42 research outputs found
Copeptin reflects physiological strain during thermal stress.
PURPOSE: To prevent heat-related illnesses, guidelines recommend limiting core body temperature (T c) ≤ 38 °C during thermal stress. Copeptin, a surrogate for arginine vasopressin secretion, could provide useful information about fluid balance, thermal strain and health risks. It was hypothesised that plasma copeptin would rise with dehydration from occupational heat stress, concurrent with sympathoadrenal activation and reduced glomerular filtration, and that these changes would reflect T c responses. METHODS: Volunteers (n = 15) were recruited from a British Army unit deployed to East Africa. During a simulated combat assault (3.5 h, final ambient temperature 27 °C), T c was recorded by radiotelemetry to differentiate volunteers with maximum T c > 38 °C versus ≤ 38 °C. Blood was sampled beforehand and afterwards, for measurement of copeptin, cortisol, free normetanephrine, osmolality and creatinine. RESULTS: There was a significant (P 38 °C (n = 8) vs ≤ 38 °C (n = 7) there were significantly greater elevations in copeptin (10.4 vs. 2.4 pmol L(-1)) and creatinine (10 vs. 2 μmol L(-1)), but no differences in cortisol, free normetanephrine or osmolality. CONCLUSIONS: Changes in copeptin reflected T c response more closely than sympathoadrenal markers or osmolality. Dynamic relationships with tonicity and kidney function may help to explain this finding. As a surrogate for integrated physiological strain during work in a field environment, copeptin assay could inform future measures to prevent heat-related illnesses
Etiology of first-ever ischaemic stroke in European young adults: the 15 cities young stroke study
Background and purposeRisk factors for IS in young adults differ between genders and evolve with age, but data on the age- and gender-specific differences by stroke etiology are scare. These features were compared based on individual patient data from 15 European stroke centers
Interplay of filaggrin loss-of-function variants, allergic sensitization, and eczema in a longitudinal study covering infancy to 18 years of age
BackgroundImmune specific genes as well as genes regulating the formation of skin barrier are major determinants for eczema manifestation. There is a debate as to whether allergic sensitization and filaggrin gene (FLG) variants lead to eczema or FLG variants and eczema increase the risk of allergic sensitization. To investigate the time-order between eczema and allergic sensitization with respect to FLG variants, data from a large prospective study covering infancy to late adolescence were analyzed.Methodology/Principal FindingsRepeated measurements of eczema and allergic sensitization (documented by skin prick tests) at ages 1, 2, 4, 10, and 18 years were ascertained in the Isle of Wight birth cohort (n = 1,456). Three transition periods were analyzed: age 1-or-2 to 4, 4 to 10, and 10 to 18 years. FLG variants were genotyped in 1,150 participants. Over the three transition periods, in temporal sequence analyses of initially eczema-free participants, the combined effect of FLG variants and allergic sensitization showed a 2.92-fold (95% CI: 1.47–5.77) increased risk ratio (RR) of eczema in subsequent examinations. This overall risk was more pronounced at a younger age (transition period 1-or-2 to 4, RR = 6.47, 95% CI: 1.96–21.33). In contrast, FLG variants in combination with eczema showed a weaker, but significant, risk ratio for subsequent allergic sensitization only up to 10 years of age.Conclusions/SignificanceTaking the time order into account, this prospective study demonstrates for the first time, that a combination of FLG variants and allergic sensitization increased the risk of eczema in subsequent years. Also FLG variants interacted with eczema and increased the risk of subsequent allergic sensitization, which, was limited to the younger age. Hence, early restoration of defective skin barrier could prevent allergic sensitization and subsequently reduce the risk of eczema development.<br/
Etiology of first-ever ischaemic stroke in European young adults: the 15 cities young stroke study
Background and purposeRisk factors for IS in young adults differ between
genders and evolve with age, but data on the age- and gender-specific
differences by stroke etiology are scare. These features were compared
based on individual patient data from 15 European stroke centers.
MethodsStroke etiology was reported in detail for 3331 patients aged
15-49years with first-ever IS according to Trial of Org in Acute Stroke
Treatment (TOAST) criteria: large-artery atherosclerosis (LAA),
cardioembolism (CE), small-vessel occlusion (SVO), other determined
etiology, or undetermined etiology. CE was categorized into low- and
high-risk sources. Other determined group was divided into dissection
and other non-dissection causes. Comparisons were done using logistic
regression, adjusting for age, gender, and center heterogeneity.
ResultsEtiology remained undetermined in 39.6%. Other determined
etiology was found in 21.6%, CE in 17.3%, SVO in 12.2%, and LAA in
9.3%. Other determined etiology was more common in females and younger
patients, with cervical artery dissection being the single most common
etiology (12.8%). CE was more common in younger patients. Within CE,
the most frequent high-risk sources were atrial fibrillation/flutter
(15.1%) and cardiomyopathy (11.5%). LAA, high-risk sources of CE, and
SVO were more common in males. LAA and SVO showed an increasing
frequency with age. No significant etiologic distribution differences
were found amongst southern, central, or northern Europe.
ConclusionsThe etiology of IS in young adults has clear gender-specific
patterns that change with age. A notable portion of these patients
remains without an evident stroke mechanism according to TOAST criteria.
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