81 research outputs found
Seroprevalence of Toxoplasma gondii infection in arthritis patients in eastern China
Background: There is accumulating evidence for an increased susceptibility to infection in patients with arthritis. We sought to understand the epidemiology of Toxoplasma gondii infection in arthritis patients in eastern China, given the paucity of data on the magnitude of T. gondii infection in these patients.
Methods: Seroprevalence of T. gondii infection was assessed by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay using a crude antigen of the parasite in 820 arthritic patients, and an equal number of healthy controls, from Qingdao and Weihai cities, eastern China. Sociodemographic, clinical and lifestyle information on the study participants were also obtained.
Results: The prevalence of anti-T. gondii IgG was significantly higher in arthritic patients (18.8%) compared with 12% in healthy controls (P < 0.001). Twelve patients with arthritis had anti-T. gondii IgM antibodies comparable with 10 control patients (1.5% vs 1.2%). Demographic factors did not significantly influence these seroprevalence frequencies. The highest T. gondii infection seropositivity rate was detected in patients with rheumatoid arthritis (24.8%), followed by reactive arthritis (23.8%), osteoarthritis (19%), infectious arthritis (18.4%) and gouty arthritis (14.8%). Seroprevalence rates of rheumatoid arthritis and reactive arthritis were significantly higher when compared with controls (P < 0.001 and P = 0.002, respectively). A significant association was detected between T. gondii infection and cats being present in the home in arthritic patients (odds ratio [OR], 1.68; 95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.24 – 2.28; P = 0.001).
Conclusions: These findings are consistent with and extend previous results, providing further evidence to support a link between contact with cats and an increased risk of T. gondii infection. Our study is also the first to confirm an association between T. gondii infection and arthritis patients in China. Implications for better prevention and control of T. gondii infection in arthritis patients are discussed.
Trial registration: This is an epidemiological survey, therefore trial registration was not required
Interaction between maternal caffeine intake during pregnancy and CYP1A2 C164A polymorphism affects infant birth size in the Hokkaido study
BACKGROUND: Caffeine, 1,3,7-trimethylxanthine, is widely consumed by women of reproductive age. Although caffeine has been proposed to inhibit fetal growth, previous studies on the effects of caffeine on infant birth size have yielded inconsistent findings. This inconsistency may result from failure to account for individual differences in caffeine metabolism related to polymorphisms in the gene for CYP1A2, the major caffeine-metabolizing enzyme. METHODS: Five hundred fourteen Japanese women participated in a prospective cohort study in Sapporo, Japan, from 2002 to 2005, and 476 mother-child pairs were included for final analysis. RESULTS: Caffeine intake was not significantly associated with mean infant birth size. When caffeine intake and CYP1A2 C164A genotype were considered together, women with the AA genotype and caffeine intake of >= 300 mg per day had a mean reduction in infant birth head circumference of 0.8 cm relative to the reference group after adjusting for confounding factors. In a subgroup analysis, only nonsmokers with the AA genotype and caffeine intake of >= 300 mg per day had infants with decreased birth weight (mean reduction, 277 g) and birth head circumference (mean reduction, 1.0 cm). CONCLUSION: Nonsmokers who rapidly metabolize caffeine may be at increased risk for having infants with decreased birth size when consuming >= 300 mg of caffeine per day.This is the author's accepted version of their manuscript of the following article: Sasaki, et al. Pediatric Research (2017) 82, 19–28. The final publication is available at: http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/pr.2017.7
Strong Host-Feeding Preferences of the Vector Triatoma infestans Modified by Vector Density: Implications for the Epidemiology of Chagas Disease
Chagas disease is a complex zoonosis with more than 150 mammalian host species, nearly a dozen blood-sucking triatomine species as main vectors, and 9–11 million people infected with Trypanosoma cruzi (its causal agent) in the Americas. Triatoma infestans, a highly domesticated species and one of the main vectors, feeds more often on domestic animals than on humans in northern Argentina. The question of whether there are host-feeding preferences among dogs, cats, and chickens is crucial to estimating transmission risks and predicting the effects of control tactics targeting them. This article reports the first host choice experiments of triatomine bugs conducted in small huts under natural conditions. The results demonstrate that T. infestans consistently preferred dogs to chickens or cats, with host shifts occurring more frequently at higher vector densities. Combined with earlier findings showing that dogs have high infection rates, are highly infectious, and have high contact rates with humans and domestic bugs, our results reinforce the role of dogs as the key reservoirs of T. cruzi. The strong bug preference for dogs can be exploited to target dogs with topical lotions or insecticide-impregnated collars to turn them into baited lethal traps or use them as transmission or infestation sentinels
Programming of metabolic effects in C57BL/6JxFVB mice by in utero and lactational exposure to perfluorooctanoic acid
Perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA) is known to
cause developmental toxicity and is a suggested endocrine
disrupting compound (EDC). Early life exposure
to EDCs has been implicated in programming of the
developing organism for chronic diseases later in life.
Here we study perinatal metabolic programming by
PFOA using an experimental design relevant for human
exposure. C57BL/6JxFVB hybrid mice were exposed
during gestation and lactation via maternal feed to
seven low doses of PFOA at and below the NOAEL
used for current risk assessment (3–3000 μg/kg body
weight/day). After weaning, offspring were followed
for 23–25 weeks without further exposure. Offspring
showed a dose-dependent decrease in body weight from
postnatal day 4 to adulthood. Growth under high fat
diet in the last 4–6 weeks of follow-up was increased
in male and decreased in female offspring. Both sexes
showed increased liver weights, hepatic foci of cellular
alterations and nuclear dysmorphology. In females, reductions in perigonadal and perirenal fat pad weights,
serum triglycerides and cholesterol were also observed.
Endocrine parameters, such as glucose tolerance, serum
insulin and leptin, were not affected. In conclusion,
our study with perinatal exposure to PFOA in mice
produced metabolic effects in adult offspring. This is
most likely due to disrupted programming of metabolic
homeostasis, but the assayed endpoints did not provide
a mechanistic explanation. The BMDL of the programming
effects in our study is below the current point of
departure used for calculation of the tolerable daily
intake.The authors wish to acknowledge the support of
the biotechnicians from the team of Hans Strootman at the RIVM animal
facilities. Further technical support was provided by Piet Beekhof,
Hennie Hodemaekers, Sandra Imholz (RIVM), Mirjam Koster
(UU), Stefan van Leeuwen (RIKILT), Jacco Koekkoek and Marja
Lamoree (VU). This study was funded by the European Community’s
Seventh Framework Programme [FP7/2007–2013] under grant agreement
OBELIX 227391
Mechanism of anomalous sinking of an intruder in a granular packing close to incipient fluidization
Objects released into a granular packing close to incipient fluidization may float or sink depending on their density. Contrary to intuition, Oshitani et al. [Phys. Rev. Lett. 116, 068001 (2016)10.1103/PhysRevLett.116.068001] reported that under certain conditions, a lighter sphere can sink further and slower than a heavier one. While this phenomenon has been attributed to a local fluidization around the sinking sphere, its physical mechanisms have not yet been understood. Here, we studied this intriguing phenomenon using both magnetic resonance imaging and discrete particle simulation. Our findings suggest that local fluidization around the sinking sphere and the formation and detachment of gas bubbles play a critical role in driving this anomaly. An analysis of forces acting on the intruder revealed that the upward-directed fluid force acting on a sphere is almost fully counterbalanced by the sum of the net contact forces and the gravitational force acting downward, when the sphere density is close to the bulk density of the granular packing (ρsphere/ρbulk≈1). At the time when bubbles detach from the sphere, the gas pressure gradient experienced by the sphere is slightly attenuated and the sphere is pushed downward by the particle cap located on top of the sphere. Because the deviations from the force equilibrium are small, the sphere sinks slowly. Even after the sphere has reached its final stable depth, local fluidization in combination with bubble formation remains in the proximity of the sphere.ISSN:2469-990
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