keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38571396/inflammatory-liver-diseases-and-susceptibility-to-sepsis
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Hong Lu
Patients with inflammatory liver diseases, particularly alcohol-associated liver disease and metabolic dysfunction-associated fatty liver disease (MAFLD), have higher incidence of infections and mortality rate due to sepsis. The current focus in the development of drugs for MAFLD is the resolution of non-alcoholic steatohepatitis and prevention of progression to cirrhosis. In patients with cirrhosis or alcoholic hepatitis, sepsis is a major cause of death. As the metabolic center and a key immune tissue, liver is the guardian, modifier, and target of sepsis...
April 10, 2024: Clinical Science (1979-)
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38568881/how-our-longitudinal-employment-patterns-might-shape-our-health-as-we-approach-middle-adulthood-us-nlsy79-cohort
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Wen-Jui Han
Recent labor market transformations brought on by digital and technological advances, together with the rise of the service economy since the 1980s, have subjected more workers to precarious conditions, such as irregular work hours and low or unpredictable wages, threatening their economic well-being and health. This study advances our understanding of the critical role employment plays in our health by examining how employment patterns throughout our working lives, based on work schedules, may shape our health at age 50, paying particular attention to the moderating role of social position...
2024: PloS One
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38563834/tumor-infiltrating-lymphocytes-in-triple-negative-breast-cancer
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Roberto A Leon-Ferre, Sarah Flora Jonas, Roberto Salgado, Sherene Loi, Vincent de Jong, Jodi M Carter, Torsten O Nielsen, Samuel Leung, Nazia Riaz, Stephen Chia, Gérôme Jules-Clément, Giuseppe Curigliano, Carmen Criscitiello, Vincent Cockenpot, Matteo Lambertini, Vera J Suman, Barbro Linderholm, John W M Martens, Carolien H M van Deurzen, A Mieke Timmermans, Tatsunori Shimoi, Shu Yazaki, Masayuki Yoshida, Sung-Bae Kim, Hee Jin Lee, Maria Vittoria Dieci, Guillaume Bataillon, Anne Vincent-Salomon, Fabrice André, Marleen Kok, Sabine C Linn, Matthew P Goetz, Stefan Michiels
IMPORTANCE: The association of tumor-infiltrating lymphocyte (TIL) abundance in breast cancer tissue with cancer recurrence and death in patients with early-stage triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) who are not treated with adjuvant or neoadjuvant chemotherapy is unclear. OBJECTIVE: To study the association of TIL abundance in breast cancer tissue with survival among patients with early-stage TNBC who were treated with locoregional therapy but no chemotherapy. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: Retrospective pooled analysis of individual patient-level data from 13 participating centers in North America (Rochester, Minnesota; Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada), Europe (Paris, Lyon, and Villejuif, France; Amsterdam and Rotterdam, the Netherlands; Milan, Padova, and Genova, Italy; Gothenburg, Sweden), and Asia (Tokyo, Japan; Seoul, Korea), including 1966 participants diagnosed with TNBC between 1979 and 2017 (with follow-up until September 27, 2021) who received treatment with surgery with or without radiotherapy but no adjuvant or neoadjuvant chemotherapy...
April 2, 2024: JAMA
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38562675/edward-o-bixler-phd-from-the-apollo-project-and-chimpanzees-to-sleep-epidemiology
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Julio Fernandez-Mendoza, Susan L Calhoun, Edward O Bixler
What an honor to write about Dr. Edward O. Bixler's contributions to the sleep field. In 1967, Dr. Bixler published a case report on a chimpanzee with implanted brain electrodes while working at an Air Force base in New Mexico. A few years later, in 1971, he published on the sleep effects of flurazepam in individuals with insomnia together with Dr. Anthony Kales, data that he had collected when the Sleep Research & Treatment Center (SRTC) was housed at the University of California Los Angeles. Dr. Bixler, a meticulous scientist, learned from Dr...
2024: Sleep advances: a journal of the Sleep Research Society
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38556657/comparative-analysis-of-recurrence-free-survival-and-mortality-in-postmastectomy-patients-insights-from-multidecade-multiinstitutional-propensity-score-matching
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Yunchan Chen, Chase Alston, Tara M Chadab, Paul Asadourian, Grant G Black, Christine H Rohde, David M Otterburn
INTRODUCTION: Disparities in postmastectomy reconstructive care are widely acknowledged. However, there is limited understanding regarding the impact of reconstructive services on cancer recurrence and breast cancer-related mortality. Therefore, this study aims to examine how patient-specific factors and breast reconstruction status influence recurrence-free survival and mortality rates in breast cancer patients. METHODS: Retrospective chart review was performed to collect data on patients who underwent mastectomy at 2 institutions within the New York-Presbyterian system from 1979 to 2019...
April 1, 2024: Annals of Plastic Surgery
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38552023/anthropogenic-forcing-has-increased-the-risk-of-longer-traveling-and-slower-moving-large-contiguous-heatwaves
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ming Luo, Sijia Wu, Gabriel Ngar-Cheung Lau, Tao Pei, Zhen Liu, Xiaoyu Wang, Guicai Ning, Ting On Chan, Yuanjian Yang, Wei Zhang
Heatwaves are consecutive hot days with devastating impacts on human health and the environment. These events may evolve across both space and time, characterizing a spatiotemporally contiguous propagation pattern that has not been fully understood. Here, we track the spatiotemporally contiguous heatwaves in both reanalysis datasets and model simulations and examine their moving patterns (i.e., moving distance, speed, and direction) in different continents and periods. Substantial changes in contiguous heatwaves have been identified from 1979 to 2020, with longer persistence, longer traveling distance, and slower propagation...
March 29, 2024: Science Advances
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38549918/%C3%AF-a-review-of-the-semipunctata-species-group-within-the-genus-lilioceris-reitter-1913-coleoptera-chrysomelidae
#27
REVIEW
Yuan Xu, Gexia Qiao, Hongbin Liang
A new species group of Lilioceris Reitter, 1913 is proposed and reviewed, the semipunctata group. It includes eleven species: L.atrilateralis Kimoto & Takizawa, 1973, L.consentanea (Lacordaire, 1845), L.dentifemoralis Long, 1988, L.discrepens (Baly, 1879), L.jianfenglingensis Long, 1988, L.latissima (Pic, 1932), L.lianzhouensis Long, 2000a, L.rondoni Kimoto & Gressitt, 1979, L.rufometallica (Pic, 1923), L.semipunctata (Fabricius, 1801), and L.yuae Long, 2000b. Liliocerisdiscrepens and L.rondoni were new records from China...
2024: ZooKeys
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38549291/red-blood-cell-distribution-width-rdw-reflects-disease-severity-in-patients-with-carbon-monoxide-poisoning-systematic-literature-review-and-meta-analysis
#28
REVIEW
Giuseppe Lippi, Brandon M Henry, Camilla Mattiuzzi
No definitive prognostic biomarkers for carbon monoxide (CO) poisoning have been proposed. The aim of this study is to investigate, through a systematic literature review and pooled analysis, whether red blood cell distribution width (RDW) can predict disease severity in CO-poisoned patients. We performed an electronic search in Scopus and PubMed using the keywords: 'red blood cell distribution width' OR 'RDW' AND 'carbon monoxide' AND 'poisoning,' with no time or language restrictions (i.e. through August 2023) to find clinical studies that examined the value of RDW in patients with varying severity of CO poisoning...
March 28, 2024: Scandinavian Journal of Clinical and Laboratory Investigation
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38535361/review-of-the-genus-sycanus-amyot-serville-1843-heteroptera-reduviidae-harpactorinae-from-china-based-on-dna-barcoding-and-morphological-evidence
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ping Zhao, Suyi Chen, Yingqi Liu, Jianyun Wang, Zhuo Chen, Hu Li, Wanzhi Cai
Due to the variability of body coloration and morphological similarity among closely related species, unresolved issues and debates still persist in the taxonomic study of the genus Sycanus from China. In this study, we conducted phylogenetic analyses and species delimitation for Sycanus in China based on a COI DNA barcoding dataset comprising 81 samples. The results revealed that all the samples could be classified into 12 species by integrating molecular analyses with morphological comparison. This paper provides a comprehensive systematic review of the Sycanus species found in China, including descriptions of three new species: S...
February 28, 2024: Insects
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38533425/analyzing-changes-in-parkinsonian-speech-over-time-a-diachronic-experimental-phonetics-study
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Massimo Pettorino, Marta Maffia
In this contribution the use of web resources for the longitudinal study of speech rhythm of a 'well-known' person diagnosed with Parkinson's disease, the American actor Alan Alda, is proposed. A corpus of 20 speech samples produced in the period between 1979 and 2021 was collected from the web. A rhythmical analysis was conducted, based on two parameters: the percentage of vocalic portion on the total duration of the utterance (%V) and the VtoV, the mean duration of the interval between two consecutive vowel onset points...
2024: Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38533119/on-data-benchmarking-and-verification-of-discrete-granular-simulations
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jose Salomon, Catherine O'Sullivan, Fernando Patino-Ramirez
Since the seminal work of Cundall and Strack (1979), the Discrete Element Method (DEM) has now become accepted as a key tool amongst researchers exploring the fundamental behavior of granular materials. Along with a sustained increase in the number of publications documenting use of DEM in research, intensive development of new open-source and commercial DEM codes has taken place in the last decades. The credibility of these software packages depends on their capacity to replicate physical observations and to reproduce theoretical expressions...
April 2024: Data in Brief
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38524923/mortality-in-childhood-onset-type-1-diabetes-mellitus-with-onset-between-1959-and-1996-a-population-based-study-in-hokkaido-japan
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Nobuo Matsuura, Hiroshi Yokomichi, Yoshiya Ito, Shigeru Suzuki, Mie Mochizuki
AIM: To examine the mortality rate and causes of death in childhood-onset type 1 diabetes in Japan. METHODS: For a median 36.7 years, we followed 391 patients under the age of 15 years who developed type 1 diabetes between 1959 and 1996. We calculated the mortality rate per 100,000 person-years and the standardised mortality ratio (SMR) according to risk factors. RESULTS: The mortality rates and SMRs were 823 and 8.8 with onset during 1959-1979, 370 and 5...
April 2024: Diabetology International
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38517072/children-born-to-parents-with-mild-intellectual-disability-register-based-follow-up-of-psychiatric-and-neurodevelopmental-diagnoses-and-out-of-home-placements
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
I Lindblad, V Landgren, C Gillberg, E Fernell
AIM: Study the outcomes in terms of registered neurodevelopmental diagnoses and out-of-home placements in children whose parents had been diagnosed with mild intellectual disability (ID) in childhood. METHODS: The study groups consist of (1) a population-based sample of 78 individuals, born in 1979-1985, meeting criteria for mild ID during childhood, and (2) their 88 children. From national registers, data on outcomes were retrieved in 2020 regarding psychosocial and psychiatric outcomes for the adults, and neurodevelopmental diagnoses and out-of-home placements for the children...
March 22, 2024: Acta Paediatrica
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38505994/cardiotoxic-effects-of-common-and-emerging-drugs-role-of-cannabinoid-receptors
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Yiming Bo, Xin Zhao, Liliang Li
Drug-induced cardiotoxicity has become one of the most common and detrimental health concerns, which causes significant loss to public health and drug resources. Cannabinoid receptors (CBRs) have recently achieved great attention for their vital roles in the regulation of heart health and disease, with mounting evidence linking CBRs with the pathogenesis and progression of drug-induced cardiotoxicity. This review aims to summarize fundamental characteristics of two well-documented CBRs (CB1R and CB2R) from aspects of molecular structure, signaling and their functions in cardiovascular physiology and pathophysiology...
March 20, 2024: Clinical Science (1979-)
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38505993/the-complement-system-in-neurodegenerative-diseases
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jacqui Nimmo, Robert A J Byrne, Nikoleta Daskoulidou, Lewis M Watkins, Sarah M Carpanini, Wioleta M Zelek, B Paul Morgan
Complement is an important component of innate immune defence against pathogens and crucial for efficient immune complex disposal. These core protective activities are dependent in large part on properly regulated complement-mediated inflammation. Dysregulated complement activation, often driven by persistence of activating triggers, is a cause of pathological inflammation in numerous diseases, including neurological diseases. Increasingly, this has become apparent not only in well-recognized neuroinflammatory diseases like multiple sclerosis but also in neurodegenerative and neuropsychiatric diseases where inflammation was previously either ignored or dismissed as a secondary event...
March 20, 2024: Clinical Science (1979-)
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38499098/synoptic-scale-drivers-of-fire-weather-in-greece
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Georgios Papavasileiou, Theodore M Giannaros
The identification of the large-scale atmospheric circulation patterns which are associated with extreme fire weather is of great importance for developing early warning systems, management strategies, and for increasing awareness and preparedness of all the involved entities, including both the public and practitioners. Such a forecasting approach is currently missing in Greece and many other countries. Furthermore, considering climate projections over the Mediterranean, which indicate an environment more conducive to wildfire activity, the need for timely forecasting of extreme fire weather becomes increasingly urgent...
March 16, 2024: Science of the Total Environment
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38495896/private-health-insurance-in-the-united-states-and-sweden-a-comparative-review
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Udit Dave, Emma G Lewis, Jenilkumar H Patel, Nikhil Godbole
BACKGROUND AND AIMS: The United States of America and Sweden both contain a public and private component to their healthcare systems. While both countries spend a similar amount per capita on public healthcare expenditures, the United States spends significantly more in the private healthcare sector. Sweden has a social democratic model of health care, and given its identity as a welfare state, private health insurance providers have a small and nuanced role. METHODS: This paper was completed after searches were queried for "Sweden," "United States," and variants of the words "insurance," "public," "private," "Medicare," "Medicaid," "public," and "costs...
March 2024: Health Science Reports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38492852/comprehensive-functional-characterization-of-a-novel-ano6-variant-in-a-new-patient-with-scott-syndrome
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Samantha J Montague, Joshua Price, Katherine Pennycott, Natasha J Pavey, Eleyna M Martin, Isaac Thirlwell, Samuel Kemble, Catarina Monteiro, Lily Redmond-Motteram, Natalie Lawson, Katherine Reynolds, Carl Fratter, Patricia Bignell, Anouk Groenheide, Dana Huskens, Bas de Laat, Jeremy A Pike, Natalie S Poulter, Steven G Thomas, Gillian C Lowe, Jonathan Lancashire, Paul Harrison, Neil V Morgan
BACKGROUND: Scott syndrome is a mild platelet-type bleeding disorder, first described in 1979, with only 3 unrelated families identified through defective phosphatidylserine (PS) exposure and confirmed by sequencing. The syndrome is distinguished by impaired surface exposure of procoagulant PS on platelets after stimulation. To date, platelet function and thrombin generation in this condition have not been extensively characterized. OBJECTIVES: Genetic and functional studies were undertaken in a consanguineous family with a history of excessive bleeding of unknown cause...
March 15, 2024: Journal of Thrombosis and Haemostasis: JTH
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38488023/biological-functions-of-circrna-in-regulating-the-hallmarks-of-gastrointestinal-cancer-review
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Mengjun Qiu, Youxiang Chen, Chunyan Zeng
Circular RNA (circRNA) was first observed in the cytoplasm of eukaryotic cells in 1979, but it was not characterized in detail until 2012, when high‑throughput sequencing technology was more advanced and available. Consequently, the mechanism of circRNA formation and its biological function have been progressively elucidated by researchers. circRNA is abundant in eukaryotic cells and exhibits a certain degree of organization, timing and disease‑specificity. Additionally, it is poorly degradable, meeting the characteristics of an ideal clinical biomarker...
May 2024: International Journal of Oncology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38484221/tumors-of-the-central-nervous-system-classification-of-the-world-health-organization-2021-towards-a-paradigm-shift
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ramiro J Del Río, Santiago E Cicutti, Javier D González Ramos
The study of central nervous system (CNS) tumors is a subject of great interest and such knowledge is of great importance in medical practice. The classifications of CNS neoplasms began in the mid-19th century, until the World Health Organization (WHO) published, in 1979, the first edition of a useful systematic review for the purpose of establishing a common language for all medical specialties. To date, 5 updated editions of neoplastic taxonomy have been published. The fifth edition, from 2021, consolidates the paradigm shift brought about by molecular advances, although the transition between morphological and molecular biological characterization is still in progress...
March 21, 2024: Archivos Argentinos de Pediatría
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