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1.
JAMA Neurol ; 76(4): 480-491, 2019 04 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30726504

ABSTRACT

Importance: Genetic studies of intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) have focused mainly on white participants, but genetic risk may vary or could be concealed by differing nongenetic coexposures in nonwhite populations. Transethnic analysis of risk may clarify the role of genetics in ICH risk across populations. Objective: To evaluate associations between established differences in ICH risk by race/ethnicity and the variability in the risks of apolipoprotein E (APOE) ε4 alleles, the most potent genetic risk factor for ICH. Design, Setting, and Participants: This case-control study of primary ICH meta-analyzed the association of APOE allele status on ICH risk, applying a 2-stage clustering approach based on race/ethnicity and stratified by a contributing study. A propensity score analysis was used to model the association of APOE with the burden of hypertension across race/ethnic groups. Primary ICH cases and controls were collected from 3 hospital- and population-based studies in the United States and 8 in European sites in the International Stroke Genetic Consortium. Participants were enrolled from January 1, 1999, to December 31, 2017. Participants with secondary causes of ICH were excluded from enrollment. Controls were regionally matched within each participating study. Main Outcomes and Measures: Clinical variables were systematically obtained from structured interviews within each site. APOE genotype was centrally determined for all studies. Results: In total, 13 124 participants (7153 [54.5%] male with a median [interquartile range] age of 66 [56-76] years) were included. In white participants, APOE ε2 (odds ratio [OR], 1.49; 95% CI, 1.24-1.80; P < .001) and APOE ε4 (OR, 1.51; 95% CI, 1.23-1.85; P < .001) were associated with lobar ICH risk; however, within self-identified Hispanic and black participants, no associations were found. After propensity score matching for hypertension burden, APOE ε4 was associated with lobar ICH risk among Hispanic (OR, 1.14; 95% CI, 1.03-1.28; P = .01) but not in black (OR, 1.02; 95% CI, 0.98-1.07; P = .25) participants. APOE ε2 and ε4 did not show an association with nonlobar ICH risk in any race/ethnicity. Conclusions and Relevance: APOE ε4 and ε2 alleles appear to affect lobar ICH risk variably by race/ethnicity, associations that are confirmed in white individuals but can be shown in Hispanic individuals only when the excess burden of hypertension is propensity score-matched; further studies are needed to explore the interactions between APOE alleles and environmental exposures that vary by race/ethnicity in representative populations at risk for ICH.


Subject(s)
Apolipoproteins E/genetics , Black or African American , Cerebral Hemorrhage , Genetic Predisposition to Disease , Hispanic or Latino , Hypertension , White People , Black or African American/ethnology , Black or African American/genetics , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Case-Control Studies , Cerebral Hemorrhage/ethnology , Cerebral Hemorrhage/genetics , Female , Genetic Predisposition to Disease/ethnology , Genetic Predisposition to Disease/genetics , Hispanic or Latino/genetics , Hispanic or Latino/statistics & numerical data , Humans , Hypertension/ethnology , Hypertension/genetics , Male , Middle Aged , Risk Factors , United States/ethnology , White People/ethnology , White People/genetics
2.
Dermatol Ther ; 32(1): e12775, 2019 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30365211

ABSTRACT

Nocardiosis is a rare localized or systemic suppurative disease caused by the actinomycete Nocardia species. The respiratory tract is the most common site of infection, but primary cutaneous nocardiosis can also be induced by direct inoculation. Nocardiosis is usually reported in immunocompromised patients, such as those with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, autoimmune diseases, cancer, or in those who have had organ transplantation or corticosteroid administration. However, it can also affect individuals with no serious underlying condition. We reported two cases of primary cutaneous nocardiosis in immunocompetent patients after intralesional injection of steroid.


Subject(s)
Glucocorticoids/adverse effects , Nocardia Infections/chemically induced , Skin/drug effects , Triamcinolone/adverse effects , Adult , Anti-Bacterial Agents/therapeutic use , Bacteriological Techniques , Biopsy , Female , Glucocorticoids/administration & dosage , Humans , Injections, Intralesional , Middle Aged , Nocardia Infections/diagnosis , Nocardia Infections/microbiology , Nocardia Infections/transmission , Risk Factors , Skin/microbiology , Skin/pathology , Treatment Outcome , Triamcinolone/administration & dosage
3.
Front Neurosci ; 11: 136, 2017.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28512395

ABSTRACT

Musical preference is highly individualized and is an area of active study to develop methods for its quantification. Recently, preference-based behavior, associated with activity in brain reward circuitry, has been shown to follow lawful, quantifiable patterns, despite broad variation across individuals. These patterns, observed using a keypress paradigm with visual stimuli, form the basis for relative preference theory (RPT). Here, we sought to determine if such patterns extend to non-visual domains (i.e., audition) and dynamic stimuli, potentially providing a method to supplement psychometric, physiological, and neuroimaging approaches to preference quantification. For this study, we adapted our keypress paradigm to two sets of stimuli consisting of seventeenth to twenty-first century western art music (Classical) and twentieth to twenty-first century jazz and popular music (Popular). We studied a pilot sample and then a separate primary experimental sample with this paradigm, and used iterative mathematical modeling to determine if RPT relationships were observed with high R2 fits. We further assessed the extent of heterogeneity in the rank ordering of keypress-based responses across subjects. As expected, individual rank orderings of preferences were quite heterogeneous, yet we observed mathematical patterns fitting these data similar to those observed previously with visual stimuli. These patterns in music preference were recurrent across two cohorts and two stimulus sets, and scaled between individual and group data, adhering to the requirements for lawfulness. Our findings suggest a general neuroscience framework that predicts human approach/avoidance behavior, while also allowing for individual differences and the broad diversity of human choices; the resulting framework may offer novel approaches to advancing music neuroscience, or its applications to medicine and recommendation systems.

4.
Front Psychol ; 8: 122, 2017.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28270776

ABSTRACT

This study examines how the domains of reward and attention, which are often studied as independent processes, in fact interact at a systems level. We operationalize divided attention with a continuous performance task and variables from signal detection theory (SDT), and reward/aversion with a keypress task measuring approach/avoidance in the framework of relative preference theory (RPT). Independent experiments with the same subjects showed a significant association between one SDT and two RPT variables, visualized as a three-dimensional structure. Holding one of these three variables constant, further showed a significant relationship between a loss aversion-like metric from the approach/avoidance task, and the response bias observed during the divided attention task. These results indicate that a more liberal response bias under signal detection (i.e., a higher tolerance for noise, resulting in a greater proportion of false alarms) is associated with higher "loss aversion." Furthermore, our functional model suggests a mechanism for processing constraints with divided attention and reward/aversion. Together, our results argue for a systematic relationship between divided attention and reward/aversion processing in humans.

5.
PLoS One ; 10(9): e0135216, 2015.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26394306

ABSTRACT

Individuals tend to give losses approximately 2-fold the weight that they give gains. Such approximations of loss aversion (LA) are almost always measured in the stimulus domain of money, rather than objects or pictures. Recent work on preference-based decision-making with a schedule-less keypress task (relative preference theory, RPT) has provided a mathematical formulation for LA similar to that in prospect theory (PT), but makes no parametric assumptions in the computation of LA, uses a variable tied to communication theory (i.e., the Shannon entropy or information), and works readily with non-monetary stimuli. We evaluated if these distinct frameworks described similar LA in healthy subjects, and found that LA during the anticipation phase of the PT-based task correlated significantly with LA related to the RPT-based task. Given the ease with which non-monetary stimuli can be used on the Internet, or in animal studies, these findings open an extensive range of applications for the study of loss aversion. Furthermore, the emergence of methodology that can be used to measure preference for both social stimuli and money brings a common framework to the evaluation of preference in both social psychology and behavioral economics.


Subject(s)
Decision Making/physiology , Adolescent , Adult , Choice Behavior , Female , Game Theory , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Models, Theoretical , Young Adult
6.
Cell Transplant ; 18(3): 333-41, 2009.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19558781

ABSTRACT

Skeletal myoblast (SM) implantation promotes recovery of myocardial function after ischemic injury. Clinical observations suggest an association of SM implantation and ventricular arrhythmias. Support for this link has been sought in animal studies, but none employing models of congestive heart failure. In a canine model of postinfarction congestive heart failure (CHF) we compared the frequency of rhythm disturbances using ambulatory electrocardiography monitoring following skeletal myoblast or saline (SAL) implantation. In 19 mongrel dogs ischemic injury and CHF were induced by intracoronary microsphere infusions. Direct intramyocardial injection of autologous skeletal myoblasts (ASM) (2.7-8.3 x 10(8) cells) or SAL controls was administered to 11 and 8 dogs, respectively. Serial echocardiography and 24-h ambulatory electrocardiography were recorded at baseline (after CHF induction) and at 4 weeks and at 8-10 weeks after injection. Comparisons between groups of left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) and the frequency of ventricular arrhythmias, supraventricular arrhythmias, and measures of heart rate variability (HRV) were made at each of the three time points. LVEF increased from 41 +/- 6% to 47 +/- 2% (p < 0.03) in the ASM group, and did not change (42 +/- 6% to 40 +/- 2%, p = ns) in SAL. After injection, no differences were seen in the number of dogs demonstrating ventricular tachycardia (n = 3 vs. n = 2, p = ns) or frequent PVCs (n = 3 vs. n = 3, p = ns) in the ASM versus SAL groups, respectively. Significant changes were observed in a time-domain measure of HRV, standard deviation of normal-to-normal RR interval (in ms: 4 weeks 174 +/- 95 vs. 242 +/- 19; 8 weeks 174 +/- 78 vs. 276 +/- 78, ASM vs. SAL), but not in other time domain parameters. In this canine model of ischemic CHF, ASM implantation did not result in a significant increase in ventricular arrhythmias compared to controls animals. The potential for ASM implantation to affect time-domain parameters of HRV merits further study.


Subject(s)
Heart Failure/physiopathology , Heart Rate/physiology , Myoblasts/transplantation , Myocardial Ischemia/therapy , Animals , Arrhythmias, Cardiac/diagnostic imaging , Arrhythmias, Cardiac/physiopathology , Dogs , Electrocardiography, Ambulatory , Heart Failure/diagnostic imaging , Hemodynamics , Myocardial Ischemia/diagnostic imaging , Tachycardia, Ventricular/diagnostic imaging , Tachycardia, Ventricular/physiopathology , Ultrasonography , Ventricular Function, Left
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