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1.
Healthcare (Basel) ; 12(9)2024 Apr 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38727429

ABSTRACT

The current study aimed to investigate whether there is a relationship between emotional intelligence (EI), functional capacity, fatigue, cognitive function, and quality of life (QoL) in HD patients and to assess the effect of a 9-month intradialytic exercise training program on EI levels. Seventy-eight dialysis patients (50 M/28 F, 60.6 ± 17.2 years) participated in the cross-sectional study. Afterward, a subgroup of 18 patients (15 M/3 F, 56.7 ± 12.3 years) completed a 9-month supervised intradialytic exercise training program (three times weekly). EI was assessed by the Schutte Self Report Emotional Intelligence Test (SSEIT) and the Wong and Law Emotional Intelligence Scale (WLEIS). Functional capacity was assessed by a battery of tests. Sleep quality, depression levels, and daily sleepiness were assessed via validated questionnaires. All assessments were carried out before and after the intervention. A significant positive correlation was found between the WLEIS scores and the physical component summary of the QoL questionnaire. In contrast, the WLEIS scores were negatively associated with general and physical fatigue. The SSEIT scores were positively associated with cognitive function. After nine months of exercise training, only the group with low WLEIS scores improved their EI score significantly compared to the baseline values (98.7 ± 7.0 vs. 73.0 ± 4.0, p = 0.020), while no changes were observed in the medium or high EI groups. In conclusion, patients with higher levels of EI showed increased quality of life and lower levels of fatigue. Patients with low levels of EI are more likely to benefit from an exercise training program compared to their medium- and high-level counterparts.

2.
Front Neurosci ; 17: 1217831, 2023.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37901426

ABSTRACT

Background: The visual system is not fully mature at birth and continues to develop throughout infancy until it reaches adult levels through late childhood and adolescence. Disruption of vision during this postnatal period and prior to visual maturation results in deficits of visual processing and in turn may affect the development of complementary senses. Studying people who have had one eye surgically removed during early postnatal development is a useful model for understanding timelines of sensory development and the role of binocularity in visual system maturation. Adaptive auditory and audiovisual plasticity following the loss of one eye early in life has been observed for both low-and high-level visual stimuli. Notably, people who have had one eye removed early in life perceive the McGurk effect much less than binocular controls. Methods: The current study investigates whether multisensory compensatory mechanisms are also present in people who had one eye removed late in life, after postnatal visual system maturation, by measuring whether they perceive the McGurk effect compared to binocular controls and people who have had one eye removed early in life. Results: People who had one eye removed late in life perceived the McGurk effect similar to binocular viewing controls, unlike those who had one eye removed early in life. Conclusion: This suggests differences in multisensory compensatory mechanisms based on age at surgical eye removal. These results indicate that cross-modal adaptations for the loss of binocularity may be dependent on plasticity levels during cortical development.

3.
J Health Psychol ; 28(14): 1331-1344, 2023 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37264609

ABSTRACT

The COVID-19 pandemic has resulted in the introduction of pharmaceutical and non-pharmaceutical interventions such as precautionary behaviours. The current study used affective priming to evaluate COVID-19 attitudes in vaccine-hesitant and pro-vaccine participants. Explicitly, both groups rated their overall perception of risk associated with contracting COVID-19 significantly lower compared to their perception of necessary precautions and overall adherence to public health measures. Pro-vaccine participants rated their perception of necessary precautions higher compared to vaccine-hesitant participants. During baseline measures, both groups classified COVID-19 affiliated words as unpleasant. Affective priming was observed for congruent prime-target pleasant and unpleasant word pairs but was not observed for COVID-19 related word pairs. Differences between groups in the perception of necessary public health precautions points to different underlying pathways for reduced perceived risk and lack of affective priming. These results refine previous findings indicating that implicit attitudes towards COVID-19 can be measured using the affective priming paradigm.


Subject(s)
Affect , COVID-19 , Humans , Pandemics , COVID-19/prevention & control , Reaction Time , Attitude , Vaccination
4.
Sports (Basel) ; 11(4)2023 Mar 31.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37104153

ABSTRACT

Cardiovascular disease is the most common cause of death in hemodialysis (HD) patients. Intradialytic aerobic exercise training has a beneficial effect on cardiovascular system function and reduces mortality in HD patients. However, the impact of other forms of exercise on the cardiovascular system, such as hybrid exercise, is not clear. Briefly, hybrid exercise combines aerobic and strength training in the same session. The present study examined whether hybrid intradialytic exercise has long-term benefits on left ventricular function and structure and the autonomous nervous system in HD patients. In this single-group design, efficacy-based intervention, twelve stable HD patients (10M/2F, 56 ± 19 years) participated in a nine-month-long hybrid intradialytic training program. Both echocardiographic assessments of left ventricular function and structure and heart rate variability (HRV) were assessed pre, during and after the end of the HD session at baseline and after the nine-month intervention. Ejection Fraction (EF), both assessed before and at the end of the HD session, appeared to be significantly improved after the intervention period compared to the baseline values (48.7 ± 11.1 vs. 58.8 ± 6.5, p = 0.046 and 50.0 ± 13.4 vs. 56.1 ± 3.4, p = 0.054 respectively). Regarding HRV assessment, hybrid exercise training increased LF and decreased HF (p < 0.05). Both conventional Doppler and tissue Doppler imaging indices of diastolic function did not change after the intervention period (p > 0.05). In conclusion, long-term intradialytic hybrid exercise training was an effective non-pharmacological approach to improving EF and the cardiac autonomous nervous system in HD patients. Such exercise training programs could be incorporated into HD units to improve the patients' cardiovascular health.

5.
Int Urol Nephrol ; 54(12): 3271-3281, 2022 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35789452

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION AND AIMS: Neurological complications such as peripheral neuropathy are very common in the end-stage renal disease (ESRD) patients, occurring in 60-80% of this specific population. The aim of the present study was to examine whether a 9-month hybrid intradialytic exercise training program could alter motor and sensory nerve conduction study (NCS) parameters in hemodialysis population. METHODS: Seventeen stable patients undergoing HD with no clinical evidence of uremic polyneuropathy were included in the study (15 M/2F, 59 ± 13.7 years). All patients completed a 9-month supervised exercise training program composed of both aerobic cycling and resistance training (hybrid) during HD. Functional capacity was assessed by a battery of tests, while pain levels and fatigue profile were assessed via validated questionnaires. Motor and sensory NCS on bilateral median, ulnar, peroneal and tibial nerves as well as F-wave were assessed using a full neurographic electromyography (EMG) assessment. RESULTS: After the 9-month exercise training intervention, exercise capacity was increased by 65% and functional capacity by an average of 40%. The neurological assessment showed that conduction velocity from tibial and peroneal nerves was improved by 3.7% and 4.2%, respectively, while tibial F-wave latency and peroneal and sural nerve distal latency were significantly improved by 4.2%, 4.9% and 10%, respectively. Fatigue and pain were improved after the exercise intervention while fatigue score was positively correlated with conduction velocity and amplitude values. CONCLUSIONS: The results of the current study demonstrate that 9-month hybrid exercise training induces beneficial effects on both sensory and motor NCS parameters, improving conduction velocity and F-wave latency. Improvements in neural activity were accompanied by changes in fatigue score and pain-related aspects. The parallel improvement in motor nerve conduction velocity and its correlations with functional tests supports the hypothesis that exercise could be beneficial for preventing a decline in neural function in HD patients.


Subject(s)
Neural Conduction , Renal Dialysis , Humans , Neural Conduction/physiology , Renal Dialysis/adverse effects , Exercise , Fatigue/etiology , Fatigue/therapy , Pain
6.
J Med Chem ; 65(6): 4972-4990, 2022 03 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35286090

ABSTRACT

Chromosomal instability (CIN) is a hallmark of cancer that results from errors in chromosome segregation during mitosis. Targeting of CIN-associated vulnerabilities is an emerging therapeutic strategy in drug development. KIF18A, a mitotic kinesin, has been shown to play a role in maintaining bipolar spindle integrity and promotes viability of CIN cancer cells. To explore the potential of KIF18A, a series of inhibitors was identified. Optimization of an initial hit led to the discovery of analogues that could be used as chemical probes to interrogate the role of KIF18A inhibition. Compounds 23 and 24 caused significant mitotic arrest in vivo, which was sustained for 24 h. This would be followed by cell death either in mitosis or in the subsequent interphase. Furthermore, photoaffinity labeling experiments reveal that this series of inhibitors binds at the interface of KIF18A and tubulin. This study represents the first disclosure of KIF18A inhibitors with in vivo activity.


Subject(s)
Kinesins , Neoplasms , Cell Death , Humans , Mitosis , Neoplasms/drug therapy , Neoplasms/metabolism , Spindle Apparatus/metabolism , Tubulin/metabolism
7.
Disabil Rehabil ; 44(24): 7655-7663, 2022 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34672894

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: This paper provides recommendations for neurorehabilitative research informed by insights from critical disability studies (CDS) and a research study that tested an augmented neurorehabilitative technology prototype. METHODS: The methodology combines critical reflection, feminist science studies and CDS to analyze how neurorehabilitation and disability studies conceptualize notions of disability and cure. It offers recommendations for reconciling the conflicting ideologies of cure that operate within neurorehabilitative research. RESULTS: The prototype acted as a kind of virtual reality hope machine that tapped into different emotions and language games regarding disability and cure. The result is five recommendations about the ways that a CDS perspective might inform neurorehabilitation research: (I) ensure clarity in recruitment materials to account for dominant social views on disability and the possibility of cure; (II) build "strong objectivity" into research methods through attention to social context and multiple meanings of terms; (III) engage in critical reflection about research processes and findings; (IV) incorporate principles of crip technoscience; and (V) include CDS perspectives in neurorehabilitation education. CONCLUSIONS: Bridging a conversation between neurorehabilitative research and CDS can address the discrepancies between ideologies of cure, and situate rehabilitation within the wider concerns of social determinants of health and disability justice.Implications for rehabilitationBridging connections between rehabilitation studies and critical disability studies can generate productive insights that open up conversations with disabled people and a commitment to disability justice.Disability and cure are social constructs and may have different meanings for patients and rehabilitation professionals.Clinicians should be mindful of the conflicting ideological constructs and socio-political dimensions of disability and cure that are operating below the surface in the rehabilitation profession and in interactions between clinicians and patients.As technology continues to transform clinical rehabilitation care through virtual reality and other innovative paradigms, rehabilitation clinicians should recognize the potential for these technologies to become "hope machines," generating patient expectations that are idealized constructions of hoped-for outcomes of returning to a previous state or level of functionality rather than predictive expectations of likely results.


Subject(s)
Disabled Persons , Neurological Rehabilitation , Virtual Reality , Humans , Disability Studies , Research Design
8.
Int Urol Nephrol ; 54(1): 201-208, 2022 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34100215

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Cardiovascular diseases are the leading cause of mortality in end-stage renal disease (ESRD) patients, especially those receiving hemodialysis (HD) therapy. HD has many side effects that are related to patients' hearts, such as recurrent myocardial ischemia and global or segmental left-ventricular dysfunction, which is associated with intradialytic hypotension, long-term loss of systolic function, and high incidence of cardiovascular events and death. Systematic exercise training has a beneficial effect on measures of cardiovascular fitness and reducing cardiovascular risk factors in ESRD. Whether there is an acute benefit of exercise during HD on left-ventricular function is not well known. The current study aimed to investigate whether a single bout of hybrid (aerobic and resistance) intradialytic exercise could affect left-ventricular function during HD sessions. METHODS: Twenty-one exercise naïve and clinically stable HD patients participated in the study. All participants completed two different HD trials on two different days, separated by 1 week: (1) standard HD and (2) HD including a single bout of hybrid intradialytic exercise. Hybrid intradialytic training included the usual intradialytic cycling followed by resistance training using elastic bands and dumbbells. Echocardiographic assessment of left-ventricular function was completed before HD, half an hour before the end of HD, and 30 min after the end of HD. RESULTS: Cohort data for left-ventricular function indices were not different between trials and did not change across time in either the standard HD or HD plus exercise trial. Cohort data for the change in ejection fraction from baseline to during HD did mask considerable inter-individual variability (HD - 0 ± 15; HD plus exercise (- 2 ± 20). Despite this, the variability was not mediated by the addition of intradialytic hybrid exercise. CONCLUSION: A single bout of hybrid intradialytic exercise did not affect left-ventricular function during the HD therapy. It is important to determine whether chronic exercise training could beneficially affect left-ventricular function abnormalities often observed during the HD therapy. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: The study is registered at ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT01721551) as a clinical trial.


Subject(s)
Exercise Therapy , Renal Dialysis , Ventricular Function, Left/physiology , Adult , Aged , Cross-Over Studies , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged
9.
Am J Obstet Gynecol ; 226(6): 817.e1-817.e9, 2022 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34902319

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The cost of cancer care is high and rising. Evidence of increased patient cost burden is prevalent in the medical literature and has been defined as "financial toxicity," the financial hardship and financial concerns experienced by patients because of a disease and its related treatments. With targeted therapies and growing out-of-pocket costs, patient financial toxicity is a growing concern among patients with gynecologic cancer. OBJECTIVE: This study aimed to determine the prevalence of financial toxicity and identify its risk factors in patients with gynecologic cancer treated at a large cancer center using objective data. STUDY DESIGN: Using institutional databases, we identified patients with gynecologic cancer treated from January 2016 to December 2018. Patients with a preinvasive disease were excluded. Financial toxicity was defined according to institutionally derived metrics as the presence of ≥1 of the following: ≥2 bills sent to collections, application or granting of a payment plan, settlement, bankruptcy, financial assistance program enrollment, or a finance-related social work visit. Clinical characteristics were gathered using a 2-year look-back from the time of the first financial toxicity event or a randomly selected treatment date for those not experiencing toxicity. Risk factors were assessed using chi-squared tests. All significant variables on univariate analysis were included in the logistic regression model. RESULTS: Of the 4655 patients included in the analysis, 1155 (25%) experienced financial toxicity. In the univariate analysis, cervical cancer (35%), stage 3 or 4 disease (24% and 30%, respectively), younger age (35% for age <30 years), nonpartnered marital status (31%), Black (45%) or Hispanic (37%) race and ethnicity, self-pay (48%) or commercial insurance (30%), clinical trial participation (31%), more imaging studies (39% for ≥9), ≥1 emergency department visit (36%), longer inpatient stays (36% for ≥20 days), and more outpatient clinician visits (41% for ≥20 visits) were significantly associated with financial toxicity (P<.01). In multivariate analysis, younger age, nonpartnered marital status, Black and Hispanic race and ethnicity, commercial insurance, more imaging studies, and more outpatient physician visits were significantly associated with financial toxicity. CONCLUSION: Financial toxicity is an increasing problem for patients with gynecologic cancer. Our analysis, using objective measures of financial toxicity, has suggested that demographic factors and healthcare utilization metrics may be used to proactively identify at-risk patients for financial toxicity.


Subject(s)
Financial Stress , Genital Neoplasms, Female , Adult , Female , Genital Neoplasms, Female/therapy , Health Expenditures , Humans , Patient Acceptance of Health Care , Risk Factors
10.
Sci Rep ; 11(1): 21912, 2021 11 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34753967

ABSTRACT

The ongoing novel coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic has resulted in the enforcement of national public health safety measures including precautionary behaviours such as border closures, movement restrictions, total or partial lockdowns, social distancing, and face mask mandates in order to reduce the spread of this disease. The current study uses affective priming, an indirect behavioural measure of implicit attitude, to evaluate COVID-19 attitudes. Explicitly, participants rated their overall risk perception associated with contracting COVID-19 significantly lower compared to their perception of necessary precautions and overall adherence to public health measures. During baseline trials, participants explicitly rated COVID-19 affiliated words as unpleasant, similar to traditional unpleasant word stimuli. Despite rating the COVID-19 affiliated words as unpleasant, affective priming was not observed for congruent prime-target COVID-19 affiliated word pairs when compared to congruent prime-target pleasant and unpleasant words. Overall, these results provide quantitative evidence that COVID-19 affiliated words do not invoke the same implicit attitude response as traditional pleasant and unpleasant word stimuli, despite conscious explicit rating of the COVID-19 words as unpleasant. This reduction in unpleasant attitude towards COVID-19 related words may contribute towards decreased fear-related behaviours and increased incidences of risky-behaviour facilitating the movement of the virus.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Adolescent , Adult , Communicable Disease Control , Emotions , Humans , Male , Young Adult
11.
Int Urol Nephrol ; 53(4): 771-784, 2021 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33387217

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: Hemodialysis (HD) patients suffer from generalized weakness, exercise intolerance and muscle atrophy, all leading to generalized fatigue and lack of energy. HD patients spend at least 50% of their time in a functionally "switch off" mode with their fatigue sensations reaching a peak in the immediate hours after the dialysis session. The purpose of the current study was to assess the effectiveness of a nine-month hybrid intradialytic exercise program on fatigue symptoms occurring during and after hemodialysis session. METHODS: Twenty stable hemodialysis patients were included in the study (59 ± 13.7 years; 16 males). All patients completed a 9-month supervised exercise training program composed of both aerobic cycling and resistance training during HD. Aspects related to physical and generalized fatigue were assessed via validated questionnaires, while physical performance was assessed by a battery of tests, before and after the intervention period. RESULTS: Exercise capacity and physical performance were increased by an average of 65 and 40%, respectively. Patients reported feeling better during post-dialysis hours in question 1 (p = 0.000), question 3 (p = 0.009) and question 4 (p = 0.003) after the 9-month intervention. In addition, exercise training improved scores in cognitive function (p = 0.037), vitality (p = 0.05), depression (p = 0.000) and fatigue (p = 0.039). CONCLUSION: The present study showed that a 9-month hybrid (aerobic + resistance) exercise training program improved symptoms of post-dialysis fatigue and overall general perception of fatigue. Hybrid exercise training is a safe and effective non-pharmacological approach to ameliorate fatigue symptoms in HD patients. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: Trial registration number The study is registered at ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT01721551, 2012) as a clinical trial.


Subject(s)
Exercise Therapy , Exercise , Fatigue/prevention & control , Renal Dialysis , Aged , Fatigue/etiology , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Renal Dialysis/adverse effects , Time Factors
12.
Int Urol Nephrol ; 52(9): 1771-1778, 2020 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32797383

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: Limited data exist regarding the effects of detraining on functional capacity and quality of life (QoL) in the hemodialysis population. The aim of the current study was to assess whether the discontinuation from a systematic intradialytic exercise training program will affect aspects of health-related QoL and functional capacity in hemodialysis patients. METHODS: Seventeen hemodialysis patients (12 Males/5 Females, age 60.8 ± 13.6 year) participated in this study. Patients were assessed for functional capacity using various functional capacity tests while QoL, daily sleepiness, sleep quality, depression and fatigue were assessed using validated questionnaires at the end of a 12-month aerobic exercise program and after 12 months of detraining. RESULTS: The detraining significantly reduced patients' QoL score by 20% (P = 0.01). More affected were aspects related to the physical component summary of the QoL (P < 0.001) rather than those related to the mental one (P = 0.096). In addition, the performance in the functional capacity tests was reduced (P < 0.05), while sleep quality (P = 0.020) and daily sleepiness scores (P = 0.006) were significantly worse after the detraining period. Depressive symptoms (P = 0.214) and the level of fatigue (P = 0.163) did not change significantly. CONCLUSIONS: Detraining has a detrimental effect in patients' QoL, functional capacity and sleep quality. The affected physical health contributed significantly to the lower QoL score. It is crucial for the chronic disease patients, even during emergencies such as lockdowns and restrictions in activities to maintain a minimum level of activity to preserve some of the acquired benefits and maintain their health status.


Subject(s)
Exercise , Kidney Failure, Chronic/physiopathology , Kidney Failure, Chronic/therapy , Quality of Life , Renal Dialysis , Aged , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Time Factors
13.
Front Neurosci ; 14: 529, 2020.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32508588

ABSTRACT

Blindness caused by early vision loss results in complete visual deprivation and subsequent changes in the use of the remaining intact senses. We have also observed adaptive plasticity in the case of partial visual deprivation. The removal of one eye, through unilateral eye enucleation, results in partial visual deprivation and is a unique model for examining the consequences of the loss of binocularity. Partial deprivation of the visual system from the loss of one eye early in life results in behavioral and structural changes in the remaining senses, namely auditory and audiovisual systems. In the current study we use functional neuroimaging data to relate function and behavior of the audiovisual system in this rare patient group compared to controls viewing binocularly or with one eye patched. In Experiment 1, a whole brain analysis compared common regions of cortical activation between groups, for auditory, visual and audiovisual stimuli. People with one eye demonstrated a trend for increased activation for low-level audiovisual stimuli compared to patched viewing controls but did not differ from binocular viewing controls. In Experiment 2, a region of interest (ROI) analysis for auditory, visual, audiovisual and illusory McGurk stimuli revealed that people with one eye had an increased trend for left hemisphere audiovisual activation for McGurk stimuli compared to binocular viewing controls. This aligns with current behavioral analysis and previous research showing reduced McGurk Effect in people with one eye. Furthermore, there is no evidence of a correlation between behavioral performance on the McGurk Effect task and functional activation. Together with previous behavioral work, these functional data contribute to the broader understanding of cross-sensory effects of early sensory deprivation from eye enucleation. Overall, these results contribute to a better understanding of the sensory deficits experienced by people with one eye, as well as, the relationship between behavior, structure and function in order to better predict the outcome of early partial visual deafferentation.

14.
Integr Environ Assess Manag ; 16(5): 669-675, 2020 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32196962

ABSTRACT

The failure of the Fundão dam in Brazil spilled alkaline contaminated sediments (pH ~8) into the Doce River basin. The contaminated sediments had high levels of ether amine (6 mg/kg) and Na (54 mg/kg) in relation to those in preserved sites. In the present study, a riparian forest was established over contaminated sediment using 2 main remediation strategies: phytoremediation with species native to the Atlantic forest and previously selected for their tolerance to sediment toxicity, and physicochemical remediation by incorporating organic matter (OM) into the sediment. In the experimental site (ES), the tolerant native woody species were cultivated in 2 treatments: T1, scraping of the sediments and incorporation of the OM, and T2, nonmanaged sediment and superficial deposition of the OM. The results were compared with the findings from a degraded site (DS), which was reached by the contaminated sediments but lacked vegetation, and a preserved site (PS), which was composed of a fragment of preserved Atlantic forest. Six months after transplanting, the plants from T1 showed a better height growth performance and survival index in relation to those from T2. Furthermore, T1 showed a significant decline in the pH (to ~6) concomitant with a reduction in the ether amine and Na contents (to ~0.4 mg/kg and 23 mg/kg, respectively). There was an improvement in the soil fertility and total microbial biomass in both treatments, especially in T1. Therefore, the adopted phyto- and physicochemical remediation procedures are recommended to reclaim zones reached by dam tailings containing Na and ether amine. Integr Environ Assess Manag 2020;16:669-675. © 2020 SETAC.


A ruptura da Barragen de Fundão em Mariana (Brazil) lançou um sedimento alcalino (pH ~8) ao longo da Bacia do Rio Doce. O sedimento contaminado apresentou altos níveis de éter-amina (6 mg/kg) e Na (54 mg/kg) em relação aqueles encontrados na área preservada. No presente estudo, uma floresta riparia foi estabelecida sobre este sedimento contaminado usando-se 2 estratégias de remediação: Fito-remediação com espécies nativas da Mata Atlântica, previamente selecionadas pela tolerância à toxicidade do sedimento, e remediação físico química pela raspagem superficial do sedimento e aplicação de matéria orgânica (OM). Na área experimental (ES) as espécies arbóreas da mata Atlântica selecionadas foram plantadas sob 2 tratamentos: T1, Raspagem superficial do sedimento e incorporação da OM, e T2, sedimento não foi manejado e recebeu aplicação superficial de OM. Os resultados foram comparados com aqueles obtidos na área degradada (DS), atingida pelo sedimento contaminado e sem vegetação, assim como com aqueles obtidos em uma área preservada (PS), constituída de um fragmento de Mata Atlântica. Após seis meses do plantio as plantas de T1 apresentaram um maior crescimento em altura e maior taxa de sobrevivência que as plantas de T2. Além disto ES, especialmente T1 mostraram um significante declínio do pH (~6.0) e concomitante redução nos teores de éter-amina e Na (~0.4 mg/kg e 23 mg/kg, respectivamente). Os procedimentos de remediação permitiram também um significativo aumento da fertilidade química e da biomassa microbiana do sedimento em ambos os tratamentos, especialmente em T1. Assim, os procedimentos de remediação físico-quimica e fitoremediação aqui adotados, são recomendados para recuperar as zonas atingidas pelo rejeito da barragem contaminado com sódio e éter-amina. Integr Environ Assess Manag 2020;16:669-675.


Subject(s)
Rivers , Soil , Biodegradation, Environmental , Brazil , Forests
15.
World J Emerg Surg ; 15(1): 18, 2020 03 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32156286

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Motorcyclists are often victims of road traffic incidents. Though elderly patients seem to have worse survival outcomes and sustain more severe injuries than younger patients, concordance in the literature for this does not exist. The aim of the study is to evaluate the impact of age and injury severity on the mortality of patients undergoing motorcycle trauma. METHODS: Data of 1725 patients consecutively admitted to our Trauma Center were selected from 2002 to 2016 and retrospectively analyzed. The sample was divided into three age groups: ≤ 17 years, 18-54 years, and ≥ 55 years. Mortality rates were analyzed for the overall population and patients with Injury Severity Score (ISS) ≥ 25. Differences in survival among age groups were evaluated with log-rank test, and multivariate logistic regression models were created to identify independent predictors of mortality. RESULTS: A lower survival rate was detected in patients older than 55 years (83.6% vs 94.7%, p = 0.049) and in those sustaining critical injuries (ISS ≥ 25, 61% vs 83%, p = 0.021). Age (p = 0.027, OR 1.03), ISS (p < 0.001, OR 1.09), and Revised Trauma Score (RTS) (p < 0.001, OR 0.47) resulted as independent predictors of death. Multivariate analysis identified head (p < 0.001, OR 2.04), chest (p < 0.001, OR 1.54), abdominal (p < 0.001, OR 1.37), and pelvic (p = 0.014, OR 1.26) injuries as independent risk factors related to mortality as well. Compared to the theoretical probability of survival, patients of all age groups showed a survival advantage when managed at a level I trauma center. CONCLUSIONS: We detected anatomical injury distributions and mortality rates among three age groups. Patients aging more than 55 years had an increased risk of death, with a prevalence of severe chest injuries, while younger patients sustained more severe head trauma. Age represented an independent predictor of death. Management of these patients at a level I trauma center may lead to improved outcomes.


Subject(s)
Accidents, Traffic/mortality , Motorcycles , Adolescent , Adult , Age Factors , Female , Hospital Mortality , Humans , Injury Severity Score , Italy , Male , Middle Aged , Registries , Retrospective Studies , Survival Analysis , Trauma Centers
16.
Neuroimage Clin ; 24: 102006, 2019.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31622842

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: Similar to early blindness, monocular enucleation (the removal of one eye) early in life results in crossmodal behavioral and morphological adaptations. Previously it has been shown that partial visual deprivation from early monocular enucleation results in structural white matter changes throughout the visual system (Wong et al., 2018). The current study investigated structural white matter of the auditory system in adults who have undergone early monocular enucleation compared to binocular control participants. METHODS: We reconstructed four auditory and audiovisual tracts of interest using probabilistic tractography and compared microstructural properties of these tracts to binocularly intact controls using standard diffusion indices. RESULTS: Although both groups demonstrated asymmetries in indices in intrahemispheric tracts, monocular enucleation participants showed asymmetries opposite to control participants in the auditory and A1-V1 tracts. Monocular enucleation participants also demonstrated significantly lower fractional anisotropy in the audiovisual projections contralateral to the enucleated eye relative to control participants. CONCLUSIONS: Partial vision loss from early monocular enucleation results in altered structural connectivity that extends into the auditory system, beyond tracts primarily dedicated to vision.


Subject(s)
Auditory Pathways/pathology , Eye Enucleation/adverse effects , Vision, Monocular , Visual Pathways/pathology , White Matter/pathology , Adolescent , Adult , Atrophy/diagnostic imaging , Atrophy/pathology , Auditory Pathways/diagnostic imaging , Diffusion Tensor Imaging , Female , Humans , Male , Retinal Neoplasms/surgery , Retinoblastoma/surgery , Visual Pathways/diagnostic imaging , White Matter/diagnostic imaging , Young Adult
17.
Postgrad Med ; 131(7): 539-545, 2019 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31482757

ABSTRACT

Objectives: Cardiac autonomic nervous system (ANS) dysfunction is a common feature in patients receiving hemodialysis (HD) therapy, whilst is associated with an increased risk of ventricular arrhythmias and sudden cardiac death. The aim of this study is to investigate and compare the hemodynamic changes and responses of ANS function in HD patients using pupillometry and Heart Rate Variability (HRV) parameters. Methods: Sixteen chronic kidney diseases (CKD) patients receiving HD (52.18 ± 17.7 years) underwent both pupillometric measurements using a portable handheld pupil-measuring device and standard HRV analysis pre HD, every hour and 30 min post-HD session under two different scenarios: at rest while the patient resting at HD bed and when the patient performed a single bout of intradialytic aerobic exercise lasting for 45 min during the second hour of the HD therapy. Results: No significant changes in ANS values were observed in neither of the pupillometric and the HRV values pre HD, for each hour and post-HD session. HRV parameters were significantly correlated with pupillometric parameters at pre HD and immediately after the single bout of intradialytic exercise. ANS activity did not differ during the conventional HD session and during the session included intradialytic exercise. Moreover, sympatho-vagal balance indices deriving from pupillometric assessment showed beneficial changes after the exercise event. Conclusion: Pupillometry is a promising and robust technique with fewer artifacts compared to HRV especially in studies involving exercise sessions. Thus, pupillometry can be used as a complementary tool in the evaluation of cardiac autonomic dysfunction.


Subject(s)
Autonomic Nervous System Diseases/physiopathology , Exercise/physiology , Heart Rate/physiology , Pupil/physiology , Renal Dialysis , Renal Insufficiency, Chronic/therapy , Adult , Aged , Autonomic Nervous System/physiopathology , Humans , Middle Aged , Renal Insufficiency, Chronic/physiopathology
18.
Vision Res ; 157: 274-281, 2019 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29567099

ABSTRACT

Person identification is essential for everyday social interactions. We quickly identify people from cues such as a person's face or the sound of their voice. A change in sensory input, such as losing one's vision, can alter how one uses sensory information. We asked how people with only one eye, who have had reduced visual input during postnatal maturation of the visual system, use faces and voices for person identity recognition. We used an old/new paradigm to investigate unimodal (visual or auditory) and bimodal (audiovisual) identity recognition of people (face, voice and face-voice) and a control category, objects (car, horn and car-horn). Participants learned the identity of 10 pairs of faces and voices (Experiment 1) and 10 cars and horns (Experiment 2) and were asked to identify the learned face/voice or car/horn among 20 distractors. People with one eye were more sensitive to voice identification compared to controls viewing binocularly or with an eye-patch. However, both people with one eye and eye-patched viewing controls use combined audiovisual information for person identification more equally than binocular viewing controls, who favour vision. People with one eye were no different from controls at object identification. The observed visual dominance for binocular controls is larger for person compared to object identification, indicating that faces (vision) play a larger role in person identification and that person identity processing is unique from that for objects. People with long-term visual deprivation from the loss of one eye may have adaptive strategies, such as placing less reliance on vision to achieve intact performance, particularly for face processing.


Subject(s)
Auditory Perception/physiology , Facial Recognition/physiology , Recognition, Psychology/physiology , Sensory Deprivation/physiology , Voice , Adult , Analysis of Variance , Eye Enucleation , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Young Adult
19.
Mol Cancer Ther ; 17(12): 2575-2585, 2018 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30266802

ABSTRACT

Aurora kinase A and B have essential and non-overlapping roles in mitosis, with elevated expression in a subset of human cancers, including acute myeloid leukemia (AML). In this study, pan-aurora kinase inhibitor (AKI) AMG 900 distinguishes itself as an anti-leukemic agent that is more uniformly potent against a panel of AML cell lines than are isoform-selective AKIs and classic AML drugs. AMG 900 inhibited AML cell growth by inducing polyploidization and/or apoptosis. AMG 900 and aurora-B-selective inhibitor AZD1152-hQPA showed comparable cellular effects on AML lines that do not harbor a FLT3-ITD mutation. AMG 900 was active against P-glycoprotein-expressing AML cells resistant to AZD1152-hQPA and was effective at inducing expression of megakaryocyte-lineage markers (CD41, CD42) on human CHRF-288-11 cells and mouse Jak2 V617F cells. In MOLM-13 cells, inhibition of p-histone H3 by AMG 900 was associated with polyploidy, extra centrosomes, accumulation of p53 protein, apoptosis, and cleavage of Bcl-2 protein. Co-administration of cytarabine (Ara-C) with AMG 900 potentiated cell killing in a subset of AML lines, with evidence of attenuated polyploidization. AMG 900 inhibited the proliferation of primary human bone marrow cells in culture, with a better proliferation recovery profile relative to classic antimitotic drug docetaxel. In vivo, AMG 900 significantly reduced tumor burden in a systemic MOLM-13 xenograft model where we demonstrate the utility of 3'-deoxy-3'-18F-fluorothymidine [18F]FLT positron emission tomographic (PET)-CT imaging to measure the antiproliferative effects of AMG 900 in skeletal tissues in mice.


Subject(s)
Aurora Kinases/antagonists & inhibitors , Leukemia, Myeloid, Acute/pathology , Mitosis/drug effects , Phthalazines/pharmacology , Animals , Apoptosis/drug effects , Aurora Kinases/metabolism , Cell Cycle Checkpoints/drug effects , Cell Differentiation/drug effects , Cell Line, Tumor , Cell Proliferation/drug effects , Female , G1 Phase/drug effects , Humans , Megakaryocytes/drug effects , Megakaryocytes/metabolism , Megakaryocytes/pathology , Mice , Organophosphates/pharmacology , Polyploidy , Protein Isoforms/metabolism , Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-bcl-2/metabolism , Quinazolines/pharmacology , Tumor Burden , Tumor Suppressor Protein p53/metabolism , Xenograft Model Antitumor Assays
20.
Exp Brain Res ; 236(11): 2877-2885, 2018 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30062442

ABSTRACT

Passive rotation has been shown to alter temporal-order judgments for tactile stimuli delivered to the hands giving an advantage to the leading hand. Here we measure thresholds for detecting stimulus onset asynchrony for touches on the hands during tilt to the left or right and during galvanic vestibular stimulation (GVS) that evoked illusory tilt. During tilt to one side, the effect of gravity on the otoliths is equivalent to a physical acceleration away from that side (e.g., tilt left is equivalent to accelerating rightwards). We therefore predicted a "leading hand advantage" for the hand opposite to the tilt direction. Thresholds for detecting asynchronicity for left-hand-first and right-hand-first touches (defined as correct detection 75% of the time) were measured separately using interleaved adaptive staircases for 15 participants. For both physical and illusory tilt there was a temporal advantage for stimuli presented to the hand contralateral to the tilt-equivalent to the "leading hand" during passive rotation. That is, there was a temporal advantage for the upward hand (for physical tilt) and for the anodal-side hand (for illusory tilt caused by GVS). These results are discussed in terms of attention and direct sensory components evoking the "leading hand" bias. These findings add to the emerging understanding of the pervasive role of vestibular activity in many aspects of cognitive processing.


Subject(s)
Touch Perception/physiology , Touch/physiology , Vestibule, Labyrinth/physiology , Adolescent , Adult , Attention/physiology , Female , Functional Laterality/physiology , Humans , Male , Rotation , Young Adult
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