Αρχειοθήκη ιστολογίου

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Κυριακή 22 Μαΐου 2022

The clinical application of head-shaking test combined with head-shaking tilt suppression test in distinguishing between peripheral and central vertigo at bedside vs. examination room

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Publication date: Available online 20 May 2022

Source: Brazilian Journal of Otorhinolaryngology

Author(s): Huiying Sun, Yinping Wang, Hong Jiang, Zhiqiang Gao, Haiyan Wu

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Diagnostic potential of extracellular vesicles in meningioma patients

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Abstract
Background
Extracellular vesicles (EVs) play an important role in cell-cell communication, and tumor-derived EVs circulating in patient blood can serve as biomarkers. Here, we investigated the potential role of plasma EVs in meningioma patients for tumor detection and determined whether EVs secreted by meningioma cells reflect epigenetic, genomic and proteomic alterations of original tumors.
Methods
EV concentrations were quantified in patient plasma (n = 46). Short-term meningioma cultures were established (n = 26) and secreted EVs were isolated. Methylation and copy number profiling was performed using 850k arrays, and mutations were identified by targeted gene panel sequencing. Differential quantitative mass spectrometry was employed for proteomic analysis.
Results
Levels of circulating EVs were elevated in meningioma patients compared to healthy individuals, and the plasma EV concentration correlated with malignanc y grade and extent of peritumoral edema. Postoperatively, EV counts dropped to normal levels, and the magnitude of the postoperative decrease was associated with extent of tumor resection. Methylation profiling of EV-DNA allowed correct tumor classification as meningioma in all investigated cases, and accurate methylation subclass assignment in almost all cases. Copy number variations present in tumors, as well as tumor-specific mutations were faithfully reflected in meningioma EV-DNA. Proteomic EV profiling did not permit original tumor identification but revealed tumor-associated proteins that could potentially be utilized to enrich meningioma EVs from biofluids.
Conclusions
Elevated EV levels in meningioma patient plasma could aid in tumor diagnosis and assessment of treatment response. Meningioma EV-DNA mirrors genetic and epigenetic tumor alterations and facilitates molecular tumor classification.
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Association of neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio, radiotherapy fractionation/technique, and risk of development of distant metastasis among patients with locally advanced rectal cancer

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We investigated the prognostic impact of the neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio (NLR) in patients with locally advanced rectal cancer (LARC) and whether modifiable factors in radiotherapy (RT) influenced the NLR.
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Effects of different doses of methylprednisolone on clinical outcomes in patients with severe community-acquired pneumonia: a study protocol for a randomized controlled trial

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The specific use of methylprednisolone in severe community-acquired pneumonia (SCAP) has not yet formed a consensus. It is not clear whether the clinical efficacy of methylprednisolone in SCAP is dose-dependen...
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Supporting the Art: Medication Adherence Patterns in Persons Prescribed Ingestible Sensor-enabled Oral Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis to Prevent HIV Infection

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Abstract
Background
Timely, accurate adherence data may support oral PrEP success and inform prophylaxis choice. We evaluated an FDA-approved digital health feedback system (DHFS) with ingestible-sensor-enabled (IS) tenofovir-disoproxil-fumarate plus emtricitabine (Truvada®) in persons starting oral PrEP.
Methods
HIV-negative adults were prescribed IS-Truvada® with DHFS for 12 weeks to observe medication taking behavior. Baseline demographics, urine toxicology and self-report questionnaires were obtained. Positive detection accuracy and adverse events were computed as percentages, with Kaplan Meier Estimate for persistence-of-use. In participants persisting ≥ 28 days, adherence patterns (taking and timing) were analyzed and mixed-effects logistic regression modelled characteristics associated with treatment adherence.
Results
Seventy-one participants enrolled, mean age 37.6 years (range 18-69), 90.1% male, 77.5% white, 33.8% Hispanic, 95.8% housed and 74.6% employed. Sixty-three participants (88.7%) persisted ≥28 days, generating 4987 observation days, average 79.2 (29-105). Total confirmed doses were 86.2% (CI95 82.5, 89.4), decreasing over time, OR 0.899 (CI95 0.876, 0.923) per week, p < 0.001; 79.4% (CI95 66.7%, 87.3%) of participants had ≥80% adherence. Pattern analysis showed days without confirmed doses clustered (p = 0.003); regular dose timing was higher among participants with ≥80% confirmed doses (0.828, CI95 0.796 to 0.859) than among those with <80% (0.542, CI95 0.405 to 0.679) p < 0.001. In multi-predictor models, better adherence was associated with older age, OR 1.060 (CI95 1.033, 1.091) per year, p < 0.001; negative vs positive methamphetamine screen, OR 5.051 (CI95 2.252, 11.494), p < 0.001.
Conclusions
DHFS with IS-Truvada® distinguished adherent persons from those potentially at risk of prophylactic failure. Ongoing methamphetamine substance use may impact oral PrEP success.
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