906 research outputs found
Diabetes: impaired damage control
A coordinated response by the innate immune system, (micro)circulation and nervous system is needed to limit tissue destruction and to initiate reparative processes after tissue damage. Alterations in danger signals in diabetes can be an important cause of the excessive tissue loss and defective tissue repair after injury and can contribute to the higher rates of cardiac failure after myocardial infarction, more severe tissue loss in the case of peripheral ischaemia and impaired wound healing. Here we discuss the mechanisms underlying this impaired damage control in diabetes, with an emphasis on the proinflammatory cytokine high mobility group box 1 and the potential role of dipeptidyl peptidase IV inhibition in improving repair responses
Impurity intrusion in radio-frequency micro-plasma jets operated in ambient air
Space and time resolved concentrations of helium metastable atoms in an
atmospheric pressure radio-frequency micro-plasma jet were measured using
tunable diode laser absorption spectroscopy. Spatial profiles as well as
lifetime measurements show significant influences of air entering the discharge
from the front nozzle and of impurities originating from the gas supply system.
Quenching of metastables was used to deduce quantitative concentrations of
intruding impurities. The impurity profile along the jet axis was determined
from optical emission spectroscopy as well as their dependance on the feed gas
flow through the jet.Comment: Journal of Physics D: Applied Physics (accepted), 6 page
Theology, News and Notes - Vol. 43, No. 02
Theology News & Notes was a theological journal published by Fuller Theological Seminary from 1954 through 2014.https://digitalcommons.fuller.edu/tnn/1125/thumbnail.jp
Patients' with type 2 diabetes willingness to pay for insulin therapy and clinical outcomes
OBJECTIVES: This study assessed patient preferences, using willingness to pay as a method to measure different treatment characteristics or attributes associated with injectable insulin therapy in patients with type 2 diabetes. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: Adults with type 2 diabetes in 12 countries, diagnosed >6 months prior and receiving insulin for >3 months, were recruited through a representative online panel. Data were collected via online questionnaire and analyzed using a standard choice model for discrete choice experiment. RESULTS: A total of 3758 patients from North America (n=646), South America (n=1537), and Europe (n=1575) completed the study. Mean glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c) levels in North America, South America, and Europe were 63 mmol/mol (7.9%), 75 mmol/mol (9.0%), and 64 mmol/mol (8.0%), respectively. In the three regions, monthly willingness to pay was US74, and US99, US104 for one less major hypoglycemic event per year; and US37 and US47, US37, and US25, and US$24 for one less injection per day. Among respondents on basal-only insulin who had previously tried a more intensive regimen, reasons for switching back included difficulty in handling multiple injections and risk of hypoglycemic events. CONCLUSIONS: Reducing HbA1c, frequency of major hypoglycemic events and weight decrease were the highest valued outcomes in each region. The administrative burden of injections was also considered important
A disease management programme for patients with diabetes mellitus is associated with improved quality of care within existing budgets
Aim  To assess the impact of a disease management programme for patients with diabetes mellitus (Type 1 and Type 2) on cost-effectiveness, quality of life and patient self-management. By organizing care in accordance with the principles of disease management, it is aimed to increase quality of care within existing budgets. Methods  Single-group, pre-post design with 2-year follow-up in 473 patients. Results  Substantial significant improvements in glycaemic control, health-related quality of life (HRQL) and patient self-management were found. No significant changes were detected in total costs of care. The probability that the disease management programme is cost-effective compared with usual care amounts to 74%, expressed in an average saving of 117 per additional life year at 5% improved HRQL. Conclusion  Introduction of a disease management programme for patients with diabetes is associated with improved intermediate outcomes within existing budgets. Further research should focus on long-term cost-effectiveness, including diabetic complications and mortality, in a controlled setting or by using decision-analytic modelling technique
Interaction of suppressor of cytokine signalling 3 with cavin-1 links SOCS3 function and cavin-1 stability
YesEffective suppression of JAK–STAT signalling by the inducible inhibitor “suppressor of
cytokine signalling 3” (SOCS3) is essential for limiting signalling from cytokine receptors.
Here we show that cavin-1, a component of caveolae, is a functionally significant SOCS3-
interacting protein. Biochemical and confocal imaging demonstrate that SOCS3 localisation to
the plasma membrane requires cavin-1. SOCS3 is also critical for cavin-1 stabilisation, such
that deletion of SOCS3 reduces the expression of cavin-1 and caveolin-1 proteins, thereby
reducing caveola abundance in endothelial cells. Moreover, the interaction of cavin-1 and
SOCS3 is essential for SOCS3 function, as loss of cavin-1 enhances cytokine-stimulated
STAT3 phosphorylation and abolishes SOCS3-dependent inhibition of IL-6 signalling by cyclic
AMP. Together, these findings reveal a new functionally important mechanism linking
SOCS3-mediated inhibition of cytokine signalling to localisation at the plasma membrane via
interaction with and stabilisation of cavin-1.This work was supported by project grants to T.M.P. from the Chief Scientist Office (ETM/226), British Heart Foundation (PG12/1/ 29276, PG 14/32/30812), and a National Health Service Greater Glasgow and Clyde Research Endowment Fund (2011REFCH08). P.F.P. was supported by the National Institutes of Health grant DK097708. J.J.L.W. was supported by a doctoral training studentship from the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council Doctoral Training Programme in Biochemistry and Molecular Biology at the University of Glasgow (BB/F016735/1). N.A. was supported by a Saudi Government PhD Scholarship. This work was also supported in part by equipment grants to T.M.P. from Diabetes UK (BDA 11/0004309) and Alzheimer’s Research UK (ARUK-EG2016A-3)
Theology, News and Notes - Vol. 29, No. 01
Theology News & Notes was a theological journal published by Fuller Theological Seminary from 1954 through 2014.https://digitalcommons.fuller.edu/tnn/1077/thumbnail.jp
The FLASHForward Facility at DESY
The FLASHForward project at DESY is a pioneering plasma-wakefield
acceleration experiment that aims to produce, in a few centimetres of ionised
hydrogen, beams with energy of order GeV that are of quality sufficient to be
used in a free-electron laser. The plasma wave will be driven by high-current
density electron beams from the FLASH linear accelerator and will explore both
external and internal witness-beam injection techniques. The plasma is created
by ionising a gas in a gas cell with a multi-TW laser system, which can also be
used to provide optical diagnostics of the plasma and electron beams due to the
<30 fs synchronisation between the laser and the driving electron beam. The
operation parameters of the experiment are discussed, as well as the scientific
program.Comment: 19 pages, 9 figure
- …