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Selected AbstractsPERCEPTION OF TEXTURE AND FLAVOR IN SOUPS BY ELDERLY AND YOUNG SUBJECTSJOURNAL OF TEXTURE STUDIES, Issue 3 2005STEFANIE KREMER ABSTRACT The perception of texture and flavor and their interaction effects in white cream soups were studied in 12 young subjects (18,29 years) and 15 elderly subjects (60,84 years). Eight soup samples (2 × 2 × 2 factorial design) were prepared with or without potato starch, with or without mushroom flavor and with water or with milk. The elderly were less sensitive to changes in the flavor profile of the soups than the young, and their perception of creaminess was reduced. Solvent by flavor interaction effects were independent of age, whereas texture by flavor interaction effects were age specific. Besides the intensities of flavor and texture attributes, pleasantness was also assessed. No indication was found that the contribution of texture and flavor to food appreciation was different for the young and for the elderly in the current study. This study supports the assumption that age-related differences in product perception exist. [source] 4424: Visual acuity loss with healthy ageing: can it be reversed by wavefront laser?ACTA OPHTHALMOLOGICA, Issue 2010D ELLIOTT Purpose To consider what levels of "super acuity" might be achieved by the correction of ocular aberrations in older patients by wavefront corrected ophthalmic surgery. Note that when comparing visual acuity (VA) of older patients with VA in the young, the average optimal monocular visual acuity of a young subject is about 6/4 (decimal VA 1.50) and not the often quoted ,normal' figure of 20/20 (6/6 or 1.0 decimal). Methods Studies that attempted to isolate the cause(s) of deterioration in visual function with age in normal, healthy eyes were reviewed. Results The majority of studies suggest that the deterioration in visual function with age is primarily due to changes within the neural system rather than optical factors. In addition, several studies have shown increases in ocular aberrations with age, but this is only found when comparisons are made across age groups with fixed pupil sizes. When natural pupil sizes are considered, there is no change in aberrations with age because of age-related pupillary miosis Conclusion There appears to be little scope for ocular aberration correction to be used to counteract the loss of vision with age. Reduced vision in patients with cataract is primarily due to increased forward light scatter, and aberrations play a minor role in reducing vision. Intra-ocular lenses (IOLs) should be designed to keep ocular aberrations at a minimum after cataract surgery, but given that vision loss with age appears to be primarily due to neural changes, there seems little scope for IOLs to improve on the vision of phakic subjects under natural pupil conditions. [source] Functional map and age-related differences in the human face: nonimmunologic contact urticaria induced by hexyl nicotinateCONTACT DERMATITIS, Issue 1 2006Slaheddine Marrakchi Variation in human skin reactivity to various irritants in association with age and body region has been reported. Hexyl nicotinate (HN), a lipophilic nicotinate ester, was used to induce nonimmunologic contact urticaria in human volunteers of 2 age groups: 10 young subjects [24,34 years, mean ± standard deviation (SD) 29.8 ± 3.9 years] and 10 older volunteers (66,83 years, mean ± SD 73.6 ± 17.4 years); and to define skin function and potential age-related differences in various facial areas. About 5 mM of HN in ethanol was applied to 8 locations on the face, neck, and volar forearm. A laser Doppler flowmeter was used to determine baseline blood flow and to monitor the skin blood flow changes after HN application. In the contralateral areas, stratum corneum turnover was determined using 5% dansyl chloride in petrolatum. In the young group, the perioral area exhibited the strongest reaction to HN. In the older group, the chin was the most sensitive site. In both the groups, the forearm was the least responsive. The older group demonstrated a stronger reaction than the younger group in 3 sites (forehead, cheek, and nasolabial area). Stratum corneum turnover was slower in the nasolabial area and in the forearm in both age groups, whereas the fastest was in the perioral area and the chin in the younger group and in the chin and the forehead in the older group. Compared to the older group, the younger group showed a slower stratum corneum turnover in the nose and the neck. This study demonstrates the regional and the age-related variability of the stratum corneum turnover and the skin reactions to HN. These observations may help explain some aspects of the cutaneous intolerance in skin care of the face. [source] Measurement delay associated with the Guardian® RT continuous glucose monitoring systemDIABETIC MEDICINE, Issue 1 2010C. Wei Diabet. Med. Abstract Aims, Using compartment modelling, we assessed the time delay between blood glucose and sensor glucose measured by the Guardian® RT continuous glucose monitoring system in young subjects with Type 1 diabetes (T1D). Methods, Twelve children and adolescents with T1D treated by continuous subcutaneous insulin infusion (male/female 7/5; age 13.1 ± 4.2 years; body mass index 21.9 ± 4.3 kg/m2; mean ± sd) were studied over 19 h in a Clinical Research Facility. Guardian® RT was calibrated every 6 h and sensor glucose measured every 5 min. Reference blood glucose was measured every 15 min using a YSI 2300 STAT Plus Analyser. A population compartment model of sensor glucose,blood glucose kinetics was adopted to estimate the time delay, the calibration scale and the calibration shift. Results, The population median of the time delay was 15.8 (interquartile range 15.2, 16.5) min, which was corroborated by correlation analysis between blood glucose and 15-min delayed sensor glucose. The delay has a relatively low intersubject variability, with 95% of individuals predicted to have delays between 10.4 and 24.3 min. Population medians (interquartile range) for the scale and shift are 0.800 (0.777, 0.823) (unitless) and 1.66 (1.47, 1.84) mmol/l, respectively. Conclusions, In young subjects with T1D, the total time delay associated with the Guardian® RT system was approximately 15 min. This is twice that expected on physiological grounds, suggesting a 5- to 10-min delay because of data processing. Delays above 25 min are rarely to be observed. [source] Effects of physiological aging and cerebrovascular risk factors on the hemodynamic response to brain activation: a functional transcranial Doppler studyEUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROLOGY, Issue 2 2007K. Gröschel The influence of the vascular system on the coupling of cerebral blood flow (CBF) to focal brain activation during aging is incompletely understood. Using functional transcranial Doppler sonography and a hypercapnic challenge as a marker of intact cerebral vasoreactivity, we determined CBF velocity (CBFV) changes in response to a language and arithmetic task in a group of 43 healthy young subjects (mean age 32 ± 8.6 years), 18 healthy old subjects (mean age 64 ± 9.8 years) and 29 old subjects with risk factors for an atherosclerosis (mean age 69 ± 8.4 years). Despite a similar performance during the cognitive tasks the CBFV changes were significantly lower in the group of old subjects with vascular risk factors compared with the healthy young and old subjects. Similarly, the CBFV changes during hypercapnia were significantly lower in the group of old subjects with vascular risk factors compared with the healthy young and old subjects. In contrast, both cognitive tasks and hypercapnia produced comparable CBFV changes in the group of healthy young and old subjects. These results suggest that the hemodynamic response to neuronal activation is unaffected by aging alone, whereas the presence of cardiovascular risk factors significantly diminishes the capability of cerebral vessels to react to vasodilating stimuli. [source] Endocrinological aspects of aging: Adaptation to and acceleration of aging by the endocrine systemGERIATRICS & GERONTOLOGY INTERNATIONAL, Issue 1 2006Kiyoshi Hashizume Endocrinological functions of aging subjects deviate from those of young subjects during the aging process. There are two types of deviation expressed as: (i) an adaptation to the aging process; and (ii) an acceleration of aging. The former includes hyperparathyroidism, hyperglycemia and hyperinsulinemia. The latter includes growth hormone resistance and low-T3 syndrome. Excess adaptation promotes the metabolic syndrome. Excess acceleration of aging easily leads subjects to mental disorder and death. In order to prevent subjects from both excess adaptation to and excess acceleration of aging, endocrinological intervention is required. [source] Genetic background of Japanese patients with adult-onset storage diseases in the liverHEPATOLOGY RESEARCH, Issue 10 2007Hisao Hayashi In contrast to primary lysosomal diseases in young subjects, adult-onset liver storage disorders may be explained by non-lysosomal genetic defects. The aim of the present review is to summarize the genetic backgrounds of Japanese patients with hemochromatosis of unknown etiology, Wilson disease of primary copper toxicosis, and the black liver of Dubin,Johnson syndrome. Three patients with middle-age onset hemochromatosis were homozygous for mutations of HJV and two patients were homozygous for mutations of TFR2. Minor genes other than HJV and TFR2 might be involved in Japanese patients. Five of the six patients with Wilson disease were compound heterozygous, while the remaining patient was heterozygous for the mutation in ATP7B responsible for copper toxicosis. Involvement of MURR1 was not proved in the heterozygote of ATP7B. Because of ferroxidase deficiency,most patients had secondary lysosomes shared by cuprothioneins and iron complex. Six patients with Dubin,Johnson syndrome were homozygous or compound heterozygous for mutant MRP2. Despite complex metabolic disorders, the syndrome had a single genetic background. Thus, most patients with adult-onset lysosomal proliferation in the liver had genetic defects in non-lysosomal organelles, named the secondary lysosomal diseases. The proliferating lysosomes in these conditions seemed to be heterogeneous in their matrices. [source] The neural control of bimanual movements in the elderly: Brain regions exhibiting age-related increases in activity, frequency-induced neural modulation, and task-specific compensatory recruitmentHUMAN BRAIN MAPPING, Issue 8 2010Daniel J. Goble Abstract Coordinated hand use is an essential component of many activities of daily living. Although previous studies have demonstrated age-related behavioral deficits in bimanual tasks, studies that assessed the neural basis underlying such declines in function do not exist. In this fMRI study, 16 old and 16 young healthy adults performed bimanual movements varying in coordination complexity (i.e., in-phase, antiphase) and movement frequency (i.e., 45, 60, 75, 90% of critical antiphase speed) demands. Difficulty was normalized on an individual subject basis leading to group performances (measured by phase accuracy/stability) that were matched for young and old subjects. Despite lower overall movement frequency, the old group "overactivated" brain areas compared with the young adults. These regions included the supplementary motor area, higher order feedback processing areas, and regions typically ascribed to cognitive functions (e.g., inferior parietal cortex/dorsolateral prefrontal cortex). Further, age-related increases in activity in the supplementary motor area and left secondary somatosensory cortex showed positive correlations with coordinative ability in the more complex antiphase task, suggesting a compensation mechanism. Lastly, for both old and young subjects, similar modulation of neural activity was seen with increased movement frequency. Overall, these findings demonstrate for the first time that bimanual movements require greater neural resources for old adults in order to match the level of performance seen in younger subjects. Nevertheless, this increase in neural activity does not preclude frequency-induced neural modulations as a function of increased task demand in the elderly. Hum Brain Mapp, 2010. © 2010 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source] Simultaneous measurements of cerebral oxygenation changes during brain activation by near-infrared spectroscopy and functional magnetic resonance imaging in healthy young and elderly subjectsHUMAN BRAIN MAPPING, Issue 1 2002D. Jannet Mehagnoul-Schipper Abstract Near infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) and functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) both allow non-invasive monitoring of cerebral cortical oxygenation responses to various stimuli. To compare these methods in elderly subjects and to determine the effect of age on cortical oxygenation responses, we determined motor-task-related changes in deoxyhemoglobin concentration ([HHb]) over the left motor cortex in six healthy young subjects (age 35 ± 9 years, mean ± SD) and five healthy elderly subjects (age 73 ± 3 years) by NIRS and blood-oxygen-level-dependent (BOLD) fMRI simultaneously. The motor-task consisted of seven cycles of 20-sec periods of contralateral finger-tapping at a rate as fast as possible alternated with 40-sec periods of rest. Time-locked averages over the seven cycles were used for further analysis. Task-related decreases in [HHb] over the motor cortex were measured by NIRS, with maximum changes of ,0.83 ± 0.38 ,mol/L (P < 0.01) for the young and ,0.32 ± 0.17 ,mol/L (P < 0.05) for the elderly subjects. The BOLD-fMRI signal increased over the cortex volume under investigation with NIRS, with maximum changes of 2.11 ± 0.72% (P < 0.01) for the young and 1.75 ± 0.71% (P < 0.01) for the elderly subjects. NIRS and BOLD-fMRI measurements showed good correlation in the young (r = ,0.70, r2 = 0.48, P < 0.001) and elderly subjects (r = ,0.82, r2 = 0.67, P < 0.001). Additionally, NIRS measurements demonstrated age-dependent decreases in task-related cerebral oxygenation responses (P < 0.05), whereas fMRI measurements demonstrated smaller areas of cortical activation in the elderly subjects (P < 0.05). These findings demonstrate that NIRS and fMRI similarly assess cortical oxygenation changes in young subjects and also in elderly subjects. In addition, cortical oxygenation responses to brain activation alter with aging. Hum. Brain Mapping 16:14,23, 2002. © 2002 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source] Dissociation between objective psychomotor impairment and subjective sleepiness after diazepam administration in the aged peopleHUMAN PSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY: CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL, Issue 6 2007Masaru Echizenya Abstract The aim of the present study was to clarify whether subjective sleepiness accurately reflects benzodiazepine-related decline in psychomotor function after taking benzodiazepines (BZPs) in aged people. Subjects were eight healthy, young (mean age, 19.8,years) and seven healthy, older (mean age, 60.9,years) men. Placebo and diazepam (DZP) were administered orally in a single-blind crossover manner to the young subjects (placebo, 5,mg DZP and 10,mg DZP) and to the older subjects (placebo and 5,mg DZP). Plasma drug concentration, choice reaction time (CRT) as an objective measure of psychomotor function, and the Stanford Sleepiness Scale (SSS) as a measure of subjective sleepiness were monitored every 20,min from 1000 until 1600,h, being the drug administered at 1200,h. Pharmacokinetic variables did not differ significantly between the two age groups. DZP at 10,mg in young subjects induced significant increases in both the CRT and SSS score. DZP at 5,mg induced no significant increase in SSS score in either age group but did induce a significant increase in CRT only in the older subjects that matched that in young subjects given 10,mg DZP. The older subjects suffered from dissociation between subjective sleepiness and objective psychomotor impairment under DZP treatment. Such individuals may underestimate the detrimental effects on brain function. Copyright © 2007 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] Exploratory Analysis of Cerebral Oxygen Reserves During Sleep Onset in Older and Younger AdultsJOURNAL OF AMERICAN GERIATRICS SOCIETY, Issue 5 2008Barbara W. Carlson RN OBJECTIVES: To explore differences in cerebral oxygen reserves during sleep in old and young adults. DESIGN: Descriptive cross-sectional study. SETTING: General clinical research center. PARTICIPANTS: Nine old (aged 65,84) and 10 young (aged 21,39) adults. MEASUREMENTS: Subjects were monitored during the first nightly sleep cycle using standard polysomnography, including measures of arterial oxyhemoglobin saturation (SaO2). Changes in regional cerebral oxyhemoglobin saturation (rcSO2) were used to estimate cerebral oxygen reserves. General linear models were used to test group differences in the change in SaO2 and rcSO2 during sleep. RESULTS: Older subjects had lower SaO2 than young subjects before sleep (baseline) (F(1,18)=5.1, P=.04) and during sleep (F(1,18)=10.7, P=.01). During sleep, half of the older subjects and none of the younger ones had SaO2 values below 95%. In addition, the older subjects had more periods of oxygen desaturation (drops in SaO2,4%) (chi-square=24.3, P=.01) and lower SaO2 levels during desaturation (F(1,18)=11.1, P<.01). Although baseline values were similar, rcSO2 decreased during sleep 2.1% in older subjects (F(1,8)=3.8, P=.05) but increased 2.1% during sleep in younger subjects (F(1,9)=4.6, P=.04). When the older subjects awakened from sleep, rcSO2, but not SaO2, returned to baseline; both returned to baseline in younger subjects. CONCLUSION: This exploratory analysis generated the hypothesis that lower SaO2, combined with declines in regional blood flow, contributes to decline in cerebral oxygen reserves during sleep in older subjects. Further study will assess the effects of factors (e.g., medical conditions, subclinical disorders, and sleep architecture) that might account for these differences. [source] Effects of Aging on Hand FunctionJOURNAL OF AMERICAN GERIATRICS SOCIETY, Issue 11 2001Vinoth K. Ranganathan MSE OBJECTIVES: The purpose of this study was to quantify age-induced changes in handgrip and finger-pinch strength, ability to maintain a steady submaximal finger pinch force and pinch posture, speed in relocating small objects with finger grip, and ability to discriminate two identical mechanical stimuli applied to the finger tip. DESIGN: A cross-sectional study. SETTINGS: Greater Cleveland area of Ohio. PARTICIPANTS: Healthy, independent, young (n = 27, range 20,35 years) and older (n = 28, range 65,79 years) subjects. MEASUREMENTS: Handgrip strength, maximum pinch force (MPF), ability to maintain a steady pinch force at three relative force levels (5%, 10%, and 20% MPF) and three absolute force levels (2.5 Newtons (N), 4 N, and 8 N), ability to maintain a precision pinch posture, speed in relocating pegs from a nearby location onto the pegboard, and the shortest distance for discriminating two stimuli were measured in both young and older groups. RESULTS: Compared with young subjects, the older group's handgrip force was 30% weaker (P < .001), MPF was 26% lower (P < .05), and ability to maintain steady submaximal pinch force and a precision pinch posture was significantly less (P < .05). The time taken to relocate the pegs and the distance needed to discriminate two identical stimuli increased significantly with age (P < .01). The decrease in the ability to maintain steady submaximal pinch force was more pronounced in women than men. CONCLUSION: Aging has a degenerative effect on hand function, including declines in hand and finger strength and ability to control submaximal pinch force and maintain a steady precision pinch posture, manual speed, and hand sensation. [source] Ion release in patients with metal-on-metal hip bearings in total joint replacement: A comparison with metal-on-polyethylene bearingsJOURNAL OF BIOMEDICAL MATERIALS RESEARCH, Issue 5 2002L. Savarino Abstract Polyethylene (PE) wear has been shown to be a problem in long-term joint replacement using metal-on-PE bearing. The use of metallic heads articulating with metallic cups could solve this problem: success will be enhanced if wear and corrosion of the articulating surfaces are maintained at a low level. New models with metal-on-metal bearing have been proposed, to be used mainly for young subjects: such coupling seems to have a reduced release, but it is unclear yet if the medium-term corrosion rate is really negligible or, on the contrary, it is significantly higher than in the metal-on-PE bearing. Aim of our study was the comparison of ion release in the serum of two groups of patients who had the same type of stable cementless prosthesis, but different bearing: twenty-six patients with metal-on-metal (Group A) and fifteen patients with metal-on-PE bearing (Group B) were examined. The follow-up was 14-38 months for group A and 18-34 months for group B. The serum concentration of chromium (Cr), cobalt (Co) and molybdenum (Mo) was measured. Twenty-two patients before surgery were used for comparison (Group C). The reference values were obtained from a population of twenty-two healthy subjects (Group D). Our findings indicate that metal-on-metal bearings produce a significantly higher systemic release of cobalt and chromium (ng/ml) when compared with levels found in metal-on-PE, pre-surgery and reference groups. Such a high release should induce to improve the bearing materials or, at least, to study the biologic fate of metal ions and consequently their long-term effects. In such a way a risk-to-benefit ratio for the patient could be established. © 2002 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Biomed Mater Res (Appl Biomater) 63: 467,474, 2002 [source] Stress-induced responses of human skin fibroblasts in vitro reflect human longevityAGING CELL, Issue 5 2009Pim Dekker Summary Unlike various model organisms, cellular responses to stress have not been related to human longevity. We investigated cellular responses to stress in skin fibroblasts that were isolated from young and very old subjects, and from offspring of nonagenarian siblings and their partners, representatives of the general population. Fibroblasts were exposed to rotenone and hyperglycemia and assessed for senescence-associated ,-galactosidase (SA-,-gal) activity by flow cytometry. Apoptosis/cell death was measured with the Annexin-V/PI assay and cell-cycle analysis (Sub-G1 content) and growth potential was determined by the colony formation assay. Compared with fibroblasts from young subjects, baseline SA-,-gal activity was higher in fibroblasts from old subjects (P = 0.004) as were stress-induced increases (rotenone: P < 0.001, hyperglycemia: P = 0.027). For measures of apoptosis/cell death, fibroblasts from old subjects showed higher baseline levels (Annexin V+/PI+ cells: P = 0.040, Sub-G1: P = 0.014) and lower stress-induced increases (Sub-G1: P = 0.018) than fibroblasts from young subjects. Numbers and total size of colonies under nonstressed conditions were higher for fibroblasts from young subjects (P = 0.017 and 0.006, respectively). Baseline levels of SA-,-gal activity and apoptosis/cell death were not different between fibroblasts from offspring and partner. Stress-induced increases were lower for SA-,-gal activity (rotenone: P = 0.064, hyperglycemia: P < 0.001) and higher for apoptosis/cell death (Annexin V+/PI, cells: P = 0.041, Annexin V+/PI+ cells: P = 0.008). Numbers and total size of colonies under nonstressed conditions were higher for fibroblasts from offspring (P = 0.001 and 0.024, respectively) whereas rotenone-induced decreases were lower (P = 0.008 and 0.004, respectively). These data provide strong support for the hypothesis that in vitro cellular responses to stress reflect the propensity for human longevity. [source] Influences of body posture on duration of oral swallowing in normal young adultsJOURNAL OF ORAL REHABILITATION, Issue 6 2007D. INAGAKI Summary, The primary purpose of this study was to determine whether body posture altered the duration of oral swallowing. To answer this question, we recorded electromyograms (EMGs) from the anterior tongue and suprahyoid (SH) muscles as well as laryngeal movement associated with swallowing in nine normal young subjects. The subjects swallowed a test food after receiving a signal while in four randomly set postures: upright, two inclined (60° and 30° to the horizontal), and supine positions. We measured the durations from the start to the peak and from the peak to the end of the integrated tongue and SH EMGs. We assumed that the duration from the start to the peak of the integrated SH EMG would correspond to the duration of oral swallowing. The average duration from the start to the peak of the integrated SH EMG decreased after moving from the upright to the inclined and supine positions. The decrease in the duration was statistically significant and consistent for three experimental sessions. The duration from the start to the peak of the integrated tongue EMG during swallowing tended to decrease after lying down, but not significantly. The postural changes did not affect the remaining four durations. The decrease in the duration of oral swallowing induced by lying down suggests that the gravitational force placed on the test food facilitates the swallowing reflex. Large variation in the tongue activity during swallowing among the subjects can probably be attributed to the lack of a significant decrease in the duration of the tongue activity. [source] A prospective analysis of incidence and severity of quadriceps inhibition in a consecutive sample of 100 patients with complete acute anterior cruciate ligament ruptureJOURNAL OF ORTHOPAEDIC RESEARCH, Issue 5 2004Terese L. Chmielewski Background: Weakness of the quadriceps femoris muscle after anterior cruciate ligament injury and reconstruction has been attributed to incomplete voluntary activation of the muscle. The literature is conflicting on the incidence of incomplete voluntary quadriceps activation after anterior cruciate ligament injury because of differences in testing methods and population biases. The purpose of this study was to systematically examine the incidence and severity of quadriceps voluntary activation failure in both lower extremities after acute anterior cruciate ligament injury. We hypothesized that the incidence of quadriceps inhibition would be higher in the anterior cruciate ligament injured limbs than the uninvolved limbs, that the incidence of inhibition in the anterior cruciate ligament deficient limbs would be larger than in our historical sample of healthy young individuals tested in the same manner and that there would be no difference in inhibition by gender. Study design: Prospective, descriptive. Methods: One hundred consecutive patients with acute anterior cruciate ligament rupture (39 women and 61 men) were tested when range of motion was restored and effusion resolved, an average of 6 weeks after injury. A burst superimposition technique was used to assess quadriceps muscle activation and strength in all patients. Dependent t -tests were used to compare side-to-side differences in quadriceps strength. Independent t -tests were used to compare incidence of activation failure by gender and make comparisons to historical data on young, active individuals. Results: The average involved side quadriceps activation was 0.92, and ranged from 0.60 to 1.00. The incidence of incomplete activation in the involved side quadriceps was 33 per cent and uninvolved side quadriceps was 31 per cent after acute anterior cruciate ligament rupture. The incidence of incomplete activation bilaterally was 21 per cent. There was no difference in incidence of quadriceps inhibition by gender. Conclusion: The incidence of voluntary quadriceps inhibition on the involved side was three times that of uninjured, active young subjects, but the magnitude was not large. The incidence of quadriceps inhibition on the uninjured side was similar to the injured side. Clinical relevance: Both the incidence and magnitude of quadriceps inhibition after ACL rupture are lower than have previously been reported. The conventional wisdom, therefore, that quadriceps inhibition is a significant problem in this population is challenged by the results of this study. Differences between this study and others include sufficient practice to ensure a maximal effort contraction and rigorous inclusion criteria. The findings have implications for strength testing as well as rehabilitation. The quadriceps index, an assessment of the injured side quadriceps strength deficit may be affected by the presence of voluntary activation failure in the uninvolved side. © 2004 Orthopaedic Research Society. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. [source] BOLD Response During Spatial Working Memory in Youth With Heavy Prenatal Alcohol ExposureALCOHOLISM, Issue 12 2009Andrea D. Spadoni Background:, Prenatal alcohol exposure has been consistently linked to neurocognitive deficits and structural brain abnormalities in affected individuals. Structural brain abnormalities observed in regions supporting spatial working memory (SWM) may contribute to observed deficits in visuospatial functioning in youth with fetal alcohol spectrum disorders (FASDs). Methods:, We used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to assess the blood oxygen level dependent (BOLD) response in alcohol-exposed individuals during a SWM task. There were 22 young subjects (aged 10,18 years) with documented histories of heavy prenatal alcohol exposure (ALC, n = 10), and age- and sex-matched controls (CON, n = 12). Subjects performed a SWM task during fMRI that alternated between 2-back location matching (SWM) and simple attention (vigilance) conditions. Results:, Groups did not differ on task accuracy or reaction time to the SWM condition, although CON subjects had faster reaction times during the vigilance condition (617 millisecond vs. 684 millisecond, p = 0.03). Both groups showed similar overall patterns of activation to the SWM condition in expected regions encompassing bilateral dorsolateral prefrontal lobes and parietal areas. However, ALC subjects showed greater BOLD response to the demands of the SWM relative to the vigilance condition in frontal, insular, superior, and middle temporal, occipital, and subcortical regions. CON youth evidenced less increased brain activation to the SWM relative to the vigilance task in these areas (p < 0.05, clusters > 1,664 ,l). These differences remained significant after including Full Scale IQ as a covariate. Similar qualitative results were obtained after subjects taking stimulant medication were excluded from the analysis. Conclusions:, In the context of equivalent performance to a SWM task, the current results suggest that widespread increases in BOLD response in youth with FASDs could either indicate decreased efficiency of relevant brain networks, or serve as a compensatory mechanism for deficiency at neural and/or cognitive levels. In context of existing fMRI evidence of heightened prefrontal activation in response to verbal working memory and inhibition demands, the present findings may indicate that frontal structures are taxed to a greater degree during cognitive demands in individuals with FASDs. [source] PERCEPTION OF TEXTURE AND FLAVOR IN SOUPS BY ELDERLY AND YOUNG SUBJECTSJOURNAL OF TEXTURE STUDIES, Issue 3 2005STEFANIE KREMER ABSTRACT The perception of texture and flavor and their interaction effects in white cream soups were studied in 12 young subjects (18,29 years) and 15 elderly subjects (60,84 years). Eight soup samples (2 × 2 × 2 factorial design) were prepared with or without potato starch, with or without mushroom flavor and with water or with milk. The elderly were less sensitive to changes in the flavor profile of the soups than the young, and their perception of creaminess was reduced. Solvent by flavor interaction effects were independent of age, whereas texture by flavor interaction effects were age specific. Besides the intensities of flavor and texture attributes, pleasantness was also assessed. No indication was found that the contribution of texture and flavor to food appreciation was different for the young and for the elderly in the current study. This study supports the assumption that age-related differences in product perception exist. [source] CHEWING PATTERNS OF VARIOUS TEXTURE FOODS STUDIED BY ELECTROMYOGRAPHY IN YOUNG AND ELDERLY POPULATIONSJOURNAL OF TEXTURE STUDIES, Issue 4 2002KAORU KOHYAMA ABSTRACT The effects of food texture on the chewing patterns of elderly and young people, masticatory recordings using electromyography (EMG) were carried out. Fourteen French adults (mean 29.4 years) and 23 elderly (mean 67.7 years) participated. Six food products (rice, beef, cheese, crispy bread, apple and peanuts) were tested. The chewing pattern of elderly subjects was characterized by a significant increase of number of chews and chewing duration for all foods except rice. Whatever the food type, muscle activity per chew (mean amplitude × burst duration) was lower for elderly than for young subjects. Single chews appeared less effective for food reduction in elderly than in young subjects. This can be partly compensated for by increasing the chewing duration and number of chews. No significant difference was found between both groups of subject for the total amount of EMG activity required prior to swallow whatever the food chewed. [source] Age-related changes in the human thymus studied with scanning electron microscopyMICROSCOPY RESEARCH AND TECHNIQUE, Issue 8 2008Carlo Cavallotti Abstract This investigation describes some morphological, age-related changes in different compartments and cells of the human thymus. Scanning electron microscopic observations were done on human thymus samples obtained from four young and eight elderly patients during thoracic surgery and/or diagnostic biopsy of the thymus, after receiving authorization from the Ethical Committee of our university. The morphological data were submitted to quantitative image analysis so as to obtain quantitative results. Subsequently, the related values were used for statistical analysis. Our findings demonstrate that (1) all thymus compartments (subcapsular spaces, cortical, medullar, thymus microenvironment) contain numerous thymocytes even after the thymus has aged. (2) In older humans, residual thymus lymphoid islets contain, in addition to fatty cells and/or fibrous cells, also the same types of resident and nonresident cells (permanent and moving cells) that are found in young and adult subjects. (3) Endothelial cells of thymus microvessels contain numerous gaps. These gaps are tight in young subjects and become loose with age. (4) Thymocytes, in older subjects, are always found near these loose endothelial gaps of thymus microvessels. (5) While thymus cortical microvessels are provided with pericytes and/or periarteriolar spaces, microvessels of the thymus medullar are free of such spaces. Our morphological and quantitative results lead us to consider the possibility that the thymus fraction of resident and permanent cells (including thymocytes and reticular epithelial cells) is larger in younger subjects compared with older ones. The endothelial loose gaps of thymus microvessels, in older subjects, can allow the bidirectional transit of thymocytes through the wall of the said microvessels. Microsc. Res. Tech., 2008. © 2008 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source] On the compensation of horizontal coma aberrations in young human eyesOPHTHALMIC AND PHYSIOLOGICAL OPTICS, Issue 3 2008Fan Lu Abstract The nature of the compensation of horizontal coma (Z31) between optical elements of the human eye has been studied and the compensative mechanism has been attributed to a passive process linked to angle kappa of the eye. We measured the horizontal coma in the anterior cornea, the whole eye and the internal optics for 221 young subjects. Thirty-three eyes with minimum angle lambda and 53 eyes with relatively large angle lambda were selected from these eyes to test the hypothesis that horizontal coma compensation is linked to angle kappa. Significant horizontal coma in the anterior cornea was observed for the group with minimum angle lambda in both the right (,0.12 ± 0.07 ,m) and left eyes (0.12 ± 0.10 ,m), and this was well compensated by the internal optics so that the level of horizontal coma in the whole eye over a 6-mm pupil size was very low (,0.05 ± 0.07 ,m for OD and 0.02 ± 0.08 ,m for OS). The horizontal coma in the anterior cornea was significantly correlated to the horizontal coma in the internal optics for both the right and the left eye. The results suggest that there is another source of horizontal coma, in addition to that linked to angle kappa, in the anterior cornea, and also a new compensative mechanism to balance the corneal coma, perhaps in the posterior cornea or the lens. [source] The effect of light scattering on multifocal electroretinographyOPHTHALMIC AND PHYSIOLOGICAL OPTICS, Issue 6 2002H. L. Chan Purpose:,Unclear ocular media is a very common condition of older eyes characterized by significant light scattering and image degradation. The multifocal electroretinography (MERG) is a useful objective technique to measure retinal activity but its validity in the presence of cloudy ocular media remains unclear. We tested the MERG under controlled light scattering conditions using a liquid crystal diffuser (LCD) that simulated different degrees of image degradation. Methods:,The MERG were taken from 13 normal young subjects seated behind a LCD set under two conditions: scatter (visual acuity ,6/18) and non-scatter (visual acuity ,6/6). The pupils had been dilated and the eyes were optically corrected for the working distance. The first-order kernel MERG response was analysed. Three subjects underwent MERG measurement with two additional intermediate light scattering levels (i.e. visual acuity ,6/9 and 6/12). Results:,The macular MERG response density was reduced (p < 0.001), but the peripheral MERG response densities were increased (p < 0.001) under the scattering condition. A similar trend was also observed with intermediate degrees of light scattering. Comparing the MERG waveforms without light scattering, a new retinal response was identified with a characteristic latency of about 60 ms (P60), but it was diminished in size under the scattering conditions. Conclusions:,The veiling luminance might have caused the reduction in the macular MERG response and an elevation in the peripheral retina with light scatter. The functional suppression of P60 observed under the influence of light scatter may be related to retinal adaptation. Unclear optical media will affect the interpretation of MERG results. [source] Optimal reading speed in simulated cataract: development of a potential vision testOPHTHALMIC AND PHYSIOLOGICAL OPTICS, Issue 4 2001Bhavesh Patel Summary Previous studies suggest that optimal reading speed is unaffected by cataract, yet is significantly reduced in age-related macular disease. This raises the question of whether a reading speed test could be developed to assess potential vision after cataract surgery. In this study, 20 young subjects, with and without a simulation of dense cataract, read aloud Bailey-Lovie word charts. From the results, critical print size, optimal reading speed and word acuity were calculated. The simulated cataract reduced word acuity and increased the critical print size, yet optimal reading speed remained unchanged. Measurements were also taken with the charts in reversed contrast polarity. Reversing the contrast polarity of the charts improved the word acuity and optimal reading speed with the cataract simulation. The results suggest that optimal reading speed could be used as a potential vision test. Further investigations using patients with cataract and ARMD are required. [source] Basal insulin switch from NPH to glargine in children and adolescents with type 1 diabetesPEDIATRIC DIABETES, Issue 3pt2 2008Minna Päivärinta Background:, Insulin glargine is a long-acting insulin analogue increasingly used instead of neutral protamine Hagedorn (NPH) insulin in young subjects with type 1 diabetes. Objective:, We evaluated the clinical course of diabetes in children and adolescents who were switched from NPH to insulin glargine. Methods:, Between August 2003 and November 2004, a total of 76 subjects were switched to glargine in our clinic, treating 340 children with type 1 diabetes. All the subjects had been receiving insulin NPH, and their serum C-peptide levels had been non-detectable for at least 1 yr. Data were collected retrospectively, and 12,18 months after the change, experiences with glargine were inquired using a questionnaire. Seven subjects (9.2%) discontinued glargine before 12 months, and seven refused to participate. Results:, Data for 62 subjects were analyzed. At the switch (0 months), their mean age was 12.7 yr (range 5.1,17.5), mean duration of diabetes was 6.7 yr (range 1.8,14.3), and mean hemoglobin A1c was (HbA1c) 9.2%. Twelve months later (+12 months), the mean HbA1c remained similar (9.2%), the proportion of long-acting insulin was smaller (47.7 vs. 58.1%; p < 0.001), and the daily insulin dose was lower (0.97 vs. 1.05 IU/kg; p < 0.001). The number of injections was lower at +12 months (17.7% with more than five injections vs. 64.5%; p < 0.001). No differences were seen in weight for height or the number of severe hypoglycemias. Most subjects who continued with glargine for ,12 months considered glargine better than NPH. Conclusions:, A switch to insulin glargine retains a similar glycemic control and does not change the number of severe hypoglycemias. [source] Variability of sleep parameters across multiple laboratory sessions in healthy young subjects: The "very first night effect"PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY, Issue 4 2002José-Luis Lorenzo Many studies have been carried out to assess the variability of sleep parameters. The first night effect is one of the most important factors in this variability and has been extensively studied. However, the readaptation phenomenon when subjects returned to the sleep laboratory after spending a certain period of time at home has been not systematically evaluated. To investigate this phenomenon across multiple sleep laboratory sessions, polysomnographic data from 12 healthy young subjects for 12 nights (three periods each of 4 consecutive nights, with a minimum of 1 month between them) were collected. The first night effect was present only in the first night of the first period ("very first night") and was significant only for REM sleep-related variables. We conclude that the results from the first nights of consecutive periods within a specific protocol with healthy young subjects need not be discarded in subsequent analyses. [source] Serotonergic influences on life-history outcomes in free-ranging male rhesus macaquesAMERICAN JOURNAL OF PRIMATOLOGY, Issue 8 2007Sue Howell Several studies have demonstrated that nonhuman primate males with low cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) levels of the serotonin metabolite 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid (5-HIAA) exhibit antisocial behavior patterns. Included in these deleterious patterns are impulse control deficits associated with violence and premature death. No studies to date have longitudinally studied the long-term outcome of young subjects with low CSF 5-HIAA concentrations as they mature into adults. In this study we examined longitudinal relations among serotonergic and dopaminergic functioning, as reflected in CSF metabolite concentrations, aggression, age at emigration, dominance rank, and mortality in free-ranging rhesus macaque (Macaca mulatta) males. Our results indicate long-term consistency of individual differences in levels of 5-HIAA in CSF in the subject population from the juvenile period of development through adulthood. We found a significant negative correlation between 5-HIAA concentrations measured in juveniles and rates of high-intensity aggression in the same animals as adults. Further, CSF 5-HIAA concentrations were lower in juveniles that died than in animals that survived. For the young animals that migrated there was a positive correlation between CSF 5-HIAA concentration and age at emigration, whereas for the animals that remained in their troop until later in sexual maturity there was a negative correlation between CSF 5-HIAA concentration and age of emigration. After animals emigrated to a new troop, social dominance rank in the new troop was positively correlated with early family social dominance rank, but inversely correlated with juvenile CSF 5-HIAA concentrations. Taken together, our findings suggest that males with low central serotonin levels early in life delay migration and show high levels of violence and premature death, but the males that survive achieve high rank. These findings indicate that longitudinal measures of serotonergic and dopaminergic functioning are predictive of major life-history outcomes in nonhuman primate males. Low concentrations of CSF 5-HIAA are associated with negative life-history patterns characterized by social instability and excessive aggression, and positive life-history patterns characterized by higher dominance rank. Am. J. Primatol. 69:851,865, 2007. © 2007 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source] Exercise prevents age-related decline in nitric-oxide-mediated vasodilator function in cutaneous microvesselsTHE JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY, Issue 14 2008Mark A. Black Ageing is associated with impaired endothelium-derived nitric oxide (NO) function in human microvessels. We investigated the impact of cardiorespiratory fitness and exercise training on physiological and pharmacological NO-mediated microvascular responses in older subjects. NO-mediated vasodilatation was examined in young, older sedentary and older fit subjects who had two microdialysis fibres embedded into the skin on the ventral aspect of the forearm and laser Doppler probes placed over these sites. Both sites were then heated to 42°C, with Ringer solution infused in one probe and N -nitro- l -arginine methyl ester (l -NAME) through the second. In another study, three doses of ACh were infused in the presence or absence of l -NAME in similar subjects. The older sedentary subjects then undertook exercise training, with repeat studies at 12 and 24 weeks. The NO component of the heat-induced rise in cutaneous vascular conductance (CVC) was diminished in the older sedentary subjects after 30 min of prolonged heating at 42°C (26.9 ± 3.9%CVCmax), compared to older fit (46.2 ± 7.0%CVCmax, P < 0.05) and young subjects (41.2 ± 5.2%CVCmax, P < 0.05), whereas exercise training in the older sedentary group enhanced NO-vasodilator function in response to incremental heating (P < 0.05). Similarly, the NO contribution to ACh responses was impaired in the older sedentary versus older fit subjects (low dose 3.2 ± 1.3 versus 6.6 ± 1.3%CVCmax; mid dose 11.4 ± 2.4 versus 21.6 ± 4.5%CVCmax; high dose 35.2 ± 6.0 versus 52.6 ± 7.9%CVCmax, P < 0.05) and training reversed this (12 weeks: 13.7 ± 3.6, 28.9 ± 5.3, 56.1 ± 3.9%CVCmax, P < 0.05). These findings indicate that maintaining a high level of fitness, or undertaking exercise training, prevents age-related decline in indices of physiological and pharmacological microvascular NO-mediated vasodilator function. Since higher levels of NO confer anti-atherogenic benefit, this study has potential implications for the prevention of microvascular dysfunction in humans. [source] Deterioration of the Pharyngo-UES Contractile Reflex in the Elderly ,THE LARYNGOSCOPE, Issue 9 2000Junlong Ren MD Abstract Objectives/Hypothesis Deterioration of aerodigestive tract reflexes such as the esophagoglottal and pharyngoglottal closure reflexes and pharyngeal swallow has been documented in the elderly. However, the effect of aging on the contractile response of the upper esophageal sphincter (UES) to pharyngeal water stimulation has not been studied. The aim of this study was to characterize the pharyngo-UES reflex in the healthy elderly. Methods We studied nine healthy elderly (77 ± 1 y [SD]; four men, five women) and nine healthy young volunteers (26 ± 2 y [SD]; four men, five women). A UES sleeve sensor was used to measure the pressure. We tested pharyngeal stimulation induced by rapid pulse and slow continuous injection of water. Results The volume of water required to stimulate the pharyngo-UES contractile reflex by rapid pulse injection in the elderly (0.5 ± 34 0.1 mL) was significantly higher than that in the young (0.1 ± 0.02 mL) (P < .05). In contrast to young subjects, there was no pressure increase in resting UES pressure observed in the elderly for continuous pharyngeal water infusion. In both young and elderly, the threshold volume for the pharyngo-UES contractile reflex was significantly lower than that for pharyngeal swallows. Conclusions The pharyngo-UES contractile reflex deteriorates with aging. This deterioration is primarily due to abnormalities of the afferent limb of the reflex. [source] Ethnic (Black-White) Contrasts in 24-Hour Heart Rate Variability in Male Adolescents with High and Low Blood Pressure: The Bogalusa Heart StudyANNALS OF NONINVASIVE ELECTROCARDIOLOGY, Issue 3 2000Elaine M. Urbina M.D. Background: Heart rate variability (HRV) has been used to study autonomic effects on the heart. The time-domain measure RMSSD (root mean square of successive differences) represents high frequency (HF) changes in HRV reflecting parasympathetic nervous system activity (PS). The frequency-domain ratio of low to high power (LF/HF) represents sympathetic (SYMP) to PS balance. In adults, increased SYMP tone has been found in hypertensive as compared to normals. The present study was performed to look for differences in HRV by race and between young subjects with high and low levels of diastolic blood pressure (DBP). Methods: Subjects included 34 healthy males age 13,17 years (53% white). Half were selected with K4 DBP < 85th% for height (HT) measured twice, 3,5 years apart. Half had DBP < 15th% for HT. Subjects underwent a physical examination including BP, HT, WT, and ECG prior to Holter monitor application. HRV data was analyzed from 24-hour Holter recordings obtained during normal activity. Results: The RMSSD was lower in whites compared to blacks for day, night, and 24-hour average (P , 0.05) with day-time measurements showing the largest racial difference. This suggests increased PS tone in blacks especially with activity. The LF/HF ratio was higher in whites for all times, reaching significance during the day (all P , 0.05) suggesting SYMP predominance in whites during activity. Subjects with higher levels of DBP had lower RMSSD and higher LF/HF ratio for all times, but these did not reach statistical significance. Conclusions: There is a trend towards SYMP predominance in children with higher DBP. Healthy white adolescents exhibit increased SYMP tone compared to blacks when measured during normal daytime activity. [source] The effect of age, gender, and body mass index on the pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of vildagliptin in healthy volunteersBRITISH JOURNAL OF CLINICAL PHARMACOLOGY, Issue 3 2008Yan-Ling He What is already known about this subject ,,Vildagliptin is a new, potent, and selective inhibitor of DPP-4. ,,The efficacy and safety of vildagliptin in type 2 diabetes has been intensively studied in diverse subject populations. ,,There has been little information published about the pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of vildagliptin. What this study adds ,,No clinically relevant changes in pharmacokinetics or pharmacodynamics were observed between young and elderly, male and female, or high body mass index (BMI) and low BMI subjects. ,,The results suggest that no dose modification is necessary for vildagliptin based on the age, gender, or BMI of a subject. Aims To evaluate the effect of age, gender, and body mass index (BMI) on the pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of vildagliptin. Methods Forty healthy subjects received a single oral dose of 100 mg vildagliptin to assess the effects of age, gender, and BMI on the pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics, reflected by the time course of inhibition of DPP-4 activity, of vildagliptin. Results Peak concentration and exposure (AUC(0,,)) of vildagliptin were 17% (90% CI 2, 35%) and 31% (90% CI 18, 45%) higher in elderly vs. young subjects. Renal clearance was reduced by 32% (90% CI 17, 45%) in elderly subjects. The pharmacokinetics of vildagliptin were not significantly influenced by gender or BMI. Inhibition of DPP-4 activity was similar regardless of age, gender, or BMI. Conclusions The pharmacokinetics of a single oral 100 mg dose of vildagliptin were not affected by gender and BMI. Exposure to vildagliptin was higher in elderly patients, but this was not associated with any difference in the effect of DPP-4 inhibition. Based on these results, no vildagliptin dose adjustment is necessary for age, gender, or BMI. [source] |