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Disease Study (disease + study)
Selected AbstractsHomocysteine Level and Cognitive Function in Patients with Arterial Disease: The Second Manifestations of ARTerial Disease StudyJOURNAL OF AMERICAN GERIATRICS SOCIETY, Issue 4 2006Fleur van A. Raamt MD OBJECTIVES: To assess the relationship between total plasma homocysteine (tHcy) level and cognitive function in patients with manifest arterial disease. DESIGN: Cross-sectional. SETTING: Patients with symptomatic cerebrovascular disease, cardiovascular disease, peripheral arterial disease, or abdominal aortic aneurysm included in the Second Manifestations of ARTerial disease study, a single-center, longitudinal study with an extensive screening program at baseline. PARTICIPANTS: Three hundred forty-five consecutively included patients, mean age 59. MEASUREMENTS: The patients underwent an extensive neuropsychological test. The cognitive domains assessed were memory, executive function, attention, and visuoperception and construction. Each raw score was transformed into standardized z-scores, and a sum score for global cognitive function was determined. Risk factors and vascular damage were measured in detail. RESULTS: Linear regression showed that elevated levels of tHcy were related to lower global cognitive function (,=,0.065, 95% confidence interval (CI)=,0.116 to ,0.013) and, more specifically, lower performance on memory (,=,0.078, 95% CI=,0.155 to ,0.002), attention (,=,0.079, 95% CI=,0.163 to ,0.005), and visuoperception and construction (,=,0.125, 95% CI=,0.236 to ,0.014) per standard deviation increase in tHcy (SD=6.4 mol/L), after adjustment for age, sex, educational level, extent of atherosclerosis, and location of vascular disease. Silent cerebral infarcts did not influence this relationship. CONCLUSION: A relationship was found between tHcy levels and cognitive function that was independent of extent and location of arterial disease. The results suggest that vascular mechanisms are not responsible for the relationship between tHcy and cognitive function. [source] Antibodies against cyclic citrullinated peptide and IgA rheumatoid factor predict the development of rheumatoid arthritisARTHRITIS & RHEUMATISM, Issue 10 2003Solbritt Rantapää-Dahlqvist Objective To evaluate the prevalence and predictive value of anti,cyclic citrullinated peptide (anti-CCP) antibodies in individuals who subsequently developed rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and to determine the relationship to rheumatoid factor (RF) of any isotype. Methods A case,control study was nested within the Northern Sweden Health and Disease Study and the Maternity cohorts of Northern Sweden. Patients with RA were identified among blood donors whose samples had been taken years before the onset of symptoms. Control subjects matched for age, sex, date of sampling, and residential area were selected randomly from the same cohorts. Anti-CCP antibody and RFs were determined using enzyme immunoassays. Results Eighty-three individuals with RA were identified as having donated blood before presenting with any symptoms of joint disease (median 2.5 years [interquartile range 1.1,4.7] before RA). In samples obtained before the onset of RA, the prevalence of autoantibodies was 33.7% for anti-CCP, 16.9% for IgG-RF, 19.3% for IgM-RF, and 33.7% for IgA-RF (all highly significant compared with controls). The sensitivities for detecting these autoantibodies >1.5 years and ,1.5 years before the appearance of any RA symptoms were 25% and 52% for anti-CCP, 15% and 30% for IgM-RF, 12% and 27% for IgG-RF, and 29% and 39% for IgA-RF. In conditional logistic regression models, anti-CCP antibody and IgA-RF were found to be significant predictors of RA. Conclusion Anti-CCP antibody and RFs of all isotypes predated the onset of RA by several years. The presence of anti-CCP and IgA-RF predicted the development of RA, with anti-CCP antibody having the highest predictive value. This indicates that citrullination and the production of anti-CCP and RF autoantibodies are early processes in RA. [source] Estimating a Multivariate Familial Correlation Using Joint Models for Canonical Correlations: Application to Memory Score Analysis from Familial Hispanic Alzheimer's Disease StudyBIOMETRICS, Issue 2 2009Hye-Seung Lee Summary Analysis of multiple traits can provide additional information beyond analysis of a single trait, allowing better understanding of the underlying genetic mechanism of a common disease. To accommodate multiple traits in familial correlation analysis adjusting for confounders, we develop a regression model for canonical correlation parameters and propose joint modeling along with mean and scale parameters. The proposed method is more powerful than the regression method modeling pairwise correlations because it captures familial aggregation manifested in multiple traits through maximum canonical correlation. [source] Association of body mass index with heartburn, regurgitation and esophagitis: Results of the Progression of Gastroesophageal Reflux Disease studyJOURNAL OF GASTROENTEROLOGY AND HEPATOLOGY, Issue 11 2007Marc Nocon Abstract Background:, Overweight and obesity are believed to be risk factors for gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD). The aim of the present study was to analyze the impact of body mass index (BMI) on the severity and frequency of reflux symptoms and esophagitis in a large cohort of reflux patients. Methods:, As part of the Progression of Gastroesophageal Reflux Disease (ProGERD) study, 6215 patients with clinically assessed GERD were included in the present investigation (53% male, 52 ± 14 years; 47% female, 56 ± 14 years). Heartburn and regurgitation symptoms were assessed using the validated Reflux Disease Questionnaire. Endoscopies were performed and patients were subsequently classified as having non-erosive or erosive disease. To examine the association between BMI, GERD symptoms, and esophagitis, odds ratios (OR) and 95% confidence intervals (95%CI) were calculated using logistic regression models. Results:, In patients with GERD, higher BMI was associated with more frequent and more severe heartburn and regurgitation, as well as with esophagitis. The effects were more pronounced for regurgitation than for heartburn. The strongest association was between obesity and severity of regurgitation symptoms (women: OR 2.11, 95%CI 1.60,2.77; men: OR 2.15, 95%CI 1.59,2.90). Obese women, but not men, had an increased risk of severe esophagitis compared to women with normal weight (OR 2.51, 95%CI 1.53,4.12). Conclusions:, In patients with GERD, higher BMI was associated with more severe and more frequent reflux symptoms and esophagitis. [source] Inflammation reduces HDL protection against primary cardiac riskEUROPEAN JOURNAL OF CLINICAL INVESTIGATION, Issue 6 2010James P. Corsetti Eur J Clin Invest 2010; 40 (6): 483,489 Abstract Background, We recently reported high high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol as a predictor of recurrent risk in a subgroup of postinfarction patients defined by hypercholesterolemia and high C-reactive protein (CRP) levels. We investigated whether a similar high-risk subgroup might exist for incident cardiovascular disease. Material and Methods, A graphical exploratory data analysis tool was used to identify high-risk subgroups in a male population-based cohort (n = 3405) from the prevention of renal and vascular end-stage disease study by generating 3-dimensional mappings of risk over the HDL-cholesterol/CRP domain with subsequent use of Kaplan,Meier analysis to verify high-risk. Within-subgroup risk was assessed using Cox proportional hazards regression and Kaplan,Meier analysis. Results, Mappings revealed two high-risk subgroups: a low HDL-cholesterol/high CRP subgroup and a high HDL-cholesterol/high CRP subgroup. The low HDL-cholesterol subgroup demonstrated a pattern of metabolic syndrome dyslipidemia contrasted with a predominantly unremarkable biomarker pattern for the high HDL-cholesterol subgroup. However, in the high HDL-cholesterol subgroup, CRP levels were higher than the low HDL-cholesterol subgroup; and within the high HDL-cholesterol subgroup, CRP predicted risk. Moreover, in the high HDL-cholesterol subgroup, risk was associated with lower triglyceride levels in conjunction with presumptively larger HDL particles. Conclusions, High HDL-cholesterol and high CRP levels define a subgroup of men at high-risk for incident cardiovascular disease. High HDL cholesterol-associated risk likely relates to impaired HDL particle remodelling in the setting of inflammation. This approach may facilitate identification of additional inflammation-related mechanisms underlying high HDL cholesterol-associated risk; and potentially influence management of such patients. [source] Homocysteine Level and Cognitive Function in Patients with Arterial Disease: The Second Manifestations of ARTerial Disease StudyJOURNAL OF AMERICAN GERIATRICS SOCIETY, Issue 4 2006Fleur van A. Raamt MD OBJECTIVES: To assess the relationship between total plasma homocysteine (tHcy) level and cognitive function in patients with manifest arterial disease. DESIGN: Cross-sectional. SETTING: Patients with symptomatic cerebrovascular disease, cardiovascular disease, peripheral arterial disease, or abdominal aortic aneurysm included in the Second Manifestations of ARTerial disease study, a single-center, longitudinal study with an extensive screening program at baseline. PARTICIPANTS: Three hundred forty-five consecutively included patients, mean age 59. MEASUREMENTS: The patients underwent an extensive neuropsychological test. The cognitive domains assessed were memory, executive function, attention, and visuoperception and construction. Each raw score was transformed into standardized z-scores, and a sum score for global cognitive function was determined. Risk factors and vascular damage were measured in detail. RESULTS: Linear regression showed that elevated levels of tHcy were related to lower global cognitive function (,=,0.065, 95% confidence interval (CI)=,0.116 to ,0.013) and, more specifically, lower performance on memory (,=,0.078, 95% CI=,0.155 to ,0.002), attention (,=,0.079, 95% CI=,0.163 to ,0.005), and visuoperception and construction (,=,0.125, 95% CI=,0.236 to ,0.014) per standard deviation increase in tHcy (SD=6.4 mol/L), after adjustment for age, sex, educational level, extent of atherosclerosis, and location of vascular disease. Silent cerebral infarcts did not influence this relationship. CONCLUSION: A relationship was found between tHcy levels and cognitive function that was independent of extent and location of arterial disease. The results suggest that vascular mechanisms are not responsible for the relationship between tHcy and cognitive function. [source] |