Search results for "DEGENERATION"

showing 10 items of 601 documents

Clinico-Biomechanical Issues and Dynamic Stabilization When Considering Stem Cell Treatment for Degenerative Disc Disease

2013

After reading the article published in Transplantation (1), scientists are to be congratulatedVespecially with the clinical results as published. Looking for alternatives to avoid fusion is part of function-preserving spine care, as it should be the last option to be undertaken while keeping the debate open (2, 3). Nevertheless, we would like to point out some questions that arise from a clinical point of view from our daily surgical practice. First, several clinical presentations and procedures are compared without taking into account that they are different treatments applied for different disc disease situations (discectomy is performed for disc herniation with radicular symptoms, disc p…

Transplantationmedicine.medical_specialtybusiness.industrymedicine.medical_treatmentModic changesDiscographyDegeneration (medical)medicine.diseaseLow back painlaw.inventionDegenerative disc diseaseSurgeryTransplantationRandomized controlled triallawDiscectomyMedicinemedicine.symptombusinessTransplantation Journal
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Common miRNA Patterns of Alzheimer's Disease and Parkinson's Disease and Their Putative Impact on Commensal Gut Microbiota.

2019

With the rise of Next-Generation-Sequencing (NGS) methods, Micro-RNAs (miRNAs) have achieved an important position in the research landscape and have been found to present valuable diagnostic tools in various diseases such as multiple sclerosis or lung cancer. There is also emerging evidence that miRNAs play an important role in the pathogenesis of neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer’s disease (AD) or Parkinson’s disease (PD). Apparently, these diseases come along with changes in miRNA expression patterns which led to attempts from researchers to use these small RNA species from several body fluids for a better diagnosis and in order to observe disease progression. Additionally, it…

610 Medical sciencesmicro-RNAsneurodegenerationParkinson’s disease610 Medizingut microbiomeAlzheimer’s diseaselcsh:Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. NeuropsychiatryNeuroscienceOriginal Researchcrosstalklcsh:RC321-571Frontiers in neuroscience
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From obesity to Alzheimer's disease through insulin resistance

2021

Alzheimer's disease is one of the most frequent forms of dementia. It is a progressive neurodegenerative disease, characterized by presence of amyloid plaques and neurofibrillary tangles in the brain. Obesity is regarded as abnormal fat accumulation with deleterious impact on human health. There is full scientific evidence that obesity and the metabolic comorbidities (e.g., insulin resistance, hyperglycaemia, and type 2 diabetes) are related to Alzheimer's disease and likely in the causative pathway. Numerous studies have identified several overlapping neurodegenerative mechanisms, including oxidative stress, mitochondrial dysfunction, and inflammation. In this review, we present how obesit…

medicine.medical_specialtyEndocrinology Diabetes and MetabolismType 2 diabetesmedicine.disease_causeEndocrinologyInsulin resistanceDownregulation and upregulationAlzheimer DiseaseInternal medicineDiabetes mellitusInternal MedicinemedicineHumansDementiaObesityNeurodegenerationInflammationbusiness.industryNeurodegenerationBrainInsulin resistanceAlzheimer's diseasemedicine.diseaseEndocrinologyDiabetes Mellitus Type 2LipotoxicitybusinessOxidative stressJournal of Diabetes and its Complications
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Surgical management of subfoveal choroidal neovascular membranes in age-related macular degeneration by macular relocation: experiences of an early-s…

2009

The MARAN (Macular Relocation in Age-related Neovascular disease) trial was planned to assess the effectiveness of full macular relocation (MR) in patients with neovascular age-related macular degeneration (AMD).Randomised, prospective, controlled clinical trial.Patients suffering from visual loss because of AMD were randomised to either surgery or a control group receiving standard treatment (observation or photodynamic therapy (PDT)). The primary end point was the change of visual acuity (VA) (ETDRS) 52 weeks after randomisation compared with initial VA, and secondary end points included reading performance, contrast sensitivity, stability of fixation, eye-specific quality of life, and th…

Malemedicine.medical_specialtyVisual acuitygenetic structuresEye diseaseVisual AcuityFixation Ocularlaw.inventionContrast SensitivityMacular DegenerationRandomized controlled triallawOphthalmologyTask Performance and AnalysisMedicineHumansProspective StudiesProspective cohort studyAgedAged 80 and overbusiness.industryMacular degenerationmedicine.diseaseeye diseasesChoroidal NeovascularizationSurgeryClinical trialOphthalmologymedicine.anatomical_structureReadingQuality of LifeFemalesense organsChoroidmedicine.symptombusinessRetinopathyEye (London, England)
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TOPORS, implicated in retinal degeneration, is a cilia-centrosomal protein.

2011

et al.

Retinal degenerationUbiquitin-Protein LigasesBiologymedicine.disease_causeRetinaCell Line03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compoundMiceNuclear proteins0302 clinical medicineIntraflagellar transportGeneticsmedicineBasal bodyAnimalsHumansPhotoreceptor CellsCiliaMolecular BiologyZebrafishGenetics (clinical)Cells CulturedZebrafish030304 developmental biologyCentrosome0303 health sciencesRetinaMutationUbiquitinCiliumRetinal DegenerationNuclear ProteinsRetinalTOPORS proteinGeneral MedicineArticlesmedicine.diseasebiology.organism_classification3. Good healthCell biologyNeoplasm ProteinsProtein Transportmedicine.anatomical_structurechemistryNeoplasm proteinssense organs030217 neurology & neurosurgeryHuman molecular genetics
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The

2016

ABSTRACT Members of the Junctophilin (JPH) protein family have emerged as key actors in all excitable cells, with crucial implications for human pathophysiology. In mammals, this family consists of four members (JPH1-JPH4) that are differentially expressed throughout excitable cells. The analysis of knockout mice lacking JPH subtypes has demonstrated their essential contribution to physiological functions in skeletal and cardiac muscles and in neurons. Moreover, mutations in the human JPH2 gene are associated with hypertrophic and dilated cardiomyopathies; mutations in JPH3 are responsible for the neurodegenerative Huntington's disease-like-2 (HDL2), whereas JPH1 acts as a genetic modifier …

NotchGenotypeCardiomyopathyGenes InsectAnimals Genetically ModifiedAnimalsDrosophila ProteinsAllelesMammalsNeuronsHuntingtin ProteinReceptors NotchMusclesMyocardiumMembrane ProteinsReproducibility of ResultsDrosHuntington's diseaseDisease Models AnimalDrosophila melanogasterPhenotypeGene Knockdown TechniquesMutationNerve DegenerationPhotoreceptor Cells InvertebrateRNA InterferenceJunctophilinDrosophilaTrinucleotide Repeat ExpansionSignal TransductionResearch ArticleDisease modelsmechanisms
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Impact of diet-induced obesity on the mouse brain phosphoproteome

2018

Obesity is closely associated to several diseases such as type 2 diabetes, cardiovascular disease, hepatic steatosis, airway disease, neurodegeneration, biliary diseases and certain cancers. It is, therefore, of importance to assess the role of nutrition in disease prevention as well as its effect in the course of such pathologies. In the present study, we addressed the impact of the exposure to different obesogenic diets in the mice brains phosphoproteome. To analyze if the obesity could be able to modify the protein pattern expression of brain neurons, obesity was induced in two different groups of mice. One group of mice was fed with hyperglycemic diet (HGD) and the other one was fed wit…

Male0301 basic medicinemedicine.medical_specialtyPhosphoproteomicsEndocrinology Diabetes and MetabolismClinical BiochemistryHyperglycemic dietType 2 diabetesDiseaseBiologyDiet High-FatBiochemistry03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineInternal medicinemedicineAnimalsProtein phosphorylationObesityPhosphorylationMolecular BiologyGSK3BNutritionNeuronal impairmentNutrition and DieteticsNeurodegenerationta1182BrainObesity; Nutrition; High-fat diet; Hyperglycemic diet; Neuronal impairment; PhosphoproteomicsPhosphoproteinsmedicine.diseaseObesityMice Inbred C57BLHigh-fat dietGene Ontology030104 developmental biologyEndocrinologyHyperglycemiaPhosphorylationCalcium ChannelsSteatosis030217 neurology & neurosurgeryThe Journal of Nutritional Biochemistry
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Poor Bone Quality in Patients With Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis

2020

Objective: Musculoskeletal functional deterioration in Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is associated with an increase in bone fractures. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the influence of sex, ALS type, on bone quality in patients with ALS compared to healthy controls. The impact on bone health of the clinical status and some metabolic parameters was also analyzed in ALS patients.Methods: A series of 33 voluntary patients with ALS, and 66 healthy individuals matched in sex and age underwent assessment of bone mass quality using quantitative ultrasound (QUS) of the calcaneus. Ultrasonic broadband attenuation (BUA), the speed of sound (SOS), stiffness index and T-score were measur…

medicine.medical_specialtyamyotrophic lateral sclerosisOsteoporosisvitamin DPhysical strengthGastroenterologylcsh:RC346-429Pulmonary function testingFEV1/FVC ratioInternal medicinemedicineVitamin D and neurologyAmyotrophic lateral sclerosisamyotrophic lateral sclerosis bone quality neurodegeneration osteoporosis quantitative ultrasound (QUS) measurement vitamin DOssos Malaltieslcsh:Neurology. Diseases of the nervous systemBone mineralquantitative ultrasound (QUS) measurementbusiness.industryneurodegenerationBrief Research Reportmedicine.diseaseosteoporosisbone qualityNeurologyCalcaneusNeurology (clinical)business
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2013

Background To monitor viability of implanted genetically engineered and microencapsulated human stem cells (MicroBeads) in the mouse eye, and to study the impact of the beads and/or xenogenic cells on retinal integrity. Methodology/Principal Findings MicroBeads were implanted into the subretinal space of SV126 wild type mice using an ab externo approach. Viability of microencapsulated cells was monitored by noninvasive retinal imaging (Spectralis™ HRA+OCT). Retinal integrity was also assessed with retinal imaging and upon the end of the study by light and electron microscopy. The implanted GFP-marked cells encapsulated in subretinal MicroBeads remained viable over a period of up to 4 months…

Retinal degeneration0303 health sciencesRetinaOpsinMultidisciplinaryRetinalAnatomymedicine.diseaseCell biology03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compound0302 clinical medicinemedicine.anatomical_structureImmune systemchemistry030221 ophthalmology & optometrymedicineFluorescence microscopeStem cellPreclinical imaging030304 developmental biologyPLOS ONE
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Two in one against motor neuron degeneration: tackling oxidative stress and inflammation with a sulfasalazine derivative.

2012

Free RadicalsInflammationPharmacologymedicine.disease_causeBiochemistryDinoprostoneCellular and Molecular Neurosciencechemistry.chemical_compoundSulfasalazinemedicineAnimalsHumansAmyotrophic lateral sclerosisbusiness.industryAmyotrophic Lateral SclerosisAnti-Inflammatory Agents Non-Steroidalmedicine.diseaseDinoprostoneSulfasalazinechemistryAnesthesiaMotor neuron degenerationmedicine.symptombusinessOxidative stressDerivative (chemistry)medicine.drugJournal of neurochemistry
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