16 research outputs found

    Age-Specific Acute Changes in Carotid-Femoral Pulse Wave Velocity With Head-up Tilt

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    BACKGROUND: Aortic stiffness as measured by carotid-femoral pulse wave velocity (cfPWV) is known to depend on blood pressure (BP), and this dependency may change with age. Therefore, the hydrostatic BP gradient resulting from a change in body posture may elicit a cfPWV change that is age-dependent. We aimed to analyze the relationship between BP gradient-induced by head-up body tilting-and related changes in cfPWV in individuals of varying age. METHODS: cfPWV and other hemodynamic parameters were measured in 30 healthy individuals at a head-up tilt of 0° (supine), 30°, and 60°. At each angle, the PWV gradient and resulting cfPWV were also estimated (predicted) by assuming a global nonlinear, exponential, pressure-diameter relationship characterized by a constant β0, and taking into account that (diastolic) foot-to-foot cfPWV acutely depends on diastolic BP. RESULTS: cfPWV significantly increased upon body tilting (8.0 ± 2.0 m/s supine, 9.1 ± 2.6 m/s at 30°, 9.5 ± 3.2 m/s at 60°, P for trend <0.01); a positive trend was also observed for heart rate (HR; P < 0.01). When the observed, tilt-induced cfPWV change measured by applanation tonometry was compared with that predicted from the estimated BP hydrostatic gradient, the difference in observed-vs.-predicted PWV change increased nonlinearly as a function of age (R2 for quadratic trend = 0.38, P < 0.01, P vs. linear = 0.04). This result was unaffected by HR tilt-related variations (R2 for quadratic trend = 0.37, P < 0.01, P vs. linear = 0.04). CONCLUSIONS: Under a hydrostatic pressure gradient, the pulse wave traveling along the aorta undergoes an age-related, nonlinear PWV increase exceeding the increase predicted from BP dependency

    Indexing of Fatty Acids in Poultry Meat for Its Characterization in Healthy Human Nutrition: A Comprehensive Application of the Scientific Literature and New Proposals

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    Chicken meat is becoming the most consumed in the world for both economic and nutritional reasons; regarding the latter, the lipid profile may play positive or negative roles in the prevention and treatment of diseases. In this study, we define the state of the art of lipid-based nutritional indexes and used the lipid content and fatty acid profile (both qualitative and quantitative) of breast meat of two poultry genotypes with different growth rates and meat traits. Further, we summarize and review the definitions, implications, and applications of nutritional indexes used in recent years and others of our own design to provide a useful tool to researchers working in the field of meat quality (not only in poultry) to select the most appropriate index for their own scientific purposes. All indexes show advantages and disadvantages; hence, a rational choice should be applied to consider the nutritional effect of meat on human health and for a possible assessment of the most suitable rearing systems (genotype, feeding, farming system or postmortem handling)

    Oxidative Balance in Lymphocytes From Patients With Nonalcoholic Steatohepatitis

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    Oxidative stress is linked to several human diseases, including nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH). In this study, lymphocytes were used as a model to study this disease. These cells offer several advantages for cellular and molecular studies such as easy accessibility, and they are easily accessible and constitute a "time-persistent" system capable of reflecting the condition of the whole organism. Lymphocytes from patients with NASH display oxidative stress features. Among the possible causes for the overproduction of reactive oxygen species in NASH lymphocytes, there might be alterations of enzymatic pathways, auto-oxidation of glucose and mitochondrial superoxide production, which, in turn, would lead to protein oxidative damage. Increased oxidative stress in lymphocytes from patients with NASH may result in a pro-oxidative environment, which, in turn, could modify the pathway of the enzymatic activities. The data confirm that an imbalance between pro-oxidant and antioxidant defense mechanisms may be an important factor in NASH

    Relationship between serum myostatin levels and carotid-femoral pulse wave velocity in healthy young male adolescents. The Maciste Study

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    Serum Myostatin (sMSTN) is a proteic compound that regulates skeletal muscle growth, adipogenesis, and production of extracellular matrix. Its relationship with functional and structural properties of the arterial wall is still understudied. We aimed at evaluating the association between sMSTN and carotid-femoral pulse wave velocity (cf-PWV), a measure of aortic stiffness, in a cohort of healthy male adolescents. Fifteen healthy male adolescents were recruited among participants of the MACISTE study, a cross-sectional survey conducted at the "Renato Donatelli" High School in Terni, Italy. sMSTN was measured through Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay (ELISA). cf-PWV was measured through high-fidelity applanation tonometry. Muscle strength and body composition were measured through handgrip and bioimpedentiometry, respectively. sMSTN levels showed a skewed distribution (median 6.0 ng/mL, interquartile range 2.2 - 69.2 ng/mL). Subjects with sMSTN above median value showed higher values of brachial DBP and increased cf-PWV (6.1\ub11.1 m/s vs 4.6\ub10.7 m/s, p<0.01) values, compared to their counterparts. Such difference remained significant after controlling for age, mean BP, heart rate, body mass index z-score, waist-to-height ratio, body mass/lean mass ratio, and amount of physical activity (p=0.02). The association between log-transformed sMSTN and cf-PWV was direct and linear, and independent from the effect of confounders at the multivariate analysis (p=0.02). In this preliminary report, sMSTN was independently associated with cf-PWV, a measure of aortic stiffness, in healthy male adolescents. Our results shed lights on the potential role of myokines in the pathogenesis of systemic hypertension and atherosclerosis
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