36 research outputs found
Association between Mammographic Breast Density and Lifestyle in Japanese Women
A high mammographic breast density is considered to be a risk factor for breast cancer. However, only a small number of studies on the association between breast density and lifestyle have been performed. A cross-sectional study was performed using a survey with 29 questions on life history and lifestyle. The breast density on mammography was classified into 4 categories following the BI-RADS criteria. The subjects were 522 women with no medical history of breast cancer. The mean age was 53.3 years old. On multivariate analysis, only BMI was a significant factor determining breast density in premenopausal women (parameter estimate, -0.403;p value, 0.0005), and the density decreased as BMI rose. In postmenopausal women, BMI (parameter estimate, -0.196;p value, 0.0143) and number of deliveries (parameter estimate, -0.388;p value, 0.0186) were significant factors determining breast density;breast density decreased as BMI and number of deliveries increased. Only BMI and number of deliveries were identified as factors significantly influencing breast density. BMI was inversely correlated with breast density before and after menopause, whereas the influence of number of deliveries on breast density was significant only in postmenopausal women in their 50 and 60s
Effects of lifestyle and single nucleotide polymorphisms on breast cancer risk: a case-control study in Japanese women
Background: Lifestyle factors, including food and nutrition, physical activity, body composition and reproductive factors, and single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) are associated with breast cancer risk, but few studies of these factors have been performed in the Japanese population. Thus, the goals of this study were to validate the association between reported SNPs and breast cancer risk in the Japanese population and to evaluate the effects of SNP genotypes and lifestyle factors on breast cancer risk.
Methods: A case-control study in 472 patients and 464 controls was conducted from December 2010 to November 2011. Lifestyle was examined using a self-administered questionnaire. We analyzed 16 breast cancer-associated SNPs based on previous GWAS or candidate-gene association studies. Age or multivariate-adjusted odds ratios (OR) and 95% confidence intervals (95% CI) were estimated from logistic regression analyses.
Results: High BMI and current or former smoking were significantly associated with an increased breast cancer risk, while intake of meat, mushrooms, yellow and green vegetables, coffee, and green tea, current leisure-time exercise, and education were significantly associated with a decreased risk. Three SNPs were significantly associated with a breast cancer risk in multivariate analysis: rs2046210 (per allele OR = 1.37 [95% CI: 1.11-1.70]), rs3757318 (OR = 1.33[1.05-1.69]), and rs3803662 (OR = 1.28 [1.07-1.55]). In 2046210 risk allele carriers, leisure-time exercise was associated with a significantly decreased risk for breast cancer, whereas current smoking and high BMI were associated with a significantly decreased risk in non-risk allele carriers.
Conclusion: In Japanese women, rs2046210 and 3757318 located near the ESR1 gene are associated with a risk of breast cancer, as in other Asian women. However, our findings suggest that exercise can decrease this risk in allele carriers
Phylogenetic relationships among Toxocara spp. and Toxascaris sp. from different regions of the world
Toxocara and Toxascaris are parasitic nematodes that infect canids and felids although species of the genus
Toxocara also infect humans. This work aimed to establish the phylogenetic and phylogeographic relationship
between specimens of T. canis, T. cati, T. malaysiensis and Toxascaris leonina and to evaluate the degree of host
specificity. In total, 437 samples (adults and pools of eggs) were collected from canids and felids from eight
countries. Parasites were identified by morphology, PCR linked Restriction Fragment Length Polymorphism
(PCR-RFLP) and partial sequencing of the mitochondrial gene cox1. Phylogenetic trees were constructed and
genetic distance among isolates was estimated. Based on the molecular characterization all worms were identified in agreement with their respective hosts with the exception of three samples; two from cats and one from
dogs identified as T. canis and T. cati, respectively. There was no clear geographical clustering of the samples
despite this study including parasites from three continents. This is the first study, to our knowledge, to use
molecular methods to identify T. canis in cats and T. cati in dogs with host specificity being the most common
finding. Our developed PCR-RFLP method was found to be a facile and reliable method for identifying Toxocara
species.A91F-E8B8-FA62 | Teresa Susana Letra MateusN/
Palatal Fistula Repair : Methods and Results
Thirty-seven patients of the palatal fistula after primary palatoplasty were reviewed, with special reference to the methods used to repair, their results and the effect on speech. The operative procedures used include local mucoperiosteal flap, mucosal flap, tongue flap and free mucosal graft, which were selected according to size, location and local condition of the fistula. If possible, it is better to select the operative procedure that will disturb neither the maxillar development nor orthodontic treatment. As for speech, closure of the fistula seems to be an important trigger for the improvement in the intelligibility of the speech