447 results on '"Pettinger P"'
Search Results
2. Investigating Gene-Diet Interactions Impacting the Association Between Macronutrient Intake and Glycemic Traits.
- Author
-
Westerman, Kenneth E, Walker, Maura E, Gaynor, Sheila M, Wessel, Jennifer, DiCorpo, Daniel, Ma, Jiantao, Alonso, Alvaro, Aslibekyan, Stella, Baldridge, Abigail S, Bertoni, Alain G, Biggs, Mary L, Brody, Jennifer A, Chen, Yii-Der Ida, Dupuis, Joseé, Goodarzi, Mark O, Guo, Xiuqing, Hasbani, Natalie R, Heath, Adam, Hidalgo, Bertha, Irvin, Marguerite R, Johnson, W Craig, Kalyani, Rita R, Lange, Leslie, Lemaitre, Rozenn N, Liu, Ching-Ti, Liu, Simin, Moon, Jee-Young, Nassir, Rami, Pankow, James S, Pettinger, Mary, Raffield, Laura M, Rasmussen-Torvik, Laura J, Selvin, Elizabeth, Senn, Mackenzie K, Shadyab, Aladdin H, Smith, Albert V, Smith, Nicholas L, Steffen, Lyn, Talegakwar, Sameera, Taylor, Kent D, de Vries, Paul S, Wilson, James G, Wood, Alexis C, Yanek, Lisa R, Yao, Jie, Zheng, Yinan, Boerwinkle, Eric, Morrison, Alanna C, Fornage, Miriam, Russell, Tracy P, Psaty, Bruce M, Levy, Daniel, Heard-Costa, Nancy L, Ramachandran, Vasan S, Mathias, Rasika A, Arnett, Donna K, Kaplan, Robert, North, Kari E, Correa, Adolfo, Carson, April, Rotter, Jerome I, Rich, Stephen S, Manson, JoAnn E, Reiner, Alexander P, Kooperberg, Charles, Florez, Jose C, Meigs, James B, Merino, Jordi, Tobias, Deirdre K, Chen, Han, and Manning, Alisa K
- Subjects
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,Prevention ,Genetics ,Minority Health ,Clinical Research ,Human Genome ,Health Disparities ,Precision Medicine ,Cardiovascular ,Nutrition ,Diabetes ,Metabolic and endocrine ,Good Health and Well Being ,Humans ,Glycated Hemoglobin ,Diet ,Diabetes Mellitus ,Eating ,Guanine Nucleotide Dissociation Inhibitors ,Genome-Wide Association Study ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Endocrinology & Metabolism ,Biomedical and clinical sciences - Abstract
Few studies have demonstrated reproducible gene-diet interactions (GDIs) impacting metabolic disease risk factors, likely due in part to measurement error in dietary intake estimation and insufficient capture of rare genetic variation. We aimed to identify GDIs across the genetic frequency spectrum impacting the macronutrient-glycemia relationship in genetically and culturally diverse cohorts. We analyzed 33,187 participants free of diabetes from 10 National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute Trans-Omics for Precision Medicine program cohorts with whole-genome sequencing, self-reported diet, and glycemic trait data. We fit cohort-specific, multivariable-adjusted linear mixed models for the effect of diet, modeled as an isocaloric substitution of carbohydrate for fat, and its interactions with common and rare variants genome-wide. In main effect meta-analyses, participants consuming more carbohydrate had modestly lower glycemic trait values (e.g., for glycated hemoglobin [HbA1c], -0.013% HbA1c/250 kcal substitution). In GDI meta-analyses, a common African ancestry-enriched variant (rs79762542) reached study-wide significance and replicated in the UK Biobank cohort, indicating a negative carbohydrate-HbA1c association among major allele homozygotes only. Simulations revealed that >150,000 samples may be necessary to identify similar macronutrient GDIs under realistic assumptions about effect size and measurement error. These results generate hypotheses for further exploration of modifiable metabolic disease risk in additional cohorts with African ancestry.Article highlightsWe aimed to identify genetic modifiers of the dietary macronutrient-glycemia relationship using whole-genome sequence data from 10 Trans-Omics for Precision Medicine program cohorts. Substitution models indicated a modest reduction in glycemia associated with an increase in dietary carbohydrate at the expense of fat. Genome-wide interaction analysis identified one African ancestry-enriched variant near the FRAS1 gene that may interact with macronutrient intake to influence hemoglobin A1c. Simulation-based power calculations accounting for measurement error suggested that substantially larger sample sizes may be necessary to discover further gene-macronutrient interactions.
- Published
- 2023
3. Skewed History: Textbook Coverage of Early America and the New Deal
- Author
-
National Association of Scholars (NAS), Randall, David, Frohnen, Bruce P., Gutzman, Kevin R. C., Ross, Jason, Shlaes, Amity, and Pettinger, William
- Abstract
The study in this report focuses on four historical periods and five textbooks. The four historical periods are: (1) The European Settlement of North America (1492-1660); (2) Colonial America (1660-1763); (3) The Nation's Founding (1763-1789); and (4) The New Deal (1933-1940). Three of the 5 textbooks are intended for regular high school American history classes and the remaining 2 are intended for Advanced Placement American history classes. While the study does not provide a comprehensive judgment of how American history textbooks cover American history, but its selective analysis provides a window into the general operations of American history textbooks.
- Published
- 2021
4. Development of a multi-timescale method for classifying hybrid energy storage systems in grid applications
- Author
-
Zugschwert, C., Göschl, S., Ibanez, F. Martin, and Pettinger, K.
- Subjects
Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Systems and Control - Abstract
An extended use of renewable energies and a trend towards increasing energy consumption lead to challenges such as temporal and spatial decoupling of energy generation and consumption. This work evaluates the possible applications and advantages of hybrid energy storage systems compared to conventional, single energy storage applications. In a mathematical approach, evaluation criteria such as frequency, probability of power transients, as well as absolute power peaks are combined to identify suitable thresholds for energy management systems on a multi-timescale basis. With experimental load profiles from a municipal application, an airport, and an industrial application, four categories, clustering similar roles of the VRFB and the SC, are developed.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Correction: Taking action to advance the study of race and ethnicity: the Women’s Health Initiative (WHI)
- Author
-
Garcia, Lorena, Follis, Shawna, Thomson, Cynthia A, Breathett, Khadijah, Cené, Crystal Wiley, Jimenez, Monik, Kooperberg, Charles, Masaki, Kamal, Paskett, Electra D, Pettinger, Mary, Aragaki, Aaron, Dilworth-Anderson, Peggye, and Stefanick, Marcia L
- Subjects
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Applied and Developmental Psychology ,Clinical Sciences ,Psychology ,Reproductive Medicine ,Clinical sciences ,Reproductive medicine ,Applied and developmental psychology - Published
- 2022
6. Taking action to advance the study of race and ethnicity: the Women’s Health Initiative (WHI)
- Author
-
Garcia, Lorena, Follis, Shawna, Thomson, Cynthia A, Breathett, Khadijah, Cené, Crystal Wiley, Jimenez, Monik, Kooperberg, Charles, Masaki, Kamal, Paskett, Electra D, Pettinger, Mary, Aragaki, Aaron, Dilworth-Anderson, Peggye, and Stefanick, Marcia L
- Subjects
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Applied and Developmental Psychology ,Clinical Sciences ,Psychology ,Reproductive Medicine ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Clinical Research ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Good Health and Well Being ,Reduced Inequalities ,Social determinants of health ,Structural racism ,Women’s health ,Clinical sciences ,Reproductive medicine ,Applied and developmental psychology - Abstract
"Race" and "ethnicity" are socially constructed terms, not based on biology - in contrast to biologic ancestry and genetic admixture - and are flexible, contested, and unstable concepts, often driven by power. Although individuals may self-identify with a given race and ethnic group, as multidimensional beings exposed to differential life influencing factors that contribute to disease risk, additional social determinants of health (SDOH) should be explored to understand the relationship of race or ethnicity to health. Potential health effects of structural racism, defined as "the structures, policies, practices, and norms resulting in differential access to goods, services, and opportunities of society by "race," have been largely ignored in medical research. The Women's Health Initiative (WHI) was expected to enroll a racially and ethnically diverse cohort of older women at 40 U.S. clinical centers between 1993 and 1998; yet, key information on the racial and ethnic make-up of the WHI cohort of 161,808 women was limited until a 2020-2021 Task Force was charged by the WHI Steering Committee to better characterize the WHI cohort and develop recommendations for WHI investigators who want to include "race" and/or "ethnicity" in papers and presentations. As the lessons learned are of relevance to most cohorts, the essence of the WHI Race and Ethnicity Language and Data Interpretation Guide is presented in this paper. Recommendations from the WHI Race and Ethnicity Language and Data Interpretation Guide include: Studies should be designed to include all populations and researchers should actively, purposefully and with cultural-relevance, commit to recruiting a diverse sample; Researchers should collect robust data on race, ethnicity and SDOH variables that may intersect with participant identities, such as immigration status, country of origin, acculturation, current residence and neighborhood, religion; Authors should use appropriate terminology, based on a participant's self-identified "race" and "ethnicity", and provide clear rationale, including a conceptual framework, for including race and ethnicity in the analytic plan; Researchers should employ appropriate analytical methods, including mixed-methods, to study the relationship of these sociocultural variables to health; Authors should address how representative study participants are of the population to which results might apply, such as by age, race and ethnicity.
- Published
- 2022
7. A critical exploration of the diets of UK disadvantaged communities to inform food systems transformation: a scoping review of qualitative literature using a social practice theory lens
- Author
-
Hunt, Louise, Pettinger, Clare, and Wagstaff, Carol
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Rare Coding Variants Associated With Electrocardiographic Intervals Identify Monogenic Arrhythmia Susceptibility Genes: A Multi-Ancestry Analysis.
- Author
-
Choi, Seung Hoan, Jurgens, Sean J, Haggerty, Christopher M, Hall, Amelia W, Halford, Jennifer L, Morrill, Valerie N, Weng, Lu-Chen, Lagerman, Braxton, Mirshahi, Tooraj, Pettinger, Mary, Guo, Xiuqing, Lin, Henry J, Alonso, Alvaro, Soliman, Elsayed Z, Kornej, Jelena, Lin, Honghuang, Moscati, Arden, Nadkarni, Girish N, Brody, Jennifer A, Wiggins, Kerri L, Cade, Brian E, Lee, Jiwon, Austin-Tse, Christina, Blackwell, Tom, Chaffin, Mark D, Lee, Christina J-Y, Rehm, Heidi L, Roselli, Carolina, Regeneron Genetics Center, Redline, Susan, Mitchell, Braxton D, Sotoodehnia, Nona, Psaty, Bruce M, Heckbert, Susan R, Loos, Ruth JF, Vasan, Ramachandran S, Benjamin, Emelia J, Correa, Adolfo, Boerwinkle, Eric, Arking, Dan E, Rotter, Jerome I, Rich, Stephen S, Whitsel, Eric A, Perez, Marco, Kooperberg, Charles, Fornwalt, Brandon K, Lunetta, Kathryn L, Ellinor, Patrick T, Lubitz, Steven A, and NHLBI Trans-Omics for Precision Medicine (TOPMed) Consortium
- Subjects
Regeneron Genetics Center ,NHLBI Trans-Omics for Precision Medicine (TOPMed) Consortium ,Humans ,Long QT Syndrome ,Death ,Sudden ,Cardiac ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Electrocardiography ,Heterozygote ,Female ,Male ,Genetic Variation ,Exome Sequencing ,death ,sudden ,cardiac ,epidemiology ,genetics ,genome ,population ,Clinical Research ,Cardiovascular ,Genetics ,Heart Disease ,Human Genome ,Biotechnology ,Aetiology ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Good Health and Well Being ,death ,sudden ,cardiac - Abstract
BackgroundAlterations in electrocardiographic (ECG) intervals are well-known markers for arrhythmia and sudden cardiac death (SCD) risk. While the genetics of arrhythmia syndromes have been studied, relations between electrocardiographic intervals and rare genetic variation at a population level are poorly understood.MethodsUsing a discovery sample of 29 000 individuals with whole-genome sequencing from Trans-Omics in Precision Medicine and replication in nearly 100 000 with whole-exome sequencing from the UK Biobank and MyCode, we examined associations between low-frequency and rare coding variants with 5 routinely measured electrocardiographic traits (RR, P-wave, PR, and QRS intervals and corrected QT interval).ResultsWe found that rare variants associated with population-based electrocardiographic intervals identify established monogenic SCD genes (KCNQ1, KCNH2, and SCN5A), a controversial monogenic SCD gene (KCNE1), and novel genes (PAM and MFGE8) involved in cardiac conduction. Loss-of-function and pathogenic SCN5A variants, carried by 0.1% of individuals, were associated with a nearly 6-fold increased odds of the first-degree atrioventricular block (P=8.4×10-5). Similar variants in KCNQ1 and KCNH2 (0.2% of individuals) were associated with a 23-fold increased odds of marked corrected QT interval prolongation (P=4×10-25), a marker of SCD risk. Incomplete penetrance of such deleterious variation was common as over 70% of carriers had normal electrocardiographic intervals.ConclusionsOur findings indicate that large-scale high-depth sequence data and electrocardiographic analysis identifies monogenic arrhythmia susceptibility genes and rare variants with large effects. Known pathogenic variation in conventional arrhythmia and SCD genes exhibited incomplete penetrance and accounted for only a small fraction of marked electrocardiographic interval prolongation.
- Published
- 2021
9. Lipoprotein(a) levels and risk of abdominal aortic aneurysm in the Women's Health Initiative
- Author
-
Chou, Elizabeth L, Pettinger, Mary, Haring, Bernhard, Mell, Matthew W, Hlatky, Mark A, Wactawski-Wende, Jean, Allison, Matthew A, Wild, Robert A, Shadyab, Aladdin H, Wallace, Robert B, Snetselaar, Linda G, Eagleton, Matthew J, Conrad, Mark F, and Liu, Simin
- Subjects
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Cardiovascular Medicine and Haematology ,Clinical Sciences ,Aging ,Cardiovascular ,Clinical Research ,Prevention ,Good Health and Well Being ,Aged ,Aortic Aneurysm ,Abdominal ,Aortic Rupture ,Biomarkers ,Comorbidity ,Dyslipidemias ,Female ,Humans ,Incidence ,Lipoprotein(a) ,Medicare ,Middle Aged ,Postmenopause ,Prognosis ,Prospective Studies ,Risk Assessment ,Risk Factors ,Sex Factors ,Time Factors ,United States ,Women's Health ,Abdominal aortic aneurysm ,Women's health ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Cardiovascular System & Hematology ,Cardiovascular medicine and haematology ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
ObjectiveFew studies have prospectively examined the associations of lipoprotein(a) [Lp(a)] levels with the risk of abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA), especially in women. Accounting for commonly recognized risk factors, we investigated the baseline Lp(a) levels and the risk of AAA among postmenopausal women participating in the ongoing national Women's Health Initiative.MethodsWomen's Health Initiative participants with baseline Lp(a) levels available who were beneficiaries of Medicare parts A and B fee-for-service at study enrollment or who had aged into Medicare at any point were included. Participants with missing covariate data or known AAA at baseline were excluded. Thoracic aneurysms were excluded owing to the different pathophysiology. The AAA cases and interventions were identified using the International Classification of Diseases, 9th and 10th revision, codes and Current Procedural Terminology codes from claims data. Hazard ratios were computed using Cox proportional hazard models according to the quintiles of Lp(a).ResultsThe mean age of the 6615 participants included in the analysis was 65.3 years. Of the 6615 participants, 66.6% were non-Hispanic white, 18.9% were black, 7% were Hispanic and 4.7% were Asian/Pacific Islander. Compared with the participants in the lowest Lp(a) quintile, those in higher quintiles were more likely to be overweight, black, and former or current smokers, to have hypertension, hyperlipidemia, and a history of cardiovascular disease, and to use menopausal hormone therapy and statins. During 65,476 person-years of follow-up, with a median of 10.4 years, 415 women had been diagnosed with an AAA and 36 had required intervention. More than one half had required intervention for a ruptured AAA. We failed to find a statistically significant association between Lp(a) levels and incident AAA. Additional sensitivity analyses stratified by race, with exclusion of statin users and alternative categorizations of Lp(a) using log-transformed levels, tertiles, and a cutoff of >50 mg/dL, were conducted, which did not reveal any significant associations.ConclusionsWe found no statistically significant association between Lp(a) levels and the risk of AAA in a large and well-phenotyped sample of postmenopausal women. Women with high Lp(a) levels were more likely to be overweight, black, and former or current smokers, and to have hypertension, hyperlipidemia, and a history of cardiovascular disease, or to use hormone therapy and statins compared with those with lower Lp(a) levels. These findings differ from previous prospective, case-control, and meta-analysis studies that had supported a significant relationship between higher Lp(a) levels and an increased risk of AAA. Differences in the association could have resulted from study limitations or sex differences.
- Published
- 2021
10. Optimism may moderate screening mammogram frequency in Medicare
- Author
-
Progovac, Ana M, Pettinger, Mary, Donohue, Julie M, Chang, Chung-Chou H, Matthews, Karen A, Habermann, Elizabeth B, Kuller, Lewis H, Rosal, Milagros, Li, Wenjun, Garcia, Lorena, and Tindle, Hilary A
- Subjects
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Breast Cancer ,Prevention ,Health Services ,Aging ,Clinical Research ,Cancer ,Good Health and Well Being ,Aged ,Female ,Health Behavior ,Humans ,Insurance Claim Review ,Longitudinal Studies ,Mammography ,Medicare ,Optimism ,Patient Acceptance of Health Care ,Socioeconomic Factors ,United States ,Women's Health ,breast cancer ,cynical hostility ,optimism ,psychological attitudes ,screening mammograms - Abstract
Higher trait optimism and/or lower cynical hostility are associated with healthier behaviors and lower risk of morbidity and mortality, yet their association with health care utilization has been understudied. Whether these psychological attitudes are associated with breast cancer screening behavior is unknown. To assess the association of optimism and cynical hostility with screening mammography in older women and whether sociodemographic factors acted as mediators of these relationships, we used Women's Health Initiative (WHI) observational cohort survey data linked to Medicare claims. The sample includes WHI participants without history of breast cancer who were enrolled in Medicare Parts A and B for ≥2 years from 2005-2010, and who completed WHI baseline attitudinal questionnaires (n = 48,291). We used survival modeling to examine whether screening frequency varied by psychological attitudes (measured at study baseline) after adjusting for sociodemographic characteristics, health conditions, and healthcare-related variables. Psychological attitudes included trait optimism (Life Orientation Test-Revised) and cynical hostility (Cook Medley subscale), which were self-reported at study baseline. Sociodemographic, health conditions, and healthcare variables were self-reported at baseline and updated through 2005 as available. Contrary to our hypotheses, repeated events survival models showed that women with the lowest optimism scores (i.e., more pessimistic tendencies) received 5% more frequent screenings after complete covariate adjustment (p
- Published
- 2019
11. Corrosion of Sulfur Removal Tanks Used in the Processing of Landfill Gas
- Author
-
Solomon, Ellen L. S., Pettinger, Alfred M., Babcock, Jason R., Sanders, Steven A., and McDougall, Jeffrey L.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. The CABI Trial: an Unblinded Parallel Group Randomised Controlled Feasibility Trial of Long-Course Antibiotic Therapy (28 Days) Compared with Short Course (≤ 10 Days) in the Prevention of Relapse in Adults Treated for Complicated Intra-Abdominal Infection
- Author
-
Ahmed, Shadia, Brown, Rory, Pettinger, Richard, Vargas-Palacios, Armando, Burke, Dermot, and Kirby, Andrew
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Anticholinergic medication use and falls in postmenopausal women: findings from the women’s health initiative cohort study
- Author
-
Marcum, Zachary A, Wirtz, Heidi S, Pettinger, Mary, LaCroix, Andrea Z, Carnahan, Ryan, Cauley, Jane A, Bea, Jennifer W, and Gray, Shelly L
- Subjects
Reproductive Medicine ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Health Sciences ,Clinical Research ,Aging ,Accidental Falls ,Aged ,Cholinergic Antagonists ,Cohort Studies ,Female ,Histamine Antagonists ,Humans ,Middle Aged ,Odds Ratio ,Postmenopause ,Prospective Studies ,Recurrence ,Risk Factors ,United States ,Anticholinergic ,Community dwelling ,Falls ,Older adults ,Clinical Sciences ,Human Movement and Sports Sciences ,Geriatrics ,Clinical sciences ,Health services and systems ,Public health - Abstract
BackgroundResults from studies assessing the association between anticholinergic use and falls are mixed, and prior studies are limited in their ability to control for important potential confounders. Thus, we sought to examine the association between anticholinergic medication use, including over-the-counter medications, and recurrent falls in community-dwelling older women.MethodsWe analyzed data from a prospective cohort study of women aged 65 to 79 years from the Women's Health Initiative Observational Study and Clinical Trials. Women were recruited between 1993 and 1998, and analyses included 61,451 women with complete information. Medications with moderate or strong anticholinergic effects were ascertained directly from drug containers during face-to-face interviews. The main outcome measure was recurrent falls (≥2 falls in previous year), which was determined from self-report within 1.5 years subsequent to the medication assessment.ResultsAt baseline, 11.3 % were using an anticholinergic medication, of which antihistamines (commonly available over-the-counter) were the most common medication class (received by 45.2 % of individuals on anticholinergic medication). Using multivariable GEE models and controlling for potential confounders, the adjusted odds ratio for anticholinergic medication use was 1.51 (95 % CI, 1.43-1.60) for recurrent falls. Participants using multiple anticholinergic medications had a 100 % increase in likelihood of recurrent falls (adjusted odds ratio 2.00, 95 % CI 1.73-2.32). Results were robust to sensitivity analysis.ConclusionsAnticholinergic medication use was associated with increased risk for recurrent falls. Our findings reinforce judicious use of anticholinergic medications in older women. Public health efforts should emphasize educating older women regarding the risk of using over-the-counter anticholinergics, such as first-generation antihistamines.
- Published
- 2016
14. Risk Factors for Incident Hospitalized Heart Failure With Preserved Versus Reduced Ejection Fraction in a Multiracial Cohort of Postmenopausal Women
- Author
-
Eaton, Charles B, Pettinger, Mary, Rossouw, Jacques, Martin, Lisa Warsinger, Foraker, Randi, Quddus, Abdullah, Liu, Simin, Wampler, Nina S, Hank Wu, Wen-Chih, Manson, JoAnn E, Margolis, Karen, Johnson, Karen C, Allison, Matthew, Corbie-Smith, Giselle, Rosamond, Wayne, Breathett, Khadijah, and Klein, Liviu
- Subjects
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Medical Physiology ,Cardiovascular Medicine and Haematology ,Hypertension ,Clinical Research ,Aging ,Prevention ,Cardiovascular ,Heart Disease - Coronary Heart Disease ,Heart Disease ,Obesity ,heart failure ,hospitalization ,prevalence ,public health ,risk factors ,Biochemistry and Cell Biology ,Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology ,Cardiovascular System & Hematology ,Cardiovascular medicine and haematology ,Medical physiology - Abstract
Heart failure is an important and growing public health problem in women. Risk factors for incident hospitalized heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF) compared with heart failure with reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF) in women and differences by race/ethnicity are not well characterized. We prospectively evaluated the risk factors for incident hospitalized HFpEF and HFrEF in a multiracial cohort of 42 170 postmenopausal women followed up for a mean of 13.2 years. Cox regression models with time-dependent covariate adjustment were used to define risk factors for HFpEF and HFrEF. Differences by race/ethnicity about incidence rates, baseline risk factors, and their population-attributable risk percentage were analyzed. Risk factors for both HFpEF and HFrEF were as follows: older age, white race, diabetes mellitus, cigarette smoking, and hypertension. Obesity, history of coronary heart disease (other than myocardial infarction), anemia, atrial fibrillation, and more than one comorbidity were associated with HFpEF but not with HFrEF. History of myocardial infarction was associated with HFrEF but not with HFpEF. Obesity was found to be a more potent risk factor for African American women compared with white women for HFpEF (P for interaction=0.007). For HFpEF, the population-attributable risk percentage was greatest for hypertension (40.9%) followed by obesity (25.8%), with the highest population-attributable risk percentage found in African Americans for these risk factors. In this multiracial cohort of postmenopausal women, obesity stands out as a significant risk factor for HFpEF, with the strongest association in African American women. URL: http://www.clinicaltrials.gov. Unique identifier: NCT00000611.
- Published
- 2016
15. Anticholinergic Medication Use and Fractures in Postmenopausal Women: Findings from the Women’s Health Initiative
- Author
-
Marcum, Zachary A, Wirtz, Heidi S, Pettinger, Mary, LaCroix, Andrea Z, Carnahan, Ryan, Cauley, Jane A, Bea, Jennifer W, and Gray, Shelly L
- Subjects
Reproductive Medicine ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Patient Safety ,Aging ,Physical Injury - Accidents and Adverse Effects ,Clinical Research ,6.1 Pharmaceuticals ,Evaluation of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,Aged ,Cholinergic Antagonists ,Cohort Studies ,Female ,Hip Fractures ,Humans ,Middle Aged ,Postmenopause ,Proportional Hazards Models ,Prospective Studies ,Risk ,Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciences ,Geriatrics ,Clinical sciences ,Pharmacology and pharmaceutical sciences - Abstract
BackgroundAnticholinergic medication use has been associated with several negative health outcomes in older adults, but little is known about its risk for fractures.ObjectiveTo examine the association between anticholinergic medication use and fracture outcomes in community-dwelling postmenopausal women.MethodsUtilizing a prospective cohort design, we examined data collected from 137,408 women aged 50-79 years from the Women's Health Initiative observational study and clinical trials not reporting hip fracture at baseline. Medications with moderate or strong anticholinergic effects were identified directly from drug containers during in-person interviews. The main outcome was fractures (hip, lower arm/wrist and total fractures). We performed multivariable Cox proportional hazard survival modelling to assess the association between anticholinergic use and the risk of fractures.ResultsAt baseline, 10.6% of the women were using an anticholinergic medication, of which antihistamines were the most common medication class (48.4%). The multivariable-adjusted hazard ratios for anticholinergic medication use were 1.08 (95% confidence interval [CI] 0.89-1.30) for hip fracture, 1.01 (95% CI 0.91-1.13) for lower arm/wrist fracture and 1.03 (95% CI 0.98-1.09) for total fractures. We observed no association according to subclass or count of anticholinergic medications, or trends between the duration of anticholinergic use and any of the fracture outcomes.ConclusionAnticholinergic medication use was not associated with an increased risk of fractures among community-dwelling women. Future research should make efforts to capture over-the-counter medication use and the cumulative anticholinergic burden in relation to important health outcomes for older adults.
- Published
- 2015
16. One-Pot Oxidative Amidation of Aldehydes via the Generation of Nitrile Imine Intermediates.
- Author
-
Henry, Martyn C., Minty, Laura, Kwok, Alexander C. W., Elwood, Jessica M. L., Foulis, Adam J., Pettinger, Jonathan, and Jamieson, Craig
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Developing Emotional Intelligence in a Multiage Classroom.
- Author
-
Finley, Darla, Pettinger, Ann, Rutherford, Timika, and Timmes, Valerie
- Abstract
This action research project investigated a modified integrated curriculum for students in a multiage classroom who lacked personal and social skills. The lack of such skills in the prekindergarten through first-grade students was documented by means of teacher observations, summary reports, daily behavior reports, student portfolios, discussions with other teachers, and test scores. Data revealed that the students had problems with poor listening, off-task behavior, high levels of dependency on older peers within the class, disruptive behavior due to high frustration levels, low participation in classroom activities, and inability to make transitions successfully from group to independent activities. An examination of curriculum content and instructional strategies revealed few opportunities for students to make choices, no integration of the desired social skills in the curriculum, ineffective team-building strategies, and inappropriate implementation of individual monitoring plans. Two interventions were selected: a revised and enhanced approach to implementing the Second Step Program (Committee for Children), and a mandatory staff development workshop that focused on instructional strategies and curriculum enhancements to more effectively develop students' personal and social skills. Post-intervention data indicated an improvement in the students' transfer of social skills in daily real-life situations, an improvement in their approach to resolving conflicts, and an increase in their ability to work cooperatively. (Seven appendices include checklists and questionnaires. Contains 31 references.) (EV)
- Published
- 2000
18. Engaging Homeless Individuals in Discussion about Their Food Experiences to Optimise Wellbeing: A Pilot Study
- Author
-
Pettinger, Clare, Parsons, Julie M., Cunningham, Miranda, Withers, Lyndsey, D'Aprano, Gia, Letherby, Gayle, Sutton, Carole, Whiteford, Andrew, and Ayres, Richard
- Abstract
Objective: High levels of social and economic deprivation are apparent in many UK cities, where there is evidence of certain "marginalised" communities suffering disproportionately from poor nutrition, threatening health. Finding ways to engage with these communities is essential to identify strategies to optimise wellbeing and life skills. The Food as a Lifestyle Motivator project aimed to pilot creative methods among homeless adults for the examination of food-related experiences in order to facilitate their engagement in the wellbeing discourse. Design: Creative Participatory Action Research methods including Photo-Elicitation. Setting: A homeless service provider in Plymouth, UK. Method: A sample of homeless service users took photographs of their food activities over a 10-day period, and then volunteered to share their photos in focus group discussions to elicit meaning related to their food experiences. Results: Five themes were generated from nine service user narratives, demonstrating that food holds meaning, elicits emotions and exerts power. The food environment can be a critical social meeting place and food preparation can provide companionship and occupation. Conclusion: As well as being central to many health concerns, food may also be a powerful way to motivate people to change their lifestyle. The participatory methods used in this pilot hold potential to engage effectively with harder-to-reach service users. Discussions about their wellbeing indicate food as a powerful "catalyst" for inclusion with the potential to empower individuals. The study serves to inform health education practice, design of services and address (nutritional) health inequalities.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. An Exploratory Study of Respiratory Quotient Calibration and Association with Postmenopausal Breast Cancer
- Author
-
Prentice, Ross L, Neuhouser, Marian L, Tinker, Lesley F, Pettinger, Mary, Thomson, Cynthia A, Mossavar-Rahmani, Yasmin, Thomas, Fridtjof, Qi, Lihong, and Huang, Ying
- Subjects
Breast Cancer ,Cancer ,Nutrition ,Aging ,Prevention ,Clinical Research ,Aged ,Basal Metabolism ,Breast Neoplasms ,Calibration ,Carbon Dioxide ,Cohort Studies ,Dietary Fats ,Female ,Humans ,Middle Aged ,Oxygen ,Postmenopause ,Reproducibility of Results ,Respiratory Mechanics ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Epidemiology - Abstract
BackgroundThe respiratory quotient (RQ), defined as the ratio of carbon dioxide exhaled to oxygen uptake, reflects substrate utilization when energy is expended. Fat and alcohol have RQ values of approximately 0.7, compared with 1.0 for carbohydrate, and approximately 0.8 for protein. Here, the association between RQ and postmenopausal breast cancer risk is studied.MethodsPaired RQ measurements were obtained, separated by approximately 6 months, for women in the reliability subset of a Women's Health Initiative (WHI) Nutrition and Physical Activity Assessment Study. Linear regression of the average of the paired log RQ assessments on a corresponding log food quotient (FQ) average and other study subject characteristics, including age, body mass index, race, and education, yielded calibration equations for predicting RQ.ResultsCalibration equations, using any of food frequency, food record, or dietary recall data, explained an appreciable fraction of measured log RQ variation, and these were used to compute calibrated RQ estimates throughout WHI cohorts. Calibrated RQ estimates using 4-day food record (4DFR) data related inversely (P = 0.004) to (invasive) breast cancer risk in the WHI Dietary Modification trial comparison group, and corresponding RQ estimates using food-frequency data related inversely (P = 0.002) to breast cancer incidence in this cohort combined with the larger WHI observational study.ConclusionAlthough preliminary, these analyses suggest a substantially higher postmenopausal breast cancer risk among women having relatively low RQ.ImpactRQ elevation could provide a novel target for breast cancer risk reduction.
- Published
- 2013
20. Loci influencing blood pressure identified using a cardiovascular gene-centric array
- Author
-
Ganesh, Santhi K, Tragante, Vinicius, Guo, Wei, Guo, Yiran, Lanktree, Matthew B, Smith, Erin N, Johnson, Toby, Castillo, Berta Almoguera, Barnard, John, Baumert, Jens, Chang, Yen-Pei Christy, Elbers, Clara C, Farrall, Martin, Fischer, Mary E, Franceschini, Nora, Gaunt, Tom R, Gho, Johannes MIH, Gieger, Christian, Gong, Yan, Isaacs, Aaron, Kleber, Marcus E, Leach, Irene Mateo, McDonough, Caitrin W, Meijs, Matthijs FL, Mellander, Olle, Molony, Cliona M, Nolte, Ilja M, Padmanabhan, Sandosh, Price, Tom S, Rajagopalan, Ramakrishnan, Shaffer, Jonathan, Shah, Sonia, Shen, Haiqing, Soranzo, Nicole, van der Most, Peter J, Van Iperen, Erik PA, Van Setten, Jessic A, Vonk, Judith M, Zhang, Li, Beitelshees, Amber L, Berenson, Gerald S, Bhatt, Deepak L, Boer, Jolanda MA, Boerwinkle, Eric, Burkley, Ben, Burt, Amber, Chakravarti, Aravinda, Chen, Wei, Cooper-DeHoff, Rhonda M, Curtis, Sean P, Dreisbach, Albert, Duggan, David, Ehret, Georg B, Fabsitz, Richard R, Fornage, Myriam, Fox, Ervin, Furlong, Clement E, Gansevoort, Ron T, Hofker, Marten H, Hovingh, G Kees, Kirkland, Susan A, Kottke-Marchant, Kandice, Kutlar, Abdullah, LaCroix, Andrea Z, Langaee, Taimour Y, Li, Yun R, Lin, Honghuang, Liu, Kiang, Maiwald, Steffi, Malik, Rainer, Murugesan, Gurunathan, Newton-Cheh, Christopher, O'Connell, Jeffery R, Onland-Moret, N Charlotte, Ouwehand, Willem H, Palmas, Walter, Penninx, Brenda W, Pepine, Carl J, Pettinger, Mary, Polak, Joseph F, Ramachandran, Vasan S, Ranchalis, Jane, Redline, Susan, Ridker, Paul M, Rose, Lynda M, Scharnag, Hubert, Schork, Nicholas J, Shimbo, Daichi, Shuldiner, Alan R, Srinivasan, Sathanur R, Stolk, Ronald P, Taylor, Herman A, Thorand, Barbara, Trip, Mieke D, van Duijn, Cornelia M, Verschuren, W Monique, Wijmenga, Cisca, Winkelmann, Bernhard R, Wyatt, Sharon, and Young, J Hunter
- Subjects
Hypertension ,Heart Disease ,Human Genome ,Genetics ,Clinical Research ,Cardiovascular ,Aetiology ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Adult ,Aged ,Blood Pressure ,Cardiovascular Diseases ,Chromosome Mapping ,Cohort Studies ,Female ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Genome-Wide Association Study ,Genotype ,Humans ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Polymorphism ,Single Nucleotide ,White People ,CARDIOGRAM ,METASTROKE ,LifeLines Cohort Study ,Biological Sciences ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Genetics & Heredity - Abstract
Blood pressure (BP) is a heritable determinant of risk for cardiovascular disease (CVD). To investigate genetic associations with systolic BP (SBP), diastolic BP (DBP), mean arterial pressure (MAP) and pulse pressure (PP), we genotyped ∼50 000 single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) that capture variation in ∼2100 candidate genes for cardiovascular phenotypes in 61 619 individuals of European ancestry from cohort studies in the USA and Europe. We identified novel associations between rs347591 and SBP (chromosome 3p25.3, in an intron of HRH1) and between rs2169137 and DBP (chromosome1q32.1 in an intron of MDM4) and between rs2014408 and SBP (chromosome 11p15 in an intron of SOX6), previously reported to be associated with MAP. We also confirmed 10 previously known loci associated with SBP, DBP, MAP or PP (ADRB1, ATP2B1, SH2B3/ATXN2, CSK, CYP17A1, FURIN, HFE, LSP1, MTHFR, SOX6) at array-wide significance (P < 2.4 × 10(-6)). We then replicated these associations in an independent set of 65 886 individuals of European ancestry. The findings from expression QTL (eQTL) analysis showed associations of SNPs in the MDM4 region with MDM4 expression. We did not find any evidence of association of the two novel SNPs in MDM4 and HRH1 with sequelae of high BP including coronary artery disease (CAD), left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) or stroke. In summary, we identified two novel loci associated with BP and confirmed multiple previously reported associations. Our findings extend our understanding of genes involved in BP regulation, some of which may eventually provide new targets for therapeutic intervention.
- Published
- 2013
21. Health risks and benefits from calcium and vitamin D supplementation: Women's Health Initiative clinical trial and cohort study
- Author
-
Prentice, RL, Pettinger, MB, Jackson, RD, Wactawski-Wende, J, LaCroix, AZ, Anderson, GL, Chlebowski, RT, Manson, JE, Van Horn, L, Vitolins, MZ, Datta, M, LeBlanc, ES, Cauley, JA, and Rossouw, JE
- Subjects
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Health Sciences ,Women's Health ,Cardiovascular ,Clinical Research ,Nutrition ,Patient Safety ,Digestive Diseases ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Complementary and Integrative Health ,Aging ,Cancer ,Prevention ,Dietary Supplements ,Heart Disease ,Colo-Rectal Cancer ,6.1 Pharmaceuticals ,3.3 Nutrition and chemoprevention ,Good Health and Well Being ,Aged ,Bone Density Conservation Agents ,Calcium Carbonate ,Cardiovascular Diseases ,Cholecalciferol ,Double-Blind Method ,Drug Administration Schedule ,Drug Therapy ,Combination ,Female ,Hip Fractures ,Humans ,Middle Aged ,Neoplasms ,Osteoporosis ,Postmenopausal ,Osteoporotic Fractures ,Risk Assessment ,United States ,Urinary Calculi ,Biomedical Engineering ,Public Health and Health Services ,Endocrinology & Metabolism ,Clinical sciences ,Epidemiology - Abstract
SummaryThe Women's Health Initiative (WHI) double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trial randomly assigned 36,282 postmenopausal women in the U.S. to 1,000 mg elemental calcium carbonate plus 400 IU of vitamin D(3) daily or placebo, with average intervention period of 7.0 years. The trial was designed to test whether calcium plus vitamin D supplementation in a population in which the use of these supplements was widespread would reduce hip fracture, and secondarily, total fracture and colorectal cancer.IntroductionThis study further examines the health benefits and risks of calcium and vitamin D supplementation using WHI data, with emphasis on fractures, cardiovascular disease, cancer, and total mortality.MethodsWHI calcium and vitamin D randomized clinical trial (CT) data through the end of the intervention period were further analyzed with emphasis on treatment effects in relation to duration of supplementation, and these data were contrasted and combined with corresponding data from the WHI prospective observational study (OS).ResultsAmong women not taking personal calcium or vitamin D supplements at baseline, the hazard ratio [HR] for hip fracture occurrence in the CT following 5 or more years of calcium and vitamin D supplementation versus placebo was 0.62 (95 % confidence interval (CI), 0.38-1.00). In combined analyses of CT and OS data, the corresponding HR was 0.65 (95 % CI, 0.44-0.98). Supplementation effects were not apparent on the risks of myocardial infarction, coronary heart disease, total heart disease, stroke, overall cardiovascular disease, colorectal cancer, or total mortality, while evidence for a reduction in breast cancer risk and total invasive cancer risk among calcium plus vitamin D users was only suggestive.ConclusionThough based primarily on a subset analysis, long-term use of calcium and vitamin D appears to confer a reduction that may be substantial in the risk of hip fracture among postmenopausal women. Other health benefits and risks of supplementation at doses considered, including an elevation in urinary tract stone formation, appear to be modest and approximately balanced.
- Published
- 2013
22. Predictors of serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D concentrations among postmenopausal women: the Women’s Health Initiative Calcium plus Vitamin D Clinical Trial
- Author
-
Millen, Amy E, Wactawski-Wende, Jean, Pettinger, Mary, Melamed, Michal L, Tylavsky, Frances A, Liu, Simin, Robbins, John, LaCroix, Andrea Z, LeBoff, Meryl S, and Jackson, Rebecca D
- Subjects
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,Prevention ,Digestive Diseases ,Aging ,Clinical Research ,Complementary and Integrative Health ,Cancer ,Nutrition ,Aged ,Calcium ,Female ,Geography ,Humans ,Middle Aged ,Postmenopause ,Seasons ,Sunlight ,United States ,Vitamin D ,Engineering ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Nutrition & Dietetics ,Clinical sciences ,Nutrition and dietetics - Abstract
BackgroundIt is unclear how well surrogate markers for vitamin D exposure (eg, oral intake of vitamin D and estimates of sunlight exposure), with and without consideration of other potential predictors of 25-hydroxyvitamin D [25(OH)D] concentrations, similarly rank individuals with respect to 25(OH)D blood concentrations.ObjectiveThe objective was to determine how much variation in serum 25(OH)D concentrations (nmol/L) could be explained by a predictive model with the use of different vitamin D surrogate markers (latitude of residence, mean annual regional solar irradiance estimates, and oral sources) and other individual characteristics that might influence vitamin D status.DesignA random sample of 3055 postmenopausal women (aged 50-70 y) participating in 3 nested case-control studies of the Women's Health Initiative Calcium plus Vitamin D Clinical Trial was used. Serum 25(OH)D values, assessed at year 1 (1995-2000), and potential predictors of 25(OH)D concentrations, assessed at year 1 or Women's Health Initiative baseline (1993-1998), were used.ResultsMore than half of the women (57.1%) had deficient (
- Published
- 2010
23. Effects of Conjugated Equine Estrogen on Risk of Fractures and BMD in Postmenopausal Women With Hysterectomy: Results From the Women's Health Initiative Randomized Trial
- Author
-
Jackson, Rebecca D, Wactawski‐Wende, Jean, LaCroix, Andrea Z, Pettinger, Mary, Yood, Robert A, Watts, Nelson B, Robbins, John A, Lewis, Cora E, Beresford, Shirley AA, Ko, Marcia G, Naughton, Michelle J, Satterfield, Suzanne, and Bassford, Tamsen
- Subjects
Cancer ,Aging ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Prevention ,Patient Safety ,Estrogen ,Clinical Research ,Osteoporosis ,Evaluation of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,6.1 Pharmaceuticals ,Aged ,Bone Density ,Estrogens ,Conjugated (USP) ,Female ,Fractures ,Bone ,Humans ,Hysterectomy ,Middle Aged ,Postmenopause ,Risk Factors ,Treatment Outcome ,Women's Health ,Women's Health Initiative ,estrogen ,hormone therapy ,fracture ,BMD ,postmenopause ,clinical trial ,Women's Health Initiative Investigators ,Biological Sciences ,Engineering ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Anatomy & Morphology - Abstract
UnlabelledFurther analyses from the Women's Health Initiative estrogen trial shows that CEE reduced fracture risk. The fracture reduction at the hip did not differ appreciably among risk strata. These data do not support overall benefit over risk, even in women at highest risk for fracture.IntroductionThe Women's Health Initiative provided evidence that conjugated equine estrogen (CEE) can significantly reduce fracture risk in postmenopausal women. Additional analysis of the effects of CEE on BMD and fracture are presented.Materials and methodsPostmenopausal women 50-79 years of age with hysterectomy were randomized to CEE 0.625 mg daily (n = 5310) or placebo (n = 5429) and followed for an average 7.1 years. Fracture incidence was assessed by semiannual questionnaire and verified by adjudication of radiology reports. BMD was measured in a subset of women (N = 938) at baseline and years 1, 3, and 6. A global index was used to examine whether the balance of risks and benefits differed by baseline fracture risk.ResultsCEE reduced the risk of hip (hazard ratio [HR], 0.65; 95% CI, 0.45-0.94), clinical vertebral (HR, 0.64; 95% CI, 0.44-0.93), wrist/lower arm (HR, 0.58; 95% CI, 0.47-0.72), and total fracture (HR, 0.71; 95% CI, 0.64-0.80). This effect did not differ among strata according to age, oophorectomy status, past hormone use, race/ethnicity, fall frequency, physical activity, or fracture history. Total fracture reduction was less in women at the lowest predicted fracture risk in both absolute and relative terms (HR, 0.86; 95% CI, 0.68-1.08). CEE also provided modest but consistent positive effects on BMD. The HRs of the global index for CEE were relatively balanced across tertiles of summary fracture risk (lowest risk: HR, 0.81; 95% CI, 0.62-1.05; mid risk: HR, 1.09; 95% CI, 0.92-1.30; highest risk: HR, 1.04; 95% CI, 0.88-1.23; interaction, p = 0.42).ConclusionsCEE reduces the risk of fracture and increases BMD in hysterectomized postmenopausal women. Even among the women with the highest risk for fractures, when considering the effects of estrogen on other important health outcomes, a summary of the burden of monitored effects does not indicate a significant net benefit.
- Published
- 2006
24. Lack of a relation between vitamin and mineral antioxidants and bone mineral density: results from the Women’s Health Initiative
- Author
-
Wolf, Randi L, Cauley, Jane A, Pettinger, Mary, Jackson, Rebecca, Lacroix, Andrea, Leboff, Meryl S, Lewis, Cora E, Nevitt, Michael C, Simon, Joel A, Stone, Katie L, and Wactawski-Wende, Jean
- Subjects
Medical and Health Sciences ,Engineering ,Nutrition & Dietetics - Published
- 2005
25. Validity of self-report for fractures among a multiethnic cohort of postmenopausal women: results from the Women's Health Initiative observational study and clinical trials
- Author
-
Chen, Zhao, Kooperberg, Charles, Pettinger, Mary B, Bassford, Tamsen, Cauley, Jane A, LaCroix, Andrea Z, Lewis, Cora E, Kipersztok, Simon, Borne, Carolyn, and Jackson, Rebecca D
- Subjects
Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Clinical Research ,Aging ,Physical Injury - Accidents and Adverse Effects ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Osteoporosis ,Injuries and accidents ,Aged ,Cohort Studies ,Ethnicity ,Female ,Fractures ,Bone ,Humans ,Medical Records ,Middle Aged ,Osteoporosis ,Postmenopausal ,Postmenopause ,Radiography ,Reproducibility of Results ,Retrospective Studies ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,United States ,Women's Health Initiative ,self-report for fracture ,validity ,clinical trial ,observational study ,postmenopausal women ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Obstetrics & Reproductive Medicine - Abstract
ObjectiveThe purpose of this study is to examine the validity of, and factors associated with, the accuracy of self-report (participant-report and proxy-report) for fractures.DesignStudy participants were from the Women's Health Initiative Clinical Trial and Observational Study cohorts. All women were postmenopausal; populations included American Indian, Asian/Pacific Islander, black, Hispanic, and non-Hispanic white. The average length of follow-up was 4.3 years. Self-reported fractures were adjudicated by reviewing medical records. The first adjudicated self-report of fractures for each participant was included in the analysis (n = 6,652).ResultsWe found substantial variations in validity of self-report by the fracture site. Agreements between self-reports for single-site fractures and medical records were high for hip (78%) and forearm/wrist (81%) but relatively lower for clinical spine fractures (51%). The average confirmation rate for all single-site fractures was 71%. Misidentification of fracture sites by participants or proxy-reporters seemed to be a cause of unconfirmed self-reports. Higher confirmation rates were observed in participant-reports than in proxy-reports. Results of the multivariate analysis indicated that multiple factors, such as ethnicity, a history of osteoporosis or fractures, body mass index, years since menopause, smoking status, and number of falls in the past year were significantly (P < 0.05) related to the validity of self-report.ConclusionThe validity of self-reports for fracture varies by fracture sites and many other factors. The assessed validity in this study is likely conservative because some of the unconfirmed self-reports may be due to poor medical record systems. The validity of self-reports for hip and forearm/wrist fractures is high in this study, supporting their use in epidemiological studies among postmenopausal women.
- Published
- 2004
26. Habitual Tea Consumption and Risk of Osteoporosis: A Prospective Study in the Women’s Health Initiative Observational Cohort
- Author
-
Chen, Z, Pettinger, MB, Ritenbaugh, C, LaCroix, AZ, Robbins, J, Caan, BJ, Barad, DH, and Hakim, IA
- Subjects
Aging ,Complementary and Integrative Health ,Clinical Research ,Osteoporosis ,Musculoskeletal ,Aged ,Bone Density ,Calcium ,Dietary ,Confidence Intervals ,Female ,Hip Fractures ,Humans ,Middle Aged ,Osteoporosis ,Postmenopausal ,Prospective Studies ,Risk Factors ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Tea ,United States ,Women's Health ,bone density ,cohort studies ,densitometry ,fractures ,osteoporosis ,postmenopausal ,tea ,women ,Mathematical Sciences ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Epidemiology - Abstract
The purpose of this study was to prospectively investigate associations of habitual drinking of regular tea with bone mineral density and fracture risk. Study participants were a multiethnic postmenopausal cohort (n = 91,465) from the nationwide Women's Health Initiative Observational Study. These women were recruited in the United States and aged 50-79 years at the time of enrollment (1994-1998). The average follow-up time was 4.1 years. Habitual consumption of regular tea was assessed with a structured questionnaire at baseline. Clinical fractures during the follow-up were reported in questionnaires, and hip fractures were further confirmed by reviewing medical records. Bone mineral density measurements were conducted among a subgroup of women (n = 4,979) at three Women's Health Initiative bone mineral density centers using dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry. Multivariate analyses suggested a positive trend of increased total body bone mineral density with tea drinking (p < 0.05). However, results from the Cox proportional hazard models did not show any significant association between tea drinking and the risk of fractures at the hip and forearm/wrist. In conclusion, the results from this study indicate that the effect of habitual tea drinking on bone density is small and does not significantly alter the risk of fractures among the US postmenopausal population.
- Published
- 2003
27. Effects of Estrogen Plus Progestin on Risk of Fracture and Bone Mineral Density: The Women's Health Initiative Randomized Trial
- Author
-
Cauley, Jane A, Robbins, John, Chen, Zhao, Cummings, Steven R, Jackson, Rebecca D, LaCroix, Andrea Z, LeBoff, Meryl, Lewis, Cora E, McGowan, Joan, Neuner, Joan, Pettinger, Mary, Stefanick, Marcia L, Wactawski-Wende, Jean, Watts, Nelson B, and Investigators, for the Women's Health Initiative
- Subjects
Aging ,Clinical Research ,Osteoporosis ,Patient Safety ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Prevention ,Estrogen ,6.1 Pharmaceuticals ,Evaluation of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,Injuries and accidents ,Aged ,Bone Density ,Double-Blind Method ,Estrogen Replacement Therapy ,Estrogens ,Conjugated (USP) ,Female ,Fractures ,Bone ,Humans ,Medroxyprogesterone Acetate ,Middle Aged ,Postmenopause ,Progesterone Congeners ,Proportional Hazards Models ,Risk ,Women's Health Initiative Investigators ,Medical and Health Sciences ,General & Internal Medicine - Abstract
ContextIn the Women's Health Initiative trial of estrogen-plus-progestin therapy, women assigned to active treatment had fewer fractures.ObjectiveTo test the hypothesis that the relative risk reduction of estrogen plus progestin on fractures differs according to risk factors for fractures.Design, setting, and participantsRandomized controlled trial (September 1993-July 2002) in which 16 608 postmenopausal women aged 50 to 79 years with an intact uterus at baseline were recruited at 40 US clinical centers and followed up for an average of 5.6 years.InterventionWomen were randomly assigned to receive conjugated equine estrogen, 0.625 mg/d, plus medroxyprogesterone acetate, 2.5 mg/d, in 1 tablet (n = 8506) or placebo (n = 8102).Main outcome measuresAll confirmed osteoporotic fracture events that occurred from enrollment to discontinuation of the trial (July 7, 2002); bone mineral density (BMD), measured in a subset of women (n = 1024) at baseline and years 1 and 3; and a global index, developed to summarize the balance of risks and benefits to test whether the risk-benefit profile differed across tertiles of fracture risk.ResultsSeven hundred thirty-three women (8.6%) in the estrogen-plus-progestin group and 896 women (11.1%) in the placebo group experienced a fracture (hazard ratio [HR], 0.76; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.69-0.83). The effect did not differ in women stratified by age, body mass index, smoking status, history of falls, personal and family history of fracture, total calcium intake, past use of hormone therapy, BMD, or summary fracture risk score. Total hip BMD increased 3.7% after 3 years of treatment with estrogen plus progestin compared with 0.14% in the placebo group (P
- Published
- 2003
28. Statin use, clinical fracture, and bone density in postmenopausal women: results from the Women's Health Initiative Observational Study.
- Author
-
LaCroix, Andrea Z, Cauley, Jane A, Pettinger, Mary, Hsia, Judith, Bauer, Douglas C, McGowan, Joan, Chen, Zhao, Lewis, Cora E, McNeeley, S Gene, Passaro, Maureen D, and Jackson, Rebecca D
- Subjects
Reproductive Medicine ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Prevention ,Aging ,Osteoporosis ,Clinical Research ,Musculoskeletal ,Aged ,Bone Density ,Confounding Factors ,Epidemiologic ,Female ,Follow-Up Studies ,Forearm Injuries ,Fractures ,Bone ,Hip Fractures ,Humans ,Hydroxymethylglutaryl-CoA Reductase Inhibitors ,Incidence ,Middle Aged ,Osteoporosis ,Postmenopausal ,Postmenopause ,Prospective Studies ,Wrist Injuries ,Public Health and Health Services - Abstract
Background3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl coenzyme A reductase inhibitors (statins) have been shown to stimulate bone formation in laboratory studies, both in vitro and in vivo. While early epidemiologic studies showed lower risk for hip fracture among statin users than nonusers, subsequent studies have produced mixed results.ObjectiveTo examine the association of statin use with incidence of hip, lower arm or wrist, and other clinical fractures and with baseline levels of bone density.DesignProspective study.SettingWomen's Health Initiative Observational Study conducted in 40 clinical centers in the United States.Participants93 716 postmenopausal women ages 50 to 79 years.MeasurementsRates of hip, lower arm or wrist, and other clinical fractures were compared among 7846 statin users and 85 870 nonusers over a median follow-up of 3.9 years. In 6442 women enrolled at three clinical centers, baseline levels of total hip, posterior-anterior spine, and total-body bone density measured by using dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry were compared according to statin use.ResultsAge-adjusted rates of hip, lower arm or wrist, and other clinical fractures were similar between statin users and nonusers regardless of duration of statin use. The multivariate-adjusted hazard ratios for current statin use were 1.22 (95% CI, 0.83 to 1.81) for hip fracture, 1.04 (CI, 0.85 to 1.27) for lower arm or wrist fracture, and 1.11 (CI, 1.00 to 1.22) for other clinical fracture. Bone density levels did not statistically differ between statin users and nonusers at any skeletal site after adjustment for age, ethnicity, body mass index, and other factors.ConclusionStatin use did not improve fracture risk or bone density in the Women's Health Initiative Observational Study. The cumulative evidence does not warrant use of statins to prevent or treat osteoporosis.
- Published
- 2003
29. Thermal Analysis of Buried Insulated Pipes
- Author
-
Afshan, S. and Pettinger, A.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Walking Compared with Vigorous Exercise for the Prevention of Cardiovascular Events in Women
- Author
-
Manson, JoAnn E, Greenland, Philip, LaCroix, Andrea Z, Stefanick, Marcia L, Mouton, Charles P, Oberman, Albert, Perri, Michael G, Sheps, David S, Pettinger, Mary B, and Siscovick, David S
- Subjects
Heart Disease ,Clinical Research ,Aging ,Prevention ,Cardiovascular ,Cancer ,Good Health and Well Being ,Aged ,Cardiovascular Diseases ,Coronary Disease ,Exercise ,Female ,Humans ,Middle Aged ,Multivariate Analysis ,Postmenopause ,Proportional Hazards Models ,Prospective Studies ,Reproducibility of Results ,Risk ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Walking ,Medical and Health Sciences ,General & Internal Medicine - Abstract
BackgroundThe role of walking, as compared with vigorous exercise, in the prevention of cardiovascular disease remains controversial. Data for women who are members of minority racial or ethnic groups are particularly sparse.MethodsWe prospectively examined the total physical-activity score, walking, vigorous exercise, and hours spent sitting as predictors of the incidence of coronary events and total cardiovascular events among 73,743 postmenopausal women 50 to 79 years of age in the Women's Health Initiative Observational Study. At base line, participants were free of diagnosed cardiovascular disease and cancer, and all participants completed detailed questionnaires about physical activity. We documented 345 newly diagnosed cases of coronary heart disease and 1551 total cardiovascular events.ResultsAn increasing physical-activity score had a strong, graded, inverse association with the risk of both coronary events and total cardiovascular events. There were similar findings among white women and black women. Women in increasing quintiles of energy expenditure measured in metabolic equivalents (the MET score) had age-adjusted relative risks of coronary events of 1.00, 0.73, 0.69, 0.68, and 0.47, respectively (P for trend,
- Published
- 2002
31. Social Selection and Religiously Selective Faith Schools
- Author
-
Pettinger, Paul
- Abstract
This article reviews recent research looking at the socio-economic profile of pupils at faith schools and the contribution religiously selective admission arrangements make. It finds that selection by faith leads to greater social segregation and is open to manipulation. It urges that such selection should end, making the state-funded school system more inclusive and reducing disadvantage.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Life Events, Caregiving, and Risk of Autoimmune Rheumatic Diseases in the Women's Health Initiative Observational Study
- Author
-
Parks, Christine G., Pettinger, Mary, Roos, Anneclaire J., Tindle, Hilary A., Walitt, Brian T., and Howard, Barbara V.
- Abstract
Growing evidence suggests psychosocial stressors may increase risk of developing autoimmune disease. We examined stressful life events and caregiving in relation to incident rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) in the Women's Health Initiative Observational Study cohort. The sample of postmenopausal women included 211 incident RA or SLE cases reported within 3 years after enrollment, confirmed by use of disease‐modifying antirheumatic drugs (i.e., probable RA/SLE), and 76,648 noncases. Baseline questionnaires asked about life events in the past year, caregiving, and social support. We used Cox regression models to calculate hazard ratios (HR) and 95% confidence intervals (95% CIs), adjusting for age, race/ethnicity, occupational class, education, pack‐years of smoking and BMI. Incident RA/SLE was associated with reporting 3 or more life events (e.g., age‐adjusted HR 1.70 [95% CI 1.14, 2.53]; Pfor trend = 0.0026). Elevated HRs were noted for physical (HR 2.48 [95% CI 1.02, 6.04]) and verbal (HR 1.34 [0.89, 2.02]) abuse (Pfor trend = 0.0614), 2 or more interpersonal events (HR 1.23 [95% CI 0.87, 1.73]; Pfor trend = 0.2403), financial stress (HR 1.22 [95% CI 0.90, 1.64]), and caregiving 3 or more days per week (HR 1.25 [95% CI 0.87, 1.81]; Pfor trend = 0.2571). Results were similar, excluding women with baseline symptoms of depression or moderate‐to‐severe joint pain in the absence of diagnosed arthritis. Our findings support the idea that diverse stressors may increase risk of developing probable RA or SLE in postmenopausal women, supporting the need for further studies in autoimmune rheumatic diseases, including childhood adverse events, life event trajectories, and modifying psychosocial and socioeconomic factors.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. The Evidence Base on the Effects of Policy and Practice in Faith Schools
- Author
-
Pettinger, Paul
- Abstract
This article analyses some of the common assertions made in the public debate about the merits and disadvantages of faith schools and tests them against actual research findings. It argues that there is a growing body of evidence showing that current policy and practice in faith schools creates social division and that faith schools need to do more to respect the rights and beliefs of staff, pupils and their families. (Contains 15 notes.)
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. What’s wrong with work?
- Author
-
Pettinger, Lynne and Pettinger, Lynne
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Embodying the inquiry: Disaster, affectivity, and the localized politics of security
- Author
-
Pettinger, Tom
- Abstract
The responsibilizing of civil society for security has been well analysed in recent years, but the place of the public inquiry as an important site of negotiations over issues of affect in security has been largely under-acknowledged. This article investigates the scope, recommendations, and forensic investigation of the Manchester Arena Inquiry, an inquiry established in the wake of the 2017 bombing and which prefigures the gaze of the UK’s forthcoming ‘Protect Duty’. Once formalized, this Duty will situate venue workers as crucial embodiments of national counter-terrorism priorities. The paper shows how contestations over affective embodiments of security are navigated across the Inquiry, with national security articulated as being produced exclusively in local spaces, and through a body divorced from its experience via sophisticated management techniques. We find how security is imagined through local workers becoming ‘watchfully-anxious’, with routinized tasks and training deployed to generate this necessary destabilization. Bodies of venue staff must be displaced and moved around, opening space for racialized encounters – where these encounters are rendered necessarily productive of security, regardless of their result. Workers are required to confess, defending their role in security failure and situating them within national priorities. Through close analysis of the Inquiry’s reports, and drawing from interviews with UK disaster management experts, the discussion reveals how the Manchester Arena Inquiry positions national security as produced through low-paid workers defending the minutiae of their jobs in the context of the local venue. Through its forensic investigation and detail-oriented scope, the public inquiry is revealed as an important technology in the (re)production of localized forms of security knowledge, which in turn delegitimizes knowledge of disaster as structural or political.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Metabolomics-Based Biomarker for Dietary Fat and Associations with Chronic Disease Risk in Postmenopausal Women
- Author
-
Prentice, Ross L., Vasan, Sowmya, Tinker, Lesley F., Neuhouser, Marian L., Navarro, Sandi L., Raftery, Daniel, Gowda, GA Nagana, Pettinger, Mary, Aragaki, Aaron K., Lampe, Johanna W., Huang, Ying, Van Horn, Linda, Manson, JoAnn E., Wallace, Robert, Mossavar-Rahmani, Yasmin, Wactawski-Wende, Jean, Liu, Simin, Snetselaar, Linda, Howard, Barbara V., Chlebowski, Rowan T., and Zheng, Cheng
- Abstract
The Women’s Health Initiative (WHI) randomized, controlled Dietary Modification (DM) trial of a low-fat dietary pattern suggested intervention benefits related to breast cancer, coronary heart disease (CHD), and diabetes. Here, we use WHI observational data for further insight into the chronic disease implications of adopting this type of low-fat dietary pattern.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Frederick Douglass and Scotland, 1846 : Living an Antislavery Life
- Author
-
Pettinger, Alasdair and Pettinger, Alasdair
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Profiling Sulfur(VI) Fluorides as Reactive Functionalities for Chemical Biology Tools and Expansion of the Ligandable Proteome.
- Author
-
Gilbert, Katharine E., Vuorinen, Aini, Aatkar, Arron, Pogány, Peter, Pettinger, Jonathan, Grant, Emma K., Kirkpatrick, Joanna M., Rittinger, Katrin, House, David, Burley, Glenn A., and Bush, Jacob T.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Association of Premature Menopause With Risk of Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm in the Women's Health Initiative.
- Author
-
Chou, Elizabeth L., Pettinger, Mary, Haring, Bernhard, Allison, Matthew A., Mell, Matthew W., Hlatky, Mark A., Wactawski-Wende, Jean, Wild, Robert A., Shadyab, Aladdin H., Wallace, Robert B., Snetselaar, Linda G., Madsen, Tracy E., Eagleton, Matthew J., Conrad, Mark F., and Liu, Simin
- Abstract
Objective: To determine if premature menopause and early menarche are associated with increased risk of AAA, and to explore potential effect modification by smoking history. Summary of Background Data: Despite worse outcomes for women with AAA, no studies have prospectively examined sex-specific risk factors, such as premature menopause and early menarche, with risk of AAA in a large, ethnically diverse cohort of women. Methods: This was a post-hoc analysis of Women's Health Initiative participants who were beneficiaries of Medicare Parts A&B fee-for-service. AAA cases and interventions were identified from claims data. Follow-up period included Medicare coverage until death, end of follow-up or end of coverage inclusive of 2017. Results: Of 101,119 participants included in the analysis, the mean age was 63 years and median follow-up was 11.3 years. Just under 10,000 (9.4%) women experienced premature menopause and 22,240 (22%) experienced early men-arche. Women with premature menopause were more likely to be overweight, Black, have >20 pack years of smoking, history of cardiovascular disease, hypertension, and early menarche. During 1,091,840 person-years of follow-up, 1125 women were diagnosed with AAA, 134 had premature menopause (11.9%), 93 underwent surgical intervention and 45 (48%) required intervention for ruptured AAA. Premature menopause was associated with increased risk of AAA [hazard ratio 1.37 (1.14, 1.66)], but the association was no longer significant after multivariable adjustment for demographics and cardiovascular disease risk factors. Amongst women with ≥20 pack year smoking history (n = 19,286), 2148 (11.1%) had premature menopause, which was associated with greater risk of AAA in all models [hazard ratio 1.63 (1.24, 2.23)]. Early menarche was not associated with increased risk of AAA. Conclusions: This study finds that premature menopause may be an important risk factor for AAA in women with significant smoking history. There was no significant association between premature menopause and risk of AAA amongst women who have never smoked. These results suggest an opportunity to develop strategies for better screening, risk reduction and stratification, and outcome improvement in the comprehensive vascular care of women. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Using the Whole Cohort in the Analysis of Case-Control Data: Application to the Women’s Health Initiative
- Author
-
Breslow, Norman E., Amorim, Gustavo, Pettinger, Mary B., and Rossouw, Jacques
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Prevalence of Psychotropic Drug Use in Adults with Intellectual Disability: Positive and Negative Findings from a Large Scale Study
- Author
-
Tsiouris, John A., Kim, Soh-Yule, Brown, W. Ted, Pettinger, Jill, and Cohen, Ira L.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Enantioselective OTUD7B fragment discovery through chemoproteomics screening and high-throughput optimisation
- Author
-
Vuorinen, Aini, Kennedy, Cassandra R., McPhie, Katherine A., McCarthy, William, Pettinger, Jonathan, Skehel, J. Mark, House, David, Bush, Jacob T., and Rittinger, Katrin
- Published
- 2025
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Robust proteome profiling of cysteine-reactive fragments using label-free chemoproteomics
- Author
-
Biggs, George S., Cawood, Emma E., Vuorinen, Aini, McCarthy, William J., Wilders, Harry, Riziotis, Ioannis G., van der Zouwen, Antonie J., Pettinger, Jonathan, Nightingale, Luke, Chen, Peiling, Powell, Andrew J., House, David, Boulton, Simon J., Skehel, J. Mark, Rittinger, Katrin, and Bush, Jacob T.
- Published
- 2025
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. P1.01B.02 The Genomic Landscape of Lung Cancer in Never-Smokers from the Women's Health Initiative
- Author
-
Moorthi, S., Paguirigan, A., Itagi, P., Ko, M., Pettinger, M., Hoge, A.C.H., Nag, A., Patel, N.A., Wu, F., Sather, C., Levine, K.M., Fitzgibbon, M.P., Thorner, A.R., Anderson, G.L., Ha, G., and Berger, A.H.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Calcium and vitamin D supplementation and incident rheumatoid arthritis: the Women’s Health Initiative Calcium plus Vitamin D trial
- Author
-
Racovan, Marius, Walitt, Brian, Collins, Christopher E., Pettinger, Mary, Parks, Christine G., Shikany, James M., Wactawski-Wende, Jean, Manson, JoAnn E., Moreland, Larry, Wright, Nicole, Jackson, Rebecca, and Howard, Barbara V.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. A Large Scale Study of the Psychometric Characteristics of the IBR Modified Overt Aggression Scale: Findings and Evidence for Increased Self-Destructive Behaviors in Adult Females with Autism Spectrum Disorder
- Author
-
Cohen, Ira L., Tsiouris, John A., Flory, Michael J., Kim, Soh-Yule, Freedland, Robert, Heaney, Glenn, Pettinger, Jill, and Ted Brown, W.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. African Americans on Africa: Colleen J. McElroy and the rhetoric of kinship
- Author
-
Pettinger, Alasdair
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Productivity Gains from Worker Well-Being in Europe.
- Author
-
Peroni, Chiara, Pettinger, Maxime, and Sarracino, Francesco
- Published
- 2022
49. Electrochemical SHG at a Ag (111) single-crystal electrode using the hanging meniscus configuration
- Author
-
Danckwerts, M., Savinova, E., Pettinger, B., and Doblhofer, K.
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Educational achievement to age 11 years in children born at late preterm and early term gestations
- Author
-
Copper, Clare, Waterman, Amanda, Nicoletti, Cheti, Pettinger, Katherine, Sanders, Lee, and Hill, Liam J B
- Abstract
ObjectiveTo investigate the effects of being born late preterm (LPT, 34–36 weeks’ gestation) or early term (37–38 weeks) on children’s educational achievement between ages 5 and 11 years.DesignA series of observational studies of longitudinal linked health and education data.SettingThe Born-in-Bradford (BiB) birth cohort study, which recruited mothers during pregnancy between 2007 and 2011.ParticipantsThe participants are children born between 2007 and 2011. Children with missing data, looked-after-children, multiple births and births post-term were excluded. The sample size varies by age according to amount of missing data, from 7860 children at age 5 years to 2386 at age 11 years (8031 at age 6 years and 5560 at age 7 years).Main outcome measuresBinary variables of whether a child reached the ‘expected’ level of overall educational achievement across subjects at the ages of 5, 6, 7 and 11 years. The achievement levels are measured using standardised teacher assessments and national tests.ResultsCompared with full-term births (39–41 weeks), there were significantly increased adjusted odds of children born LPT, but not early term, of failing to achieve expected levels of overall educational achievement at ages 5 years (adjusted OR (aOR) 1.72,95% CI 1.34 to 2.21) and 7 years (aOR 1.46, 95% CI 1.08 to 1.97) but not at age 11 years (aOR 1.51, 95% CI 0.99 to 2.30). Being born LPT still had statistically significant effects on writing and mathematics at age 11 years.ConclusionsThere is a strong association between LPT and education at age 5 years, which remains strong and statistically significant through age 11 years for mathematics but not for other key subjects.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.