35 research outputs found

    Comparing Diet and Exercise Monitoring Using Smartphone App and Paper Diary: A Two-Phase Intervention Study

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    Background: There is increasing recognition that personalized approaches may be more effective in helping people establish healthier eating patterns and exercise more, and that this approach may be particularly effective in adolescents. Objective: The objective of this study was to investigate the use of a smartphone app (FoodWiz2) in supporting healthy lifestyle choices in adolescence. Methods: Participants (N=34: 11 male, 23 female) aged 16-19 years in full- or part-time education were recruited from sixth form colleges, schools, and other further education establishments in Norfolk and Suffolk, United Kingdom, between February and May 2015. Participants recorded food intake and exercise using a paper diary for 4-5 weeks and then used the app for the same duration. Initial nutrition education and general support were provided during the paper diary use, but the app included personalized messages sent in response to app activity. At the end of each study phase, participants completed an online questionnaire to describe their experience of using the paper diary and app. Results: Record completion declined throughout the study, possibly affected by examination pressure. Food intake data showed increased fruit consumption and significantly reduced consumption of chocolate snacks (P=.01) and fizzy drinks (P=.002) among participants using the app. Questionnaire responses indicated that the app was generally preferred to the paper diary, in particular, the app was seen as less boring to use (P=.03) and more acceptable in social settings (P<.001). Conclusions: This app-based approach has shown the potential for a more effective approach to improving adolescent diet and exercise levels

    Diagnostic criteria and tumor screening for individuals with isolated hemihyperplasia

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    Isolated hemihyperplasia, formerly termed isolated hemihypertrophy, is a congenital overgrowth disorder associated with an increased risk for embryonal tumors, mainly Wilms tumor and hepatoblastoma. This practice guideline will set forth the diagnostic criteria and tumor screening recommendations for children with isolated hemihyperplasia, based on the best information available. There is clinical overlap between isolated hemihyperplasia with Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome. The majority of Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome patients have a molecular abnormality involving the imprinted cluster of genes at 11p15.5. In contrast, the preponderance of isolated hemihyperplasia patients studied have no identified etiology. Tumors have developed in isolated hemihyperplasia patients with and without molecular abnormalities. For this reason, molecular diagnostics are not helpful in identifying the subset of isolated hemihyperplasia patients with tumor risk and all isolated hemihyperplasia patients should undergo tumor screening

    A Cross-Species Analysis of MicroRNAs in the Developing Avian Face

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    Higher vertebrates use similar genetic tools to derive very different facial features. This diversity is believed to occur through temporal, spatial and species-specific changes in gene expression within cranial neural crest (NC) cells. These contribute to the facial skeleton and contain species-specific information that drives morphological variation. A few signaling molecules and transcription factors are known to play important roles in these processes, but little is known regarding the role of micro-RNAs (miRNAs). We have identified and compared all miRNAs expressed in cranial NC cells from three avian species (chicken, duck, and quail) before and after species-specific facial distinctions occur. We identified 170 differentially expressed miRNAs. These include thirty-five novel chicken orthologs of previously described miRNAs, and six avian-specific miRNAs. Five of these avian-specific miRNAs are conserved over 120 million years of avian evolution, from ratites to galliforms, and their predicted target mRNAs include many components of Wnt signaling. Previous work indicates that mRNA gene expression in NC cells is relatively static during stages when the beak acquires species-specific morphologies. However, miRNA expression is remarkably dynamic within this timeframe, suggesting that the timing of specific developmental transitions is altered in birds with different beak shapes. We evaluated one miRNA:mRNA target pair and found that the cell cycle regulator p27KIP1 is a likely target of miR-222 in frontonasal NC cells, and that the timing of this interaction correlates with the onset of phenotypic variation. Our comparative genomic approach is the first comprehensive analysis of miRNAs in the developing facial primordial, and in species-specific facial development

    Vehicular pollution modeling using the operational street pollution model (OSPM) for Chembur, Mumbai (India)

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    Megacities in India such as Mumbai and Delhi are among the most polluted places in the world. In the present study, the widely used operational street pollution model (OSPM) is applied for assessing pollutant loads in the street canyons of Chembur, a suburban area just outside Mumbai city. Chembur is both industrialized and highly congested with vehicles. There are six major street canyons in this area, for which modeling has been carried out for NOx and particulate matter (PM). The vehicle emission factors for Indian cities have been developed by Automotive Research Association of India (ARAI) for PM, not specifically for PM10 or PM2.5. The model has been applied for 4 days of winter season and for the whole year to see the difference of effect of meteorology. The urban background concentrations have been obtained from an air quality monitoring station. Results have been compared with measured concentrations from the routine monitoring performed in Mumbai. NOx emissions originate mainly from vehicles which are ground-level sources and are emitting close to where people live. Therefore, those emissions are highly relevant. The modeled NOx concentration compared satisfactorily with observed data. However, this was not the case for PM, most likely because the emission inventory did not contain emission terms due to resuspended particulate matter

    Monitoring patients on methotrexate : hepatic fibrosis not seen in patients with normal serum assays of aminoterminal peptide of type III procollage

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    ‘The definitive version is available at www.blackwell-synergy.com'. Copyright British Association of Dermatologists and Blackwell [Full text of this article is not available in the UHRA]Background: The aminoterminal peptide of type III procollagen (PIIINP) is formed during the synthesis of type III collagen and can be measured in the serum. It has been used as a marker for hepatic fibrosis in patients on long-term methotrexate and it has been suggested that serial assay of PIIINP could reduce or eliminate the need for liver biopsies in these patients. Objectives: To determine whether routine use of the PIIINP assay in a cohort of patients on methotrexate would reliably identify those who were developing hepatic fibrosis and exclude those who were not, thereby reducing or eliminating the need for liver biopsies in this latter group. Methods: Data were available from a clinical series of 38 patients on methotrexate, who had undergone a total of 70 liver biopsies and 306 PIIINP assays. Liver biopsies were graded using the Roenigk classification. Results: In 34 patients, the findings on 46 liver biopsies could be compared with the results of contemporaneous PIIINP assays. Apart from two biopsies from two patients where fibrosis was no longer detected on a subsequent biopsy, all four biopsies showing fibrosis had abnormal results on over half of the associated PIIINP assays. There were no biopsies showing fibrosis where all associated PIIINP assays were normal. However, 50% of biopsies without fibrosis had at least one abnormal associated assay. In 23 patients, the results of serial PIIINP assays performed between two sequential liver biopsies were correlated with changes in the biopsy in terms of fibrosis. Data were available for 32 pairs of liver biopsies. Apart from a biopsy pair in one patient where fibrosis on the second biopsy was not detected on a third biopsy, all four biopsy pairs defined as showing deterioration had abnormal results on over half of the intervening PIIINP assays. There were no biopsy pairs showing deterioration where all intervening assay results were normal. However, 63% of stable biopsy pairs had at least one abnormal intervening assay. Two patients with nonalcoholic steatohepatitis, which manifests a pattern of fibrosis not scored under the Roenigk classification, had persistently and substantially elevated PIIINP levels. Conclusions: The data presented support the view that follow-up liver biopsies, as recommended by published guidelines, for patients on long-term low-dose methotrexate can be avoided if PIIINP levels are consistently normal. This approach would have reduced the number of patients requiring biopsy in our series by 45%. The PIIINP assay will also be helpful in the management of patients on methotrexate in whom liver biopsy is contraindicated, and in patients with nonalcoholic steatohepatitis.Peer reviewe
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