38 research outputs found

    Frailty, Disability and Physical Exercise in the Aging Process and in Chronic Kidney Disease

    Get PDF
    Frailty in the elderly is a state of vulnerability to poor resolution of homoeostasis after a stressor event and is a consequence of cumulative decline in many physiological systems during a lifetime. This cumulative decline depletes homoeostatic reserves until minor stressor events trigger disproportionate changes in health status. It is usually associated to adverse health outcomes and to one-year mortality risk. Physical exercise has found to be effective in preventing frailty and disability in this population. Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is also a clinical condition where protein energy-wasting, sarcopenia and dynapenia ,very common symptoms in the frail elderly, may occur. Moreover elderly and CKD patients are both affected by an impaired physical performance that may be reversed by physical exercise with an improvement of the survival rate. These similarities suggest that frailty may be a common pathway of aging and CKD that may induce disability and that can be prevented by a multidimensional approach in which physical exercise plays an important role

    To translate pharmacogenetics in geriatrics: towards a personalized medicine

    Get PDF
    Geriatric wards represented a very interesting clinical setting in which an increased drugs use rise the prevalence of adverse drug reactions (ADRs) and therapeutic failures (TFs). These are not independent phenomena, but the severe counterposed manifestations of a continuum of phenotypes in which the better drug response is the midpoint. Age-related changes in the regulation of cytochrome P450 (CYP) genes, encoding the most common drugmetabolizing enzymes, might be responsible of the observed age-associated drift towards ADRs and TFs. In this review article, a complete impression of the CYP pharmacogenetics and epigenetics is reported in the context of increasing age, in which epigenetic CYP-gene regulation might change. Physiological age-related changes in DNA-methylation, the main epigenetic mechanisms regulating gene expression in humans, results in a physiological decrease in CYP gene expression with advancing age. This may be one of the physiological changes that, together with an increased drug use, contributed to raise the prevalence of severe responder phenotypes in older age

    Model Numerikal Reservoir Sistem Panasbumi Pada Daerah Topografi Relatif Datar Untuk Mencari Kondisi Natural State Dan Menganalisa Sensitivitas Panas Pada Reservoir Menggunakan Software Tough2

    Full text link
    Telah dilakukan pemodelan reservoir menggunakan software Tough2 dengan data sintetik, berupa data permeabilitas dan pororsitas. Dimana terdiri dari 4 lapisan, yaitu lapisan overburden, lapisan clay caps, lapisan recharge area + lapisan reservoir (berada pada lapisan yang sama), dan lapisan basement dengan tujuan untuk menganalisa sensitivitas panas, serta untuk mencari kondisi natural state (natural state merupakan kondisi setimbang, yaitu dimana kondisi tekanan, temperatur dan kondisi reservoirnya tidak berubah terhadap waktu).Dari hasil pemodelan reservoir oleh Tough2 didapat bahwa kondisi natural state selama 2,20857E+4 tahun, dimana terjadi penurunan suhu dari kondisi natural state tanpa sumur produksi berbanding kondisi natural state dengan sumur produksi, dimana suhu pada saat kondisi natural state tanpa sumur produksi sebesar 245OC dan suhu pada saat kondisi natural state dengan sumur produksi sebesar 235OC pada kedalaman 1350 m. Sedangkan untuk penggunaan rate 20 kg/s, 25 kg/s, 30 kg/s dan 35 kg/s untuk melihat sensitivitas heat nya, didapatkan bahwa semakin besar nilai rate yang dipakai dalam suatu sumur produksi, maka akan menurunnya nilai temperatur di sumur produksi tersebut

    The Impact of COVID-19 Lockdown on Gambling Habit: A Cross-Sectional Study from Italy

    Get PDF
    Few preliminary studies have shown an impact of COVID-19 confinement on gambling habits. We aim to evaluate short-term effects of lockdown restrictions on gambling behaviors in Italy

    To translate pharmacogenetics in geriatrics: towards a personalized medicine

    Get PDF
    Geriatric wards represented a very interesting clinical setting in which an increased drugs use rise the prevalence of adverse drug reactions (ADRs) and therapeutic failures (TFs). These are not independent phenomena, but the severe counterposed manifestations of a continuum of phenotypes in which the better drug response is the midpoint. Age-related changes in the regulation of cytochrome P450 (CYP) genes, encoding the most common drugmetabolizing enzymes, might be responsible of the observed age-associated drift towards ADRs and TFs. In this review article, a complete impression of the CYP pharmacogenetics and epigenetics is reported in the context of increasing age, in which epigenetic CYP-gene regulation might change. Physiological age-related changes in DNA-methylation, the main epigenetic mechanisms regulating gene expression in humans, results in a physiological decrease in CYP gene expression with advancing age. This may be one of the physiological changes that, together with an increased drug use, contributed to raise the prevalence of severe responder phenotypes in older age

    Neurocognitive Disorders and Dehydration in Older Patients: Clinical Experience Supports the Hydromolecular Hypothesis of Dementia

    No full text
    Abnormalities of water homeostasis can be early expressions of neuronal dysfunction, brain atrophy, chronic cerebrovasculopathy and neurodegenerative disease. The aim of this study was to analyze the serum osmolality of subjects with cognitive impairment. One thousand and ninety-one consecutive patients attending the Alzheimer’s Evaluation Unit were evaluated with the Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE), 21-Item Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HDRS-21), Activities of Daily Living (ADL), Instrumental-ADL (IADL), Mini Nutritional Assessment (MNA), Exton-Smith Scale (ESS), and Cumulative Illness Rating Scale (CIRS). For each patient, the equation for serum osmolality developed by Khajuria and Krahn was applied. Five hundred and seventy-one patients had cognitive decline and/or depression mood (CD-DM) and 520 did not have CD-DM (control group). Patients with CD-DM were less likely to be male (p < 0.001), and were more likely to be older (p < 0.001), have a significant clear cognitive impairment (MMSE: p < 0.001), show the presence of a depressive mood (HDRS-21: p < 0.001) and have major impairments in ADL (p < 0.001), IADL (p < 0.001), MNA (p < 0.001), and ESS (p < 0.001), compared to the control group. CD-DM patients had a higher electrolyte concentration (Na+: p < 0.001; K+: p < 0.001; Cl−: p < 0.001), risk of dehydration (osmolality p < 0.001), and kidney damage (eGFR: p = 0.021), than the control group. Alzheimer’s disease (AD) patients showed a major risk for current dehydration (p ≤ 0.001), and dehydration was associated with the risk of developing a type of dementia, like AD or vascular dementia (VaD) (OR = 2.016, p < 0.001). In the multivariate analysis, the presence of dehydration state was associated with ADL (p < 0.001) and IADL (p < 0.001), but independently associated with age (r2 = 0.0046, p = 0.77), ESS (r2 = 0.0052, p = 0.54) and MNA (r2 = 0.0004, p = 0.48). Moreover, younger patients with dementia were significantly more dehydrated than patients without dementia (65–75 years, p = 0.001; 76–85 years, p = 0.001; ≥86 years, p = 0.293). The hydromolecular hypothesis intends to explain the relationship between dehydration and cognitive impairment in older patients as the result of protein misfolding and aggregation, in the presence of a low interstitial fluid volume, which is a defect of the microcirculation. Defective proteins were shown to impair the amount of information in brain biomolecular mechanisms, with consequent neuronal and synaptic damage
    corecore