83 research outputs found
Muscle parameters in fragility fracture risk prediction in older adults: A scoping review.
Half of osteoporotic fractures occur in patients with normal/osteopenic bone density or at intermediate or low estimated risk. Muscle measures have been shown to contribute to fracture risk independently of bone mineral density. The objectives were to review the measurements of muscle health (muscle mass/quantity/quality, strength and function) and their association with incident fragility fractures and to summarize their use in clinical practice. This scoping review follows the PRISMA-ScR guidelines for reporting. Our search strategy covered the three overreaching concepts of 'fragility fractures', 'muscle health assessment' and 'risk'. We retrieved 14 745 references from Medline Ovid SP, EMBASE, Web of Science Core Collection and Google Scholar. We included original and prospective studies on community-dwelling adults aged over 50 years that analysed an association between at least one muscle parameter and incident fragility fractures. We systematically extracted 17 items from each study, including methodology, general characteristics and results. Data were summarized in tables and graphically presented in adjusted forest plots. Sixty-seven articles fulfilled the inclusion criteria. In total, we studied 60 muscle parameters or indexes and 322 fracture risk ratios over 2.8 million person-years (MPY). The median (interquartile range) sample size was 1642 (921-5756), age 69.2 (63.5-73.6) years, follow-up 10.0 (4.4-12.0) years and number of incident fragility fractures 166 (88-277). A lower muscle mass was positively/not/negatively associated with incident fragility fracture in 28 (2.0), 64 (2.5) and 10 (0.2 MPY) analyses. A lower muscle strength was positively/not/negatively associated with fractures in 53 (1.3), 57 (1.7 MPY) and 0 analyses. A lower muscle function was positively/not/negatively associated in 63 (1.9), 45 (1.0 MPY) and 0 analyses. An in-depth analysis shows how each single muscle parameter was associated with each fragility fractures subtype. This review summarizes markers of muscle health and their association with fragility fractures. Measures of muscle strength and function appeared to perform better for fracture risk prediction. Of these, hand grip strength and gait speed are likely to be the most practical measures for inclusion in clinical practice, as in the evaluation of sarcopenia or in further fracture risk assessment scores. Measures of muscle mass did not appear to predict fragility fractures and might benefit from further research, on D3-creatine dilution test, lean mass indexes and artificial intelligence methods
Le Forum, Vol. 45 #4
https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/francoamericain_forum/1109/thumbnail.jp
Faith-based Institutions as Venues for Obesity Prevention
Purpose of review: To critique the scope and value of recent studies with a focus on obesity-related health promotion in faith organizations. Recent findings: Electronic database searches, scanning of the reference lists of identified articles, and hand searching of journals for articles written in English and published in 2013-16, revealed 16 studies. Half of the studies involved African-Americans, in churches and with predominantly female participants. Research among other ethnic groups was more likely to be exploratory. All of the 11 studies reporting the impact of programs on weight-related measures showed favourable outcomes. However due to study limitations (small sample size; short duration; attrition), significant unbiased effects cannot yet be concluded for most of the interventions reviewed. Study strengths included application of theory in community engagement, and detailed description of cultural tailoring. Summary: Faith organizations show promise as settings for obesity prevention among high-risk groups, particularly African-Americans. Support for progressing formative work to adequately powered, randomized controlled trials is vital. Wider involvement of diverse faith settings, and targeting obesity in men and childhood, would be valuable developments
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Glycaemic control in people with type 2 diabetes mellitus during and after cancer treatment: A systematic review and meta-analysis
Background
Cancer and Diabetes Mellitus (DM) are leading causes of death worldwide and the prevalence of both is escalating. People with co-morbid cancer and DM have increased morbidity and premature mortality compared with cancer patients with no DM. The reasons for this are likely to be multifaceted but will include the impact of hypo/hyperglycaemia and diabetes therapies on cancer treatment and disease progression. A useful step toward addressing this disparity in treatment outcomes is to establish the impact of cancer treatment on diabetes control.
Aim
The aim of this review is to identify and analyse current evidence reporting glycaemic control (HbA1c) during and after cancer treatment.
Methods
Systematic searches of published quantitative research relating to comorbid cancer and type 2 diabetes mellitus were conducted using databases, including Medline, Embase, PsychINFO, CINAHL and Web of Science (February 2017). Full text publications were eligible for inclusion if they: were quantitative, published in English language, investigated the effects of cancer treatment on glycaemic control, reported HbA1c (%/mmols/mol) and included adult populations with diabetes. Means, standard deviations and sample sizes were extracted from each paper; missing standard deviations were imputed. The completed datasets were analysed using a random effects model. A mixed-effects analysis was undertaken to calculate mean HbA1c (%/mmols/mol) change over three time periods compared to baseline.
Results
The available literature exploring glycaemic control post-diagnosis was mixed. There was increased risk of poor glycaemic control during this time if studies of surgical treatment for gastric cancer are excluded, with significant differences between baseline and 12 months (p < 0.001) and baseline and 24 months (p = 0.002).
Conclusion
We found some evidence to support the contention that glycaemic control during and/or after non-surgical cancer treatment is worsened, and the reasons are not well defined in individual studies. Future studies should consider the reasons why this is the case
Quantification of endogenous levels of IAA, IAAsp and IBA in micro-propagated shoots of hybrid chestnut pre-treated with IBA
Endogenous levels of indole-3-acetic acid (IAA),
indole-3-acetylaspartic acid (IAAsp) and indole-3-butyric
acid (IBA) were measured during the first 8 d of in vitro
rooting of rootstock from the chestnut ‘M3’ hybrid by high
performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). Rooting was
induced either by dipping the basal ends of the shoots into a
4.92-mM IBA solution for 1 min or by sub-culturing the
shoots on solid rooting medium supplemented with 14.8-
μM IBA for 5 d. For root development, the induced shoots
were transferred to auxin-free solid medium. Auxins were
measured in the apical and basal parts of the shoots by
means of HPLC. Endogenous levels of IAA and IAAsp
were found to be greater in IBA-treated shoots than in
control shoots. In extracts of the basal parts of the shoots,
the concentration of free IAA showed a significant peak 2 d
after either root inductive method and a subsequent gradual
decrease for the remainder of the time course. The
concentration of IAAsp peaked at day 6 in extracts of the
basal parts of shoots induced with 14.8-μM IBA for 5 d,
whereas shoots induced by dipping showed an initial
increase until day 2 and then remained stable. In extracts
from basal shoot portions induced by dipping, IBA
concentration showed a transient peak at day 1 and a plateau between day 2 and 4, in contrast to the profile of
shoots induced on auxin-containing medium, which
showed a significant reduction between 4 and 6 d after
transferred to auxin-free medium. All quantified auxins
remained at a relatively low level, virtually constant, in
extracts from apical shoot portions, as well as in extracts
from control non-rooting shoots. In conclusion, the natural
auxin IAA is the signal responsible for root induction,
although it is driven by exogenous IBA independently of
the adding conditions
Manipulation of Plant Defense Responses by the Tomato Psyllid (Bactericerca cockerelli) and Its Associated Endosymbiont Candidatus Liberibacter Psyllaurous
Some plant pathogens form obligate relationships with their insect vector and are vertically transmitted via eggs analogous to insect endosymbionts. Whether insect endosymbionts manipulate plant defenses to benefit their insect host remains unclear. The tomato psyllid, Bactericerca cockerelli (Sulc), vectors the endosymbiont “Candidatus Liberibacter psyllaurous” (Lps) during feeding on tomato (Solanum lycopersicum L.). Lps titer in psyllids varied relative to the psyllid developmental stage with younger psyllids harboring smaller Lps populations compared to older psyllids. In the present study, feeding by different life stages of B. cockerelli infected with Lps, resulted in distinct tomato transcript profiles. Feeding by young psyllid nymphs, with lower Lps levels, induced tomato genes regulated by jasmonic acid (JA) and salicylic acid (SA) (Allene oxide synthase, Proteinase inhibitor 2, Phenylalanine ammonia-lyase 5, Pathogenesis-related protein 1) compared to feeding by older nymphs and adults, where higher Lps titers were found. In addition, inoculation of Lps without insect hosts suppressed accumulation of these defense transcripts. Collectively, these data suggest that the endosymbiont-like pathogen Lps manipulates plant signaling and defensive responses to benefit themselves and the success of their obligate insect vector on their host plant
Critical reappraisal of remdesivir investigational trials in COVID-19
International audienceDuring disease outbreaks, the pharmaceutical industry generally puts a lot of effort into promoting clinical trials studying their new drugs. We review evidence of the ten most recent reports on remdesivir. We conclude that it is far too premature to identify remdesivir as a curative or life-saving intervention during the COVID-19 pandemic. (C) 2020 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd
L’intelligence artificielle a-t-elle un rôle dans la prise en charge de l’ostéoporose ? [Does artificial intelligence have a role in osteoporosis management?]
The individual and societal burden of osteoporosis is high and will continue to increase due to the demographic situation. Applications based on artificial intelligence models can provide concrete solutions at each step of the management of osteoporosis: screening, diagnostic, therapy management and prognostic assessment. The implementation of such models could assist clinicians in their workflow while improving overall patient care
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