroke patients presented enhanced parasympathetic control of the heart rate (higher values for RMSSD, pNN50 and HF in normalized units). Right hemisphere ischemic stroke patients displayed a reduced cardiac parasympathetic modulation during deep breathing test. Beside time and frequency domain, using short-term ECG monitoring, cardiac parasympathetic modulation can also be assessed by nonlinear parameter SD1, that presented strong positive correlation with time and frequency domain parameters RMSSD, pNN50, HFnu, while DFA α1 index presented negative correlation with the same indices and positive correlation with the LFnu and LF/HF ratio, indicating a positive association with the sympatho-vagal balance.
Conclusions
Cardiac monitoring in clinical routine using HRV analysis in order to identify autonomic imbalance may highlight cardiac dysfunctions, thus helping preventing potential cardiovascular complications, especially in right hemisphere ischemic stroke patients with sympathetic hyperactivation
Traumatic spinal cord injuries: Neuroprotection and recent outcomes
Traumatic spinal cord injury has major effects on the injured person. In case of acute complete traumatic spinal cord injury methylprednisolone is a standard treatment option and surgery is often necessary, but these are not a cure for a complete spinal cord injury. This paper analyses the treatment outcomes in 37 cases of complete traumatic spinal cord injuries of which some patients received usual treatment and some patients received cerebrolysin, as neuroprotection and a protocol of intravenous fluids to ensure the spinal cord perfusion pressure augmentation, and standard surgical treatment
Effect of magnesium and vitamin B6 supplementation on mental health and quality of life in stressed healthy adults: Postâhoc analysis of a randomised controlled trial
Magnesium status and vitamin B6 intake have been linked to mental health and/or quality of life (QoL). In an 8âweek Phase IV randomised controlled study in individuals with low magnesemia and severe/extremely severe stress but who were otherwise healthy, greater stress reduction was achieved with magnesium combined with vitamin B6 than with magnesium alone. We present a previously unreported secondary analysis of the effect of magnesium, with and without vitamin B6, on depression, anxiety, and QoL. Adults with Depression Anxiety Stress Scales (DASSâ42) stress subscale score >18 were randomised 1:1 to magnesium + vitamin B6 combination (Magne B6Âź; daily dose 300 and 30 mg, respectively) or magnesium alone (MagnespasmylÂź; daily dose 300 mg). Outcomes included changes from baseline in DASSâ42 depression and anxiety scores, and QoL (Short Formâ36 Health Survey). DASSâ42 anxiety and depression scores significantly improved from baseline to week 8 with both treatments, particularly during the first 4 weeks. Improvement in QoL continued over 8 weeks. Participants' perceived capacity for physical activity in daily life showed greater improvement with magnesium + vitamin B6 than magnesium alone (Week 4). In conclusion, magnesium supplementation, with or without vitamin B6, could provide a meaningful clinical benefit in daily life for individuals with stress and low magnesemia
A framework for chemical safety assessment incorporating new approach methodologies within REACH
The long-term investment in new approach methodologies (NAMs) within the EU and other parts of the world is beginning to result in an emerging consensus of how to use information from in silico, in vitro and targeted in vivo sources to assess the safety of chemicals. However, this methodology is being adopted very slowly for regulatory purposes. Here, we have developed a framework incorporating in silico, in vitro and in vivo methods designed to meet the requirements of REACH in which both hazard and exposure can be assessed using a tiered approach. The outputs from each tier are classification categories, safe doses, and risk assessments, and progress through the tiers depends on the output from previous tiers. We have exemplified the use of the framework with three examples. The outputs were the same or more conservative than parallel assessments based on conventional studies. The framework allows a transparent and phased introduction of NAMs in chemical safety assessment and enables science-based safety decisions which provide the same level of public health protection using fewer animals, taking less time, and using less financial and expert resource. Furthermore, it would also allow new methods to be incorporated as they develop through continuous selective evolution rather than periodic revolution.publishe