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013-0.084%w/w) were determined in five commercial dried extracts of E. purpurea, with significant variation in the contents between different samples, indicating the need of standardization and control of individual caffeic acid derivatives in commercial extracts.
Reward sensitivity has been proposed as a potential mediator of outcomes for bariatric surgery.
We aimed to determine whether gustatory and psychometric measures of reward-related feeding are predictors of bariatric-induced weight loss.
A multicenter longitudinal cohort study was conducted in patients scheduled for bariatric surgery (surgical group), assessed at baseline and 2 follow-up assessments. Predictions of % weight loss from baseline (%WL) according to baseline gustatory measures, including intensity and pleasantness ratings of sweet and other tastants, and psychometric measures of reward-related feeding behavior, including hedonic hunger scores, were assessed with multivariable linear regression. Exploratory analyses were conducted to test for associations between %WL and changes in gustatory and psychophysical measures, as well as for comparisons with data from patients on the surgery waiting list (control group).
We included 212 patients, of whom 96 in the surgical group and 50 in the contrthey may reflect physiological processes that are variably modulated by bariatric surgery, influencing clinical outcomes.
Sweet intensity ratings and hedonic hunger scores predict %WL after surgery. The variability of sweet intensity ratings is also associated with %WL, further suggesting they may reflect physiological processes that are variably modulated by bariatric surgery, influencing clinical outcomes.
Patients with Lynch syndrome are at an increased risk of developing colorectal cancer, and the adenoma-carcinoma sequence is accelerated in these patients. However, the clinicopathological characteristics of colorectal neoplasms in Lynch syndrome patients are not well-known.
A total of 325 consecutive colorectal neoplasms were endoscopically removed from 68 patients with Lynch syndrome between June 2005 and May 2018 and retrospectively reviewed.
Of the 325 lesions, 94 (29%), 220 (68%) and 11 (3%) were from patients with MLH1, MSH2 and MSH6 mutations, respectively. The median lesion size was 5mm (range 2-40mm), with 229 (71%) lesions having a non-polypoid morphology. The frequencies of advanced neoplasms, including high-grade adenomas, intramucosal carcinomas and submucosal invasive carcinomas were 14, 34, 97 and 93% for lesions with diameters of <5, ≥5 and<10, ≥10 and<20, and≥20mm, respectively. The frequencies of advanced neoplasms in the proximal colon, distal colon and rectum did not signifion, and all neoplastic lesions, regardless of the size, should be subjected to detailed endoscopic examination, complete resection and detailed pathological examination.
Although abnormal blood pressure patterns are associated with adverse cardiorenal outcomes, their associations are yet unquantified by nocturnal dipping status. We examined the association of nocturnal blood pressure dipping pattern with albuminuria and kidney function among participants with controlled hypertension without prior advanced kidney disease.
Ambulatory blood pressure measurements were collected from 995 middle-aged, cardiology clinic patients with controlled office blood pressure (<140/90 mmHg). The magnitude of dipping was calculated as the difference between daytime and nighttime systolic blood pressure divided by daytime systolic blood pressure. Accordingly, the participants were categorized as extreme-dipper (≥20%), dipper (10-<20%), non-dipper (0-<10%), or reverse-dipper (<0%). We analyzed the cross-sectional associations of dipping with albuminuria (urine albumin-to-creatinine ratio ≥30mg/g) and decreased estimated glomerular filtration rate (<60ml/min/1.73m 2), adjusting otherwise overlooked based on office blood pressure.
Surgery is recommended for patients with high-risk submucosal invasive rectal cancer (SM-RC) after local resection but affects the quality of life due to stoma placement or impaired anal function; therefore, alternative treatment approaches are needed to prevent local metastasis. The purpose of this study was to assess the short-term safety of adjuvant chemoradiotherapy with capecitabine in patients with high-risk submucosal invasive rectal cancer after local resection.
This single-arm, multicenter, phase II trial included patients undergoing local resection for high-risk submucosal invasive rectal cancer within 12weeks prior to enrollment. High-risk submucosal invasive rectal cancer was defined as the presence of at least one of the following factors poor differentiation of adenocarcinoma, submucosal invasion depth>1mm, presence of lymphovascular invasion and grade-2 or-3 tumour budding. Protocol treatment comprised 45.0Gy radiotherapy with conventional fractionation and 1650mg/m2 capecitabine given ter local resection.
Our objective was to investigate age- and sex-related differences in the distribution of metastases in patients with metastatic bladder cancer.
Within the National Inpatient Sample database (2008-2015), we identified 7040 patients with metastatic bladder cancer. Trend test and Chi-square test analyses were used to evaluate the relationship between age and site of metastases, according to sex.
Of 7040 patients with metastatic bladder cancer, 5226 (74.2%) were men and 1814 (25.8%) were women. AGL 1879 Thoracic, abdominal, bone and brain metastases were present in 19.5 vs. 23.0%, 43.6 vs. 46.9%, 23.9 vs. 18.7% and 2.4 vs. 2.9% of men vs. women, respectively. Bone was the most common metastatic site in men (23.9%) vs. lung in women (22.4%). Increasing age was associated with decreasing rates of abdominal (from 44.9 to 40.2%) and brain (from 3.2 to 1.4%) metastases in men vs. decreasing rates of bone (from 21.0 to 13.3%) and brain (from 5.1 to 2.0%) metastases in women (all P<0.05). Finally, rates of metastases in multiple organs also decreased with age, in both men and women.
The distribution of metastases in bladder cancer varies according to sex. Moreover, differences exist according to patient age and these differences are also sex-specific. In consequence, patient age and sex should be considered in the interpretation of imaging, especially when findings are indeterminate.
The distribution of metastases in bladder cancer varies according to sex. Moreover, differences exist according to patient age and these differences are also sex-specific. In consequence, patient age and sex should be considered in the interpretation of imaging, especially when findings are indeterminate.
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