22 research outputs found

    Microalbuminuria, peripheral artery disease, and cognitive function

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    Kidney disease may be linked to a decline in cognitive activity. We examined the association of microalbuminuria and cognitive function in a general population of older adults in the United States drawn from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey of 1999–2002. Cognitive function was measured by digit symbol substitution in 2386 participants 60 years of age and older of whom 448 had microalbuminuria. Covariates included age, gender, race/ethnicity, education, smoking, diabetes, and hypertension. Among participants with peripheral artery disease, those with microalbuminuria had a significantly lower cognitive function score compared to those with a normal albumin-to-creatinine ratio. The association between microalbuminuria and cognitive function was weak in those without peripheral artery disease. But in those with peripheral artery disease, the odds of microalbuminuria associated with cognitive function in the lowest and middle tertiles was 6.5 and 3.5, respectively

    Elevated hypertension risk for African-origin populations in biracial societies : Modeling the Epidemiologic Transition Study.

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    OBJECTIVES: Blood pressures in persons of African descent exceed those of other racial/ethnic groups in the United States. Whether this trait is attributable to the genetic factors in African-origin populations, or a result of inadequately measured environmental exposures, such as racial discrimination, is not known. To study this question, we conducted a multisite comparative study of communities in the African diaspora, drawn from metropolitan Chicago, Kingston, Jamaica, rural Ghana, Cape Town, South Africa, and the Seychelles. METHODS: At each site, 500 participants between the age of 25 and 49 years, with approximately equal sex balance, were enrolled for a longitudinal study of energy expenditure and weight gain. In this study, we describe the patterns of blood pressure and hypertension observed at baseline among the sites. RESULTS: Mean SBP and DBP were very similar in the United States and South Africa in both men and women, although among women, the prevalence of hypertension was higher in the United States (24 vs. 17%, respectively). After adjustment for multiple covariates, relative to participants in the United States, SBP was significantly higher among the South Africans by 9.7 mmHg (P < 0.05) and significantly lower for each of the other sites: for example, Jamaica: -7.9 mmHg (P = 0.06), Ghana: -12.8 mmHg (P < 0.01) and Seychelles: -11.1 mmHg (P = 0.01). CONCLUSION: These data are consistent with prior findings of a blood pressure gradient in societies of the African diaspora and confirm that African-origin populations with lower social status in multiracial societies, such as the United States and South Africa, experience more hypertension than anticipated based on anthropometric and measurable socioeconomic risk factors

    Semantics of Agent Communication: An Introduction

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    Communication has been one of the salient issues in the research on concurrent and distributed systems. This holds no less for the research on multiagent systems. Over the last few years the study of agent communication, and in particular the semantics of agent communication, has attracted increased interest. The present paper provides an introduction to this area. Since agent communication builds upon concepts and techniques from concurrency theory , we start by giving a short historical overview that covers shared-variable concurrency, message-passing, rendezvous, concurrent constraint programming and agent communication. Standard approaches of agent communication identify three different layers: a content layer, message layer and communication layer. To this model we add an extra level, namely the layer of the multi-agent system. Subsequently, we discern three approaches in developing the semantics of programming languages: the axiomatic, operational and denotational approach. Additionally, we discuss semantic aspects of agent communication, including communication histories, compositionality, observable behaviour, failure sets and full abstractness. We illustrate these issues by means of the framework ACPL (Agent Communication Programming Language). Finally, we briefly consider the specification and verification of agent communication
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