997 resultados para Normotensive Int
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Urotensin-II controls ion/water homeostasis in fish and vascular tone in rodents. We hypothesised that common genetic variants in urotensin-II pathway genes are associated with human blood pressure or renal function. We performed family-based analysis of association between blood pressure, glomerular filtration and genes of the urotensin-II pathway (urotensin-II, urotensin-II related peptide, urotensin-II receptor) saturated with 28 tagging single nucleotide polymorphisms in 2024 individuals from 520 families; followed by an independent replication in 420 families and 7545 unrelated subjects. The expression studies of the urotensin-II pathway were carried out in 97 human kidneys. Phylogenetic evolutionary analysis was conducted in 17 vertebrate species. One single nucleotide polymorphism (rs531485 in urotensin-II gene) was associated with adjusted estimated glomerular filtration rate in the discovery cohort (p = 0.0005). It showed no association with estimated glomerular filtration rate in the combined replication resource of 8724 subjects from 6 populations. Expression of urotensin-II and its receptor showed strong linear correlation (r = 0.86, p<0.0001). There was no difference in renal expression of urotensin-II system between hypertensive and normotensive subjects. Evolutionary analysis revealed accumulation of mutations in urotensin-II since the divergence of primates and weaker conservation of urotensin-II receptor in primates than in lower vertebrates. Our data suggest that urotensin-II system genes are unlikely to play a major role in genetic control of human blood pressure or renal function. The signatures of evolutionary forces acting on urotensin-II system indicate that it may have evolved towards loss of function since the divergence of primates.
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Neuropeptide Y (NPY) is a peptide with vasoconstrictor properties known to be present in the central nervous system as well as in sympathetic nerve endings and the adrenal medulla. The purposes of this study were to investigate in normotensive conscious rats the effects of nonpressor doses of NPY on cardiac output and regional blood flow distribution (using radiolabeled microspheres) as well as on plasma renin activity, plasma catecholamine and vasopressin levels. NPY (0.1 microgram/min) infused i.v. for 30 min modified neither blood pressure nor heart rate. Cardiac index was at comparable levels in NPY- as in vehicle-treated rats (17.7 +/- 1.6, n = 8, vs. 21.3 +/- 0.9 ml/min/100 g, n = 8, mean +/- S.E.M.). There was no significant difference in regional blood flow distribution between the two groups of rats, except for the large intestine (0.42 +/- 0.06 vs. 0.71 +/- 0.1 ml/min/g in NPY- and vehicle-treated rats, respectively, P less than .05). Basal plasma renin activity and catecholamine levels were not modified by NPY whereas plasma vasopressin levels were lower (P less than .05) in rats given NPY (0.76 +/- 0.3 pg/ml, n = 8) than in those having received the vehicle (2.2 +/- 0.4 pg/ml).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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The research reported in this series of article aimed at (1) automating the search of questioned ink specimens in ink reference collections and (2) at evaluating the strength of ink evidence in a transparent and balanced manner. These aims require that ink samples are analysed in an accurate and reproducible way and that they are compared in an objective and automated way. This latter requirement is due to the large number of comparisons that are necessary in both scenarios. A research programme was designed to (a) develop a standard methodology for analysing ink samples in a reproducible way, (b) comparing automatically and objectively ink samples and (c) evaluate the proposed methodology in forensic contexts. This report focuses on the last of the three stages of the research programme. The calibration and acquisition process and the mathematical comparison algorithms were described in previous papers [C. Neumann, P. Margot, New perspectives in the use of ink evidence in forensic science-Part I: Development of a quality assurance process for forensic ink analysis by HPTLC, Forensic Sci. Int. 185 (2009) 29-37; C. Neumann, P. Margot, New perspectives in the use of ink evidence in forensic science-Part II: Development and testing of mathematical algorithms for the automatic comparison of ink samples analysed by HPTLC, Forensic Sci. Int. 185 (2009) 38-50]. In this paper, the benefits and challenges of the proposed concepts are tested in two forensic contexts: (1) ink identification and (2) ink evidential value assessment. The results show that different algorithms are better suited for different tasks. This research shows that it is possible to build digital ink libraries using the most commonly used ink analytical technique, i.e. high-performance thin layer chromatography, despite its reputation of lacking reproducibility. More importantly, it is possible to assign evidential value to ink evidence in a transparent way using a probabilistic model. It is therefore possible to move away from the traditional subjective approach, which is entirely based on experts' opinion, and which is usually not very informative. While there is room for the improvement, this report demonstrates the significant gains obtained over the traditional subjective approach for the search of ink specimens in ink databases, and the interpretation of their evidential value.
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BACKGROUND: Hypertension and associated disorders are major risk factors for cardiovascular disease. The Lyon hypertensive rat (LH) is a genetically hypertensive strain that exhibits spontaneous and salt-sensitive hypertension, exaggerated proteinuria, high body weight, hyperlipidemia, and elevated insulin-to-glucose ratio. Previous genetic mapping identified quantitative trait loci (QTLs) influencing blood pressure (BP) on rat chromosome 13 (RNO13) in several models of hypertension. METHODS: To study the effects of a single chromosome on the mapped traits, we generated consomic strains by substituting LH RNO13 with that of the normotensive Brown Norway (BN) strain (LH-13BN) and reciprocal consomics by substituting a BN RNO13 with that of LH (BN-13LH). These reciprocal consomic strains, as well as the two parental strains were characterized for BP, metabolic and morphological parameters. RESULTS: Compared with LH parents, LH-13BN rats showed decreased mean BP (up to -24 mmHg on 2% NaCl in the drinking water), urine proteins and lipids, and increased body weight. Differences between BN-13LH and BN rats were much smaller than those observed between LH-13BN and LH rats, demonstrating the effects of the highly resistant BN genome background. Plasma renin activity was not affected by the substitution of RNO13, despite the significant BP differences. CONCLUSION: The present work demonstrates that RNO13 is a determinant of BP, proteinuria, and plasma lipids in the LH rat. The distinct phenotypic differences between the consomic LH-13BN and the LH make it a powerful model to determine genes and pathways leading to these risk factors for cardiovascular and renal disease.
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BACKGROUND: Controversy exists regarding the usefulness of troponin testing for the risk stratification of patients with acute pulmonary embolism (PE). We conducted an updated systematic review and a metaanalysis of troponin-based risk stratification of normotensive patients with acute symptomatic PE. The sources of our data were publications listed in Medline and Embase from 1980 through April 2008 and a review of cited references in those publications. METHODS: We included all studies that estimated the relation between troponin levels and the incidence of all-cause mortality in normotensive patients with acute symptomatic PE. Two reviewers independently abstracted data and assessed study quality. From the literature search, 596 publications were screened. Nine studies that consisted of 1,366 normotensive patients with acute symptomatic PE were deemed eligible. Pooled results showed that elevated troponin levels were associated with a 4.26-fold increased odds of overall mortality (95% CI, 2.13 to 8.50; heterogeneity chi(2) = 12.64; degrees of freedom = 8; p = 0.125). Summary receiver operating characteristic curve analysis showed a relationship between the sensitivity and specificity of troponin levels to predict overall mortality (Spearman rank correlation coefficient = 0.68; p = 0.046). Pooled likelihood ratios (LRs) were not extreme (negative LR, 0.59 [95% CI, 0.39 to 0.88]; positive LR, 2.26 [95% CI, 1.66 to 3.07]). The Begg rank correlation method did not detect evidence of publication bias. CONCLUSIONS: The results of this metaanalysis indicate that elevated troponin levels do not adequately discern normotensive patients with acute symptomatic PE who are at high risk for death from those who are at low risk for death.
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This chapter describes the profile of the HIA, provides insight into the process and gives an example of how political decisions may be made on behalf of a concerned population through an HIA approach. [Introduction p. 284]
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Avant même d'entamer ma recherche de sujet pour le travail de maîtrise, j'avais déjà une certitude: je souhaitais choisir un thème qui m'intéressait, certes, mais surtout qui arriverait à me passionner, de façon à pouvoir y mettre toute mon énergie. Le choix initial de m'orienter vers ma future spécialité, la psychiatrie, s'est vite confirmé, et un rayon de l'IUMG en particulier a très rapidement attiré ma curiosité: celui de l'ethnopsychiatrie. Pour le choix du thème de ce travail, mon expérience de vie, suite à un mariage mixte, et mon inté- rêt pour les migrants, ont compté, ainsi que les nombreux stages effectués en milieux multicultu- rels et ma probable future orientation en psychiatrie systémique. Face à l'augmentation de la migration et des déplacements des populations et des individus ainsi qu'aux mélanges interculturels qui en résultent, les recherches transculturelles connaissent, depuis quelques années, un développement important: ceci est valable en psychiatrie, en psychopathologie comme en psychothérapie. Pendant mes stages, j'ai remarqué que l'accueil et la prise en charge des personnes étrangères sont une possibilité, pour les professionnels issus de tous les domaines, que ce soit d'un milieu médico- psychologique, social ou éducatif, de remettre en cause les méthodes théoriques et techniques habi- tuelles. En effet, dès que l'on est amené à s'occuper de personnes d'une culture différente de la nô- tre, une partie de nos théories, de notre manière d'intervention clinique et de nos principes de for- mation se trouve forcément remise en question. Le choix de mieux connaître et proposer cette nouvelle discipline par un travail de master s'est basé également en fonction de l'ampleur du parcours historique que l'ethnopsychiatrie nous permettait d'explorer. Par mon travail, j'ai donc essayé de retracer le parcours socio-historique de l'ethnopsychiatrie de- puis ses origines. Cela n'a pas été facile car, même si théoriquement cette discipline s'est dévelop- pée aux alentours du début du XXe siècle, entre l'Europe et les lieux où l'Occident élargissait son domaine, il n y a pas unanimité sur un fondateur précis. Cependant, à plusieurs reprises, Emil Kraepelin est cité comme le fondateur de cette discipline, et c'est pour cette raison que j'ai décidé de focaliser mon attention sur ce grand psychiatre, pour es- sayer de comprendre pourquoi plusieurs auteurs le considèrent comme le père de l'ethnopsychia- trie. Pour ce faire, dans une première partie, ma recherche a donc consisté en une revue de la littérature médicale spécialisée. 4 Je me suis basée tout d'abord sur des sources primaires, en cherchant des articles écrits par Kraepe- lin lui-même, consultant principalement les revues germanophones et anglo-saxonnes susceptibles d'avoir publié ses articles. J'ai également consulté un choix de traités de psychiatrie qu'il a publié. Dans la deuxième partie de mes recherches, j'ai passé en revue la littérature secondaire, en me ba- sant sur des articles qui ont été écrits sur lui par différents auteurs, psychiatres et historiens. La thè- se du Dr. Christoph Bendick a été utilisée en particulier: «Emil Kraepelin's Forschungsreise nach Java», a été un outil précieux pour retrouver aussi bien des récits primaires inédits du psychiatre que maintes sources de littérature secondaire. En analysant cette littérature, j'ai essayé de dégager les principaux thèmes d'évolution entre le XIXe et le XXe siècle, en cherchant en parallèle d'éventuelles répercussions des travaux de psy- chiatrie comparée du médecin allemand sur la postérité, ainsi que sur la psychiatrie moderne. En progressant dans mon travail, je me suis pertinemment posé la question suivante: Kraepelin était-il vraiment le premier qui se fut intéressé à une psychiatrie « exotique » ou, au contraire, l'ambition de comparer la folie occidentale à des peuples et civilisations étrangers avait-elle déjà commencé bien avant lui ? Aurait-il apporté quelque chose de différent dans sa recherche, qui nous permettrait aujourd'hui de lui attribuer le statut de fondateur de l'ethnopsychiatrie ? Afin d'essayer de répondre à cette réflexion, ma méthodologie a consisté en un dépouillement d'une célèbre revue de psychiatrie française, Les annales médico-psychologiques, depuis le premier numéro paru en 1843 jusqu'à l'aube de la deuxième guerre mondiale, à la recherche d'articles trai- tant de la folie exotique. Pour accomplir cette tâche, un article de R. Collignon, psychologue-anthropologue travaillant sur l'histoire de la psychiatrie en Afrique, m'a été d'une aide très précieuse. Ce texte, paru dans la re- vue Psychopathologie Africaine, qui répertorie tous les articles traitants de la psychiatrie coloniale, m'a évité de devoir analyser personnellement toute la collection des A.M.P., ce qui a permis un gain de temps considérable. Une analyse approfondie de cette littérature m'a permis de me forger une idée sur la question et de dégager en même temps, dans la troisième partie du travail, les principaux thèmes d'évolution en ethnopsychiatrie entre le XIXe et le XXe siècle. Finalement, en disséquant les théories d'un autre auteur qui s'est passionné pour l'ethnopsychiatrie, le psychanalyste Georges Devereux, considéré également comme le fondateur de cette discipline, j'ai essayé de comprendre les changements qui se sont opérés dans ce domaine pendant la période qui les sépare. Un regard particulier a été porté sur les possibles répercussions de l'ancienne eth- nopsychiatrie, de connotation coloniale, sur une ethnopsychiatrie plus «moderne», laquelle, suite aux travaux de Devereux, a évolué depuis quelques années surtout dans les domaines des études de la migration et de l'intégration. 5 Cette ethnopsychiatrie contemporaine inclut aujourd'hui des phénomènes uniques attribués à une origine culturelle qui, depuis 1995, sont regroupés dans le DSM IV sous le nom de Culture-Bound Syndromes. Ce travail de master esquisse donc un double mouvement: Europe-Occident, Occident-Europe. Sur ce chemin, aux alentours de 1900, sont posés les premières grandes lignes et récits d'une ethnopsy- chiatrie, née en un premier temps entre l'Europe et ses colonies et ensuite entre l'Europe et le reste du monde.
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OBJECTIVE: Cuff inflation at the arm is known to cause an instantaneous rise in blood pressure, which might be due to the discomfort of the procedure and might interfere with the precision of the blood pressure measurement. In this study, we compared the reactive rise in blood pressure induced by cuff inflation when the cuff was placed at the upper arm level and at the wrist. PARTICIPANTS AND METHODS: The reactive rise in systolic and diastolic blood pressure to cuff inflation was measured in 34 normotensive participants and 34 hypertensive patients. Each participant was equipped with two cuffs, one around the right upper arm (OMRON HEM-CR19, 22-32 cm) and one around the right wrist (OMRON HEM-CS 19, 17-22 cm; Omron Health Care Europe BV, Hoofddorp, The Netherlands). The cuffs were inflated in a double random order (maximal cuff pressure and position of the cuff) with two maximal cuff pressures: 180 and 240 mmHg. The cuffs were linked to an oscillometric device (OMRON HEM 907; Omron Health Care). Simultaneously, blood pressure was measured continuously at the middle finger of the left hand using photoplethysmography. Three measurements were made at each level of blood pressure at the arm and at the wrist, and the sequence of measurements was randomized. RESULTS: In normotensive participants, no significant difference was observed in the reactive rise in blood pressure when the cuff was inflated either at the arm or at the wrist irrespective of the level of cuff inflation. Inflating a cuff at the arm, however, induced a significantly greater rise in blood pressure than inflating it at the wrist in hypertensive participants for both systolic and diastolic pressures (P<0.01), and at both levels of cuff inflation. The blood pressure response to cuff inflation was independent of baseline blood pressure. CONCLUSIONS: The results show that in hypertensive patients, cuff inflation at the wrist produces a smaller reactive rise in blood pressure. The difference between the arm and the wrist is independent of the patient's level of blood pressure.
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A recent publication in this journal [Neumann et al., Forensic Sci. Int. 212 (2011) 32-46] presented the results of a field study that revealed the data provided by the fingermarks not processed in a forensic science laboratory. In their study, the authors were interested in the usefulness of this additional data in order to determine whether such fingermarks would have been worth submitting to the fingermark processing workflow. Taking these ideas as a starting point, this communication here places the fingermark in its context of a case brought before a court, and examines the question of processing or not processing a fingermark from a decision-theoretic point of view. The decision-theoretic framework presented provides an answer to this question in the form of a quantified expression of the expected value of information (EVOI) associated with the processed fingermark, which can then be compared with the cost of processing the mark.
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Nanotechnology has been heralded as a "revolution" in science, for two reasons: first, because of its revolutionary view of the way in which chemicals and elements, such as gold and silver, behave, compared to traditional scientific understanding of their properties. Second, the impact of these new discoveries, as applied to commerce, can transform the daily life of consumer products ranging from sun tan lotions and cosmetics, food packaging and paints and coatings for cars, housing and fabrics, medicine and thousands of industrial processes.9 Beneficial consumer use of nanotechnologies, already in the stream of commerce, improves coatings on inks and paints in everything from food packaging to cars. Additionally, "Nanomedicine" offers the promise of diagnosis and treatment at the molecular level in order to detect and treat presymptomatic disease,10 or to rebuild neurons in Alzheimer's and Parkinson's disease. There is a possibility that severe complications such as stroke or heart attack may be avoided by means of prophylactic treatment of people at risk, and bone regeneration may keep many people active who never expected rehabilitation. Miniaturisation of diagnostic equipment can also reduce the amount of sampling materials required for testing and medical surveillance. Miraculous developments, that sound like science fiction to those people who eagerly anticipate these medical products, combined with the emerging commercial impact of nanotechnology applications to consumer products will reshape civil society - permanently. Thus, everyone within the jurisdiction of the Council of Europe is an end-user of nanotechnology, even without realising that nanotechnology has touched daily life.
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A wide range of modelling algorithms is used by ecologists, conservation practitioners, and others to predict species ranges from point locality data. Unfortunately, the amount of data available is limited for many taxa and regions, making it essential to quantify the sensitivity of these algorithms to sample size. This is the first study to address this need by rigorously evaluating a broad suite of algorithms with independent presence-absence data from multiple species and regions. We evaluated predictions from 12 algorithms for 46 species (from six different regions of the world) at three sample sizes (100, 30, and 10 records). We used data from natural history collections to run the models, and evaluated the quality of model predictions with area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC). With decreasing sample size, model accuracy decreased and variability increased across species and between models. Novel modelling methods that incorporate both interactions between predictor variables and complex response shapes (i.e. GBM, MARS-INT, BRUTO) performed better than most methods at large sample sizes but not at the smallest sample sizes. Other algorithms were much less sensitive to sample size, including an algorithm based on maximum entropy (MAXENT) that had among the best predictive power across all sample sizes. Relative to other algorithms, a distance metric algorithm (DOMAIN) and a genetic algorithm (OM-GARP) had intermediate performance at the largest sample size and among the best performance at the lowest sample size. No algorithm predicted consistently well with small sample size (n < 30) and this should encourage highly conservative use of predictions based on small sample size and restrict their use to exploratory modelling.