98 research outputs found

    Impact of Dental Diseases on Quality-Adjusted Life Expectancy in US Adults

    Get PDF
    Comparing the burden of dental conditions to other health outcomes provides useful insight for public policy. We aimed to estimate quality-adjusted life expectancy (QALE) loss due to dental conditions in the US adult population. Social inequalities in QALE loss by dental conditions were also examined. Data from 3 cross-sectional waves of the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES waves 2001 to 2002, 2003 to 2004, and 2011 to 2012) were pooled and analyzed. The average age of study participants (n = 9,445) was 48.4 y. Disutility scores were derived from self-rated health and the numbers of physically unhealthy days, mentally unhealthy days, and days with activity limitation, employing a previously published algorithm. The associations between the disutility scores and the numbers of decayed teeth, missing teeth, and periodontitis were examined by multiple linear regression stratified by age groups (20–39, 40–59, and ≄60 y), adjusted for other covariates (age, sex, wave fixed effect, educational attainment, smoking, and diabetes). The QALE loss due to dental conditions at the age of 20 was estimated using life tables. Decayed and missing teeth, but not periodontitis, were associated with a larger disutility score. The coefficient for decayed teeth was larger among the older population, whereas that of missing teeth was smaller among them. The estimated QALE loss was 0.43 y (95% confidence interval [CI], 0.28–0.59), which reached 5.3% of QALE loss (8.15 y; 95% CI, 8.03–8.27) due to overall morbidity. There were clear social gradients in QALE loss by dental conditions across the life course, and people with high school or less education had 0.32 y larger QALE loss in total compared with people with college or more education. This study suggests that improvements in people’s dental health may yield substantial gains in population health and well-being. The necessity of more comprehensive public health strategies is highlighted

    Study protocol; Thyroid hormone Replacement for Untreated older adults with Subclinical hypothyroidism - a randomised placebo controlled Trial (TRUST).

    Get PDF
    Subclinical hypothyroidism (SCH) is a common condition in elderly people, defined as elevated serum thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) with normal circulating free thyroxine (fT4). Evidence is lacking about the effect of thyroid hormone treatment. We describe the protocol of a large randomised controlled trial (RCT) of Levothyroxine treatment for SCH. Participants are community-dwelling subjects aged ≄65 years with SCH, diagnosed by elevated TSH levels (≄4.6 and ≀19.9 mU/L) on a minimum of two measures ≄ three months apart, with fT4 levels within laboratory reference range. The study is a randomised double-blind placebo-controlled parallel group trial, starting with levothyroxine 50 micrograms daily (25 micrograms in subjects <50Kg body weight or known coronary heart disease) with titration of dose in the active treatment group according to TSH level, and a mock titration in the placebo group. The primary outcomes are changes in two domains (hypothyroid symptoms and fatigue / vitality) on the thyroid-related quality of life questionnaire (ThyPRO) at one year. The study has 80% power (at p = 0.025, 2-tailed) to detect a change with levothyroxine treatment of 3.0% on the hypothyroid scale and 4.1% on the fatigue / vitality scale with a total target sample size of 750 patients. Secondary outcomes include general health-related quality of life (EuroQol), fatal and non-fatal cardiovascular events, handgrip strength, executive cognitive function (Letter Digit Coding Test), basic and instrumental activities of daily living, haemoglobin, blood pressure, weight, body mass index and waist circumference. Patients are monitored for specific adverse events of interest including incident atrial fibrillation, heart failure and bone fracture. This large multicentre RCT of levothyroxine treatment of subclinical hypothyroidism is powered to detect clinically relevant change in symptoms / quality of life and is likely to be highly influential in guiding treatment of this common condition. Clinicaltrials.gov NCT01660126 ; registered 8th June 2012

    Influences de la sylviculture sur le risque de dégùts biotiques et abiotiques dans les peuplements forestiers

    Full text link

    Effects of blockage of urine and/or bile flow on diflunisal conjugation and disposition in rats

    No full text
    1. The effects of surgical blockage of either or both of the urinary and biliary excretion routes on the elimination of diflunisal (DF) and its conjugates were investigated in pentobarbitone-anaesthetized rats given DF at 10mg/kg i.v. 2. In control animals the acyl glucuronide and phenolic glucuronide conjugates were excreted predominantly in bile, whereas the sulphate conjugate was eliminated almost exclusively in urine. 3. Bilateral ureter ligation had little effect on DF elimination, except for accumulation of the sulphate conjugate in plasma. Compensatory biliary excretion did not occur. 4. Total plasma clearance of DF decreased from 1.01 to 0.68 ml/min per kg following bile duct ligation. Plasma concentrations and urinary excretion of the glucuronides were elevated. 5. In rats with blockage of both urinary and biliary excretion routes, total plasma clearance of DF decreased to 0.59 ml/min per kg. Both the sulphate and phenolic glucuronide conjugates accumulated in plasma, whereas the acyl glucuronide peaked at 30 min and then declined in parallel with DF. The latter result indicates systemic instability of DF acyl glucuronide with hydrolytic regeneration of DF as the likely major consequence

    Contrasting systemic stabilities of the acyl and phenolic glucuronides of diflunisal in the rat

    No full text
    1. Diflunisal (DF) is metabolized in humans and rats primarily to its acyl glucuronide, phenolic glucuronide and sulphate conjugates. 2. After i.v. administration of DF acyl glucuronide to pentobarbitone-anaesthetized rats, DF and its phenolic glucuronide and sulphate conjugates appeared rapidly in plasma, indicating ready systemic hydrolysis of the acyl glucuronide and subsequent biotransformation of liberated DF. 3. Approximately 72% of the acyl glucuronide dose was recovered in bile and urine over 6 h: 52% as acyl glucuronide, 6% as phenolic glucuronide, 5% as sulphate, and 8% as isomers of the acyl glucuronide arising from intramolecular acyl migration. 4. Blockage of excretion routes by ligation of the ureters, bile duct, and both ureters and bile duct, decreased plasma clearance of the acyl glucuronide from 7.8 ml/min per kg to 6.0, 3.2 and 2.2 ml/min per kg respectively, and increased the apparent terminal plasma half-life of DF from 2.1 h to 2.6, 3.4 and 6.3 h, respectively. 5. By contrast, DF phenolic glucuronide was quite stable after i.v. administration at the same dose. 6. This study shows that systemic cycling between DF and its acyl glucuronide exists in the rat in vivo, with portions of each cycle of unstable acyl glucuronide through DF yielding stable phenolic glucuronide and (presumptively stable) sulphate conjugate

    The potential role of dentists in HIV screening

    Get PDF
    Recent evidence suggests there is a role for the dental team, particularly dentists, in offering chairside HIV screening to patients during dental appointments. HIV is no longer a death sentence with early diagnosis and effective treatment contributing to a good prognosis. Despite the availability of both venipuncture diagnostic and rapid saliva/finger prick screening tests for HIV infection, 25% of people living with HIV in the United Kingdom are undiagnosed and remain at risk of transmitting their infection if having unprotected sex. This paper highlights the international evidence that supports dentists' willingness to conduct HIV screening and dental patient acceptance, and explores whether this is an opportunity or a step too far

    Dynamical instabilities, chaos, and spatial complexity in fundamental nonlinear optical interaction

    No full text
    Report also numbered PL-TR--95-07Available from British Library Document Supply Centre- DSC:0678.231F(AD-A--291223)(fiche) / BLDSC - British Library Document Supply CentreSIGLEGBUnited Kingdo

    The role of theories in explaining the association between social inequalities and population oral health: a scoping review protocol

    No full text
    Ankur Singh, Jane Harford, Richard G Watt, Marco A Pere
    • 

    corecore