Publications
By Year
Now showing items 1681-1700 of 5325 records
Incremental Value of Myocardial Work over Global Longitudinal Strain in the Surveillance for Cancer-Treatment-Related Cardiac Dysfunction: A Case-Control Study.
Wojciech Kosmala; Tomoko Negishi; Paaladinesh Thavendiranathan; Martin Penicka; Jonathan De Blois; Klaus Murbræch; Sakiko Miyazaki; Mitra Shirazi; Ciro Santoro; Dragos Vinereanu; Goo-Yeong Cho; Krassimira Hristova; Bogdan A Popescu; Koji Kurosawa; Masaki Izumo; Kazuaki Negishi; Monika Przewlocka-Kosmala; Thomas H Marwick
JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MEDICINE - 09 Feb 2022
The load dependence of global longitudinal strain (GLS) means that changes in systolic blood pressure (BP) between visits may confound the diagnosis of cancer-treatment-related cardiac dysfunction (CTRCD). We sought to determine whether the estimation of myocardial work, which incorporates SBP, could overcome this limitation. In this case-control study, 44 asymptomatic patients at risk of CTRCD...
The Association between Diabetes and Human T-Cell Leukaemia Virus Type-1 (HTLV-1) with : Results of a Community-Based, Cross-Sectional Survey in Central Australia.Strongyloides stercoralis
Mohammad Radwanur Talukder; Hai Pham; Richard Woodman; Kim Wilson; Kerry Taylor; John Kaldor; Lloyd Einsiedel
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH AND PUBLIC HEALTH - 13 Feb 2022
In central Australia, an area that is endemic for the human T-cell leukaemia virus type-1 (HTLV-1), the prevalence of and its association with other health conditions are unknown. A cross-sectional community-based survey was conducted in seven remote Aboriginal communities in central Australia, from 2014 to 2018. All residents aged ≥10 years were invited to complete a health survey and to prov...
Effect of 2D and 3D Culture Microenvironments on Mesenchymal Stem Cell-Derived Extracellular Vesicles Potencies.
Gina D Kusuma; Anqi Li; Dandan Zhu; Hannah McDonald; Ishmael M Inocencio; Daniel C Chambers; Kenneth Sinclair; Haoyun Fang; David W Greening; Jessica E Frith; Rebecca Lim
FRONTIERS IN CELL AND DEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGY - 01 Jan 2022
Therapeutic benefits of mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) are now widely believed to come from their paracrine signalling, i.e. secreted factors such as cytokines, chemokines, and extracellular vesicles (EVs). Cell-free therapy using EVs is an active and emerging field in regenerative medicine. Typical 2D cultures on tissue culture plastic is far removed from the physiological environment of MSCs. ...
Hematopoietic Progenitors and the Bone Marrow Niche Shape the Inflammatory Response and Contribute to Chronic Disease.
Yangsong Xu; Andrew J Murphy; Andrew J Fleetwood
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR SCIENCES - 17 Feb 2022
It is now well understood that the bone marrow (BM) compartment can sense systemic inflammatory signals and adapt through increased proliferation and lineage skewing. These coordinated and dynamic alterations in responding hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HSPCs), as well as in cells of the bone marrow niche, are increasingly viewed as key contributors to the inflammatory response. Growt...
Autoencoded deep features for semi-automatic, weakly supervised physiological signal labelling.
Janis M Nolde; Revathy Carnagarin; Leslie Marisol Lugo-Gavidia; Omar Azzam; Márcio Galindo Kiuchi; Sandi Robinson; Ajmal Mian; Markus P Schlaich
COMPUTERS IN BIOLOGY AND MEDICINE - 17 Feb 2022
Machine Learning is transforming data processing in medical research and clinical practice. Missing data labels are a common limitation to training Machine Learning models. To overcome missing labels in a large dataset of microneurography recordings, a novel autoencoder based semi-supervised, iterative group-labelling methodology was developed.Autoencoders were systematically optimised to extra...
Adipose-Derived Extracellular Vesicles: Systemic Messengers and Metabolic Regulators in Health and Disease.
Simon T Bond; Anna C Calkin; Brian G Drew
FRONTIERS IN PHYSIOLOGY - 01 Jan 2022
Adipose tissue is comprised of a heterogeneous population of cells that co-operate to perform diverse physiological roles including endocrine-related functions. The endocrine role of adipose tissue enables it to communicate nutritional and health cues to other organs, such as the liver, muscle, and brain, in order to regulate appetite and whole body metabolism. Adipose tissue dysfunction, which...
Characterization of Cardiac Sympathetic Nervous System and Inflammatory Activation in HFpEF Patients.
David M Kaye; Shane Nanayakkara; Bing Wang; Waled Shihata; Francine Z Marques; Murray Esler; Gavin Lambert; Justin Mariani
JACC. BASIC TO TRANSLATIONAL SCIENCE - 01 Feb 2022
We have shown that systemic and cardiac sympathetic activation is present in heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF) patients. Conversely, whereas systemic inflammatory activation was also detected in HFpEF, we did not detect local myocardial release of inflammatory cytokines. Activation of the sympathetic system correlated with both hemodynamic and demographic factors that chara...
Renal denervation alters ambulatory blood pressure-derived salt sensitivity index in patients with uncontrolled hypertension.
Revathy Carnagarin; Janis M Nolde; Rebecca Lee; Leslie Marisol Lugo-Gavidia; Natalie C Ward; Gavin W Lambert; Elisabeth A Lambert; Murray D Esler; Antony Walton; Márcio Galindo Kiuchi; Markus P Schlaich
JOURNAL OF HYPERTENSION - 01 Mar 2022
Renal denervation (RDN) has been proven in multiple sham-controlled trials to lower blood pressure (BP) in various forms of hypertension. RDN-mediated interruption of sympathetic signaling through its effects on renal blood flow, salt retention, and renin release are likely contributors to the BP-lowering effects. However, the impact of RDN on salt sensitivity in humans has not yet been explore...
The importance of calibration method in determining the association between central blood pressure with left ventricular and left atrial strain.
Satish Ramkumar; Hong Yang; Mark Nolan; Tomoko Negishi; James E Sharman; Thomas H Marwick; Kazuaki Negishi
THE INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CARDIOVASCULAR IMAGING - 01 Mar 2022
Afterload is an important determinant of left ventricular (LV) and atrial (LA) function, including myocardial strain. Central blood pressure (CBP) is the major component of cardiac afterload and independently associated with cardiovascular risk. However, the optimal means of calibrating CBP is unclear-standard CBP assessment uses systolic (SBP) and diastolic blood pressure (DBP) from brachial w...
Clinical risk prediction model for 30-day all-cause re-hospitalisation or mortality in patients hospitalised with heart failure.
A Driscoll; H Romaniuk; D Dinh; J Amerena; A Brennan; D L Hare; D Kaye; J Lefkovits; S Lockwood; C Neil; D Prior; C M Reid; L Orellana
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CARDIOLOGY - 01 Mar 2022
This study aimed to develop a risk prediction model (AUS-HF model) for 30-day all-cause re-hospitalisation or death among patients admitted with acute heart failure (HF) to inform follow-up after hospitalisation. The model uses routinely collected measures at point of care.We analyzed pooled individual-level data from two cohort studies on acute HF patients followed for 30-days after discharge ...
Acquired haemophilia A: Insight into treatment and outcomes from an Australian tertiary referral centre.
Caroline Dix; Amanda Tee; James D McFadyen; Huyen Tran
HAEMOPHILIA : THE OFFICIAL JOURNAL OF THE WORLD FEDERATION OF HEMOPHILIA - 01 Mar 2022
Applying Sodium Carbonate Extraction Mass Spectrometry to Investigate Defects in the Mitochondrial Respiratory Chain.
David R L Robinson; Daniella H Hock; Linden Muellner-Wong; Roopasingam Kugapreethan; Boris Reljic; Elliot E Surgenor; Carlos H M Rodrigues; Nikeisha J Caruana; David A Stroud
FRONTIERS IN CELL AND DEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGY - 01 Jan 2022
Mitochondria are complex organelles containing 13 proteins encoded by mitochondrial DNA and over 1,000 proteins encoded on nuclear DNA. Many mitochondrial proteins are associated with the inner or outer mitochondrial membranes, either peripherally or as integral membrane proteins, while others reside in either of the two soluble mitochondrial compartments, the mitochondrial matrix and the inter...
Association Between Urine Output and Mortality in Critically Ill Patients: A Machine Learning Approach.
Aaron J Heffernan; Stephanie Judge; Stephen M Petrie; Rakshitha Godahewa; Christoph Bergmeir; David Pilcher; Shane Nanayakkara
CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE - 01 Mar 2022
Current definitions of acute kidney injury use a urine output threshold of less than 0.5 mL/kg/hr, which have not been validated in the modern era. We aimed to determine the prognostic importance of urine output within the first 24 hours of admission to the ICU and to evaluate for variance between different admission diagnoses.Retrospective cohort study.One-hundred eighty-three ICUs throughout ...
A prospective natural history study of coronary atherosclerosis following liver transplantation.
Anoop Ninan Koshy; Nitesh Nerlekar; Paul John Gow; Ruth Lim; Gerard Smith; Michael Galea; Thalys Sampaio Rodrigues; Han Sung Lim; Andrew W Teh; Omar Farouque
ATHEROSCLEROSIS - 01 Mar 2022
Cardiovascular disease remains a leading cause of mortality following liver transplantation (LT). Whether it may be partially attributable to accelerated development of subclinical coronary artery disease is unclear. We sought to assess the longitudinal effect of LT on coronary plaque burden.A prospective observational study was conducted in 30 asymptomatic patients who underwent computed tomog...
Neutrophil Migratory Patterns: Implications for Cardiovascular Disease.
Albert Dahdah; Jillian Johnson; Sreejit Gopalkrishna; Robert M Jaggers; Darren Webb; Andrew J Murphy; Nordin M J Hanssen; Beatriz Y Hanaoka; Prabhakara R Nagareddy
FRONTIERS IN CELL AND DEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGY - 01 Jan 2022
The body's inflammatory response involves a series of processes that are necessary for the immune system to mitigate threats from invading pathogens. Leukocyte migration is a crucial process in both homeostatic and inflammatory states. The mechanisms involved in immune cell recruitment to the site of inflammation are numerous and require several cascades and cues of activation. Immune cells hav...
Ether Lipids in Obesity: From Cells to Population Studies.
Yvette L Schooneveldt; Sudip Paul; Anna C Calkin; Peter J Meikle
FRONTIERS IN PHYSIOLOGY - 01 Jan 2022
Ether lipids are a unique class of glycero- and glycerophospho-lipid that carry an ether or vinyl ether linked fatty alcohol at the -1 position of the glycerol backbone. These specialised lipids are important endogenous anti-oxidants with additional roles in regulating membrane fluidity and dynamics, intracellular signalling, immunomodulation and cholesterol metabolism. Lipidomic profiling of h...
Chronic physical health conditions up to five years after serious orthopaedic injury.
Asmare Yitayeh Gelaw; Belinda J Gabbe; Christina L Ekegren
INJURY - 01 Apr 2022
Information about the prevalence of chronic physical health conditions following serious orthopaedic injury is currently lacking in the general population and is essential for quantifying the burden of injury and improving outcomes.To determine the prevalence of chronic physical health conditions recorded within hospitalisations and emergency department presentations and associated factors five...
Thyroid cancers potentially preventable by reducing overweight and obesity in Australia: A pooled cohort study.
Maarit A Laaksonen; Robert J MacInnis; Karen Canfell; Jonathan E Shaw; Dianna J Magliano; Emily Banks; Graham G Giles; Julie E Byles; Tiffany K Gill; Paul Mitchell; Vasant Hirani; Robert G Cumming; Claire M Vajdic
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CANCER - 15 Apr 2022
Thyroid cancer incidence and the prevalence of overweight and obesity are increasing, but the future thyroid cancer burden attributable to contemporary levels of overweight and obesity has not been evaluated before. We quantified this burden in Australia, and assessed whether the overweight/obesity-attributable burden differed by sex or other population subgroupings. We estimated the strength o...
Responsible use of polygenic risk scores in the clinic: potential benefits, risks and gaps.
Michael Inouye; Et Al
NATURE MEDICINE - 01 Nov 2021
Polygenic risk scores (PRSs) aggregate the many small effects of alleles across the human genome to estimate the risk of a disease or disease-related trait for an individual. The potential benefits of PRSs include cost-effective enhancement of primary disease prevention, more refined diagnoses and improved precision when prescribing medicines. However, these must be weighed against the potentia...
Inhibitors of Advanced Glycation End Product (AGE) Formation and Accumulation
Karly C Sourris; Anna Watson; Karin Jandeleit-Dahm
HANDBOOK OF EXPERIMENTAL PHARMACOLOGY - 01 Jan 2021
A range of chemically different compounds are known to inhibit the formation and accumulation of advanced glycation end products (AGEs) or disrupt associated signalling pathways. There is evidence that some of these agents can provide end-organ protection in chronic diseases including diabetes. Whilst this group of therapeutics are structurally and functionally different and have a range of mec...
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