57 research outputs found

    Systematic assessment of the quality of osteoporosis guidelines

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    BACKGROUND: Numerous agencies have developed clinical practice guidelines for the management of postmenopausal osteoporosis. The study objective was to conduct a systematic assessment of the quality of osteoporosis guidelines produced since 1998. METHODS: Guidelines were identified by searching MEDLINE (1998+), the world wide web, known guideline developer websites, bibliographies of retrieved guidelines, and through consultation with content experts. Each guideline was then assessed by three independent appraisers using the 'Appraisal Instrument for Clinical Guidelines' (version 1) by Cluzeau. RESULTS: We identified 26 unique guidelines from 1998–2001 and 21 met our inclusion criteria. Of the 21 guidelines reviewed, 8 were developed by medical societies, 6 by national groups, 6 by government agencies, and 1 by an international group. Twelve of the guidelines were published, 7 were organizational reports, and 2 were accessible only from the web. Half or more of the 20 items assessing the rigor of guideline development were met by 15% (median quality score 23%, range 5–80%, (95% CI 16.5, 34.7)), 81% met at least half of the 12 items assessing guideline content and context (median score 58%, range 17–83%, (95% CI 50.8, 65.5)), and none met half or more of the items assessing guideline application (median score 0%, range 0–47%, (95% CI -0.5 to 12.6)). Eight guidelines described the method used to assess the strength of evidence, and in 6 there was an explicit link between recommendations and the supporting evidence. Ten guidelines were judged not suitable for use in practice, 10 were acceptable with modification, and one was acceptable for use without modification. CONCLUSION: The methodological quality of current osteoporosis guidelines is low, although their scores for clinical content were higher. Virtually no guidelines covered dissemination issues. Few guidelines were judged as acceptable for use in their current format

    Cost-effectiveness of recommended nurse staffing levels for short-stay skilled nursing facility patients

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    BACKGROUND: Among patients in skilled nursing facilities for post-acute care, increased registered nurse, total licensed staff, and nurse assistant staffing is associated with a decreased rate of hospital transfer for selected diagnoses. However, the cost-effectiveness of increasing staffing to recommended levels is unknown. METHODS: Using a Markov cohort simulation, we estimated the incremental cost-effectiveness of recommended staffing versus median staffing in patients admitted to skilled nursing facilities for post-acute care. The outcomes of interest were life expectancy, quality-adjusted life expectancy, and incremental cost-effectiveness. RESULTS: The incremental cost-effectiveness of recommended staffing versus median staffing was $321,000 per discounted quality-adjusted life year gained. One-way sensitivity analyses demonstrated that the cost-effectiveness ratio was most sensitive to the likelihood of acute hospitalization from the nursing home. The cost-effectiveness ratio was also sensitive to the rapidity with which patients in the recommended staffing scenario recovered health-related quality of life as compared to the median staffing scenario. The cost-effectiveness ratio was not sensitive to other parameters. CONCLUSION: Adopting recommended nurse staffing for short-stay nursing home patients cannot be justified on the basis of decreased hospital transfer rates alone, except in facilities with high baseline hospital transfer rates. Increasing nurse staffing would be justified if health-related quality of life of nursing home patients improved substantially from greater nurse and nurse assistant presence

    K+ channel openers restore verapamil-inhibited lung fluid resolution and transepithelial ion transport

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Lung epithelial Na<sup>+ </sup>channels (ENaC) are regulated by cell Ca<sup>2+ </sup>signal, which may contribute to calcium antagonist-induced noncardiogenic lung edema. Although K<sup>+ </sup>channel modulators regulate ENaC activity in normal lungs, the therapeutical relevance and the underlying mechanisms have not been completely explored. We hypothesized that K<sup>+ </sup>channel openers may restore calcium channel blocker-inhibited alveolar fluid clearance (AFC) by up-regulating both apical and basolateral ion transport.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>Verapamil-induced depression of heterologously expressed human αβγ ENaC in <it>Xenopus </it>oocytes, apical and basolateral ion transport in monolayers of human lung epithelial cells (H441), and <it>in vivo </it>alveolar fluid clearance were measured, respectively, using the two-electrode voltage clamp, Ussing chamber, and BSA protein assays. Ca<sup>2+ </sup>signal in H441 cells was analyzed using Fluo 4AM.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>The rate of <it>in vivo </it>AFC was reduced significantly (40.6 ± 6.3% of control, <it>P </it>< 0.05, n = 12) in mice intratracheally administrated verapamil. K<sub>Ca3.1 </sub>(1-EBIO) and K<sub>ATP </sub>(minoxidil) channel openers significantly recovered AFC. In addition to short-circuit current (Isc) in intact H441 monolayers, both apical and basolateral Isc levels were reduced by verapamil in permeabilized monolayers. Moreover, verapamil significantly altered Ca<sup>2+ </sup>signal evoked by ionomycin in H441 cells. Depletion of cytosolic Ca<sup>2+ </sup>in αβγ ENaC-expressing oocytes completely abolished verapamil-induced inhibition. Intriguingly, K<sub>V </sub>(pyrithione-Na), K <sub>Ca3.1 </sub>(1-EBIO), and K<sub>ATP </sub>(minoxidil) channel openers almost completely restored the verapamil-induced decrease in Isc levels by diversely up-regulating apical and basolateral Na<sup>+ </sup>and K<sup>+ </sup>transport pathways.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>Our observations demonstrate that K<sup>+ </sup>channel openers are capable of rescuing reduced vectorial Na<sup>+ </sup>transport across lung epithelial cells with impaired Ca<sup>2+ </sup>signal.</p

    A Cytoplasmic Domain Mutation in ClC-Kb Affects Long-Distance Communication Across the Membrane

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    BACKGROUND: ClC-Kb and ClC-Ka are homologous chloride channels that facilitate chloride homeostasis in the kidney and inner ear. Disruption of ClC-Kb leads to Bartter's Syndrome, a kidney disease. A point mutation in ClC-Kb, R538P, linked to Bartter's Syndrome and located in the C-terminal cytoplasmic domain was hypothesized to alter electrophysiological properties due to its proximity to an important membrane-embedded helix. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Two-electrode voltage clamp experiments were used to examine the electrophysiological properties of the mutation R538P in both ClC-Kb and ClC-Ka. R538P selectively abolishes extracellular calcium activation of ClC-Kb but not ClC-Ka. In attempting to determine the reason for this specificity, we hypothesized that the ClC-Kb C-terminal domain had either a different oligomeric status or dimerization interface than that of ClC-Ka, for which a crystal structure has been published. We purified a recombinant protein corresponding to the ClC-Kb C-terminal domain and used multi-angle light scattering together with a cysteine-crosslinking approach to show that the dimerization interface is conserved between the ClC-Kb and ClC-Ka C-terminal domains, despite the fact that there are several differences in the amino acids that occur at this interface. CONCLUSIONS: The R538P mutation in ClC-Kb, which leads to Bartter's Syndrome, abolishes calcium activation of the channel. This suggests that a significant conformational change--ranging from the cytoplasmic side of the protein to the extracellular side of the protein--is involved in the Ca(2+)-activation process for ClC-Kb, and shows that the cytoplasmic domain is important for the channel's electrophysiological properties. In the highly similar ClC-Ka (90% identical), the R538P mutation does not affect activation by extracellular Ca(2+). This selective outcome indicates that ClC-Ka and ClC-Kb differ in how conformational changes are translated to the extracellular domain, despite the fact that the cytoplasmic domains share the same quaternary structure

    Claudin-16 and claudin-19 interact and form a cation-selective tight junction complex

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    Tight junctions (TJs) play a key role in mediating paracellular ion reabsorption in the kidney. Familial hypomagnesemia with hypercalciuria and nephrocalcinosis (FHHNC) is an inherited disorder caused by mutations in the genes encoding the TJ proteins claudin-16 (CLDN16) and CLDN19; however, the mechanisms underlying the roles of these claudins in mediating paracellular ion reabsorption in the kidney are not understood. Here we showed that in pig kidney epithelial cells, CLDN19 functioned as a Cl– blocker, whereas CLDN16 functioned as a Na+ channel. Mutant forms of CLDN19 that are associated with FHHNC were unable to block Cl– permeation. Coexpression of CLDN16 and CLDN19 generated cation selectivity of the TJ in a synergistic manner, and CLDN16 and CLDN19 were observed to interact using several criteria. In addition, disruption of this interaction by introduction of FHHNC-causing mutant forms of either CLDN16 or CLDN19 abolished their synergistic effect. Our data show that CLDN16 interacts with CLDN19 and that their association confers a TJ with cation selectivity, suggesting a mechanism for the role of mutant forms of CLDN16 and CLDN19 in the development of FHHNC

    Sodium chloride drives autoimmune disease by the induction of pathogenic TH17 cells

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    There has been a marked increase in the incidence of autoimmune diseases in the last half-century. While the underlying genetic basis of this class of diseases has recently been elucidated implicating predominantly immune response genes(1), changes in environmental factors must ultimately be driving this increase. The newly identified population of interleukin (IL)-17 producing CD4(+) helper T cells (Th17 cells) plays a pivotal role in autoimmune diseases(2). Pathogenic IL-23 dependent Th17 cells have been shown to be critical for the development of experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE), an animal model for multiple sclerosis (MS), and genetic risk factors associated with MS are related to the IL23/Th17 pathway(1, 2). However, little is known regarding the environmental factors that directly influence Th17 cells. Here we show that increased salt (sodium chloride; NaCl) concentrations found locally under physiological conditions in vivo dramatically boost the induction of murine and human Th17 cells. High-salt conditions activate the p38/MAPK pathway involving the tonicity-responsive enhancer binding protein (TonEBP/NFAT5) and the serum/glucocorticoid-regulated kinase 1 (SGK1) during cytokine-induced Th17 polarization. Gene silencing or chemical inhibition of p38/MAPK, NFAT5 or SGK1 abrogates the high-salt induced Th17 cell development. The Th17 cells generated under high-salt display a highly pathogenic and stable phenotype characterized by the up-regulation of the pro-inflammatory cytokines GM-CSF, TNFα and IL-2. Moreover, mice fed with a high-salt diet develop a more severe form of EAE, in line with augmented central nervous system infiltrating and peripherally induced antigen specific Th17 cells. Thus, increased dietary salt intake might represent an environmental risk factor for the development of autoimmune diseases through the induction of pathogenic Th17 cells

    TGF-&beta; directs trafficking of the epithelial sodium channel ENaC which has implications for ion and fluid transport in acute lung injury.

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    GF-&beta; is a pathogenic factor in patients with acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), a condition characterized by alveolar edema. A unique TGF-&beta; pathway is described, which rapidly promoted internalization of the &alpha;&beta;&gamma; epithelial sodium channel (ENaC) complex from the alveolar epithelial cell surface, leading to persistence of pulmonary edema. TGF-&beta; applied to the alveolar airspaces of live rabbits or isolated rabbit lungs blocked sodium transport and caused fluid retention, which-together with patch-clamp and flow cytometry studies-identified ENaC as the target of TGF-&beta;. TGF-&beta; rapidly and sequentially activated phospholipase D1, phosphatidylinositol-4-phosphate 5-kinase 1&alpha;, and NADPH oxidase 4 (NOX4) to produce reactive oxygen species, driving internalization of &beta;ENaC, the subunit responsible for cell-surface stability of the &alpha;&beta;&gamma;ENaC complex. ENaC internalization was dependent on oxidation of &beta;ENaC Cys(43). Treatment of alveolar epithelial cells with bronchoalveolar lavage fluids from ARDS patients drove &beta;ENaC internalization, which was inhibited by a TGF-&beta; neutralizing antibody and a Tgfbr1 inhibitor. Pharmacological inhibition of TGF-&beta; signaling in vivo in mice, and genetic ablation of the nox4 gene in mice, protected against perturbed lung fluid balance in a bleomycin model of lung injury, highlighting a role for both proximal and distal components of this unique ENaC regulatory pathway in lung fluid balance. These data describe a unique TGF-&beta;-dependent mechanism that regulates ion and fluid transport in the lung, which is not only relevant to the pathological mechanisms of ARDS, but might also represent a physiological means of acutely regulating ENaC activity in the lung and other organs

    The role of the I(sK) protein in the specific pharmacological properties of the I(Ks) channel complex

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    I(Ks) channels are composed of I(sK) and KvLQT1 subunits and underly the slowly activating, voltage-dependent I(Ks) conductance in heart. Although it appears clear that the I(sK) protein affects both the biophysical properties and regulation of I(Ks) channels, its role in channel pharmacology is unclear. In the present study we demonstrate that KvLQT1 homopolymeric K(+) channels are inhibited by the I(Ks) blockers 293B, azimilide and 17-β-oestradiol. However, I(Ks) channels induced by the coexpression of I(sK) and KvLQT1 subunits have a 6–100 fold higher affinity for these blockers. Moreover, the I(Ks) activators mefenamic acid and DIDS had little effect on KvLQT1 homopolymeric channels, although they dramatically enhanced steady-state currents through heteropolymeric I(Ks) channels by arresting them in an open state. In summary, the I(sK) protein modulates the effects of both blockers and activators of I(Ks) channels. This finding is important for the action and specificity of these drugs as I(sK) protein expression in heart and other tissues is regulated during development and by hormones
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