2,865 research outputs found
Grayanotoxin I Intoxication in Pet Pigs
Contaminated honey is a common cause of grayanotoxin intoxication in humans. Intoxication of animals, especially cattle, is usually due to ingestion of plants of the Ericaceae family, such as Rhododendron. Here, we report the ingestion of Pieris japonica as the cause of grayanotoxin I intoxication in 2 miniature pigs that were kept as pets. The pigs showed sudden onset of pale oral mucosa, tachycardia, tachypnea, hypersalivation, tremor, and ataxia that progressed to lateral recumbency. The pathological examination of one pig revealed no specific indications for intoxication except for the finding of plant material of Pieris japonica in the intestine. Grayanotoxin I was identified in the ingested plant, gastric content, blood, liver, bile, kidney, urine, lung, and skeletal muscle via HPLC-MS/MS. Grayanotoxin I should be considered as a differential etiological diagnosis in pigs with unspecific signs and discovery of ingested plant material as the only indication in the pathologic examination
A Cohort Study Followed for 13 Years
Background There is growing evidence of an association between oral health,
specifically dental status, and chronic systemic diseases. However, varying
measures of dental status across different populations and low study sample
has made comparison of studies and conclusion of findings unclear. Our aim is
to examine whether the number of teeth as a measure of dental status is
associated with incident chronic diseases in a cohort setting. Methods We
conducted a cohort study among 24,313 middle-aged Germans followed up for 13
years. Data on number of teeth as a measure of dental status were obtained
through self-reports. Outcomes were clinically–verified incident non–fatal
myocardial infarction, stroke, type 2 diabetes mellitus, and cancer. Hazard
ratio (HR) and 95% confidence intervals (CI) were obtained from Cox regression
models. Results Increasing number of teeth is inversely related to risk of
myocardial infarction (HR: 0.97; 95% CI: 0.96, 0.99). The full multivariate
model of teeth groups showed a strong linear trend for myocardial infarction,
a less strong trend for stroke, and no relation with type 2 diabetes mellitus
and cancer in a competing risk model. Participants with 18–23 teeth and those
without teeth were at 76% (95%CI: 1.04, 3) and 2.93 times (95%CI: 1.61, 5.18)
higher risk of myocardial infarction compared to those with nearly all teeth
(28–32 teeth). Conclusions Number of teeth is specifically associated with
myocardial infarction and not with other chronic disease indicating that
dental status further strengthens the link between oral health and
cardiovascular diseases
a cross-sectional, multicenter feasibility study of the German National Cohort
Background To investigate the periodontal disease status in a multi-center
cross-sectional study in Germany. Associations of dental, socio-economic,
blood and biomedical variables with periodontal outcome parameters were
evaluated. Methods From 4 different centers N = 311 persons were included,
drawn randomly from the registration offices. Maximal pocket depth (PD) was
used as primary indicator for periodontitis. It was classified as: no/mild ≤3
mm, moderate 4-5 mm, severe ≥6 mm. Associations between socioeconomic
(household income, education), lifestyle, and biomedical factors and PD or
bleeding on probing (BOP) per site (“Yes”/”No”) was analyzed with logistic
regression analysis. Results Mean age of subjects was 46.4 (range 20–77)
years. A significantly higher risk of deeper pockets for smokers (OR = 2.4,
current vs. never smoker) or persons with higher BMI (OR = 1.6, BMI increase
by 5) was found. Severity of periodontitis was significantly associated with
caries lesions (p = 0.01), bridges (p < .0001), crowns (p < .0001), leukocytes
(p = 0.04), HbA1c (p < .0001) and MCV (p = 0.04). PD was positively correlated
with BOP. No significant associations with BOP were found in regression
analysis. Conclusions Earlier findings for BMI and smoking with severity of PD
were confirmed. Dental variables might be influenced by potential confounding
factors e.g. dental hygiene. For blood parameters interactions with unknown
systemic diseases may exist
Pocket depth and bleeding on probing and their associations with dental, lifestyle, socioeconomic and blood variables: a cross-sectional, multicenter feasibility study of the German National Cohort
Background: To investigate the periodontal disease status in a multi-center cross-sectional study in Germany. Associations of dental, socio-economic, blood and biomedical variables with periodontal outcome parameters were evaluated. Methods: From 4 different centers N = 311 persons were included, drawn randomly from the registration offices. Maximal pocket depth (PD) was used as primary indicator for periodontitis. It was classified as: no/mild ≤3 mm, moderate 4-5 mm, severe ≥6 mm. Associations between socioeconomic (household income, education), lifestyle, and biomedical factors and PD or bleeding on probing (BOP) per site (“Yes”/”No”) was analyzed with logistic regression analysis. Results: Mean age of subjects was 46.4 (range 20–77) years. A significantly higher risk of deeper pockets for smokers (OR = 2.4, current vs. never smoker) or persons with higher BMI (OR = 1.6, BMI increase by 5) was found. Severity of periodontitis was significantly associated with caries lesions (p = 0.01), bridges (p < .0001), crowns (p < .0001), leukocytes (p = 0.04), HbA1c (p < .0001) and MCV (p = 0.04). PD was positively correlated with BOP. No significant associations with BOP were found in regression analysis. Conclusions: Earlier findings for BMI and smoking with severity of PD were confirmed. Dental variables might be influenced by potential confounding factors e.g. dental hygiene. For blood parameters interactions with unknown systemic diseases may exist
automated detection of non-wear time in comparison to diary information
Estimation of physical activity using 24 h-accelerometry requires detection of
accelerometer non-wear time (NWT). It is common practice to define NWT as
periods >60 minutes of consecutive zero-accelerations, but this algorithm was
originally developed for waking hours only and its applicability to 24
h-accelerometry is unclear. We investigated sensitivity and specificity of
different algorithms to detect NWT in 24 h-accelerometry compared to diary in
47 ActivE and 559 KORA participants. NWT was determined with algorithms >60,
>90, >120, >150, or >180 minutes of consecutive zero-counts. Overall, 9.1%
(ActivE) and 15.4% (KORA) of reported NWT was >60 minutes. Sensitivity and
specificity were lowest for the 60-min algorithm in ActivE (0.72 and 0.00) and
KORA (0.64 and 0.08), and highest for the 180-min algorithm in ActivE (0.88
and 0.92) and for the 120-min algorithm in KORA (0.76 and 0.74). Nevertheless,
when applying these last two algorithms, the overlap of accelerometry with any
diary based NWT minutes was around 20% only. In conclusion, only a small
proportion of NWT is >60 minutes. The 60-min algorithm is less suitable for
NWT detection in 24 h-accelerometry because of low sensitivity, specificity,
and small overlap with reported NWT minutes. Longer algorithms perform better
but detect lower proportions of reported NWT
Prospective cohort study evaluating risk factors for the development of pasture-associated laminitis in the United Kingdom
Nanocoating with plant-derived pectins activates osteoblast response in vitro
Abstract: A new strategy to improve osseointegration of implants is to
stimulate adhesion of bone cells, bone matrix formation, and mineralization at
the implant surface by modifying surface coating on the nanoscale level.
Plant-derived pectins have been proposed as potential candidates for surface
nanocoating of orthopedic and dental titanium implants due to 1) their
osteogenic stimulation of osteoblasts to mineralize and 2) their ability to
control pectin structural changes. The aim of this study was to evaluate in
vitro the impact of the nanoscale plant-derived pectin Rhamnogalacturonan-I
(RG-I) from potato on the osteogenic response of murine osteoblasts. RG-I from
potato pulps was isolated, structurally modified, or left unmodified. Tissue
culture plates were either coated with modified RG-I or unmodified RG-I or –
as a control – left uncoated. The effect of nanocoating on mice osteoblast-
like cells MC3T3-E1 and primary murine osteoblast with regard to
proliferation, osteogenic response in terms of mineralization, and gene
expression of Runt-related transcription factor 2 (Runx2), alkaline phosphate
(Alpl), osteocalcin (Bglap), α-1 type I collagen (Col1a1), and receptor
activator of NF-κB ligand (Rankl) were analyzed after 3, 7, 14, and 21 days,
respectively. Nanocoating with pectin RG-Is increased proliferation and
mineralization of MC3T3-E1 and primary osteoblast as compared to osteoblasts
cultured without nanocoating. Moreover, osteogenic transcriptional response of
osteoblasts was induced by nanocoating in terms of gene induction of Runx2,
Alpl, Bglap, and Col1a1 in a time-dependent manner – of note – to the highest
extent under the PA-coating condition. In contrast, Rankl expression was
initially reduced by nanocoating in MC3T3-E1 or remained unaltered in primary
osteoblast as compared to the uncoated controls. Our results showed that
nanocoating of implants with modified RG-I beneficially 1) supports
osteogenesis, 2) has the capacity to improve osseointegration of implants, and
is therefore 3) a potential candidate for nanocoating of bone implants
Habitual intake of flavonoid subclasses and risk of colorectal cancer in two large prospective cohorts
Background: Flavonoids inhibit the growth of colon cancer cells in vitro. In a secondary analysis of a randomized controlled trial, the Polyp Prevention Trial, a higher intake of one sub-class, flavonols, was significantly associated with reduced risk of recurrent advanced adenoma. Most previous prospective studies on colorectal cancer evaluated only a limited number of flavonoid sub-classes and intake ranges, yielding inconsistent results. Objective: To examine whether higher habitual dietary intakes of flavonoid subclasses (flavonols, flavones, flavanones, flavan-3-ols and anthocyanins) are associated with lower risk of colorectal cancer. Design: Using data from validated food frequency questionnaires administered every four years and an updated flavonoid food composition database flavonoid intakes were calculated for 42,478 male participants from the Health Professionals Follow-up Study and for 76,364 female participants from the Nurses’ Health Study. Results: During up to 26 years of follow-up, 2,519 colorectal cancer cases (1,061 in men, 1,458 in women) were documented. Intakes of flavonoid subclasses were not associated with risk of colorectal cancer in either cohort. Pooled multivariable adjusted relative risks (95% confidence interval) comparing the highest with the lowest quintile were 1.04 (0.91, 1.18) for flavonols; 1.01 (0.89, 1.15) for flavones; 0.96 (0.84, 1.10) for flavanones; 1.07 (0.95, 1.21) for flavan-3-ols; and 0.98 (0.81, 1.19) for anthocyanins (all p-values for heterogeneity by sex >0.19). In subsite analyses, flavonoid intake was also not associated with colon or rectal cancer risk. Conclusion: Our findings do not support the hypothesis that a higher habitual intake of any flavonoid sub-class decreases the risk of colorectal cancer
Genetic variants including markers from the exome chip and metabolite traits of type 2 diabetes
Diabetes-associated metabolites may aid the identification of new risk
variants for type 2 diabetes. Using targeted metabolomics within a subsample
of the German EPIC-Potsdam study (n = 2500), we tested previously published
SNPs for their association with diabetes-associated metabolites and conducted
an additional exploratory analysis using data from the exome chip including
replication within 2,692 individuals from the German KORA F4 study. We
identified a total of 16 loci associated with diabetes-related metabolite
traits, including one novel association between rs499974 (MOGAT2) and a
diacyl-phosphatidylcholine ratio (PC aa C40:5/PC aa C38:5). Gene-based tests
on all exome chip variants revealed associations between GFRAL and PC aa
C42:1/PC aa C42:0, BIN1 and SM (OH) C22:2/SM C18:0 and TFRC and SM (OH)
C22:2/SM C16:1). Selecting variants for gene-based tests based on functional
annotation identified one additional association between OR51Q1 and hexoses.
Among single genetic variants consistently associated with diabetes-related
metabolites, two (rs174550 (FADS1), rs3204953 (REV3L)) were significantly
associated with type 2 diabetes in large-scale meta-analysis for type 2
diabetes. In conclusion, we identified a novel metabolite locus in single
variant analyses and four genes within gene-based tests and confirmed two
previously known mGWAS loci which might be relevant for the risk of type 2
diabetes
Waist-to-hip ratio and mortality in heart failure
Aims:
A higher body mass index (BMI) is associated with better survival in heart failure (HF) patients, also known as the obesity paradox. However, BMI does not account for body composition. We therefore analysed the association between abdominal fat, measured via waist‐to‐hip ratio (WHR), BMI and all‐cause mortality in patients with HF.
Methods and results:
For this analysis, 1738 patients from the Scottish BIOlogy Study to TAilored Treatment in Chronic Heart Failure (BIOSTAT‐CHF) validation study were included. Patients without waist and hip measurements were excluded. WHR was defined as waist circumference/hip circumference, divided into tertiles and split for sex. A linear regression of principal components from an extensive panel of biomarkers was performed to provide insight in the pathophysiology behind a higher WHR. In total, 1479 patients were included, of which 33% were female and mean age was 75 ±11 years. A higher WHR was independently associated with a higher BMI, a higher prevalence of diabetes and higher New York Heart Association functional class. There was a significant interaction between sex and WHR on its association with mortality (P <0.001). In women, a higher WHR was associated with a higher mortality risk [hazard ratio (HR) 2.23, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.37–3.63; P =0.001], whereas no significant association was found in men (HR 0.87, 95% CI 0.63–1.20; P = 0.409). We found a strong association between a higher WHR and elevated markers of inflammation and MAPK cascade in women, while these associations were less profound in men.
Conclusions:
A higher WHR was associated with a higher risk of death in female but not in male HF patients. These findings challenge the obesity paradox, and suggest that fat deposition is pathophysiologically harmful and may be a target for therapy in female patients with HF
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