9 research outputs found

    Acute Respiratory and Cardiovascular Outcomes Associated with Low Levels of Ambient Fine Particulate Matter (PM2.5) on the Island of Oahu

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    Scant literature exists regarding health effects of fine particulate matter (PM2.5) pollution at or below national standards. This study examined the relationship between PM2.5 and acute care use and costs in Honolulu where PM2.5 is low. Single and distributed lag over-dispersed Poisson models were used to examine hospitalizations/emergency department (ED) visits associated with cumulative PM2.5 exposure over the current day and seven previous days (lags 0-7) in 2011. A 10-µg/m3 increase in cumulative PM2.5 concentration was associated with a 32% increase in respiratory admissions (RR=1.32, p=0.001) costing 486,908anda24486,908 and a 24% decrease in respiratory admissions in the comparison group (RR=0.76, p\u3c0.001). ED visits increased by 12% at lag day 0 for respiratory outcomes (RR=1.12, p=0.03) and cumulatively with increased respiratory visits by 49% (RR=1.49) and increased combined respiratory and cardiovascular issues by 20% (RR=1.20; p\u3c0.01 for both) costing 117,856. Additional research is needed on health effects within pollution lower levels

    Socioeconomic variables explain rural disparities in US mortality rates: Implications for rural health research and policy

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    Objectives: Rural disparities in age-adjusted mortality are growing in the United States. While socioeconomic variables have been found to explain significant variation in life expectancy across US counties, previous research has not examined the role of socioeconomic variables in explaining rural mortality disparities. The purpose of this study was to quantify the rural mortality disparity after controlling for socioeconomic variables. Methods: Recursive partitioning, or tree regression, was used to fit models predicting premature mortality across counties in the United States, adjusted for age, median income, and percent in poverty in 4 time periods (from 2004 to 2012) with and without inclusion of an urban-rural variable. Results: We found median income and percent in poverty explained about 50% of the variation in age-adjusted premature mortality rates across US counties in each of the four time periods. After controlling for these socioeconomic variables, rural mortality disparities largely disappeared, explaining less than 2% of the variance in premature mortality. Conclusions: Addressing poverty and other socioeconomic issues should be a priority to improve health in rural communities. Interventions designed to target social determinants of health in rural areas are needed to address the growing rural mortality disparity that is largely explained by measures of poverty and income. Researchers examining rural health disparities should routinely include socioeconomic variables in their analyses. Keywords: Rural, Urban, Disparities, Mortality, Socioeconomic status, Social determinant

    Qualité de vie des patients atteints d’une diverticulite sigmoïdienne : mise au point

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    International audienceIntroductionDiverticular disease, including diverticulitis, begins when the patient becomes symptomatic. Sigmoid diverticulitis corresponds to inflammation/infection of a diverticulum of the sigmoid colon. Among diverticulosis patients, 4.3% develop diverticulitis, a frequent pathology that can entail major functional disorders. Following sigmoid diverticulitis, few studies have assessed functional disorders and quality of life, a multidimensional concept comprising physical, psychological and mental dimensions, as well as social relations.ObjectiveThe purpose of this work is to report current published data on the quality of life of patients having had sigmoid diverticulitis.ResultsFollowing uncomplicated sigmoid diverticulitis, long-term quality of life does not substantially differ between patients having undergone antibiotic therapy and those having only received symptomatic treatment. As for patients having experienced recurrent events, their quality of life seems improved by elective surgery. Following Hinchey I/II sigmoid diverticulitis, elective surgery seems to improve quality of life, notwithstanding a 10% risk of postoperative complications. Following sigmoid diverticulitis, while emergency surgery seems not to have greater impact on quality of life than elective surgery, the surgical technique employed in an emergency setting seems to have an impact, particularly with regard to the physical and mental components of quality of life.ConclusionAssessment of quality of life is of fundamental importance in diverticular disease and should orient operative indications, particularly in an elective context.IntroductionLa maladie diverticulaire, comprenant la diverticulite, commence lorsque le patient devient symptomatique. La diverticulite sigmoïdienne correspond à l’inflammation/infection d’un diverticule du côlon sigmoïde. Parmi les patients porteurs de diverticule, 4,3 % développeront une diverticulite. Cette pathologie est fréquente et peut entraîner des troubles fonctionnels importants. Dans la diverticulite sigmoïdienne, peu d’études se sont intéressées à l’évaluation des troubles fonctionnels et de la qualité de vie, qui est un concept multidimensionnel englobant les dimensions physiques, psychologiques, mentales ainsi que les relations sociales.ObjectifCe travail a pour but de rapporter les données actuelles publiées sur la qualité de vie des patients ayant une diverticulite sigmoïdienne.RésultatsAprès diverticulite sigmoïdienne non compliquée, la qualité de vie à long terme n’est pas différente entre les patients ayant eu une antibiothérapie et ceux ayant reçu un traitement symptomatique exclusif. La qualité de vie des patients ayant eu des épisodes récidivants semble améliorée par une chirurgie élective. Après diverticulite sigmoïdienne Hinchey I/II, la chirurgie élective semble améliorer la qualité de vie, malgré un risque de complication postopératoire de 10 %. Après diverticulite sigmoïdienne, la chirurgie en urgence ne semble pas impacter la qualité de vie par rapport à la chirurgie élective, mais la technique chirurgicale choisie en urgence semble avoir un impact notamment sur les composantes physique et mentale de la qualité de vie.ConclusionL’évaluation de la qualité de vie est fondamentale dans la pathologie diverticulaire et doit guider les indications opératoires notamment en situation élective

    Quality of life after sigmoid diverticulitis: A review

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    International audienceIntroductionDiverticular disease, including diverticulitis, begins when the patient becomes symptomatic. Sigmoid diverticulitis corresponds to inflammation/infection of a diverticulum of the sigmoid colon. Among diverticulosis patients, 4.3% develop diverticulitis, a frequent pathology that can entail major functional disorders. Following sigmoid diverticulitis, few studies have assessed functional disorders and quality of life, a multidimensional concept comprising physical, psychological and mental dimensions, as well as social relations.ObjectiveThe purpose of this work is to report current published data on the quality of life of patients having had sigmoid diverticulitis.ResultsFollowing uncomplicated sigmoid diverticulitis, long-term quality of life does not substantially differ between patients having undergone antibiotic therapy and those having only received symptomatic treatment. As for patients having experienced recurrent events, their quality of life seems improved by elective surgery. Following Hinchey I/II sigmoid diverticulitis, elective surgery seems to improve quality of life, notwithstanding a 10% risk of postoperative complications. Following sigmoid diverticulitis, while emergency surgery seems not to have greater impact on quality of life than elective surgery, the surgical technique employed in an emergency setting seems to have an impact, particularly with regard to the physical and mental components of quality of life.ConclusionAssessment of quality of life is of fundamental importance in diverticular disease and should orient operative indications, particularly in an elective context

    AIDS

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    BACKGROUND: The widespread introduction of combination antiretroviral therapy (cART) has increased survival of HIV+ patients. However, the prevalence of age-related comorbidities remains higher than that of the general population, suggesting that individuals with HIV suffer from accelerated aging. Immune activation, -senescence and inflammation could play an important role in this process. METHODS: The CIADIS (Chronic Immune Activation anD Senescence) sub-study analyzed biomarkers of activation, differentiation, and senescence of T-cells in a cellular-CIADIS weighted score, while biomarkers of inflammation were analyzed in a soluble-CIADIS weighted score using principal component analysis. Adjusted logistic regression and Cox proportional hazard models were used to determine the association between CIADIS weighted scores and 1) the presence of multimorbidity, 2) time to occurrence of the first new age-related comorbidity, and 3) time to death, over a 3-year follow-up period. RESULTS: Of 828 patients with an undetectable viral load, a higher cellular-CIADIS weighted score and higher TNFRI levels were independently associated with the presence of multimorbidity (OR=1.3; 95% CI 1.0-1.6; P=0.02), but the soluble-CIADIS weighted score was not (OR=1.1; 95% CI 0.9-1.3; P=0.33). A higher cellular-CIADIS weighted score (HR=2.2; P < 0.01), higher levels of CD8 activation and a lower CD4/CD8 ratio were associated with a higher risk of age-related comorbidities. Only TNFRI was associated with mortality in a 3-year period. CONCLUSIONS: The cellular-CIADIS weighted score was independently associated with both multimorbidity at inclusion and the risk of new age-related comorbidity during a 3- year follow-up. TNFRI was associated a higher risk for mortality

    Characteristic phenotypes associated with Congenital Dyserythropoietic Anemia (Type II) manifest at different stages of erythropoiesis

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    Congenital dyserythropoietic anemia type II is an autosomally recessive form of hereditary anemia caused by SEC23B gene mutations. Patients exhibit characteristic phenotypes including multinucleate erythroblasts, erythrocytes with hypoglycosylated membrane proteins and an apparent double plasma membrane. Despite ubiquitous expression of SEC23B, the effects of mutations in this gene are confined to the erythroid lineage and the basis of this erythroid specificity remains to be defined. In addition, little is known regarding the stage at which the disparate phenotypes of this disease manifest during erythropoiesis. We employ an in vitro culture system to monitor the appearance of the defining phenotypes associated with congenital dyserythropoietic anemia type II during terminal differentiation of erythroblasts derived from small volumes of patient peripheral blood. Membrane protein hypoglycosylation was detected by the basophilic stage, preceding the onset of multinuclearity in orthochromatic erythroblasts that occurs coincident with the loss of secretory pathway proteins including SEC23A during erythropoiesis. Endoplasmic reticulum remnants were observed in nascent reticulocytes of both diseased and healthy donor cultures but were lost upon further maturation of normal reticulocytes, implicating a defect of ER clearance during reticulocyte maturation in congenital dyserythropoietic anemia type II. We also demonstrate distinct isoform and species-specific expression profiles of SEC23 during terminal erythroid differentiation and identify a prolonged expression of SEC23A in murine erythropoiesis compared to humans. We propose that SEC23A is able to compensate for the absence of SEC23B in mouse erythroblasts, providing a basis for the absence of phenotype within the erythroid lineage of a recently described SEC23B knockout mouse

    Impact of the first wave of COVID-19 epidemy on the surgical management of sigmoid diverticular disease in France: National French retrospective study

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    International audienceObjective: To analyze the surgical management of sigmoid diverticular disease (SDD) before, during, and after the first containment rules (CR) for the first wave of COVID-19.Methods: From the French Surgical Association multicenter series, this study included all patients operated on between January 2018 and September 2021. Three groups were compared: A (before CR period: 01/01/18-03/16/20), B (CR period: 03/17/20-05/03/20), and C (post CR period: 05/04/20-09/30/21).Results: A total of 1965 patients (A n = 1517, B n = 52, C n = 396) were included. The A group had significantly more previous SDD compared to the two other groups (p = 0.007), especially complicated (p = 0.0004). The rate of peritonitis was significantly higher in the B (46.1%) and C (38.4%) groups compared to the A group (31.7%) (p = 0.034 and p = 0.014). As regards surgical treatment, Hartmann's procedure was more often performed in the B group (44.2%, vs A 25.5% and C 26.8%, p = 0.01). Mortality at 90 days was significantly higher in the B group (9.6%, vs A 4% and C 6.3%, p = 0.034). This difference was also significant between the A and B groups (p = 0.048), as well as between the A and C groups (p = 0.05). There was no significant difference between the three groups in terms of postoperative morbidity.Conclusion: This study shows that the management of SDD was impacted by COVID-19 at CR, but also after and until September 2021, both on the initial clinical presentation and on postoperative mortality

    NEOTROPICAL ALIEN MAMMALS: a data set of occurrence and abundance of alien mammals in the Neotropics

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    Biological invasion is one of the main threats to native biodiversity. For a species to become invasive, it must be voluntarily or involuntarily introduced by humans into a nonnative habitat. Mammals were among first taxa to be introduced worldwide for game, meat, and labor, yet the number of species introduced in the Neotropics remains unknown. In this data set, we make available occurrence and abundance data on mammal species that (1) transposed a geographical barrier and (2) were voluntarily or involuntarily introduced by humans into the Neotropics. Our data set is composed of 73,738 historical and current georeferenced records on alien mammal species of which around 96% correspond to occurrence data on 77 species belonging to eight orders and 26 families. Data cover 26 continental countries in the Neotropics, ranging from Mexico and its frontier regions (southern Florida and coastal-central Florida in the southeast United States) to Argentina, Paraguay, Chile, and Uruguay, and the 13 countries of Caribbean islands. Our data set also includes neotropical species (e.g., Callithrix sp., Myocastor coypus, Nasua nasua) considered alien in particular areas of Neotropics. The most numerous species in terms of records are from Bos sp. (n = 37,782), Sus scrofa (n = 6,730), and Canis familiaris (n = 10,084); 17 species were represented by only one record (e.g., Syncerus caffer, Cervus timorensis, Cervus unicolor, Canis latrans). Primates have the highest number of species in the data set (n = 20 species), partly because of uncertainties regarding taxonomic identification of the genera Callithrix, which includes the species Callithrix aurita, Callithrix flaviceps, Callithrix geoffroyi, Callithrix jacchus, Callithrix kuhlii, Callithrix penicillata, and their hybrids. This unique data set will be a valuable source of information on invasion risk assessments, biodiversity redistribution and conservation-related research. There are no copyright restrictions. Please cite this data paper when using the data in publications. We also request that researchers and teachers inform us on how they are using the data
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