17 research outputs found

    Characteristics of control group participants who increased their physical activity in a cluster-randomized lifestyle intervention trial

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Meaningful improvement in physical activity among control group participants in lifestyle intervention trials is not an uncommon finding, and may be partly explained by participant characteristics. This study investigated which baseline demographic, health and behavioural characteristics were predictive of successful improvement in physical activity in usual care group participants recruited into a telephone-delivered physical activity and diet intervention trial, and descriptively compared these characteristics with those that were predictive of improvement among intervention group participants.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>Data come from the Logan Healthy Living Program, a primary care-based, cluster-randomized controlled trial of a physical activity and diet intervention. Multivariable logistic regression models examined variables predictive of an improvement of at least 60 minutes per week of moderate-to-vigorous intensity physical activity among usual care (n = 166) and intervention group (n = 175) participants.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Baseline variables predictive of a meaningful change in physical activity were different for the usual care and intervention groups. Being retired and completing secondary school (but no further education) were predictive of physical activity improvement for usual care group participants, whereas only baseline level of physical activity was predictive of improvement for intervention group participants. Higher body mass index and being unmarried may also be predictors of physical activity improvement for usual care participants.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>This is the first study to examine differences in predictors of physical activity improvement between intervention group and control group participants enrolled in a physical activity intervention trial. While further empirical research is necessary to confirm findings, results suggest that participants with certain socio-demographic characteristics may respond favourably to minimal intensity interventions akin to the treatment delivered to participants in a usual care group. In future physical activity intervention trials, it may be possible to screen participants for baseline characteristics in order to target minimal-intensity interventions to those most likely to benefit. (Australian Clinical Trials Registry, <url>http://www.anzctr.org.au/default.aspx</url>, ACTRN012607000195459)</p

    Synthesis and structure of a neutral SiAl14 cluster

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    Purath A, Dohmeier C, Ecker A, et al. Synthesis and structure of a neutral SiAl14 cluster. JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY. 2000;122(29):6955-6959.A metastable AlCl solution obtained by co-condensation of the high-temperature molecule AlCl and a mixture of toluene/diethyl ether reacted with SiCp*2 or SiCl4/AlCp*, giving a unique SiAl14 cluster species that bears six Cp* ligands protecting the compound from disproportionation and formation of the bulk material (elemental Al or an Si/Al alloy). The structure of the SiAl14 core represents a section of the body centered packing when a Si atom resides in the center of an Al cube. Each of the six faces of the cube is capped by an additional Al(eta(5) Cp*) moiety. This cluster compound was investigated by mass spectrometry, X-ray diffraction, Al-27 NMR spectroscopy, and ab initio theory. The solid-state structure contains minor amounts of molecules with additional Cl atoms bonded to the Al atoms at the corners of the cube, and the presence of Cl-containing molecules in the crystal is rationalized on basis of the suggested reaction path

    Natural killer cells trigger osteoclastogenesis and bone destruction in arthritis

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    Osteoclasts are bone-eroding cells that develop from monocytic precursor cells in the presence of receptor activator of NF-ÎșB ligand (RANKL) and macrophage colony-stimulating factor (M-CSF). Osteoclasts are essential for physiological bone remodeling, but localized excessive osteoclast activity is responsible for the periarticular bone destruction that characteristically occurs in patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA). The origin of osteoclasts at sites of bone erosion in RA is unknown. Natural killer (NK) cells, as well as monocytes, are abundant in the inflamed joints of patients with RA. We show here that such NK cells express both RANKL and M-CSF and are frequently associated with CD14+ monocytes in the RA synovium. Moreover, when synovial NK cells are cocultured with monocytes in vitro, they trigger their differentiation into osteoclasts, a process dependent on RANKL and M-CSF. As in RA, NK cells in the joints of mice with collagen-induced arthritis (CIA) express RANKL. Depletion of NK cells from mice before the induction of CIA reduces the severity of subsequent arthritis and almost completely prevents bone erosion. These results suggest that NK cells may play an important role in the destruction of bone associated with inflammatory arthritis
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