28 research outputs found
A treatment applying a biomechanical device to the feet of patients with knee osteoarthritis results in reduced pain and improved function: a prospective controlled study
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>This study examined the effect of treatment with a novel biomechanical device on the level of pain and function in patients with knee OA.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>Patients with bilateral knee OA were enrolled to active and control groups. Patients were evaluated at baseline, at 4 weeks and at the 8-week endpoint. A novel biomechanical device was individually calibrated to patients from the active group. Patients from the control group received an identical foot-worn platform without the biomechanical elements. Primary outcomes were the WOMAC Index and ALF assessments.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>There were no baseline differences between the groups. At 8 weeks, the active group showed a mean improvement of 64.8% on the WOMAC pain scale, a mean improvement of 62.7% on the WOMAC function scale, and a mean improvement of 31.4% on the ALF scale. The control group demonstrated no improvement in the above parameters. Significant differences were found between the active and control groups in all the parameters of assessment.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>The biomechanical device and treatment methodology is effective in significantly reducing pain and improving function in knee OA patients.</p> <p>The study is registered at clinicaltrials.gov, identifier NCT00457132, <url>http://www.clinicaltrials.gov/ct/show/NCT00457132?order=1</url></p
Folding Circular Permutants of IL-1β: Route Selection Driven by Functional Frustration
Interleukin-1β (IL-1β) is the cytokine crucial to inflammatory and immune response. Two dominant routes are populated in the folding to native structure. These distinct routes are a result of the competition between early packing of the functional loops versus closure of the β-barrel to achieve efficient folding and have been observed both experimentally and computationally. Kinetic experiments on the WT protein established that the dominant route is characterized by early packing of geometrically frustrated functional loops. However, deletion of one of the functional loops, the β-bulge, switches the dominant route to an alternative, yet, as accessible, route, where the termini necessary for barrel closure form first. Here, we explore the effect of circular permutation of the WT sequence on the observed folding landscape with a combination of kinetic and thermodynamic experiments. Our experiments show that while the rate of formation of permutant protein is always slower than that observed for the WT sequence, the region of initial nucleation for all permutants is similar to that observed for the WT protein and occurs within a similar timescale. That is, even permutants with significant sequence rearrangement in which the functional-nucleus is placed at opposing ends of the polypeptide chain, fold by the dominant WT “functional loop-packing route”, despite the entropic cost of having to fold the N- and C- termini early. Taken together, our results indicate that the early packing of the functional loops dominates the folding landscape in active proteins, and, despite the entropic penalty of coalescing the termini early, these proteins will populate an entropically unfavorable route in order to conserve function. More generally, circular permutation can elucidate the influence of local energetic stabilization of functional regions within a protein, where topological complexity creates a mismatch between energetics and topology in active proteins
Desempenho de diferentes equações antropométricas na predição de gordura corporal excessiva em crianças e adolescentes
Minocycline-Induced Hyperpigmentation of the Tongue: Successful Treatment with the Q-Switched Ruby Laser
The issue of trust and its influence on risk communication during a volcanic crisis
This paper investigates trust in the scientists, government authorities and wider risk management team during the ongoing volcanic crisis in Montserrat, WI. Identifying the most trusted communicator and how trust in information can be enhanced are considered important for improving the efficacy of volcanic risk communication. Qualitative interviews, participant observations and a quantitative survey were utilised to investigate the views and attitudes of the public, authorities and scientists. Trust was found to be dynamic, influenced by political factors made more complex by the colonial nature of Montserrat’s governance and the changing level of volcanic activity. The scientists were viewed by the authorities as a highly trusted expert source of volcanic information. Mistrust among some of the local authorities towards the scientists and British Governor was founded in the uncertainty of the volcanic situation and influenced by differences in levels of acceptable risk and suspicions about integrity (e.g. as a consequence of employment by the British Government). The public viewed friends and relatives as the most trusted source for volcanic information. High trust in this source allowed competing messages to reinforce beliefs of lower risk than were officially being described. The scientists were the second most trusted group by the public and considered significantly more competent, reliable, caring, fair and open than the authorities. The world press was the least trusted, preceded closely by the British Governor’s Office and Montserratian Government officials. These results tally well with other empirical findings suggesting that government ministers and departments are typically distrusted as sources of risk-related information. These findings have implications for risk communication on Montserrat and other volcanic crises. The importance and potential effectiveness of scientists as communicators, because of, and despite, the existence of political, cultural and institutional barriers, is exemplified by this study
External validation of a prediction model for estimating fat mass in children and adolescents in 19 countries: individual participant data meta-analysis
Peer reviewed: TrueAcknowledgements: We thank John Reilly for his advice on data sources and data access; Cara L Eckhardt, Josephine Avila, Igor Y Kon, and Jinzhong Wang from the Eckhardt et al study23; and all staff involved in recruitment and data collection from the included studies. Data gathered from South Africa was supported by South Africa Medical Research Council and National Research Foundation.Objective
To evaluate the performance of a UK based prediction
model for estimating fat-free mass (and indirectly fat
mass) in children and adolescents in non-UK settings.
Design
Individual participant data meta-analysis.
Setting
19 countries.
Participants
5693 children and adolescents (49.7% boys) aged
4 to 15 years with complete data on the predictors
included in the UK based model (weight, height,
age, sex, and ethnicity) and on the independently
assessed outcome measure (fat-free mass determined
by deuterium dilution assessment).
Main outcome measures
The outcome of the UK based prediction model
was natural log transformed fat-free mass (lnFFM).
Predictive performance statistics of R2
, calibration
slope, calibration-in-the-large, and root mean square
error were assessed in each of the 19 countries and
then pooled through random effects meta-analysis.
Calibration plots were also derived for each country,
including flexible calibration curves.
Results
The model showed good predictive ability in non-UK
populations of children and adolescents, providing
R2
values of >75% in all countries and >90% in 11
of the 19 countries, and with good calibration (ie,
agreement) of observed and predicted values. Root
mean square error values (on fat-free mass scale)
were <4 kg in 17 of the 19 settings. Pooled values
(95% confidence intervals) of R2
, calibration slope,
and calibration-in-the-large were 88.7% (85.9% to
91.4%), 0.98 (0.97 to 1.00), and 0.01 (−0.02 to 0.04),
respectively. Heterogeneity was evident in the R2
and
calibration-in-the-large values across settings, but not
in the calibration slope. Model performance did not
vary markedly between boys and girls, age, ethnicity,
and national income groups. To further improve the
accuracy of the predictions, the model equation was
recalibrated for the intercept in each setting so that
country specific equations are available for future use.
Co nclusion
The UK based prediction model, which is based on
readily available measures, provides predictions
of childhood fat-free mass, and hence fat mass,
in a range of non-UK settings that explain a large
proportion of the variability in observed fat-free mass,
and exhibit good calibration performance, especially
after recalibration of the intercept for each population.
The model demonstrates good generalisability in both
low-middle income and high income populations of
healthy children and adolescents aged 4-15 year