Publications
By Year
Now showing items 3021-3040 of 5325 records
Morning exercise mitigates the impact of prolonged sitting on cerebral blood flow in older adults.
Michael J Wheeler; David W Dunstan; Brianne Smith; Kurt J Smith; Anna Scheer; Jaye Lewis; Louise H Naylor; Ilkka Heinonen; Kathryn A Ellis; Ester Cerin; Philip N Ainslie; Daniel J Green
JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSIOLOGY (BETHESDA, MD. : 1985) - 01 Apr 2019
Preventing declines in cerebral blood flow is important for maintaining optimal brain health with aging. We compared the effects of a morning bout of moderate-intensity exercise, with and without subsequent light-intensity walking breaks from sitting, on cerebral blood velocity over 8 h in older adults. In a randomized crossover trial, overweight/obese older adults ( n = 12, 70 ± 7 yr; 30.4 ± 4...
Effects of tonic muscle pain on fusimotor control of human muscle spindles during isometric ankle dorsiflexion.
Lyndon J Smith; Vaughan G Macefield; Ingvars Birznieks; Alexander R Burton
JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY - 01 Apr 2019
Studies on anesthetized animals have revealed that nociceptors can excite fusimotor neurons and thereby change the sensitivity of muscle spindles to stretch; such nociceptive reflexes have been suggested to underlie the mechanisms that lead to chronic musculoskeletal pain syndromes. However, the validity of the "vicious cycle" hypothesis in humans has yielded results contrasting with those foun...
Television Viewing Time and Stroke Risk: Australian Diabetes Obesity and Lifestyle Study (1999-2012).
Toby B Cumming; Elizabeth Holliday; David Dunstan; Coralie English
JOURNAL OF STROKE AND CEREBROVASCULAR DISEASES : THE OFFICIAL JOURNAL OF NATIONAL STROKE ASSOCIATION - 01 Apr 2019
Having a low level of physical activity is an established risk factor for stroke, but little is known about the importance of common sedentary behavior-television viewing-to stroke risk.We conducted a retrospective analysis of data that were collected as part of the longitudinal Australian Diabetes, Obesity, and Lifestyle study. Stroke events reported during the study (between baseline assessme...
Atrial Tachycardia Arising From the Crista Terminalis, Detailed Electrophysiological Features and Long-Term Ablation Outcomes.
Gwilym M Morris; Louise Segan; Geoff Wong; Gareth Wynn; Troy Watts; Patrick Heck; Tomos E Walters; Ashley Nisbet; Paul Sparks; Joseph B Morton; Peter M Kistler; Jonathan M Kalman
JACC. CLINICAL ELECTROPHYSIOLOGY - 01 Apr 2019
The goal of this study was to characterize, in detail, focal atrial tachycardia (AT) arising from the crista terminalis to investigate associations with other atrial arrhythmia and to define long-term ablation outcomes.The crista terminalis is known to be the most common site of origin for focal AT, but it is not well characterized.This study retrospectively identified a total of 548 ablation p...
Central and Peripheral Determinants of Exercise Capacity in Heart Failure Patients With Preserved Ejection Fraction.
Emil Wolsk; David Kaye; Jan Komtebedde; Sanjiv J Shah; Barry A Borlaug; Daniel Burkhoff; Dalane W Kitzman; Carolyn S P Lam; Dirk J van Veldhuisen; Piotr Ponikowski; Mark C Petrie; Christian Hassager; Jacob E Møller; Finn Gustafsson
JACC. HEART FAILURE - 01 Apr 2019
This study sought to discern which central (e.g., heart rate, stroke volume [SV], filling pressure) and peripheral factors (e.g., oxygen use by skeletal muscle, body mass index [BMI]) during exercise were most strongly associated with the presence of heart failure and preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF) as compared with healthy control subjects exercising at the same workload.The underlying mec...
Maternal fetal programming of birthweight among Australian Aboriginal infants: a population-based data linkage study.
Alison J Gibberd; Judy M Simpson; Bridgette J McNamara; Sandra J Eades
THE LANCET. GLOBAL HEALTH - 01 Apr 2019
Low birthweight, which is common among Australian Aboriginal infants, has been found to persist across generations because of shared genetic and environmental factors and possibly fetal programming. Fetal programming refers to the response of a fetus to hostile uterine conditions with lifelong effects and possibly, in turn, providing a poorer uterine environment for future offspring. Fetal prog...
Evaluating the benefits of a rapid access chest pain clinic in Australia.
James Andrew Black; Kevin Cheng; Jo-Anne Flood; Garry Hamilton; Serena Parker; Anees Enayati; Faisal S Khan; Tom Marwick
THE MEDICAL JOURNAL OF AUSTRALIA - 01 Apr 2019
To compare the outcomes and safety of a rapid access chest pain clinic (RACPC) in Australia with those of a general cardiology clinic.Prospective comparison of the outcomes for patients attending an RACPC and those of historical controls.Royal Hobart Hospital cardiology outpatient department.1914 patients referred for outpatient evaluation of new onset chest pain (1479 patients seen in the RACP...
What is 'LDL cholesterol'?
Michael V Holmes; Mika Ala-Korpela
NATURE REVIEWS. CARDIOLOGY - 01 Apr 2019
Maternal body mass index, excess gestational weight gain, and diabetes are positively associated with neonatal adiposity in the Pregnancy and Neonatal Diabetes Outcomes in Remote Australia (PANDORA) study.
Danielle K Longmore; Elizabeth L M Barr; I-Lynn Lee; Federica Barzi; Marie Kirkwood; Cherie Whitbread; Vanya Hampton; Sian Graham; Paula Van Dokkum; Christine Connors; Jacqueline A Boyle; Patrick Catalano; Alex D H Brown; Kerin O'Dea; Jeremy Oats; H David McIntyre; Jonathan E Shaw; Louise J Maple-Brown;
PEDIATRIC OBESITY - 01 Apr 2019
In-utero exposures likely influence the onset and severity of obesity in youth. With increasing rates of type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) and maternal adiposity in pregnancy globally, it is important to assess the impact of these factors on neonatal adipose measures.To evaluate the contribution of maternal ethnicity, body mass index (BMI), gestational weight gain, and hyperglycaemia to neonatal ...
Plasmalogens: A potential therapeutic target for neurodegenerative and cardiometabolic disease.
Sudip Paul; Graeme I Lancaster; Peter J Meikle
PROGRESS IN LIPID RESEARCH - 01 Apr 2019
Plasmalogens are a class of membrane glycerophospholipids with unique properties. They contain a vinyl-ether linked alkyl chain at the sn-1 position of the glycerol backbone and, typically, a polyunsaturated fatty acyl chain at the sn-2 position. Plasmalogens are critical for human health and have established roles in neuronal development, the immune response and as endogenous antioxidants. How...
Part II: Special Issue on Extracellular Vesicles and Exosomes.
Richard J Simpson; David W Greening
PROTEOMICS - 01 Apr 2019
Oncogenic and Non-Malignant Pancreatic Exosome Cargo Reveal Distinct Expression of Oncogenic and Prognostic Factors Involved in Tumor Invasion and Metastasis.
Aikaterini Emmanouilidi; Dino Paladin; David W Greening; Marco Falasca
PROTEOMICS - 01 Apr 2019
Exosomes are small extracellular membrane vesicles important in intercellular communication, with their oncogenic cargo attributed to tumor progression and pre-metastatic niche formation. To gain an insight into key differences in oncogenic composition of exosomes, human non-malignant epithelial and pancreatic cancer cell models and purified and characterized resultant exosome populations are u...
The Effects of Dietary Improvement on Symptoms of Depression and Anxiety: A Meta-Analysis of Randomized Controlled Trials.
Joseph Firth; Wolfgang Marx; Sarah Dash; Rebekah Carney; Scott B Teasdale; Marco Solmi; Brendon Stubbs; Felipe B Schuch; André F Carvalho; Felice Jacka; Jerome Sarris
PSYCHOSOMATIC MEDICINE - 01 Apr 2019
Poor diet can be detrimental to mental health. However, the overall evidence for the effects of dietary interventions on mood and mental well-being has yet to be assessed. We conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis examining effects of dietary interventions on symptoms of depression and anxiety.Major electronic databases were searched through March 2018 for all randomized controlled tri...
ECG-based cardiac screening programs: Legal, ethical, and logistical considerations.
Jessica J Orchard; Lis Neubeck; John W Orchard; Rajesh Puranik; Hariharan Raju; Ben Freedman; Andre La Gerche; Christopher Semsarian
HEART RHYTHM - 29 Mar 2019
Screening asymptomatic people with a resting electrocardiogram (ECG) has been theorized to detect latent cardiovascular disease. However, resting ECG screening is not recommended for numerous populations, such as asymptomatic middle-age (sedentary) people, because it is not sufficiently sensitive to detect coronary artery disease. Although the issues raised in this article are common to all scr...
RESPONSE TO LETTER TO EDITOR.
Aleksandr Voskoboinik; Peter M Kistler
JOURNAL OF CARDIOVASCULAR ELECTROPHYSIOLOGY - 27 Mar 2019
Artificial Intelligence in Cardiovascular Imaging: JACC State-of-the-Art Review.
Damini Dey; Piotr J Slomka; Paul Leeson; Dorin Comaniciu; Sirish Shrestha; Partho P Sengupta; Thomas H Marwick
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN COLLEGE OF CARDIOLOGY - 26 Mar 2019
Data science is likely to lead to major changes in cardiovascular imaging. Problems with timing, efficiency, and missed diagnoses occur at all stages of the imaging chain. The application of artificial intelligence (AI) is dependent on robust data; the application of appropriate computational approaches and tools; and validation of its clinical application to image segmentation, automated measu...
Comparison of endothelial function and sympathetic nervous system activity along the glucose continuum in individuals with differing metabolic risk profiles and low dietary sodium intake.
Sara Baqar; Nora E Straznicky; Gavin Lambert; Yee Wen Kong; John B Dixon; George Jerums; Elif Ilhan Ekinci; Elisabeth Lambert
BMJ OPEN DIABETES RESEARCH & CARE - 01 Jan 2019
Low sodium intake may trigger sympathetic nervous system (SNS) activation and endothelial dysfunction. Studies have not explored these associations along the glucose continuum. Accordingly, we compared endothelial function and SNS activity in individuals with low sodium intake and differing categories of metabolic risk along the glucose continuum. We hypothesized that low sodium intake is assoc...
Mending the failing heart.
Xiaowei Wang; Karlheinz Peter
AGING - 18 Mar 2019
FastSpar: rapid and scalable correlation estimation for compositional data.
Stephen C Watts; Scott C Ritchie; Michael Inouye; Kathryn E Holt
BIOINFORMATICS (OXFORD, ENGLAND) - 15 Mar 2019
A common goal of microbiome studies is the elucidation of community composition and member interactions using counts of taxonomic units extracted from sequence data. Inference of interaction networks from sparse and compositional data requires specialized statistical approaches. A popular solution is SparCC, however its performance limits the calculation of interaction networks for very high-di...
Pharmacological inhibition of the NLRP3 inflammasome reduces blood pressure, renal damage, and dysfunction in salt-sensitive hypertension.
Shalini M Krishnan; Yeong H Ling; Brooke M Huuskes; Dorota M Ferens; Narbada Saini; Christopher T Chan; Henry Diep; Michelle M Kett; Chrishan S Samuel; Barbara K Kemp-Harper; Avril A B Robertson; Matthew A Cooper; Karlheinz Peter; Eicke Latz; Ashley S Mansell; Christopher G Sobey; Grant R Drummond; Antony Vinh
CARDIOVASCULAR RESEARCH - 15 Mar 2019
Renal inflammation, leading to fibrosis and impaired function is a major contributor to the development of hypertension. The NLRP3 inflammasome mediates inflammation in several chronic diseases by processing the cytokines pro-interleukin (IL)-1β and pro-IL-18. In this study, we investigated whether MCC950, a recently-identified inhibitor of NLRP3 activity, reduces blood pressure (BP), renal inf...
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