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Now showing items 4781-4800 of 5385 records
Central proopiomelanocortin but not neuropeptide Y mediates sympathoexcitation and hypertension in fat fed conscious rabbits
Armitage, JA; Head, GA; Barzel, B; Lim, K; Burke, SL; Davern, PJ
J HYPERTENS - 01 Mar 2016
OBJECTIVE: High-fat diet (HFD)-induced hypertension in rabbits is neurogenic because of the central sympathoexcitatory actions of leptin. Hypothalamic melanocortin and neuropeptide Y (NPY) neurons are recognized as the major signalling pathways through which leptin exerts its central effects. In this study, we assessed the effects of specific antagonists and agonists to melanocortin and NPY ...
Continued increases in hypertension over three decades in Fiji, and the influence of obesity
Tukana, I; Vatucawaqa, P; Lin, S; Zimmet, P; Morrell, S; Taylor, R; Linhart, C; Magliano, D
J HYPERTENS - 01 Mar 2016
OBJECTIVES: To analyse trends during 1980-2011 in hypertension prevalence and SBP/DBP by sex in Fiji Melanesian (i-Taukei) and Indian adults aged 25-64 years; and to assess effects of BMI. METHODS: Unit record data from five population-based surveys were included (n = 14, 191). Surveys were adjusted to the nearest previous census to improve national representativeness. Hypertension was d...
Hypertension, antihypertensive treatment and cancer incidence and mortality: a pooled collaborative analysis of 12 Australian and New Zealand cohorts
Huxley, R; Sooriyakumaran, M; Dobson, A; Simons, LA; Pasco, JA; Tonkin, A; Taylor, AW; Brennan-Olsen, S; Simmons, D; Knuiman, M; Shaw, JE; Davis, WA; Mitchell, P; Anstey, KJ; Magliano, DJ; Grant, J; Harding, JL; Briffa, T; Luszcz, M; Balkau, B; Adams, R; Giles, GG; Davis, TM; Woodward, M; Reid, CM
J HYPERTENS - 01 Jan 2016
BACKGROUND: Observational studies examining associations between hypertension and cancer are inconsistent. We explored the association of hypertension, graded hypertension and antihypertensive treatment with cancer incidence and mortality. METHOD: Eighty-six thousand five hundred and ninety-three participants from the Australian and New Zealand Diabetes and Cancer Collaboration were linked t...
Health-related quality of life and blood pressure 12 months after renal denervation
Hammond, L; Schlaich, MP; Esler, MD; Thorp, A; Dhar, AK; Head, GA; Lee, R; Duval, J; Marusic, P; Sata, Y; Lambert, EA; Hering, D; Lambert, GW; Dixon, JB; Barton, DA
J HYPERTENS - 01 Nov 2015
AIM: To examine the effect of renal denervation (RDN) on blood pressure (BP) and health-related quality of life (QoL) in patients with resistant hypertension, pseudoresistant hypertension due to a white-coat effect and in patients with uncontrolled masked hypertension. METHODS: Using the Medical Outcomes Study 36-Item Short-Form Health Survey (SF-36), Beck Depression Inventory (BDI) and ...
Duration of obesity and incident hypertension in adults from the Framingham Heart Study
Wolfe, R; Backholer, K; Barendregt, J; Abdullah, A; Wong, E; Tanamas, SK; Peeters, A
J HYPERTENS - 01 Mar 2015
BACKGROUND: Previous studies exploring the association between obesity and hypertension generally used a single baseline measurement of obesity. The effect of accumulating excess adiposity over time on the risk of hypertension is uncertain. This study aimed to examine the relationship between duration of obesity and incident hypertension using the Framingham Heart Study. METHODS: Two thousan...
Amino-terminal-pro-B-type natriuretic peptide levels and low diastolic blood pressure: potential relevance to the diastolic J-curve
McGrady, M; Krum, H; Wolfe, R; Prior, DL; Campbell, DJ; Stewart, S; Boffa, U; Shiel, L; Coller, JM; Reid, CM; Liew, D
J HYPERTENS - 01 Nov 2014
BACKGROUND: There is debate whether the J-curve relationship between cardiac event risk and DBP is because of inherent cardiac risk or is a consequence of blood pressure (BP) lowering therapy. METHODS: We examined the association between the cardiovascular risk marker amino-terminal-pro-B-type natriuretic peptide (NT-proBNP) and DBP in 1781 women and 2211 men aged at least 60 years with one ...
Estimation of central aortic blood pressure: a systematic meta-analysis of available techniques
Narayan, O; Szarski, M; Dart, AM; Meredith, IT; Cameron, JD; Casan, J
J HYPERTENS - 01 Sep 2014
BACKGROUND: Central aortic blood pressure (cBP) is often promoted to be a superior predictor of cardiovascular risk compared to brachial blood pressure, and brachial-central pulse pressure amplification is also suggested as prognostic. Several devices and techniques, each purporting to estimate cBP, have entered commercial use. The interchangeability of cBP measurements between devices and t...
More rigorous protocol adherence to intensive structured management improves blood pressure control in primary care: results from the Valsartan Intensified Primary carE Reduction of Blood Pressure study
Carrington, MJ; Swemmer, CH; Stocks, NP; Esterman, A; Kurstjens, NP; de Looze, FJ; Harris, M; Burrell, LM; Hung, J; Jennings, GL; Stewart, S
J HYPERTENS - 01 Jun 2014
OBJECTIVE: To examine protocol adherence to structured intensive management in the Valsartan Intensified Primary carE Reduction of Blood Pressure (VIPER-BP) study involving 119 primary care clinics and 1562 randomized participants. METHODS: Prospective criteria for assessing adherence to treatment prescription, uptitration, and visit attendance at 6, 10, 14, and 18 weeks postrandomization we...
Actions of rilmenidine on neurogenic hypertension in BPH/2J genetically hypertensive mice
Jackson, KL; Nguyen-Huu, TP; Head, GA; Palma-Rigo, K; Davern, PJ
J HYPERTENS - 01 Mar 2014
OBJECTIVE: BPH/2J hypertensive mice have an exaggerated sympathetic contribution to blood pressure (BP). Premotor sympathetic neurons within the rostroventrolateral medulla (RVLM) are a major source of sympathetic vasomotor tone and major site of action of the centrally acting sympatholytic agent, rilmenidine. The relative cardiovascular effect of rilmenidine in BPH/2J versus normotensive BPN/...
GABAA receptor dysfunction contributes to high blood pressure and exaggerated response to stress in Schlager genetically hypertensive mice
Jackson, KL; Nguyen-Huu, TP; Head, GA; Davern, PJ; Chowdhury, S
J HYPERTENS - 01 Feb 2014
OBJECTIVE: Schlager BPH/2J hypertensive mice have high blood pressure (BP) likely due to overactivity of the sympathetic nervous system regulated by neurons in amygdala-hypothalamic pathways. These areas are normally under tonic inhibition by GABA containing neurons that may be deficient in Schlager hypertensive mice as suggested by microarray analysis. In the present study, cardiovascular eff...
Synergistic deleterious effect of hypoxemia and hypovolemia on microcirculation in intestinal villi
Kato, H; Huet, O; Baudry, N; Harrois, A; Vicaut, E; Ziol, M; Lohez, M; Duranteau, J
CRIT CARE MED - 01 Nov 2013
OBJECTIVE: To investigate the effect of hypoxemia, hemorrhagic shock, and the association of both of these on intestinal microcirculation (microcirculatory perfusion and leukocytes-endothelium interactions in postcapillary venules), as it can be encountered in hemorrhagic shock following trauma. DESIGN: Prospective controlled experimental study. SETTING: University research laboratory. SU...
Protective effect of inflammasome activation by hydrogen peroxide in a mouse model of septic shock
Tikellis, C; Chang, CJ; Masters, S; Dickinson, B; Cooper, ME; Kingwell, B; Pickering, RJ; Huet, O; de Haan, JB; Latouche, C; Mackay, F; Long, F
CRIT CARE MED - 01 Feb 2017
OBJECTIVES: To study the effect of a lack of antioxidant defenses during lethal pneumonia induced by Klebsiella pneumonia, compared to wild-type mice. SETTING: Laboratory experiments. SUBJECTS: C57Bl6 and glutathione peroxidase 1 knockout mice. INTERVENTION: Murine acute pneumonia model induced by Klebsiella pneumonia. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: We show here that despite ...
Microcirculatory alterations in traumatic hemorrhagic shock
Tanaka, S; Pottecher, J; Kato, H; Tachon, G; Huet, O; Harrois, A; Vicaut, E; Duranteau, J
CRIT CARE MED - 01 Jun 2014
OBJECTIVES: Microcirculatory dysfunction has been well reported in clinical studies in septic shock. However, no clinical studies have investigated microcirculatory blood flow behavior in hemorrhagic shock. The main objective of this study was to assess the time course of sublingual microcirculation in traumatic hemorrhagic shock during the first 4 days after trauma. DESIGN: Prospective ...
Shorter lumbar paraspinal fascia is associated with high intensity low back pain and disability
Wang, Y; Ranger, TA; Wluka, AE; OʼSullivan, R; Cicuttini, FM; Jones, G; Urquhart, DM; Teichtahl, AJ
SPINE - 01 Apr 2016
STUDY DESIGN: A cross-sectional, community-based study. OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to investigate the relationship between structural features of the thoracolumbar fascia and low back pain and disability. SUMMARY OF BACKGROUND DATA: The thoracolumbar fascia plays a role in stabilization of the spine by transmitting tension from the spinal and abdominal musculature to the ve...
Norepinephrine decreases fluid requirements and blood loss while preserving intestinal villi microcirculation during fluid resuscitation of uncontrolled hemorrhagic shock in mice
Kato, H; Dupic, L; Huet, O; Baudry, N; Harrois, A; Vicaut, E; Ziol, M; Lohez, M; Duranteau, J
ANESTHESIOLOGY - 01 May 2015
BACKGROUND: Norepinephrine administration is controversial during hemorrhagic shock resuscitation to stabilize mean arterial pressure (MAP) level because it could have deleterious effects on local circulations. The authors investigated the effect of norepinephrine on intestinal microcirculation during fluid resuscitation in uncontrolled hemorrhagic shock. METHODS: Mice (n = 6 per group) ...
Dynamic changes in the cardiac methylome during postnatal development
Ziemann, M; Khurana, I; Chang, L; Hudson, JE; Porello, ER; Kaspi, A; Harikrishnan, KN; El-Osta, A; Ooi, J; Sim, CB
FASEB J - 01 Apr 2015
Relatively little is known about the epigenetic control mechanisms that guide postnatal organ maturation. The goal of this study was to determine whether DNA methylation plays an important role in guiding transcriptional changes during the first 2 wk of mouse heart development, which is an important period for cardiomyocyte maturation, loss of proliferative capacity and loss of regenerative pot...
Therapeutic silencing of miR-652 restores heart function and attenuates adverse remodeling in a setting of established pathological hypertrophy
Winbanks, CE; Kiriazis, H; Boey, EJ; Du, XJ; Igoor, S; Nguyen, SS; Tham, YK; Gao, XM; Thomas, CJ; Porrello, ER; Bernardo, BC; Ooi, JY; Gregorevic, P; McMullen, JR; Lin, RC
FASEB J - 01 Dec 2014
Expression of microRNA-652 (miR-652) increases in the diseased heart, decreases in a setting of cardioprotection, and is inversely correlated with heart function. The aim of this study was to assess the therapeutic potential of inhibiting miR-652 in a mouse model with established pathological hypertrophy and cardiac dysfunction due to pressure overload. Mice were subjected to a sham operation o...
HIV protein Nef causes dyslipidemia and formation of foam cells in mouse models of atherosclerosis
Sviridov, D; Kesani, R; Mukhamedova, N; Geyer, M; Ditiatkovski, M; Bobryshev, YV; Liu, Y; Bukrinsky, M; Cui, HL
FASEB J - 01 Jul 2014
Patients with HIV are at an increased risk of cardiovascular disease. In this study we investigated the effect of Nef, a secreted HIV protein responsible for the impairment of cholesterol efflux, on the development of atherosclerosis in two animal models. ApoE(-/-) mice fed a high-fat diet and C57BL/6 mice fed a high-fat, high-cholesterol diet were injected with recombinant Nef (40 ng/injection...
Elevated expression of activins promotes muscle wasting and cachexia
FASEB J - 01 Apr 2014
In models of cancer cachexia, inhibiting type IIB activin receptors (ActRIIBs) reverse muscle wasting and prolongs survival, even with continued tumor growth. ActRIIB mediates signaling of numerous TGF-β proteins; of these, we demonstrate that activins are the most potent negative regulators of muscle mass. To determine whether activin signaling in the absence of tumor-derived factors induces c...
Ubiquitin-specific protease 2-69 in macrophages potentially modulates metainflammation
Okamoto, S; Kitamura, H; Ishizuka, M; Ito, M; Ohara, O; Okabe, J; Meek, B; Kimura, S; Toda, C; El-Osta, A; Naoe, Y; Watarai, H; Shimamoto, Y; Kikuguchi, C; Kanehira, K; Miyoshi, I; Hase, K; Miyamoto, T
FASEB J - 01 Dec 2013
Macrophages play a critical role in chronic inflammation and metabolic diseases. We identified a longer splice variant of ubiquitin specific protease (USP) 2-69 as a novel molecule that modulates pathways implicated in metabolic disorders. Expression levels of aP2/FABP4 and PAI-1/SERPINE1 genes were increased by 4- and 1.8-fold, respectively, after short hairpin RNA-mediated knockdown (KD) of t...
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