49 research outputs found

    Treatment of Femoral Shaft Fracture with an Interlocking Humeral Nail in Older Children and Adolescents

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    ∙ The authors have no financial conflicts of interest. © Copyright: Yonsei University College of Medicine 2012 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial Licens

    Physical activity and exercise: Strategies to manage frailty

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    Frailty, a consequence of the interaction of the aging process and certain chronic diseases, compromises functional outcomes in the elderly and substantially increases their risk for developing disabilities and other adverse outcomes. Frailty follows from the combination of several impaired physiological mechanisms affecting multiple organs and systems. And, though frailty and sarcopenia are related, they are two different conditions. Thus, strategies to preserve or improve functional status should consider systemic function in addition to muscle conditioning. Physical activity/exercise is considered one of the main strategies to counteract frailty-related physical impairment in the elderly. Exercise reduces age-related oxidative damage and chronic inflammation, increases autophagy, and improves mitochondrial function, myokine profile, insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1) signaling pathway, and insulin sensitivity. Exercise interventions target resistance (strength and power), aerobic, balance, and flexibility work. Each type improves different aspects of physical functioning, though they could be combined according to need and prescribed as a multicomponent intervention. Therefore, exercise intervention programs should be prescribed based on an individual's physical functioning and adapted to the ensuing response.pre-print2.493 K

    Type 2 diabetes – an autoinflammatory disease driven by metabolic stress

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    Type 2 diabetes has traditionally been viewed as a metabolic disorder characterised by chronic high glucose levels, insulin resistance, and declining insulin secretion from the pancreas. Modern lifestyle, with abundant nutrient supply and reduced physical activity, has resulted in dramatic increases in the rates of obesity-associated disease conditions, including diabetes. The associated excess of nutrients induces a state of systemic low-grade chronic inflammation that results from production and secretion of inflammatory mediators from the expanded pool of activated adipocytes. Here, we review the mechanisms by which obesity induces adipose tissue dysregulation, detailing the roles of adipose tissue secreted factors and their action upon other cells and tissues central to glucose homeostasis and type 2 diabetes. Furthermore, given the emerging importance of adipokines, cytokines and chemokines in disease progression, we suggest that type 2 diabetes should now be viewed as an autoinflammatory disease, albeit one that is driven by metabolic dysregulation

    Spectroscopic Evidence for Amyloid-like Interfacial Self-Assembly of Hydrophobin Sc3

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    Amphipathic fungal proteins called hydrophobins are able to self-assemble into insoluble supramolecular structures at hydrophobic/hydrophilic interfaces, but the molecular mechanism and underlying protein conformation changes are not known. Secondary-structure prediction indicated that hydrophobin Sc3 is an all-β protein. Many amyloidogenic proteins self-assemble into insoluble amyloid fibrils while undergoing a change to an all-β conformation. In this study we show that two dyes, thioflavin T, and Congo red, which are widely used for specific detection of stacked β sheets, interact with Sc3 assemblies in the same way as with the amyloid β-sheet fibrils. We conclude that Sc3, and probably other hydrophobins too, self-assemble at interfaces in the same manner as amyloidogenic proteins, i.e., through β-sheet stacking
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