25 research outputs found

    Changing trends in end-stage renal disease patients with diabetes.

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    Worldwide, diabetes has become the most common cause of end-stage renal disease (ESRD), yet Swiss data are largely lacking. This observational study examined ESRD patients with diabetes mellitus (ESRD-DM) at end of 2009 and 2014. The prevalence and characteristics of ESRD-DM patients were collected in all dialysis facilities in the Canton of Vaud of Switzerland in 2009 and in 2014, and the 5-year mortality rate was assessed. A total of 107 and 140 ESRD-DM patients underwent dialysis at end of 2009 and 2014, respectively. Within the 5-year period a total of 167 incidental ESRD-DM patients required dialysis, corresponding to an estimated incidental rate of 0.84/1000 person-years in the diabetic population. In 2009, all patients with ESRD-DM underwent haemodialysis, decreasing to 96.2% in 2014, with 3.8% on peritoneal dialysis. Age, sex, body mass index, type of diabetes, duration of diabetes, cause of ESRD, dialysis duration, dialysis frequency, vascular access, and glycosylated haemoglobin levels did not differ between 2009 and 2014. In 2014, macrovascular comorbidity was reported more often than in 2009, but not amputations. Haemoglobin level decreased significantly from 117.9 g/l to 112.3 g/l. Calcium-containing phosphate binder and angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor use significantly decreased, whereas iron therapy significantly increased with time. The 5-year mortality rate was 61.7%. Five-year survivors were significantly younger and had a higher body mass index. The growing prevalence of ESRD-DM emphasises that prevention of chronic kidney disease and its progression should be a public health priority in Switzerland

    Angiogenin protects motoneurons against hypoxic injury.

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    Cells can adapt to hypoxia through the activation of hypoxia-inducible factor-1 (HIF-1), which in turn regulates the expression of hypoxia-responsive genes. Defects in hypoxic signaling have been suggested to underlie the degeneration of motoneurons in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). We have recently identified mutations in the hypoxia-responsive gene, angiogenin (ANG), in ALS patients, and have shown that ANG is constitutively expressed in motoneurons. Here, we show that HIF-1alpha is sufficient and required to activate ANG in cultured motoneurons exposed to hypoxia, although ANG expression does not change in a transgenic ALS mouse model or in sporadic ALS patients. Administration of recombinant ANG or expression of wild-type ANG protected motoneurons against hypoxic injury, whereas gene silencing of ang1 significantly increased hypoxia-induced cell death. The previously reported ALS-associated ANG mutations (Q12L, K17I, R31K, C39W, K40I, I46V) all showed a reduced neuroprotective activity against hypoxic injury. Our data show that ANG plays an important role in endogenous protective pathways of motoneurons exposed to hypoxia, and suggest that loss of function rather than loss of expression of ANG is associated with ALS

    Bicarbonate de sodium pour ralentir la progression de la maladie rénale chronique [Sodium bicarbonate to slow the progression of chronic kidney disease].

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    Metabolic acidosis is a prevalent complication in moderate and late stages of chronic kidney disease (CKD). It is established that the correction of metabolic acidosis may improve metabolic bone disorders and protein degradation in the skeletal muscle, two characteristic complications of patients with advanced CKD. In the last 18 months, three randomized controlled trials have drawn the attention on a novel indication to correct metabolic acidosis in these patients, i.e., halting CKD progression. These data show that sodium bicarbonate, a cheap and easily manageable treatment, may delay the progression of CKD and the need of a renal replacement therapy such as dialysis or kidney transplantation

    Death receptors in cutaneous biology and disease

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    Death receptors are a growing family of transmembrane proteins that can detect the presence of specific extracellular death signals and rapidly trigger cellular destruction by apoptosis. Expression and signaling by death receptors and their respective ligands is a tightly regulated process essential for key physiologic functions in a variety of organs, including the skin. Several death receptors and ligands, Fas and Fas ligand being the most important to date, are expressed in the skin and have proven to be essential in contributing to its functional integrity. Recent evidence has shown that Fas-induced keratinocyte apoptosis in response to ultraviolet light, prevents the accumulation of pro-carcinogenic p53 mutations by deleting ultraviolet-mutated keratinocytes. Further- more, there is strong evidence that dysregulation of Fas expression and/or signaling contributes to the pathogenesis of toxic epidermal necrolysis, acute cutaneous graft versus host disease, contact hypersensitivity and melanoma metastasis. With these new developments, strategies for modulating the function of death receptor signaling pathways have emerged and provided novel therapeutic possibilities. Specific blockade of Fas, for example with intravenous immunoglobulin preparations that contain specific anti-Fas antibodies, has shown great promise in the treatment of toxic epidermal necrolysis and may also be useful in the treatment acute graft versus host disease. Likewise, induction of death signaling by ultraviolet light can lead to hapten-specific tolerance, and gene transfer of Fas ligand to dendritic cells can be used to induce antigen specific tolerance by deleting antigen-specific T cells. Further developments in this field may have important clinical implications in cutaneous disease

    Dénutrition en diatlyse: vers la fin d'une fatalité [Malnutrition on dialysis: the end of a fatality].

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    Protein-energy malnutrition in patients treated with haemodialysis (HD) is a complex, multifactorial and prevalent problem, starting well ahead of the dialysis program. It is associated with an increased morbidity and mortality. Uraemic patients are relatively resistant to nutrients because of metabolism abnormalities. Prevention of malnutrition is therefore more efficient than treatment per se. Classical supplementation including oral nutritional supplements, intradialytic parenteral nutrition and enteral nutrition remain efficient, if applied for a sufficient time. A global approach coupling supplementation and strategies designed to optimise metabolism abnormalities should increase treatment efficacy and improve the outcome and quality of life of these patients

    Dénutrition en diatlyse: vers la fin d'une fatalité [Malnutrition on dialysis: the end of a fatality].

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    Protein-energy malnutrition in patients treated with haemodialysis (HD) is a complex, multifactorial and prevalent problem, starting well ahead of the dialysis program. It is associated with an increased morbidity and mortality. Uraemic patients are relatively resistant to nutrients because of metabolism abnormalities. Prevention of malnutrition is therefore more efficient than treatment per se. Classical supplementation including oral nutritional supplements, intradialytic parenteral nutrition and enteral nutrition remain efficient, if applied for a sufficient time. A global approach coupling supplementation and strategies designed to optimise metabolism abnormalities should increase treatment efficacy and improve the outcome and quality of life of these patients

    Selective expression of FLIP in malignant melanocytic skin lesions

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    FLIP (FLICE Inhibitory Protein) is a recently identified intracellular inhibitor of caspase-8 activation that potently inhibits cell death mediated by all death receptors including Fas and TRAIL. FLIP has recently been shown to favor tumor growth and immune escape in mouse tumor models. We analyzed FLIP expression by immunohistochemistry in a panel of 61 benign and malignant human melanocytic skin lesions. FLIP expression was undetectable in all but one benign melanocytic lesion (31/32, 97%). In contrast, FLIP was strongly expressed in most melanomas (24/29 = 83%). Overexpression of FLIP by transfection in a Fas- and TRAIL-sensitive human melanoma cell line rendered this cell line more resistant to death mediated by both TRAIL and FasL. Selective expression of FLIP by human melanomas may confer in vivo resistance to FasL and TRAIL, thus representing an additional mechanism by which melanoma cells escape immune destruction

    Frequent downregulation of Fas (CD95) expression and function in melanoma

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    Membrane-bound Fas ligand (FasL, Apo-1L, CD95L) induces rapid apoptosis of Fas (CD95)-sensitive cells on interaction with Fas, and is an important effector molecule of cytolytic T lymphocytes (CTLs). Melanomas are immunogenic and induce the production of specific CTLs, but are usually able to escape immune destruction. We investigated Fas expression and function in 53 cutaneous melanocytic lesions and 13 melanoma cell lines grown in vitro. Immunohistochemical analysis of Fas expression in cutaneous melanocytic lesions showed moderate to high levels of Fas in common benign melanocytic naevi, but low to undetectable levels in atypical naevi, primary (superficial spreading melanoma, nodular melanoma) and cutaneous melanoma metastases. Fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS) analysis of Fas expression in melanoma cell lines revealed undetectable or low levels of cell surface Fas expression in five of the 13 melanoma cell lines. Analysis of Fas signalling by quantification of cell death following exposure to recombinant FasL showed that a reduction in Fas expression results in resistance to FasL-mediated cell death. Furthermore, two of the 13 melanoma cell lines were found to be resistant to FasL-mediated cell death despite conserved Fas expression. Thus seven of the 13 melanoma cell lines were found to have impaired Fas signalling. Taken together, our results indicate that downregulation of Fas expression and resistance to Fas-mediated apoptosis are frequent in melanoma
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