584 research outputs found

    Is the immediate effect of marathon running on novice runners' knee joints sustained within 6 months after the run? A follow-up 3.0 T MRI study.

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    OBJECTIVE: To evaluate changes in the knee joints of asymptomatic first-time marathon runners, using 3.0 T MRI, 6 months after finishing marathon training and run. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Six months after their participation in a baseline study regarding their knee joints, 44 asymptomatic novice marathoners (17 males, 27 females, mean age 46 years old) agreed to participate in a repeat MRI investigation: 37 completed both a standardized 4-month-long training programme and the marathon (marathon runners); and 7 dropped out during training (pre-race dropouts). The participants already underwent bilateral 3.0 T MRIs: 6 months before and 2 weeks after their first marathon, the London Marathon 2017. This study was a follow-up assessment of their knee joints. Each knee structure was assessed using validated scoring/grading systems at all time points. RESULTS: Two weeks after the marathon, 3 pre-marathon bone marrow lesions and 2 cartilage lesions showed decrease in radiological score on MRI, and the improvement was sustained at the 6-month follow-up. New improvements were observed on MRI at follow-up: 5 pre-existing bone marrow lesions and 3 cartilage lesions that remained unchanged immediately after the marathon reduced in their extent 6 months later. No further lesions appeared at follow-up, and the 2-week post-marathon lesions showed signs of reversibility: 10 of 18 bone marrow oedema-like signals and 3 of 21 cartilage lesions decreased on MRI. CONCLUSION: The knees of novice runners achieved sustained improvement, for at least 6 months post-marathon, in the condition of their bone marrow and articular cartilage

    Differential expression of mitogen activating protein kinases in periodontitis

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    Aim Following toll‐like receptor ( TLR ) engagement, lipopolysaccharide ( LPS ) can stimulate the expression of pro‐inflammatory cytokines thus activating the innate immune response. The production of inflammatory cytokines results, in part, from the activation of kinase‐induced signalling cascades and transcriptional factors. Of the four distinct classes of mitogen‐activated protein kinases ( MAPK ) described in mammals, p38, c‐Jun N‐terminal activated kinases ( JNK 1‐3) and extracellular activated kinases ( ERK 1,2) are the best studied. Previous data have established that p38 MAPK signalling is required for inflammation and bone loss in periodontal disease pre‐clinical animal models. Materials & Methods In this study, we obtained healthy and diseased periodontal tissues along with clinical parameters and microbiological parameters. Excised fixed tissues were immunostained with total and phospho‐specific antibodies against p38, JNK and ERK kinases. Results Intensity scoring from immunostained tissues was correlated with clinical periodontal parameters. Rank correlations with clinical indices were statistically significantly positive ( p ‐value < 0.05) for total p38 (correlations ranging 0.49–0.68), phospho‐p38 (range 0.44–0.56), and total ERK (range 0.52–0.59) levels, and correlations with JNK levels also supported association (range 0.42–0.59). Phospho‐ JNK and phospho‐ ERK showed no significant positive correlation with clinical parameters of disease. Conclusion These data strongly implicate p38 MAPK as a major MAPK involved in human periodontal inflammation and severity.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/98997/1/jcpe12123.pd

    Prevalence of abnormal findings in 230 knees of asymptomatic adults using 3.0 T MRI.

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    OBJECTIVE: To identify abnormalities in asymptomatic sedentary individuals using 3.0 Tesla high-resolution MRI. MATERIALS AND METHODS: The cohort comprised of 230 knees of 115 uninjured sedentary adults (51 males, 64 females; median age: 44 years). All participants had bilateral knee 3.0 T MRIs. Two senior musculoskeletal radiologists graded all intraarticular knee structures using validated scoring systems. Participants completed Knee Injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score questionnaires at the time of the MRI scan. RESULTS: MRI showed abnormalities in the majority (97%) of knees. Thirty percent knees had meniscal tears: horizontal (23%), complex (3%), vertical (2%), radial (2%) and bucket handle (1%). Cartilage and bone marrow abnormalities were prevalent at the patellofemoral joint (57% knees and 48% knees, respectively). Moderate and severe cartilage lesions were common, in 19% and 31% knees, respectively, while moderate and severe bone marrow oedema in 19% and 31% knees, respectively. Moderate-intensity lesion in tendons was found in 21% knees and high-grade tendonitis in 6% knees-the patellar (11% and 2%, respectively) and quadriceps (7% and 2%, respectively) tendons being most affected. Three percent partial ligamentous ruptures were found, especially of the anterior cruciate ligament (2%). CONCLUSION: Nearly all knees of asymptomatic adults showed abnormalities in at least one knee structure on MRI. Meniscal tears, cartilage and bone marrow lesions of the patellofemoral joint were the most common pathological findings. Bucket handle and complex meniscal tears were reported for the first time in asymptomatic knees

    Can marathon running improve knee damage of middle-aged adults? A prospective cohort study.

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    Objectives: To evaluate the short-term impact of long-distance running on knee joints using MRI. Methods: 82 healthy adults participating in their first marathon underwent 3T (Tesla) MRI of both knees 6 months before and half a month after the marathon: 71 completed both the 4 month-long standardised training programme and the marathon; and 11 dropped-out during training and did not run the marathon. Two senior musculoskeletal radiologists graded the internal knee structures using validated scoring systems. Participants completed Knee Injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score questionnaires at each visit for self-reporting knee function. Results: Premarathon and pretraining MRI showed signs of damage, without symptoms, to several knee structures in the majority of the 82 middle-aged volunteers. However, after the marathon, MRI showed a reduction in the radiological score of damage in: subchondral bone marrow oedema in the condyles of the tibia (p=0.011) and femur (p=0.082). MRI did also show an increase in radiological scores to the following structures: cartilage of the lateral patella (p=0.0005); semimembranosus tendon (p=0.016); iliotibial band (p<0.0001) and the prepatellar bursa (p=0.016). Conclusion: Improvement to damaged subchondral bone of the tibial and femoral condyles was found following the marathon in novice runners, as well as worsening of the patella cartilage although asymptomatic. This is the most robust evidence to link marathon running with knee joint health and provides important information for those seeking to understand the link between long distance running and osteoarthritis of the main weight-bearing areas of the knee

    Tristetraprolin Regulates Interleukin-6 Expression Through p38 MAPK-Dependent Affinity Changes with mRNA 3' Untranslated Region

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    Tristetraprolin (TTP) is a well-characterized, zinc finger-containing, RNA-binding protein. TTP targets tumor necrosis factor alpha for degradation via the 3- untranslated region (3-UTR). Although AU-rich elements (AREs) in the 3-UTR of interleukin-6 (IL-6) mRNA dictate mRNA degradation, the role of TTP in the post-transcriptional regulation of IL-6 gene expression is unclear. Here we used TTP-deficient mice to test the hypothesis that IL-6 expression is influenced by TTP. Genetic and siRNA-mediated knockdown of TTP resulted in increased IL-6 production and overexpression of TTP had the reverse effect. IL-6 and tumor necrosis factor alpha production were elevated after injection of IL-1- in TTP-deficient mice. Further, embryonic fibroblasts from these mice (mouse embryonic fibroblasts) exhibited greater IL-6 mRNA expression and longer half-life than wild-type mouse embryonic fibroblasts. Overexpression of TTP reduced IL-6 3-UTR luciferase reporter activity in an ARE-dependent manner. Proximal and distal regions of the 3-UTR acted synergistically to produce the full repression of TTP. Mutation-based luciferase assays show that ARE2, ARE3, and ARE4 are required for TTP-mediated repression. The constitutively activated p38-MK2 pathway abrogated TTP-mediated repression of IL-6 3-UTR reporter activity. RNA immunoprecipitation assay indicated that the deficiency of p38alpha resulted in the increased affinity of TTP to IL-6 mRNA. Taken together, we propose that TTP downregulates IL-6 gene expression at the post-transcriptional level by targeting ARE elements in the 3-UTR region.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/90500/1/jir-2E2010-2E0154.pd

    Bipolar Magnetic Regions on the Sun: Global Analysis of the SOHO/MDI Data Set

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    The magnetic flux that is generated by dynamo inside the Sun emerges in the form of bipolar magnetic regions. We have analyzed the whole set of solar magnetograms obtained with the SOHO/MDI instrument in 1995-2011, and automatically identified 160,079 bipolar magnetic regions that span a range of scale sizes across nearly four orders of magnitude. Their properties have been statistically analyzed, in particular with respect to the polarity orientations of the bipolar regions, including their tilt angle distributions. The latitude variation of the average tilt angles (with respect to the E-W direction), known as Joy's law, is found to closely follow the relation 32.1*sin(latitude)[deg]. There is no indication of a dependence on region size that one may expect if the tilts were produced by the Coriolis force during the buoyant rise of flux loops from the tachocline region. A few percent of all regions have orientations that violate Hale's polarity law. We show examples, from different phases of the solar cycle, where well defined medium-size bipolar regions with opposite polarity orientations occur side by side in the same latitude zone. Such oppositely oriented large bipolar regions cannot be part of the same toroidal flux system, but different flux systems must coexist in the same latitude zones. These examples are incompatible with the paradigm of coherent, subsurface toroidal flux ropes as the source of sunspots, and instead show that fluctuations must play a major role at all scales for the turbulent dynamo. We see no observational support for a separation of scales or a division between a global and a local dynamo, since also the smallest scales in the data set retain a non-random component that significantly contributes to the accumulated emergence of a N-S dipole moment that leads to the replacement of the old global poloidal field with a new one that has the opposite orientation.Comment: 38 pages, 9 figures; to appear in the Astrophysical Journa

    Angiotensin II Receptor Blockers in the Management of Hypertension in Preventing Cognitive Impairment and Dementia - A Systematic Review

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    This is the final version. Available on open access from MDPI via the DOI in this recordHypertension is a known risk factor for cognition-related pathologies including dementia. The National Institute of Health and Care Excellence (NICE) guidelines recommend angiotensin (Ang) II receptor blockers (ARBs) or angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors (ACEIs) as a first-line treatment for hypertension. Although both ARBs and ACEIs show neuroprotective effects, ACEIs show contradictory side effects; therefore, ARBs may be a more viable option. However, trials assessing the effects of ARBs on cognition are scarce and conflicting. Therefore, the aim of this review is to conduct a systematic review and synthesise data on the influence of ARBs on cognition and dementia prevention. Five databases were searched from 1992-2022 to produce 13 randomised controlled trials (RCTs) involving 26,907 patients that compared associations of ARBs against placebos or other antihypertensives on cognition or probable dementia with a minimum duration of 3 months. ARBs showed greater cognitive benefits when compared to hydrochlorothiazide (HCTZ), beta blockers (BB), and ACEIs. Our findings showed that although ARBs are superior to some antihypertensives such as ACEIs, thiazide and beta blockers, they made no difference in comparison to the placebo in all but one sample of patients. The positive effects on cognitive performances are equal to calcium channel blockers (CCBs) and lower than statin. The neuroprotective effects of ARBs are also more beneficial when ARBs are taken at the same time as a statin. Due to these inconsistencies, robust conclusions cannot be made. Future trials are warranted and, if successful, could have positive economic implications and consequently improve quality of life.National Natural Science Foundation of ChinaAlzheimer’s Research UKRoyal Societ

    Can marathon running improve knee damage of middle-aged adults? A prospective cohort study

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    Objectives To evaluate the short-term impact of longdistance running on knee joints using MRI. Methods 82 healthy adults participating in their first marathon underwent 3T (Tesla) MRI of both knees 6 months before and half a month after the marathon: 71 completed both the 4 month-long standardised training programme and the marathon; and 11 dropped-out during training and did not run the marathon. Two senior musculoskeletal radiologists graded the internal knee structures using validated scoring systems. Participants completed Knee Injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score questionnaires at each visit for self-reporting knee function. Results Premarathon and pretraining MRI showed signs of damage, without symptoms, to several knee structures in the majority of the 82 middle-aged volunteers. However, after the marathon, MRI showed a reduction in the radiological score of damage in: subchondral bone marrow oedema in the condyles of the tibia (p=0.011) and femur (p=0.082). MRI did also show an increase in radiological scores to the following structures: cartilage of the lateral patella (p=0.0005); semimembranosus tendon (p=0.016); iliotibial band (p<0.0001) and the prepatellar bursa (p=0.016). Conclusion Improvement to damaged subchondral bone of the tibial and femoral condyles was found following the marathon in novice runners, as well as worsening of the patella cartilage although asymptomatic. This is the most robust evidence to link marathon running with knee joint health and provides important information for those seeking to understand the link between long distance running and osteoarthritis of the main weight-bearing areas of the knee

    Strategy for Dynamic Wisp Removal in James Webb Space Telescope NIRCam Images

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    The James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) near-infrared camera (NIRCam) has been found to exhibit serious wisp-like structures in four of its eight short-wavelength detectors. The exact structure and strength of these wisps is highly variable with the position and orientation of JWST, so the use of static templates is non-optimal. Here we investigate a dynamic strategy to mitigate these wisps using long-wavelength reference images. Based on a suite of experiments where we embed a worst-case scenario median-stacked wisp into wisp-free images, we define suitable parameters for our wisp removal strategy. Using this setup we re-process wisp-affected public Prime Extragalactic Areas for Reionization and Lensing Science (PEARLS) data in the North Ecliptic Pole Time Domain Field (NEP-TDF) field, resulting in significant visual improvement in our detector frames and reduced noise in the final stacked images.Comment: 16 pages, 10 figures, submitted to PASP, comments welcom

    ProPane: Image Warping with Fire

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    In this paper we introduce the software package ProPane, written for the R data analysis language. ProPane combines the full range of wcslib projections with the C++ image manipulation routines provided by the CImg library. ProPane offers routines for image warping and combining (including stacking), and various related tasks such as image alignment tweaking and pixel masking. It can stack an effectively unlimited number of target frames using multiple parallel cores, and offers threading for many lower level routines. It has been used for a number of current and upcoming large surveys, and we present a range of its capabilities and features. ProPane is already available under a permissive open-source LGPL-3 license at github.com/asgr/ProPane (DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.10057053).Comment: 19 pages, 17 figures, 5 tables, accepted to MNRA
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