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showing 10 items of 9912 documents

Evidence for a white matter lesion size threshold to support the diagnosis of relapsing remitting multiple sclerosis

2018

Abstract Background The number of white matter lesions (WML) in brain MRI is the most established paraclinical tool to support the diagnosis of multiple sclerosis (MS) and to monitor its course. Diagnostic criteria have stipulated a minimum detectable diameter of 3 mm per WML, although this threshold is not evidence-based. We aimed to provide a rationale for a WML size threshold for three-dimensional MRI sequences at 3 T by comparing patients with relapsing-remitting MS (RRMS) to control subjects (CS). Methods We analyzed MR images from two cohorts, obtained at scanners from two different vendors, each comprising patients with RRMS and CS. Both cohorts were examined with FLAIR and T1w seque…

AdultMaleWhite matter lesionNeuroimagingFluid-attenuated inversion recoveryYoung Adult03 medical and health sciencesMultiple Sclerosis Relapsing-Remitting0302 clinical medicineHumansMedicine030212 general & internal medicineRetrospective StudiesExpanded Disability Status ScaleReceiver operating characteristicbusiness.industryMultiple sclerosisGeneral MedicineOdds ratioReference Standardsmedicine.diseaseMagnetic Resonance ImagingWhite MatterHyperintensityNeurologyRelapsing remittingFemaleNeurology (clinical)businessNuclear medicine030217 neurology & neurosurgeryMultiple Sclerosis and Related Disorders
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Metabolic and structural connectivity within the default mode network relates to working memory performance in young healthy adults.

2012

Abstract Studies of functional connectivity suggest that the default mode network (DMN) might be relevant for cognitive functions. Here, we examined metabolic and structural connectivity between major DMN nodes, the posterior cingulate (PCC) and medial prefrontal cortex (MPFC), in relation to normal working memory (WM). DMN was captured using independent component analysis of [18F]fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography (FDG-PET) data from 35 young healthy adults (27.1 ± 5.1 years). Metabolic connectivity, a correlation between FDG uptake in PCC and MPFC, was examined in groups of subjects with (relative to median) low (n = 18) and high (n = 17) performance on digit span backward te…

AdultMaleWorking memoryCognitive NeuroscienceBrainCognitionHealthy VolunteersCorrelationMemory Short-TermNeurologyFluorodeoxyglucose F18Posterior cingulatePositron-Emission TomographyMemory spanConnectomeHumansFemaleNerve NetRadiopharmaceuticalsPrefrontal cortexPsychologyNeuroscienceDefault mode networkDiffusion MRISignal TransductionNeuroImage
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Replacement therapy for alpha-1-protease inhibitor deficiency in PiZ subjects with chronic obstructive lung disease

1988

In a six-month multicenter feasibility and safety study, 20 patients, who all had a congenital deficiency of alpha-1-protease inhibitor (A1PI) of the PiZ phenotype accompanied by a chronic obstructive lung disease, were treated with human-plasma-derived A1PI. A weekly dose of 60 mg/kg, administered intravenously, was shown to be sufficient to maintain patient serum levels above the threshold limit of 35 percent, the serum level of healthy persons of the MZ phenotype. This is supposed to be the minimal effective level for protection against the elastolytic attack of the lung and, therefore, satisfies one of the most important criteria of feasibility of long-term replacement therapy. The glob…

AdultMalealpha 1-Antitrypsin DeficiencymedicineHumansLung Diseases ObstructiveInfusions IntravenousAgedRadial immunodiffusionClinical Trials as TopicLungPancreatic Elastasebiologybusiness.industryBlood ProteinsGeneral MedicineMiddle AgedOuchterlony double immunodiffusionTrypsinmedicine.diseaseAlpha-1 Protease Inhibitor DeficiencyObstructive lung diseasePhenotypemedicine.anatomical_structureImmunologybiology.proteinFemaleAntibodyLung Volume MeasurementsbusinessNephelometrymedicine.drugThe American Journal of Medicine
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Marginal bone loss around implants placed in maxillary native bone or grafted sinuses: a retrospective cohort study

2013

Objectives To assess differences in marginal bone loss around implants placed in maxillary pristine bone and implants placed following maxillary sinus augmentation over a period of 3 years after functional loading. Material and methods Two cohorts of subjects (Group 1: Subjects who received sinus augmentation with simultaneous implant placement; Group 2: Subjects who underwent conventional implant placement in posterior maxillary pristine bone) were included in this retrospective study. Radiographic marginal bone loss was measured around one implant per patient on digitized panoramic radiographs that were obtained at the time of prosthesis delivery (baseline) and 12, 24, and 36 months later…

AdultMalealveolar bone lossbone graftingMaxillary sinusAdolescentRadiographymedicine.medical_treatmentAlveolar Bone LossDentistrySinus Floor AugmentationBone graftingProsthesisBone resorptionRisk Factorsdental implantsRadiography PanoramicMaxillaMedicineHumansPeriodontitisSinus (anatomy)AgedRetrospective StudiesOrthodonticsPeriodontitisDental Implantsbusiness.industryDental Implantation EndosseousSmokingMiddle Agedmedicine.diseasemedicine.anatomical_structureFemaleImplantOral Surgerymaxillary sinusbusinessbone resorption
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Time to care? Temporal variations of agency of the Finnish adult foster carers.

2020

This article analyses a hybrid form of housing and care service for older people called adult foster care. In Finnish adult foster care model, an older person moves to a foster care home and is cared for by a semi-professional foster carer who is not related to them. A foster care home is thus simultaneously a personal dwelling and a site of intensive care work which also changes the rhythms and routines of both the foster carer and older person. In the article I ask, how do foster carers express their temporal agency and its variations (identity, pragmatic, life course) through time work? By temporal agency I mean individuals' ability to impact on their experience of time, which is done th…

AdultMalecare workHealth (social science)palveluasunnotTime Factorsvanhuksettemporal agencyvanhustenhuoltoFoster Home CareInterviews as Topic03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineNursing030502 gerontologyIntensive careAgency (sociology)sijaiskoditHumansLife-span and Life-course StudiesFinlandQualitative ResearchAgedasumispalvelut030214 geriatricsGeneral Arts and HumanitiesGeneral Social SciencesGeneral Medicineadult foster careMiddle AgedFoster careWork (electrical)CaregiversAdult Foster Caretime workLife course approachCare workFemalehoitokoditThematic analysis0305 other medical sciencePsychologyikääntyneethoitotyöJournal of aging studies
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Health anxiety, cyberchondria, and coping in the current COVID-19 pandemic: Which factors are related to coronavirus anxiety?

2020

Highlights • First study on anxiety and cyberchondria during the COVID-19 pandemic. • The increase in virus anxiety was particularly strong with elevated health anxiety. • Health anxiety, cyberchondria, and virus anxiety are positively associated. • Combined health anxiety and cyberchondria is associated with strong virus anxiety. • Being informed and adaptive emotion regulation can have a beneficial effect.

AdultMaleemotion regulation050103 clinical psychologyCoping (psychology)Pneumonia ViralPopulationvirus anxietyAnxietyEmotional AdjustmentCyberchondriaArticleBetacoronavirus03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineRisk FactorsGermanyPandemicmedicineHumans0501 psychology and cognitive scienceseducationPandemicsRetrospective StudiesInterneteducation.field_of_studySARS-CoV-205 social sciencesCOVID-19Cognitionmedicine.diseaseModerationHealth SurveysEmotional RegulationHypochondriasis030227 psychiatryhealth anxietyPsychiatry and Mental healthClinical PsychologyTraitAnxietyFemalemedicine.symptomCoronavirus InfectionsPsychologycyberchondriaClinical psychologyJournal of Anxiety Disorders
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Muscle-tendon architecture in Kenyans and Japanese : Potential role of genetic endowment in the success of elite Kenyan endurance runners

2022

Aim The specificity of muscle-tendon and foot architecture of elite Kenyan middle- and long-distance runners has been found to contribute to their superior running performance. To investigate the respective influence of genetic endowment and training on these characteristics, we compared leg and foot segmental lengths as well as muscle-tendon architecture of Kenyans and Japanese males (i) from infancy to adulthood and (ii) non-athletes versus elite runners. Methods The 676 participants were divided according to their nationality (Kenyans and Japanese), age (nine different age groups for non-athletes) and performance level in middle- and long-distance races (non-athlete, non-elite and elite …

AdultMaleendurance runningkestävyysjuoksuFinancial ManagementPhysiologygrowth[SDV.NEU.SC]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Neurons and Cognition [q-bio.NC]/Cognitive Sciencesultrasonographygear ratioAchilles TendonKenyajalatetniset ryhmätJapanHumansethnicityultraäänitutkimus[SDV.IB]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Bioengineeringfoot structurebiomekaniikkageneettiset tekijätChildMuscle Skeletal
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A Cytologic Assay for Diagnosis of Food Hypersensitivity in Patients With Irritable Bowel Syndrome

2010

BACKGROUND & AIMS: A percentage of patients with symptoms of irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) suffer from food hypersensitivity (FH) and improve on a food-elimination diet. No assays have satisfactory levels of sensitivity for identifying patients with FH. We evaluated the efficacy of an in vitro basophil activation assay in the diagnosis of FH in IBS-like patients. METHODS: Blood samples were collected from 120 consecutive patients diagnosed with IBS according to Rome II criteria. We analyzed in vitro activation of basophils by food allergens (based on levels of CD63 expression), as well as total and food-specific immunoglobulin (Ig)E levels in serum. Effects of elimination diets and dou…

AdultMalefood hypersensitivitySettore MED/09 - Medicina InternaAdolescentCytologic assay; food hypersensitivity; irritable bowel diseaseCytological Techniquesirritable bowel diseasePlatelet Membrane GlycoproteinsImmunoglobulin ESensitivity and SpecificityIrritable Bowel SyndromeYoung AdultAntigenAntigens CDElimination dietmedicineAnimalsHumansYoung adultCells CulturedIrritable bowel syndromeCytologic assayHepatologybiologyCD63Tetraspanin 30business.industryGastroenterologyAllergensImmunoglobulin EMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseBasophilsBasophil activationImmunologybiology.proteinFemaleAntibodybusinessClinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology
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High-dose short-term administration of naringin did not alter talinolol pharmacokinetics in humans.

2015

Naringin is considered the major causative ingredient of the inhibition of intestinal drug uptake by grapefruit juice. Moreover, it is contained in highly dosed nutraceuticals available on the market. A controlled, open, randomized, crossover study was performed in 10 healthy volunteers to investigate the effect of high-dose naringin on the bioavailability of talinolol, a substrate of intestinal organic anion-transporting polypeptide (OATP)-mediated uptake. Following 6-day supplementation with 3 capsules of 350 mg naringin daily, 100mg talinolol were administered orally with 3 capsules of the same dietary supplement (1050 mg naringin) on the seventh day. This test treatment was compared to …

AdultMalefood.ingredientAdrenergic beta-AntagonistsPharmaceutical ScienceOrganic Anion TransportersPharmacologyPolymorphism Single NucleotideDosage formGrapefruit juicePropanolamineschemistry.chemical_compoundFood-Drug InteractionsYoung AdultNutraceuticalfoodPharmacokineticsHumansNaringinDosage FormsCross-Over StudiesDose-Response Relationship DrugChemistryCrossover studyBioavailabilityDietary SupplementsFlavanonesFemaleTalinololCitrus paradisiEuropean journal of pharmaceutical sciences : official journal of the European Federation for Pharmaceutical Sciences
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Condylar growth after non-surgical advancement in adult subject: a case report.

2007

Abstract Background A defect of condylar morphology can be caused by several sources. Case report A case of altered condylar morphology in adult male with temporomandibular disorders was reported in 30-year-old male patient. Erosion and flattening of the left mandibular condyle were observed by panoramic x-ray. The patient was treated with splint therapy that determined mandibular advancement. Eight months after the therapy, reduction in joint pain and a greater opening of the mouth was observed, although crepitation sounds during mastication were still noticeable. Conclusion During the following months of gnatologic treatment, new bone growth in the left condyle was observed by radiograph,…

AdultMalelcsh:Specialties of internal medicinemedicine.medical_treatmentClinical NeurologyDentistryCase ReportCondylestomatognathic systemlcsh:RC581-951Radiography PanoramicMedicineHumansGeneral DentistryMasticationReduction (orthopedic surgery)OrthodonticsBone growthbusiness.industryDentistry(all)Mandibular CondyleTemporomandibular Joint Disordersstomatognathic diseasesSplintsOtorhinolaryngologySplintsJoint painOral and maxillofacial surgeryNeurology (clinical)medicine.symptombusinessSplint (medicine)Headface medicine
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