159 results on '"G. Casals"'
Search Results
2. P-771 Subfertility versus in vitro fertilization procedures: unravelling the origins of fetal cardiac remodeling in assisted reproductive technologies
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M.L Boutet, G Casals, B Valenzuela-Alcaraz, L García-Otero, F Crovetto, P Carrillo, A Borrás, M.S Cívico, D Manau, E Gratacós, and F Crispi
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Reproductive Medicine ,Rehabilitation ,Obstetrics and Gynecology - Abstract
Study question Do spontaneously conceived (SC) fetuses from subfertile couples present signs of cardiac remodeling as those observed after in vitro fertilization (IVF) treatments? Summary answer SC fetuses from subfertile couples do not associate cardiac remodeling, and their cardiac structure and function are similar to those of SC from fertile couples. What is known already Fetuses and children from IVF associate cardiac remodeling and suboptimal function, including dilated atria, more globular and thicker ventricles, reduced longitudinal motion and impaired relaxationin uteroand after birth. Fetal cardiac changes have been demonstrated both after fresh and frozen embryo transfer. The SC fetuses used as ‘controls’ in our previous publications were conceived by fertile couples thus making it difficult to separate the contribution of infertilityper sefrom the IVF procedures on cardiac programming. There are no previous cardiovascular studies investigating the independent effects of infertility in SC fetuses from subfertile couples (time-to-pregnancy (TTP) over 12 months). Study design, size, duration Prospective cohort study of 289 singleton pregnancies recruited from 2017 to 2021, including 96 SC pregnancies from fertile couples (TTP less than 12 months), 97 SC from subfertile couples (TTP over 12 months) and 96 from IVF after fresh ET. Fetal echocardiography was performed in all pregnancies. Epidemiological data and perinatal outcomes were collected in all pregnancies. Participants/materials, setting, methods IVF pregnancies from our centre were identified as eligible at pregnancy diagnosis. Eligible SC pregnancies from fertile and subfertile couples who attended our Maternal-Fetal Unit were invited to participate at third trimester, being matched to the IVF pregnancies by maternal age. Fetal echocardiography was performed at 29-34 weeks of pregnancy to assess cardiac structure and function. Echocardiographic comparisons were adjusted by nulliparity, birthweight centile, gestational age and estimated fetal weight at scan. Main results and the role of chance Parental age, ethnicity, body mass index and smoking exposure, median gestational age and estimated fetal weight were similar in all study groups. There were no significant differences in infertility duration or aetiology between the subfertile and the IVF populations (TTP: subfertile median 30 months [IQR 20-54] versus IVF: 47 [25-61]; p-value=0.052). While both fertile and subfertile SC groups presented similar fetal cardiac results, IVF fetuses showed larger atria (right atria-to-heart ratio: IVF mean 18.9% [SD 3.4] versus subfertile 17.8% [3.5] versus fertile 17.6% [3.3]; adjusted P-value Limitations, reasons for caution The fetal cardiac changes reported here are subclinical, with most cardiovascular parameters lying within normal ranges. Although echocardiographic changes are recognized as potential cardiovascular risk factors, their association with long-term cardiovascular disease remains to be proven. Wider implications of the findings Subfertility per se does not seem to be associated to fetal cardiac remodeling, which have been previously described in IVF fetuses. Future studies are warranted to further investigate the factors related to fetal cardiac changes associated to ART. Trial registration number Not a trial
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- 2022
3. Effects of Fibroblast factor 21 to adrenal renewal after chronic hypercortisolism
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D, Diaz-catalan, primary, A, Vega-Beyhart, additional, M., Mora, additional, M, Rodrigo, additional, L, Boswell, additional, G, Casals, additional, and F., A. Hanzu, additional
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- 2022
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4. Fetal neurosonography and infant neurobehavior following conception by assisted reproductive technology with fresh or frozen embryo transfer
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M. L. Boutet, E. Eixarch, P. Ahumada‐Droguett, A. Nakaki, F. Crovetto, M. S. Cívico, A. Borrás, D. Manau, E. Gratacós, F. Crispi, and G. Casals
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Radiological and Ultrasound Technology ,Reproductive Techniques, Assisted ,Infant, Newborn ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Infant ,General Medicine ,Fertilization in Vitro ,Embryo Transfer ,Reproductive Medicine ,Pregnancy ,Fertilization ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Female ,Prospective Studies - Abstract
We aimed to explore fetal cortical brain development by neurosonography in fetuses conceived by assisted reproductive technology (ART), including frozen and fresh embryo transfer (ET), compared with those conceived spontaneously (SC), and to investigate its association with infant neurobehavior at 12 months of age.This was a prospective cohort study of 210 singleton pregnancies, including 70 SC pregnancies, 70 conceived by in-vitro fertilization (IVF) following frozen ET and 70 conceived by IVF after fresh ET. Fetal neurosonography was performed at 32 ± 2 gestational weeks to assess cortical development. Sulci depths were measured offline and normalized by biparietal diameter (BPD). Ages and Stages Questionnaires (ASQ) were completed postnatally, at 12 ± 1 months of corrected age. Neurosonographic findings were adjusted by regression analysis for maternal age, ethnicity, parity, fetal sex and fetal-weight centile and gestational age at scan, and ASQ scores were adjusted for maternal age, ethnicity, parity, educational level and employment status, gestational age at birth, breastfeeding, infant sex and infant age at the ASQ evaluation.Overall, in comparison to the SC fetuses, fetuses conceived by ART showed statistically significant differences in cortical development, with reduced parieto-occipital sulci depth adjusted for BPD (mean ± SD: fresh ET, 12.5 ± 2.5 vs frozen ET, 13.4 ± 2.6 vs SC, 13.4 ± 2.6, P 0.001), cingulate sulci depth adjusted for BPD (median (interquartile range (IQR)): fresh ET, 5.8 (4.2-7.4) vs frozen ET, 5.8 (4.1-7.5) vs SC, 6.5 (4.8-7.8), P = 0.001) and calcarine sulci depth adjusted for BPD (median (IQR): fresh ET, 13.5 (10.1-16.1) vs frozen ET, 14.5 (12.1-15.8) vs SC, 16.4 (14.3-17.9), P 0.001), together with lower Sylvian fissure grading score. Changes in cortical development were more pronounced in the fresh ET than in the frozen ET group. ART infants showed lower ASQ scores as compared to SC infants, particularly in the fresh ET group (mean ± SD global ASQ Z-score: fresh ET, -0.3 ± 0.4 vs frozen ET, -0.2 ± 0.4 vs SC, 0 ± 0.4, P 0.001).Fetuses conceived by ART show a distinctive pattern of cortical development and suboptimal infant neurodevelopment, with more pronounced changes in those conceived following fresh ET. These findings support the existence of in-utero brain reorganization associated with ART and warrant follow-up studies to assess its long-term persistence. © 2022 The Authors. Ultrasound in ObstetricsGynecology published by John WileySons Ltd on behalf of International Society of Ultrasound in Obstetrics and Gynecology.
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- 2022
5. Abstracts of the 31st World Congress on Ultrasound in Obstetrics and Gynecology, 15-17 October 2021, Virtual
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M L, Boutet, E, Eixarch, P Ahumada, Droguett, F, Crovetto, S, Peralta, P, Carrillo, M, Guimerà, D, Manau, E, Gratacós, F, Crispi, and G, Casals
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- 2021
6. Thromboembolic Events and Endoscopy-Related Bleeding in Patients on Direct Oral Anticoagulants or Vitamin K Antagonists: A Multicentric Prospective Observational Study
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M Roldán Fernández, D Pérez Corte, M Ruiz Andreu, M Urpi Ferreruela, Á Cañete Ruiz, L. Téllez, D de Frutos, A García Rodríguez, D Burgos Santamaría, PG Delgado Guillena, B. Mateos Muñoz, G Fernández Esparrach, A. Albillos, Anna Brujats, F Riu Pons, Alfonso Muriel, Milagros Altamirano, C. Ferre Aracil, MA de Jorge Turrión, ML Arias Rivera, E Vázquez Sequeiros, A. García García de Paredes, A Gómez Outomuro, C Senosiain Lalastra, Javier Zamora, S Parejo Carbonell, J Arribas Anta, Áf Marcos Martin, E Tavío, E. Rodríguez de Santiago, M Fraile López, Raquel Ríos León, B Peñas García, M Aicart Ramos, A Herreros de Tejada, E Barreiro Alonso, C Warner Argente, Giulia Pagano, R Sánchez Aldehuelo, HM Marcos Prieto, G Casals Urquiza, C Rodríguez Escaja, E De La Fuente Briongos, M Núñez Esteban, and P Pérez Riveras
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medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,In patient ,Observational study ,Vitamin k ,business ,Gastroenterology ,Endoscopy - Published
- 2021
7. Prevalence of Missed Lesions in Patients with Inadequate Bowel Preparation Through a Very Early Repeat Colonoscopy
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Noemí Caballero, A Seoane Urgorri, J Amorós Martínez, R Pérez Berbegal, I Puig del Castillo, A Pérez Oltra, Antonio Z. Gimeno-García, Ana García-Rodríguez, P Díez Redondo, Óscar Nogales, MA Pantaleón Sánchez, IA Ibañez Zafón, D Hernández Negrín, B Bernad Cabredo, Marco Antonio Alvarez-Gonzalez, G Casals Urquiza, I Romero Sánchez-Miguel, S Frago Larramona, C Romero Mascarell, and Sadornill G Bujedo
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medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,General surgery ,medicine ,Colonoscopy ,In patient ,business ,Inadequate bowel preparation - Published
- 2021
8. Fecundación in vitro (FIV) en ciclo natural: del origen de la FIV a la práctica asistencial actual
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P. Carrillo Torres, G. Casals Soler, A. Goday Cibeira, and B. Hernández Dacruz
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Reproductive Medicine ,business.industry ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Medicine ,business ,Humanities - Abstract
Resumen El principio basico de la fecundacion in vitro en ciclo natural (FIV-CN) recae en el reclutamiento mediante la seleccion folicular espontanea, minimizando la manipulacion del ciclo de la mujer. Recientemente esta tecnica ha suscitado mayor interes y se han puesto en valor muchas de sus ventajas respecto a la FIV convencional (FIVc). FIV-CN y FIVc son tratamientos complementarios que permiten ampliar el espectro terapeutico en las parejas con indicacion de FIV. La FIV-CN constituye un tratamiento a considerar especialmente en la paciente con mal pronostico para la FIVc por baja reserva ovarica. La edad es su principal factor pronostico y los resultados son aceptables hasta los 40 anos. El principal factor limitante de la FIV-CN es el riesgo de cancelacion por ovulacion, que puede reducirse mediante diferentes estrategias. No obstante, los resultados por transferencia embrionaria son satisfactorios en diferentes series publicadas.
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- 2022
9. Postnatal persistence of fetal cardiovascular remodelling associated with assisted reproductivetechnologies: a cohort study
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Merida Rodriguez-Lopez, Álvaro Sepúlveda-Martínez, Juan Balasch, G Casals, A Serafini, Brenda Valenzuela-Alcaraz, Laura García-Otero, Bart Bijnens, E. Gratacós, Marta Sitges, Fatima Crispi, Monica Cruz-Lemini, and Universitat de Barcelona
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Reproductive Techniques, Assisted ,carotid intima-media thickness ,Diastole ,Blood Pressure ,heart ,Reproductive technology ,Carotid Intima-Media Thickness ,Right atrial ,Persistence (computer science) ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Pregnancy ,Risk Factors ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,echocardiography ,Birth control ,Prospective Studies ,Reproducció assistida ,Ultrasonography ,Fetus ,postnatal ,030219 obstetrics & reproductive medicine ,Ventricular Remodeling ,business.industry ,blood pressure ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Blood pressure ,Cardiovascular Diseases ,Echocardiography ,Case-Control Studies ,Child, Preschool ,Cardiology ,Control de la natalitat ,Female ,Assisted reproductive technologies ,Isovolumic relaxation time ,business ,Cohort study - Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To assess the postnatal persistence of fetal cardiovascular remodelling associated with assisted reproductive technologies (ART) in children at 3 years of age. DESIGN: A cohort study of children conceived by ART. SETTING: Maternal-Fetal Medicine Unit, Hospital Clinic Barcelona, Spain. POPULATION SAMPLE: Eighty singleton pregnancies conceived by ART and 80 spontaneously conceived (controls) followed from fetal life up to childhood. METHODS: Cardiovascular evaluation was performed at 3 years of corrected age, including echocardiography, carotid intima-media (cIMT) by ultrasound, and blood pressure. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Postnatal persistence of cardiovascular changes in children conceived by ART. RESULTS: Compared with controls, children conceived by ART showed larger atria (right atrial area: control 4.9 cm(2) (0.9) versus ART 5.5 cm(2) (0.9), P < 0.001), more globular ventricles (right ventricular sphericity index: control mean 1.8 (SD 0.5) versus ART 1.6 (0.2), P < 0.001), and signs of systolic (tricuspid annular plane systolic excursion: control 18 mm (2) versus ART 16 mm (3), P < 0.001) and diastolic dysfunction (isovolumic relaxation time: control 68 ms (12) versus ART 79 ms (12), P < 0.001). ART children also presented increased systolic blood pressure (control 90 mmHg (6) versus ART 94 mmHg (5), P < 0.003) and cIMT (control 0.52 µm (0.14) versus ART 0.60 µm (0.16), P < 0.001) as compared with those spontaneously conceived. CONCLUSIONS: Cardiovascular changes previously reported in ART fetuses persist postnatally at 3 years of age. These results underscore the importance of future studies for assessing the long-term cardiovascular health associated with ART. TWEETABLE ABSTRACT: Cardiovascular changes described in fetuses conceived by ART, persist in children at 3 years of age.
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- 2018
10. Reproductive endocrinology
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A. Nazzaro, A. Salerno, L. Di Iorio, G. Landino, S. Marino, E. Pastore, F. Fabregues, A. Iraola, G. Casals, M. Creus, S. Peralta, J. Penarrubia, D. Manau, S. Civico, J. Balasch, I. Lindgren, Y. L. Giwercman, E. Celik, I. Turkcuoglu, B. Ata, A. Karaer, P. Kirici, B. Berker, J. Park, J. Kim, J. Rhee, M. Krishnan, O. Rustamov, R. Russel, C. Fitzgerald, S. Roberts, S. Hapuarachi, B. K. Tan, R. S. Mathur, A. van de Vijver, C. Blockeel, M. Camus, N. Polyzos, L. Van Landuyt, H. Tournaye, N. O. Turhan, D. Hizli, Z. Kamalak, A. Kosus, N. Kosus, H. Kafali, A. Lukaszuk, M. Kunicki, J. Liss, A. Bednarowska, G. Jakiel, K. Lukaszuk, M. Lukaszuk, B. Olszak-Sokolowska, T. Wasniewski, M. Neuberg, V. Cavalcanti, C. Peluso, B. L. Lechado, E. B. Cordts, D. M. Christofolini, C. P. Barbosa, B. Bianco, C. A. Venetis, E. M. Kolibianakis, J. Bosdou, B. C. Tarlatzis, M. Onal, D. N. Gungor, M. Acet, S. Kahraman, E. Kuijper, J. Twisk, M. Caanen, T. Korsen, P. Hompes, M. Kushnir, A. Rockwood, W. Meikle, C. B. Lambalk, X. Yan, X. Dai, J. Wang, N. Zhao, Y. Cui, J. Liu, F. Yarde, A. H. E. M. Maas, A. Franx, M. J. C. Eijkemans, J. T. Drost, B. B. van Rijn, J. van Eyck, Y. T. van der Schouw, F. J. M. Broekmans, F. Martyn, B. Anglim, M. Wingfield, T. Fang, G. J. Yan, H. X. Sun, Y. L. Hu, J. Chrudimska, P. Krenkova, M. Macek, J. Teixeira da Silva, M. Cunha, J. Silva, P. Viana, A. Goncalves, N. Barros, C. Oliveira, M. Sousa, A. Barros, S. M. Nelson, S. M. Lloyd, A. McConnachie, A. Khader, R. Fleming, D. A. Lawlor, L. Thuesen, A. N. Andersen, A. Loft, J. Smitz, M. Abdel-Rahman, S. Ismail, J. Silk, M. Abdellah, A. H. Abdellah, F. Ruiz, M. Cruz, M. Piro, D. Collado, J. A. Garcia-Velasco, A. Requena, Z. Kollmann, N. A. Bersinger, B. McKinnon, S. Schneider, M. D. Mueller, M. von Wolff, A. Vaucher, B. Weiss, P. Stute, U. Marti, J. Chai, W. Y. T. Yeung, C. Y. V. Lee, W. H. R. Li, P. C. Ho, H. Y. E. Ng, S. M. Kim, S. H. Kim, B. C. Jee, S. Ku, C. S. Suh, Y. M. Choi, J. G. Kim, S. Y. Moon, J. H. Lee, S. G. Kim, Y. Y. Kim, H. J. Kim, K. H. Lee, I. H. Park, H. G. Sun, Y. I. Hwang, N. Y. Sung, M. H. Choi, S. H. Cha, C. W. Park, J. Y. Kim, K. M. Yang, I. O. Song, M. K. Koong, I. S. Kang, H. O. Kim, C. Haines, W. Y. Wong, W. S. Kong, L. P. Cheung, T. K. Choy, P. C. Leung, R. Fadini, G. Coticchio, M. M. Renzini, M. C. Guglielmo, F. Brambillasca, A. Hourvitz, D. F. Albertini, P. Novara, M. Merola, M. Dal Canto, J. A. A. Iza, J. L. DePablo, C. Anarte, A. Domingo, E. Abanto, G. Barrenetxea, R. Kato, S. Kawachiya, D. Bodri, M. Kondo, T. Matsumoto, L. G. L. Maldonado, A. S. Setti, D. P. A. F. Braga, A. Iaconelli, E. Borges, C. Iaconelli, R. C. S. Figueira, K. Kitaya, S. Taguchi, M. Funabiki, Y. Tada, T. Hayashi, Y. Nakamura, M. Snajderova, D. Zemkova, V. Lanska, L. Teslik, R. N. - Calonge, L. Ortega, A. Garcia, S. Cortes, A. Guijarro, P. C. Peregrin, M. Bellavia, M. H. Pesant, D. Wirthner, L. Portman, D. de Ziegler, D. Wunder, X. Chen, S. H. L. Chen, Y. D. Liu, T. Tao, L. J. Xu, X. L. Tian, D. S. H. Ye, Y. X. He, A. Carby, E. Barsoum, S. El-Shawarby, G. Trew, S. Lavery, N. Mishieva, N. Barkalina, I. Korneeva, T. Ivanets, A. Abubakirov, R. Chavoshinejad, G. m. Hartshorne, W. Marei, A. a. Fouladi-nashta, G. Kyrkou, E. Trakakis, C. H. Chrelias, E. Alexiou, K. Lykeridou, G. Mastorakos, N. Bersinger, H. Ferrero, R. Gomez, C. M. Garcia-Pascual, C. Simon, A. Pellicer, A. Turienzo, B. Lledo, J. Guerrero, J. A. Ortiz, R. Morales, J. Ten, J. Llacer, R. Bernabeu, V. De Leo, R. Focarelli, A. Capaldo, A. Stendardi, L. Gambera, A. L. Marca, P. Piomboni, J. J. Kim, J. H. Kang, K. R. Hwang, S. J. Chae, S. H. Yoon, S. Y. Ku, S. Iliodromiti, T. W. Kelsey, R. A. Anderson, H. J. Lee, A. Weghofer, V. A. Kushnir, A. Shohat-Tal, E. Lazzaroni, D. H. Barad, N. N. Gleicher, T. Shavit, E. Shalom-Paz, O. Fainaru, M. Michaeli, E. Kartchovsky, A. Ellenbogen, J. Gerris, F. Vandekerckhove, A. Delvigne, N. Dhont, B. Madoc, J. Neyskens, M. Buyle, E. Vansteenkiste, E. De Schepper, L. Pil, N. Van Keirsbilck, W. Verpoest, D. Debacquer, L. Annemans, P. De Sutter, M. Von Wolff, N. a. Bersinger, F. F. Verit, S. Keskin, A. K. Sargin, S. Karahuseyinoglu, O. Yucel, S. Yalcinkaya, A. N. Comninos, C. N. Jayasena, G. M. K. Nijher, A. Abbara, A. De Silva, J. D. Veldhuis, R. Ratnasabapathy, C. Izzi-Engbeaya, A. Lim, D. A. Patel, M. A. Ghatei, S. R. Bloom, W. S. Dhillo, M. Colodron, J. J. Guillen, D. Garcia, O. Coll, R. Vassena, V. Vernaeve, H. Pazoki, G. Bolouri, F. Farokhi, M. A. Azarbayjani, M. S. Alebic, N. Stojanovic, R. Abali, A. Yuksel, C. Aktas, C. Celik, S. Guzel, G. Erfan, O. Sahin, H. Zhongying, L. Shangwei, M. Qianhong, F. Wei, L. Lei, X. Zhun, W. Yan, A. De Baerdemaeker, K. Tilleman, S. Vansteelandt, J. B. A. Oliveira, R. L. R. Baruffi, C. G. Petersen, A. L. Mauri, A. M. Nascimento, L. Vagnini, J. Ricci, M. Cavagna, F. C. Massaro, A. Pontes, J. G. Franco, W. El-khayat, M. Elsadek, F. Foroozanfard, H. Saberi, A. Moravvegi, M. Kazemi, Y. S. Gidoni, A. Raziel, S. Friedler, D. Strassburger, D. Hadari, E. Kasterstein, I. Ben-Ami, D. Komarovsky, B. Maslansky, O. Bern, R. Ron-El, M. P. Izquierdo, F. Araico, O. Somova, O. Feskov, I. Feskova, I. Bezpechnaya, I. Zhylkova, O. Tishchenko, S. K. Oguic, D. P. Baldani, L. Skrgatic, V. Simunic, H. Vrcic, D. Rogic, J. Juras, M. S. Goldstein, L. Garcia De Miguel, M. C. Campo, A. Gurria, J. Alonso, A. Serrano, E. Marban, L. Shalev, Y. Yung, G. Yerushalmi, C. Giovanni, J. Has, E. Maman, M. Monterde, A. Marzal, O. Vega, J. m. Rubio, C. Diaz-Garcia, A. Eapen, A. Datta, A. Kurinchi-selvan, H. Birch, G. M. Lockwood, M. C. Ornek, U. Ates, T. Usta, C. P. Goksedef, A. Bruszczynska, J. Glowacka, K. Jaguszewska, S. Oehninger, S. Nelson, P. Verweij, B. Stegmann, H. Ando, T. Takayanagi, H. Minamoto, N. Suzuki, N. Rubinshtein, S. Saltek, B. Demir, B. Dilbaz, C. Demirtas, W. Kutteh, B. Shapiro, H. Witjes, K. Gordon, M. P. Lauritsen, A. Pinborg, N. L. Freiesleben, A. L. Mikkelsen, M. R. Bjerge, P. Chakraborty, S. K. Goswami, B. N. Chakravarty, M. Mittal, R. Bajoria, N. Narvekar, R. Chatterjee, J. G. Bentzen, T. H. Johannsen, T. Scheike, L. Friis-Hansen, S. Sunkara, A. Coomarasamy, R. Faris, P. Braude, Y. Khalaf, A. Makedos, S. Masouridou, K. Chatzimeletiou, L. Zepiridis, A. Mitsoli, G. Lainas, I. Sfontouris, A. Tzamtzoglou, D. Kyrou, T. Lainas, A. Fermin, L. Crisol, A. Exposito, B. Prieto, R. Mendoza, R. Matorras, Y. Louwers, O. Lao, M. Kayser, A. Palumbo, V. Sanabria, J. P. Rouleau, M. Puopolo, M. J. Hernandez, J. M. Rubio, S. Ozturk, B. Sozen, A. Yaba-Ucar, D. Mutlu, N. Demir, H. Olsson, R. Sandstrom, L. Grundemar, E. Papaleo, L. Corti, E. Rabellotti, V. S. Vanni, M. Potenza, M. Molgora, P. Vigano, M. Candiani, M. Fernandez-Sanchez, E. Bosch, H. Visnova, P. Barri, B. J. C. M. Fauser, J. C. Arce, P. Peluso, C. M. Trevisan, F. A. Fonseca, P. Bakas, N. Vlahos, D. Hassiakos, D. Tzanakaki, O. Gregoriou, A. Liapis, G. Creatsas, E. Adda-Herzog, J. Steffann, S. Sebag-Peyrelevade, M. Poulain, A. Benachi, R. Fanchin, D. Zhang, F. Aybar, S. Temel, O. Hamdine, N. S. Macklon, J. S. Laven, B. J. Cohlen, A. Verhoeff, P. A. van Dop, R. E. Bernardus, G. J. E. Oosterhuis, C. A. G. Holleboom, G. C. van den Dool-Maasland, H. J. Verburg, P. F. M. van der Heijden, A. Blankhart, B. C. J. M. Fauser, F. J. Broekmans, J. Bhattacharya, A. Mitra, G. B. Dutta, A. Kundu, M. Bhattacharya, S. Kundu, P. Pigny, A. Dassonneville, S. Catteau-Jonard, C. Decanter, D. Dewailly, J. Pouly, F. Olivennes, N. Massin, M. Celle, N. Caizergues, M. Gaudoin, M. Messow, L. Vanhove, M. Peigne, P. Thomas, and G. Robin
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Gynecology ,Gerontology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Index (economics) ,Reproductive Medicine ,business.industry ,Rehabilitation ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Medicine ,Stimulation ,business - Abstract
Sao Paulo State Univ UNESP, Ctr Human Reprod Prof Franco Jr, Paulista Ctr Diag Res & Training, Dept Gynecol & Obstet,Botucatu Med Sch, Ribeirao Preto, Brazil
- Published
- 2013
11. POSTER VIEWING SESSION - REPRODUCTIVE ENDOCRINOLOGY
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L. Wildt, M. Alhalabi, C.B Lambalk, T. Cordes, G. Makrydimas, M. Turnovec, L. Mohiyiddeen, Y. Menezo, A. Ben Salem, B. Mannaerts, F. Carmona, M.C Magli, K.A.I. Xue, J. Higgs, M. Al Azemi, K. Toulis, C. Arrivi, P.G.A. Hompes, B. Wang, F.S Wu, A. Pellicer, C. Blockeel, N. Demir, P.M Bossuyt, J.S Yoon, H. Piao, E. Hatzi, E.M. van der Stroom, J. Moon, R.K.K. Lee, M. Poulasouhidou, W. Newman, C.A Venetis, A. Karkanaki, M. Vural, M. Dimitraki, R.D.S. Santos, J.E Han, W.K Kuchenbecker, C.Y Hur, K. Haller-Kikkatalo, Y.J Kang, Y. Cheong, M. Macek, N. Bayram, B. Tarlatzis, A. Chambers, R. Hiura, R. Formankova, K. Kishimoto, M. Manno, A. Nicoletti, I. Tamura, S. Modi, T.K Nilsson, R. Karayalcin, A. Volpes, F.C Massaro, M. Chronopoulou, M. Hellström, L.G Nardo, R. Gomez, A. Abousetta, M. Aboulghar, S.N Beemsterboer, M.H Lin, B. Coroleu, R. Homburg, M. Sterrenburg, A. Salazar, F. Cagampang, M. Camus, N. Shreeve, P. Devroey, S. Fernandes, S. Venturoli, S. Samawi, K.H Sadek, M. Sarafraz Yazdi, R.M Reis, K. Sfakianoudis, A. Watanabe, R. Takata, A. Pavlaki, R.E Bernardus, D. Dewailly, M. Aghahosseini, M. Sator, B. Gull, M. van Wely, Z. Zhou, L. Gianaroli, M.Y Won, V. Ventura, M. Youssef, Y.D Mao, H. Klucková, J. Vialard, M. Fernandez-Sanchez, J. Lee, N. Hatakeyama, R.A Ferriani, A. Chikawa, R. Nasiri, F. Fàbregues, C. Egarter, D. Bodri, B. Rashidi, F.M Helmerhorst, A. Overbeek, M. Snajderova, F. Lunger, S. Pang, T. Mousatat, B. Xu, L.F.I. Silva, P. Pemberton, P.L Broux, M. Touhami, G. Van Thillo, T. Yoon, M. Creus, R. Mendoza, J. Balasch, Y. Nafiye, B. Jee, E. Young, A. Teranisi, V. Gallot, A. Othman, H. Edalatkhah, F. Giolo, S. Banerjee, A.H Zarnani, E.A McGee, M.C Béné, M. van den Berg, X. Wang, S.W Lyu, Y. Oka, P.C.M. de Groot, L. Safdarian, K. Ozerkan, N. Celik, M. Laanpere, S.W.M. Dieben, S. Akira, L. Jungblut, F. Ramezanzadeh, E.M Kolibianakis, P. Scaglione, M. Dahan, A. Leader, I.O Song, W.G Newman, D. Nakayama, K. Iwahasi, S.N Kabir, M.C Pustovrh, C. Iaconelli, L. Yang, H. Zorgati, R. Matsuo, H.O Kim, L. van den Wijngaard, A. Sarapik, A.M.M. Cota, A. Demirol, I.S Kang, T. Kaart, J.H Yoo, N. Kafri, J.H Lim, R.L.R. Baruffi, M. Guimerà, E. Borges, L. Gao, L. Moy, S. Ozyer, H. Leonhardt, F.J Paula, G. Uncu, J.M Estanyol, S. Teramura, J.C Osborn, P. Merino, D. Kyrou, P. Keslova, D. Colleu, M. Ono, H. Mousavi Fatemi, N.P Polyzos, L.D Vagnini, F. van der Veen, J. Han, E. Chang, F. Diao, I. Afshan, P. Haentjens, C. Suh, D. Pietrowski, H. Won, S. Mehri, K. Doody, M. Franz, F.Y Diao, T. Waseda, S. Patchava, W.P Martins, E. Kintiraki, Z. Zhang, Y. Shibui, D. Gentien, M. Even, M.E.I. Li, S. Teramoto, C. González, C.A.M. Koks, D. Montjeant, S.A Roberts, N. Xita, M.J Nahuis, T. Mardesic, N. Koutlaki, A. Velthut, T. Hillensjo, Abdel-Gawad E Saad, M. Jo, Y. Hu, P. Paulasová, M. Ajina, P. Delagrange, J.A Romijn, K.L Radhika, K. Hatano, B. Prieto, I. Katsikis, S. Goswami, M. Dattilo, E. Stener-Victorin, I. Kasapoglu, O. Lao, Y. Kuwabara, G. Mintziori, N. Hope, I. Rodríguez, S. Lavery, K.C Kim, J. Stary, Y.V Louwers, F. Broekmans, V. Magnani, K. Isaka, G. Priou, D.H Barad, T. Fumino, S. Kahraman, M. Jinno, M. Kuwayama, C.N.M. Renckens, B.W.J. Mol, R. Paradisi, M. Farahpour, M. Kayser, N. Gleicher, C.I Messini, S. Altmäe, E. Codner, A. Marino, H. Sun, S.H Kim, Y.C Cheong, D. Athanatos, L. Szabo, J.J Guillén, R. Núñez, J.A Guijarro, M. de Carvalho, D. Stavrou, J. Smit, J.T Chung, W. van Dorp, A.M Ardekani, S.D Kim, J. Diblík, K. Mine, T. Iwasa, F.R Cagampang, F.H de Jong, N. Prados, N. Ohama, G. Pasquinelli, M.S Icen, Y. Uncu, F. Yazici, A. Smith, A. Allegra, H. Ben Ali, V. Loup, A. Guivarch Leveque, H. Witjes, M. Heidari, J.H Esler, H. Ferrero, B. Gurlek, K.A Toulis, D. Paz, N. Sugino, T. Abe, O. Valkenburg, H. Abdalla, A. Salumets, C. Ho, A. Weghofer, M.L Hendriks, N. Potdar, H. Toy, T.A Gelbaya, H. Al-Inany, S. Assou, R. Santana, K. Niyani, A. Pane, R. Fabbri, C.G Petersen, A. Piouka, W.S Lee, Y. Kim, V. Basconi, G. Yan, I. Georgiou, Z. Qiu, J.H Jung, F. Massin, K. Kotaska, H.M Fatemi, R. Uibo, B.C Tarlatzis, N. Kose, R. Matorras, X. Hu, H. Asada, W. Lee, J.S.E. Laven, A. Khatib, S. Sharma, H. McBurney, I. Schipper, S.H Yang, M. Kazuka, R. Schats, K. Dafopoulos, S. Daube, H. Tournaye, B.C Jee, G. Ruvolo, T.G Tzellos, K. Pantos, C. Motteram, J. Cerníková, L.J Rombauts, H. Rahmanpour Zanjani, G. Giakoumakis, S. Lin, M. Hrehorcák, G. Daskalopoulos, F.E. van Leeuwen, J. Choi, S. Talebi, Y.U.A.N. Zhang, B. Seeber, S.D Sharma, R. Fujii, A. Katayama, A. Yaba, S. Engels, A. Schultze-Mosgau, E. Lee, S. Kim, S. Ono, F. Davari, O. Coll, A. Just, C. Battaglia, K. Gordon, J. Sha, E. Angeli, C. Villarroel, J.B.A. Oliveira, T. Ichikawa, H.J.H.M. van Dessel, O. Iannetta, F.M Valente, F. Delgado, S. Batioglu, Y. Cui, H. Tomizawa, R. Baydoun, W.D Lee, S. Soliman, T. Sasagawa, T. Okubo, A. Taha, W. Ding, W. Wang, S. Dória, P. Arvis, M.L Tartaglia, A.P Ferraretti, S. Lie Fong, S. Reinblatt, K.S Lim, E. Hasegawa, S. Fujita, M.A Akhtar, M. Baghrei, D. Delkos, S. Roberts, J. Ramos Vidal, I. Kwak, Y.J Kim, D. Beyer, F. Aspichueta, M. Trullenque, J.B.F. Fernandes, S. Usuda, M. Colakoglu, H. Dechaud, E.J Oude Loohuis, T. Gurgan, O.M Dekkers, J. García, R. Iannetta, C. Keck, M. Shigeta, H. Tamura, J. Liu, K.H Kim, T. Takeshita, S.A Mouratoglou, G.J.E. Oosterhuis, M. Macciocca, J. Sharif, M. Demirtas, J.Y Liu, C. Simon, A. Iraola, C. Vieira, L. Nardo, A. Exposito, T. Stefos, K. Zikopoulos, M. De Vos, K. Diedrich, L. Lazaros, R. Fanchin, K.B Bruce, P. Feldmár, P. Hompes, P. Chakraborty, S. Makinoda, M. Abuzeid, C.M Hill, J.G Franco, M. Benkhalifa, V. Vernaeve, M.K Koong, T.K Yoon, H. Rahmanpour, A. Stavreus-Evers, D. Panidis, L.G Maldonado, T.B Tarlatzi, J.W Kim, S.K Goswami, A. Pontes, H. Seok, R. Cartwright, C. Cordeo, J. Cho, S. Stergianos, N. Kim, J. Nicopoullos, G.C Faure, S. Van Voorst, T. Yeko, S.H Shim, J. Alonso, J.M. van Montfrans, W.Y Son, D.P.A.F. Braga, E.G Papanikolaou, B.N Chakravarty, K.A Park, M.W Heymans, K. Kim, A. Yates, C.E Martinelli, K. Navaratnam, T.E König, F. Sarvi, A. Iaconelli, M.C Fasolino, A. Barros, G. Trew, I. Kale, P.N Barri, R. Frydman, J. Wolyncevic, R. Tomiyama, P. Caballero, J. Bosdou, G. Casals, F. Lamazou, G. Griesinger, E. Eukarpidis, D. Ankers, E. van Dulmen-den Broeder, S.S Nandi, N. Buendgen, G.M Soares, L. Fien, H. Ito, A. Rodríguez, D. Tsolakidis, H. Billi, A.C.J.S. Rosa e Silva, A. Sarkar, L. Crisol, Y.M Hwu, A.G Uitterlinden, D. Lee, A. Gonzalez-Ravina, M. Kataoka, G. Lockwood, G. Ding, I. Parazza, A.L Mauri, C. Caligara, H. Takagi, M. Cavagna, B. Ata, L. Homer, R. Tur, A. Tocino, N. Neyatani, K. Sadek, M.H Mochtar, H. Hamai, T. Taketani, M.F Silva de Sá, A. Kaponis, M. Kavrut, D.G Goulis, J. Van Leeuwen, N. Brook, R. Chattopadhyay, G. Pados, T. Vaxevanoglou, S. Ghosh, S. Hamamah, T. Anahory, L.E.E. van der Houwen, X. Ma, B. Mulugeta, P. Sedlacek, H. Holzer, N.M. van Mello, O. Rustamov, N. Macklon, M. Devesa, J. Hirohama, I.E Messinis, A. García, S.H Cha, A. Aleyasin, S. Cortés, S.J Chae, D. Choi, M. Grynberg, F.J Carranza, A.S Mahmoud, N. Sofikitis, T. Gioka, J. Elbers, W. Dietrich, F. Gaytan, T.P Lima, P. López, G. Iñiguez, and A.S Setti
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Reproductive Medicine ,Family medicine ,Rehabilitation ,medicine ,Reproductive Endocrinology ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Session (computer science) - Published
- 2011
12. POSTER VIEWING SESSION - ENDOMETRIOSIS, ENDOMETRIUM, IMPLANTATION AND FALLOPIAN TUBE
- Author
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K. K. Palial, J. Drury, L. Heathcote, A. Valentijin, R. G. Farquharson, R. Gazvani, P. S. Rudland, D. K. Hapangama, N. Celik, O. Celik, E. Aktan, E. Ozerol, E. Celik, K. Bozkurt, H. Paran, S. Hascalik, I. Ozerol, T. Arase, T. Maruyama, H. Uchida, K. Miyazaki, H. Oda, S. Uchida-Nishikawa, M. Kagami, A. Yamazaki, K. Tamaki, Y. Yoshimura, M. De Vos, C. Ortega, J. Smitz, I. Van Vaerenbergh, C. Bourgain, P. Devroey, D. Luciano, C. Exacoustos, E. Zupi, A. A. Luciano, D. Arduini, W. A. Palomino, F. Argandona, P. Kohen, R. Azua, A. Scarella, L. Devoto, B. McKinnon, N. A. Bersinger, M. D. Mueller, M. Bonavita, M. Mattila, F. P. Ferreira, V. Maia-Filho, A. M. Rocha, P. Serafini, E. L. A. Motta, H. Kim, C. H. Kim, R. M. You, H. Y. Nah, J. W. Lee, H. J. Kang, B. M. Kang, H. Letur - Koenirsch, D. Haouzi, F. Olivennes, C. Rouleau, P. Cohen-Bacri, H. Dechaud, S. Hamamah, T. D'Hooghe, L. Hummelshoj, G. A. J. Dunselman, C. D. Dirksen, W. E. R. F. EndoCost Consortium, S. Simoens, R. Novembri, S. Luisi, P. Carrarelli, A. L. L. Rocha, P. Toti, F. M. Reis, P. Florio, F. Petraglia, K. D. Bruce, K. H. Sadek, N. Macklon, F. R. Cagampang, Y. Cheong, M. Goudakou, A. Kalogeraki, I. Matalliotakis, A. Papatheodorou, T. Pasadaki, A. Karkanaki, I. Prapas, I. Panagiotidis, E. Kasapi, D. Barlow, J. Oliver, E. Loumaye, M. Khanmohammadi, S. kazemnejad, S. darzi, S. Khanjani, A. Zarnani, M. Akhondi, C. W. Tan, C. P. Ng, S. F. Loh, H. H. Tan, M. Choolani, L. Griffith, J. Chan, K. L. Andersson, J. Sundqvist, G. Scarselli, K. Gemzell-Danielsson, P. G. Lalitkumar, S. Jana, R. Chattopadhyay, C. Datta Ray, K. Chaudhury, B. N. Chakravarty, N. Hannan, J. Evans, C. Hincks, L. J. F. Rombauts, L. A. Salamonsen, D. Choi, J. Lee, J. Park, H. Chang, M. Kim, K. Hwang, K. Takeuchi, T. Kurematsu, Y. Fukumoto, Y. Yuki, Y. Kuroki, Y. Homan, Y. Sata, M. Takeuchi, E. Munoz Munoz, G. Ortiz Olivera, I. Fernandez Lopez, B. Martinez Martinez, J. Aguilar Prieto, S. Portela Perez, A. Pellicer Martinez, M. Keltz, M. Sauerbrun, A. Breborowicz, E. Gonzales, S. Vicente-Munoz, L. Puchades-Carrasco, I. Morcillo, J. J. Hidalgo, J. Gilabert-Estelles, E. Novella-Maestre, A. Pellicer, A. Pineda-Lucena, K. A. Yavorovskaya, T. A. Okhtyrskaya, T. A. Demura, N. M. Faizulina, L. S. Ezhova, E. A. Kogan, J. P. Bilibio, C. A. B. Souza, G. P. Rodini, V. Genro, C. G. Andreoli, E. de Conto, J. S. L. Cunha-Filho, M. Saare, D. Soritsa, L. Jarva, K. Vaidla, P. Palta, M. Laan, H. Karro, A. Soritsa, A. Salumets, M. Peters, A. Miskova, M. Pilmane, D. Rezeberga, S. Assou, H. Letur, P. Piomboni, A. Stendardi, L. Gambera, V. De Leo, R. Focarelli, K. Tamm, J. Simm, M. Metsis, A. Vodolazkaia, A. Fassbender, C. M. Kyama, A. Bokor, D. Schols, D. Huskens, C. Meuleman, K. Peeraer, C. Tomassetti, T. M. D'Hooghe, K. Machens, W. Afhuppe, A. Schulz, K. Diefenbach, B. Schutt, T. Faustmann, J. Reischl, S. Altmae, J. Reimand, T. Laisk, O. Hovatta, R. Kolde, J. Vilo, A. Stavreus-Evers, J. H. Lee, S. G. Kim, Y. Y. Kim, I. H. Park, H. G. Sun, K. H. Lee, K. Ezoe, H. Kawano, A. Yabuuchi, K. Ochiai, H. Nagashima, H. Osada, N. Kagawa, O. Kato, I. Tamura, H. Asada, T. Taketani, H. Tamura, N. Sugino, J. Garcia Velasco, L. Prieto, J. F. Quesada, O. Cambero, M. Toribio, C. Y. Hur, K. S. Lim, W. D. Lee, J. H. Lim, A. Germeyer, L. Nelson, A. Graham, J. Jauckus, T. Strowitzki, B. Lessey, I. Gyulmamedova, O. Illina, I. Illin, I. Mogilevkina, A. Chaika, O. Nosenko, I. Boykova, E. Gulmamedova, H. Isik, O. Moraloglu, A. L. I. Seven, S. Kilic, U. Erkayiran, M. Caydere, S. Batioglu, M. Alhalabi, S. Samawi, A. Taha, N. Kafri, S. Modi, A. Khatib, J. Sharif, A. Othman, S. Lancuba, C. Branzini, M. Lopez, A. Baricalla, C. Cristina, J. Chen, Y. Jiang, X. Zhen, Y. Hu, G. Yan, H. Sun, J. Mizumoto, J. Ueno, F. M. Carvalho, G. Casals, J. Ordi, M. Guimera, M. Creus, F. Fabregues, R. Casamitjana, F. Carmona, J. Balasch, Y. S. Choi, K. C. Kim, K. H. Kim, B. S. Lee, S. H. Kim, L. Overbergh, E. Verdrengh, C. Kyama, E. Waelkens, C. Mathieu, T. Iwasa, K. Hatano, E. Hasegawa, H. Ito, K. Isaka, F. Reis, K. S. Lee, J. K. Joo, J. B. Son, J. R. Choi, A. Vidali, D. H. Barad, N. Gleicher, M. Sayyah-Melli, and M. Kazemi-Shishvan
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Gynecology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Obstetrics ,Rehabilitation ,Endometriosis ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Endometrium ,medicine.disease ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Reproductive Medicine ,medicine ,Session (computer science) ,business ,Fallopian tube - Published
- 2011
13. Impact of bariatric surgery on ovarian reserve markers and its correlation with nutritional parameters and adipokines
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G. Casals, S. Ventosa, L. Flores, S. Peralta, A. Ibarzabal Olano, F. Torres, D. Manau, and J. Vidal
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Oncology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Reproductive Medicine ,business.industry ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Adipokine ,Ovarian reserve ,business - Published
- 2018
14. ¿HEMOS DE RECOMENDAR DIETA LÍQUIDA O DIETA SIN RESIDUOS, EL DÍA ANTES DE UNA COLONOSCOPIA DE CRIBADO?. ESTUDIO CLÍNICO RANDOMIZADO CON DOS GRUPOS PARALELOS
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A Fernández Clotet, IA Ibañez Zafón, X Bessa Caserras, F Riu Pons, MA Alvarez Gonzalez, MA Pantaleón Sánchez, M Bonilla Montón, A Seoane Urgorri, G Casals Urquiza, A Raga Gil, M Dedeu Josep, L Barranco Priego, and D Zaffalon Espinal
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business.industry ,Gastroenterology ,Medicine ,business ,Humanities - Published
- 2015
15. Metanefrinas plasmáticas: mayor eficacia en el diagnóstico bioquímico del feocromocitoma
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G. Casals, W. Jiménez, E. Calvo, Irene Halperin, and C. Ferran
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Endocrinology ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism - Abstract
Introduccion La aproximacion optima al diagnostico bioquimico del feocromocitoma es tema de debate debido a la posibilidad de determiner las metanefrinas plasmaticas libres, que muestran un elevado poder diagnostico. Ademas, presentan la ventaja de eliminar los inconvenientes relacionados con las muestras de orina de 24 h. El objetivo del estudio es analizar la eficacia en el diagnostico de feocromocitoma de las metanefrinas plasmaticas libres fraccionadas. Material y metodos A todos los individuos evaluados para la deteccion de feocromocitoma durante un ano en nuestro hospital (n = 137) se les determinaron las concentraciones de metanefrinas y catecolaminas totales en orina y, paralelamente, de las metanefrinas plasmaticas libres mediante inmunoensayo. Resultados Se diagnosticaron 5 feocromocitomas, confirmados histologicamente. Las metanefrinas plasmaticas no presentaron ningun resultado falso negativo y solo un falso positivo. Las catecolaminas y las metanefrinas en orina no ofrecieron ningun falso negativo, aunque mostraron, respectivamente, 12 y 13 falsos positivos, lo que dio como resultado una especificidad significativamente inferior a las metanefrinas plasmaticas. Conclusion La determinacion de las metanefrinas plasmaticas libres mediante tecnicas de inmunoensayo supone la incorporacion de una prueba de gran eficacia para el diagnostico del feocromocitoma asequible para una gran mayoria de laboratorios; por tanto, es una alternative valida a las determinaciones urinarias.
- Published
- 2005
16. C0514: Increased Circulating Procoagulant Microparticles are Associated with Recurrent Implantation Failure After In Vitro Fertilization and Embryo Transfer
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G. Casals, S. Civico, E. Garcia, M-A. Martinez-Zamora, J. Balasch, Dolors Tàssies, L. Martin, Juan Carlos Reverter, J. Monteagudo, and F. Carmona
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Andrology ,In vitro fertilisation ,Implantation failure ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Immunology ,Medicine ,Hematology ,business ,Embryo transfer - Published
- 2014
17. The Duct Selective Volumetric Receiver
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Xavier G. Casals and Jose Ignacio Ajona
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Materials science ,Duct (flow) ,Anatomy - Published
- 2000
18. 728 POSTER Differential inhibitory effects of epigallocatechin-3-gallate (EGCG) and C75 in cancer fatty acid metabolism
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T. Puig, J. Brunet, J. Relat, P.F. Marrero, D. Haro, G. Casals, Rut Porta, Ramon Colomer, and J.A. Menéndez
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Cancer Research ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Oncology ,Fatty acid metabolism ,chemistry ,Biochemistry ,medicine ,Cancer ,Gallate ,medicine.disease ,Inhibitory postsynaptic potential - Published
- 2007
19. Tratamiento conservador en el sindrome hellp
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O. Coll, G. Casals, S. Martínez, V. Cararach, and J. Figueras
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Gynecology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Medicine ,General Medicine ,business - Published
- 2000
20. Haemodynamic effects of angiotensin converting enzyme inhibition after cardiopulmonary bypass in dogs
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Kenneth M. Taylor, Jorge G Casals, James J. Morton, Susheela M Mittra, and John J. Brannan
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Captopril ,Proline ,Physiology ,Cardiac index ,Hemodynamics ,Angiotensin-Converting Enzyme Inhibitors ,law.invention ,Dogs ,law ,Physiology (medical) ,medicine ,Cardiopulmonary bypass ,Animals ,Cardiac Output ,Cardiopulmonary Bypass ,biology ,Chemistry ,Angiotensin II ,Angiotensin-converting enzyme ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Enzyme inhibitor ,Anesthesia ,Vascular resistance ,biology.protein ,Vascular Resistance ,medicine.symptom ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,Vasoconstriction - Abstract
Recent studies have suggested a possible causative relationship between elevated plasma levels of Angiotensin II (All) and the vasoconstriction associated with conventional cardiopulmonary bypass. The haemodynamic effects of SQ14225, a specific angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor, have been studied in a group of five dogs submitted to a 60 min period of cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB). A 20 min infusion of SQ14225 in a dose of 2 μg·kg−1·h−1 was administered to each dog 2 h after the end of the period of CPB. Measurements of peripheral vascular resistance index (PVRI), cardiac index (CI) and plasma levels of Angiotensin II were obtained at the start and end of the infusion period. The results in the five blocked dogs were compared with a control series of ten unblocked dogs submitted to an identical cardiopulmonary bypass regime. In the blocked dogs, PVRI fell significantly during infusion of SQ14225 from 38.27 units to 21.70 units (P < 0.01). There was a simultaneous significant increase in cardiac index from 3.00 to 3.98 litre·m2·min−1 (P < 0.01). Plasma Angiotensin II levels fell in the blocked dogs from 57 to 11.5 pg·cm−3 during the infusion period (normal levels
- Published
- 1980
21. Comparative Effects of Acetate- and Citrate-Based Dialysates on Dialysis Dose and Protein-Bound Uremic Toxins in Hemodiafiltration Patients: Exploring the Impact of Calcium and Magnesium Concentrations.
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Rodríguez-Espinosa D, Cuadrado-Payán E, Rico N, Torra M, Fernández RM, Gómez M, Morantes L, Casals G, Rodriguez-Garcia M, Maduell F, and Broseta JJ
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- Humans, Male, Female, Middle Aged, Aged, Prospective Studies, Dialysis Solutions chemistry, Urea blood, Indican blood, Sulfuric Acid Esters blood, Cresols blood, Protein Binding, Uremia therapy, Uremia blood, Adult, Hemodiafiltration, Acetates, Cross-Over Studies, Magnesium blood, Calcium blood, Citric Acid, Uremic Toxins blood
- Abstract
Modern hemodialysis employs weak acids as buffers to prevent bicarbonate precipitation with calcium or magnesium. Acetate, the most used acid, is linked to chronic inflammation and poor dialysis tolerance. Citrate has emerged as a potential alternative, though its effect on dialysis efficiency is not clear. This study aims to compare the efficacy of acetate- and citrate-based dialysates, focusing on protein-bound uremic toxins and dialysis doses. This single-center prospective crossover study includes prevalent patients participating in a thrice-weekly online hemodiafiltration program. Four dialysates were tested: two acetate-based (1.25 and 1.5 mmol/L calcium) and two citrate-based (1.5 mmol/L calcium with 0.5 and 0.75 mmol/L magnesium). Pre- and post-dialysis blood samples of eighteen patients were analyzed for urea, creatinine, p-cresyl sulfate, indoxyl sulfate, and albumin. Statistical significance was assessed using paired t -tests and repeated measures of ANOVA. There were no significant differences in dialysis dose (Kt), urea, creatinine, or indoxyl sulfate reduction ratios between acetate- and citrate-based dialysates. However, a significant decrease in the reduction ratio of p-cresyl sulfate was observed with the acetate dialysate containing 1.25 mmol/L calcium and the citrate dialysate with 0.5 mmol/L magnesium compared to the acetate dialysate containing 1.5 mmol/L calcium and the citrate dialysate with 0.75 mmol/L magnesium (51.56 ± 4.75 and 53.02 ± 4.52 vs. 65.25 ± 3.38 and 58.66 ± 4.16, p 0.007). No differences in dialysis dose were found between acetate- and citrate-based dialysates. However, citrate dialysates with lower calcium and magnesium concentrations may reduce the albumin displacement of p-cresyl sulfate. Further studies are needed to understand the observed differences and optimize the dialysate composition for the better clearance of protein-bound uremic toxins.
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- 2024
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22. Reversible effects of the SARS-CoV-2 on semen parameters.
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Jodar M, Barral Y, Leiva M, Castillo J, Barrio R, Agustí I, Borràs A, Carrillo P, Matheu R, Ferreti R, Herrero J, Reimundo P, Navero-Castillejos J, Casals G, Guimerà M, Corral JM, Martinez M, Carbonell M, Bassas L, Manau D, and Oliva R
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Retrospective Studies, Adult, Sperm Motility, COVID-19 complications, COVID-19 physiopathology, Infertility, Male virology, Infertility, Male physiopathology, Infertility, Male etiology, Semen Analysis, Semen virology, SARS-CoV-2
- Abstract
Despite that the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic has been controlled, it has affected a large proportion of the population, raising some concerns about potential sequelae in men at reproductive age. To contribute to the clarification of this issue, we performed a retrospective study comparing semen parameters values before and after confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infection in a large cohort of infertile men, compared to a control group that did not undergo SARS-CoV-2 infection. Wilcoxon test on paired samples and general linear regression model showed that SARS-CoV-2 infection has a detrimental effect on semen volume values ( p < 0.005). However, semen volume seems to be significantly lower only during the first spermatogenic cycle after SARS-COV-2 infection ( p < 0.005) and mainly in unvaccinated patients ( p < 0.05). In addition, we detected alterations in progressive motility in patients infected with the alpha SARS-COV-2 strain ( p < 0.05). In conclusion, our results show that although SARS-CoV-2 has a small effect on semen volume and sperm motility in infertile men, depending on the infectious strain or vaccination status, pre-infection values of semen parameters appear to be restored over one spermatogenic cycle after infection.
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- 2024
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23. The use of saliva and blood progesterone to profile the menstrual cycles of youth professional football players.
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Ferrer E, Rodas G, Casals G, Trilla A, Balagué-Dobon L, González JR, Ridley K, White R, and Burden RJ
- Abstract
Background: Understanding individual ovarian hormone cycles and their relationship with health, performance and injuries is highly important to practitioners supporting female athletes. Venous blood sampling is the current gold standard for measuring the ovarian hormones, but the invasive nature of this method presents a major barrier in sport environments. Saliva analysis may offer an alternative method as it is non-invasive, allowing the sample to be collected " in situ ", with relative ease, necessary in applied sport environments., Objective: The aims of this study were: (i) To compare the concentration of progesterone between capillary blood and saliva, (ii) To assess the efficacy of weekly measurements of progesterone for determining if ovulation has occurred in elite eumenorrheic football players, and (iii) To establish a saliva criteria cut-off for establishing ovulation and assessing the sensitivity, specificity and accuracy values of the method., Methodology: Twenty-one professional and semi-professional, Spanish league female football players (18.6 ± 1.5 years, 58.1 ± 6.0 kg, 164.0 ± 4.8 cm) with natural menstrual cycles, completed the study. Capillary blood and saliva samples were collected from each participant on twelve occasions each separated by at least 7 days. All samples were collected in the morning, following an overnight fast., Results: According to luteal phase serum progesterone concentrations, 11 out of 21 (52%) players presented with menstrual irregularities (oligomenorrheic n = 6, anovulatory n = 4, amenorrhoeic n = 1). A significant correlation was observed between plasma and saliva progesterone in the estimated eumenorrheic group ( r = 0.80, p = <0.001, 95% CI 0.72-0.86). The association between serum and saliva progesterone was weaker in the oligomenorrheic group ( r = 0.47, p = <0.001, 95% CI 0.27-0.64) and was not present in the anovulatory or amenorrhoeic groups., Conclusions: Salivary measurements of progesterone are well correlated with capillary blood when taken during eumenorrheic menstrual cycles and presents a viable, non-invasive method of establishing characteristic progesterone fluctuations in applied sport settings. The strength of the association appears to be concentration dependent. A luteal phase saliva progesterone (P4) >50 pg/ml and >1.5× follicular baseline has good sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy to indicate ovulation compared to established criteria for serum progesterone., Competing Interests: The authors declare that this study received funding from Mint Diagnostics Ltd. The funder had the following involvement in the study: conceptualized the study and completed the data analysis and reviewed the manuscript. KR and RW were employed by company Mint Diagnostics., (© 2024 Ferrer, Rodas, Casals, Trilla, Balagué-Dobon, González, Ridley, White and Burden.)
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- 2024
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24. Citrate Dialysate with and without Magnesium Supplementation in Hemodiafiltration: A Comparative Study Versus Acetate.
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Rodríguez-Espinosa D, Cuadrado-Payán E, Rico N, Torra M, Fernández RM, Casals G, Rodríguez-García M, Maduell F, and Broseta JJ
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- Humans, Male, Female, Middle Aged, Aged, Prospective Studies, Dialysis Solutions chemistry, Calcium, Hemodiafiltration methods, Magnesium administration & dosage, Acetates, Citric Acid, Cross-Over Studies
- Abstract
The choice of dialysate buffer in hemodialysis is crucial, with acetate being widely used despite complications. Citrate has emerged as an alternative because of its favorable effects, yet concerns persist about its impact on calcium and magnesium levels. This study investigates the influence of citrate dialysates (CDs) with and without additional magnesium supplementation on CKD-MBD biomarkers and assesses their ability to chelate divalent metals compared to acetate dialysates (ADs). A prospective crossover study was conducted in a single center, involving patients on thrice-weekly online hemodiafiltration (HDF). The following four dialysates were compared: two acetate-based and two citrate-based. Calcium, magnesium, iPTH, iron, selenium, cadmium, copper, zinc, BUN, albumin, creatinine, bicarbonate, and pH were monitored before and after each dialysis session. Seventy-two HDF sessions were performed on eighteen patients. The CDs showed stability in iPTH levels and reduced post-dialysis total calcium, with no significant increase in adverse events. Magnesium supplementation with CDs prevented hypomagnesemia. However, no significant differences among dialysates were observed in the chelation of other divalent metals. CDs, particularly with higher magnesium concentrations, offer promising benefits, including prevention of hypomagnesemia and stabilization of CKD-MBD parameters, suggesting citrate as a viable alternative to acetate. Further studies are warranted to elucidate long-term outcomes and optimize dialysate formulations. Until then, given our results, we recommend that when a CD is used, it should be used with a 0.75 mmol/L Mg concentration rather than a 0.5 mmol/L one.
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- 2024
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25. LC-HRMS and GC-MS Profiling of Urine Free Cortisol, Cortisone, 6Β-, and 18-Hydroxycortisol for the Evaluation of Glucocorticoid and Mineralocorticoid Disorders.
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Casals G, Ballesteros MA, Zamora A, Martínez I, Fernández-Varo G, Mora M, Hanzu FA, and Morales-Ruiz M
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- Humans, Chromatography, Liquid methods, Glucocorticoids urine, Cushing Syndrome urine, Cushing Syndrome diagnosis, Male, Female, Hydrocortisone urine, Hydrocortisone analogs & derivatives, Cortisone urine, Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry methods
- Abstract
Introduction: Urine free cortisol measurements are routinely performed to evaluate hypercortisolism. Despite their analytical inaccuracy, immunoassay-based methods are frequently used. Advances in liquid chromatography-high-resolution mass spectrometry (LC-HRMS) facilitate the incorporation of powerful diagnostic tools into clinical laboratories. In addition to its high analytical specificity and simultaneous analysis of different metabolites, accurate mass measurement allows for untargeted compound identification, which may help to identify clinically relevant metabolites or drugs., Methods: The present study aimed to validate a simple routine LC-HRMS method to quantify cortisol, cortisone, 6β-hydroxycortisol, and 18-hydroxycortisol simultaneously in human urine. Additionally, the study also validated a GC-MS method for the same steroids, evaluated their cross-reactivity with commercial cortisol immunoassays, and quantified the 24 h urine excretion in patients under clinical suspicion or follow-up for hypercortisolism., Results: The LC-HRMS method involved liquid-liquid extraction using dichloromethane, micro-LC for chromatographic separation and detection using the accurate masses of the steroids, and simultaneous high-resolution full scan acquisition. The method presented acceptable linearity, precision, and accuracy. Significant interference from 6β-hydroxycortisol and cortisone was demonstrated in the cortisol immunoassays, which impacted their reliability in the follow-up of patients with hypercortisolism and significant changes in these cortisol metabolites (i.e., due to drug-induced changes in CYP3A4 activity)., Conclusion: A rapid and accurate routine LC-HRMS method was validated, which is useful for the evaluation of hypercortisolism and other disorders of glucocorticoid and mineralocorticoid metabolism.
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- 2024
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26. Current status of fertility preservation in a Spanish tertiary public hospital: multidisciplinary approach and experience in over 1500 patients.
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Barral Y, Borrás A, Carrillo P, Agustí I, Peralta S, Casals G, Fàbregues F, Guimerà M, Corral JM, Calafell JM, Redondo M, Glickman A, Rovira M, Adamo B, Ricart E, and Trullàs DM
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Male, Gonadotropin-Releasing Hormone, Retrospective Studies, Semen, Spain, Breast Neoplasms, Fertility Preservation, Hematologic Neoplasms therapy
- Abstract
Purpose: Currently, 15% of gynaecological and 9% of haematological malignancies are diagnosed before the age of 40. The increased survival rates of cancer patients who are candidates for gonadotoxic treatments, the delay in childbearing to older ages, and the optimization of in vitro fertilisation techniques have all contributed to an increased interest in fertility preservation (FP) treatments. This study reviews the experience of the Fertility Preservation Programme (FPP) of a tertiary public hospital with a multidisciplinary approach., Methods: This retrospective study included all the available (FP) treatments, performed in patients of childbearing age between 2006 and 2022., Results: 1556 patients were referred to the FPP: 332 oocyte vitrification cycles, 115 ovarian cortex cryopreservation with 11 orthotopic autotransplantations, 175 gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) agonist treatments, 109 fertility-sparing treatments for gynaecological cancer, and 576 sperm cryopreservation were performed. Malignancy was the main indication for FP (the main indications being breast cancer in women and haematological malignancies in men), although non-oncological pathologies, such as endometriosis and autoimmune diseases, have increased in recent years. Currently, the most widely used FP technique is oocyte vitrification, the increase of which has been associated with a decrease in the use of cortex CP and GnRH agonists., Conclusions: The increase in FP treatment reflects the implementation of reproductive counselling in oncology programmes. A multidisciplinary approach in a tertiary public hospital allows individualised FP treatment for each patient. In recent years, there has been a change in trend with the introduction of new indications for FP and a change in techniques due to their optimisation., (© 2023. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Federación de Sociedades Españolas de Oncología (FESEO).)
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- 2024
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27. Versatile Antibacterial and Antioxidant Bacterial Cellulose@Nanoceria Biotextile: Application in Reusable Antimicrobial Face Masks.
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Tang J, Zhang Y, Liu X, Lin Y, Liang L, Li X, Casals G, Zhou X, Casals E, and Zeng M
- Subjects
- Masks, Textiles, Humans, Reactive Oxygen Species metabolism, Nanoparticles chemistry, Microbial Sensitivity Tests, Cellulose chemistry, Cerium chemistry, Cerium pharmacology, Anti-Bacterial Agents pharmacology, Anti-Bacterial Agents chemistry, Antioxidants chemistry, Antioxidants pharmacology, Escherichia coli drug effects, Staphylococcus aureus drug effects, Pseudomonas aeruginosa drug effects
- Abstract
Despite considerable interest in medical and pharmaceutical fields, there remains a notable absence of functional textiles that concurrently exhibit antibacterial and antioxidant properties. Herein, a new composite fabric constructed using nanostructured bacterial cellulose (BC) covalently-linked with cerium oxide nanoparticles (BC@CeO
2 NPs) is introduced. The synthesis of CeO2 NPs on the BC is performed via a microwave-assisted, in situ chemical deposition technique, resulting in the formation of mixed valence Ce3+ /Ce4+ CeO2 NPs. This approach ensures the durability of the composite fabric subjected to multiple washing cycles. The Reactive oxygen species (ROS) scavenging activity of CeO2 NPs and their rapid and efficient eradication of >99% model microbes, such as Escherichia coli, Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Staphylococcus aureus remain unaltered in the composite. To demonstrate the feasibility of incorporating the fabric in marketable products, antimicrobial face masks are fabricated with filter layers made of BC@CeO2 NPs cross-linked with propylene or cotton fibers. These masks exhibit complete inhibition of bacterial growth in the three bacterial strains, improved breathability compared to respirator masks and enhanced filtration efficiency compared to single-use surgical face masks. This study provides valuable insights into the development of functional BC@CeO2 NPs biotextiles in which design can be extended to the fabrication of medical dressings and cosmetic products with combined antibiotic, antioxidant and anti-inflammatory activities., (© 2024 Wiley‐VCH GmbH.)- Published
- 2024
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28. Identification of Dhx15 as a Major Regulator of Liver Development, Regeneration, and Tumor Growth in Zebrafish and Mice.
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Portolés I, Ribera J, Fernandez-Galán E, Lecue E, Casals G, Melgar-Lesmes P, Fernández-Varo G, Boix L, Sanduzzi M, Aishwarya V, Reig M, Jiménez W, and Morales-Ruiz M
- Subjects
- Animals, Humans, Mice, Oligonucleotides, Carcinoma, Hepatocellular genetics, RNA Helicases genetics, Zebrafish genetics, Zebrafish Proteins genetics
- Abstract
RNA helicase DHX15 plays a significant role in vasculature development and lung metastasis in vertebrates. In addition, several studies have demonstrated the overexpression of DHX15 in the context of hepatocellular carcinoma. Therefore, we hypothesized that this helicase may play a significant role in liver regeneration, physiology, and pathology. Dhx15 gene deficiency was generated by CRISPR/Cas9 in zebrafish and by TALEN-RNA in mice. AUM Antisense-Oligonucleotides were used to silence Dhx15 in wild-type mice. The hepatocellular carcinoma tumor induction model was generated by subcutaneous injection of Hepa 1-6 cells. Homozygous Dhx15 gene deficiency was lethal in zebrafish and mouse embryos. Dhx15 gene deficiency impaired liver organogenesis in zebrafish embryos and liver regeneration after partial hepatectomy in mice. Also, heterozygous mice presented decreased number and size of liver metastasis after Hepa 1-6 cells injection compared to wild-type mice. Dhx15 gene silencing with AUM Antisense-Oligonucleotides in wild-type mice resulted in 80% reduced expression in the liver and a significant reduction in other major organs. In addition, Dhx15 gene silencing significantly hindered primary tumor growth in the hepatocellular carcinoma experimental model. Regarding the potential use of DHX15 as a diagnostic marker for liver disease, patients with hepatocellular carcinoma showed increased levels of DHX15 in blood samples compared with subjects without hepatic affectation. In conclusion, Dhx15 is a key regulator of liver physiology and organogenesis, is increased in the blood of cirrhotic and hepatocellular carcinoma patients, and plays a key role in controlling hepatocellular carcinoma tumor growth and expansion in experimental models.
- Published
- 2024
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29. Editorial: Advanced functional nanomaterials for diagnosis, bioimaging, drug delivery and therapeutics.
- Author
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Casals E, Li S, Jia Z, Casals G, and Zeng M
- Abstract
Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.
- Published
- 2024
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30. Hair cortisol and changes in cortisol dynamics in chronic kidney disease.
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Boswell L, Vega-Beyhart A, Blasco M, Quintana LF, Rodríguez G, Díaz-Catalán D, Vilardell C, Claro M, Mora M, Amor AJ, Casals G, and Hanzu FA
- Subjects
- Humans, Cross-Sectional Studies, Case-Control Studies, Male, Female, Adult, Middle Aged, Aged, Dexamethasone therapeutic use, Heart Disease Risk Factors, Prospective Studies, Hypothalamo-Hypophyseal System, Renal Insufficiency, Chronic complications, Renal Insufficiency, Chronic drug therapy, Hair metabolism, Hydrocortisone metabolism
- Abstract
Objective: We compared hair cortisol (HC) with classic tests of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis in chronic kidney disease (CKD) and assessed its association with kidney and cardiometabolic status., Design and Methods: A cross-sectional study of 48 patients with CKD stages I-IV, matched by age, sex, and BMI with 24 healthy controls (CTR) was performed. Metabolic comorbidities, body composition, and HPA axis function were studied., Results: A total of 72 subjects (age 52.9 ± 12.2 years, 50% women, BMI 26.2 ± 4.1 kg/m
2 ) were included. Metabolic syndrome features (hypertension, dyslipidaemia, glucose, HOMA-IR, triglycerides, waist circumference) and 24-h urinary proteins increased progressively with worsening kidney function (p < 0.05 for all). Reduced cortisol suppression after 1-mg dexamethasone suppression (DST) (p < 0.001), a higher noon (12:00 h pm) salivary cortisol (p = 0.042), and salivary cortisol AUC (p = 0.008) were seen in CKD. 24-h urinary-free cortisol (24-h UFC) decreased in CKD stages III-IV compared with I-II (p < 0.001); higher midnight salivary cortisol (p = 0.015) and lower suppressibility after 1-mg DST were observed with declining kidney function (p < 0.001). Cortisol-after-DST cortisol was >2 mcg/dL in 23% of CKD patients (12.5% in stage III and 56.3% in stage IV); 45% of them had cortisol >2 mcg/dL after low-dose 2-day DST, all in stage IV (p < 0.001 for all). Cortisol-after-DST was lineally inversely correlated with eGFR (p < 0.001). Cortisol-after-DST (OR 14.9, 95% CI 1.7-103, p = 0.015) and glucose (OR 1.3, 95% CI 1.1-1.5, p = 0.003) were independently associated with eGFR <30 mL/min/m2 ). HC was independently correlated with visceral adipose tissue (VAT) (p = 0.016). Cortisol-after-DST (p = 0.032) and VAT (p < 0.001) were independently correlated with BMI., Conclusion: Cortisol-after-DST and salivary cortisol rhythm present progressive alterations in CKD patients. Changes in cortisol excretion and HPA dynamics in CKD are not accompanied by significant changes in long-term exposure to cortisol evaluated by HC. The clinical significance and pathophysiological mechanisms explaining the associations between HPA parameters, body composition, and kidney damage warrant further study., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2024 Boswell, Vega-Beyhart, Blasco, Quintana, Rodríguez, Díaz-Catalán, Vilardell, Claro, Mora, Amor, Casals and Hanzu.)- Published
- 2024
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31. Impact of bariatric surgery on ovarian reserve markers and its correlation with nutritional parameters and adipokines.
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Andreu A, Flores L, Méndez M, Ibarzabal A, Casals G, Mercadé I, Borrás A, Barral Y, Agustí I, Manau D, Vidal J, and Casals G
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Adipokines, Prospective Studies, Adiponectin, Androgens, Testosterone, Anti-Mullerian Hormone, Ovarian Reserve, Bariatric Surgery, Insulins
- Abstract
Introduction: A reduction in anti-müllerian hormone (AMH) levels at short-term after bariatric surgery (BS) has been previously described. However, an assessment of ovarian reserve at longer-follow up, and a comprehensive evaluation of the potentially implicated factors has not been reported., Design: Prospective cohort study., Materials and Methods: Twenty women aged 18-40 years with BMI 43.95 kg/m2 undergoing BS were studied at baseline (BS0), and at 1 month (BS1), 4 months (BS2), 12 months (BS3), and 24-36 months (BS4) after the surgery. Anthropometrics, reproductive hormones (AMH, FSH, LH, estradiol, testosterone, SHBG, androstenedione), metabolic parameters (adiponectin, leptin, ghrelin, insulin), and nutritional blood parameters (markers of nutritional status, vitamins, and minerals) were obtained at each study time point. Antral follicular count (AFC) was assessed by ultrasonography at BS0, BS3, and BS4. Mixed models were used for analysis of longitudinal data., Results: The mean AMH level was 3.88 ng/mL at BS0, decreased at BS3 (mean= 2.59 ng/mL; p=0.009), and remained stable between BS3 and BS4 (mean= 2.96 ng/mL; p=0.409). We also observed a non-significant decrease in AFC at BS3 (mean=26.14 at BS0, mean 16.81 at BS3; p=0.088) that remained stable at BS4 (mean= 17.86; p=0.731). Mixed models analysis showed: (a) a decrease in 10 kg of body weight was associated with an average decrease of 0.357 ng/mL in AMH (p=0.014); (b) a decrease in 1 BMI point was associated with an average decrease of 0.109 ng/mL in AMH (p=0.005); (c) an increase in 1 µg/mL of adiponectin was associated with an average decrease of 0.091 ng/ml in AMH (p=0.041) Significant positive correlations were found between the AMH levels after BS and plasma concentrations of testosterone, free androgen index, insulin and HOMA index. No significant correlations were detected between AMH levels and nutritional parameters., Conclusions: Our results were in line with previous observations, showing that AMH levels decreased significantly at 12 months after bariatric surgery, in parallel with a non-significant reduction in AFC. Both ovarian reserve markers showed a later stabilization up to the end of the study. Of note, postoperative AMH levels were positively correlated with key androgen and insulin resistance-related parameters., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2024 Andreu, Flores, Méndez, Ibarzabal, Casals, Mercadé, Borrás, Barral, Agustí, Manau, Vidal and Casals.)
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- 2024
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32. Normalization of short-chain fatty acid concentration by bacterial count of stool samples improves discrimination between eubiotic and dysbiotic gut microbiota caused by Clostridioides difficile infection.
- Author
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Sayol-Altarriba A, Aira A, Villasante A, Albarracín R, Faneca J, Casals G, Villanueva-Cañas JL, and Casals-Pascual C
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Female, Middle Aged, Adult, Aged, Butyrates metabolism, Butyrates analysis, Bacteria classification, Bacteria isolation & purification, Bacteria metabolism, Bacteria genetics, Fatty Acids, Volatile metabolism, Fatty Acids, Volatile analysis, Feces microbiology, Feces chemistry, Gastrointestinal Microbiome, Clostridium Infections microbiology, Dysbiosis microbiology, Clostridioides difficile metabolism, Bacterial Load
- Abstract
Short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs) represent a cornerstone of gut health, serving as critical mediators of immune modulation and overall host homeostasis. Patients with dysbiosis caused by Clostridioides difficile infection (CDI) typically exhibit lower SCFAs levels compared to healthy stool donors and, thus, the concentration of SCFAs has been proposed as a proxy marker of a healthy microbiota. However, there is no consistency in the methods used to quantify SCFAs in stool samples and usually, the results are normalized by the weight of the stool samples, which does not address differences in water and fiber content and ignores bacterial counts in the sample (the main component of stool that contributes to the composition of these metabolites in the sample). Here, we show that normalized SCFAs concentrations by the bacterial count improve discrimination between healthy and dysbiotic samples (patients with CDI), particularly when using acetate and propionate levels. After normalization, butyrate is the metabolite that best discriminates eubiotic and dysbiotic samples according to the area under the receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve (AUC-ROC = 0.860, [95% CI: 0.786-0.934], p < .0001).
- Published
- 2024
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33. Midnight Cortisol is Associated with Changes in Systolic Blood Pressure and Diabetic Neuropathy in Subjects with Type 1 Diabetes Undergoing Simultaneous Kidney-Pancreas Transplantation.
- Author
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Boswell L, Amor AJ, Montagud-Marrahi E, Casals G, Díaz-Catalan D, Banon-Maneus E, Ramírez-Bajo MJ, Hierro N, Diekmann F, Musquera M, Serés-Noriega T, Esmatjes E, Ferrer-Fàbrega J, Ventura-Aguiar P, and Hanzu FA
- Abstract
Introduction: An increased midnight cortisol (MC) has been described in end-stage kidney disease (ESKD) and type 1 diabetes (T1D). Lower circulating levels of the cytokine soluble tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-like weak inducer of apoptosis (sTWEAK) have been found in T1D and ESKD and associated with cardiovascular (CV) events in the latter. We aimed to study MC and sTWEAK in simultaneous pancreas-kidney transplant (SPKT) recipients, and the association of these markers with CV risk factors and transplant outcomes., Methods: This was a retrospective cohort study including subjects with T1D who received a first SPKT between 2008 and 2020. MC and sTWEAK at baseline were correlated with CV risk factors and evolution 1 year after SPKT., Results: We included 29 subjects (58.6% women, mean age 43.5 ± 7.5 years, diabetes duration 31.9 ± 9.4 years). Systolic blood pressure (SBP) increased directly with MC quartiles, despite similar hypertension prevalence (p < 0.05). At 1 year, antihypertensive treatment was deintensified in those in lower MC quartiles (p < 0.05). Diabetic neuropathy prevalence decreased progressively in higher cortisol quartiles (p for trend = 0.005). Low MC was associated with delayed kidney graft function (p for trend = 0.044), and high sTWEAK with kidney graft rejection (p for trend = 0.018). In multivariate analyses, MC (standardized-β 0.505, p = 0.004) and age (standardized-β - 0.460, p = 0.040) were independently correlated with SBP, and MC was independently associated with the presence of diabetic neuropathy (OR 0.633, 95% CI 0.425-0.944, p = 0.025), adjusted for confounders., Conclusions: In this exploratory study, lower MC was associated with a lower baseline SBP, an improvement of antihypertensive treatment 1 year after transplant, and a higher diabetic neuropathy prevalence in SPKT recipients., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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34. Facile aqueous synthesis and comparative evaluation of TiO 2 -semiconductor and TiO 2 -metal nanohybrid photocatalysts in antibiotics degradation under visible light.
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Zhang Y, Ju S, Casals G, Tang J, Lin Y, Li X, Liang L, Jia Z, Zeng M, and Casals E
- Abstract
Advanced oxidation processes using TiO
2 -based nanomaterials are sustainable technologies that hold great promise for the degradation of many types of pollutants including pharmaceutical residues. A wide variety of heterostructures coupling TiO2 with visible-light active nanomaterials have been explored to shift its photocatalytic properties to harness sun irradiation but a systematic comparison between them is lacking in the current literature. Furthermore, the high number of proposed nanostructures with different size, morphology, and surface area, and the often complex synthesis processes hamper the transition of these materials into commercial and effective solutions for environmental remediation. Herein, we have designed a facile and cost-effective method to synthesize two heterostructured photocatalysts representative of two main families of novel structures proposed, hybrids of TiO2 with metal (Au) and semiconductor (CeO2 ) nanomaterials. The photocatalysts have been extensively characterized to ensure a good comparability in terms of co-catalyst doping characteristics, morphology and surface area. The photocatalytic degradation of ciprofloxacin and sulfamethoxazole as target pollutants, two antibiotics of high concern polluting water sources, has been evaluated and CeO2 /TiO2 exhibited the highest activity, achieving complete antibiotic degradation at very low photocatalyst concentrations. Our study provides new insights into the development of inexpensive heterostructured photocatalysts and suggests that the non-stoichiometry and characteristic d and f electronic orbital configuration of CeO2 have a significantly improved role in the enhancement of the photocatalytic reaction., Competing Interests: The authors declare no competing financial interest., (This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.)- Published
- 2023
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35. Subfertility versus ART: unraveling the origins of fetal cardiac programming.
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Boutet ML, Casals G, Valenzuela-Alcaraz B, García-Otero L, Crovetto F, Borrás A, Cívico MS, Manau D, Gratacós E, and Crispi F
- Subjects
- Pregnancy, Child, Female, Humans, Prospective Studies, Fetal Weight, Ventricular Remodeling, Fertilization in Vitro methods, Infertility etiology
- Abstract
Study Question: Do spontaneously conceived (SC) fetuses from subfertile couples show the same signs of cardiac remodeling as those observed after IVF treatments?, Summary Answer: As opposed to fetuses from IVF, SC fetuses from subfertile couples do not show cardiac remodeling and present a similar cardiac structure and function to those of SC fetuses from fertile couples., What Is Known Already: Subjects conceived by IVF present signs of cardiac remodeling and suboptimal function in utero and during childhood, including larger atria, more globular and thicker ventricles, reduced longitudinal motion, and impaired relaxation as compared to SC individuals from fertile couples. There are no previous publications investigating the independent cardiac programming effects of infertility in SC fetuses from subfertile couples (with time-to-pregnancy (TTP) over 12 months)., Study Design, Size, Duration: A prospective cohort study of 289 singleton pregnancies exposed and not exposed to subfertility recruited from 2019 to 2021, including 96 SC pregnancies from fertile couples (TTP under 12 months), 97 SC from subfertile couples (TTP over 12 months), and 96 from IVF after fresh embryo transfer. Fetal echocardiography was performed in all pregnancies. Epidemiological data and perinatal outcomes were collected in all pregnancies. The overall attrition rate was 15.7%., Participants/materials, Setting, Methods: SC from subfertile couples and IVF pregnancies were identified as eligible at pregnancy diagnosis, and eligible SC pregnancies from fertile couples who attended our maternal-fetal unit were invited to participate at third trimester, being matched to the other groups by maternal age. Fetal echocardiography was performed at 29-34 weeks of pregnancy to assess cardiac structure and function, and results were adjusted by parental age, maternal smoking status, child's birth order, birthweight centile, gestational age, and estimated fetal weight at scan., Main Results and the Role of Chance: Parental age, ethnicity, BMI, and smoking exposure, median gestational age and estimated fetal weight were similar in all study groups. There were no significant differences in infertility duration or etiology between the subfertile and the IVF populations (TTP: subfertile median 35 months (interquartile range 20-48) versus IVF: 47 (25-61); P-value = 0.051). While both fertile and subfertile SC groups presented similar fetal cardiac results, IVF fetuses showed larger atria (right atria-to-heart ratio: IVF mean 18.9% (SD 3.4) versus subfertile 17.8% (3.5) versus fertile 17.6% (3.3); adjusted P-value < 0.001), more globular ventricles (right ventricular sphericity index: IVF 1.56 (0.25) versus subfertile 1.72 (0.26) versus fertile 1.72 (0.26); <0.001), and thicker myocardial walls (relative wall thickness: IVF 0.86 (0.22) versus subfertile 0.64 (0.13) versus fertile 0.64 (0.18); <0.001). Whereas SC fetuses from fertile and subfertile couples had preserved cardiac function, IVF fetuses showed signs of suboptimal systolic and diastolic function, with reduced tricuspid ring displacement (IVF 7.26 mm (1.07) versus subfertile 8.04 mm (1.18) versus fertile 7.89 mm (1.51); <0.001) and increased left myocardial performance index (IVF 0.49 (0.08) versus subfertile 0.45 (0.09) versus fertile 0.45 (0.10); <0.001). A sub-analysis including only unexplained infertility cases in subfertile SC and IVF groups showed similar results., Limitations, Reasons for Caution: The fetal cardiac changes reported here are subclinical, and most of the cardiovascular parameters were within normal ranges. Although echocardiographic changes are recognized as potential cardiovascular risk factors, their association with long-term cardiovascular disease remains to be demonstrated., Wider Implications of the Findings: Subfertility per se does not seem to be associated to fetal cardiac remodeling, which has been previously described in IVF fetuses. Future studies are warranted to further investigate other factors related to the observed fetal cardiac changes associated with ART., Study Funding/competing Interest(s): This project has been partially funded with support from the Erasmus + Programme of the European Union (Framework Agreement number: 2013-0040). This publication reflects the views only of the author, and the Commission cannot be held responsible for any use, which may be made of the information contained therein. Additionally, the research leading to these results has received funding from 'la Caixa' Foundation under grant agreement LCF/PR/GN18/10310003, the Instituto de Salud Carlos III (PI15/00130, PI16/00861, PI17/00675, PI18/00073, INT21/00027)-co-funded by the European Union, Cerebra Foundation for the Brain Injured Child (Carmarthen, Wales, UK) and AGAUR 2017 SGR grant no 1531. The authors have no conflicts of interest to declare., Trial Registration Number: N/A., (© The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of European Society of Human Reproduction and Embryology. All rights reserved. For permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
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36. Is the 1mg-dexamethasone suppression test a precise marker of glucocorticoid excess and cardiometabolic risk in patients with adrenal incidentalomas?
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Araujo-Castro M, Hanzu FA, Pascual-Corrales E, García Cano AM, Marchan M, Escobar-Morreale HF, Valderrabano P, and Casals G
- Subjects
- Humans, Glucocorticoids, Hydrocortisone, Tetrahydrocortisol, Cross-Sectional Studies, Dehydroepiandrosterone, Dehydroepiandrosterone Sulfate, Dexamethasone, Adrenal Gland Neoplasms complications, Adrenal Gland Neoplasms diagnosis, Cortisone, Cardiovascular Diseases
- Abstract
Aim: To analyze if the 1mg-dexamethasone suppression test (DST) is a reliable marker of glucocorticoid excess and cardiometabolic risk in patients with adrenal incidentalomas (AIs)., Methods: Cross-sectional study of patients with nonfunctioning adrenal incidentalomas (NFAIs, defined by cortisol post-DST ≤ 1.8 µg/dL) and patients with autonomous cortisol secretion (ACS, defined by cortisol post-DST > 1.8 µg/Dl). The urinary steroid profile (USP) was determined by gas chromatography coupled to mass spectrometry. Both groups were matched by sex, age and body mass index., Results: Forty-nine patients with AIs (25 with ACS and 24 with NFAI) were included. As a whole, AIs showed a high excretion of β-cortolone, tetrahydro-11-deoxycortisol (THS), α-cortolone, α-cortol, tetrahydrocortisol (THF) and tetrahydrocortisone (THE). A positive yet modest correlation between post-DST cortisol and total excretion of glucocorticoid metabolites (r = 0.401, P = 0.004) was observed, with the stronger being observed with total THS (r = 0.548, P < 0.001) and THF (r = 0.441, P = 0.002). Some of the metabolites that were elevated in patients with AIs, were higher in patients with ACS-related comorbidities than in those without comorbidities. Post-DST cortisol showed a fair diagnostic accuracy for the prediction of ACS-related comorbidities (AUC 0.767 [95% CI 0.634-0.882]). However, post-DST diagnostic accuracy improved when combined with urinary cortisone, α-cortol, THS and serum DHEAS (0.853 [0.712‒0.954])., Conclusion: The DST has a positive, but modest, correlation with urinary glucocorticoid excretion. Similarly, the diagnostic accuracy of the DST for the prediction of ACS-related comorbidities is only fair, but it may be improved if combined with the results of the USP and serum DHEAS., Significance Statement: This is the first study aimed to evaluate if 1mg-dexamethasone suppression test (DST) is a reliable marker of glucocorticoid excess and cardiometabolic risk in patients with adrenal incidentalomas (AIs) and if urinary steroid profile was measured by GS-MS could improve such a prediction. We found a positive yet modest correlation between post-DST cortisol and total excretion of glucocorticoid metabolites, with the stronger being observed with total tetrahydro-11-deoxycortisol (THS) and tetrahydrocortisol. Post-DST cortisol showed a fair diagnostic accuracy for the prediction of ACS-related comorbidities (AUC 0.767). However, post-DST diagnostic accuracy improved when combined with urinary cortisone, α-cortol, THS and serum DHEAS (0.853)., (© 2023. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.)
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- 2023
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37. Conservation of the enzyme-like activity and biocompatibility of CeO 2 nanozymes in simulated body fluids.
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Zeng M, Zhang X, Tang J, Liu X, Lin Y, Guo D, Zhang Y, Ju S, Fernández-Varo G, Wang YC, Zhou X, Casals G, and Casals E
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- Saliva, Antioxidants pharmacology, Biological Assay, Catalysis, Body Fluids
- Abstract
Cerium oxide nanozymes (CeO
2 NZs) are attracting vast attention due to their antioxidant and catalytic properties and mimic the activities of multiple endogenous enzymes. However, as is the case for nanomedicines in general, the success in showing their unique medical applications has not been matched by an understanding of their pharmacokinetics, which is delaying their implementation in clinical settings. Furthermore, the data of their modifications in body fluids and the impact on their activity are scarce. Herein, two types of widely used CeO2 NZs, electrostatically stabilized and coated with a mesoporous silica shell, were exposed to simulated saliva and lung, gastric and intestinal fluids, and cell culture media. Their physicochemical modifications and bioactivity were tracked over time up to 15 days combining the data of different characterization techniques and biological assays. The results show that the biocompatibility and antioxidant activity are retained in all cases despite the different evolution behaviors in different fluids, including agglomeration. This work provides an experimental basis from a pharmacokinetic perspective that supports the therapeutic effectiveness of CeO2 NZs observed in vivo for the treatment of many conditions related to chronic inflammation and cancer, and suggests that they can be safely administered through different portals of entry including intravenous injection, oral ingestion or inhalation.- Published
- 2023
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38. La sobreexpresión de FoxO1 en el hígado esta positivamente asociada al grado de daño hepático en pacientes cirróticos.
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Fernández-Galán E, Sandalinas S, Macias-Muñoz L, Portolés I, Ribera J, Morales-Romero B, Pauta M, Casals G, Boix L, Jiménez W, and Morales-Ruiz M
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- 2023
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39. Tcf20 deficiency is associated with increased liver fibrogenesis and alterations in mitochondrial metabolism in mice and humans.
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Córdoba-Jover B, Ribera J, Portolés I, Lecue E, Rodriguez-Vita J, Pérez-Sisqués L, Mannara F, Solsona-Vilarrasa E, García-Ruiz C, Fernández-Checa JC, Casals G, Rodríguez-Revenga L, Álvarez-Mora MI, Arteche-López A, Díaz de Bustamante A, Calvo R, Pujol A, Azkargorta M, Elortza F, Malagelada C, Pinyol R, Huguet-Pradell J, Melgar-Lesmes P, Jiménez W, and Morales-Ruiz M
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- Humans, Mice, Animals, Liver Cirrhosis pathology, Mitochondria pathology, Transcription Factors genetics, Fibroblasts pathology, Liver pathology
- Abstract
Background & Aims: Transcription co-activator factor 20 (TCF20) is a regulator of transcription factors involved in extracellular matrix remodelling. In addition, TCF20 genomic variants in humans have been associated with impaired intellectual disability. Therefore, we hypothesized that TCF20 has several functions beyond those described in neurogenesis, including the regulation of fibrogenesis., Methods: Tcf20 knock-out (Tcf20
-/- ) and Tcf20 heterozygous mice were generated by homologous recombination. TCF20 gene genotyping and expression was assessed in patients with pathogenic variants in the TCF20 gene. Neural development was investigated by immufluorescense. Mitochondrial metabolic activity was evaluated with the Seahorse analyser. The proteome analysis was carried out by gas chromatography mass-spectrometry., Results: Characterization of Tcf20-/- newborn mice showed impaired neural development and death after birth. In contrast, heterozygous mice were viable but showed higher CCl4 -induced liver fibrosis and a differential expression of genes involved in extracellular matrix homeostasis compared to wild-type mice, along with abnormal behavioural patterns compatible with autism-like phenotypes. Tcf20-/- embryonic livers and mouse embryonic fibroblast (MEF) cells revealed differential expression of structural proteins involved in the mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation chain, increased rates of mitochondrial metabolic activity and alterations in metabolites of the citric acid cycle. These results parallel to those found in patients with TCF20 pathogenic variants, including alterations of the fibrosis scores (ELF and APRI) and the elevation of succinate concentration in plasma., Conclusions: We demonstrated a new role of Tcf20 in fibrogenesis and mitochondria metabolism in mice and showed the association of TCF20 deficiency with fibrosis and metabolic biomarkers in humans., (© 2023 The Authors. Liver International published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)- Published
- 2023
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40. Liver FoxO1 overexpression is positively associated with the degree of liver injury in cirrhotic patients.
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Fernández-Galán E, Sandalinas S, Macias-Muñoz L, Portolés I, Ribera J, Morales-Romero B, Pauta M, Casals G, Boix L, Jiménez W, and Morales-Ruiz M
- Abstract
Objectives: Chronic liver disease and related complications, cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma, are associated with high mortality. Curative treatments, partial hepatectomy or liver transplantation, have limited applicability in patients with cirrhosis due to the poor liver regenerative capacity. Thus, we need to find new diagnostic and therapeutic alternatives, to block the disease progression and to improve the survival of patients. In this context, preclinical studies have demonstrated the key role of the protein kinase B (Akt) in liver dysfunction, but the status of Akt and its targets in patients with chronic hepatopathy remains unknown. Aims: To determine the activation status of the Akt pathway and their association with liver functionality in cirrhotic patients., Methods: This retrospective study includes liver tissue samples from 36 hepatectomized patients with (n=27) and without (n=9) cirrhosis. Multiplex analysis of proteins involved in the Akt/mTOR pathway was performed using a Luminex panel and Western blot. Conventional liver function tests were determined in serum before resection surgery., Results: Akt and forkhead box protein O1 (FoxO1) are overexpressed in the liver of cirrhotic patients: (2.1 vs. 1.0 densitometric relative units (DRU); p<0.01, and 9.5 vs . 4.4 DRU; p<0.01, respectively). FoxO1 showed the best correlation with markers of liver injury (aspartate aminotransferase (ASAT): r=0.51, p<0.05; alanine aminotransferase (ALAT): r=0.49, p<0.05), and was the only enzyme in the Akt pathway identified as an independent predictor of ASAT and ALAT levels., Conclusions: The intrahepatic expression of FoxO1 could have clinical utility as a potential prognostic marker for patients with advanced liver disease., Competing Interests: Competing interests: Authors state no conflict of interest., (© 2023 the author(s), published by De Gruyter, Berlin/Boston.)
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- 2023
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41. Exploring the Long-Term Tissue Accumulation and Excretion of 3 nm Cerium Oxide Nanoparticles after Single Dose Administration.
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Ernst LM, Mondragón L, Ramis J, Gustà MF, Yudina T, Casals E, Bastús NG, Fernández-Varo G, Casals G, Jiménez W, and Puntes V
- Abstract
Nanoparticle (NP) pharmacokinetics significantly differ from traditional small molecule principles. From this emerges the need to create new tools and concepts to harness their full potential and avoid unnecessary risks. Nanoparticle pharmacokinetics strongly depend on size, shape, surface functionalisation, and aggregation state, influencing their biodistribution, accumulation, transformations, and excretion profile, and hence their efficacy and safety. Today, while NP biodistribution and nanoceria biodistribution have been studied often at short times, their long-term accumulation and excretion have rarely been studied. In this work, 3 nm nanoceria at 5.7 mg/kg of body weight was intravenously administrated in a single dose to healthy mice. Biodistribution was measured in the liver, spleen, kidney, lung, brain, lymph nodes, ovary, bone marrow, urine, and faeces at different time points (1, 9, 30, and 100 days). Biodistribution and urinary and faecal excretion were also studied in rats placed in metabolic cages at shorter times. The similarity of results of different NPs in different models is shown as the heterogeneous nanoceria distribution in organs. After the expectable accumulation in the liver and spleen, the concentration of cerium decays exponentially, accounting for about a 50% excretion of cerium from the body in 100 days. Cerium ions, coming from NP dissolution, are most likely excreted via the urinary tract, and ceria nanoparticles accumulated in the liver are most likely excreted via the hepatobiliary route. In addition, nanoceria looks safe and does not damage the target organs. No weight loss or apathy was observed during the course of the experiments.
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- 2023
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42. Recommendations for the measurement of sexual steroids in clinical practice. A position statement of SEQC ML /SEEN/SEEP.
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Casals G, Costa RF, Rull EU, Escobar-Morreale HF, Argente J, Sesmilo G, and Biagetti B
- Abstract
The proper clinical approach to a wide range of disorders relies on the availability of accurate, reproducible laboratory results for sexual steroids measured using methods with a high specificity and sensitivity. The chemiluminescent immunoassays currently available have analytical limitations with significant clinical implications. This position statement reviews the current limitations of laboratory techniques for the measurement of estradiol and testosterone and their impact on diverse clinical scenarios. A set of recommendations are provided to incorporate steroid hormone analysis by mass spectrometry in national health systems. International societies have recommended this methodology for a decade., Competing Interests: Competing interests: Authors state no conflict of interest., (© 2023 the author(s), published by De Gruyter, Berlin/Boston.)
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43. Executive summary of the position statement of the Spanish Societies SEQC ML /SEEN/SEEP. Recommendations for the measurement of sex steroids in clinical practice.
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Casals G, Ferrer Costa R, Urgell Rull E, Escobar-Morreale HF, Argente J, Sesmilo G, and Biagetti B
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- Mass Spectrometry methods, Testosterone, Steroids analysis, Gonadal Steroid Hormones, Estradiol
- Abstract
Accurate measurement of sex steroids, particularly testosterone and estradiol, is relevant for the diagnosis and treatment of a wide range of conditions. Unfortunately, current chemiluminescent immunoassays have analytical limitations with important clinical consequences. This document reviews the current state of clinical assays for estradiol and testosterone measurements and their potential impact in different clinical situations. It also includes a series of recommendations and necessary steps to introduce steroid analysis by mass spectrometry into national health systems, a methodology recommended for more than a decade by international societies., (Copyright © 2022 SEEN and SED. Published by Elsevier España, S.L.U. All rights reserved.)
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- 2023
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44. Obesity management in women of reproductive age.
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Andreu A, Casals G, Vinagre I, and Flores L
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- Pregnancy, Infant, Newborn, Humans, Female, Obesity complications, Obesity epidemiology, Obesity surgery, Fertility, Obesity Management, Pregnancy Complications epidemiology, Bariatric Surgery adverse effects
- Abstract
With the increasing prevalence of obesity among women of reproductive age, the detrimental effects on maternal and neonatal health are increasing. The objective of this review is to summarise the evidence that comprehensive management of weight control in women of reproductive age has on maternal-fetal outcomes. First, the impact that obesity has on fertility and pregnancy is described and then the specific aspects of continued weight management in each of the stages (preconception, pregnancy and postpartum) during these years are outlined, not only to benefit women affected by obesity before pregnancy, but also to avoid and reverse weight gain during pregnancy that complicates future pregnancies. Finally, the special planning and follow-up needs of women with a history of bariatric surgery are discussed in order to avoid nutritional deficiencies and/or surgical complications that endanger the mother or affect fetal development., (Copyright © 2022 SEEN and SED. Published by Elsevier España, S.L.U. All rights reserved.)
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- 2023
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45. The Integration of Nanomedicine with Traditional Chinese Medicine: Drug Delivery of Natural Products and Other Opportunities.
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Zeng M, Guo D, Fernández-Varo G, Zhang X, Fu S, Ju S, Yang H, Liu X, Wang YC, Zeng Y, Casals G, and Casals E
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- Humans, Medicine, Chinese Traditional, Nanomedicine, Drugs, Chinese Herbal therapeutic use, Biological Products
- Abstract
The integration of progressive technologies such as nanomedicine with the use of natural products from traditional medicine (TM) provides a unique opportunity for the longed-for harmonization between traditional and modern medicine. Although several actions have been initiated decades ago, a disparity of reasons including some misunderstandings between each other limits the possibilities of a truly complementation. Herein, we analyze some common challenges between nanomedicine and traditional Chinese medicine (TCM). These challenges, if solved in a consensual way, can give a boost to such harmonization. Nanomedicine is a recently born technology, while TCM has been used by the Chinese people for thousands of years. However, for these disciplines, the regulation and standardization of many of the protocols, especially related to the toxicity and safety, regulatory aspects, and manufacturing procedures, are under discussion. Besides, both TCM and nanomedicine still need to achieve a wider social acceptance. Herein, we first briefly discuss the strengths and weaknesses of TCM. This analysis serves to focus afterward on the aspects where TCM and nanomedicine can mutually help to bridge the existing gaps between TCM and Western modern medicine. As discussed, many of these challenges can be applied to TM in general. Finally, recent successful cases in scientific literature that merge TCM and nanomedicine are reviewed as examples of the benefits of this harmonization.
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- 2023
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46. Evaluation of Body Composition in Patients With and Without Adrenal Tumors and Without Overt Hypersecretory Syndromes.
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Araujo-Castro M, Pascual-Corrales E, García Cano AM, Marchan M, Casals G, Hanzu FA, Gomez-Bermejo MÁ, Escobar Morreale HF, and Valderrabano P
- Subjects
- Humans, Glucocorticoids, Hydrocortisone, Syndrome, Androgens, Cross-Sectional Studies, Body Composition, Adrenal Gland Neoplasms metabolism
- Abstract
Objective: To compare body composition between patients with autonomous cortisol secretion (ACS), those with nonfunctioning adrenal incidentalomas (NFAIs), and control subjects without adrenal tumors., Methods: A cross-sectional study was performed, incluidng the following 3 groups: patients with ACS (cortisol post-dexamethasone suppression test [DST] >1.8 μg/dL), NFAIs (cortisol post-DST ≤ 1.8 μg/dL), and patients without adrenal tumors (control group). Patients of the 3 groups were matched according to age (±5 years), sex, and body mass index (±5 kg/m
2 ). Body composition was evaluated by bioelectrical impedance and abdominal computed tomography (CT) and urinary steroid profile by gas chromatography mass spectrometry., Results: This study enrolled 25 patients with ACS, 24 with NFAIs, and 24 control subjects. Based on CT images, a weak positive correlation between the serum cortisol level post-DST and subcutaneous fat area (r = 0.3, P =.048) was found. As assessed by bioelectrical impedance, lean mass and bone mass were positively correlated with the excretion of total androgens (r = 0.56, P <.001; and r = 0.58, P <.001, respectively); visceral mass was positively correlated with the excretion of glucocorticoid metabolites and total glucocorticoids (r = 0.28, P =.031; and r = 0.42, P =.001, respectively). Based on CT imaging evaluation, a positive correlation was observed between lean mass and androgen metabolites (r = 0.30, P =.036) and between visceral fat area, total fat area, and visceral/total fat area ratio and the excretion of glucocorticoid metabolites (r = 0.34, P =.014; r = 0.29, P =.042; and r = 0.31, P =.170, respectively)., Conclusion: The urinary steroid profile observed in adrenal tumors, comprising a low excretion of androgen metabolites and high excretion of glucocorticoid metabolites, is associated with a lower lean mass and bone mass and higher level of visceral mass in patients with adrenal tumors., (Copyright © 2022 AACE. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2023
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47. Characterisation of the urinary steroid profile of patients with nonfunctioning adrenal incidentalomas: A matched controlled cross-sectional study.
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Araujo-Castro M, Casals G, Hanzu FA, Pascual-Corrales E, García Cano AM, Lanza VF, Luis Del Rey Mejías Á, Marchan M, Escobar-Morreale HF, and Valderrabano P
- Subjects
- Humans, Hydrocortisone metabolism, Cross-Sectional Studies, Androgens, Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry, Glucocorticoids, Adrenal Gland Neoplasms complications
- Abstract
Aim: To identify alterations in steroid metabolism in patients with nonfunctioning adrenal incidentalomas (NFAIs) through the analysis of their urinary steroid profile (USP)., Methods: Cross-sectional study with one study group (NFAIs, cortisol post dexamethasone suppression test [DST] ≤ 1.8 µg/dl [49.7 nmol/L]) and 2 control groups: patients with autonomous cortisol secretion (ACS group, cortisol post-DST > 1.8 µg/dl (49.7 nmol/L) and patients without adrenal tumours (healthy-adrenal group). Twenty-four-hour urine collections for USP measurement (total and free fraction of 51 24 h-urine specimens) were obtained from 73 participants (24 with NFAIs, 24 without AIs, and 25 with ACS). USP was determined by gas chromatography coupled to mass spectrometry. Patients of the three groups were matched according to sex, age (±5 years-old) and body mass index (±5 kg/m
2 )., Results: Compared to healthy-adrenal controls, patients with NFAIs had a lower excretion of androgen metabolites (230.5 ± 190.12 vs. 388.7 ± 328.58 µg/24 h, p = .046) and a higher excretion of urinary free cortisol (UFC) (54.3 ± 66.07 vs. 25.4 ± 11.16 µg/24 h, p = .038). UFC was above the reference range in 20.8% of patients in the NFAI, compared to 0% in the healthy-adrenal group (p = .018). Patients with ACS had a higher prevalence of hypertension, dyslipidemia, and diabetes than patients with NFAIs or the control group. A lower excretion of androgen metabolites (218.4 ± 204.24 vs. 231 ± 190 µg/24 h, p = .041) and a nonsignificant higher excretion of glucocorticoid metabolites (2129.6 ± 1195.96 vs. 1550.8 ± 810.03 µg/24 h, p = .180) was found in patients with ACS compared to patients with NFAIs., Conclusion: NFAIs seem to secrete a subtle, yet clinically relevant, excess of glucocorticoids. Future studies are needed to confirm our findings; and to identify metabolic alterations associated with an increased cardiometabolic risk., (© 2022 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)- Published
- 2023
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48. Cortisol: Analytical and clinical determinants.
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Vega-Beyhart A, Araujo-Castro M, Hanzu FA, and Casals G
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- Humans, Saliva, Liver, Mass Spectrometry, Hydrocortisone, Body Fluids
- Abstract
Cortisol, the main human glucocorticoid, is synthesized from cholesterol in the adrenal cortex and predominantly metabolized by the liver. Interpretation of quantitative results from the analysis of serum, urine and saliva is complicated by variation in circadian rhythm, response to stress as well as the presence of protein-bound and free forms. Interestingly, cortisol is the only hormone routinely measured in serum, urine, and saliva. Preanalytical and analytical challenges arise in each matrix and are further compounded by the use of various stimulation and suppression tests commonly employed in clinical practice. Although not yet included in clinical guidelines, measurement of cortisol in hair may be of interest in specific situations. Immunoassays are the most widely used methods in clinical laboratories to measure cortisol, but they are susceptible to interference from synthetic and endogenous steroids, generally producing a variable overestimation of true cortisol results, especially in urine. Analysis by mass spectrometry provides higher specificity and allows simultaneous measurement of multiple steroids including synthetic steroids, thus reducing diagnostic uncertainty. An integrated review of cortisol in various disease states is also addressed., (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2023
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49. Fetal neurosonography and infant neurobehavior following conception by assisted reproductive technology with fresh or frozen embryo transfer.
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Boutet ML, Eixarch E, Ahumada-Droguett P, Nakaki A, Crovetto F, Cívico MS, Borrás A, Manau D, Gratacós E, Crispi F, and Casals G
- Subjects
- Pregnancy, Infant, Newborn, Infant, Female, Humans, Prospective Studies, Fertilization in Vitro, Fertilization, Embryo Transfer, Reproductive Techniques, Assisted
- Abstract
Objective: We aimed to explore fetal cortical brain development by neurosonography in fetuses conceived by assisted reproductive technology (ART), including frozen and fresh embryo transfer (ET), compared with those conceived spontaneously (SC), and to investigate its association with infant neurobehavior at 12 months of age., Methods: This was a prospective cohort study of 210 singleton pregnancies, including 70 SC pregnancies, 70 conceived by in-vitro fertilization (IVF) following frozen ET and 70 conceived by IVF after fresh ET. Fetal neurosonography was performed at 32 ± 2 gestational weeks to assess cortical development. Sulci depths were measured offline and normalized by biparietal diameter (BPD). Ages and Stages Questionnaires (ASQ) were completed postnatally, at 12 ± 1 months of corrected age. Neurosonographic findings were adjusted by regression analysis for maternal age, ethnicity, parity, fetal sex and fetal-weight centile and gestational age at scan, and ASQ scores were adjusted for maternal age, ethnicity, parity, educational level and employment status, gestational age at birth, breastfeeding, infant sex and infant age at the ASQ evaluation., Results: Overall, in comparison to the SC fetuses, fetuses conceived by ART showed statistically significant differences in cortical development, with reduced parieto-occipital sulci depth adjusted for BPD (mean ± SD: fresh ET, 12.5 ± 2.5 vs frozen ET, 13.4 ± 2.6 vs SC, 13.4 ± 2.6, P < 0.001), cingulate sulci depth adjusted for BPD (median (interquartile range (IQR)): fresh ET, 5.8 (4.2-7.4) vs frozen ET, 5.8 (4.1-7.5) vs SC, 6.5 (4.8-7.8), P = 0.001) and calcarine sulci depth adjusted for BPD (median (IQR): fresh ET, 13.5 (10.1-16.1) vs frozen ET, 14.5 (12.1-15.8) vs SC, 16.4 (14.3-17.9), P < 0.001), together with lower Sylvian fissure grading score. Changes in cortical development were more pronounced in the fresh ET than in the frozen ET group. ART infants showed lower ASQ scores as compared to SC infants, particularly in the fresh ET group (mean ± SD global ASQ Z-score: fresh ET, -0.3 ± 0.4 vs frozen ET, -0.2 ± 0.4 vs SC, 0 ± 0.4, P < 0.001)., Conclusions: Fetuses conceived by ART show a distinctive pattern of cortical development and suboptimal infant neurodevelopment, with more pronounced changes in those conceived following fresh ET. These findings support the existence of in-utero brain reorganization associated with ART and warrant follow-up studies to assess its long-term persistence. © 2022 The Authors. Ultrasound in Obstetrics & Gynecology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of International Society of Ultrasound in Obstetrics and Gynecology., (© 2022 The Authors. Ultrasound in Obstetrics & Gynecology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of International Society of Ultrasound in Obstetrics and Gynecology.)
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- 2022
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50. Prevalence of missed lesions in patients with inadequate bowel preparation through a very early repeat colonoscopy.
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Pantaleón Sánchez M, Gimeno Garcia AZ, Bernad Cabredo B, García-Rodríguez A, Frago S, Nogales O, Diez Redondo P, Puig I, Romero Mascarell C, Romero Sánchez-Miguel I, Caballero N, Ibañez I, Hernandez Negrín D, Bujedo Sadornill G, Pérez Oltra A, Pérez Berbegal R, Casals G, Seoane Urgorri A, Riu Pons F, Amorós J, and Alvarez-Gonzalez MA
- Subjects
- Cathartics, Colonoscopy, Humans, Prevalence, Prospective Studies, Adenoma diagnosis, Colonic Polyps diagnosis, Colonic Polyps pathology
- Abstract
Objectives: When bowel preparation (BP) is inadequate, international guidelines recommend repeating the colonoscopy within 1 year to avoid missing clinically relevant lesions. We aimed to determine the rate of missed lesions in patients with inadequate BP through a very early repeat colonoscopy with adequate BP., Methods: Post hoc analysis was conducted using data collected from a prospective multicenter randomized clinical trial including patients with inadequate BP and then repeat colonoscopy. Inadequate BP was defined as the Boston Bowel Preparation Scale (BBPS) score <2 points in any segment. We included patients with any indication for colonoscopy. The adenoma detection rate (ADR), advanced ADR (AADR), and serrated polyp detection rate (SPDR) were calculated for index and repeat colonoscopies., Results: Of the 651 patients with inadequate BP from the original trial, 413 (63.4%) achieved adequate BP on repeat colonoscopy. The median interval between index and repeat colonoscopies was 28 days. On repeat colonoscopy, the ADR was 45.3% (95% confidence interval [CI] 40.5-50.1%), the AADR was 10.9% (95% CI 8.1-14.3%), and the SPDR was 14.3% (95% CI 10.9-17.7%). Cancer was discovered in four patients (1%; 95% CI 0.2-2.5%). A total of 60.2% of all advanced adenoma (AA) were discovered on repeat colonoscopy. A colon segment scored BBPS = 0 had most AA (66.1%) and all four cancers., Conclusion: Patients with inadequate BP present a high rate of AAs on repeat colonoscopy. When a colonoscopy has a colon segment score BBPS = 0, we recommend repeating the colonoscopy as soon as possible., (© 2022 The Authors. Digestive Endoscopy published by John Wiley & Sons Australia, Ltd on behalf of Japan Gastroenterological Endoscopy Society.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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