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9
result(s) for
"Berger, Ines H."
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Improvement in Fibromyalgia Symptoms With Acupuncture: Results of a Randomized Controlled Trial
by
Sletten, Christopher D.
,
Berger, Ines H.
,
Williams, Brent A.
in
Acupuncture Points
,
Acupuncture Therapy
,
Anxiety - therapy
2006
To test the hypothesis that acupuncture improves symptoms of fibromyalgia.
We conducted a prospective, partially blinded, controlled, randomized clinical trial of patients receiving true acupuncture compared with a control group of patients who received simulated acupuncture. All patients met American College of Rheumatology criteria for fibromyalgia and had tried conservative symptomatic treatments other than acupuncture. We measured symptoms with the Fibromyalgia Impact Questionnaire (FIQ) and the Multidimensional Pain Inventory at baseline, immediately after treatment, and at 1 month and 7 months after treatment. The trial was conducted from May 28, 2002, to August 18, 2003.
Fifty patients participated in the study: 25 in the acupuncture group and 25 in the control group. Total fibromyalgia symptoms, as measured by the FIQ, were significantly improved in the acupuncture group compared with the control group during the study period (
P=.01). The largest difference in mean FIQ total scores was observed at 1 month (42.2 vs 34.8 in the control and acupuncture groups, respectively;
P=.007). Fatigue and anxiety were the most significantly improved symptoms during the follow-up period. However, activity and physical function levels did not change. Acupuncture was well tolerated, with minimal adverse effects.
This study paradigm allows for controlled and blinded clinical trials of acupuncture. We found that acupuncture significantly improved symptoms of fibromyalgia. Symptomatic improvement was not restricted to pain relief and was most significant for fatigue and anxiety.
Journal Article
18F-sodium fluoride autoradiography imaging of nephrocalcinosis in donor kidneys and explanted kidney allografts
by
Slart, Riemer H. J. A.
,
Bulthuis, Marian L. C.
,
Benjamens, Stan
in
692/4022/272
,
692/53/2421
,
Allografts
2021
Nephrocalcinosis is present in up to 43% of kidney allograft biopsies at one-year after transplantation and is associated with inferior graft function and poor graft survival. We studied [
18
F]-sodium fluoride ([
18
F]-NaF) imaging of microcalcifications in donor kidneys (n = 7) and explanted kidney allografts (n = 13). Three µm paraffin-embedded serial sections were used for histological evaluation of calcification (Alizarin Red; Von Kossa staining) and ex-vivo [
18
F]-NaF autoradiography. The images were fused to evaluate if microcalcification areas corresponded with [
18
F]-NaF uptake areas. Based on histological analyses, tubulointerstitial and glomerular microcalcifications were present in 19/20 and 7/20 samples, respectively. Using autoradiography, [
18
F]-NaF uptake was found in 19/20 samples, with significantly more tracer activity in kidney allograft compared to deceased donor kidney samples (
p
= 0.019). Alizarin Red staining of active microcalcifications demonstrated good correlation (Spearman’s rho of 0.81,
p
< 0.001) and Von Kossa staining of consolidated calcifications demonstrated significant but weak correlation (0.62,
p
= 0.003) with [
18
F]-NaF activity. This correlation between ex-vivo [
18
F]-NaF uptake and histology-proven microcalcifications, is the first step towards an imaging method to identify microcalcifications in active nephrocalcinosis. This may lead to better understanding of the etiology of microcalcifications and its impact on kidney transplant function.
Journal Article
Interventions to improve health care provider implementation and patient adherence of patients to recommendations on geriatric assessment and management in older adults: A scoping review protocol
2025
The world population is aging. Comprehensive Geriatric assessment (CGA) has been proven to improve the well-being of older adults. However, evidence suggests not all clinicians implement these recommendations in their practice; nor do all patients adhere to them. Currently, there is no up-to-date review of interventions that can improve older adults’ adherence to CGA recommendations and health care provider/clinician implementation of those recommendations. The objective of this scoping review protocol is to describe the methodology of the scoping review with the aim to identify interventions that have been tested to improve adherence to CGA recommendations. We will use the Arksey and O’Malley framework and subsequent extension by Levac and colleagues to complete the scoping review. We searched OVID MEDLINE, OVID Embase, EBSCO CINAHL, APA PsychInfo, and Cochrane CENTRAL databases from inception to November 14, 2024, and will include a review of reference lists of included studies. Studies eligible for inclusion are studies of any design that examined one or more interventions aiming to improve clinician implementation of and patient adherence to CGA in any clinical setting. We will use standard methods for study selection, data abstraction, assessment of methodological quality of individual studies, and data synthesis. Results will be analyzed and reported using descriptive numerical summaries and narrative analysis. Findings from the scoping review will be published in a manuscript and presented at scientific conferences.
Journal Article
18F-sodium fluoride autoradiography imaging of nephrocalcinosis in donor kidneys and explanted kidney allografts
2021
Nephrocalcinosis is present in up to 43% of kidney allograft biopsies at one-year after transplantation and is associated with inferior graft function and poor graft survival. We studied [18F]-sodium fluoride ([18F]-NaF) imaging of microcalcifications in donor kidneys (n = 7) and explanted kidney allografts (n = 13). Three µm paraffin-embedded serial sections were used for histological evaluation of calcification (Alizarin Red; Von Kossa staining) and ex-vivo [18F]-NaF autoradiography. The images were fused to evaluate if microcalcification areas corresponded with [18F]-NaF uptake areas. Based on histological analyses, tubulointerstitial and glomerular microcalcifications were present in 19/20 and 7/20 samples, respectively. Using autoradiography, [18F]-NaF uptake was found in 19/20 samples, with significantly more tracer activity in kidney allograft compared to deceased donor kidney samples (p = 0.019). Alizarin Red staining of active microcalcifications demonstrated good correlation (Spearman's rho of 0.81, p < 0.001) and Von Kossa staining of consolidated calcifications demonstrated significant but weak correlation (0.62, p = 0.003) with [18F]-NaF activity. This correlation between ex-vivo [18F]-NaF uptake and histology-proven microcalcifications, is the first step towards an imaging method to identify microcalcifications in active nephrocalcinosis. This may lead to better understanding of the etiology of microcalcifications and its impact on kidney transplant function.Nephrocalcinosis is present in up to 43% of kidney allograft biopsies at one-year after transplantation and is associated with inferior graft function and poor graft survival. We studied [18F]-sodium fluoride ([18F]-NaF) imaging of microcalcifications in donor kidneys (n = 7) and explanted kidney allografts (n = 13). Three µm paraffin-embedded serial sections were used for histological evaluation of calcification (Alizarin Red; Von Kossa staining) and ex-vivo [18F]-NaF autoradiography. The images were fused to evaluate if microcalcification areas corresponded with [18F]-NaF uptake areas. Based on histological analyses, tubulointerstitial and glomerular microcalcifications were present in 19/20 and 7/20 samples, respectively. Using autoradiography, [18F]-NaF uptake was found in 19/20 samples, with significantly more tracer activity in kidney allograft compared to deceased donor kidney samples (p = 0.019). Alizarin Red staining of active microcalcifications demonstrated good correlation (Spearman's rho of 0.81, p < 0.001) and Von Kossa staining of consolidated calcifications demonstrated significant but weak correlation (0.62, p = 0.003) with [18F]-NaF activity. This correlation between ex-vivo [18F]-NaF uptake and histology-proven microcalcifications, is the first step towards an imaging method to identify microcalcifications in active nephrocalcinosis. This may lead to better understanding of the etiology of microcalcifications and its impact on kidney transplant function.
Journal Article
Validating candidate endpoints for intermediate age-related macular degeneration trials in a multi-centre setting—lessons from the MACUSTAR study
by
Dunbar, Hannah M. P.
,
Terheyden, Jan Henrik
,
Aires, Inês Dinis
in
692/53/2422
,
692/699/3161/3175
,
Aged
2025
For the conduct of future interventional age-related macular degeneration (AMD) trials, the availability of clinical study endpoints is key. However, no endpoints have been accepted by regulators for evaluation of treatment for intermediate (i) AMD, i.e. the AMD stage at highest risk of developing irreversible geographic atrophy or macular neovascularization. The European MACUSTAR consortium has recruited more than 700 individuals to develop and validate structural, functional and patient-reported endpoints, enabling future iAMD trials based on a prospective observational, multi-centre cohort study. Reliably assessing candidate endpoints in a setting that involves multiple clinical sites across countries comes with a plurality of challenges in the study set-up, quality of data, recruitment of participants and study conduct. Therefore, the MACUSTAR consortium has established a framework that successfully addresses these topics, provides relevant insights into the natural history of iAMD and its sub-phenotypes, and will open new regulatory pathways. The MACUSTAR study is registered on ClinicalTrials.gov under NCT03349801.
Journal Article
Predictors of health-related quality of life in children with chronic heart disease
by
Hövels-Gürich, Hedwig H.
,
Balmer, Christian
,
Stiller, Brigitte
in
Adolescent
,
Adolescents
,
Anxiety
2017
Chronic paediatric heart disease is often associated with residual symptoms, persisting functional restrictions, and late sequelae for psychosocial development. It is, therefore, increasingly important to evaluate the health-related quality of life of children and adolescents with chronic heart disease. The aim of this study was to determine medical and socio-demographic variables affecting health-related quality of life in school-aged children and adolescents with chronic heart disease. Patients and methods The Pediatric Cardiac Quality of Life Inventory was administered to 375 children and adolescents and 386 parental caregivers. Medical information was obtained from the charts. The socio-demographic information was provided by the patients and caregivers.
Greater disease severity, low school attendance, current cardiac medication, current parental employment, uncertain or limited prognosis, history of connection to a heart-lung machine, number of nights spent in a hospital, and need for treatment in a paediatric aftercare clinic independently contributed to lower health-related quality of life (self-report: R2=0.41; proxy-report: R2=0.46). High correlations between self-reports and parent-proxy reports indicated concordance regarding the evaluation of a child's health-related quality of life.
Beyond medical treatment, integration into school is important to increase health-related quality of life in children and adolescents surviving with chronic heart disease. Regular screening of health-related quality of life is recommended to identify patients with special needs.
Journal Article
Digenic inheritance of severe insulin resistance in a human pedigree
2002
Impaired insulin action is a key feature of type 2 diabetes and is also found, to a more extreme degree, in familial syndromes of insulin resistance. Although inherited susceptibility to insulin resistance may involve the interplay of several genetic loci, no clear examples of interactions among genes have yet been reported. Here we describe a family in which five individuals with severe insulin resistance, but no unaffected family members, were doubly heterozygous with respect to frameshift/premature stop mutations in two unlinked genes,
PPARG
and
PPP1R3A
these encode peroxisome proliferator activated receptor γ, which is highly expressed in adipocytes, and protein phosphatase 1, regulatory subunit 3, the muscle-specific regulatory subunit of protein phosphatase 1, which are centrally involved in the regulation of carbohydrate and lipid metabolism, respectively. That mutant molecules primarily involved in either carbohydrate or lipid metabolism can combine to produce a phenotype of extreme insulin resistance provides a model of interactions among genes that may underlie common human metabolic disorders such as type 2 diabetes.
Journal Article
Correction: Corrigendum: The zebrafish reference genome sequence and its relationship to the human genome
2014
Nature 496, 498–503 (2013); doi:10.1038/nature12111 In this Letter, five authors were inadvertently omitted: Sharmin Begum and Christine Lloyd from the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute, and Christa Lanz, Günter Raddatz and Stephan C. Schuster from the Max Planck Institute for Developmental Biology. David Elliot was incorrectly listed as David Eliot, Beverley Mortimore was incorrectly listed as Beverly Mortimer, and James D.
Journal Article