32 results on '"Landero J"'
Search Results
2. Provision of small-quantity lipid-based nutrient supplements increases plasma selenium concentration in pregnant women in Malawi:a secondary outcome of a randomized controlled trial
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Haskell, M. J. (Marjorie J.), Maleta, K. (Kenneth), Arnold, C. D. (Charles D.), Jorgensen, J. M. (Josh M.), Fan, Y.-M. (Yue-Mei), Ashorn, U. (Ulla), Matchado, A. (Andrew), Monangi, N. K. (Nagendra K.), Zhang, G. (Ge), Xu, H. (Huan), Bellin, E. (Elizabeth), Landero, J. (Julio), Chappell, J. (Joanne), Muglia, L. J. (Louis J.), Hallman, M. (Mikko), Ashorn, P. (Per), Dewey, K. G. (Kathryn G.), Haskell, M. J. (Marjorie J.), Maleta, K. (Kenneth), Arnold, C. D. (Charles D.), Jorgensen, J. M. (Josh M.), Fan, Y.-M. (Yue-Mei), Ashorn, U. (Ulla), Matchado, A. (Andrew), Monangi, N. K. (Nagendra K.), Zhang, G. (Ge), Xu, H. (Huan), Bellin, E. (Elizabeth), Landero, J. (Julio), Chappell, J. (Joanne), Muglia, L. J. (Louis J.), Hallman, M. (Mikko), Ashorn, P. (Per), and Dewey, K. G. (Kathryn G.)
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Background: Pregnant women in Malawi are at risk of selenium deficiency, which can have adverse effects on pregnancy outcomes. Interventions for improving selenium status are needed. Objectives: To assess the effect of provision of small-quantity lipid-based nutrient supplements (SQ-LNSs) to Malawian women during pregnancy on their plasma selenium concentrations at 36 wk of gestation. Methods: Pregnant women (≤20 wk of gestation) were randomly assigned to receive daily either: 1) iron and folic acid (IFA); 2) multiple micronutrients (MMN; 130 µg selenium per capsule); or 3) SQ-LNS (130 µg selenium/20 g). Plasma selenium concentrations were measured by inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry at baseline and after ≥16 wk of intervention (at 36 wk of gestation) and compared by intervention group. Results: At 36 wk of gestation, median (quartile 1, quartile 3) plasma selenium concentrations (micromoles per liter) were 0.96 (0.73, 1.23), 0.94 (0.78, 1.18), and 1.01 (0.85, 1.28) in the IFA, MMN, and SQ-LNS groups, respectively. Geometric mean (GM) plasma selenium concentration was 5.4% (95% CI: 1.8%, 9.0%) higher in the SQ-LNS group than in the MMN group and tended to be higher than in the IFA group (+4.2%; 95% CI: 1.0%, 7.8%). The prevalence of adjusted plasma selenium concentrations <1 µmol/L was 55.1%, 57.8%, and 47.3% in the IFA, MMN, and SQ-LNS groups, respectively; it was lower in the SQ-LNS group than in the MMN group, OR = 0.44 (95% CI: 0.24, 0.83), and tended to be lower than in the IFA group, OR = 0.54 (95% CI: 0.29, 1.03). There was a significant interaction between baseline plasma selenium concentration and intervention group (P = 0.003). In the lowest tertile of baseline selenium concentrations, GM plasma selenium concentration was higher, and the prevalence of low values was lower in the SQ-LNS group compared with the MMN and IFA groups at 36 wk of gestation (P ≤ 0.007). Conclusions: Provision of SQ-LNS containing selenium to pregnant women
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- 2022
3. ¿Cómo contribuye el material didáctico multimedia en el aprendizaje de las ciencias?. Un estudio en las clases prácticas de topografía
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León Bonillo, M. and Aguaded Landero, J.
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En este trabajo se comunica la investigación realizada tras la detección de un problema en el aula a nivel universitario. Se ha creado una herramienta virtual a partir de una hipótesis de progresión y analizado los resultados obtenidos a lo largo de 4 cursos, desde un punto de vista cooperativista del desarrollo profesional. El problema detectado en el aula fue la imposibilidad por parte de los discentes, de poder utilizar el instrumental de campo fuera del horario lectivo. La solución adoptada fue la creación de una herramienta virtual, al objeto de paliar el uso in situ, considerando que con la hipótesis se llegaría a solucionar esta deficiencia y se optimizarían las clases prácticas. De los resultados de las evaluaciones se puede concluir la mejora del aprendizaje de los discentes mientras que entre el profesorado universitario es más heterogéneo en su desarrollo profesional.
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- 2021
4. Association of maternal prenatal selenium concentration and preterm birth: a multicountry meta-analysis
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Monangi, N. (Nagendra), Xu, H. (Huan), Khanam, R. (Rasheda), Khan, W. (Waqasuddin), Deb, S. (Saikat), Pervin, J. (Jesmin), Price, J. T. (Joan T.), Kennedy, S. H. (Stephen H.), Al Mahmud, A. (Abdullah), Fan, Y. (Yuemei), Le, T. Q. (Thanh Q.), Care, A. (Angharad), Landero, J. A. (Julio A.), Combs, G. F. (Gerald F.), Belling, E. (Elizabeth), Chappell, J. (Joanne), Kong, F. (Fansheng), Lacher, C. (Criag), Ahmed, S. (Salahuddin), Chowdhury, N. H. (Nabidul Haque), Rahman, S. (Sayedur), Kabir, F. (Furqan), Nisar, I. (Imran), Hotwani, A. (Aneeta), Mehmood, U. (Usma), Nizar, A. (Ambreen), Khalid, J. (Javairia), Dhingra, U. (Usha), Dutta, A. (Arup), Ali, S. (Said), Aftab, F. (Fahad), Juma, M. H. (Mohammed Hamad), Rahman, M. (Monjur), Vwalika, B. (Bellington), Musonda, P. (Patrick), Ahmed, T. (Tahmeed), Islam, M. M. (Md Munirul), Ashorn, U. (Ulla), Maleta, K. (Kenneth), Hallman, M. (Mikko), Goodfellow, L. (Laura), Gupta, J. K. (Juhi K.), Alfirevic, A. (Ana), Murphy, S. (Susan), Rand, L. (Larry), Ryckman, K. K. (Kelli K.), Murray, J. C. (Jeffrey C.), Bahl, R. (Rajiv), Litch, J. A. (James A.), Baruch-Gravett, C. (Courtney), Alfirevic, Z. (Zarko), Ashorn, P. (Per), Baqui, A. (Abdullah), Hirst, J. (Jane), Hoyo, C. (Cathrine), Jehan, F. (Fyezah), Jelliffe-Pawlowski, L. L. (Laura L.), Rahman, A. (Anisur), Roth, D. E. (Daniel E.), Sazawal, S. (Sunil), Stringer, J. (Jeffrey), Zhang, G. (Ge), Muglia, L. (Louis), Monangi, N. (Nagendra), Xu, H. (Huan), Khanam, R. (Rasheda), Khan, W. (Waqasuddin), Deb, S. (Saikat), Pervin, J. (Jesmin), Price, J. T. (Joan T.), Kennedy, S. H. (Stephen H.), Al Mahmud, A. (Abdullah), Fan, Y. (Yuemei), Le, T. Q. (Thanh Q.), Care, A. (Angharad), Landero, J. A. (Julio A.), Combs, G. F. (Gerald F.), Belling, E. (Elizabeth), Chappell, J. (Joanne), Kong, F. (Fansheng), Lacher, C. (Criag), Ahmed, S. (Salahuddin), Chowdhury, N. H. (Nabidul Haque), Rahman, S. (Sayedur), Kabir, F. (Furqan), Nisar, I. (Imran), Hotwani, A. (Aneeta), Mehmood, U. (Usma), Nizar, A. (Ambreen), Khalid, J. (Javairia), Dhingra, U. (Usha), Dutta, A. (Arup), Ali, S. (Said), Aftab, F. (Fahad), Juma, M. H. (Mohammed Hamad), Rahman, M. (Monjur), Vwalika, B. (Bellington), Musonda, P. (Patrick), Ahmed, T. (Tahmeed), Islam, M. M. (Md Munirul), Ashorn, U. (Ulla), Maleta, K. (Kenneth), Hallman, M. (Mikko), Goodfellow, L. (Laura), Gupta, J. K. (Juhi K.), Alfirevic, A. (Ana), Murphy, S. (Susan), Rand, L. (Larry), Ryckman, K. K. (Kelli K.), Murray, J. C. (Jeffrey C.), Bahl, R. (Rajiv), Litch, J. A. (James A.), Baruch-Gravett, C. (Courtney), Alfirevic, Z. (Zarko), Ashorn, P. (Per), Baqui, A. (Abdullah), Hirst, J. (Jane), Hoyo, C. (Cathrine), Jehan, F. (Fyezah), Jelliffe-Pawlowski, L. L. (Laura L.), Rahman, A. (Anisur), Roth, D. E. (Daniel E.), Sazawal, S. (Sunil), Stringer, J. (Jeffrey), Zhang, G. (Ge), and Muglia, L. (Louis)
- Abstract
Background: Selenium (Se), an essential trace mineral, has been implicated in preterm birth (PTB). We aimed to determine the association of maternal Se concentrations during pregnancy with PTB risk and gestational duration in a large number of samples collected from diverse populations. Methods: Gestational duration data and maternal plasma or serum samples of 9946 singleton live births were obtained from 17 geographically diverse study cohorts. Maternal Se concentrations were determined by inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry analysis. The associations between maternal Se with PTB and gestational duration were analysed using logistic and linear regressions. The results were then combined using fixed-effect and random-effect meta-analysis. Findings: In all study samples, the Se concentrations followed a normal distribution with a mean of 93.8 ng/mL (SD: 28.5 ng/mL) but varied substantially across different sites. The fixed-effect meta-analysis across the 17 cohorts showed that Se was significantly associated with PTB and gestational duration with effect size estimates of an OR=0.95 (95% CI: 0.9 to 1.00) for PTB and 0.66 days (95% CI: 0.38 to 0.94) longer gestation per 15 ng/mL increase in Se concentration. However, there was a substantial heterogeneity among study cohorts and the random-effect meta-analysis did not achieve statistical significance. The largest effect sizes were observed in UK (Liverpool) cohort, and most significant associations were observed in samples from Malawi. Interpretation: While our study observed statistically significant associations between maternal Se concentration and PTB at some sites, this did not generalise across the entire cohort. Whether population-specific factors explain the heterogeneity of our findings warrants further investigation. Further evidence is needed to understand the biologic pathways, clinical efficacy and safety, before changes to antenatal nutritional recommendations for Se supplementation are c
- Published
- 2021
5. 182 The effects of pure benzoic acid, an acid blend product, or their combination in nursery pig diets on post-weaning growth performance
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Bergstrom, Jon, primary, Landero, J, additional, Young, Malachy, additional, and Hahn, J D, additional
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- 2020
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6. Effects of feeding fermented wheat with Lactobacillus reuteri on gut morphology, intestinal fermentation, nutrient digestibility, and growth performance in weaned pigs1
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Le, M. H. A., primary, Galle, S., additional, Yang, Y., additional, Landero, J. L., additional, Beltranena, E., additional, Gänzle, M. G., additional, and Zijlstra, R. T., additional
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- 2016
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7. 201 Lysine requirement titration for barrows and gilts from 25- to 75-kg
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Landero, J. L., primary, Young, M. G., additional, Touchette, K. J., additional, Stevenson, M. J., additional, Clark, A. B., additional, Gonçalves, M. A. D., additional, and Dritz, S. S., additional
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- 2016
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8. Development and application of a selenium speciation method in cattle feed and beef samples using HPLC-ICP-MS: evaluating the selenium metabolic process in cattle
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Oliveira, A. F., primary, Landero, J., additional, Kubachka, K., additional, Nogueira, A. R. A., additional, Zanetti, M. A., additional, and Caruso, J., additional
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- 2016
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9. Growth performance, diet nutrient digestibility, and bone mineralization in weaned pigs fed pelleted diets containing thermostable phytase1
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Yáñez, J. L., primary, Landero, J. L., additional, Owusu-Asiedu, A., additional, Cervantes, M., additional, and Zijlstra, R. T., additional
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- 2013
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10. Growth performance and preference studies to evaluate solvent-extracted Brassica napus or Brassica juncea canola meal fed to weaned pigs1
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Landero, J. L., primary, Beltranena, E., additional, and Zijlstra, R. T., additional
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- 2012
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11. MODELING OF STEADY-STATE HEAT TRANSFER IN A WATER SPRAY IMPINGEMENT ONTO A HEATED WALL
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Landero, J. C., primary and Watkins, A. Paul, additional
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- 2008
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12. Effects of feeding fermented wheat with Lactobacillus reuterion gut morphology, intestinal fermentation, nutrient digestibility, and growth performance in weaned pigs1
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Le, M. H. A., Galle, S., Yang, Y., Landero, J. L., Beltranena, E., Gänzle, M. G., and Zijlstra, R. T.
- Abstract
Feeding fermented feed to weaned pigs may improve nutrient digestibility and gut health and thereby reduce diarrhea incidence. Effects of feeding wheat grain fermented for 24 h with Lactobacillus reuteriwere evaluated with 36 weaned pigs (7.3 kg BW). Fermented wheat grain contained (DM basis) 14.2% CP, 0.45% chemically available Lys, and 7.8% NDF, whereas unfermented wheat grain contained 16.4% CP, 0.45% chemically available Lys, and 9.9% NDF. Pigs were fed 6 mash wheat-based diets balanced for water content during 2 phases: Phase 1 diets for 1 wk (d 0–7) with 20% unfermented or fermented wheat and, subsequently, Phase 2 diets for 2 wk (d 8–21) with 50% unfermented or fermented wheat. The 6 diets were unfermented wheat (CTRL), unfermented and chemically acidified wheat (ACD), fermented wheat with L. reuteriTMW1.656 and 10% sucrose, fermented wheat with L. reuteriTMW1.656 and 5% glucose + 5% fructose, fermented wheat with L. reuteriLTH5794 and 10% sucrose, and fermented wheat with L. reuteriLTH5794 and 5% glucose + 5% fructose. Diets were formulated to provide 2.5 and 2.4 Mcal NE/kg and 5.3 and 5.0 g standardized ileal digestible Lys/Mcal NE for Phase 1 and 2 diets, respectively. Feeding fermented wheat reduced (P< 0.05) apparent total tract digestibility (ATTD) of diet DM (84.7 vs. 85.4%), GE (84.4 vs. 85.3%), and CP (81.8 vs. 83.6%) for d 15 through 21 compared with the CTRL and ACD diets. Weaned pigs fed fermented wheat diets had lower (P< 0.05) ADFI than pigs fed the CTRL and ACD diets for d 0 through 7. The ADFI, ADG, and G:F did not differ between pigs fed fermented and unfermented diets. Concentrations of acetic, propionic, and branched-chain fatty acids and total VFA in feces increased (P< 0.05) for pigs fed fermented wheat diets containing exopolysaccharides (EPS). However, VFA did not differ in ileal digesta. Villus height in the duodenum and jejunum increased in pigs fed fermented wheat without EPS (P< 0.05) compared with pigs fed fermented wheat with EPS. However, pigs fed the CTRL and ACD diets had longer (P< 0.05) villi and deeper crypts in the ileum than pigs fed fermented wheat. The ratio of villus height to crypt depth did not differ in the 3 segments of small intestine of weaned pigs. In conclusion, feeding fermented wheat grain diets to weaned pigs did not affect gut morphology, intestinal fermentation, growth performance, and ATTD of nutrients; however, EPS stimulated hindgut fermentation and may promote health benefits.
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- 2016
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13. The effects of pure benzoic acid, an acid blend product, or their combination in nursery pig diets on post-weaning growth performance.
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Bergstrom, Jon, Landero, J., Young, Malachy, and Hahn, J. D.
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BENZOIC acid , *SWINE , *DIET , *ACIDS - Published
- 2020
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14. Lysine requirement titration for barrows and gilts from 25- to 75-kg.
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Landero, J. L., Young, M. G, Touchette, K. J., Stevenson, M. J., Clark, A. B., Goncalves, M. A. D., and Dritz, S. S.
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HIGH-lysine diet , *SWINE nutrition , *SWINE growth , *SWINE physiology - Abstract
Lysine is the first limiting amino acid in practical swine diets, so it is important to optimize the dietary digestible lysine to maximize growth and profitability. Two experiments were conducted to estimate the standardized ileal digestible (SID) Lys requirement for pigs from 25- to 50-kg BW (Exp. 1) and 50- to 75-kg BW (Exp. 2) using ADG and G:F as criteria responses. A total of 1050 barrows and gilts (FAST Fl female x PIC380 boar line) were used in each experiment, blocked by gender, with 10 pens per treatment and 21 pigs per pen. Experimental diets were formulated to contain 2.3 Meal NE/ kg and to meet or exceed all nutrient requirements except Lys, according to NRC (2012). Minimum ratios of 30% Met:Lys, 60% Met+Cys:Lys, 21% Trp:Lys, 70% VakLys, 55% Ile:Lys, and 102% Leu:Lys on a SID basis were used for all diets. The SID ThnLys ratio was 65 and 66% for Exp. 1 and 2, respectively. In Exp. 1, pigs were fed diets formulated to contain 0.72, 0.80, 0.88, 0.96 or 1.04% SID Lys whereas in Exp. 2 diets were formulated to contain 0.68,0.75, 0.82,0.89 or 0.96% SID Lys. Responses measured at the pen level were analyzed using general linear and nonlinear heteroskedastic mixed models. Dose response curves were evaluated using linear (LM), quadratic polynomial (QP), broken-line linear (BLL), and broken-line quadratic (BLQ) models. For each response variable, the best-fitting model was selected using Bayesian information criterion. Gender was used as covariate when significant. Increasing SID Lys content in the diet quadratically (P < 0.01) increased ADG and G:F in Exp. 1 and linearly (P < 0.001) increased ADG and G:F in Exp. 2. From 25- to 50-kg, the best-fitting models for ADG and G:F were the LM and QP, respectively, with the maximum response estimated at > 1.04% SID Lys. From 50- to 75- kg BW, the best-fitting model for ADG was the BLQ estimating the requirement at 0.83% (95% confidence interval [CI]: [0.80%, 0.86%]) SID Lys, with 99% of maximum achieved with 0.82%. For G:F, the BLL was the best-fitting model and the SID Lys requirement estimated at 0.85% (95% CI: [0.75%, 0.94%]) with 99% of maximum achieved with 0.80%. In conclusion, the SID Lys requirement for 25- to 75-kg pigs may be higher than the recommendation from NRC (2012). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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15. Impact of metabolism-disrupting chemicals and folic acid supplementation on liver injury and steatosis in mother-child pairs.
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India-Aldana S, Midya V, Betanzos-Robledo L, Yao M, Alcalá C, Andra SS, Arora M, Calafat AM, Chu J, Deierlein A, Estrada-Gutierrez G, Jagani R, Just AC, Kloog I, Landero J, Oulhote Y, Walker RW, Yelamanchili S, Baccarelli AA, Wright RO, Téllez Rojo MM, Colicino E, Cantoral A, and Valvi D
- Abstract
Background & Aims: Scarce knowledge about the impact of metabolism-disrupting chemicals (MDCs) on steatotic liver disease limits opportunities for intervention. We evaluated pregnancy MDC-mixture associations with liver outcomes, and effect modification by folic acid (FA) supplementation in mother-child pairs., Methods: We studied ∼200 mother-child pairs from the Mexican PROGRESS cohort, with 43 MDCs measured during pregnancy (estimated air pollutants, blood/urine metals or metalloids, urine high- and low-molecular-weight phthalate [HMWPs, LMWPs] and organophosphate-pesticide metabolites), and serum liver enzymes (ALT, AST) at ∼9 years post-parturition. Outcomes included elevated liver enzymes in children and established clinical scores for steatosis and fibrosis in mothers (i.e., , Ast: ALT, FLI, HSI, FIB-4). Bayesian-weighted quantile sum regression assessed MDC-mixture associations with liver outcomes. We further examined chemical-chemical interactions and effect modification by self-reported FA supplementation., Results: In children, many MDC-mixtures were associated with liver injury. Per quartile HMWP-mixture increase, ALT increased by 10.1% (95% CI 1.67%, 19.4%) and AST by 5.27% (95% CI 0.80%, 10.1%). LMWP-mixtures and air pollutant-mixtures were associated with higher AST and ALT, respectively. Air pollutant and non-essential metal/element associations with liver enzymes were attenuated by maternal cobalt blood concentrations (p-interactions <0.05). In mothers, only the LMWP-mixture was associated with odds for steatosis (odds ratio = 1.53, 95% CI 1.01-2.28 for HSI >36, and odds ratio 1.62, 95% CI 1.05-2.49 for AST:ALT <1). In mothers and children, most associations were attenuated (null) at FA supplementation ≥600 μg/day (p-interactions <0.05)., Conclusions: Pregnancy MDC exposures may increase risk of liver injury and steatosis, particularly in children. Adequate FA supplementation and maternal cobalt levels may attenuate these associations., Impact and Implications: The effects of environmental chemical exposures on steatotic liver diseases are not well understood. In a parallel investigation of mothers and children, we found that pregnancy exposures to metabolism-disrupting chemicals may increase the risk of liver injury and steatosis, especially in the child, and that these associations could be attenuated by higher folic acid and/or cobalt levels. These findings can inform policies to decrease environmental chemical pollution and contribute to the design of clinical interventions addressing the metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease epidemic., Competing Interests: Conflict of interest The authors of this study declare that they do not have any conflict of interest. Please refer to the accompanying ICMJE disclosure forms for further details., (Copyright © 2024 European Association for the Study of the Liver. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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16. Akkermansia muciniphila attenuates association between specific metal exposures during pregnancy and depressive symptoms in late childhood.
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Midya V, Nagdeo K, Lane JM, Torres-Olascoaga LA, Martínez GG, Horton MK, McRae N, Lopez I, Landero J, Gennings C, Téllez-Rojo MM, Wright RO, Arora M, and Eggers S
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Emerging research suggests that exposures to metals during pregnancy and consequent disruptions in gut microbiome (GM) are associated with depressive disorders in childhood. Akkermansia muciniphila , a GM bacteria, has been studied for its potential antidepressant effects. However, its role in influencing the association between prenatal metal exposures and depressive symptoms during childhood is unknown. Leveraging a well-characterized pediatric birth cohort and its microbiome substudy ( n = 112), we investigated whether a certain subgroup of children at 9-11-year-of-age (characterized by a specific pattern of prenatal exposure to groups of metals or metal-clique) had worsened depressive symptoms and if the presence of A.muciniphila in GM modifies this association. A subgroup of children characterized by the prenatal metal-clique signature of zinc-chromium-cobalt had significantly increased depression scores; however, within that subgroup, children with A.muciniphila had much lower depression scores than those without A.muciniphila in the GM. Our analysis provides exploratory evidence hypothesizing A.muciniphila as an intervention attenuating the effect of prenatal metal-exposures-associated depressive disorders in late childhood., Competing Interests: M.A. is an employee and equity holder of Linus Biotechnology Inc., a start-up company of Mount Sinai Health System. The company develops tools for the detection of ASD and related conditions. The remaining 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., (© 2024 The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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17. Prenatal iodine intake and infant temperament in a multiethnic US cohort.
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Akinkugbe AA, Duffy J, Kannan S, Hartman TJ, Landero J, Bosquet Enlow M, Wright RO, Zhang X, and Wright RJ
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- Humans, Female, Pregnancy, Infant, United States, Adult, Male, Longitudinal Studies, Dietary Supplements statistics & numerical data, Cohort Studies, Diet statistics & numerical data, Infant Behavior, Prenatal Nutritional Physiological Phenomena, Temperament, Iodine administration & dosage
- Abstract
Objective: Maternal iodine plays a central role in fetal neurodevelopment. It is recommended that pregnant women consume sufficient levels of iodine to accommodate increased need for mother and fetus. We examined associations among prenatal dietary and supplemental iodine intake and infant temperament., Design: The PRogramming of Intergenerational Stress Mechanisms (PRISM) study is an ongoing longitudinal pregnancy cohort. Data from 2011 to 2020 were used for this study. Women completed the Block98 FFQ ascertaining prenatal dietary and supplemental iodine intake and the Infant Behavior Questionnaire-Revised at infant age 6 months to ascertain infant temperament (Surgency/Extraversion, Negative Affectivity and Orienting/Regulation)., Setting: USA., Participants: Mother-child dyads ( n 892)., Results: Women were primarily Black/Hispanic Black (44 %) and non-Black Hispanic (35 %) with 46 % reporting household income < $25 000/year. Nearly half had an estimated average requirement (EAR) < 160 µg/d (49 % based on dietary intake; 43 % based on diet and supplements). Girls born to women with an EAR ≥ 160 µg/d compared to girls born to women below this level had higher unadjusted extraversion scores for dietary plus supplemental intake ( β = 0·23 (0·13, 0·33)); decreased to β = 0·05 (-0·08, 0·19) after adjusting for covariates. Boys born to women with an EAR ≥ 160 µg/d (based on diet and supplements) as compared to boys born to women below this level had statistically non-significant higher unadjusted negative affective score ( β = 0·06 (-0·08, 0·20)) that became significantly lower upon covariate adjustment ( β = -1·66 (-1·97, -1·35))., Conclusions: A significant proportion of these women reported suboptimal prenatal iodine intake. Suboptimal prenatal iodine intake may have implications for child neurodevelopment evident as early as infancy.
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- 2024
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18. Environmental pollutant risk factors for worse COVID-19 related clinical outcomes in predominately hispanic and latino populations.
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Baumert BO, Wang H, Samy S, Park SK, Lam CN, Dunn K, Pinto-Pacheco B, Walker D, Landero J, Conti D, Chatzi L, Hu H, and Goodrich JA
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- Humans, Middle Aged, Male, Female, Aged, Adult, Risk Factors, Pilot Projects, Fluorocarbons blood, Fluorocarbons urine, Hospitalization statistics & numerical data, Intensive Care Units statistics & numerical data, SARS-CoV-2, COVID-19, Hispanic or Latino statistics & numerical data, Environmental Pollutants urine, Environmental Pollutants blood, Environmental Exposure adverse effects, Environmental Exposure analysis, Metals, Heavy urine, Metals, Heavy blood
- Abstract
Background: Per- and poly-fluorinated compounds (PFAS) and heavy metals constitute two classes of environmental exposures with known immunotoxicant effects. In this pilot study, we aimed to evaluate the impact of exposure to heavy metals and PFAS on COVID-19 severity. We hypothesized that elevated plasma-PFAS concentrations and urinary heavy metal concentrations would be associated with increased odds of ICU admission in COVID-19 hospitalized individuals., Methods: Using the University of Southern California Clinical Translational Sciences Institute (SC-CTSI) biorepository of hospitalized COVID-19 patients, urinary concentrations of 15 heavy metals and urinary creatinine were measured in n = 101 patients and plasma concentrations of 13 PFAS were measured in n = 126 patients. COVID-19 severity was determined based on whether a patient was admitted to the ICU during hospitalization. Associations of metals and PFAS with ICU admission were assessed using logistic regression models, controlling for age, sex, ethnicity, smoking status, and for metals, urinary dilution., Results: The average age of patients was 55 ± 14.2 years. Among SC-CTSI participants with urinary measurement of heavy metals and blood measures of PFAS, 54.5% (n = 61) and 54.8% (n = 80) were admitted to the ICU, respectively. For heavy metals, we observed higher levels of Cd, Cr, and Cu in ICU patients. The strongest associations were with Cadmium (Cd). After accounting for covariates, each 1 SD increase in Cd resulted in a 2.00 (95% CI: 1.10-3.60; p = 0.03) times higher odds of admission to the ICU. When including only Hispanic or Latino participants, the effect estimates between cadmium and ICU admission remained similar. Results for PFAS were less consistent, with perfluorodecanesulfonic acid (PFDS) exhibiting a positive but non-significant association with ICU admission (Odds ratio, 95% CI: 1.50, 0.97-2.20) and perfluorodecanoic acid (PFDA) exhibiting a negative association with ICU admission (0.53, 0.31-0.88)., Conclusions: This study supports the hypothesis that environmental exposures may impact COVID-19 severity., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2024 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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19. Metabolism-Disrupting Chemical Mixtures during Pregnancy, Folic Acid Supplementation, and Liver Injury in Mother-Child Pairs.
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India-Aldana S, Midya V, Betanzos-Robledo L, Yao M, Alcalá C, Andra SS, Arora M, Calafat AM, Chu J, Deierlein A, Estrada-Gutierrez G, Jagani R, Just AC, Kloog I, Landero J, Oulhote Y, Walker RW, Yelamanchili S, Baccarelli AA, Wright RO, Téllez Rojo MM, Colicino E, Cantoral A, and Valvi D
- Abstract
Background and Aims: Scarce knowledge about the impact of metabolism-disrupting chemicals (MDCs) on liver injury limits opportunities for intervention. We evaluated pregnancy MDC-mixture associations with liver injury and effect modification by folic acid (FA) supplementation in mother-child pairs., Methods: We studied ∼200 mother-child pairs from the Mexican PROGRESS cohort, with measured 43 MDCs during pregnancy (estimated air pollutants, blood/urine metals or metalloids, urine high- and low-molecular-weight phthalate [HMWPs, LMWPs] and organophosphate-pesticide [OP] metabolites), and serum liver enzymes (ALT, AST) at ∼9 years post-parturition. We defined liver injury as elevated liver enzymes in children, and using established clinical scores for steatosis and fibrosis in mothers (i.e., AST:ALT, FLI, HSI, FIB-4). Bayesian Weighted Quantile Sum regression assessed MDC-mixture associations with liver injury outcomes. We further examined chemical-chemical interactions and effect modification by self-reported FA supplementation., Results: In children, many MDC-mixtures were associated with liver injury outcomes. Per quartile HMWP-mixture increase, ALT increased by 10.1% (95%CI: 1.67%, 19.4%) and AST by 5.27% (95% CI: 0.80%, 10.1%). LMWP-mixtures and air pollutant-mixtures were associated with higher AST and ALT, respectively. Air pollutant and non-essential metal/element associations with liver enzymes were attenuated by maternal cobalt blood concentrations ( p -interactions<0.05). In mothers, only the LMWP-mixture was associated with liver injury [OR=1.53 (95%CI: 1.01, 2.28) for HSI>36, and OR=1.62 (95%CI: 1.05, 2.49) for AST:ALT<1]. In mothers and children, most associations were attenuated (null) at FA supplementation≥600mcg/day ( p -interactions<0.05)., Conclusions: Pregnancy MDC exposures may increase liver injury risk, particularly in children. These associations may be attenuated by higher FA supplementation and maternal cobalt levels.
- Published
- 2024
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20. Cross-sectional and prospective associations of early childhood circulating metals with early and mid-childhood cognition in the Project Viva cohort.
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Thilakaratne R, Lin PD, Rifas-Shiman SL, Landero J, Wright RO, Bellinger D, Oken E, and Cardenas A
- Subjects
- Pregnancy, Female, Humans, Child, Preschool, Child, Cross-Sectional Studies, Cognition, Neuropsychological Tests, Lead toxicity, Mercury
- Abstract
Background: Relatively little is known about the immediate and prospective neurodevelopmental impacts of joint exposure to multiple metals (i.e., metal mixtures) in early childhood., Objectives: To estimate associations of early childhood (∼3 years of age) blood metal concentrations with cognitive test scores at early and mid-childhood (∼8 years of age)., Methods: We studied children from the Project Viva cohort. We measured erythrocyte concentrations of seven essential (Co, Cu, Mg, Mn, Mo, Se, and Zn) and eight non-essential metals (As, Ba, Cd, Cs, Hg, Pb, Sn, and Sr) in early childhood blood samples. Trained research assistants administered cognitive tests assessing vocabulary, visual-motor ability, memory, and general intelligence (standard deviations: ∼10 points), in early and mid-childhood. We employed multivariable linear regression to examine associations of individual metals with test scores adjusting for confounders, other concurrently measured metals, and first-trimester maternal blood metals. We also estimated joint associations and explored interaction between metals in mixture analyses., Results: We analyzed 349 children (median whole blood Pb ∼1 μg/dL). In cross-sectional analyses, each doubling of Pb was associated with lower visual-motor function (mean difference: -2.43 points, 95% confidence interval (CI): -4.01, -0.86) and receptive vocabulary, i.e., words understood (-1.45 points, 95% CI: -3.26, 0.36). Associations of Pb with mid-childhood cognition were weaker and less precise by comparison. Mg was positively associated with cognition in cross-sectional but not prospective analyses, and cross-sectional associations were attenuated in a sensitivity analysis removing adjustment for concurrent metals. We did not observe joint associations nor interactions., Discussion: In this cohort with low blood Pb levels, increased blood Pb was robustly associated with lower cognitive ability in cross-sectional analyses, even after adjustment for prenatal Pb exposure, and regardless of adjustment for metal co-exposures. However, associations with mid-childhood cognition were attenuated and imprecise, suggesting some buffering of Pb neurotoxicity in early life., What This Study Adds: Relatively few studies have comprehensively separated the effects of neurotoxic metals such as lead (Pb) from pre- and postnatal co-occurring metals, nor examined persistence of associations across childhood. In a cohort of middle-class children, we found higher early childhood (∼3 y) blood Pb was associated with lower scores on cognitive tests, independent of other metals and prenatal blood Pb. However, early childhood Pb was only weakly associated with cognition in mid-childhood (∼8 y). Our results suggest the effects of low-level Pb exposure may attenuate over time in some populations, implying the presence of factors that may buffer Pb neurotoxicity in early life., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
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21. Provision of Small-Quantity Lipid-Based Nutrient Supplements Increases Plasma Selenium Concentration in Pregnant Women in Malawi: A Secondary Outcome of a Randomized Controlled Trial.
- Author
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Haskell MJ, Maleta K, Arnold CD, Jorgensen JM, Fan YM, Ashorn U, Matchado A, Monangi NK, Zhang G, Xu H, Belling E, Landero J, Chappell J, Muglia LJ, Hallman M, Ashorn P, and Dewey KG
- Abstract
Background: Pregnant women in Malawi are at risk of selenium deficiency, which can have adverse effects on pregnancy outcomes. Interventions for improving selenium status are needed., Objectives: To assess the effect of provision of small-quantity lipid-based nutrient supplements (SQ-LNSs) to Malawian women during pregnancy on their plasma selenium concentrations at 36 wk of gestation., Methods: Pregnant women (≤20 wk of gestation) were randomly assigned to receive daily either: 1 ) iron and folic acid (IFA); 2 ) multiple micronutrients (MMN; 130 µg selenium per capsule); or 3 ) SQ-LNS (130 µg selenium/20 g). Plasma selenium concentrations were measured by inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry at baseline and after ≥16 wk of intervention (at 36 wk of gestation) and compared by intervention group., Results: At 36 wk of gestation, median (quartile 1, quartile 3) plasma selenium concentrations (micromoles per liter) were 0.96 (0.73, 1.23), 0.94 (0.78, 1.18), and 1.01 (0.85, 1.28) in the IFA, MMN, and SQ-LNS groups, respectively. Geometric mean (GM) plasma selenium concentration was 5.4% (95% CI: 1.8%, 9.0%) higher in the SQ-LNS group than in the MMN group and tended to be higher than in the IFA group (+4.2%; 95% CI: 1.0%, 7.8%). The prevalence of adjusted plasma selenium concentrations <1 µmol/L was 55.1%, 57.8%, and 47.3% in the IFA, MMN, and SQ-LNS groups, respectively; it was lower in the SQ-LNS group than in the MMN group, OR = 0.44 (95% CI: 0.24, 0.83), and tended to be lower than in the IFA group, OR = 0.54 (95% CI: 0.29, 1.03). There was a significant interaction between baseline plasma selenium concentration and intervention group ( P = 0.003). In the lowest tertile of baseline selenium concentrations, GM plasma selenium concentration was higher, and the prevalence of low values was lower in the SQ-LNS group compared with the MMN and IFA groups at 36 wk of gestation ( P ≤ 0.007)., Conclusions: Provision of SQ-LNS containing selenium to pregnant women can be an effective strategy for improving their selenium status.This trial was registered at clinicaltrials.gov (identifier: NCT01239693)., (© The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the American Society for Nutrition.)
- Published
- 2022
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22. Maternal selenium levels and whole genome screen in recurrent spontaneous preterm birth population: A nested case control study.
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Care AG, Gupta JK, Goodfellow L, Zhang G, Monangi N, Belling E, Landero J, Chappell J, Sharp A, Alfirevic A, Müller-Myhsok B, Muglia LJ, and Alfirevic Z
- Subjects
- Case-Control Studies, Female, Humans, Models, Statistical, Pregnancy, Prognosis, Premature Birth genetics, Selenium
- Abstract
Objective: To establish if low maternal selenium (Se) was associated with sPTB in women with recurrent sPTB and identify genetic link with maternal Se levels., Design: Nested case-control study., Setting: Tertiary Maternity Hospital., Population: Plasma and whole blood from pregnant women with history of early sPTB/PPROM < 34
+0 and European ancestry were obtained at 20 weeks (range 15-24 weeks). 'Cases' were recurrent PTB/PPROM < 34+0 weeks and term (≥37+0 ) deliveries were classified as 'high-risk controls.' Women with previous term births and index birth ≥ 39 weeks were 'low-risk controls'., Methods: Maternal plasma Se measured by ICP-MS was used as a continuous phenotype in a GWAS analysis. Se was added to a logistic regression model using PTB predictor variables., Main Outcome Measures: Maternal Se concentration, recurrent early sPTB/PPROM., Results: 53/177 high-risk women had a recurrent sPTB/PPROM < 34+0 weeks and were 2.7 times more likely to have a Se level < 83.3 ppm at 20weeks of pregnancy compared with low-risk term controls (n = 179), (RR 2.7, 95%CI 1.5-4.8; p = .001). One SNP from a non-coding region (FOXN3 intron variant, rs55793422) reached genome-wide significance level (p = 3.73E-08 ). Targeted analysis of Se gene variant did not show difference between preterm and term births. (χ2 test, OR = 0.95; 95%CI = 0.59-1.56; p = 0.82). When Se levels were added to a clinical prediction model, only an additional 5% of cases (n = 3) and 0.6% (n = 1) of controls were correctly identified., Conclusions: Low plasma Se is associated with sPTB risk but is not sufficiently predictive at individual patient level. We did not find a genetic association between maternal Se levels and Se-related genes., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2021 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2021
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23. Let It Chill: The Role of Interventional Radiology in Complicated Appendicitis. A Case Report.
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Vázquez Mézquita AJ, Murrieta Peralta E, Ramírez Landero J, Uribe Campo GA, and Guerrero Hernández M
- Abstract
Appendicitis is a common cause of acute abdominal syndrome that affects different group ages. In some cases, complications such as abscess formation or perforation may make taking an immediate surgical approach difficult. We report a case of a 39-year-old male who presented with appendicitis, with the presence of a well-circumscribed abscess. The surgeons and interventional radiologists at our institution preferred a conservative approach by placing ultrasound-guided percutaneous drainage and performing an interval appendectomy weeks after the initial symptoms. Through the presentation of this case, we want to make physicians, mostly in developing countries, aware of the benefits of interventional radiology in the management of complicated appendicitis., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
- Published
- 2019
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24. The metabolic effects of mercury during the biological cycle of vines (Vitis vinifera).
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Spisso A, Verni E, Nahan K, Martinez L, Landero J, and Pacheco P
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- Humans, Plant Leaves drug effects, Plant Leaves growth & development, Plant Roots drug effects, Plant Roots growth & development, Plant Roots metabolism, Vitis drug effects, Vitis growth & development, Environmental Pollutants toxicity, Mercury toxicity, Plant Leaves metabolism, Vitis metabolism
- Abstract
Mercury (Hg) is a major environmental pollutant that can be disposed to the environment by human activities, reaching crops like vineyards during irrigation with contaminated waters. A 2-year study was performed to monitor Hg variations during reproductive and vegetative stages of vines after Hg supplementation. Variations were focused on total Hg concentration, the molecular weight of Hg fractions and Hg-proteins associations in roots, stems and leaves. Total Hg concentrations increased during reproductive stages and decreased during vegetative stages. Variations in length of these stages were observed, according to an extension of the vegetative period. Six months post Hg administration, in roots, stems and leaves, initial Hg proteic fractions of 200 kDa were catabolized to 66 kDa fractions according to a transition from reproductive to vegetative stages. However, 24 months after Hg supplementation, the 66 kDa Hg proteic fraction was continuously determined in a prolonged senescence. Accordingly, the identified proteins associated to Hg show catabolic functions such as endopeptidases, hydrolases, glucosidases and nucleosidases. Stress associated proteins, like peroxidase and chitinase were also found associated to Hg. During the reproductive periods of vines, Hg was associated to membrane proteins, such as ATPases and lipid transfer proteins, especially in roots where Hg is absorbed.
- Published
- 2018
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25. Long-term pubic dermatitis diagnosed as white piedra.
- Author
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Landero J
- Subjects
- Administration, Topical, Antifungal Agents administration & dosage, Dermoscopy methods, Groin, Hair, Humans, Ketoconazole administration & dosage, Male, Middle Aged, Piedra drug therapy, Antifungal Agents therapeutic use, Dermatitis diagnosis, Ketoconazole therapeutic use, Piedra diagnosis
- Abstract
The case of a 58-year-old man with a pruritic rash involving the pubic area that had been undiagnosed for 30 years is presented. At least 15 different primary care physicians and dermatologists evaluated the patient during this time period. Multiple treatments were unsuccessful and a definitive diagnosis was not rendered. Wood lamp evaluation of the pubic area revealed hair shaft concretions that were confirmed on histologic evaluation to be white piedra (WP). The patient was successfully treated with topical ketoconazole and the eruption completely resolved. Our case raises awareness of the use of Wood lamp and dermoscopy to evaluate for parasitic infections of the pubic hair shafts when nonspecific dermatitis presents in this area.
- Published
- 2017
26. Evaluation of selenium in dietary supplements using elemental speciation.
- Author
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Kubachka KM, Hanley T, Mantha M, Wilson RA, Falconer TM, Kassa Z, Oliveira A, Landero J, and Caruso J
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- Dietary Supplements standards, Dose-Response Relationship, Drug, Selenic Acid analysis, Selenium Compounds analysis, Selenocysteine analogs & derivatives, Selenocysteine analysis, Selenomethionine analysis, Dietary Supplements analysis, Selenium analysis
- Abstract
Selenium-enriched dietary supplements containing various selenium compounds are readily available to consumers. To ensure proper selenium intake and consumer confidence, these dietary supplements must be safe and have accurate label claims. Varying properties among selenium species requires information beyond total selenium concentration to fully evaluate health risk/benefits A LC-ICP-MS method was developed and multiple extraction methods were implemented for targeted analysis of common "seleno-amino acids" and related oxidation products, selenate, selenite, and other species relatable to the quality and/or accuracy of the labeled selenium ingredients. Ultimately, a heated water extraction was applied to recover selenium species from non-selenized yeast supplements in capsule, tablet, and liquid forms. For selenized yeast supplements, inorganic selenium was monitored as a means of assessing selenium yeast quality. A variety of commercially available selenium supplements were evaluated and discrepancies between labeled ingredients and detected species were noted., (Published by Elsevier Ltd.)
- Published
- 2017
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27. Postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome: a dermatologic perspective and successful treatment with losartan.
- Author
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Landero J
- Abstract
The postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome is a disease characterized by excessively increased heart rate during orthostatic challenge associated with symptoms of orthostatic intolerance including dizziness, exercise intolerance, headache, fatigue, memory problems, nausea, blurred vision, pallor, and sweating, which improve with recumbence. Postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome patients may present with a multitude of additional symptoms that are attributable to vascular vasoconstriction. Observed signs and symptoms in a patient with postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome include tachycardia at rest, exaggerated heart rate increase with upright position and exercise, crushing chest pain, tremor, syncope, loss of vision, confusion, migraines, fatigue, heat intolerance, parasthesia, dysesthesia, allodynia, altered traditional senses, and thermoregulatory abnormalities. There are a number of possible dermatological manifestations of postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome easily explained by its recently discovered pathophysiology. The author reports the case of a 22-year-old woman with moderate-to-severe postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome with numerous dermatological manifestations attributable to the disease process. The cutaneous manifestations observed in this patient are diverse and most noticeable during postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome flares. The most distinct are evanescent, hyperemic, sharply demarcated, irregular patches on the chest and neck area that resolve upon diascopy. This distinct "evanescent hyperemia" disappears spontaneously after seconds to minutes and reappears unexpectedly. Other observed dermatological manifestations of this systemic disease include Raynaud's phenomenon, koilonychia, onychodystrophy, madarosis, dysesthesia, allodynia, telogen effluvium, increased capillary refill time, and livedo reticularis. The treatment of this disease poses a great challenge. The author reports the unprecedented use of an oral angiotensin II type 1 receptor antagonist resulting in remarkable improvement.
- Published
- 2014
28. Lead, mercury, and cadmium exposure and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder in children.
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Kim S, Arora M, Fernandez C, Landero J, Caruso J, and Chen A
- Subjects
- Case-Control Studies, Child, Child, Preschool, Female, Humans, Logistic Models, Male, Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity chemically induced, Heavy Metal Poisoning, Metals, Heavy adverse effects, Poisoning complications
- Abstract
Background: There is limited research examining the relationship between lead (Pb) exposure and medically diagnosed attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) in children. The role of mercury (Hg) and cadmium (Cd) exposures in ADHD development is even less clear., Objectives: To examine the relationship between Pb, Hg, and Cd and ADHD in children living inside and outside a Lead Investigation Area (LIA) of a former lead refinery in Omaha, NE., Methods: We carried out a case-control study with 71 currently medically diagnosed ADHD cases and 58 controls from a psychiatric clinic and a pediatric clinic inside and outside of the LIA. The participants were matched on age group (5-8, 9-12 years), sex, race (African American or Caucasians and others), and location (inside or outside LIA). We measured whole blood Pb, total Hg, and Cd using inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry., Results: Inside the LIA, the 27 cases had blood Pb geometric mean (GM) 1.89 µg/dL and the 41 controls had 1.51 µg/dL. Outside the LIA, the 44 cases had blood Pb GM 1.02 µg/dL while the 17 controls had 0.97 µg/dL. After adjustment for matching variables and maternal smoking, socioeconomic status, and environmental tobacco exposure, each natural log unit blood Pb had an odds ratio of 2.52 with 95% confidence interval of 1.07-5.92. Stratification by the LIA indicated similar point estimate but wider CIs. No associations were observed for Hg or Cd., Conclusions: Postnatal Pb exposure may be associated with higher risk of clinical ADHD, but not the postnatal exposure to Hg or Cd., (© 2013 Published by Elsevier Inc.)
- Published
- 2013
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29. Coupling transmission electron microscopy with synchrotron radiation X-ray fluorescence microscopy to image vascular copper.
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Qin Z, Lai B, Landero J, and Caruso JA
- Subjects
- Animals, Aorta chemistry, Cell Line, Humans, Mass Spectrometry, Mice, Copper analysis, Microscopy, Electron, Transmission methods, Microscopy, Fluorescence methods, Synchrotrons
- Abstract
Recently, using synchrotron radiation X-ray fluorescence microscopy (SRXRF), the copper accumulation in rat aortic elastin and copper topography in human THP-1 cell monolayer have been described. However, it is necessary to locate more accurately cellular copper in the vascular cells and tissues. In the current study, SRXRF coupling with transmission electron microscopy (TEM) was used to image copper in sections of human THP-1 cells and mouse aorta. The results showed that sections of 1 µm thickness are required for SRXRF producing a correlative image with TEM between copper topography and cellular ultrastructure. As compared with SRXRF alone, coupling TEM with SRXRF can clearly identify the location of copper in the nucleus and nucleolus in non-dividing THP-1 cell sections, and can differentiate the copper location at elastic laminae from collagen in mouse aortic sections. Thus, these results revealed new information about the copper topography in vascular cells and tissues and highlighted the potential of TEM-SRXRF to investigate the role of copper in macrophage and aortic homeostasis.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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30. Invasive ductal breast carcinoma underneath a lipoma in a male patient.
- Author
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Landero J, Touloei K, and Glick BP
- Abstract
Male breast cancer is a rare malignancy and accounts for less than one percent of all cancers in men. The authors describe the case of a 76-year-old Caucasian man with invasive ductal breast carcinoma who presented with a common lipoma. This paper reviews the current literature on epidemiology, risk factors, etiology, different types of breast cancer, clinical presentation, imaging, diagnostic workup, and treatment.
- Published
- 2012
31. Multiple liquid chromatography separations and nanoESI-ion trap detection of plasma proteins in search of stroke biomarkers: A pilot study.
- Author
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Kodali P, Jurkevica A, Landero J, Kuhlmann C, Caruso J, and Adeoye O
- Subjects
- Biomarkers analysis, Blood Proteins isolation & purification, Female, Humans, Male, Pilot Projects, Stroke diagnosis, Biomarkers blood, Blood Proteins analysis, Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid methods, Spectrometry, Mass, Electrospray Ionization methods, Stroke blood
- Abstract
Stroke is the most common cause of morbidity and death in the Western world, following ischemic heart disease and cancer. Stroke can be of two types, ischemic or hemorrhagic, with ischemic stroke accounting for approximately 85% of the total number of strokes. Well-recognized environmental risk factors for stroke include hypertension, smoking, diabetes mellitus, atrial fibrillation, and atherosclerosis. Computed tomography (CT) scanning is used to diagnose hemorrhagic stroke but is relatively ineffective and may remain normal in patients with mild ischemic strokes. Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) is more sensitive in detecting ischemia than CT, especially in the diagnosis of mild stroke but it is still not 100% sensitive or precise. A simple and low-cost, rapid blood test to confirm a clinical and imaging diagnosis of ischemic stroke would be extremely useful. Based on this, the central idea of this paper is to develop a method that would be applicable to a statistically viable sample set to provide candidate biomarkers for distinguishing stroke types. In search of these candidate biomarkers, different analytical separation techniques have been used to screen for major differences in the proteomes of patients plasma samples with proteomics for identification., (© 2012 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim.)
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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32. A transgenic Drosophila model for arsenic methylation suggests a metabolic rationale for differential dose-dependent toxicity endpoints.
- Author
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Muñiz Ortiz JG, Shang J, Catron B, Landero J, Caruso JA, and Cartwright IL
- Subjects
- Animals, Animals, Genetically Modified genetics, Animals, Genetically Modified metabolism, Body Burden, Chromosomes genetics, DNA Damage, Dose-Response Relationship, Drug, Endpoint Determination, Female, Humans, Male, Methyltransferases metabolism, Models, Animal, Arsenic toxicity, Arsenites metabolism, Drosophila genetics, Methylation, Methyltransferases genetics
- Abstract
The mechanisms by which exposure to arsenic induces its myriad pathological effects are undoubtedly complex, while individual susceptibility to their type and severity is likely to be strongly influenced by genetic factors. Human metabolism of arsenic into methylated derivatives, once presumed to result in detoxification, may actually produce species with significantly greater pathological potential. We introduce a transgenic Drosophila model of arsenic methylation, allowing its consequences to be studied in a higher eukaryote exhibiting conservation of many genes and pathways with those of human cells while providing an important opportunity to uncover mechanistic details via the sophisticated genetic analysis for which the system is particularly well suited. The gene for the human enzyme, arsenic (+3 oxidation state) methyltransferase, was introduced into nonmethylating Drosophila under inducible control. Transgenic flies were characterized for enzyme inducibility, production of methylated arsenic species, and the dose-dependent consequences for chromosomal integrity and organismal longevity. Upon enzyme induction, transgenic flies processed arsenite into mono and dimethylated derivatives identical to those found in human urine. When induced flies were exposed to 9 ppm arsenite, chromosomal stability was clearly reduced, whereas at much higher doses, adult life span was significantly increased, a seemingly paradoxical pair of outcomes. Measurement of arsenic body burden in the presence or absence of methylation suggested that enhanced clearance of methylated species might explain this greater longevity under acutely toxic conditions. Our study clearly demonstrates both the hazards and the benefits of arsenic methylation in vivo and suggests a resolution based on evolutionary grounds.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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