223 research outputs found

    Simvastatin and its impact on healing of craniofacial bone and cartilage: A systematic review

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    Aims and objectives: Many bone regeneration techniques have been introduced in dentistry in order to address lacking of bone tissue. Besides autogenous bone, considered the gold standard, many biomaterials have been involved, such as bone substitutes, barrier membranes, autologous and recombinant growth factors, stem cells and, lately, osteo-promotive pharmacological compounds, such as BMPs, teriparatide, statins, and others. Preclinical and clinical studies, systematic reviews and meta-analyses have investigated the potential of simvastatin in enhancing bone formation. This review aimed at assessing the relevance of simvastatin in bone regeneration, focusing on clinical and histological outcomes in oral surgery. Methodology: The PICO question was \u201cIs the adjunctive use of simvastatin beneficial respect to control for bone regeneration in dentistry?\u201d An electronic search was performed on MEDLINE, Scopus, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL) using a combination of keywords. A hand search was undertaken on seven oral surgery Journals: Previous systematic reviews were considered for further potential eligible studies. No limitation of language and publication year was placed. Both animal and clinical comparative studies were considered. After inclusion, data on methodology, efficacy and safety were extracted. Included studies underwent risk of bias assessment. Results: One randomized clinical study and 23 studies on animal models (rats, pigs, dogs, rabbits) were included. Simvastatin was tested in different oral applications, such as: periodontal disease, distraction osteogenesis, temporomandibular joint disease, socket preservation, orthodontics. In the range 0.5-1mg and 2.2-2.5mg simvastatin was associated with higher bone formation rate and decreased osteoclastic activity as compared to control. Immunohistochemistry revealed the increased activity of TRAP, MMP-1 and BMP and decreased activity of RANKL when using simvastatin. The outcomes were unrelated to the administration route (local or systemic). Conclusion: This review provided a detailed insight into the osteopromotive effects of simvastatin through clinical, histological and immunohistochemical markers associated with bone regeneration

    Metabolic profile and psychological variables after bariatric surgery: association with weight outcomes

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    Purpose This study aims to examine associations between metabolic profile and psychological variables in post-bariatric patients and to investigate if metabolic and psychological variables, namely high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C), triglycerides (TG), glycated hemoglobin (HbA 1c), impulsivity, psychological distress, depressive and eating disorder symptoms are independently associated with percentage of excess weight loss (%EWL) after bariatric surgery.Methods One hundred and fifty bariatric patients (BMI = 33.04 +/- 5.8 kg/m(2)) who underwent to bariatric surgery for more than 28.63 +/- 4.9 months were assessed through a clinical interview, a set of self-report measures and venous blood samples. Pearson's correlations were used to assess correlations between %EWL, metabolic and psychological variables. Multiple linear regression was conducted to investigate which metabolic and psychological variables were independently associated with %EWL, while controlling for type of surgery.Results Higher TG blood levels were associated with higher disordered eating, psychological distress and depression scores. HDL-C was associated with higher depression scores. Both metabolic and psychological variables were associated with %EWL. Regression analyses showed that, controlling for type of surgery, higher % EWL is significantly and independently associated with less disordered eating symptoms and lower TG and HbA_1c blood concentrations (R-2 aj = 0.383, F (4, 82) = 14.34, p < 0.000).Conclusion An association between metabolic and psychological variables, particularly concerning TG blood levels, disordered eating and psychological distress/depression was found. Only higher levels of disordered eating, TG and HbA_1c showed and independent correlation with less weight loss. Targeting maladaptive eating behaviors may be a reasonable strategy to avoid weight regain and optimize health status post-operatively.This research was partially supported by Fundacao para a Ciencia e a Tecnologia/Foundation for Science and Technology through European Union COMPETE program Grant to Eva Conceicao (IF/01219/2014) and (PTDC/MHC-PCL/4974/2012), doctoral scholarship (SFRH/BD/104159/2014) to Ana Pinto-Bastos and doctoral scholarship (SFRH/BD/104182/2014) to Sofia Ramalho
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