Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Mostrar: 20 | 50 | 100
Resultados 1 - 20 de 341
Filtrar
1.
Surg Obes Relat Dis ; 20(10): 895-909, 2024 Oct.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39097472

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: Clinical care pathways help guide and provide structure to clinicians and providers to improve healthcare delivery and quality. The Quality Improvement and Patient Safety Committee (QIPS) of the American Society for Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery (ASMBS) has previously published care pathways for the performance of laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy (LSG) and pre-operative care of patients undergoing Roux-en-Y gastric bypass (RYGB). OBJECTIVE: This current RYGB care pathway was created to address intraoperative care, defined as care occurring on the day of surgery from the preoperative holding area, through the operating room, and into the postanesthesia care unit (PACU). METHODS: PubMed queries were performed from January 2001 to December 2019 and reviewed according to Level of Evidence regarding specific key questions developed by the committee. RESULTS: Evidence-based recommendations are made for care of patients undergoing RYGB including the pre-operative holding area, intra-operative management and performance of RYGB, and concurrent procedures. CONCLUSIONS: This document may provide guidance based on recent evidence to bariatric surgeons and providers for the intra-operative care for minimally invasive RYGB.


Asunto(s)
Derivación Gástrica , Obesidad Mórbida , Humanos , Derivación Gástrica/métodos , Obesidad Mórbida/cirugía , Cuidados Intraoperatorios/métodos , Laparoscopía/métodos , Procedimientos Quirúrgicos Mínimamente Invasivos/métodos , Vías Clínicas , Cirugía Bariátrica/métodos , Estados Unidos
2.
Int J Mol Sci ; 25(16)2024 Aug 09.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39201374

RESUMEN

As knowledge of the gut microbiome has expanded our understanding of the symbiotic and dysbiotic relationships between the human host and its microbial constituents, the influence of gastrointestinal (GI) microbes both locally and beyond the intestine has become evident. Shifts in bacterial populations have now been associated with several conditions including Crohn's disease (CD), Ulcerative Colitis (UC), irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's Disease, liver diseases, obesity, metabolic syndrome, anxiety, depression, and cancers. As the bacteria in our gut thrive on the food we eat, diet plays a critical role in the functional aspects of our gut microbiome, influencing not only health but also the development of disease. While the bacterial microbiome in the context of disease is well studied, the associated gut phageome-bacteriophages living amongst and within our bacterial microbiome-is less well understood. With growing evidence that fluctuations in the phageome also correlate with dysbiosis, how diet influences this population needs to be better understood. This review surveys the current understanding of the effects of diet on the gut phageome.


Asunto(s)
Bacteriófagos , Dieta , Disbiosis , Microbioma Gastrointestinal , Humanos , Microbioma Gastrointestinal/fisiología , Bacteriófagos/fisiología , Disbiosis/microbiología , Animales , Viroma
3.
Mayo Clin Proc ; 99(9): 1422-1434, 2024 Sep.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39115511

RESUMEN

OBJECTIVE: To assess the role of the systolic blood pressure polygenic risk score (SBP-PRS) in antihypertensive treatment initiation and its comparative efficacy with coronary artery calcium (CAC) scores. PATIENTS AND METHODS: This retrospective cohort study included participants with whole genome sequencing data who underwent CAC scanning between 1971 and 2008, were free of prevalent cardiovascular disease (CVD), and were not taking antihypertensive medications. The cohort was stratified by blood pressure (BP) treatment group and SBP-PRS (low/intermediate, first and second tertiles; high, third tertile) and CAC score (0 vs >0) subgroups. The primary outcome was the first occurence of adjudicated coronary heart disease, heart failure, or stroke during 10-year follow-up. The 10-year number needed to treat (NNT) to prevent 1 event of the primary outcome was estimated. A relative risk reduction of 25% for the primary outcome based on the treatment effect of intensive control (SBP <120 mm Hg) of hypertension in SPRINT (Systolic Blood Pressure Intervention Trial) was used for estimating the NNT. RESULTS: Among the 5267 study participants, the median age was 59 years (interquartile range, 51-68 years); 2817 (53.5%) were women and 2880 (54.7%) were non-White individuals. Among 1317 individuals with elevated BP/low-risk stage 1 hypertension not recommended treatment, the 10-year incidence rate of the primary outcome was 5.6% for low/intermediate SBP-PRS and 6.3% for high SBP-PRS with NNTs of 63 and 59, respectively. Similarly, the 10-year incidence rate of the primary outcome was 2.9% for CAC score 0 and 9.7% for CAC score greater than 0, with NNTs of 117 and 37, respectively. CONCLUSION: Including genetic information in risk estimation of individuals with elevated BP/low-risk stage 1 hypertension has modest value in the initiation of antihypertensive therapy. Genetic risk and CAC both have efficacy in personalizing antihypertensive therapy.


Asunto(s)
Antihipertensivos , Enfermedad de la Arteria Coronaria , Hipertensión , Humanos , Femenino , Persona de Mediana Edad , Masculino , Antihipertensivos/uso terapéutico , Hipertensión/tratamiento farmacológico , Hipertensión/genética , Hipertensión/epidemiología , Estudios Retrospectivos , Anciano , Enfermedad de la Arteria Coronaria/genética , Enfermedad de la Arteria Coronaria/epidemiología , Enfermedad de la Arteria Coronaria/tratamiento farmacológico , Medicina de Precisión/métodos , Calcificación Vascular/genética , Calcificación Vascular/epidemiología , Medición de Riesgo , Presión Sanguínea/efectos de los fármacos , Factores de Riesgo , Predisposición Genética a la Enfermedad , Vasos Coronarios/diagnóstico por imagen , Estudios de Cohortes
4.
Brain Behav Immun ; 122: 345-352, 2024 Nov.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39163909

RESUMEN

Neuroinflammation is a key component underlying multiple neurological disorders, yet non-invasive and cost-effective assessment of in vivo neuroinflammatory processes in the central nervous system remains challenging. Diffusion weighted magnetic resonance spectroscopy (dMRS) has shown promise in addressing these challenges by measuring diffusivity properties of different neurometabolites, which can reflect cell-specific morphologies. Prior work has demonstrated dMRS utility in capturing microglial reactivity in the context of lipopolysaccharide (LPS) challenges and serious neurological disorders, detected as changes of microglial metabolite diffusivity properties. However, the extent to which such dMRS metrics are capable of detecting subtler and more nuanced levels of neuroinflammation in populations without overt neuropathology is unknown. Here we examined the relationship between intrinsic, gut-derived levels of systemic LPS and dMRS-based apparent diffusion coefficients (ADC) of choline, creatine, and N-acetylaspartate (NAA) in two brain regions: the thalamus and the corona radiata. Higher plasma LPS concentrations were significantly associated with increased ADC of choline and NAA in the thalamic region, with no such relationships observed in the corona radiata for any of the metabolites examined. As such, dMRS may have the sensitivity to measure microglial reactivity across populations with highly variable levels of neuroinflammation, and holds promising potential for widespread applications in both research and clinical settings.


Asunto(s)
Colina , Lipopolisacáridos , Espectroscopía de Resonancia Magnética , Microglía , Lipopolisacáridos/farmacología , Microglía/metabolismo , Animales , Colina/metabolismo , Masculino , Espectroscopía de Resonancia Magnética/métodos , Enfermedades Neuroinflamatorias/metabolismo , Creatina/metabolismo , Ácido Aspártico/metabolismo , Ácido Aspártico/análogos & derivados , Encéfalo/metabolismo , Imagen de Difusión por Resonancia Magnética/métodos , Tálamo/metabolismo , Femenino
5.
JPGN Rep ; 5(3): 317-325, 2024 Aug.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39149177

RESUMEN

Background/Aims: Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is prevalent among children, and lifestyle modification is the primary treatment approach. However, the optimal exercise duration, frequency, and intensity for managing NAFLD remain undefined. This study aimed to gain insights from the patient perspective by examining exercise behaviors, preferences, and barriers in children with NAFLD. Methods: A multicenter survey was conducted among children 8-18 years with NAFLD in pediatric gastroenterology clinics. Participants completed a questionnaire on exercise practices, preferences, and barriers, while parents completed a questionnaire on their willingness and ability to support their child's exercise. Data were analyzed using χ 2 test with Yates' correction and two-sample t test. Results: The study included 408 children with NAFLD, with a mean age of 13.8 years. Approximately 52.5% of participants had physical education classes at school, while 59.5% engaged in extracurricular exercise, averaging 3.7 days per week. However, 11.5% reported no physical activity. A significant majority (81.1%) expressed interest in increasing their exercise levels, primarily driven by health-related factors. Time-related constraints were the most cited barriers to exercise (53.7%). Approximately 80% of parents demonstrated willingness and ability to support their child's exercise regimen. Conclusion: This study provides insights into exercise behaviors, preferences, and barriers among children with NAFLD. Half of the children lacked exercise opportunities at school but expressed interest in increasing their physical activity. Time limitation was the major obstacle cited. Parents are motivated to support increased physical activity. Exercise intervention programs for NAFLD should consider the perspective of the children and their families.

6.
J Am Heart Assoc ; 13(17): e034760, 2024 Sep 03.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39206732

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: Ventricular repolarization time (ECG QT and JT intervals) is associated with malignant arrhythmia. Genome-wide association studies have identified 230 independent loci for QT and JT; however, 50% of their heritability remains unexplained. Previous work supports a causal effect of lower serum calcium concentrations on longer ventricular repolarization time. We hypothesized calcium interactions with QT and JT variant associations could explain a proportion of the missing heritability. METHODS AND RESULTS: We performed genome-wide calcium interaction analyses for QT and JT intervals. Participants were stratified by their calcium level relative to the study distribution (top or bottom 20%). We performed a 2-stage analysis (genome-wide discovery [N=62 532] and replication [N=59 861] of lead variants) and a single-stage genome-wide meta-analysis (N=122 393, [European ancestry N=117 581, African ancestry N=4812]). We also calculated 2-degrees of freedom joint main and interaction and 1-degree of freedom interaction P values. In 2-stage and single-stage analyses, 50 and 98 independent loci, respectively, were associated with either QT or JT intervals (2-degrees of freedom joint main and interaction P value <5×10-8). No lead variant had a significant interaction result after correcting for multiple testing and sensitivity analyses provided similar findings. Two loci in the single-stage meta-analysis were not reported previously (SPPL2B and RFX6). CONCLUSIONS: We have found limited support for an interaction effect of serum calcium on QT and JT variant associations despite sample sizes with suitable power to detect relevant effects. Therefore, such effects are unlikely to explain a meaningful proportion of the heritability of QT and JT, and factors including rare variation and other environmental interactions need to be considered.


Asunto(s)
Calcio , Estudio de Asociación del Genoma Completo , Humanos , Potenciales de Acción , Arritmias Cardíacas/genética , Arritmias Cardíacas/fisiopatología , Arritmias Cardíacas/sangre , Arritmias Cardíacas/diagnóstico , Calcio/sangre , Electrocardiografía , Predisposición Genética a la Enfermedad , Frecuencia Cardíaca/genética , Frecuencia Cardíaca/fisiología , Polimorfismo de Nucleótido Simple , Factores de Riesgo , Factores de Tiempo
7.
Microorganisms ; 12(7)2024 Jul 14.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39065198

RESUMEN

The gut microbiota-brain axis allows for bidirectional communication between the microbes in our gastrointestinal (GI) tract and the central nervous system. Psychological stress has been known to disrupt the gut microbiome (dysbiosis) leading to anxiety-like behavior. Pathogens administered into the gut have been reported to cause anxiety. Whether commensal bacteria affect the gut-brain axis is not well understood. In this study, we examined the impact of a commensal sulfate-reducing bacteria (SRB) and its metabolite, hydrogen sulfide (H2S), on anxiety-like behavior. We found that mice gavaged with SRB had increased anxiety-like behavior as measured by the open field test. We also tested the effects of magnesium oxide (MgO) on SRB growth both in vitro and in vivo using a water avoidance stress (WAS) model. We found that MgO inhibited SRB growth and H2S production in a dose-dependent fashion. Mice that underwent psychological stress using the WAS model were observed to have an overgrowth (bloom) of SRB (Deferribacterota) and increased anxiety-like behavior. However, WAS-induced overgrowth of SRB and anxiety-like behavioral effects were attenuated in animals fed a MgO-enriched diet. These findings supported a potential MgO-reversible relationship between WAS-induced SRB blooms and anxiety-like behavior.

8.
Mov Disord ; 39(8): 1258-1268, 2024 Aug.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38817039

RESUMEN

Cerebrovascular activity is not only crucial to optimal cerebral perfusion, but also plays an important role in the glymphatic clearance of interstitial waste, including α-synuclein. This highlights a need to evaluate how cerebrovascular activity is altered in Lewy body diseases. This review begins by discussing how vascular risk factors and cardiovascular autonomic dysfunction may serve as upstream or direct influences on cerebrovascular activity. We then discuss how patients with Lewy body disease exhibit reduced and delayed cerebrovascular activity, hypoperfusion, and reductions in measures used to capture cerebrospinal fluid flow, suggestive of a reduced capacity for glymphatic clearance. Given the lack of an existing framework, we propose a model by which these processes may foster α-synuclein aggregation and neuroinflammation. Importantly, this review highlights several avenues for future research that may lead to treatments early in the disease course, prior to neurodegeneration. © 2024 The Author(s). Movement Disorders published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society.


Asunto(s)
Circulación Cerebrovascular , Sistema Glinfático , Enfermedad por Cuerpos de Lewy , Humanos , Enfermedad por Cuerpos de Lewy/fisiopatología , Enfermedad por Cuerpos de Lewy/metabolismo , Sistema Glinfático/fisiopatología , Circulación Cerebrovascular/fisiología , alfa-Sinucleína/metabolismo
9.
Pattern Recognit ; 1522024 Aug.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38645435

RESUMEN

Deep learning models for medical image segmentation are usually trained with voxel-wise losses, e.g., cross-entropy loss, focusing on unary supervision without considering inter-voxel relationships. This oversight potentially leads to semantically inconsistent predictions. Here, we propose a contextual similarity loss (CSL) and a structural similarity loss (SSL) to explicitly and efficiently incorporate inter-voxel relationships for improved performance. The CSL promotes consistency in predicted object categories for each image sub-region compared to ground truth. The SSL enforces compatibility between the predictions of voxel pairs by computing pair-wise distances between them, ensuring that voxels of the same class are close together whereas those from different classes are separated by a wide margin in the distribution space. The effectiveness of the CSL and SSL is evaluated using a clinical cone-beam computed tomography (CBCT) dataset of patients with various craniomaxillofacial (CMF) deformities and a public pancreas dataset. Experimental results show that the CSL and SSL outperform state-of-the-art regional loss functions in preserving segmentation semantics.

10.
J Pediatr Gastroenterol Nutr ; 78(3): 548-554, 2024 Mar.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38504404

RESUMEN

OBJECTIVES: Abdominal pain remains one of the most common referral reasons to pediatric gastroenterology. Dietary intolerances are often considered but due to various factors are hardly pursued. We observed that diet review in large number of children with abdominal pain was high in sugary foods which led to food intolerance investigation and dietary intervention. METHODS: A retrospective review was conducted of patients presenting with abdominal pain, diarrhea, or vomiting and negative GI evaluation, who underwent fructose breath testing. Patients younger than 20 years old who were seen between June 1, 2018 and March 1, 2021 were included. Statistical analysis was performed in R. RESULTS: There were 110 pediatric patients during the study period who underwent fructose breath testing, with 31% male and 69% female. The average age was 12.14 ± 4.01 years, and the average BMI was 21.21 ± 6.12. Abdominal pain was the most common presenting symptom (74.5%) followed by diarrhea and vomiting. Seventy-seven patients (70%) had a positive fructose breath test and were diagnosed with dietary intolerance to fructose. The 56 (67.5%) of those patients experienced symptoms during the breath test. Forty-three patients improved with dietary intervention. Twenty-seven on low fermentable oligosaccharides, disaccharides, monosaccharides, and polyols diet and 16 on other diets. CONCLUSIONS: Based on analysis of our cohort of children with abdominal pain and high incidence of fructose intolerance as well as improvement in symptoms, following dietary changes, this condition should be considered and treated. Further investigation is needed to improve diagnostic testing but also into understanding mechanisms behind symptom presentation in this population.


Asunto(s)
Intolerancia a la Fructosa , Síndrome del Colon Irritable , Polímeros , Humanos , Masculino , Femenino , Niño , Adolescente , Adulto Joven , Adulto , Disacáridos , Intolerancia a la Fructosa/diagnóstico , Intolerancia a la Fructosa/terapia , Intolerancia a la Fructosa/complicaciones , Monosacáridos , Síndrome del Colon Irritable/complicaciones , Dieta , Oligosacáridos , Dolor Abdominal/complicaciones , Diarrea/etiología , Fructosa , Vómitos/complicaciones , Fermentación
12.
Sci Rep ; 14(1): 4517, 2024 02 24.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38402255

RESUMEN

PURPOSE Cathepsin B (Cat B) is a cysteine lysosomal protease that is upregulated in many inflammatory diseases and widely expressed in the brain. Here, we used a Cat B activatable near-infrared (NIR) imaging probe to measure glial activation in vivo in the formalin test, a standard orofacial inflammatory pain model. The probe's efficacy was quantified with immunohistochemical analysis of the somatosensory cortex. PROCEDURES Three different concentrations of Cat B imaging probe (30, 50, 100 pmol/200 g bodyweight) were injected intracisternally into the foramen magnum of rats under anesthesia. Four hours later formalin (1.5%, 50 µl) was injected into the upper lip and the animal's behaviors recorded for 45 min. Subsequently, animals were repeatedly scanned using the IVIS Spectrum (8, 10, and 28 h post imaging probe injection) to measure extracellular Cat B activity. Aldehyde fixed brain sections were immunostained with antibodies against microglial marker Iba1 or astrocytic GFAP and detected with fluorescently labeled secondary antibodies to quantify co-localization with the fluorescent probe. RESULTS The Cat B imaging probe only slightly altered the formalin test results. Nocifensive behavior was only reduced in phase 1 in the 100 pmol group. In vivo measured fluorescence efficiency was highest in the 100 pmol group 28 h post imaging probe injection. Post-mortem immunohistochemical analysis of the somatosensory cortex detected the greatest amount of NIR fluorescence localized on microglia and astrocytes in the 100 pmol imaging probe group. Sensory neuron neuropeptide and cell injury marker expression in ipsilateral trigeminal ganglia was not altered by the presence of fluorescent probe. CONCLUSIONS These data demonstrate a concentration- and time-dependent visualization of extracellular Cat B in activated glia in the formalin test using a NIR imaging probe. Intracisternal injections are well suited for extracellular CNS proteinase detection in conditions when the blood-brain barrier is intact.


Asunto(s)
Catepsina B , Colorantes Fluorescentes , Ratas , Animales , Catepsina B/metabolismo , Dimensión del Dolor , Colorantes Fluorescentes/metabolismo , Encéfalo/diagnóstico por imagen , Encéfalo/metabolismo , Microglía/metabolismo , Dolor Facial/metabolismo , Formaldehído/metabolismo
13.
Biotechnol Bioeng ; 121(5): 1674-1687, 2024 May.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38372655

RESUMEN

Hollow fiber filter fouling is a common issue plaguing perfusion production process for biologics therapeutics, but the nature of filter foulant has been elusive. Here we studied cell culture materials especially Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cell-derived extracellular vesicles in perfusion process to determine their role in filter fouling. We found that the decrease of CHO-derived small extracellular vesicles (sEVs) with 50-200 nm in diameter in perfusion permeates always preceded the increase in transmembrane pressure (TMP) and subsequent decrease in product sieving, suggesting that sEVs might have been retained inside filters and contributed to filter fouling. Using scanning electron microscopy and helium ion microscopy, we found sEV-like structures in pores and on foulant patches of hollow fiber tangential flow filtration filter (HF-TFF) membranes. We also observed that the Day 28 TMP of perfusion culture correlated positively with the percentage of foulant patch areas. In addition, energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy-based elemental mapping microscopy and spectroscopy analysis suggests that foulant patches had enriched cellular materials but not antifoam. Fluorescent staining results further indicate that these cellular materials could be DNA, proteins, and even adherent CHO cells. Lastly, in a small-scale HF-TFF model, addition of CHO-specific sEVs in CHO culture simulated filter fouling behaviors in a concentration-dependent manner. Based on these results, we proposed a mechanism of HF-TFF fouling, in which filter pore constriction by CHO sEVs is followed by cake formation of cellular materials on filter membrane.


Asunto(s)
Anticuerpos Monoclonales , Filtración , Cricetinae , Animales , Cricetulus , Células CHO , Perfusión , Filtración/métodos , Reactores Biológicos , Membranas Artificiales
16.
Hepatology ; 79(6): 1279-1292, 2024 Jun 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38146932

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Alagille syndrome (ALGS) is characterized by chronic cholestasis with associated pruritus and extrahepatic anomalies. Maralixibat, an ileal bile acid transporter inhibitor, is an approved pharmacologic therapy for cholestatic pruritus in ALGS. Since long-term placebo-controlled studies are not feasible or ethical in children with rare diseases, a novel approach was taken comparing 6-year outcomes from maralixibat trials with an aligned and harmonized natural history cohort from the G lobal AL agille A lliance (GALA) study. APPROACH AND RESULTS: Maralixibat trials comprise 84 patients with ALGS with up to 6 years of treatment. GALA contains retrospective data from 1438 participants. GALA was filtered to align with key maralixibat eligibility criteria, yielding 469 participants. Serum bile acids could not be included in the GALA filtering criteria as these are not routinely performed in clinical practice. Index time was determined through maximum likelihood estimation in an effort to align the disease severity between the two cohorts with the initiation of maralixibat. Event-free survival, defined as the time to first event of manifestations of portal hypertension (variceal bleeding, ascites requiring therapy), surgical biliary diversion, liver transplant, or death, was analyzed by Cox proportional hazards methods. Sensitivity analyses and adjustments for covariates were applied. Age, total bilirubin, gamma-glutamyl transferase, and alanine aminotransferase were balanced between groups with no statistical differences. Event-free survival in the maralixibat cohort was significantly better than the GALA cohort (HR, 0.305; 95% CI, 0.189-0.491; p <0.0001). Multiple sensitivity and subgroup analyses (including serum bile acid availability) showed similar findings. CONCLUSIONS: This study demonstrates a novel application of a robust statistical method to evaluate outcomes in long-term intervention studies where placebo comparisons are not feasible, providing wide application for rare diseases. This comparison with real-world natural history data suggests that maralixibat improves event-free survival in patients with ALGS.


Asunto(s)
Síndrome de Alagille , Humanos , Síndrome de Alagille/complicaciones , Síndrome de Alagille/tratamiento farmacológico , Femenino , Masculino , Estudios Retrospectivos , Niño , Lactante , Preescolar , Supervivencia sin Progresión , Adolescente , Proteínas Portadoras , Glicoproteínas de Membrana
17.
Crohns Colitis 360 ; 5(4): otad062, 2023 Oct.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37941600

RESUMEN

Introduction: The COVID-19 pandemic has introduced new challenges to the diagnosis and management of pediatric inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). Many patients have had only limited access to their providers through telemedicine, and many chose to delay nonemergent treatment. Methods: A retrospective chart review of patients with IBD seen by the Pediatric Gastroenterology Division at Doernbecher Children's Hospital from January 2018 to August 2021 was conducted. The study cohort was divided into 2 groups: those presenting before the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic (January 1, 2018 to February 28, 2020) and those presenting during the pandemic (March 1, 2020 to August 1, 2021). Variables collected included: age, sex, race, ethnicity, IBD type, insurance type, location of residence. Primary outcome measures selected focused on disease severity, initial type of treatment, or surgical intervention offered. A subgroup analysis of the new diagnosis patients was performed. Data were analyzed using independent t-tests, chi-squared analysis, and Wilcoxon rank sum tests. Results: Two hundred and eleven patients met inclusion criteria, 107 (72 new diagnoses, 35 admissions) within the pre-COVID epoch and 104 (67 new diagnoses, 37 admissions) within the during-COVID epoch. Patients in the during-COVID epoch had higher fecal calprotectin level and were more likely to be started on a biologic as initial treatment. Patients admitted during COVID for IBD flare were more likely to require surgical intervention. Subgroup analysis of newly diagnosed patients revealed higher incidence of comorbid depression and anxiety. Conclusions: Our review identified increased disease severity in newly diagnosed pediatric patients with IBD as well as pediatric patients admitted for flare during COVID. Increases in anxiety and depression rates during COVID may have contributed to worsened disease severity.

18.
Nature ; 622(7981): 58-62, 2023 Oct.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37794268

RESUMEN

In physics, two systems that radically differ at short scales can exhibit strikingly similar macroscopic behaviour: they are part of the same long-distance universality class1. Here we apply this viewpoint to geometry and initiate a program of classifying homogeneous metrics on group manifolds2 by their long-distance properties. We show that many metrics on low-dimensional Lie groups have markedly different short-distance properties but nearly identical distance functions at long distances, and provide evidence that this phenomenon is even more robust in high dimensions. An application of these ideas of particular interest to physics and computer science is complexity geometry3-7-the study of quantum computational complexity using Riemannian geometry. We argue for the existence of a large universality class of definitions of quantum complexity, each linearly related to the other, a much finer-grained equivalence than typically considered. We conjecture that a new effective metric emerges at larger complexities that describes a broad class of complexity geometries, insensitive to various choices of microscopic penalty factors. We discuss the implications for recent conjectures in quantum gravity.

19.
Cell Genom ; 3(10): 100401, 2023 Oct 11.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37868038

RESUMEN

Each human genome has tens of thousands of rare genetic variants; however, identifying impactful rare variants remains a major challenge. We demonstrate how use of personal multi-omics can enable identification of impactful rare variants by using the Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis, which included several hundred individuals, with whole-genome sequencing, transcriptomes, methylomes, and proteomes collected across two time points, 10 years apart. We evaluated each multi-omics phenotype's ability to separately and jointly inform functional rare variation. By combining expression and protein data, we observed rare stop variants 62 times and rare frameshift variants 216 times as frequently as controls, compared to 13-27 times as frequently for expression or protein effects alone. We extended a Bayesian hierarchical model, "Watershed," to prioritize specific rare variants underlying multi-omics signals across the regulatory cascade. With this approach, we identified rare variants that exhibited large effect sizes on multiple complex traits including height, schizophrenia, and Alzheimer's disease.

20.
Front Neurosci ; 17: 1232480, 2023.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37841680

RESUMEN

Approximately one third of non-hospitalized coronavirus disease of 2019 (COVID-19) patients report chronic symptoms after recovering from the acute stage of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection. Some of the most persistent and common complaints of this post-acute COVID-19 syndrome (PACS) are cognitive in nature, described subjectively as "brain fog" and also objectively measured as deficits in executive function, working memory, attention, and processing speed. The mechanisms of these chronic cognitive sequelae are currently not understood. SARS-CoV-2 inflicts damage to cerebral blood vessels and the intestinal wall by binding to angiotensin-converting enzyme 2 (ACE2) receptors and also by evoking production of high levels of systemic cytokines, compromising the brain's neurovascular unit, degrading the intestinal barrier, and potentially increasing the permeability of both to harmful substances. Such substances are hypothesized to be produced in the gut by pathogenic microbiota that, given the profound effects COVID-19 has on the gastrointestinal system, may fourish as a result of intestinal post-COVID-19 dysbiosis. COVID-19 may therefore create a scenario in which neurotoxic and neuroinflammatory substances readily proliferate from the gut lumen and encounter a weakened neurovascular unit, gaining access to the brain and subsequently producing cognitive deficits. Here, we review this proposed PACS pathogenesis along the gut-brain axis, while also identifying specific methodologies that are currently available to experimentally measure each individual component of the model.

SELECCIÓN DE REFERENCIAS
DETALLE DE LA BÚSQUEDA