144 results on '"Ortiz RM"'
Search Results
2. Evolocumab and clinical outcomes in patients with cardiovascular disease
- Author
-
Sabatine, Marc S., Giugliano, Robert P., Keech, Anthony C., Honarpour, Narimon, Wiviott, Stephen D., Murphy, Sabina A., Kuder, Julia F., Wang, Huei, Liu, Thomas, Wasserman, Scott M., Sever, Peter S., Pedersen, Fish MP, Terje R., Abrahamsen, Te, Im, K, Kanevsky, E, Bonaca, Mp, Lira Pineda, A, Hanlon, K, Knusel, B, Somaratne, R, Kurtz, C, Scott, R, Accini Mendoza JL, Amerena, J, Badariene, J, Burgess, L, Ceska, R, Charng, Mj, Choi, D, Cobos, Jl, Dan, Ga, De Ferrari GM, Deedwania, Pc, Chopra, Vk, Erglis, A, Ezhov, Mv, Ferreira, J, Filipová, S, Gaciong, Za, Pasierski, T, Georgiev, Bg, Gonzalez-Galvez, G, Gouni-Berthold, I, Schäufele, T, Hirayama, A, Huber, K, Rammer, M, Kjaerulf Jensen, H, Wermuth, S, Jiang, L, Jukema, Jw, Kraydashenko, O, Leiter, La, Lewis, Bs, López-Miranda, J, Lorenzatti, Aj, Mach, F, Mcadam, B, Nilsson, L, Olsson, Å, Rallidis, L, Rogelio, Gg, Kerr Saraiva JF, Scheen, A, Schiele, F, Scott, Rs, Connolly, D, Siu, Cw, Tay, L, Thorgeirsson, G, Tikkanen, Mj, Tokgozoglu, Sl, Toth, K, Viigimaa, M, Wan Ahmad WA, Hennekens, Ch, Andreotti, F, Baigent, C, Brown, Wv, Davis, Br, Newcomer, Jw, Wood, Sk, Larosa, J, Ansell, B, Olsson, A, Lowe, C, Zahn, L, Awtry, E, Berger, C, Croce, K, Desai, A, Gelfand, E, Ho, C, Leeman, D, Link, M, Norden, A, Pande, A, Rost, N, Ruberg, F, Silverman, S, Singhal, A, Vita, J, Mackinnon, I, Vogel, Dr, Leon de la Fuente, R, Perna, E, Amuchastegui, M, Pacora, F, Hershson, A, Blumberg, E, Glenny, Ja, Colombo, H, Cuadrado, Ja, Nicolosi, L, Rojas, Cg, Ulla, Mr, Hasbani, Eg, Cuneo, C, Lopez Santi RG, Sanabria, Hd, Hrabar, A, Lozada, A, Begg, A, Lehman, S, Wittert, G, Juergens, C, Kostner, K, Beltrame, J, Simpson, R, Sinhal, A, Adams, M, Kritharides, L, Roberts Thomson, P, Cross, D, Thompson, P, Van Gaal, W, Cox, N, Farshid, A, Hammett, C, Garrahy, P, Prasan, A, Horrigan, M, Ebenbichler, C, Hanusch, U, Prager, R, Schernthaner, G, Luger, A, Siostrzonek, P, Toplak, H, Bergler-Klein, J, Paulweber, B, Sinzinger, H, Buysschaert, I, Thoeng, J, Vandekerckhove, H, Catez, E, Verheye, S, Descamps, O, Hoffer, E, Wollaert, B, Chenu, P, van de Borne, P, De Meulemeester, M, Friart, A, Charlier, F, De Raedt, H, Rietzschel, E, Roelandt, R, Lalmand, J, Tavares Russo LA, Reis, G, Duarte Barbosa EC, Vidotti, Mh, Fernandes Manenti ER, Dutra, O, Leaes, Pe, Rech, Rl, Bertolim Precoma, D, Nicolau, Jc, Amoedo, R, Eliaschewitz, Fg, Pereira, A, Kurtz Lisboa HR, Soares Piegas, L, Cunha Borges JL, Ferreira Rossi PR, Pimentel Filho, P, Bodanese, Lc, de Sa Cunha, R, Moura Jorge JC, Ardito, Wr, Barroso de Souza WK, Hissa, M, Izar, Mc, Manolova, A, Kitova, L, Kinova, E, Tzekova, M, Velchev, V, Tarnovska-Kadreva, R, Gotchev, D, Petrov, I, Raev, D, Trendafilova-Lazarova, D, Yotov, Y, Lazov, P, Rahimi, S, St Amour, E, Constance, C, Pesant, Y, Hess, A, Anderson, T, Sussex, B, Henein, S, Tsoukas, G, Pandey, As, Bergeron, J, Hart, R, Gosselin, G, Chehayeb, R, Hamet, P, Hartleib, M, Mukherjee, A, Halperin, F, Petrella, R, Bhargava, R, Lonn, E, Sabbah, E, Bata, I, Cha, J, Gaudet, D, Chapman, K, Murthy, D, Nigro, F, Rupka, D, Gossard, D, Gupta, M, Dowell, A, Mansour, S, Baass, A, Geadah, C, Huynh, T, Peterson, S, Poirier, P, Sabe-Affaki, G, Vertes, G, Crowley, D, Duchesne, L, Pincetti Jofre CP, Potthoff Cardenas, S, Conejeros Kindel, C, Saavedra Gajardo VA, Lanas Zanetti, F, Sepulveda Varela PA, Stockins Fernandez BA, Li, W, Li, D, Zhao, S, Li, Z, Wang, J, Yang, Y, Zhang, L, Yang, P, Zhang, X, Huang, H, Xue, L, Zheng, Z, Huang, W, Dai, H, Su, H, Zeng, X, Zheng, Y, Tang, Y, Yao, Z, Sun, Y, Du, Y, Ge, Z, Yan, J, Chen, X, Liu, F, Pei, H, Yang, X, Cui, H, Gu, Y, Yang, Z, Li, J, Lian, Y, Cui, Y, Wang, D, Jiang, J, Li, X, Chen, J, Mo, Z, Xu, P, He, Y, Zhou, C, Qu, P, Zhu, Y, Liu, Y, Shen, X, Gao, X, Terront Lozano MA, Moncada Corredor MA, Hernandez Triana, E, Botero Lopez, R, Coronel Arroyo JA, Quintero Baiz AE, Sanchez Vallejo, G, Arana Londoño, C, Molina de Salazar DI, Castellanos Bueno, R, Manzur Jattin, F, Cure Cure CA, Sotomayor Herazo, A, Spinar, J, Hala, T, Machkova, M, Klimsa, Z, Polasek, R, Jerabek, O, Kazdera, P, Pozdisek, Z, Vaclavik, J, Frana, P, Elbl, L, Kucera, D, Kryza, R, Malecha, J, Reichert, P, Sochor, K, Ludka, O, Kellnerova, I, Peterka, K, Zidkova, E, Cech, V, Brabec, T, Fiserova, N, Kvasnicka, J, Rosolova, H, Nemecek, E, Adamkova, V, Dunaj, M, Pojsl, S, Cepelak, M, Podpera, I, Kuchar, L, Rysava, D, Burianova, H, Spinarova, L, Skrobakova, J, Charvat, J, Homza, M, Zemanek, J, Koleckar, P, Karen, I, Krupicka, J, Blaha, V, Matuska, J, Brotanek, J, Cifkova, R, Kuchar, R, Vomacka, Z, Kosek, Z, Hulinsky, V, Krejcova, H, Kuchar, J, Jelinek, Z, Jelinek, P, Markdanner Lindgren, L, Saetre Lihn, A, Korsgaard Thomsen, K, Bronnum-Schou, J, Nielsen, H, Nielsen, T, Egstrup, K, Klausen, Ic, Mickley, H, Hove, J, Jeppesen, J, Melchior, T, Schmidt, Eb, Valter, I, Rosenthal, A, Kaik, J, Kork, A, Alt, I, Strand, J, Nieminen, S, Kahri, J, Suomi, J, Nyman, K, Strandberg, Te, Piippo, T, Savolainen, M, Vikman, S, Pucheu, Y, Cariou, B, Henry, P, Ferrari, E, Montalescot, G, Ferrieres, J, Roubille, F, Bonnet, B, Angoulvant, D, Range, G, Bammert, A, Delarche, N, Mariat, C, Cayla, G, Durlach, V, Coisne, D, Paillard, F, Rouzier, R, Goralski, M, Khanoyan, P, Cottin, Y, Ziegler, O, Khalife, K, Le Corvoisier, P, Motreff, P, Spaulding, C, Vanbelle, E, Bourhaial, H, Opitz, C, Kahrmann, G, Contzen, C, Appel, K, Schenkenberger, I, Rinke, A, Trenk, D, Maus, O, Karakas, M, Hanefeld, M, Darius, H, Hetzel, G, Münzel, T, Wöhrle, J, Stawowy, P, Marten, I, Isermann, B, Kast, P, Vorpahl, M, Bosiljanoff, P, Hengstenberg, C, Kassner, U, Salbach, P, Fischer, M, Steiner, S, Wagner, S, Kraatz, U, von Hodenberg, E, Weyland, K, Mantas, I, Tziakas, D, Bousboulas, S, Patsilinakos, S, Mertzanos, G, Panagoulis, C, Bilianou, H, Skoumas, I, Elisaf, M, Manolis, A, Moschos, N, Kochiadakis, G, Ntaios, G, Richter, D, Athyros, V, Kolovou, G, Danias, P, Melidonis, A, Fan, Kyy, Siu, Sc, Hornyik, A, Lakatos, F, Zilahi, Z, Nagy, K, Laszlo, Z, Peterfai, E, Lupkovics, G, Andreka, P, Merkely, B, Herczeg, B, Piros, Ga, Salamon, C, Mark, L, Papp, A, Szakal, I, Edes, I, Mohacsi, A, Tomcsanyi, J, Hajko, E, Nagy, A, Papp, E, Kiss, R, Karadi, I, Sigurdsson, A, Jain, A, Pai, R, Kothiwale, V, Kulkarni, G, Mahajan, A, Aggarwal, S, Mehta, V, Rajadhyaksha, G, Joshi, A, Khandait, V, Parmar, M, Tyagi, S, Airody Govinda, R, Dwivedi, Sk, Parikh, K, Pothineni, Rb, Solanki, B, O’Donnell, M, Crean, P, Barton, J, Shechter, M, Shotan, A, Klutstein, M, Chorin, E, Gavish, D, Kracoff, O, Atar, S, Rigler, S, Hasin, Y, Schiff, E, Merlini, P, Rapezzi, C, Pirro, M, Gonnelli, S, Floresta, Am, Mennuni, M, Ardissino, D, Senni, M, Marenzi, G, Marcucci, R, Sampietro, T, Cosmi, F, Perrone Filardi, P, De Caterina, R, Fedele, Francesco, Moretti, L, Biasucci, Lm, Ferri, C, Go, Y, Kiyosue, A, Higashi, Y, Tokunaga, T, Kawasaki, T, Sakagami, S, Namba, S, Saku, K, Oku, K, Arakawa, T, Iida, H, Nakamura, Y, Yamamoto, K, Hata, Y, Katsuda, Y, Koga, Y, Shimizu, M, Uehara, H, Kajiyama, S, Okamoto, H, Shinozaki, T, Fujino, Y, Funazaki, T, Higa, N, Kaigawa, K, Koike, A, Nakane, H, Sato, K, Satoh, Y, Shirasawa, K, Sugino, H, Tanabe, J, Uemura, O, Yoshimichi, G, Akai, A, Himeno, H, Inage, T, Inoko, M, Kadokami, T, Noguchi, Y, Yamashita, K, Yasumura, Y, Yuge, M, Hosokawa, S, Kawamitsu, K, Kozuma, K, Matsuo, H, Nakashima, E, Okada, M, Wada, A, Yokoya, K, Iwade, K, Kawabata, K, Tanno, H, Ako, J, Fujita, H, Izumiya, Y, Kanno, M, Nunohiro, T, Ohmura, H, Ueno, T, Kakurina, N, Jasinkevica, I, Stukena, I, Veze, I, Eglite, R, Teterovska, D, Sime, I, Strazdiene, V, Venceviciene, L, Gustiene, O, Radzeviciene-Jurgute, R, Kucinskiene, A, Maskon, O, Lee, Cy, Erng, T, Gan, Hw, Mohamed Yusof AK, Ramanathan, Gl, Liew, H, Lopez Alvarado, A, Nevarez Ruiz LA, De los Rios Ibarra MO, Bazzoni Ruiz AE, Ramos Lopez GA, Llamas Esperon GA, De la Peña Topete GDJ, Violante Ortiz RM, Illescas Diaz JJ, Leon Gonzalez, S, Sanchez Diaz CJ, Mendez Machado GF, Venegas Carrillo LA, Aldrete Velasco JA, Cardona Muñoz EG, Leiva Pons JL, Perez Alva JC, van der Zwaan, C, Oomen, A, van de Wal, R, Magro, M, Boswijk, D, Janus, C, Groutars, R, Tonino, W, Cornel, Jh, Oude Ophuis, A, Troquay, R, Liem, A, Westendorp, I, Van Hessen, M, Lok, D, De Nooijer, C, Den Hartog, F, Van Beek, E, Bendermacher, P, Jansen, R, Römer, T, Rensing, B, Hersbach, F, Herrman, J, Ladyjanskaia, G, Karalis, I, Linssen, G, Bokern, M, Visman, A, Kooij, A, Monajemi, H, Lieverse, A, Baker, J, Tie, S, Risberg, K, Hysing, J, Pedersen, T, Hoivik, Ho, Norheim, P, Solnor, L, Hovland, A, Kjaernli, T, Jocson, G, Coching, Rm, Batalla, E, Go, A, Habaluyas, R, Barcinas, R, Sy, Ra, Estepar, Ra, Germar, A, Trebacz, J, Szymkowiak, K, Wnetrzak-Michalska, R, Kopaczewski, J, Przekwas-Jaruchowska, M, Kania, G, Zabowka, M, Mirek-Bryniarska, E, Dabrowska, M, Napora, P, Konieczny, M, Spyra, J, Lysek, R, Pijanowski, Z, Grzegorzewski, B, Bednarkiewicz, Z, Kinasz, L, Antkowiak-Piatyszek, K, Stania, K, Szpajer, M, Staneta, P, Skonieczny, G, Ksiezycka-Majczynska, E, Blicharski, T, Piepiorka, M, Wozakowska-Kaplon, B, Zechowicz, T, Ilkowski, J, Lubiszewska, B, Hiczkiewicz, J, Wierzbicka, K, Kosior, D, Garbocz, P, Kubica, J, Raczak, G, Wozniak, I, Cygler, J, Kramarczuk, E, Bystryk, L, Pentela-Nowicka, J, Dabrowski, M, Podolec, P, Zieba, B, Mosiewicz, J, Dubaniewicz, W, Banach, M, Tyszecka, G, Lepich, T, Rychlewska-Hanczewska, A, Guzik, T, Monteiro, P, Pereira, H, Oliveira, L, Matos, P, Soares Goncalves, S, Leitao, A, Vasco Salgado, A, Timoteo, At, Pintilei, E, Badila, E, Militaru, C, Tudoran, M, Arsenescu-Georgescu, C, Mitu, F, Zdrenghea, D, Lighezan, D, Teodorescu, I, Popescu, Mi, Coman, I, Vintila, Mm, Vishnevsky, A, Lukyanov, Y, Blokhin, A, Kostenko, V, Shvarts, Y, Markov, V, Motylev, I, Dronov, D, Sherenkov, A, Barbarash, O, Shutemova, E, Bolshakova, O, Kobalava, Z, Voevoda, M, Treshkur, T, Zrazhevskiy, K, Pimenov, L, Solovev, O, Tarasov, N, Arkhipov, M, Freidlin, M, Shalaev, S, Yakhontova, P, Shustov, S, Goloshchekin, B, Panov, A, Bart, B, Bubnova, M, Gordeev, I, Osipova, I, Tereshenko, S, Solovieva, E, Meshkov, A, Zateyshchikov, D, Tan, Jl, Subramaniam, T, Pella, D, Fulop, P, Antalik, L, Dzupina, A, Banikova, A, Sosovec, D, Urgeova, L, Mazur, J, Hranai, M, Banik, M, Vinanska, D, Lennerova, J, Kovar, F, Pastrnakova, E, Uhliar, R, Blasko, P, Gonsorcik, J, Lukacova, J, Oriesek, R, Hatalova, K, du Toit, M, Ebrahim, I, Vawda, G, Lipschitz, S, Blignaut, S, Engelbrecht, J, Coetzer, Tf, Pretorius, M, Urbach, D, Badat, A, Pillay, S, Van Zyl, L, Abelson, M, van der Walt, E, Moodley, R, Jacovides, A, Oosthuysen, Wm, Klug, E, Lottering, H, Kok, J, Saaiman, J, Dawood, S, De Jong DM, Kapp, C, Makotoko, E, Bayat, J, Sarvan, M, Vally, T, Stapelberg, A, Kim, M, Bae, J, Cho, Y, Kim, S, Han, Kh, Her, S, Kim, B, Lee, S, Hong, B, Kim, W, Rha, S, Jeong, M, Shin, Gj, Vida Gutierrez, M, Valdes Chavarri, M, Pinto Sala, X, Gonzalez Juanatey JR, Civeira Murillo, F, Zamorano Gomez JL, Lekuona Goya, I, Iñiguez Romo, A, Cordero Fort, A, Ascaso Gimilio JF, Millan Nuñez-Cortes, J, Lindholm, C, Söderberg, S, Suutari, A, Berglund, S, Mooe, T, Kusiak, D, Bandh, S, Dahlén, G, Olsson, S, Witt, N, Tydén, P, Johansson, P, Cizinsky, S, Falck, G, Pettersson, Si, Rasmanis, G, Östergren, J, Moccetti, T, Beer, Hj, Eberli, F, Krähenbühl, S, Linka, A, Ackermann, D, Michel, P, Yeh, H, Tsai, Cf, Wu, C, Hsia, C, Juang, J, Hsieh, I, Lai, W, Huang, C, Hsieh, Y, Sahin, T, Duzenli, M, Yigit, Z, Demir, M, Yilmaz, Mb, Muderrisoglu, Ih, Kirma, C, Ercan, E, Kayikcioglu, L, Balbay, Y, Lymar, I, Kulynych, O, Prokhorov, O, Karpenko, O, Kraіz, I, Vakaliuk, I, Stanislavchuk, M, Korzh, O, Rudyk, I, Zhurba, S, Svishchenko, Y, Tseluyko, V, Gyrina, O, Reshotko, D, Kopytsya, M, Volkov, V, Myshanych, G, Rebrov, B, Rishko, M, Rudenko, L, Shatylo, V, Parkhomenko, O, Yena, L, Golovchenko, O, Sorokina, I, Malynovsky, Y, Ivan, P, Blagden, M, Dear, H, Mathew, A, Lagocki, S, Kondagunta, V, Ahsan, A, Mckinnon, C, Douglas, F, Thom, S, Fiore, G, Caulfield, M, Lynch, M, Thomas, H, Bain, S, Hall, A, Mcnally, D, Fisher, M, Keeling, P, Al-Bahrani, A, Lip, G, Ellery, A, Purohit, J, Travill, C, Cappuccio, F, Davis, G, Gaunt, R, Adlam, D, Asamoah, N, Jaafar, F, Mccormack, T, Jupp, B, Pye, M, Ainsworth, P, Chauhan, A, Paul, N, Fairlie, H, Fox, C, Muzulu, S, Trevelyan, J, Aggarwal, R, Issa, B, Saravanan, P, Cruickshank, K, Gorog, D, Heller, S, Newby, D, Nicolson, A, Hare, Po, Donnelly, P, Rutherfurd, S, de Belder, M, Finlayson, J, Harvey, J, Hoye, A, Kingston, D, Sarkar, D, Negahban, A, Webster, J, Wyatt, N, Muir, S, Cummings, M, Mackenzie, I, Senior, R, Capps, N, Fotherby, K, Mcintyre, H, Aldegather, J, Dixon, L, Saksena, R, Butler, R, Ramstad, D, Pierpont, B, Levinson, D, Mohammed, A, Haddad, T, Goel, A, Dave, K, Haught, Wh, Desire, A, Hershon, K, Napoli, M, Tami, L, Rothschild, R, Khurana, S, Gupta, D, Cheung, D, Hearne, S, Grubb, S, Miller, A, Baird, I, Marcus, A, Srivastava, S, Forgosh, L, Fritz, R, Mays, M, Bertolet, B, Reddy, J, Khan, M, Nakhle, S, Dill, S, Fishbein, G, Khan, B, Marais, H, Reschak, M, Malone, M, Nadar, V, Whitney, R, Reichman, A, Reyes, H, El Shahawy, M, Rabinowitz, A, Weinstein, D, Farhat, N, Onyema, D, Potu, R, Runquist, L, Barnum, O, Crater, T, Fialkow, J, Shah, A, Thompson, C, Wiseman, A, Doyle, T, Henderson, D, Herzog, W, Schnitzler, R, Carr, K, Davis, M, Nagajothi, N, Olsen, S, Rogers, W, Rubino, J, Singh, I, Tarleton, G, Bhagwat, R, Clardy, D, Jardula, M, Robinson, J, Torres, M, Vijay, N, Farris, N, Lillo, J, Moriarty, P, Recknor, C, Berlacher, P, Christensen, T, Gabra, N, Issa, M, Janik, M, Lawless, A, Molter, D, Stout, E, Brezina, B, Claxton, E, Linsky, R, Poock, J, Remler, R, Roseman, H, Schramm, E, Al-Joundi, T, Amin, J, Hitchcock, J, Isserman, S, Kirstein, J, Rider, J, Shalek, M, Sherman, H, Bernstein, M, Chandra, L, Hatharasinghe, R, Ibrahim, H, Iteld, B, Linzmeyer, K, Seaton, B, Zeig, S, Christofides, E, Dunbar, R, Griffin, S, Kohli, N, Koren, M, Pharr, W, Purdy, D, Spencer, R, Yeoman, G, Banerjee, S, Cheek, Hb, Engel, E, Hamroff, G, Huling, R, Kozlowski, L, Levin, P, Makam, S, Meengs, M, Bhushan, R, Erickson, B, Herman, L, Lo, E, Mcdowell, E, Mcgrew, F, Miller, M, Ord, J, Webel, R, Wilhoit, G, Wise, J, Yang, E, Budoff, M, Collins, J, Dauber, I, Dobkin, L, Focil, A, Gandy, W, Pasquini, J, Ramos, M, Rodriguez, D, Rosenson, R, Sanford, K, Schlau, A, Snyder, B, Stonesifer, L, Tang, A, De Souza, J, Elam, M III, French, J, Guyton, J, Hage Korban, E, Kereiakes, D, King, M, Loh, I, Navarro, J, Simons, R, Tobin, T, Younis, L, Aboufakher, R, Baldari, D, Ballantyne, C, Broughton, R, Eaton, C, Johnston, J, Simon, W, Thomson, S, Vora, K, Youngman, D, Alzohaili, O, Auerbach, E, Brown, C, Burrough, B, Chen, Y, Gilpatrick, M, Landzberg, J, Mitchell, C, Rice, L, Rubenfire, M, Sofley, Cw, Strobl, D, Atassi, K, Davila, W, Diogo, J, Fagan, T, Joffe, I, Krishna, J, Osea, E, Penny, W, Rowe, W, Shapiro, M, Welker, J, Benton, R, Dobratz, D, Fortuin, F, Graham, J, Henry, B, Kusnick, B, Lutskiy, M, Mcrae, A, Saway, W, Scott, J, Shah, M, Weinberg, B, Zarich, S, Acheatel, R, Case, C, Earl, J, Fernandez, S, Giugliano, G, Handelsman, Y, Hermany, P, Holder, S, Kashyap, M, Khan, A, Lader, E, Peniston, J, Raoof, T, Sacco, J, Shore, K, Spriggs, D, Stringam, S, Tahirkheli, N, Delgado, E, Derian, W, Greenwald, J, Harris, M, Jackson, R, Marhefka, G, Mcelveen, W, Mooss, A, Morris, P, Murray, J, Pearlstein, P, Raisinghani, A, Rezkalla, S, Sakhrani, L, Schreibman, D, Shaoulian, E, Steinsapir, J, Yataco, A, De La Cruz, A, Fredrick, M, Goldenberg, E, Lee, D, Mccullum, K, Mclellan, B, Stephens, L, Wilson, S, Alfieri, A, Mandviwala, M, Orourke, D, Samal, A, Schmedtje, J, Waxman, F, Carhart, R, Clements, B, Dyke, C, Ghali, J, Gruberg, L, Hack, T, Jehle, A, Pogue, B, Schooley, C, Shifrin, G., National Institute for Health Research, Amgen Inc, University of Zurich, Sabatine, Marc S, Sabatine, M, Giugliano, R, Keech, A, Honarpour, N, Wiviott, S, Murphy, S, Kuder, J, Wang, H, Liu, T, Wasserman, S, Sever, P, Pedersen, T, Fish, M, Abrahamsen, T, Im, K, Kanevsky, E, Bonaca, M, Lira Pineda, A, Hanlon, K, Knusel, B, Somaratne, R, Kurtz, C, Scott, R, Accini Mendoza, J, Amerena, J, Badariene, J, Burgess, L, Ceska, R, Charng, M, Choi, D, Cobos, J, Dan, G, De Ferrari, G, Deedwania, P, Chopra, V, Erglis, A, Ezhov, M, Ferreira, J, Filipova, S, Gaciong, Z, Pasierski, T, Georgiev, B, Gonzalez-Galvez, G, Gouni-Berthold, I, Schaufele, T, Hirayama, A, Huber, K, Rammer, M, Kjaerulf Jensen, H, Wermuth, S, Jiang, L, Jukema, J, Kraydashenko, O, Leiter, L, Lewis, B, Lopez-Miranda, J, Lorenzatti, A, Mach, F, Mcadam, B, Nilsson, L, Olsson, A, Rallidis, L, Rogelio, G, Kerr Saraiva, J, Scheen, A, Schiele, F, Connolly, D, Siu, C, Tay, L, Thorgeirsson, G, Tikkanen, M, Tokgozoglu, S, Toth, K, Viigimaa, M, Wan Ahmad, W, Hennekens, C, Andreotti, F, Baigent, C, Brown, W, Davis, B, Newcomer, J, Wood, S, Larosa, J, Ansell, B, Lowe, C, Zahn, L, Awtry, E, Berger, C, Croce, K, Desai, A, Gelfand, E, Ho, C, Leeman, D, Link, M, Norden, A, Pande, A, Rost, N, Ruberg, F, Silverman, S, Singhal, A, Vita, J, Mackinnon, I, Vogel, D, Leon de la Fuente, R, Perna, E, Amuchastegui, M, Pacora, F, Hershson, A, Blumberg, E, Glenny, J, Colombo, H, Cuadrado, J, Nicolosi, L, Rojas, C, Ulla, M, Hasbani, E, Cuneo, C, Lopez Santi, R, Sanabria, H, Hrabar, A, Lozada, A, Begg, A, Lehman, S, Wittert, G, Juergens, C, Kostner, K, Beltrame, J, Simpson, R, Sinhal, A, Adams, M, Kritharides, L, Roberts Thomson, P, Cross, D, Thompson, P, Van Gaal, W, Cox, N, Farshid, A, Hammett, C, Garrahy, P, Prasan, A, Horrigan, M, Ebenbichler, C, Hanusch, U, Prager, R, Schernthaner, G, Luger, A, Siostrzonek, P, Toplak, H, Bergler-Klein, J, Paulweber, B, Sinzinger, H, Buysschaert, I, Thoeng, J, Vandekerckhove, H, Catez, E, Verheye, S, Descamps, O, Hoffer, E, Wollaert, B, Chenu, P, van de Borne, P, De Meulemeester, M, Friart, A, Charlier, F, De Raedt, H, Rietzschel, E, Roelandt, R, Lalmand, J, Tavares Russo, L, Reis, G, Duarte Barbosa, E, Vidotti, M, Fernandes Manenti, E, Dutra, O, Leaes, P, Rech, R, Bertolim Precoma, D, Nicolau, J, Amoedo, R, Eliaschewitz, F, Pereira, A, Kurtz Lisboa, H, Soares Piegas, L, Cunha Borges, J, Ferreira Rossi, P, Pimentel Filho, P, Bodanese, L, de Sa Cunha, R, Moura Jorge, J, Ardito, W, Barroso de Souza, W, Hissa, M, Izar, M, Manolova, A, Kitova, L, Kinova, E, Tzekova, M, Velchev, V, Tarnovska-Kadreva, R, Gotchev, D, Petrov, I, Raev, D, Trendafilova-Lazarova, D, Yotov, Y, Lazov, P, Rahimi, S, St Amour, E, Constance, C, Pesant, Y, Hess, A, Anderson, T, Sussex, B, Henein, S, Tsoukas, G, Pandey, A, Bergeron, J, Hart, R, Gosselin, G, Chehayeb, R, Hamet, P, Hartleib, M, Mukherjee, A, Halperin, F, Petrella, R, Bhargava, R, Lonn, E, Sabbah, E, Bata, I, Cha, J, Gaudet, D, Chapman, K, Murthy, D, Nigro, F, Rupka, D, Gossard, D, Gupta, M, Dowell, A, Mansour, S, Baass, A, Geadah, C, Huynh, T, Peterson, S, Poirier, P, Sabe-Affaki, G, Vertes, G, Crowley, D, Duchesne, L, Pincetti Jofre, C, Potthoff Cardenas, S, Conejeros Kindel, C, Saavedra Gajardo, V, Lanas Zanetti, F, Sepulveda Varela, P, Stockins Fernandez, B, Li, W, Li, D, Zhao, S, Li, Z, Wang, J, Yang, Y, Zhang, L, Yang, P, Zhang, X, Huang, H, Xue, L, Zheng, Z, Huang, W, Dai, H, Su, H, Zeng, X, Zheng, Y, Tang, Y, Yao, Z, Sun, Y, Du, Y, Ge, Z, Yan, J, Chen, X, Liu, F, Pei, H, Yang, X, Cui, H, Gu, Y, Yang, Z, Li, J, Lian, Y, Cui, Y, Wang, D, Jiang, J, Li, X, Chen, J, Mo, Z, Xu, P, He, Y, Zhou, C, Qu, P, Zhu, Y, Liu, Y, Shen, X, Gao, X, Terront Lozano, M, Moncada Corredor, M, Hernandez Triana, E, Botero Lopez, R, Coronel Arroyo, J, Quintero Baiz, A, Sanchez Vallejo, G, Arana Londono, C, Molina de Salazar, D, Castellanos Bueno, R, Manzur Jattin, F, Cure Cure, C, Sotomayor Herazo, A, Spinar, J, Hala, T, Machkova, M, Klimsa, Z, Polasek, R, Jerabek, O, Kazdera, P, Pozdisek, Z, Vaclavik, J, Frana, P, Elbl, L, Kucera, D, Kryza, R, Malecha, J, Reichert, P, Sochor, K, Ludka, O, Kellnerova, I, Peterka, K, Zidkova, E, Cech, V, Brabec, T, Fiserova, N, Kvasnicka, J, Rosolova, H, Nemecek, E, Adamkova, V, Dunaj, M, Pojsl, S, Cepelak, M, Podpera, I, Kuchar, L, Rysava, D, Burianova, H, Spinarova, L, Skrobakova, J, Charvat, J, Homza, M, Zemanek, J, Koleckar, P, Karen, I, Krupicka, J, Blaha, V, Matuska, J, Brotanek, J, Cifkova, R, Kuchar, R, Vomacka, Z, Kosek, Z, Hulinsky, V, Krejcova, H, Kuchar, J, Jelinek, Z, Jelinek, P, Markdanner Lindgren, L, Saetre Lihn, A, Korsgaard Thomsen, K, Bronnum-Schou, J, Nielsen, H, Nielsen, T, Egstrup, K, Klausen, I, Mickley, H, Hove, J, Jeppesen, J, Melchior, T, Schmidt, E, Valter, I, Rosenthal, A, Kaik, J, Kork, A, Alt, I, Strand, J, Nieminen, S, Kahri, J, Suomi, J, Nyman, K, Strandberg, T, Piippo, T, Savolainen, M, Vikman, S, Pucheu, Y, Cariou, B, Henry, P, Ferrari, E, Montalescot, G, Ferrieres, J, Roubille, F, Bonnet, B, Angoulvant, D, Range, G, Bammert, A, Delarche, N, Mariat, C, Cayla, G, Durlach, V, Coisne, D, Paillard, F, Rouzier, R, Goralski, M, Khanoyan, P, Cottin, Y, Ziegler, O, Khalife, K, Le Corvoisier, P, Motreff, P, Spaulding, C, Vanbelle, E, Bourhaial, H, Opitz, C, Kahrmann, G, Contzen, C, Appel, K, Schenkenberger, I, Rinke, A, Trenk, D, Maus, O, Karakas, M, Hanefeld, M, Darius, H, Hetzel, G, Munzel, T, Wohrle, J, Stawowy, P, Marten, I, Isermann, B, Kast, P, Vorpahl, M, Bosiljanoff, P, Hengstenberg, C, Kassner, U, Salbach, P, Fischer, M, Steiner, S, Wagner, S, Kraatz, U, von Hodenberg, E, Weyland, K, Mantas, I, Tziakas, D, Bousboulas, S, Patsilinakos, S, Mertzanos, G, Panagoulis, C, Bilianou, H, Skoumas, I, Elisaf, M, Manolis, A, Moschos, N, Kochiadakis, G, Ntaios, G, Richter, D, Athyros, V, Kolovou, G, Danias, P, Melidonis, A, Fan, K, Siu, S, Hornyik, A, Lakatos, F, Zilahi, Z, Nagy, K, Laszlo, Z, Peterfai, E, Lupkovics, G, Andreka, P, Merkely, B, Herczeg, B, Piros, G, Salamon, C, Mark, L, Papp, A, Szakal, I, Edes, I, Mohacsi, A, Tomcsanyi, J, Hajko, E, Nagy, A, Papp, E, Kiss, R, Karadi, I, Sigurdsson, A, Jain, A, Pai, R, Kothiwale, V, Kulkarni, G, Mahajan, A, Aggarwal, S, Mehta, V, Rajadhyaksha, G, Joshi, A, Khandait, V, Parmar, M, Tyagi, S, Airody Govinda, R, Dwivedi, S, Parikh, K, Pothineni, R, Solanki, B, O'Donnell, M, Crean, P, Barton, J, Shechter, M, Shotan, A, Klutstein, M, Chorin, E, Gavish, D, Kracoff, O, Atar, S, Rigler, S, Hasin, Y, Schiff, E, Merlini, P, Rapezzi, C, Pirro, M, Gonnelli, S, Floresta, A, Mennuni, M, Ardissino, D, Senni, M, Marenzi, G, Marcucci, R, Sampietro, T, Cosmi, F, Perrone Filardi, P, De Caterina, R, Fedele, F, Moretti, L, Biasucci, L, Ferri, C, Go, Y, Kiyosue, A, Higashi, Y, Tokunaga, T, Kawasaki, T, Sakagami, S, Namba, S, Saku, K, Oku, K, Arakawa, T, Iida, H, Nakamura, Y, Yamamoto, K, Hata, Y, Katsuda, Y, Koga, Y, Shimizu, M, Uehara, H, Kajiyama, S, Okamoto, H, Shinozaki, T, Fujino, Y, Funazaki, T, Higa, N, Kaigawa, K, Koike, A, Nakane, H, Sato, K, Satoh, Y, Shirasawa, K, Sugino, H, Tanabe, J, Uemura, O, Yoshimichi, G, Akai, A, Himeno, H, Inage, T, Inoko, M, Kadokami, T, Noguchi, Y, Yamashita, K, Yasumura, Y, Yuge, M, Hosokawa, S, Kawamitsu, K, Kozuma, K, Matsuo, H, Nakashima, E, Okada, M, Wada, A, Yokoya, K, Iwade, K, Kawabata, K, Tanno, H, Ako, J, Fujita, H, Izumiya, Y, Kanno, M, Nunohiro, T, Ohmura, H, Ueno, T, Kakurina, N, Jasinkevica, I, Stukena, I, Veze, I, Eglite, R, Teterovska, D, Sime, I, Strazdiene, V, Venceviciene, L, Gustiene, O, Radzeviciene-Jurgute, R, Kucinskiene, A, Maskon, O, Lee, C, Erng, T, Gan, H, Mohamed Yusof, A, Ramanathan, G, Liew, H, Lopez Alvarado, A, Nevarez Ruiz, L, De los Rios Ibarra, M, Bazzoni Ruiz, A, Ramos Lopez, G, Llamas Esperon, G, De la Pena Topete, G, Violante Ortiz, R, Illescas Diaz, J, Leon Gonzalez, S, Sanchez Diaz, C, Mendez Machado, G, Venegas Carrillo, L, Aldrete Velasco, J, Cardona Munoz, E, Leiva Pons, J, Perez Alva, J, van der Zwaan, C, Oomen, A, van de Wal, R, Magro, M, Boswijk, D, Janus, C, Groutars, R, Tonino, W, Cornel, J, Oude Ophuis, A, Troquay, R, Liem, A, Westendorp, I, Van Hessen, M, Lok, D, De Nooijer, C, Den Hartog, F, Van Beek, E, Bendermacher, P, Jansen, R, Romer, T, Rensing, B, Hersbach, F, Herrman, J, Ladyjanskaia, G, Karalis, I, Linssen, G, Bokern, M, Visman, A, Kooij, A, Monajemi, H, Lieverse, A, Baker, J, Tie, S, Risberg, K, Hysing, J, Hoivik, H, Norheim, P, Solnor, L, Hovland, A, Kjaernli, T, Jocson, G, Coching, R, Batalla, E, Go, A, Habaluyas, R, Barcinas, R, Sy, R, Estepar, R, Germar, A, Trebacz, J, Szymkowiak, K, Wnetrzak-Michalska, R, Kopaczewski, J, Przekwas-Jaruchowska, M, Kania, G, Zabowka, M, Mirek-Bryniarska, E, Dabrowska, M, Napora, P, Konieczny, M, Spyra, J, Lysek, R, Pijanowski, Z, Grzegorzewski, B, Bednarkiewicz, Z, Kinasz, L, Antkowiak-Piatyszek, K, Stania, K, Szpajer, M, Staneta, P, Skonieczny, G, Ksiezycka-Majczynska, E, Blicharski, T, Piepiorka, M, Wozakowska-Kaplon, B, Zechowicz, T, Ilkowski, J, Lubiszewska, B, Hiczkiewicz, J, Wierzbicka, K, Kosior, D, Garbocz, P, Kubica, J, Raczak, G, Wozniak, I, Cygler, J, Kramarczuk, E, Bystryk, L, Pentela-Nowicka, J, Dabrowski, M, Podolec, P, Zieba, B, Mosiewicz, J, Dubaniewicz, W, Banach, M, Tyszecka, G, Lepich, T, Rychlewska-Hanczewska, A, Guzik, T, Monteiro, P, Pereira, H, Oliveira, L, Matos, P, Soares Goncalves, S, Leitao, A, Vasco Salgado, A, Timoteo, A, Pintilei, E, Badila, E, Militaru, C, Tudoran, M, Arsenescu-Georgescu, C, Mitu, F, Zdrenghea, D, Lighezan, D, Teodorescu, I, Popescu, M, Coman, I, Vintila, M, Vishnevsky, A, Lukyanov, Y, Blokhin, A, Kostenko, V, Shvarts, Y, Markov, V, Motylev, I, Dronov, D, Sherenkov, A, Barbarash, O, Shutemova, E, Bolshakova, O, Kobalava, Z, Voevoda, M, Treshkur, T, Zrazhevskiy, K, Pimenov, L, Solovev, O, Tarasov, N, Arkhipov, M, Freidlin, M, Shalaev, S, Yakhontova, P, Shustov, S, Goloshchekin, B, Panov, A, Bart, B, Bubnova, M, Gordeev, I, Osipova, I, Tereshenko, S, Solovieva, E, Meshkov, A, Zateyshchikov, D, Tan, J, Subramaniam, T, Pella, D, Fulop, P, Antalik, L, Dzupina, A, Banikova, A, Sosovec, D, Urgeova, L, Mazur, J, Hranai, M, Banik, M, Vinanska, D, Lennerova, J, Kovar, F, Pastrnakova, E, Uhliar, R, Blasko, P, Gonsorcik, J, Lukacova, J, Oriesek, R, Hatalova, K, du Toit, M, Ebrahim, I, Vawda, G, Lipschitz, S, Blignaut, S, Engelbrecht, J, Coetzer, T, Pretorius, M, Urbach, D, Badat, A, Pillay, S, Van Zyl, L, Abelson, M, van der Walt, E, Moodley, R, Jacovides, A, Oosthuysen, W, Klug, E, Lottering, H, Kok, J, Saaiman, J, Dawood, S, De Jong, D, Kapp, C, Makotoko, E, Bayat, J, Sarvan, M, Vally, T, Stapelberg, A, Kim, M, Bae, J, Cho, Y, Kim, S, Han, K, Her, S, Kim, B, Lee, S, Hong, B, Kim, W, Rha, S, Jeong, M, Shin, G, Vida Gutierrez, M, Valdes Chavarri, M, Pinto Sala, X, Gonzalez Juanatey, J, Civeira Murillo, F, Zamorano Gomez, J, Lekuona Goya, I, Iniguez Romo, A, Cordero Fort, A, Ascaso Gimilio, J, Millan Nunez-Cortes, J, Lindholm, C, Soderberg, S, Suutari, A, Berglund, S, Mooe, T, Kusiak, D, Bandh, S, Dahlen, G, Olsson, S, Witt, N, Tyden, P, Johansson, P, Cizinsky, S, Falck, G, Pettersson, S, Rasmanis, G, Ostergren, J, Moccetti, T, Beer, H, Eberli, F, Krahenbuhl, S, Linka, A, Ackermann, D, Michel, P, Yeh, H, Tsai, C, Wu, C, Hsia, C, Juang, J, Hsieh, I, Lai, W, Huang, C, Hsieh, Y, Sahin, T, Duzenli, M, Yigit, Z, Demir, M, Yilmaz, M, Muderrisoglu, I, Kirma, C, Ercan, E, Kayikcioglu, L, Balbay, Y, Lymar, I, Kulynych, O, Prokhorov, O, Karpenko, O, Kraіz, I, Vakaliuk, I, Stanislavchuk, M, Korzh, O, Rudyk, I, Zhurba, S, Svishchenko, Y, Tseluyko, V, Gyrina, O, Reshotko, D, Kopytsya, M, Volkov, V, Myshanych, G, Rebrov, B, Rishko, M, Rudenko, L, Shatylo, V, Parkhomenko, O, Yena, L, Golovchenko, O, Sorokina, I, Malynovsky, Y, Ivan, P, Blagden, M, Dear, H, Mathew, A, Lagocki, S, Kondagunta, V, Ahsan, A, Mckinnon, C, Douglas, F, Thom, S, Fiore, G, Caulfield, M, Lynch, M, Thomas, H, Bain, S, Hall, A, Mcnally, D, Fisher, M, Keeling, P, Al-Bahrani, A, Lip, G, Ellery, A, Purohit, J, Travill, C, Cappuccio, F, Davis, G, Gaunt, R, Adlam, D, Asamoah, N, Jaafar, F, Mccormack, T, Jupp, B, Pye, M, Ainsworth, P, Chauhan, A, Paul, N, Fairlie, H, Fox, C, Muzulu, S, Trevelyan, J, Aggarwal, R, Issa, B, Saravanan, P, Cruickshank, K, Gorog, D, Heller, S, Newby, D, Nicolson, A, Hare, P, Donnelly, P, Rutherfurd, S, de Belder, M, Finlayson, J, Harvey, J, Hoye, A, Kingston, D, Sarkar, D, Negahban, A, Webster, J, Wyatt, N, Muir, S, Cummings, M, Mackenzie, I, Senior, R, Capps, N, Fotherby, K, Mcintyre, H, Aldegather, J, Dixon, L, Saksena, R, Butler, R, Ramstad, D, Pierpont, B, Levinson, D, Mohammed, A, Haddad, T, Goel, A, Dave, K, Haught, W, Desire, A, Hershon, K, Napoli, M, Tami, L, Rothschild, R, Khurana, S, Gupta, D, Cheung, D, Hearne, S, Grubb, S, Miller, A, Baird, I, Marcus, A, Srivastava, S, Forgosh, L, Fritz, R, Mays, M, Bertolet, B, Reddy, J, Khan, M, Nakhle, S, Dill, S, Fishbein, G, Khan, B, Marais, H, Reschak, M, Malone, M, Nadar, V, Whitney, R, Reichman, A, Reyes, H, El Shahawy, M, Rabinowitz, A, Weinstein, D, Farhat, N, Onyema, D, Potu, R, Runquist, L, Barnum, O, Crater, T, Fialkow, J, Shah, A, Thompson, C, Wiseman, A, Doyle, T, Henderson, D, Herzog, W, Schnitzler, R, Carr, K, Davis, M, Nagajothi, N, Olsen, S, Rogers, W, Rubino, J, Singh, I, Tarleton, G, Bhagwat, R, Clardy, D, Jardula, M, Robinson, J, Torres, M, Vijay, N, Farris, N, Lillo, J, Moriarty, P, Recknor, C, Berlacher, P, Christensen, T, Gabra, N, Issa, M, Janik, M, Lawless, A, Molter, D, Stout, E, Brezina, B, Claxton, E, Linsky, R, Poock, J, Remler, R, Roseman, H, Schramm, E, Al-Joundi, T, Amin, J, Hitchcock, J, Isserman, S, Kirstein, J, Rider, J, Shalek, M, Sherman, H, Bernstein, M, Chandra, L, Hatharasinghe, R, Ibrahim, H, Iteld, B, Linzmeyer, K, Seaton, B, Zeig, S, Christofides, E, Dunbar, R, Griffin, S, Kohli, N, Koren, M, Pharr, W, Purdy, D, Spencer, R, Yeoman, G, Banerjee, S, Cheek, H, Engel, E, Hamroff, G, Huling, R, Kozlowski, L, Levin, P, Makam, S, Meengs, M, Bhushan, R, Erickson, B, Herman, L, Lo, E, Mcdowell, E, Mcgrew, F, Miller, M, Ord, J, Webel, R, Wilhoit, G, Wise, J, Yang, E, Budoff, M, Collins, J, Dauber, I, Dobkin, L, Focil, A, Gandy, W, Pasquini, J, Ramos, M, Rodriguez, D, Rosenson, R, Sanford, K, Schlau, A, Snyder, B, Stonesifer, L, Tang, A, De Souza, J, Elam, M, French, J, Guyton, J, Hage Korban, E, Kereiakes, D, King, M, Loh, I, Navarro, J, Simons, R, Tobin, T, Younis, L, Aboufakher, R, Baldari, D, Ballantyne, C, Broughton, R, Eaton, C, Johnston, J, Simon, W, Thomson, S, Vora, K, Youngman, D, Alzohaili, O, Auerbach, E, Brown, C, Burrough, B, Chen, Y, Gilpatrick, M, Landzberg, J, Mitchell, C, Rice, L, Rubenfire, M, Sofley, C, Strobl, D, Atassi, K, Davila, W, Diogo, J, Fagan, T, Joffe, I, Krishna, J, Osea, E, Penny, W, Rowe, W, Shapiro, M, Welker, J, Benton, R, Dobratz, D, Fortuin, F, Graham, J, Henry, B, Kusnick, B, Lutskiy, M, Mcrae, A, Saway, W, Scott, J, Shah, M, Weinberg, B, Zarich, S, Acheatel, R, Case, C, Earl, J, Fernandez, S, Giugliano, G, Handelsman, Y, Hermany, P, Holder, S, Kashyap, M, Khan, A, Lader, E, Peniston, J, Raoof, T, Sacco, J, Shore, K, Spriggs, D, Stringam, S, Tahirkheli, N, Delgado, E, Derian, W, Greenwald, J, Harris, M, Jackson, R, Marhefka, G, Mcelveen, W, Mooss, A, Morris, P, Murray, J, Pearlstein, P, Raisinghani, A, Rezkalla, S, Sakhrani, L, Schreibman, D, Shaoulian, E, Steinsapir, J, Yataco, A, De La Cruz, A, Fredrick, M, Goldenberg, E, Lee, D, Mccullum, K, Mclellan, B, Stephens, L, Wilson, S, Alfieri, A, Mandviwala, M, Orourke, D, Samal, A, Schmedtje, J, Waxman, F, Carhart, R, Clements, B, Dyke, C, Ghali, J, Gruberg, L, Hack, T, Jehle, A, Pogue, B, Schooley, C, and Shifrin, G
- Subjects
Male ,STATIN THERAPY ,2700 General Medicine ,Disease ,Cardiovascular ,PLACEBO-CONTROLLED TRIAL ,Gastroenterology ,0302 clinical medicine ,Anticholesteremic Agent ,Medicine ,Myocardial infarction ,11 Medical and Health Sciences ,ddc:616 ,Incidence ,Antibodies, Monoclonal ,General Medicine ,Cholesterol ,Cardiovascular Diseases ,Monoclonal ,Drug Therapy, Combination ,Proprotein Convertase 9 ,Antibody ,Aged ,Anticholesteremic Agents ,Atherosclerosis ,Cholesterol, LDL ,Double-Blind Method ,Female ,Follow-Up Studies ,Humans ,Hydroxymethylglutaryl-CoA Reductase Inhibitors ,Hypercholesterolemia ,Least-Squares Analysis ,Middle Aged ,Medicine (all) ,REDUCING LIPIDS ,Human ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Evinacumab ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,PCSK9 INHIBITION ,Follow-Up Studie ,LDL ,03 medical and health sciences ,Drug Therapy ,Clinical Research ,LDL-C ,Least-Squares Analysi ,Science & Technology ,Unstable angina ,PCSK9 ,medicine.disease ,chemistry ,Clinical Biochemistry ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Bococizumab ,FOURIER Steering Committee and Investigators ,Medical and Health Sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Antibodies monoclonal ,Cardiovascular Disease ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Stroke ,Humanized ,RISK ,biology ,PCSK9 Inhibitors ,10051 Rheumatology Clinic and Institute of Physical Medicine ,Heart Disease ,Atherosclerosi ,6.1 Pharmaceuticals ,Combination ,Cardiology ,Life Sciences & Biomedicine ,Antibodies, Monoclonal, Humanized ,EZETIMIBE ,610 Medicine & health ,Antibodies ,Medicine, General & Internal ,General & Internal Medicine ,Internal medicine ,CORONARY-HEART-DISEASE ,In patient ,Heart Disease - Coronary Heart Disease ,Alirocumab ,Ldl cholesterol ,business.industry ,Evaluation of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,Evolocumab ,Good Health and Well Being ,Settore MED/11 - MALATTIE DELL'APPARATO CARDIOVASCOLARE ,biology.protein ,MODERATE ,Hydroxymethylglutaryl-CoA Reductase Inhibitor ,business - Abstract
Background Evolocumab is a monoclonal antibody that inhibits proprotein convertase subtilisin–kexin type 9 (PCSK9) and lowers low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol levels by approximately 60%. Whether it prevents cardiovascular events is uncertain. Methods We conducted a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial involving 27,564 patients with atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease and LDL cholesterol levels of 70 mg per deciliter (1.8 mmol per liter) or higher who were receiving statin therapy. Patients were randomly assigned to receive evolocumab (either 140 mg every 2 weeks or 420 mg monthly) or matching placebo as subcutaneous injections. The primary efficacy end point was the composite of cardiovascular death, myocardial infarction, stroke, hospitalization for unstable angina, or coronary revascularization. The key secondary efficacy end point was the composite of cardiovascular death, myocardial infarction, or stroke. The median duration of follow-up was 2.2 years. Results At 48 weeks, the least-squares mean percentage reduction in LDL cholesterol levels with evolocumab, as compared with placebo, was 59%, from a median baseline value of 92 mg per deciliter (2.4 mmol per liter) to 30 mg per deciliter (0.78 mmol per liter) (P
- Published
- 2017
3. A Randomized, Controlled Trial of 3.0 mg of Liraglutide in Weight Management
- Author
-
Pi-Sunyer, Xavier, Astrup, Arne, Fujioka, Ken, Greenway, Frank, Halpern, Alfredo, Krempf, Michel, Lau, David C. W., le Roux, Carel W., Ortiz, Violante, Jensen, Christine Bjorn, Wilding, John P. H., Hamann, A, Barakat, A, Blüher, M, Linn, T, DALLE MOLLE, Alberto, Segner, A, Stübler, P, Tosch-Sisting, R, Pacini, F, Santini, F, Marchesini, G, Rotella, Cm, Invitti, C, Vettor, R, Buscemi, S, Raya, Pm, Freijoo, Fc, de Barbará RG, Carraro, R, Bobillo, Er, de la Cuesta, C, Farsang, C, Csaszar, A, Zahorska-Markiewicz, B, Pupek-Musialik, D, Franek, E, Ostrowska, L, Olszanecka-Glinianowicz, M, Lalic, N, Micic, D, Ludvik, B, Paulweber, B, Prager, R, Scheen, A, Van Gaal, L, Astrup, Av, Hermansen, K, Madsbad, S, Rissanen, A, Nieminen, S, Savolainen, M, Krempf, M, Romon, M, Laville, M, Marre, M, Mira, R, Finucane, F, Veenendaal, A, van Berkum, F, Johannsson-Vidarsdóttir, S, Van de Walle, V, Meesters, E, Hjelmesæth, J, Klemsdal, To, Kulseng, B, Bach-Kliegel, B, Laederach, K, Villiger, L, Golay, A, Bilz, S, Sathyapalan, T, Bain, S, Kumar, S, Le Roux CW, Lean, Me, Mcgowan, B, Rehman, T, Wilding, J, Wittert, G, Caterson, I, Proietto, J, Prins, J, Geloneze Neto, B, Gross, Jl, Chacra, Ar, Halpern, A, Suplicy Hde, A, Chow, Fc, Thacker, Hp, Chadha, M, Chandalia, H, Unnikrishnan, A, Kalra, S, Deshpande, N, Shunmugavelu, M, Deshmukh, Vc, Maislos, M, Lieberman, Gs, Shimon, I, Stern, N, Nabriski, D, Karnieli, E, Shehadeh, N, Gonzalez-Galvez, G, Arechavaleta-Granell Mdel, R, Violante Ortiz RM, Franco, Gm, Gurieva, I, Suplotova, La, Troshina, E, Ruyatkina, La, Voychik, Ea, Martsevich, S, Startseva, Ma, Seeber, Me, Badat, A, Ellis, G, Altuntas, Y, Guler, S, Ulgen, E, Delibasi, T, Chetty, T, Hart, R, Janzen, J, Labonte, I, Lau, D, Liutkus, J, O'Keefe, D, Padwal, R, Ransom, Tp, Tytus, R, Weisnagel, Sj, Adler, J, Aqua, K, Aronoff, Sl, Bedel, Gw, Blevins, Tc, Blumenau, J, Brockmyre, Ap, Call, Rs, Canadas, R, Chaykin, Lb, Cohen, K, Conrow, Jk, Davis, Mg, Downey, Hj, Drosman, Sr, Duckor, S, Farmer, H, Farrell, J, Fehnel, S, Finneran, Mp, Forbes, R, Forker, A, Fredrick, M, Fujioka, K, Geller, Sa, Gill, S, Glaser, L, Greco, Sn, Greenway, Fl, Harper, W, Herman, L, Hoekstra, J, Ingebretsen, R, Ison, R, Jain, Rk, Kaplan, R, Kaster, Sr, Haase, Ga, Kerzner, B, Kirstein, Jl, Koltun, W, Krieger, Dr, Lewis, Ce, Madder, R, Marple, Rn, Mcdermott, Ej, Mello, Cj, Miller, Ab, Mullen, J, Nardandrea, J, O'Neil, P, Pi-Sunyer, F, Pucillo, Rm, Rhee, C, Redrick, S, Pardini, A, Rothman, J, Rubino, Dm, Sellers, G, Smith, T, Byars, Wd, Soufer, J, Sussman, Am, Patrick, K, Schramm, El, Van Cleeff, M, Berg, Sr, Wyatt, Hr, Simon, Ja., Columbia University [New York], Obesity Research Center, The University of Tennessee [Knoxville], Department of Nutrition, Exercise and Sports [Copenhagen], Faculty of Science [Copenhagen], University of Copenhagen = Københavns Universitet (KU)-University of Copenhagen = Københavns Universitet (KU), Scripps Research Institute, Louisiana State University (LSU), Universidade de São Paulo (USP), Centre hospitalier universitaire de Nantes (CHU Nantes), University of Calgary, University College Dublin (UCD), Instituto Mexicano del Seguro Social [Mexico City, Mexico] (IMSS), Novo Nordisk, Department of Obesity and Endocrinology, University of Liverpool, Pi-Sunyer, Xavier, Astrup, Arne, Fujioka, Ken, Greenway, Frank, Halpern, Alfredo, Krempf, Michel, Lau, David C.W., Le Roux, Carel W., Ortiz, Rafael Violante, Jensen, Christine Bjørn, Wilding, John P.H., the SCALE Obesity and Prediabetes NN8022-1839 Study Group [.., Marchesini, Giulio, ], Pi-Sunyer, X., Astrup, A., Fujioka, K., Greenway, F., Halpern, A., Krempf, M., Lau, D., le Roux, C., Violante Ortiz, R., Jensen, C., Wilding, J. COLLABORATORS: amann A, Barakat A, Blüher M, Linn T, Mölle A, Segner A, Stübler P, Tosch-Sisting R, Pacini F, Santini F, Marchesini G, Rotella CM, Invitti C, Vettor R, Buscemi S, and Raya PM, Freijoo FC, de Barbará RG, Carraro R, Bobillo ER, de la Cuesta C, Farsang C, Csaszar A, Zahorska-Markiewicz B, Pupek-Musialik D, Franek E, Ostrowska L, Olszanecka-Glinianowicz M, Lalic N, Micic D, Ludvik B, Paulweber B, Prager R, Scheen A, Van Gaal L, Astrup AV, Hermansen K, Madsbad S, Rissanen A, Nieminen S, Savolainen M, Krempf M, Romon M, Laville M, Marre M, Mira R, Finucane F, Veenendaal A, van Berkum F, Johannsson-Vidarsdóttir S, Van de Walle V, Meesters E, Hjelmesæth J, Klemsdal TO, Kulseng B, Bach-Kliegel B, Laederach K, Villiger L, Golay A, Bilz S, Sathyapalan T, Bain S, Kumar S, Le Roux CW, Lean ME, McGowan B, Rehman T, Wilding J, Wittert G, Caterson I, Proietto J, Prins J, Geloneze Neto B, Gross JL, Chacra AR, Halpern A, Suplicy Hde A, Chow FC, Thacker HP, Chadha M, Chandalia H, Unnikrishnan A, Kalra S, Deshpande N, Shunmugavelu M, Deshmukh VC, Maislos M, Lieberman GS, Shimon I, Stern N, Nabriski D, Karnieli E, Shehadeh N, Gonzalez-Galvez G, Arechavaleta-Granell Mdel R, Violante Ortiz RM, Franco GM, Gurieva I, Suplotova LA, Troshina E, Ruyatkina LA, Voychik EA, Martsevich S, Startseva MA, Seeber ME, Badat A, Ellis G, Altuntas Y, Guler S, Ulgen E, Delibasi T, Chetty T, Hart R, Janzen J, Labonte I, Lau D, Liutkus J, O'Keefe D, Padwal R, Ransom TP, Tytus R, Weisnagel SJ, Adler J, Aqua K, Aronoff SL, Bedel GW, Blevins TC, Blumenau J, Brockmyre AP, Call RS, Canadas R, Chaykin LB, Cohen K, Conrow JK, Davis MG, Downey HJ, Drosman SR, Duckor S, Farmer H, Farrell J, Fehnel S, Finneran MP, Forbes R, Forker A, Fredrick M, Fujioka K, Geller SA, Gill S, Glaser L, Greco SN, Greenway FL, Harper W, Herman L, Hoekstra J, Ingebretsen R, Ison R, Jain RK, Kaplan R, Kaster SR, Haase GA, Kerzner B, Kirstein JL, Koltun W, Krieger DR, Lewis CE, Madder R, Marple RN, McDermott EJ, Mello CJ, Miller AB, Mullen J, Nardandrea J, O'Neil P, Pi-Sunyer F, Pucillo RM, Rhee C, Redrick S, Pardini A, Rothman J, Rubino DM, Sellers G, Smith T, Byars WD, Soufer J, Sussman AM, Patrick K, Schramm EL, Van Cleeff M, Berg SR, Wyatt HR, Simon JA.
- Subjects
Blood Glucose ,Counseling ,Male ,Type 2 diabetes ,law.invention ,Body Mass Index ,Randomized controlled trial ,Weight loss ,law ,Glucagon-Like Peptide 1 ,Weight management ,Subcutaneous ,Medicine (all) ,Reducing ,Nausea ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Combined Modality Therapy ,3. Good health ,Female ,type 2 diabetes ,medicine.symptom ,Human ,medicine.drug ,Adult ,Diarrhea ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Diet, Reducing ,Injections, Subcutaneous ,Injections, Subcutaneou ,Placebo ,Injections ,Double-Blind Method ,Internal medicine ,Weight Loss ,medicine ,Humans ,Hypoglycemic Agents ,Obesity ,Exercise ,Hypoglycemic Agent ,Liraglutide ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,Weight Lo ,Diet ,Endocrinology ,business ,[SDV.AEN]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Food and Nutrition ,Body mass index ,[SDV.MHEP]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Human health and pathology ,Dyslipidemia - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Obesity is a chronic disease with serious health consequences, but weight loss is difficult to maintain through lifestyle intervention alone. Liraglutide, a glucagon-like peptide-1 analogue, has been shown to have potential benefit for weight management at a once-daily dose of 3.0 mg, injected subcutaneously. METHODS: We conducted a 56-week, double-blind trial involving 3731 patients who did not have type 2 diabetes and who had a body-mass index (BMI; the weight in kilograms divided by the square of the height in meters) of at least 30 or a BMI of at least 27 if they had treated or untreated dyslipidemia or hypertension. We randomly assigned patients in a 2:1 ratio to receive once-daily subcutaneous injections of liraglutide at a dose of 3.0 mg (2487 patients) or placebo (1244 patients); both groups received counseling on lifestyle modification. The coprimary end points were the change in body weight and the proportions of patients losing at least 5% and more than 10% of their initial body weight. RESULTS: At baseline, the mean (±SD) age of the patients was 45.1±12.0 years, the mean weight was 106.2±21.4 kg, and the mean BMI was 38.3±6.4; a total of 78.5% of the patients were women and 61.2% had prediabetes. At week 56, patients in the liraglutide group had lost a mean of 8.4±7.3 kg of body weight, and those in the placebo group had lost a mean of 2.8±6.5 kg (a difference of -5.6 kg; 95% confidence interval, -6.0 to -5.1; P
- Published
- 2015
4. Abstract P6-08-24: Reproductive status and clinical pathological characteristics of young women diagnosed with breast cancer in Latin America: LACOG 0414 study
- Author
-
Werutsky, G, primary, Villarreal-Garza, C, additional, Morante Cruz, ZD, additional, Debiasi, M, additional, Zaffaroni, F, additional, Fonseca, A, additional, Castro-Sánchez, A, additional, Platas, A, additional, Gómez Moreno, H, additional, Bretel, D, additional, Ortiz, RM, additional, Reinert, T, additional, Dybal, V, additional, Liedke, P, additional, and Barrios, C, additional
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Oxidative stress is a potential cost of breeding in male and female northern elephant seals.
- Author
-
Sharick, JT, Costa, Daniel1, Sharick, JT, Vazquez-Medina, JP, Ortiz, RM, Crocker, DE, Sharick, JT, Costa, Daniel1, Sharick, JT, Vazquez-Medina, JP, Ortiz, RM, and Crocker, DE
- Abstract
The trade-off between current reproductive effort and survival is a key concept of life history theory. A variety of studies support the existence of this trade-off but the underlying physiological mechanisms are not well-understood. Oxidative stress has been proposed as a potential mechanism underlying the observed inverse relationship between reproductive investment and lifespan. Prolonged fasting is associated with oxidative stress including increases in the production of reactive oxygen species, oxidative damage and inflammation.Northern elephant seals (NES) undergo prolonged fasts while maintaining high metabolic rates during breeding. We investigated NES of both sexes to assess oxidative stress associated with extended breeding fasts. We measured changes in the plasma activity or concentrations of markers for oxidative stress in 30 adult male and 33 adult female northern elephant seals across their 1-3 month breeding fasts. Markers assessed included a pro-oxidant enzyme, several antioxidant enzymes, markers for oxidative damage to lipids, proteins and DNA, and markers for systemic inflammation.Plasma xanthine oxidase (XO), a pro-oxidant enzyme that increases production of oxidative radicals, and several protective antioxidant enzymes increased over breeding in both sexes. Males showed increased oxidative damage to lipids and DNA and increased systemic inflammation, while oxidative damage to proteins declined across breeding. In contrast, females showed no oxidative damage to lipids or DNA or changes in inflammation, but showed increases in oxidative damage to proteins. XO activity, antioxidant enzymes, oxidative damage markers, and inflammatory markers were strongly correlated in males but these relationships were weaker or non-existent in females.NES provide evidence for oxidative stress as a physiological cost of reproduction in a capital breeding mammal. Both sexes strongly up-regulated antioxidant defenses during breeding. Despite this response, and in con
- Published
- 2015
6. GH and ghrelin increase with fasting in a naturally adapted species, the northern elephant seal (Mirounga angustirostris)
- Author
-
Ortiz, RM, primary, Noren, DP, additional, Ortiz, CL, additional, and Talamantes, F, additional
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Exogenous thyroxine increases cardiac GLUT4 translocation in insulin resistant OLETF rats.
- Author
-
Mendez DA, Soñanez-Organis JG, Yang X, Vazquez-Anaya G, Nishiyama A, and Ortiz RM
- Subjects
- Animals, Male, Rats, Fatty Acids metabolism, Glucose metabolism, Protein Transport drug effects, Rats, Inbred OLETF, Glucose Transporter Type 4 metabolism, Glucose Transporter Type 4 genetics, Insulin Resistance, Myocardium metabolism, Thyroxine administration & dosage
- Abstract
During insulin resistance, the heart undergoes a metabolic shift in which fatty acids (FA) account for roughly about 99% of the ATP production. This metabolic shift is indicative of impaired glucose metabolism. A shift in FA metabolism with impaired glucose tolerance can increase reactive oxygen species (ROS), lipotoxicity, and mitochondrial dysfunction, ultimately leading to cardiomyopathy. Thyroid hormones (TH) may improve the glucose intolerance by increasing glucose reabsorption and metabolism in peripheral tissues, but little is known on its effects on cardiac tissue during insulin resistance. In the present study, insulin resistant Otsuka Long Evans Tokushima Fatty (OLETF) rats were used to assess the effects of exogenous thyroxine (T4) on glucose metabolism in cardiac tissue. Rats were assigned to four groups: (1) lean, Long Evans Tokushima Otsuka (LETO; n=6), (2) LETO + T4 (8 μg/100 g BM/d × 5 wks; n = 7), (3) untreated OLETF (n = 6), and (4) OLETF + T4 (8 μg/100 g BM/d × 5 wks; n = 7). T4 increased GLUT4 gene expression by 85% in OLETF and increased GLUT4 protein translocation to the membrane by 294%. Additionally, T4 increased p-AS160 by 285%, phosphofructokinase-1 (PFK-1) mRNA, the rate limiting step in glycolysis, by 98% and hexokinase II by 64% in OLETF. T4 decreased both CPT2 mRNA and protein expression in OLETF. The results suggest that exogenous T4 has the potential to increase glucose uptake and metabolism while simultaneously reducing fatty acid transport in the heart of insulin resistant rats. Thus, L-thyroxine may have therapeutic value to help correct the impaired substrate metabolism associated with diabetic cardiomyopathy., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest None., (Published by Elsevier B.V.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Metabolic Responses to an Acute Glucose Challenge: The Differential Effects of Eight Weeks of Almond vs. Cracker Consumption in Young Adults.
- Author
-
Dhillon J, Pandey S, Newman JW, Fiehn O, and Ortiz RM
- Abstract
This study investigated the dynamic responses to an acute glucose challenge following chronic almond versus cracker consumption for 8 weeks (clinicaltrials.gov ID: NCT03084003). Seventy-three young adults (age: 18-19 years, BMI: 18-41 kg/m
2 ) participated in an 8-week randomized, controlled, parallel-arm intervention and were randomly assigned to consume either almonds (2 oz/d, n=38) or an isocaloric control snack of graham crackers (325 kcal/d, n=35) daily for 8 weeks. Twenty participants from each group underwent a 2-hour oral glucose tolerance test (oGTT) at the end of the 8-week intervention. Metabolite abundances in the oGTT serum samples were quantified using untargeted metabolomics, and targeted analyses for free PUFAs, total fatty acids, oxylipins, and endocannabinoids. Multivariate, univariate, and chemical enrichment analyses were conducted to identify significant metabolic shifts. Findings exhibit a biphasic lipid response distinguished by higher levels of unsaturated triglycerides in the earlier periods of the oGTT followed by lower levels in the latter period in the almond versus cracker group (p-value<0.05, chemical enrichment analyses). Almond (vs. cracker) consumption was also associated with higher AUC120 min of aminomalonate, and oxylipins (p-value<0.05), but lower AUC120 min of L-cystine, N-acetylmannosamine, and isoheptadecanoic acid (p-value<0.05). Additionally, the Matsuda Index in the almond group correlated with AUC120 min of CE 22:6 (r=-0.46; p-value<0.05) and 12,13 DiHOME (r=0.45; p-value<0.05). Almond consumption for 8 weeks leads to dynamic, differential shifts in response to an acute glucose challenge, marked by alterations in lipid and amino acid mediators involved in metabolic and physiological pathways., Competing Interests: CONFLICTS OF INTEREST RMO and JD disclose grant support from Almond Board of California. SP, OF, and JWN have no conflicts of interest.- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Pseudocannabinoid H4CBD improves glucose response during advanced metabolic syndrome in OLETF rats independent of increase in insulin signaling proteins.
- Author
-
Wilson JN, Mendez DA, Dhoro F, Shevchenko N, Mascal M, Lund K, Fitzgerald R, DiPatrizio NV, and Ortiz RM
- Subjects
- Humans, Rats, Animals, Aged, Rats, Inbred OLETF, Insulin, Glucose, Rats, Long-Evans, Blood Glucose metabolism, Metabolic Syndrome drug therapy, Cannabidiol pharmacology, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 metabolism
- Abstract
Cannabidiol (CBD) use has grown exponentially more popular in the last two decades, particularly among older adults (>55 yr), though very little is known about the effects of CBD use during age-associated metabolic dysfunction. In addition, synthetic analogues of CBD have generated great interest because they can offer a chemically pure product, which is free of plant-associated contaminants. To assess the effects of a synthetic analogue of CBD (H4CBD) on advanced metabolic dysfunction, a cohort of 41-wk-old Otsuka Long-Evans Tokushima Fatty (OLETF) rats were administered 200 mg H4CBD/kg by oral gavage for 4 wk. Animals were fed ad libitum and monitored alongside vehicle-treated OLETF and Long-Evans Tokushima Otsuka (LETO) rats, the lean-strain controls. An oral glucose-tolerance test (oGTT) was performed after 4 wk of treatment. When compared with vehicle-treated, OLETF rats, H4CBD decreased body mass (BM) by 15%, which was attributed to a significant loss in abdominal fat. H4CBD reduced glucose response (AUC
glucose ) by 29% ( P < 0.001) and insulin resistance index (IRI) by 25% ( P < 0.05) compared with OLETF rats. However, H4CBD did not statically reduce fasting blood glucose or plasma insulin, despite compensatory increases in skeletal muscle native insulin receptor (IR) protein expression (54%; P < 0.05). H4CBD reduced circulating adiponectin (40%; P < 0.05) and leptin (47%; P < 0.05) and increased ghrelin (75%; P < 0.01) compared with OLETF. Taken together, a chronic, high dose of H4CBD may improve glucose response, independent of static changes in insulin signaling, and these effects are likely a benefit of the profound loss of visceral adiposity. NEW & NOTEWORTHY Cannabis product use has grown in the last two decades despite the lack of research on Cannabidiol (CBD)-mediated effects on metabolism. Here, we provide seminal data on CBD effects during age-associated metabolic dysfunction. We gave 41-wk-old OLETF rats 200 mg H4CBD/kg by mouth for 4 wk and noted a high dose of H4CBD may improve glucose response, independent of static changes in insulin signaling, and these effects are likely a benefit of loss of visceral adiposity.- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Differential susceptibility to parenting influences on reactive and proactive aggression: The role of testosterone and cortisol in children.
- Author
-
Del Puerto-Golzarri N, Pascual-Sagastizabal E, Muñoz JM, Carreras MR, Ruiz-Ortiz RM, and Azurmendi A
- Subjects
- Male, Female, Humans, Child, Hydrocortisone, Disease Susceptibility, Aggression, Testosterone analysis, Parenting
- Abstract
This study explored whether cortisol and testosterone moderate the effect of parenting style on children's aggressive behavior, in accordance with the diathesis-stress or differential susceptibility theory; i.e., whether children are vulnerable to negative parenting styles (diathesis-stress) or, in addition to this vulnerability, also benefit more from positive parenting (differential susceptibility). The sample group comprised 279 eight-year-old children (154 boys and 125 girls) from Spain. Aggressive behavior was assessed using the "Reactive and Proactive Questionnaire" (RPQ) and parenting styles were measured using the "Parenting Styles and Dimensions Questionnaire" (PSDQ). Additionally, three saliva samples were collected to measure testosterone and cortisol levels, which were analyzed using ELISA. The results revealed that girls' high testosterone levels moderated the association between mothers' authoritarian parenting style and reactive aggression. This result can be explained by the differential susceptibility model. None of the interactions were statistically significant in boys' proactive aggression. The study emphasizes the importance of investigating biological and social factors that may influence aggressive behavior., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors report no conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2023 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. The Renin-Angiotensin-Aldosterone System in Metabolic Diseases and Other Pathologies.
- Author
-
Ortiz RM, Satou R, Zhuo JL, and Nishiyama A
- Subjects
- Humans, Aldosterone, Renin metabolism, Angiotensin II metabolism, Renin-Angiotensin System, Metabolic Diseases
- Abstract
It has been our pleasure to have been able to develop two special issues within the International Journal of Molecular Sciences: (1) Renin-Angiotensin-Aldosterone System in Pathologies and (2) Renin-Angiotensin-Aldosterone System in Metabolism & Disease [...].
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Angiotensin receptor blockade with olmesartan alleviates brain pathology in obese OLETF rats.
- Author
-
Rodriguez-Ortiz CJ, Thorwald MA, Rodriguez R, Mejias-Ortega M, Kieu Z, Maitra N, Hawkins C, Valenzuela J, Peng M, Nishiyama A, Ortiz RM, and Kitazawa M
- Subjects
- Rats, Animals, Rats, Inbred OLETF, Angiotensin Receptor Antagonists, Receptors, Angiotensin, Angiotensin-Converting Enzyme Inhibitors, Obesity complications, Obesity drug therapy, Obesity metabolism, Rats, Long-Evans, Brain metabolism, Blood Glucose metabolism, Metabolic Syndrome metabolism, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2
- Abstract
Metabolic syndrome (MetS) is a rapidly increasing health concern during midlife and is an emerging risk factor for the development of neurodegenerative diseases, such as Alzheimer's disease (AD). While angiotensin receptor blockers (ARB) are widely used for MetS-associated hypertension and kidney disease, its therapeutic potential in the brain during MetS are not well-described. Here, we tested whether treatment with ARB could alleviate the brain pathology and inflammation associated with MetS using the Otsuka Long-Evans Tokushima Fatty (OLETF) rat. Here, we report that chronic ARB treatment with olmesartan (10 mg/kg/day by oral gavage for 6 weeks) partially but significantly ameliorated accumulation of oxidized and ubiquitinated proteins, astrogliosis and transformation to neurotoxic astrocytes in the brain of old OLETF rats, which otherwise exhibit the progression of these pathological hallmarks associated with MetS. Additionally, olmesartan treatment restored claudin-5 and ZO-1, markers of the structural integrity of the blood-brain barrier as well as synaptic protein PSD-95, which were otherwise decreased in old OLETF rats, particularly in the hippocampus, a critical region in cognition, memory and AD. These data demonstrate that the progression of MetS in OLETF rats is associated with deterioration of various aspects of neuronal integrity that may manifest neurodegenerative conditions and that overactivation of angiotensin receptor directly or indirectly contributes to these detriments. Thus, olmesartan treatment may slow or delay the onset of degenerative process in the brain and subsequent neurological disorders associated with MetS., (© 2022 John Wiley & Sons Australia, Ltd.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Almond Consumption for 8 Weeks Altered Host and Microbial Metabolism in Comparison to a Control Snack in Young Adults.
- Author
-
Dhillon J, Newman JW, Fiehn O, and Ortiz RM
- Subjects
- Humans, Young Adult, Adolescent, Adult, Snacks, RNA, Ribosomal, 16S, Tandem Mass Spectrometry, Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry, Fatty Acids, Tocopherols, Prunus dulcis
- Abstract
Almond consumption can improve cardiometabolic (CM) health. However, the mechanisms underlying those benefits are not well characterized. This study explored the effects of consuming a snack of almonds vs. crackers for 8 weeks on changes in metabolomic profiles in young adults (clinicaltrials.gov ID: NCT03084003)., Participants (n = 73, age: 18-19 years, BMI: 18-41 kg/m
2 ) were randomly assigned to consume either almonds (2 oz/d, n = 38) or an isocaloric control snack of graham crackers (325 kcal/d, n = 35) daily for 8 weeks. Blood samples were collected at baseline prior to and at 4 and 8 weeks after the intervention. Metabolite abundances in the serum were quantified by hydrophilic interaction chromatography quadrupole (Q) time-of-flight (TOF) mass spectrometry (MS/MS), gas chromatography (GC) TOF MS, CSH-ESI (electrospray) QTOF MS/MS, and targeted analyses for free PUFAs, total fatty acids, oxylipins and endocannabinoids. Linear mixed model analyses with baseline-adjustment were conducted, and those results were used for enrichment and network analyses. Microbial community pathway predictions from 16S rRNA sequencing of fecal samples was done using PICRUST2., Almond consumption enriched unsaturated triglycerides, unsaturated phosphatidylcholines, saturated and unsaturated lysophosphatidylcholines, tricarboxylic acids, and tocopherol clusters (p < 0.05). Targeted analyses reveal lower levels of omega-3 total fatty acids (TFAs) overall in the almond group compared to the cracker group (p < 0.05). Microbial amino acid biosynthesis, and amino sugar and nucleotide sugar metabolism pathways were also differentially enriched at the end of the intervention (p < 0.05)., The study demonstrates the differential effects of almonds on host tocopherol, lipid, and TCA cycle metabolism with potential changes in microbial metabolism, which may interact with host metabolism to facilitate the CM benefits.- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Simultaneous SGLT2 inhibition and caloric restriction improves insulin resistance and kidney function in OLETF rats.
- Author
-
Cornejo MA, Jardines E, Nishiyama A, Nakano D, and Ortiz RM
- Subjects
- Animals, Male, Rats, Blood Glucose metabolism, Caloric Restriction, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 metabolism, Kidney metabolism, Rats, Inbred OLETF, Sodium-Glucose Transporter 2 metabolism, Insulin Resistance, Sodium-Glucose Transporter 2 Inhibitors pharmacology
- Abstract
SGLT2 inhibitors (SGLT2i) are emerging as a novel therapy for type 2 diabetes due to their effective hypoglycemic and potential cardio- and nephroprotective effects, while caloric restriction (CR) is a common behavioral modification to improve adiposity and insulin resistance. Therefore, both interventions simultaneously may potentially further improve metabolic syndrome by enhancing carbohydrate metabolism. To test this hypothesis, cohorts of 10-week old, male Long Evans Tokushima Otsuka (LETO) and Otsuka Long Evans Tokushima Fatty (OLETF) rats were treated with SGLT2i (10 mg luseoglifozin/kg/day x 4 wks) (OLETF only) and/or 30% CR (2 wks at 12 weeks of age). CR maintained body mass in both strains while SGLT2i alone did not have any effect on body mass. Simultaneous treatments decreased SBP in OLETF vs SGLT2i alone, decreased insulin resistance index (IRI), and increased creatinine clearance vs OLETF ad lib. Conversely, CR decreased albuminuria independent of SGLT2i. In conclusion, SGLT2i treatment by itself did not elicit significant improvements in insulin resistance, kidney function or blood pressure. However, when combined with CR, these changes where more profound than with CR alone without inducing chronic hypoglycemia., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors do not declare any conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2022 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Population Genetics and Anastomosis Group's Geographical Distribution of Rhizoctonia solani Associated with Soybean.
- Author
-
Abbas A, Fang X, Iqbal S, Naqvi SAH, Mehmood Y, Rao MJ, Hassan Z, Ortiz RM, Baazeem A, Moustafa M, Alrumman S, and Negm S
- Subjects
- Phylogeny, Genetics, Population, DNA, Ribosomal, Genetic Variation genetics, Glycine max genetics
- Abstract
Rhizoctonia solani is a species complex composed of many genetically diverse anastomosis groups (AG) and their subgroups. It causes economically important diseases of soybean worldwide. However, the global genetic diversity and distribution of R. solani AG associated with soybean are unknown to date. In this study, the global genetic diversity and distribution of AG associated with soybean were investigated based on rDNA-ITS sequences deposited in GenBank and published literature. The most prevalent AG, was AG-1 (40%), followed by AG-2 (19.13%), AG-4 (11.30%), AG-7 (10.43%), AG-11 (8.70%), AG-3 (5.22%) and AG-5 (3.48%). Most of the AG were reported from the USA and Brazil. Sequence analysis of internal transcribed spacers of ribosomal DNA separated AG associated with soybean into two distinct clades. Clade I corresponded to distinct subclades containing AG-2, AG-3, AG-5, AG-7 and AG-11. Clade II corresponded to subclades of AG-1 subgroups. Furthermore, AG and/or AG subgroups were in close proximity without corresponding to their geographical origin. Moreover, AG or AG subgroups within clade or subclades shared higher percentages of sequence similarities. The principal coordinate analysis also supported the phylogenetic and genetic diversity analyses. In conclusion, AG-1, AG-2, and AG-4 were the most prevalent AG in soybean. The clade or subclades corresponded to AG or AG subgroups and did not correspond to the AG's geographical origin. The information on global genetic diversity and distribution will be helpful if novel management measures are to be developed against soybean diseases caused by R. solani ., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflict of interest.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. A Cross-Sectional Analysis of Food Perceptions, Food Preferences, Diet Quality, and Health in a Food Desert Campus.
- Author
-
Aldaz KJ, Flores SO, Ortiz RM, Diaz Rios LK, and Dhillon J
- Subjects
- Male, Female, Young Adult, Humans, Cross-Sectional Studies, Blood Glucose, Diet, Food Preferences physiology, Food Deserts
- Abstract
The sensory properties of foods guide food choices and intake, importantly determining nutritional and health status. In communities that have inconsistent access to nutritious foods, such as food deserts, food taste perceptions and preferences have yet to be explored. The purpose of this study was to examine how taster status (supertaster vs. non-taster) and food security status (high or marginal vs. low or very low) influences food taste intensities, food preferences and perceptions, and diet quality in a cohort of students from a food desert campus in the Central Valley of California. Moreover, the complex relationship of socioeconomic status, race/ethnicity, and sex on cardiometabolic and cognitive health warrants further examination. Two hundred fifty participants (aged 18-24 years) living in a food desert campus were recruited in 2018 for this cross-sectional study where participants underwent taste tests on selected fruits, vegetables, and nuts, and clinical tests (anthropometrics, blood glucose, blood pressure, and endothelial function), cognitive function tests (memory and attention), diet quality assessment (Healthy Eating Index (HEI)), and food preference and perception assessments. Food taste intensities were influenced by sex with bitter and umami taste intensities of several foods being perceived more intensely by males. Moreover, food liking was largely influenced by ethnicity with Hispanics having higher liking ratings for several foods compared with non-Hispanics. Both, Hispanics and females, had higher total fruit HEI scores and lower attention scores than non-Hispanics and males, respectively. Females also had lower blood pressure, reactive hyperemia index, and fasting blood glucose. Food-insecure individuals rated cost and convenience as more important factors for overall food consumption and had lower attention scores than those with higher food-security status. Future research should consider the complex interactions of factors such as taste and flavor perception, sex, ethnicity, prior exposure to foods, and other environmental factors when studying food preferences and health in young adults.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Perilipin Isoforms and PGC-1α Are Regulated Differentially in Rat Heart during Pregnancy-Induced Physiological Cardiac Hypertrophy.
- Author
-
Rosas-Rodríguez JA, Virgen-Ortíz A, Ruiz EA, Ortiz RM, and Soñanez-Organis JG
- Subjects
- Rats, Female, Animals, Pregnancy, Perilipin-1, Rats, Sprague-Dawley, Peroxisome Proliferator-Activated Receptor Gamma Coactivator 1-alpha genetics, Peroxisome Proliferator-Activated Receptor Gamma Coactivator 1-alpha metabolism, Cardiomegaly genetics, Cardiomegaly metabolism, Protein Isoforms genetics, Protein Isoforms metabolism, RNA, Messenger genetics, RNA, Messenger metabolism, Triglycerides, Cholesterol, Transcription Factors genetics, Transcription Factors metabolism, Peroxisome Proliferator-Activated Receptors metabolism
- Abstract
Background and Objectives : Perilipins 1-5 (PLIN) are lipid droplet-associated proteins that participate in regulating lipid storage and metabolism, and the PLIN5 isoform is known to form a nuclear complex with peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-gamma coactivator 1-alpha (PGC-1α) to regulate lipid metabolism gene expression. However, the changes in PLIN isoforms' expression in response to pregnancy-induced cardiac hypertrophy are not thoroughly studied. The aim of this study was to quantify the mRNA expression of PLIN isoforms and PGC-1α along with total triacylglycerol (TAG) and cholesterol levels during late pregnancy and the postpartum period in the rat left ventricle. Materials and Methods : Female Sprague-Dawley rats were divided into three groups: non-pregnant, late pregnancy, and postpartum. The mRNA and protein levels were evaluated using quantitative RT-PCR and Western blotting, respectively. TAG and total cholesterol content were evaluated using commercial colorimetric methods. Results : The expression of mRNAs for PLIN1, 2, and 5 increased during pregnancy and the postpartum period. PGC-1α mRNA and protein expression increased during pregnancy and the postpartum period. Moreover, TAG and total cholesterol increased during pregnancy and returned to basal levels after pregnancy. Conclusions : Our results demonstrate that pregnancy upregulates differentially the expression of PLIN isoforms along with PGC-1α, suggesting that together they might be involved in the regulation of the lipid metabolic shift induced by pregnancy.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Glucose Increases Hepatic Mitochondrial Antioxidant Enzyme Activities in Insulin Resistant Rats Following Chronic Angiotensin Receptor Blockade.
- Author
-
Godoy-Lugo JA, Thorwald MA, Mendez DA, Rodriguez R, Nakano D, Nishiyama A, and Ortiz RM
- Subjects
- Angiotensin Receptor Antagonists pharmacology, Angiotensin-Converting Enzyme Inhibitors pharmacology, Animals, Antioxidants pharmacology, Catalase, Collagen Type IV, Glucose metabolism, Glutamate-Cysteine Ligase, Insulin, Interleukin-1beta, Male, NF-E2-Related Factor 2 metabolism, Obesity metabolism, Oxidants pharmacology, Rats, Receptors, Angiotensin, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2, Insulin Resistance physiology, Non-alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease etiology
- Abstract
Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) affects up to 20% of the world's population. Overactivation of the angiotensin receptor type 1 (AT1) contributes to metabolic dysfunction and increased oxidant production, which are associated with NAFLD and impaired hepatic lipid metabolism. Nuclear factor erythroid-2-related factor 2 (Nrf2) regulates the expression of antioxidant phase II genes by binding to the antioxidant response element (ARE); however, the mechanisms by which AT1 contributes to this pathway during the progression of NAFLD remain unresolved. To investigate hepatic Nrf2 response to a hyperglycemic challenge, we studied three groups of rats (male, 10-weeks-old): (1) untreated, lean Long Evans Tokushima Otsuka (LETO), (2) untreated, obese Otsuka Long Evans Tokushima Fatty (OLETF), and (3) OLETF + angiotensin receptor blocker (OLETF + ARB; 10 mg olmesartan/kg/d × 6 weeks). Livers were collected after overnight fasting (T0; baseline), and 1 h and 2 h post-oral glucose load. At baseline, chronic AT1 blockade increased nuclear Nrf2 content, reduced expression of glutamate-cysteine ligase catalytic (GCLC) subunit, glutathione peroxidase 1 (GPx1), and superoxide dismutase 2 (SOD2), mitochondrial catalase activity, and hepatic 4-hydroxy-2-nonenal (4-HNE) content. The expression of hepatic interleukin-1 beta (IL-1β) and collagen type IV, which are associated with liver fibrosis, were decreased with AT1 blockade. Glucose increased Nrf2 translocation in OLETF but was reduced in ARB, suggesting that glucose induces the need for antioxidant defense that is ameliorated with ARB. These results suggest that overactivation of AT1 promotes oxidant damage by suppressing Nrf2 and contributing to hepatic fibrosis associated with NAFLD development.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Improved lipogenesis gene expression in liver is associated with elevated plasma angiotensin 1-7 after AT1 receptor blockade in insulin-resistant OLETF rats.
- Author
-
Godoy-Lugo JA, Mendez DA, Rodriguez R, Nishiyama A, Nakano D, Soñanez-Organis JG, and Ortiz RM
- Subjects
- Angiotensin I, Angiotensin Receptor Antagonists, Angiotensin-Converting Enzyme Inhibitors, Animals, Gene Expression, Glucose, Insulin, Lipogenesis, Liver, Obesity, Peptide Fragments, Rats, Rats, Inbred OLETF, Receptor, Angiotensin, Type 1, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2, Fatty Liver, Metabolic Syndrome
- Abstract
Increased angiotensin II (Ang II) signaling contributes to insulin resistance and liver steatosis. In addition to ameliorating hypertension, angiotensin receptor blockers (ARBs) improve lipid metabolism and hepatic steatosis, which are impaired with metabolic syndrome (MetS). Chronic blockade of the Ang II receptor type 1 (AT1) increases plasma angiotensin 1-7 (Ang 1-7), which mediates mechanisms counterregulatory to AT1 signaling. Elevated plasma Ang 1-7 is associated with decreased plasma triacylglycerol (TAG), cholesterol, glucose, and insulin; however, the benefits of RAS modulation to prevent non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) are not fully investigated. To better address the relationships among chronic ARB treatment, plasma Ang 1-7, and hepatic steatosis, three groups of 10-week-old-rats were studied: (1) untreated lean Long Evans Tokushima Otsuka (LETO), (2) untreated Otsuka Long Evans Tokushima Fatty (OLETF), and (3) OLETF + ARB (ARB; 10 mg olmesartan/kg/d × 6 weeks). Following overnight fasting, rats underwent an acute glucose load to better understand the dynamic metabolic responses during hepatic steatosis and early MetS. Tissues were collected at baseline (pre-load; T0) and 1 and 2 h post-glucose load. AT1 blockade increased plasma Ang 1-7 and decreased liver lipids, which was associated with decreased fatty acid transporter 5 (FATP5) and fatty acid synthase (FASN) expression. AT1 blockade decreased liver glucose and increased glucokinase (GCK) expression. These results demonstrate that during MetS, overactivation of AT1 promotes hepatic lipid deposition that is stimulated by an acute glucose load and lipogenesis genes, suggesting that the chronic hyperglycemia associated with MetS contributes to fatty liver pathologies via an AT1-mediated mechanism., (Copyright © 2022. Published by Elsevier B.V.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Cardiac NF-κB Acetylation Increases While Nrf2-Related Gene Expression and Mitochondrial Activity Are Impaired during the Progression of Diabetes in UCD-T2DM Rats.
- Author
-
Thorwald MA, Godoy-Lugo JA, Rodriguez R, Stanhope KL, Graham JL, Havel PJ, Forman HJ, and Ortiz RM
- Abstract
The onset of type II diabetes increases the heart's susceptibility to oxidative damage because of the associated inflammation and diminished antioxidant response. Transcription factor NF-κB initiates inflammation while Nrf2 controls antioxidant defense. Current evidence suggests crosstalk between these transcription factors that may become dysregulated during type II diabetes mellitus (T2DM) manifestation. The objective of this study was to examine the dynamic changes that occur in both transcription factors and target genes during the progression of T2DM in the heart. Novel UC Davis T2DM (UCD-T2DM) rats at the following states were utilized: (1) lean, control Sprague-Dawley (SD; n = 7), (2) insulin-resistant pre-diabetic UCD-T2DM (Pre; n = 9), (3) 2-week recently diabetic UCD-T2DM (2Wk; n = 9), (4) 3-month diabetic UCD-T2DM (3Mo; n = 14), and (5) 6-month diabetic UCD-T2DM (6Mo; n = 9). NF-κB acetylation increased 2-fold in 3Mo and 6Mo diabetic animals compared to SD and Pre animals. Nox4 protein increased 4-fold by 6Mo compared to SD. Nrf2 translocation increased 82% in Pre compared to SD but fell 47% in 6Mo animals. GCLM protein fell 35% in 6Mo animals compared to Pre. Hmox1 mRNA decreased 45% in 6Mo animals compared to SD. These data suggest that during the progression of T2DM, NF-κB related genes increase while Nrf2 genes are suppressed or unchanged, perpetuating inflammation and a lesser ability to handle an oxidant burden altering the heart's redox state. Collectively, these changes likely contribute to the diabetes-associated cardiovascular complications.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Chronic angiotensin receptor activation promotes hepatic triacylglycerol accumulation during an acute glucose challenge in obese-insulin-resistant OLETF rats.
- Author
-
Godoy-Lugo JA, Thorwald MA, Hui DY, Nishiyama A, Nakano D, Soñanez-Organis JG, and Ortiz RM
- Subjects
- Animals, Blood Glucose metabolism, Glucose metabolism, Insulin metabolism, Liver metabolism, Obesity metabolism, Rats, Rats, Inbred OLETF, Rats, Long-Evans, Receptor, Angiotensin, Type 1 metabolism, Triglycerides metabolism, Angiotensin II Type 1 Receptor Blockers pharmacology, Insulin Resistance
- Abstract
Purpose: Angiotensin receptor blockers (ARBs) can ameliorate metabolic syndrome (MetS)-associated dyslipidemia, hepatic steatosis, and glucose intolerance, suggesting that angiotensin receptor (AT1) over-activation contributes to impaired lipid and glucose metabolism, which is characteristic of MetS. The aim of this study was to evaluate changes in the lipid profile and proteins of fatty acid uptake, triacylglycerol (TAG) synthesis, and β-oxidation to better understand the links between AT1 overactivation and non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) during MetS., Methods: Four groups of 25-week-old-rats were used: (1) untreated LETO, (2) untreated OLETF, (3) OLETF + angiotensin receptor blocker (ARB; 10 mg olmesartan/kg/d × 8 weeks) and (4) OLETF ± ARB (MINUS; 10 mg olmesartan/kg/d × 4 weeks, then removed until dissection). To investigate the dynamic shifts in metabolism, animals were dissected after an oral glucose challenge (fasting, 3 and 6 h post-glucose)., Results: Compared to OLETF, plasma total cholesterol and TAG remained unchanged in ARB. However, liver TAG was 55% lesser in ARB than OLETF, and remained lower throughout the challenge. Basal CD36 and ApoB were 28% and 29% lesser, respectively, in ARB than OLETF. PRDX6 abundance in ARB was 45% lesser than OLETF, and it negatively correlated with liver TAG in ARB., Conclusions: Chronic blockade of AT1 protects the liver from TAG accumulation during glucose overload. This may be achieved by modulating NEFA uptake and increasing TAG export via ApoB. Our study highlights the contributions of AT1 signaling to impaired hepatic substrate metabolism and the detriments of a high-glucose load and its potential contribution to steatosis during MetS., (© 2021. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Body mass cycling and predictors of body mass regain and its impact on cardiometabolic health.
- Author
-
Cornejo MA and Ortiz RM
- Subjects
- Adipose Tissue metabolism, Animals, Cardiovascular Diseases metabolism, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 metabolism, Gastrointestinal Microbiome physiology, Humans, Blood Pressure physiology, Body Weight physiology, Insulin Resistance physiology
- Abstract
Caloric restriction (CR) is the first line intervention to reduce adiposity and total body mass (BM) to improve insulin resistance and ameliorate metabolic derangements. However, the lost adipose mass is difficult to maintain reduced in the long term due to several factors including compensatory changes in orexigenic hormones, adipokine release, pro-inflammatory state, adipose tissue morphology, and resting metabolic rate as a consequence of the caloric deficit. Hence, most patients undergoing a BM reduction intervention ultimately regain the lost mass and too often additional adipose mass overtime, which is hypothesized to have increased deleterious effects chronically. In this mini-review we describe the effects of BM cycling (loss and regain) on insulin resistance and cardiometabolic health and factors that may predict BM regain in clinical studies. We also describe the factors that contribute to the chronic deleterious effects of BM cycling in rodent models of diet-induced obesity (DIO) and other metabolic defects. We conclude that most of the improvements in insulin resistance are observed after a profound loss in BM regardless of the diet and that BM cycling abrogates these beneficial effects. We also suggest that more BM cycling studies are needed in rodent models resembling the development of type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) in humans., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest None., (Copyright © 2021 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Mass recovery following caloric restriction reverses lipolysis and proteolysis, but not gluconeogenesis, in insulin resistant OLETF rats.
- Author
-
Cornejo MA, Dhillon J, Nishiyama A, Nakano D, and Ortiz RM
- Subjects
- Adipose Tissue metabolism, Animals, Glucose Tolerance Test, Proteolysis, Rats, Rats, Inbred OLETF, Caloric Restriction, Gluconeogenesis physiology, Insulin Resistance physiology, Lipolysis physiology, Liver metabolism
- Abstract
Caloric restriction (CR) is one of the most important behavioral interventions to reduce excessive abdominal adiposity, which is a risk factor for the development of insulin resistance. Previous metabolomics studies have characterized substrate metabolism during healthy conditions; however, the effects of CR and subsequent mass recovery on shifts in substrate metabolism during insulin resistance (IR) have not been widely investigated. To assess the effects of acute CR and the subsequent mass recovery on shifts in substrate metabolism, a cohort of 15-week old Long Evans Tokushima Otsuka (LETO) and Otsuka Long Evans Tokushima Fatty (OLETF) rats were calorie restricted (CR: 50% × 10 days) with or without partial body mass recovery (PR; 73% x 7 days), along with their respective ad libitum controls. End-of-study plasma samples were analyzed for primary carbon metabolites by gas chromatography (GC) time-of-flight (TOF) mass spectrometry (MS) data acquisition. Data analysis included PCA, Pearson correlation vs previously reported variables (adipose and body masses, and insulin resistance index, IRI), and metabolomics maps (MetaMapp) generated for the most significant group comparisons. All treatments elicited a significant group differentiation in at least one principal component. CR improved TCA cycle in OLETF, and increased lipolysis and proteolysis. These changes were reversed after PR except for gluconeogenesis. Plasma lipid concentrations were inversely correlated to IRI in LETO, but not OLETF. These shifts in substrate metabolism suggest that the CR-induced decreases in adipose may not be sufficient to more permanently alter substrate metabolism to improve IR status during metabolic syndrome., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Chronic AT 1 blockade improves hyperglycemia by decreasing adipocyte inflammation and decreasing hepatic PCK1 and G6PC1 expression in obese rats.
- Author
-
Rodriguez R, Lee AY, Godoy-Lugo JA, Martinez B, Ohsaki H, Nakano D, Parkes DG, Nishiyama A, Vázquez-Medina JP, and Ortiz RM
- Subjects
- Adipocytes drug effects, Adipocytes metabolism, Adipocytes pathology, Adipose Tissue metabolism, Adipose Tissue pathology, Angiotensin II Type 1 Receptor Blockers therapeutic use, Animals, Gene Expression drug effects, Glucose-6-Phosphatase genetics, Glucose-6-Phosphatase metabolism, Imidazoles pharmacology, Imidazoles therapeutic use, Inflammation genetics, Inflammation metabolism, Inflammation pathology, Intracellular Signaling Peptides and Proteins genetics, Intracellular Signaling Peptides and Proteins metabolism, Liver metabolism, Male, Phosphoenolpyruvate Carboxykinase (GTP) genetics, Phosphoenolpyruvate Carboxykinase (GTP) metabolism, Rats, Rats, Inbred OLETF, Rats, Long-Evans, Receptor, Angiotensin, Type 1 metabolism, Tetrazoles pharmacology, Tetrazoles therapeutic use, Adipose Tissue drug effects, Angiotensin II Type 1 Receptor Blockers pharmacology, Inflammation prevention & control, Liver drug effects, Obesity complications, Obesity drug therapy, Obesity genetics, Obesity metabolism
- Abstract
Inappropriate activation of the renin-angiotensin system decreases glucose uptake in peripheral tissues. Chronic angiotensin receptor type 1 (AT
1 ) blockade (ARB) increases glucose uptake in skeletal muscle and decreases the abundance of large adipocytes and macrophage infiltration in adipose. However, the contributions of each tissue to the improvement in hyperglycemia in response to AT1 blockade are not known. Therefore, we determined the static and dynamic responses of soleus muscle, liver, and adipose to an acute glucose challenge following the chronic blockade of AT1 . We measured adipocyte morphology along with TNF-α expression, F4/80- and CD11c-positive cells in adipose and measured insulin receptor (IR) phosphorylation and AKT phosphorylation in soleus muscle, liver, and retroperitoneal fat before ( T0 ), 60 ( T60 ) and 120 ( T120 ) min after an acute glucose challenge in the following groups of male rats: 1 ) Long-Evans Tokushima Otsuka (LETO; lean control; n = 5/time point), 2 ) obese Otsuka Long Evans Tokushima Fatty (OLETF; n = 7 or 8/time point), and 3 ) OLETF + ARB (ARB; 10 mg olmesartan/kg/day; n = 7 or 8/time point). AT1 blockade decreased adipocyte TNF-α expression and F4/80- and CD11c-positive cells. In retroperitoneal fat at T60 , IR phosphorylation was 155% greater in ARB than in OLETF. Furthermore, in retroperitoneal fat AT1 blockade increased glucose transporter-4 (GLUT4) protein expression in ARB compared with OLETF. IR phosphorylation and AKT phosphorylation were not altered in the liver of OLETF, but AT1 blockade decreased hepatic Pck1 and G6pc1 mRNA expressions. Collectively, these results suggest that chronic AT1 blockade improves obesity-associated hyperglycemia in OLETF rats by improving adipocyte function and by decreasing hepatic glucose production via gluconeogenesis. NEW & NOTEWORTHY Inappropriate activation of the renin-angiotensin system increases adipocyte inflammation contributing to the impairment in adipocyte function and increases hepatic Pck1 and G6pc1 mRNA expression in response to a glucose challenge. Ultimately, these effects may contribute to the development of glucose intolerance.- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Mitofusin 2: A link between mitochondrial function and substrate metabolism?
- Author
-
Emery JM and Ortiz RM
- Subjects
- Animals, Energy Metabolism, GTP Phosphohydrolases genetics, Gene Expression Regulation physiology, Humans, Mitochondrial Proteins genetics, GTP Phosphohydrolases metabolism, Mitochondria metabolism, Mitochondrial Proteins metabolism
- Abstract
Mitochondria are dynamic, interactive organelles that connect cellular signaling and whole-cell homeostasis. This "mitochatting" allows the cell to receive information about the mitochondria's condition before accommodating energy demands. Mitofusin 2 (Mfn2), an outer mitochondrial membrane fusion protein specializes in mediating mitochondrial homeostasis. Early studies defined the biological significance of Mfn2, while latter studies highlighted its role in substrate metabolism. However, determining Mfn2 potential to contribute to energy homeostasis needs study. This review summarizes current literature on mitochondrial metabolic processes, dynamics, and evidence of interactions among Mfn2 and regulatory processes that may link Mfn2's role in maintaining mitochondrial function and substrate metabolism., (Copyright © 2021 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Direct Oral Anticoagulants for Venous Thromboembolism Prophylaxis Following Robot-assisted Radical Cystectomy: A Retrospective Feasibility Study at a Single Academic Medical Center.
- Author
-
Ortiz RM, Golijanin B, O'Rourke TK, Sobel DW, Pillsbury L, T Tucci C, Caffery P, and Golijanin D
- Subjects
- Anticoagulants administration & dosage, Anticoagulants adverse effects, Cystectomy methods, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Outcome and Process Assessment, Health Care, Retrospective Studies, Risk Adjustment methods, Robotic Surgical Procedures methods, Antithrombins administration & dosage, Antithrombins adverse effects, Chemoprevention adverse effects, Chemoprevention methods, Cystectomy adverse effects, Enoxaparin administration & dosage, Enoxaparin adverse effects, Hemorrhage chemically induced, Hemorrhage prevention & control, Hemorrhage therapy, Robotic Surgical Procedures adverse effects, Venous Thromboembolism diagnosis, Venous Thromboembolism etiology, Venous Thromboembolism prevention & control
- Abstract
Objectives: To evaluate the use of direct oral anticoagulants following radical cystectomy for venous thromboembolism prophylaxis. We compared the experience of those who received venous thromboembolism prophylaxis following a robot-assisted radical cystectomy with either a direct oral anticoagulant or enoxaparin., Methods: Medical records of 66 patients who underwent robot-assisted radical cystectomy between July 2017 and May 2020 at a single academic institution were reviewed retrospectively. Patients received extended prophylaxis with either a direct oral anticoagulant or enoxaparin before or following surgical discharge. Venous thromboembolic events and complications resulting in emergency department visits and readmissions were reviewed over a 90-day postoperative period., Results: A total of 4 venous thromboembolic events within 90 days of surgery were observed. Among patients taking enoxaparin, 5% (2/37) developed a deep vein thrombosis and 3% (1/37) developed a pulmonary embolism. Among patients taking direct oral anticoagulants, 3% (1/29) developed a deep vein thrombosis. Zero patients in the enoxaparin group and 3% (1/29) of patients in the direct oral anticoagulant group experienced bleeding that required an emergency department visit., Conclusion: Direct oral anticoagulants performed comparably to enoxaparin in this feasibility study following robot-assisted radical cystectomy in 66 patients. No significant differences in the number of venous thromboembolisms or bleeding complications were observed. These data encourage future studies and support the prospect of direct oral anticoagulants as a potentially suitable oral alternative to injectable low molecular weight heparins for venous thromboembolism prophylaxis following radical cystectomy., (Copyright © 2021. Published by Elsevier Inc.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Oxylipin responses to fasting and insulin infusion in a large mammalian model of fasting-induced insulin resistance, the northern elephant seal.
- Author
-
Wright DN, Katundu KGH, Viscarra JA, Crocker DE, Newman JW, La Frano MR, and Ortiz RM
- Subjects
- Animals, Biomarkers blood, Infusions, Parenteral, Fasting blood, Hypoglycemic Agents administration & dosage, Insulin administration & dosage, Insulin Resistance, Lipid Metabolism drug effects, Oxylipins blood, Seals, Earless blood
- Abstract
The prolonged, postweaning fast of northern elephant seal ( Mirounga angustirostris ) pups is characterized by a reliance on lipid metabolism and reversible, fasting-induced insulin resistance, providing a unique model to examine the effects of insulin on lipid metabolism. We have previously shown that acute insulin infusion induced a shift in fatty acid metabolism dependent on fasting duration. This study complements the previous study by examining the effects of fasting duration and insulin infusion on circulating levels of oxylipins, bioactive metabolites derived from the oxygenation of polyunsaturated fatty acids. Northern elephant seal pups were studied at two postweaning periods ( n = 5/period): early fasting (1-2 wk postweaning; 127 ± 1 kg) and late fasting (6-7 wk postweaning; 93 ± 4 kg). Different cohorts of pups were weighed, sedated, and infused with 65 mU/kg of insulin. Plasma was collected prior to infusion (T0) and at 10, 30, 60, and 120 min postinfusion. A profile of ∼80 oxylipins was analyzed by UPLC-ESI-MS/MS. Nine oxylipins changed between early and late fasting and eight were altered in response to insulin infusion. Fasting decreased prostaglandin F2α (PGF2α) and increased 14,15-dihydroxyicosatrienoic acid (14,15-DiHETrE), 20-hydroxyeicosatetraenoic acid (20-HETE), and 4-hydroxy-docosahexaenoic acid (4-HDoHE) ( P < 0.03) in T0 samples, whereas insulin infusion resulted in an inverse change in area-under-the-curve (AUC) levels in these same metabolites ( P < 0.05). In addition, 12-12-hydroperoxyeicosatetraenoic acid (HpETE) and 12-HETE decreased with fasting and insulin infusion, respectively ( P < 0.04). The oxylipins altered during fasting and in response to insulin infusion may contribute to the manifestation of insulin resistance and participate in the metabolic regulation of associated cellular processes.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Thyroid hormones and the potential for regulating glucose metabolism in cardiomyocytes during insulin resistance and T2DM.
- Author
-
Mendez DA and Ortiz RM
- Subjects
- Animals, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 physiopathology, Humans, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 metabolism, Glucose metabolism, Insulin Resistance, Myocytes, Cardiac metabolism, Thyroid Hormones metabolism
- Abstract
In order for the heart to maintain its continuous mechanical work and provide the systolic movement to uphold coronary blood flow, substantial synthesis of adenosine triphosphate (ATP) is required. Under normal conditions cardiac tissue utilizes roughly 70% fatty acids (FA), and 30% glucose for the production of ATP; however, during impaired metabolic conditions like insulin resistance and diabetes glucose metabolism is dysregulated and FA account for 99% of energy production. One of the major consequences of a shift in FA metabolism in cardiac tissue is an increase in reactive oxygen species (ROS) and lipotoxicity, which ultimately lead to mitochondrial dysfunction. Thyroid hormones (TH) have direct effects on cardiac function and glucose metabolism during impaired metabolic conditions suggesting that TH may improve glucose metabolism in an insulin resistant condition. None-classical TH signaling in the heart has shown to phosphorylate protein kinase B (Akt) and increase activity of phosphoinositide-3-kinase (PI3K), which are critical mediators in the insulin-stimulated glucose uptake pathway. Studies on peripheral tissues such as skeletal muscle and adipocytes have demonstrated TH treatment improved glucose intolerance in a diabetic model and increased insulin-regulated glucose transporter (GLUT4) mRNA levels. GLUT4 is a downstream target of thyroid response element (TRE), which demonstrates that THs regulate glucose via GLUT4. Elevated 3,5,3'-triiodothyronine (T3) increased glucose oxidation rate and decreased the glycolytic intermediate, fructose 6-phosphate (F6P) in cardiomyocytes, in addition to increasing mitochondrial biogenesis and pyruvate transport across the mitochondrial membrane. These findings along with a few other studies on T3 treatment in cardiac tissue suggest TH may improve glucose metabolism in an insulin resistant model and ameliorate the effects of diabetes and metabolic syndrome. This review highlights the potential benefits of exogenous TH on ameliorating metabolic dysfunction in the heart., (© 2021 The Authors. Physiological Reports published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of The Physiological Society and the American Physiological Society.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Desarmillaria caespitosa , a North American vicariant of D. tabescens .
- Author
-
Antonín V, Stewart JE, Ortiz RM, Kim MS, Bonello PE, Tomšovský M, and Klopfenstein NB
- Subjects
- DNA, Fungal genetics, DNA, Ribosomal genetics, North America, Phylogeny, Sequence Analysis, DNA, Spores, Fungal, Basidiomycota genetics, Peptide Elongation Factor 1 genetics
- Abstract
Desarmillaria caespitosa , a North American vicariant species of European D. tabescens , is redescribed in detail based on recent collections from the USA and Mexico. This species is characterized by morphological features and multilocus phylogenetic analyses using portions of nuc rDNA 28S (28S), translation elongation factor 1-alpha ( tef1 ), the second largest subunit of RNA polymerase II ( rpb2 ), actin ( act ), and glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase ( gpd ). A neotype of D. caespitosa is designated here. Morphological and genetic differences between D. caespitosa and D. tabescens were identified. Morphologically, D. caespitosa differs from D. tabescens by having wider basidiospores, narrower cheilocystidia, which are often irregular or mixed (regular, irregular, or coralloid), and narrower caulocystidia. Phylogenetic analyses of five independent gene regions show that D. caespitosa and D. tabescens are separated by nodes with strong support. The new combination, D. caespitosa , is proposed.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Multiethnic genome-wide association study of differentiated thyroid cancer in the EPITHYR consortium.
- Author
-
Truong T, Lesueur F, Sugier PE, Guibon J, Xhaard C, Karimi M, Kulkarni O, Lucotte EA, Bacq-Daian D, Boland-Auge A, Mulot C, Laurent-Puig P, Schvartz C, Guizard AV, Ren Y, Adjadj E, Rachédi F, Borson-Chazot F, Ortiz RM, Lence-Anta JJ, Pereda CM, Comiskey DF Jr, He H, Liyanarachchi S, de la Chapelle A, Elisei R, Gemignani F, Thomsen H, Forsti A, Herzig AF, Leutenegger AL, Rubino C, Ostroumova E, Kesminiene A, Boutron-Ruault MC, Deleuze JF, Guénel P, and de Vathaire F
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Case-Control Studies, Chromosomes, Human genetics, Female, Gene Frequency, Genetic Predisposition to Disease, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Pacific Islands ethnology, Thyroid Neoplasms genetics, Genome-Wide Association Study methods, Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander genetics, Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide, Thyroid Neoplasms ethnology, White People genetics
- Abstract
Incidence of differentiated thyroid carcinoma (DTC) varies considerably between ethnic groups, with particularly high incidence rates in Pacific Islanders. DTC is one of the cancers with the highest familial risk suggesting a major role of genetic risk factors, but only few susceptibility loci were identified so far. In order to assess the contribution of known DTC susceptibility loci and to identify new ones, we conducted a multiethnic genome-wide association study (GWAS) in individuals of European ancestry and of Oceanian ancestry from Pacific Islands. Our study included 1554 cases/1973 controls of European ancestry and 301 cases/348 controls of Oceanian ancestry from seven population-based case-control studies participating to the EPITHYR consortium. All participants were genotyped using the OncoArray-500K Beadchip (Illumina). We confirmed the association with the known DTC susceptibility loci at 2q35, 8p12, 9q22.33 and 14q13.3 in the European ancestry population and suggested two novel signals at 1p31.3 and 16q23.2, which were associated with thyroid-stimulating hormone levels in previous GWAS. We additionally replicated an association with 5p15.33 reported previously in Chinese and European populations. Except at 1p31.3, all associations were in the same direction in the population of Oceanian ancestry. We also observed that the frequencies of risk alleles at 2q35, 5p15.33 and 16q23.2 were significantly higher in Oceanians than in Europeans. However, additional GWAS and epidemiological studies in Oceanian populations are needed to fully understand the highest incidence observed in these populations., (© 2021 UICC.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Gene network and biological pathways associated with susceptibility to differentiated thyroid carcinoma.
- Author
-
Kulkarni O, Sugier PE, Guibon J, Boland-Augé A, Lonjou C, Bacq-Daian D, Olaso R, Rubino C, Souchard V, Rachedi F, Lence-Anta JJ, Ortiz RM, Xhaard C, Laurent-Puig P, Mulot C, Guizard AV, Schvartz C, Boutron-Ruault MC, Ostroumova E, Kesminiene A, Deleuze JF, Guénel P, De Vathaire F, Truong T, and Lesueur F
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Child, Child, Preschool, Female, Genome-Wide Association Study, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Male, Middle Aged, Gene Regulatory Networks, Genetic Predisposition to Disease, Genotype, Neoplasm Proteins genetics, Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide, Thyroid Neoplasms genetics
- Abstract
Variants identified in earlier genome-wide association studies (GWAS) on differentiated thyroid carcinoma (DTC) explain about 10% of the overall estimated genetic contribution and could not provide complete insights into biological mechanisms involved in DTC susceptibility. Integrating systems biology information from model organisms, genome-wide expression data from tumor and matched normal tissue and GWAS data could help identifying DTC-associated genes, and pathways or functional networks in which they are involved. We performed data mining of GWAS data of the EPITHYR consortium (1551 cases and 1957 controls) using various pathways and protein-protein interaction (PPI) annotation databases and gene expression data from The Cancer Genome Atlas. We identified eight DTC-associated genes at known loci 2q35 (DIRC3), 8p12 (NRG1), 9q22 (FOXE1, TRMO, HEMGN, ANP32B, NANS) and 14q13 (MBIP). Using the EW_dmGWAS approach we found that gene networks related to glycogenolysis, glycogen metabolism, insulin metabolism and signal transduction pathways associated with muscle contraction were overrepresented with association signals (false discovery rate adjusted p-value < 0.05). Additionally, suggestive association of 21 KEGG and 75 REACTOME pathways with DTC indicate a link between DTC susceptibility and functions related to metabolism of cholesterol, amino sugar and nucleotide sugar metabolism, steroid biosynthesis, and downregulation of ERBB2 signaling pathways. Together, our results provide novel insights into biological mechanisms contributing to DTC risk.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Exogenous GLP-1 stimulates TCA cycle and suppresses gluconeogenesis and ketogenesis in late-fasted northern elephant seals pups.
- Author
-
Dhillon J, Viscarra JA, Newman JW, Fiehn O, Crocker DE, and Ortiz RM
- Subjects
- Animals, Biomarkers blood, Blood Glucose metabolism, Dose-Response Relationship, Drug, Fasting blood, Infusions, Intravenous, Male, Metabolome, Metabolomics, Seals, Earless blood, Time Factors, Weaning, Blood Glucose drug effects, Citric Acid Cycle drug effects, Glucagon-Like Peptide 1 administration & dosage, Gluconeogenesis drug effects, Ketone Bodies metabolism, Seals, Earless metabolism
- Abstract
The postweaning fast of northern elephant seal pups is characterized by a lipid-dependent metabolism and associated with a decrease in plasma glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1), insulin, and glucose and increased gluconeogenesis (GNG) and ketogenesis. We have also demonstrated that exogenous GLP-1 infusion increased plasma insulin despite simultaneous increases in cortisol and glucagon, which collectively present contradictory regulatory stimuli of GNG, ketogenesis, and glycolysis. To assess the effects of GLP-1 on metabolism using primary carbon metabolite profiles in late-fasted seal pups, we dose-dependently infused late-fasted seals with low (LDG; 10 pM/kg; n = 3) or high (HDG; 100 pM/kg; n = 4) GLP-1 immediately following a glucose bolus (0.5 g/kg), using glucose without GLP-1 as control ( n = 5). Infusions were performed in similarly aged animals 6-8 wk into their postweaning fast. The plasma metabolome was measured from samples collected at five time points just prior to and during the infusions, and network maps constructed to robustly evaluate the effects of GLP-1 on primary carbon metabolism. HDG increased key tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle metabolites, and decreased phosphoenolpyruvate and acetoacetate ( P < 0.05) suggesting that elevated levels of GLP-1 promote glycolysis and suppress GNG and ketogenesis, which collectively increase glucose clearance. These GLP-1-mediated effects on cellular metabolism help to explain why plasma GLP-1 concentrations decrease naturally in fasting pups as an evolved mechanism to help conserve glucose during the late-fasting period.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Fine-mapping of two differentiated thyroid carcinoma susceptibility loci at 2q35 and 8p12 in Europeans, Melanesians and Polynesians.
- Author
-
Guibon J, Sugier PE, Kulkarni O, Karimi M, Bacq-Daian D, Besse C, Boland A, Adjadj E, Rachédi F, Rubino C, Xhaard C, Mulot C, Laurent-Puig P, Guizard AV, Schvartz C, Ortiz RM, Ren Y, Ostroumova E, Deleuze JF, Boutron-Ruault MC, Kesminiene A, De Vathaire F, Guénel P, Lesueur F, and Truong T
- Abstract
Differentiated thyroid carcinoma (DTC) incidence is characterized by wide ethnic and geographic variations, with high incidence rates observed in Oceanian populations. Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) identified mainly four DTC susceptibility loci at 9q22.33, 14q13.3, 2q35 and 8p12. Here we performed fine-mapping of the 2q35 and 8p12 loci in the population of the EPITHYR consortium that includes Europeans, Melanesians and Polynesians to identify likely causal variants for DTC risk. We conducted a colocalization analysis using eQTLs data to determine the SNPs with the highest probability of causality. At 2q35, we highlighted rs16857609 located in DIRC3 . This SNP has a high probability of causality in the three populations, and a significant association in Europeans (OR = 1.4, p = 1.9 x 10
-10 ). It is also associated with expression of DIRC3 and of the nearby gene IGFBP5 in thyroid tumour cells. At 8p12, we identified rs7844425 which was significantly associated with DTC in Europeans (OR = 1.32, p = 7.6 x 10-8 ) and rs2439304, which was highlighted by the colocalization analysis but only moderately associated with DTC in our dataset (OR = 1.2, p = 0.001). These SNPs are linked to the expression of NRG1 in thyroid tissue. Hence, our study identified novel variants at 2q35 and 8p12 to be prioritized for further functional studies., Competing Interests: CONFLICTS OF INTEREST Authors have no conflicts of interest to declare., (Copyright: © 2021 Guibon et al.)- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Partial Body Mass Recovery After Caloric Restriction Abolishes Improved Glucose Tolerance in Obese, Insulin Resistant Rats.
- Author
-
Cornejo MA, Nguyen J, Cazares J, Escobedo B, Nishiyama A, Nakano D, and Ortiz RM
- Subjects
- Animals, Blood Pressure, Gluconeogenesis, Glucose Tolerance Test, Kidney metabolism, Liver metabolism, Male, Obesity blood, Obesity physiopathology, Rats, Long-Evans, Sodium-Glucose Transporter 2 metabolism, Body Weight, Caloric Restriction, Insulin Resistance, Obesity metabolism
- Abstract
Caloric restriction, among other behavioral interventions, has demonstrated benefits on improving glycemic control in obesity-associated diabetic subjects. However, an acute and severe intervention without proper maintenance could reverse the initial benefits, with additional metabolic derangements. To assess the effects of an acute caloric restriction in a metabolic syndrome model, a cohort of 15-week old Long Evans Tokushima Otsuka (LETO) and Otsuka Long Evans Tokushima Fatty (OLETF) rats were calorie restricted (CR: 50% × 10 days) with or without a 10-day body mass (BM) recovery period, along with their respective ad libitum controls. An oral glucose tolerance test (oGTT) was performed after CR and BM recovery. Both strains had higher rates of mass gain during recovery vs. ad lib controls; however, the regain was partial (ca. 50% of ad lib controls) over the measurement period. Retroperitoneal and epididymal adipose masses decreased 30% (8.8 g, P < 0.001) in OLETF; however, this loss only accounted for 11.5% of the total BM loss. CR decreased blood glucose AUC 16% in LETO and 19% in OLETF, without significant decreases in insulin. Following CR, hepatic expression of the gluconeogenic enzyme, PEPCK, was reduced 55% in OLETF compared to LETO, and plasma triglycerides (TG) decreased 86%. Acute CR induced improvements in glucose tolerance and TG suggestive of improvements in metabolism; however, partial recovery of BM following CR abolished the improvement in glucose tolerance. The present study highlights the importance of proper maintenance of BM after CR as only partial recovery of the lost BM reversed benefits of the initial mass loss., (Copyright © 2020 Cornejo, Nguyen, Cazares, Escobedo, Nishiyama, Nakano and Ortiz.)
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Simultaneous angiotensin receptor blockade and glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor activation ameliorate albuminuria in obese insulin-resistant rats.
- Author
-
Rodriguez R, Escobedo B, Lee AY, Thorwald M, Godoy-Lugo JA, Nakano D, Nishiyama A, Parkes DG, and Ortiz RM
- Subjects
- Albuminuria drug therapy, Animals, Exenatide administration & dosage, Glucagon-Like Peptide-1 Receptor agonists, Male, Obesity drug therapy, Rats, Rats, Inbred OLETF, Rats, Long-Evans, Albuminuria metabolism, Angiotensin II Type 1 Receptor Blockers administration & dosage, Anti-Obesity Agents administration & dosage, Glucagon-Like Peptide-1 Receptor metabolism, Insulin Resistance physiology, Obesity metabolism
- Abstract
Insulin resistance increases renal oxidant production by upregulating NADPH oxidase 4 (Nox4) expression contributing to oxidative damage and ultimately albuminuria. Inhibition of the renin-angiotensin system (RAS) and activation of glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) receptor signalling may reverse this effect. However, whether angiotensin receptor type 1 (AT1) blockade and GLP-1 receptor activation improve oxidative damage and albuminuria through different mechanisms is not known. Using insulin-resistant Otsuka Long-Evans Tokushima Fatty (OLETF) rats, we tested the hypothesis that simultaneous blockade of AT1 and activation of GLP-1r additively decrease oxidative damage and urinary albumin excretion (U
alb V) in the following groups: (a) untreated, lean LETO (n = 7), (b) untreated, obese OLETF (n = 9), (c) OLETF + angiotensin receptor blocker (ARB; 10 mg olmesartan/kg/d; n = 9), (d) OLETF + GLP-1 mimetic (EXE; 10 µg exenatide/kg/d; n = 7) and (e) OLETF + ARB +exenatide (Combo; n = 6). Mean kidney Nox4 protein expression and nitrotyrosine (NT) levels were 30% and 46% greater, respectively, in OLETF compared with LETO. Conversely, Nox4 protein expression and NT were reduced to LETO levels in ARB and EXE, and Combo reduced Nox4, NT and 4-hydroxy-2-nonenal levels by 21%, 27% and 27%, respectively. At baseline, Ualb V was nearly double in OLETF compared with LETO and increased to nearly 10-fold greater levels by the end of the study. Whereas ARB (45%) and EXE (55%) individually reduced Ualb V, the combination completely ameliorated the albuminuria. Collectively, these data suggest that AT1 blockade and GLP-1 receptor activation reduce renal oxidative damage similarly during insulin resistance, whereas targeting both signalling pathways provides added benefit in restoring and/or further ameliorating albuminuria in a model of diet-induced obesity., (© 2019 John Wiley & Sons Australia, Ltd.)- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Comorbidity and retirement in cervical dystonia.
- Author
-
Ortiz RM, Scheperjans F, Mertsalmi T, and Pekkonen E
- Subjects
- Aged, Anxiety Disorders diagnosis, Anxiety Disorders epidemiology, Anxiety Disorders psychology, Comorbidity, Depressive Disorder diagnosis, Depressive Disorder epidemiology, Depressive Disorder psychology, Female, Finland epidemiology, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Registries, Torticollis diagnosis, Retirement psychology, Retirement trends, Torticollis epidemiology, Torticollis psychology
- Abstract
Background: Cervical dystonia (CD) is the most common form of dystonia. The onset of CD is usually before 60 years of age and it may cause severe functional and psychosocial impairment in everyday life. Recently non-motor symptoms have been reported to occur in CD substantially affecting the quality of life., Methods/patients: We studied comorbidities of patients with primary focal CD in Finland based on ICD-10 codes obtained from the care registry and patient records of 937 confirmed adult isolated focal CD patients between the years 2007-2016. The retirement months and diagnosis of retirement were calculated from pension registry information. The results were compared with 3746 age and gender-matched controls., Results: Most prominent comorbidities with primary focal CD were depression (14%), anxiety (7%), and back pain (11%). The retirement age was significantly younger in CD patients compared to control group controls (59.0 years, 95% CI 58.5-59.5 vs. 61.7 years, 95% CI 61.6-61.9) years, p < 0.001). For dystonia patients the most common diagnoses for retirement due to sickness were dystonia (51%), depression (14%), and anxiety (8%). Patients with anxiety and depression retired earlier than other dystonia patients., Discussion: Cervical dystonia considerably reduces working ability and leads to earlier retirement. Anxiety and depression are most notable comorbidities and their co-occurrence further reduces working ability. Our results suggest that more health care resources should be administered in treatment of CD to longer maintain working ability of CD patients. Further, psychiatric comorbidities should be taken into consideration in CD treatment.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Almond Snacking for 8 wk Increases Alpha-Diversity of the Gastrointestinal Microbiome and Decreases Bacteroides fragilis Abundance Compared with an Isocaloric Snack in College Freshmen.
- Author
-
Dhillon J, Li Z, and Ortiz RM
- Abstract
Background: Changes in gut microbiota are associated with cardiometabolic disorders and are influenced by diet. Almonds are a rich source of fiber, unsaturated fats, and polyphenols, all nutrients that can favorably alter the gut microbiome., Objectives: The aim of this study was to examine the effects of 8 wk of almond snacking on the gut (fecal) microbiome diversity and abundance compared with an isocaloric snack of graham crackers in college freshmen., Methods: A randomized, controlled, parallel-arm, 8-wk intervention in 73 college freshmen (age: 18-19 y; 41 women and 32 men; BMI: 18-41 kg/m
2 ) with no cardiometabolic disorders was conducted. Participants were randomly allocated to either an almond snack group (56.7 g/d; 364 kcal; n = 38) or graham cracker control group (77.5 g/d; 338 kcal/d; n = 35). Stool samples were collected at baseline and 8 wk after the intervention to assess primary microbiome outcomes, that is, gut microbiome diversity and abundance., Results: Almond snacking resulted in 3% greater quantitative alpha-diversity (Shannon index) and 8% greater qualitative alpha-diversity (Chao1 index) than the cracker group after the intervention ( P < 0.05). Moreover, almond snacking for 8 wk decreased the abundance of the pathogenic bacterium Bacteroides fragilis by 48% (overall relative abundance, P < 0.05). Permutational multivariate ANOVA showed significant time effects for the unweighted UniFrac distance and Bray-Curtis beta-diversity methods ( P < 0.05; R2 ≤ 3.1%). The dietary and clinical variables that best correlated with the underlying bacterial community structure at week 8 of the intervention included dietary carbohydrate (percentage energy), dietary fiber (g), and fasting total and HDL cholesterol (model Spearman rho = 0.16; P = 0.01)., Conclusions: Almond snacking for 8 wk improved alpha-diversity compared with cracker snacking. Incorporating a morning snack in the dietary regimen of predominantly breakfast-skipping college freshmen improved the diversity and composition of the gut microbiome. This trial was registered at clinicaltrials.gov as NCT03084003.- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Deep brain stimulation for dystonia in Finland during 2007-2016.
- Author
-
Ortiz RM, Scheperjans F, and Pekkonen E
- Subjects
- Adult, Deep Brain Stimulation adverse effects, Female, Finland, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Retrospective Studies, Treatment Outcome, Young Adult, Deep Brain Stimulation statistics & numerical data, Dystonic Disorders therapy
- Abstract
Background: Dystonia is a movement disorder substantially affecting the quality of life and the ability to work. A proportion of patients does not respond to first line pharmacotherapy. Deep brain stimulation (DBS) is established as a primary operative treatment option for severe drug resistant dystonia. We studied dystonia patients treated with DBS in Finland between the years 2007-2016 to evaluate the use and outcomes of DBS treatment., Methods: We analysed the hospital records of dystonia patients, who underwent DBS operation during 2007-2016 in Finland. The clinical and technical parameters were recorded as well as preoperative assessments and treatments. The response to DBS was evaluated retrospectively using the Global Dystonia Rating Scale (GDS)., Results: Out of 585 dB implantations during the study period, 37 were done for dystonia. The clinical response improved significantly with time in the isolated focal dystonia group, and at 12 months, 22 of 32 patients had over 50% alleviation of the GDS score. There was only one subclinical intracerebral haemorrhage, and four infections leading to revision. Speech impairment and limb coordination problems were common stimulation- related adverse events and were mostly resolved or relieved with the adjustment of stimulation parameters., Conclusions: DBS seems to be beneficial in dystonia. Although DBS is indicated for dystonia in Finland, the number of operations did not increase at the same rate as DBS operations in general. DBS appears to be a safe and effective treatment for focal as well as generalized dystonia.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. We Don't Have a Lot of Healthy Options: Food Environment Perceptions of First-Year, Minority College Students Attending a Food Desert Campus.
- Author
-
Dhillon J, Diaz Rios LK, Aldaz KJ, De La Cruz N, Vu E, Asad Asghar S, Kuse Q, and Ortiz RM
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Asian People, Choice Behavior, Costs and Cost Analysis, Diet, Diet, Healthy statistics & numerical data, Focus Groups, Food economics, Hispanic or Latino, Humans, Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander, Perception, Environment, Food Preferences, Food Quality, Minority Groups psychology, Students, Universities
- Abstract
First-year college students are at particular risk of dietary maladaptation during their transition to adulthood. A college environment that facilitates consistent access to nutritious food is critical to ensuring dietary adequacy among students. The objective of the study was to examine perceptions of the campus food environment and its influence on the eating choices of first-year students attending a minority-serving university located in a food desert. Focus group interviews with twenty-one first-year students were conducted from November 2016 to January 2017. Students participated in 1 of 5 focus groups. Most interviewees identified as being of Hispanic/Latino or Asian/Pacific Islander origin. A grounded theory approach was applied for inductive identification of relevant concepts and deductive interpretation of patterns and relationships among themes. Themes related to the perceived food environment included adequacy (i.e., variety and quality), acceptability (i.e., familiarity and preferences), affordability, and accessibility (i.e., convenience and accommodation). Subjective norms and processes of decisional balance and agency were themes characterizing interpersonal and personal factors affecting students' eating choices. The perceived environment appeared to closely interact with subjective norms to inform internal processes of decision-making and agency around the eating choices of first-year students attending a minority-serving university campus located in a food desert.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Nrf2-related gene expression is impaired during a glucose challenge in type II diabetic rat hearts.
- Author
-
Thorwald MA, Godoy-Lugo JA, Rodriguez GJ, Rodriguez MA, Jamal M, Kinoshita H, Nakano D, Nishiyama A, Forman HJ, and Ortiz RM
- Subjects
- Animals, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 metabolism, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 pathology, Gene Expression Regulation drug effects, Glucose metabolism, Glutathione biosynthesis, Heart drug effects, Humans, Insulin Resistance genetics, Oxidants pharmacology, Oxidative Stress genetics, Rats, Renin-Angiotensin System drug effects, Signal Transduction drug effects, Angiotensin II Type 1 Receptor Blockers pharmacology, Antioxidants pharmacology, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 genetics, NF-E2-Related Factor 2 genetics, Receptor, Angiotensin, Type 1 genetics
- Abstract
Diabetic hearts are susceptible to damage from inappropriate activation of the renin angiotensin system (RAS) and hyperglycemic events both of which contribute to increased oxidant production. Prolonged elevation of oxidants impairs mitochondrial enzyme function, further contributing to metabolic derangement. Nuclear factor erythriod-2-related factor 2 (Nrf2) induces antioxidant genes including those for glutathione (GSH) synthesis following translocation to the nucleus. We hypothesized that an acute elevation in glucose impairs Nrf2-related gene expression in diabetic hearts, while AT1 antagonism would aid in Nrf2-mediated antioxidant production and energy replenishment. We used four groups (n = 6-8/group) of 25-week-old rats: 1) LETO (lean strain-control), 2) type II diabetic OLETF, 3) OLETF + angiotensin receptor blocker (ARB; 10 mg olmesartan/kg/d × 8 wks), and 4) ARBM (4 weeks on ARB, 4 weeks off) to study the effects of acutely elevated glucose on cardiac mitochondrial function and Nrf2 signaling in the diabetic heart. Animals were gavaged with a glucose bolus (2 g/kg) and groups were dissected at T0, T180, and T360 minutes. Nrf2 mRNA was 32% lower in OLETF rats compared to LETO and remained suppressed in response to glucose. LETO Nrf2 mRNA increased 25% at T360 in response to glucose while no changes were observed in diabetic hearts. GCLC and GCLM mRNA decreased in diabetic hearts 33% and 44% respectively and remained suppressed in response to glucose while ARB treatment increased GCLM transcripts 90% at T180. These data illustrate that during T2DM and in response to glucose, cardiac Nrf2's adaptive response to environmental stressors such as glucose is impaired in diabetic hearts and that ARB treatment may aid Nrf2's impaired dynamic response., (Copyright © 2018 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Generation of cancer vaccine immunogens derived from major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I molecules using variable epitope libraries.
- Author
-
Servín-Blanco R, Chávaro-Ortiz RM, Zamora-Alvarado R, Martínez-Cortes F, Gevorkian G, and Manoutcharian K
- Subjects
- Animals, Cancer Vaccines genetics, Cell Proliferation, Disease Models, Animal, Epitopes genetics, Female, Gene Library, Humans, Immunity, Mice, Neoplasms genetics, Neoplasms immunology, Neoplasms metabolism, T-Lymphocytes, Cytotoxic immunology, T-Lymphocytes, Cytotoxic metabolism, Vaccination, Cancer Vaccines immunology, Epitopes immunology, Histocompatibility Antigens Class I genetics, Histocompatibility Antigens Class I immunology
- Abstract
Although various immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs), used for the treatment of advanced cancer, showed remarkably durable tumor regression in a subset of patients, there are important limitations in a large group of non-responders, and the generation of novel immunogens capable of inducing protective cellular immune responses is a priority in cancer immunotherapy field. During the last decades, several types of vaccine immunogens have been used in numerous preclinical studies and clinical trials. However, although immunity to tumor Ags can be elicited by most vaccines tested, their clinical efficacy remains modest. Recently, we have developed an innovative vaccine concept, called Variable Epitope Libraries (VELs), with the purpose to exploit the high antigenic variability of many important pathogens and tumor cells as starting points for the construction of a new class of vaccine immunogens capable of inducing the largest possible repertoire of both B and T cells. In the present study, we decided to generate VEL immunogens derived from both classical and non-classical major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I molecules. The MHC molecules, responsible for antigen presentation and subsequent activation of T lymphocytes, undergo multiple modifications that directly affect their proper function, resulting in immune escape of tumor cells. Two large VELs derived from multi-epitope region of H2-Kd and Qa-2 sequences (46 and 34 amino acids long, respectively), along with their wild type counterparts have been generated as synthetic peptides and tested in an aggressive 4T1 mouse model of breast cancer. Significant inhibition of tumor growth and the reduction of metastatic lesions in the lungs of immunized mice were observed. This study demonstrated for the first time the successful application of VELs carrying combinatorial libraries of epitope variants derived from MHC class I molecules as novel vaccine immunogens., (Copyright © 2018 European Federation of Immunological Societies. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Silencing of HIF-1 in WSSV-infected white shrimp: Effect on viral load and antioxidant enzymes.
- Author
-
Miranda-Cruz MM, Poom-Llamas JJ, Godoy-Lugo JA, Ortiz RM, Gómez-Jiménez S, Rosas-Rodríguez JA, Morán-Palacio EF, and Soñanez-Organis JG
- Subjects
- Animals, Aquaculture, DNA, Viral isolation & purification, Gene Silencing, Hepatopancreas growth & development, Hepatopancreas metabolism, Hepatopancreas virology, Hypoxia-Inducible Factor 1, alpha Subunit genetics, Hypoxia-Inducible Factor 1, alpha Subunit metabolism, Injections, Intramuscular, Lipid Peroxidation, Mexico, Muscles metabolism, Muscles virology, Organ Specificity, Oxidative Stress, Oxidoreductases genetics, Oxidoreductases metabolism, Penaeidae growth & development, Penaeidae metabolism, Protein Carbonylation, RNA Interference, RNA, Double-Stranded administration & dosage, RNA, Double-Stranded metabolism, Viral Load, White spot syndrome virus 1 isolation & purification, White spot syndrome virus 1 physiology, Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental, Hypoxia-Inducible Factor 1, alpha Subunit antagonists & inhibitors, Penaeidae virology, White spot syndrome virus 1 pathogenicity
- Abstract
Hypoxia inducible factor-1 (HIF-1) is a transcriptional factor that induces genes involved in glucose metabolism. HIF-1 is formed by a regulatory α-subunit (HIF-1α) and a constitutive β-subunit (HIF-1β). The white spot syndrome virus (WSSV) induces a shift in glucose metabolism and oxidative stress. HIF-1α is associated with the induction of metabolic changes in tissues of WSSV-infected shrimp. However, the contributions of HIF-1 to viral load and antioxidant responses in WSSV-infected shrimp have been not examined. In this study, the effect of HIF-1 silencing on viral load and the expression and activity of antioxidant enzymes (superoxide dismutase-SOD, glutathione S-transferase-GST, and catalase) along with oxidative damage (lipid peroxidation and protein carbonyl) in tissues of white shrimp infected with the WSSV were studied. The viral load increased in hepatopancreas and muscle after WSSV infection, and the accumulative mortality was of 100% at 72 h post-infection. The expression and activity of SOD, catalase, and GST decreased in each tissue evaluated after WSSV infection. Protein carbonyl concentrations increased in each tissue after WSSV infection, while lipid peroxidation increased in hepatopancreas, but not in muscle. Silencing of HIF-1α decreased the WSSV viral load in hepatopancreas and muscle of infected shrimp along with shrimp mortality. Silencing of HIF-1α ameliorated the antioxidant response in a tissue-specific manner, which translated to a decrease in oxidative damage. These results suggest that HIF-1 is essential for restoring the antioxidant response, which counters the oxidative injury associated with WSSV infection., (Copyright © 2018 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Simultaneous GLP-1 receptor activation and angiotensin receptor blockade increase natriuresis independent of altered arterial pressure in obese OLETF rats.
- Author
-
Rodriguez R, Moreno M, Lee AY, Godoy-Lugo JA, Nakano D, Nishiyama A, Parkes D, Awayda MS, and Ortiz RM
- Subjects
- Animals, Arterial Pressure physiology, Exenatide pharmacology, Heart Rate drug effects, Heart Rate physiology, Rats, Rats, Inbred OLETF, Rats, Long-Evans, Angiotensin II Type 1 Receptor Blockers pharmacology, Arterial Pressure drug effects, Glucagon-Like Peptide-1 Receptor agonists, Natriuresis drug effects, Obesity physiopathology
- Abstract
Obesity is associated with an inappropriately activated renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system, suppressed glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1), increased renal Na
+ reabsorption, and hypertension. To assess the link between GLP-1 and angiotensin receptor type 1 (AT1 ) signaling on obesity-associated impairment of urinary Na+ excretion (UNa V) and elevated arterial pressure, we measured mean arterial pressure (MAP) and heart rate by radiotelemetry and metabolic parameters for 40 days. We tested the hypothesis that stimulation of GLP-1 signaling provides added benefit to blockade of AT1 by increasing UNa V and further reducing arterial pressure in the following groups: (1) untreated Long-Evans Tokushima Otsuka (LETO) rats (n = 7); (2) untreated Otsuka Long-Evans Tokushima Fatty (OLETF) rats (n = 9); (3) OLETF + ARB (ARB; 10 mg olmesartan/kg/day; n = 9); (4) OLETF + GLP-1 receptor agonist (EXE; 10 µg exenatide/kg/day; n = 7); and (5) OLETF + ARB + EXE (Combo; n = 6). On day 2, UNa V was 60% and 62% reduced in the EXE and Combo groups, respectively, compared with that in the OLETF rats. On day 40, UNa V was increased 69% in the Combo group compared with that in the OLETF group. On day 40, urinary angiotensinogen was 4.5-fold greater in the OLETF than in the LETO group and was 56%, 62%, and 58% lower in the ARB, EXE, and Combo groups, respectively, than in the OLETF group. From day 2 to the end of the study, MAP was lower in the ARB and Combo groups than in the OLETF rats. These results suggest that GLP-1 receptor activation may reduce intrarenal angiotensin II activity, and that simultaneous blockade of AT1 increases UNa V in obesity; however, these beneficial effects do not translate to a further reduction in MAP.- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Angiotensin receptor and tumor necrosis factor-α activation contributes to glucose intolerance independent of systolic blood pressure in obese rats.
- Author
-
Rodriguez R, Lee A, Mathis KW, Broome HJ, Thorwald M, Martinez B, Nakano D, Nishiyama A, Ryan MJ, and Ortiz RM
- Subjects
- Angiotensin Receptor Antagonists pharmacology, Animals, Blood Glucose metabolism, Hypertension metabolism, Insulin Resistance physiology, Male, Metabolic Syndrome drug therapy, Metabolic Syndrome metabolism, Rats, Long-Evans, Renin-Angiotensin System drug effects, Blood Pressure drug effects, Glucose Intolerance metabolism, Obesity metabolism, Receptor, Angiotensin, Type 1 metabolism, Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha metabolism
- Abstract
Pathological activation of the renin-angiotensin system and inflammation are associated with hypertension and the development of metabolic syndrome (MetS). The contributions of angiotensin receptor type 1 (AT1) activation, independent of blood pressure, and inflammation to glucose intolerance and renal damage are not well defined. Using a rat model of MetS, we hypothesized that the onset of glucose intolerance is primarily mediated by AT1 activation and inflammation independent of elevated systolic blood pressure (SBP). To address this hypothesis, we measured changes in SBP, adiposity, plasma glucose and triglyceride levels, and glucose tolerance in six groups of rats: 1) lean, strain control Long-Evans Tokushima Otsuka (LETO; n = 5), 2) obese Otsuka Long-Evans Tokushima Fatty (OLETF; n = 8), 3) OLETF + angiotensin receptor blocker (ARB; 10 mg olmesartan/kg; n = 8), 4) OLETF + tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF-α) inhibitor (ETAN; 1.25 mg etanercept/kg; n = 6), 5) OLETF + TNF-α inhibitor + angiotensin receptor blocker (ETAN+ARB; 1.25 mg etanercept/kg + 10 mg olmesartan/kg; n = 6), and 6) OLETF + calcium channel blocker (CCB; 5 mg amlodipine/kg; n = 7). ARB and ETAN+ARB were most effective at decreasing SBP in OLETF, and ETAN did not offer any additional reduction. Glucose tolerance improved in ARB, ETAN, and ETAN+ARB compared with OLETF, whereas CCB had no detectable effect. Furthermore, all treatments reduced adiposity, whereas ETAN alone normalized urinary albumin excretion. These results suggest that AT1 activation and inflammation are primary factors in the development of glucose intolerance in a setting of MetS and that the associated increase in SBP is primarily mediated by AT1 activation.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Glucoregulatory and Cardiometabolic Profiles of Almond vs. Cracker Snacking for 8 Weeks in Young Adults: A Randomized Controlled Trial.
- Author
-
Dhillon J, Thorwald M, De La Cruz N, Vu E, Asghar SA, Kuse Q, Diaz Rios LK, and Ortiz RM
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Animals, Area Under Curve, C-Peptide blood, Female, Glucose metabolism, Glucose Tolerance Test, Humans, Insulin blood, Male, Nutritional Status, Young Adult, Blood Glucose metabolism, Prunus dulcis, Snacks
- Abstract
The transition to nutritional independence makes new college students vulnerable to alterations in eating patterns, which can increase the risk of cardiometabolic disorders. The aim of the study was to examine the potential benefits of almond vs. cracker snacking in improving glucoregulatory and cardiometabolic profiles in new college students. A randomized controlled, parallel-arm, 8-week intervention of 73 college students (BMI: 18⁻41 kg/m²) with no cardiometabolic disorders was conducted. Participants were randomized into either an almond snack group (56.7 g/day; 364 kcal; n = 38) or Graham cracker control group (77.5 g/day; 338 kcal/d; n = 35). Chronic, static changes were assessed from fasting serum/plasma samples at baseline, and after 4 and 8 weeks. Acute, dynamic effects were assessed during a 2-h oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) at 8 weeks. Almond snacking resulted in a smaller decline in HDL cholesterol over 8 weeks (13.5% vs. 24.5%, p < 0.05), 13% lower 2-h glucose area under the curve (AUC), 34% lower insulin resistance index (IRI) and 82% higher Matsuda index ( p < 0.05) during the OGTT, despite similar body mass gains over 8 weeks compared with the cracker group. In general, both almond and cracker snacking reduced fasting glucose, and LDL cholesterol., Conclusions: Incorporating a morning snack in the dietary regimen of predominantly breakfast-skipping, first-year college students had some beneficial effects on glucoregulatory and cardiometabolic health. Almond consumption has the potential to benefit postprandial glucoregulation in this cohort. These responses may be influenced by cardiometabolic risk factor status.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Adipose transcriptome analysis provides novel insights into molecular regulation of prolonged fasting in northern elephant seal pups.
- Author
-
Martinez B, Khudyakov J, Rutherford K, Crocker DE, Gemmell N, and Ortiz RM
- Subjects
- Adiposity genetics, Animals, Carbohydrate Metabolism genetics, Energy Metabolism genetics, Fasting, Lipid Metabolism genetics, Proteome genetics, Seals, Earless metabolism, Weaning, Adipose Tissue metabolism, Gene Expression Profiling, Seals, Earless genetics, Transcriptome
- Abstract
The physiological and cellular adaptations to extreme fasting in northern elephant seals ( Mirounga angustirostris, NES) are remarkable and may help to elucidate endocrine mechanisms that regulate lipid metabolism and energy homeostasis in mammals. Recent studies have highlighted the importance of thyroid hormones in the maintenance of a lipid-based metabolism during prolonged fasting in weaned NES pups. To identify additional molecular regulators of fasting, we used a transcriptomics approach to examine changes in global gene expression profiles before and after 6-8 wk of fasting in weaned NES pups. We produced a de novo assembly and identified 98 unique protein-coding genes that were differentially expressed between early and late fasting. Most of the downregulated genes were associated with lipid, carbohydrate, and protein metabolism. A number of downregulated genes were also associated with maintenance of the extracellular matrix, consistent with tissue remodeling during weight loss and the multifunctional nature of blubber tissue, which plays both metabolic and structural roles in marine mammals. Using this data set, we predict potential mechanisms by which NES pups sustain metabolism and regulate adipose stores throughout the fast, and provide a valuable resource for additional studies of extreme metabolic adaptations in mammals.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Chronic AT1 blockade improves glucose homeostasis in obese OLETF rats.
- Author
-
Rodriguez R, Minas JN, Vazquez-Medina JP, Nakano D, Parkes DG, Nishiyama A, and Ortiz RM
- Subjects
- Adipocytes, Adipose Tissue drug effects, Adipose Tissue metabolism, Adipose Tissue pathology, Angiotensin II Type 1 Receptor Blockers administration & dosage, Animals, Blood Glucose drug effects, Blood Glucose metabolism, Drug Administration Schedule, Glucose Intolerance metabolism, Glucose Intolerance pathology, Glucose Intolerance prevention & control, Glucose Tolerance Test, Homeostasis drug effects, Hyperglycemia metabolism, Hyperglycemia pathology, Hyperglycemia prevention & control, Hypertension complications, Hypertension drug therapy, Hypertension metabolism, Imidazoles administration & dosage, Insulin Resistance physiology, Male, Obesity drug therapy, Obesity pathology, Obesity physiopathology, Pancreas drug effects, Pancreas physiology, Rats, Rats, Inbred OLETF, Receptor, Angiotensin, Type 1 metabolism, Tetrazoles administration & dosage, Angiotensin II Type 1 Receptor Blockers pharmacology, Glucose metabolism, Imidazoles pharmacology, Obesity metabolism, Tetrazoles pharmacology
- Abstract
Obesity is associated with the inappropriate activation of the renin-angiotensin system (RAS), which increases arterial pressure, impairs insulin secretion and decreases peripheral tissue insulin sensitivity. RAS blockade reverses these detriments; however, it is not clear whether the disease state of the organism and treatment duration determine the beneficial effects of RAS inhibition on insulin secretion and insulin sensitivity. Therefore, the objective of this study was to compare the benefits of acute vs chronic angiotensin receptor type 1 (AT
1 ) blockade started after the onset of obesity, hyperglycemia and hypertension on pancreatic function and peripheral insulin resistance. We assessed adipocyte morphology, glucose intolerance, pancreatic redox balance and insulin secretion after 2 and 11 weeks of AT1 blockade in the following groups of rats: (1) untreated Long-Evans Tokushima Otsuka (lean control; n = 10), (2) untreated Otsuka Long-Evans Tokushima Fatty (OLETF; n = 12) and (3) OLETF + ARB (ARB; 10 mg olmesartan/kg/day by oral gavage; n = 12). Regardless of treatment duration, AT1 blockade decreased systolic blood pressure and fasting plasma triglycerides, whereas chronic AT1 blockade decreased fasting plasma glucose, glucose intolerance and the relative abundance of large adipocytes by 22, 36 and 70%, respectively. AT1 blockade, however, did not improve pancreatic oxidative stress or reverse impaired insulin secretion. Collectively, these data show that AT1 blockade after the onset of obesity, hyperglycemia and hypertension improves peripheral tissue insulin sensitivity, but cannot completely reverse the metabolic derangement characterized by impaired insulin secretion once it has been compromised., (© 2018 Society for Endocrinology.)- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Angiotensin receptor blockade improves cardiac mitochondrial activity in response to an acute glucose load in obese insulin resistant rats.
- Author
-
Thorwald M, Rodriguez R, Lee A, Martinez B, Peti-Peterdi J, Nakano D, Nishiyama A, and Ortiz RM
- Subjects
- Animals, Hyperglycemia complications, Male, Mitochondria, Heart metabolism, NF-E2-Related Factor 2 metabolism, Obesity complications, Oxidative Stress drug effects, Rats, Rats, Long-Evans, Angiotensin Receptor Antagonists pharmacology, Hyperglycemia metabolism, Insulin Resistance, Mitochondria, Heart drug effects, Obesity metabolism
- Abstract
Hyperglycemia increases the risk of oxidant overproduction in the heart through activation of a multitude of pathways. Oxidation of mitochondrial enzymes may impair their function resulting in accumulation of intermediates and reverse electron transfer, contributing to mitochondrial dysfunction. Furthermore, the renin-angiotensin system (RAS) becomes inappropriately activated during metabolic syndrome, increasing oxidant production. To combat excess oxidant production, the transcription factor, nuclear factor erythriod-2- related factor 2 (Nrf2), induces expression of many antioxidant genes. We hypothesized that angiotensin II receptor type 1 (AT1) blockade improves mitochondrial function in response to an acute glucose load via upregulation of Nrf2. To address this hypothesis, an oral glucose challenge was performed in three groups prior to dissection (n = 5-8 animals/group/time point) of adult male rats: 1) Long Evans Tokushima Otsuka (LETO; lean strain-control), 2) insulin resistant, obese Otsuka Long Evans Tokushima Fatty (OLETF), and 3) OLETF + angiotensin receptor blocker (ARB; 10mg olmesartan/kg/d × 6 weeks). Hearts were collected at T0, T60, and T120 minutes post-glucose infusion. ARB increased Nrf2 binding 32% compared to OLETF at T60. Total superoxide dismutase (SOD) and catalase (CAT) activities were increased 45% and 66% respectively in ARB treated animals compared to OLETF. Mitochondrial enzyme activities of aconitase, complex I, and complex II increased by 135%, 33% and 66%, respectively in ARB compared to OLETF. These data demonstrate the protective effects of AT1 blockade on mitochondrial function during the manifestation of insulin resistance suggesting that the inappropriate activation of AT1 during insulin resistance may impair Nrf2 translocation and subsequent antioxidant activities and mitochondrial function., (Copyright © 2017 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Regulation of lactate dehydrogenase in response to WSSV infection in the shrimp Litopenaeus vannamei.
- Author
-
Hernández-Palomares MLE, Godoy-Lugo JA, Gómez-Jiménez S, Gámez-Alejo LA, Ortiz RM, Muñoz-Valle JF, Peregrino-Uriarte AB, Yepiz-Plascencia G, Rosas-Rodríguez JA, and Soñanez-Organis JG
- Subjects
- Amino Acid Sequence, Animals, Arthropod Proteins chemistry, Arthropod Proteins genetics, Arthropod Proteins immunology, Base Sequence, Gene Expression Profiling, Hypoxia-Inducible Factor 1 metabolism, L-Lactate Dehydrogenase chemistry, Phylogeny, Sequence Alignment, White spot syndrome virus 1 physiology, Gene Expression Regulation immunology, Hypoxia-Inducible Factor 1 genetics, Immunity, Innate genetics, L-Lactate Dehydrogenase genetics, L-Lactate Dehydrogenase immunology, Penaeidae genetics, Penaeidae immunology
- Abstract
Lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) is key for anaerobic glycolysis. LDH is induced by the hypoxia inducible factor -1 (HIF-1). HIF-1 induces genes involved in glucose metabolism and regulates cellular oxygen homeostasis. HIF-1 is formed by a regulatory α-subunit (HIF-1α) and a constitutive β-subunit (HIF-1β). The white spot syndrome virus (WSSV) induces anaerobic glycolysis in shrimp hemocytes, associated with lactate accumulation. Although infection and lactate production are associated, the LDH role in WSSV-infected shrimp has not been examined. In this work, the effects of HIF-1 silencing on the expression of two LDH subunits (LDHvan-1 and LDHvan-2) in shrimp infected with the WSSV were studied. HIF-1α transcripts increased in gills, hepatopancreas, and muscle after WSSV infection, while HIF-1β remained constitutively expressed. The expression for both LDH subunits increased in each tissue evaluated during the WSSV infection, translating into increased enzyme activity. Glucose concentration increased in each tissue evaluated, while lactate increased in gills and hepatopancreas, but not in muscle. Silencing of HIF-1α blocked the increase of LDH expression and enzyme activity, along with glucose (all tissues) and lactate (gills and hepatopancreas) concentrations produced by WSSV infection. These results demonstrate that HIF-1 up regulates the expression of LDH subunits during WSSV infection, and that this induction contributes to substrate metabolism in energetically active tissues of infected shrimp., (Copyright © 2018. Published by Elsevier Ltd.)
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Objective Endoscopic Measurements of Central Airway Stenosis: A Pilot Study.
- Author
-
Gil D, Ortiz RM, Sánchez C, and Rosell A
- Subjects
- Aged, Constriction, Pathologic diagnosis, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Pilot Projects, Software, Airway Obstruction diagnosis, Bronchoscopy standards, Severity of Illness Index
- Abstract
Background: Endoscopic estimation of the degree of stenosis in central airway obstruction is subjective and highly variable., Objective: To determine the benefits of using SENSA (System for Endoscopic Stenosis Assessment), an image-based computational software, for obtaining objective stenosis index (SI) measurements among a group of expert bronchoscopists and general pulmonologists., Methods: A total of 7 expert bronchoscopists and 7 general pulmonologists were enrolled to validate SENSA usage. The SI obtained by the physicians and by SENSA were compared with a reference SI to set their precision in SI computation. We used SENSA to efficiently obtain this reference SI in 11 selected cases of benign stenosis. A Web platform with three user-friendly microtasks was designed to gather the data. The users had to visually estimate the SI from videos with and without contours of the normal and the obstructed area provided by SENSA. The users were able to modify the SENSA contours to define the reference SI using morphometric bronchoscopy., Results: Visual SI estimation accuracy was associated with neither bronchoscopic experience (p = 0.71) nor the contours of the normal and the obstructed area provided by the system (p = 0.13). The precision of the SI by SENSA was 97.7% (95% CI: 92.4-103.7), which is significantly better than the precision of the SI by visual estimation (p < 0.001), with an improvement by at least 15%., Conclusion: SENSA provides objective SI measurements with a precision of up to 99.5%, which can be calculated from any bronchoscope using an affordable scalable interface. Providing normal and obstructed contours on bronchoscopic videos does not improve physicians' visual estimation of the SI., (© 2017 S. Karger AG, Basel.)
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.