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Holterman Mark J - - 2012
Childhood obesity is a tremendous burden for children, their families, and society. Obesity prevention remains the ultimate goal but rapid development and deployment of effective nonsurgical treatment options is not currently achievable given the complexity of this disease. Surgical options for adolescent obesity have been proven to be safe and ...
Bonora Enzo - - 2012
NAFLD is very common in the general population and its prevalence is increasing worldwide in parallel with the increasing incidences of obesity and metabolic diseases, mainly type 2 diabetes. In some cases, however, the diagnosis of NAFLD remains uncertain because other causes of liver disease are not easy to exclude ...
Ajeganova Sofia - - 2012
OBJECTIVE: To determine the association of obesity, defined as BMI≥30 or ≥28 kg/m(2) or by waist circumference (WC), on disease activity and severity as well as its relation to comorbidities in rheumatoid arthritis (RA). METHODS: The study population comprised 1596 patients with early RA, mean(SD) age 55.6(14.6) years, 67.8% women, ...
Vanamala Jairam - - 2012
Obesity is closely associated with increased incidence of cardiovascular diseases, cancer, insulin resistance, and immune dysfunction, and thus obesity-mitigation strategies should take into account these secondary pathologies in addition to promoting weight loss. Recent studies indicate that black cumin (Nigella sativa) has cardio-protective, anti-cancer, anti-diabetic, antioxidant, and immune-modulatory properties. While ...
Kovacic Jason C - - 2012
Cardiovascular disease (CVD) is now the leading cause of mortality worldwide. Particularly in low and middle income countries, rapid urbanization and secondary factors, such as increasing obesity, poor diet, and lack of exercise, have combined to propel CVD into this position. Given the enormous scope of this problem and the ...
Taube Annika - - 2012
Abdominal obesity is a major risk factor for cardiovascular disease, and recent studies highlight a key role of adipose tissue dysfunction, inflammation and aberrant adipokine release in this process. An increased demand for lipid storage results in both hyperplasia and hypertrophy, finally leading to chronic inflammation, hypoxia, and a phenotypic ...
Boydens Charlotte - - 2012
Adipokines secreted by visceral, subcutaneous, and perivascular adipocytes are involved in the regulation of vascular tone by acting as circulatory hormones (leptin, adiponectin, omentin, visfatin, angiotensin II, resistin, tumor necrosis factor-α, interleukin-6, apelin) and/or via local paracrine factors (perivascular adipocyte-derived relaxing and contractile factors). Vascular tone regulation by adipokines is ...
Lainscak Mitja - - 2012
Body size, particularly large, is a matter of concern among the lay public. Whether this is justified depends upon the state of health and should be judged individually. For patients with established chronic disease, there is sufficient evidence to support the benefits of large body size, i.e., the obesity paradox. ...
Diop Soda Balla - - 2012
Obesity and cardiovascular disease are among the world's leading causes of death, especially in Western countries where consumption of high caloric food is commonly accompanied by low physical activity. This lifestyle often leads to energy imbalance, obesity, diabetes, and their associated metabolic disorders, including cardiovascular diseases. It has become increasingly ...
Bikman Benjamin T - - 2012
Following the initial discovery that adipose tissue actively synthesizes and secretes cytokines, obesity-induced inflammation has been implicated in the etiology of a host of disease states related to obesity, including cardiovascular disease and type II diabetes. Interestingly, a growing body of evidence similarly implicates sphingolipids as prime instigators in these ...
Barton Matthias - - 2012
Childhood obesity has become major health concern for physicians, parents, and health agencies around the world. Childhood obesity is associated with an increased risk for other diseases not only during youth but also later in life, including diabetes, arterial hypertension, coronary artery disease, and fatty liver disease. Importantly, obesity accelerates ...
Samper-Ternent Rafael - - 2012
Obesity is a worldwide problem with increasing prevalence and incidence in both developed and developing countries. In older adults, excess weight is associated with a higher prevalence of cardiovascular disease, metabolic disease, several important cancers, and numerous other medical conditions. Obesity has been also associated with increased functional limitations, disability, ...
Devadason Caroline Anitha - - 2012
The prevalence of obesity and obesity related comorbidities including diabetes and nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) has been rising globally. Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease is emerging as a common liver disease among adults which can lead to the eventual development of complications including cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma. With the rise ...
Sundaram Jeyapriya R - - 2012
The deregulation of cyclin-dependent kinase 5 (Cdk5) by p25 has been shown to contribute to the pathogenesis in a number of neurodegenerative diseases such as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), Parkinson's disease (PD) and Alzheimer's disease (AD). In particular, p25/Cdk5 has been shown to produce hyperphosphorylated tau, neurofibrillary tangles as well ...
Dahiya Parveen - - 2012
Obesity is a multifaceted subject. It has increased at an alarming rate in recent years. Being overweight increases the likelihood of a patient having associated health and social problems which may affect dental services and dental management. A review of the literature on obesity and periodontal disease suggested that they ...
Hassanzadeh Jafar - - 2012
Obesity and overweight are major determinants of health and quality of life. The World Health Organization (WHO) has always encouraged its member states to carry out studies on the attributable burden of these diseases at the national level, and use the study as the best guide to direct the health ...
Entsua-Mensah Kow - - 2012
Many developing countries now face the growing phenomenon of the double burden of disease. Most are still grappling with infectious diseases resulting from poor environmental sanitation and lack of access to good drinking water like malaria, cholera, and enteric fever. At the same time changes in diet and lifestyle in ...
Cheung Zelda H - - 2011
Since the identification of cyclin-dependent kinase-5 (Cdk5) as a tau kinase and member of the Cdk family almost 20 years ago, deregulation of Cdk5 activity has been linked to an array of neurodegenerative diseases. As knowledge on the etiopathological mechanisms of these diseases evolved through the years, Cdk5 has also ...
Nunes Joana - - 2010
Fistulas are a frequent and serious complication of Crohn's disease. Most of the literature has been focused on perianal fistulas, which are by far the most frequent. The effectiveness of treatment with infliximab in fistulizing Crohn's disease was demonstrated in the ACCENT II trial. In that study, however, all patients ...
Wortsman Ximena - - 2011
The skin and nails are commonly involved in rheumatic conditions, both by the primary disease and/or long-term immunosuppressive treatments. These superficial affections may also imply a worsening of the quality of life in patients and cosmetic sequels. The latest advances in ultrasound technology show that skin and nail abnormalities are ...
Yildirim Pinar - - 2012
We introduce a method for extracting hidden patterns seen in rheumatic diseases by using articles from the widely used biomedical database MEDLINE. Rheumatic diseases affect hundreds of millions of people worldwide and lead to substantial loss of functioning and mobility. Diagnosing rheumatic diseases can be difficult because some symptoms are ...
Forseth Karin Oien - - 2010
OBJECTIVE: To present the evidence for the efficacy of comprehensive rehabilitation in a warm climate of patients with a wide variety of rheumatic diseases. METHODS: A systematic review of the literature was undertaken, searching in PubMed, Cinahl, Pedro, SweMed and Embase from 1970 to 2010, and using the GRADE (Grading ...
Ajayi A O - - 2010
Crohn's disease (CD) is a multifactorial polygenic disease characterized by chronic inflammation of the gastrointestinal tract (GIT), often complicated by the development of intestinal strictures and/or formation of fistulas. Several diagnostic criteria have been proposed, usually relying on clinical, endoscopic, radiological or histological features. report a case of Crohn's disease ...
Raja Rafi - - 2010
Lymphomatoid granulomatosis is a rare disease. Anti-cyclic citrullinated peptide (anti-CCP) antibody is more commonly found in patients with rheumatoid arthritis and less frequently in some of the other rheumatic and non-rheumatic conditions. It is not recognized to be present in lymphoproliferative disease on its own. We report the first case ...
Gasparyan Armen Yuri - - 2010
The inflammatory pathogenesis of atherosclerosis is now well-established, owing to in vitro and in vivo studies and the application of high sensitivity assays for C-reactive protein (CRP) in the general population and specific groups at risk for cardiovascular disease (CVD). In view of the complexity of inflammation-induced atherosclerosis, the rationale ...
van der Helm-van Mil Annette H M - - 2010
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: The incidence of acute rheumatic fever (ARF) in the United States and Western Europe is decreasing and postStreptococcal reactive arthritis (PSRA) is more prevalent. It is not clear whether PSRA is a forme fruste of ARF or a separate disease entity. Therefore, this review explores similarities and ...
Shapira Yinon - - 2010
The accumulative global burden of autoimmune and inflammatory rheumatic diseases is substantial. Studying the distribution of these conditions across various global regions and ethnic groups by means of geoepidemiology might readily provide epidemiological data and also advance our understanding of their genetic and environmental underpinnings. In order to depict the ...
Wolfe Frederick - - 2011
The National Data Bank (NDB) for rheumatic diseases is a patient-based multi-disease, multi-purpose rheumatic disease registry that has been used primarily to study patients with RA, SLE, FM and OA. It enrols patients from the community, follows up with questionnaires and validates key patient data using medical records. Rheumatologist-written programs ...
Dupond Jean-Louis - - 2011
Fatigue is a prominent symptom in many rheumatic diseases. Numerous factors contribute to cause fatigue, which can be a source of frustration for the patients and physicians, as the treatment often fails to produce the desired improvement. Diagnostic guidelines direct insufficient attention to the various semiological patterns of fatigue seen ...
da Silva Marta Alves - - 2010
The treatment of rheumatic diseases has been the focus of many clinical studies aiming to achieve the best combination of drugs for symptom reduction. Although improved understanding of the pathophysiology of rheumatic diseases has led to the identification of effective therapeutic strategies, its cure remains unknown. Biological agents are a ...
Alevizos Ilias - - 2010
MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are endogenous, noncoding, single-stranded RNAs of 19-25 nucleotides in length. They regulate gene expression and are important in a wide range of physiological and pathological processes. MiRNAs are attractive as potential biomarkers because their expression pattern is reflective of underlying pathophysiologic processes and they are specific to various ...
Wilson Nigel - - 2010
Rheumatic fever continues unabated among the indigenous Māori and Pacific Island New Zealanders. Ethnic disparities have increased in the past decade. The major success story for disease control has been secondary penicillin prophylaxis with 28-day intramuscular benzathine penicillin with high penicillin delivery rates and low recurrence rates. A landmark study ...
Cagli Kumral - - 2010
Infective endocarditis (IE) is rarely seen in pregnancy and puerperal period, and generally occurs in patients with preexisting heart disease or intravenous drug abuse. In this report, we describe a case of a 27-year-old patient with missed diagnosis of rheumatic heart disease and a moderate size patent ductus arteriosus, in ...
Tarner I H - - 2010
Rheumatic disease can affect and severely damage vital organs and thus cause acute emergencies and life-threatening complications. As systemic diseases they can cause any presenting complaint commonly encountered in emergency medicine. Because of their relative rarity in general practice, a high level of vigilance is required in order to recognize ...
White Harvey - - 2010
Rates of acute rheumatic fever and chronic rheumatic heart disease in Aboriginal people, Torres Strait Islanders and Māori continue to be unacceptably high. The impact of rheumatic heart disease is inequitable on these populations as compared with other Australians and New Zealanders. The associated cardiac morbidity, including the development of ...
Bhaya Maneesha - - 2010
OBJECTIVES: It is fairly easy to detect advanced valve lesions of established rheumatic heart disease by echocardiography in the clinically identified cases of rheumatic heart disease. However, to diagnose a subclinical case of rheumatic heart disease, no uniform set of echocardiographic criteria exist. Moderate thickening of valve leaflets is considered ...
Tyrrell Pascal N - - 2010
OBJECTIVE: To perform a systematic review and meta-analysis to examine whether rheumatic disease is associated with an increased carotid intima-media thickness (CIMT; increasingly used as a surrogate marker for atherosclerosis) when compared with healthy control subjects. METHODS AND RESULTS: A prespecified search strategy was used to identify relevant studies in ...
Markenson Joseph A - - 2010
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Musculoskeletal complaints accompanying or as a result of endocrine disorders are common and have been well described. This review re-examines these associations in light of newer information on biology and genetics. RECENT FINDINGS: In this article, we describe the recent studies on pathophysiology of the muscular skeletal ...
Becker Jennifer - - 2010
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: As infectious diseases continue to emerge, and as molecular techniques advance, the rheumatic manifestations of infectious diseases are increasingly recognized and better understood. Herein, we review important recent clinical, epidemiologic, and basic science advances within this area of rheumatology. RECENT FINDINGS: We searched the U.S. National Library ...
Jain Manish - - 2010
The use of musculoskeletal ultrasound (MSKUS) in rheumatology practice and research has increased steadily over the last decade. An ever-growing body of literature shows parity and even superiority of MSKUS when compared to physical examination, plain radiography, and more expensive and static imaging modalities such as MRI. While many use ...
Le Goff B - - 2010
Bisphosphonates are widely use for pathologies such as osteoporosis, Paget's disease or bone metastasis. However, their potent antiresorptive properties open new therapeutic opportunities for other conditions associated with an increased focal or systemic bone remodelling. Moreover, apart from their antiresorptive activity, bisphosphonates could also have others properties through a specific ...
Yazici Hasan - - 2010
Halsted R. Holman, in a 1994 Arthritis & Rheumatism editorial, discusses how "thought barriers" can make our understanding of rheumatic diseases more difficult. The medical teaching-practice has traditionally been centered on acute disease; however, most rheumatic diseases are chronic. There is also the prevailing notion of a single lesion for ...
de Brouwer Sabine J M - - 2010
Stressful events are thought to contribute to the aetiology, maintenance and exacerbation of rheumatic diseases. Given the growing interest in acute stress responses and disease, this review investigates the impact of real-life experimental psychosocial, cognitive, exercise and sensory stressors on autonomic, neuroendocrine and immune function in patients with inflammatory rheumatic ...
Eisenstein Eli M - - 2010
Human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) is familiar to pediatric rheumatologists mainly as a cause of opportunistic disease in pharmacologically immune suppressed patients. However, HCMV also has a variety of immuno-modulatory effects, through which it may influence the course of rheumatic conditions. In this article we discuss the interplay between HCMV and the ...
Severo Milton - - 2010
To identify incorrect beliefs and common knowledge about rheumatic diseases in the general population. Participants were selected during the follow-up of a representative cohort of adult population of Porto, Portugal; 1626 participants completed a questionnaire that included general knowledge items about rheumatic diseases.Discrete and continuous latent variable models were used ...
Ehrenfeld Michael - - 2010
Spondyloarthropathies (SPA) are a group of common inflammatory rheumatic disorders characterized by axial and or peripheral arthritis, associated with enthesitis, dactylitis and potential extra-articular manifestations such as uveitis and skin rash. The diseases which comprise the group, share a common genetic predisposition, the HLA-B27 gene, however this association varies markedly ...
Le Hello S - - 2010
New Caledonia is an archipelago in the South Pacific with a high prevalence of acute rheumatic fever and rheumatic heart disease. Conducted in 2006, this study aimed at characterizing clinical manifestations and microbial features of isolates obtained from invasive Streptococcus pyogenes disease. Clinical and demographic data were collected prospectively. Isolates ...
Zulian Francesco - - 2009
Rheumatic diseases represent a group of autoimmune conditions which primarily affect the musculo-skeletal system but can also involve other internal organs such as the auditory and the respiratory systems. Among the rheumatic diseases of children those which present an otolaryngological involvement at disease onset or during their course are essentially ...
Molloy Eamonn S - - 2009
OBJECTIVE: Progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy (PML) is a rare, typically fatal, central nervous system demyelinating disease that results from reactivation of the JC virus, which generally occurs in immunosuppressed hosts. The aim of this study was to generate a national estimate of the frequency of PML among patients with rheumatic diseases. ...
Felley Christian - - 2009
INTRODUCTION: Many therapeutic decisions in the management of fistulizing and fibrostenotic Crohn's disease (CD) have to be taken without the benefit of strong scientific evidence. For this reason, explicit appropriateness criteria for CD fistula and stenosis treatment were developed by a multidisciplinary European expert panel in 2004 with the aim ...
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