Publications by authors named "Jelic S"

Background: Previous studies have strongly suggested that stent-graft deployment and acute arch angulation increase aortic stiffness, the impact of surgical interposition grafting remains unclear. We investigated the impact of open surgery on aortic stiffness and compared this with stent-graft induced aortic stiffening, utilising an ex vivo model.

Methods: Porcine thoracic aortas were connected to a mock circulatory loop.

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The prevalence of obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is on the rise, driven by various factors including more sensitive diagnostic criteria, increased awareness, enhanced technology through at-home testing enabling easy and cost-effective diagnosis, and a growing incidence of comorbid conditions such as obesity. Treating symptomatic patients with OSA syndrome to enhance quality of life remains a cornerstone approach. However, there is a lack of consensus regarding treatment to improve cardiovascular disease (CVD) outcomes, particularly in light of overall negative results from several randomized controlled trials (RCT) indicating no benefit of positive airway pressure (PAP) therapy on primary and secondary CVD events.

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Article Synopsis
  • - Chronic mild sleep restriction (SR) for 6 weeks does not significantly affect levels of free thyroxine (FT4) or thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) in adults, but shows a potential sex difference with TSH reductions noted in women only.
  • - The study involved 30 healthy participants (mostly women, with diverse racial/ethnic backgrounds), and measured hormonal levels before and after the AS (adequate sleep) and SR phases through blood samples.
  • - Results suggest that while FT4 and fibroblast growth factor-21 (FGF-21) are unchanged, sustained mild sleep restriction might disrupt the regulation of TSH in women, which could be linked to higher cardiometabolic risks compared to
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Metric multidimensional scaling is one of the classical methods for embedding data into low-dimensional Euclidean space. It creates the low-dimensional embedding by approximately preserving the pairwise distances between the input points. However, current state-of-the-art approaches only scale to a few thousand data points.

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Objective: The relationship among increased aortic arch angulation, aortic flow dynamics, and vessel wall stiffness remains unclear. This experimental ex vivo study investigated how increased aortic arch angulation affects aortic stiffness and stent-graft induced aortic stiffening, assessed by pulse wave velocity (PWV).

Methods: Porcine thoracic aortas were connected to a circulatory mock loop in a Type I and Type III aortic arch configuration.

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Background: Continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) has failed to reduce cardiovascular risk in obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA) in randomized trials. CPAP increases angiopoietin-2, a lung distension-responsive endothelial proinflammatory marker associated with increased cardiovascular risk. We investigated whether CPAP has unanticipated proinflammatory effects in patients with OSA and cardiovascular disease.

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Article Synopsis
  • * The study involved 38 women who went through two phases: one with adequate sleep (7-9 hours) and one with 1.5 hours less sleep per night for 6 weeks, measuring various glucose and insulin levels.
  • * Results showed that sleep restriction led to increased fasting insulin and insulin resistance, especially in postmenopausal women, indicating that insufficient sleep is a significant risk factor for diabetes that can be addressed.
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Background Insufficient sleep is associated with increased cardiovascular disease risk, but causality is unclear. We investigated the impact of prolonged mild sleep restriction (SR) on lipid and inflammatory profiles. Methods and Results Seventy-eight participants (56 women [12 postmenopausal]; age, 34.

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Sleep restriction is associated with increased cardiovascular risk, which is more pronounced in female than male persons. We reported recently first causal evidence that mild, prolonged sleep restriction mimicking "real-life" conditions impairs endothelial function, a key step in the development and progression of cardiovascular disease, in healthy female persons. However, the underlying mechanisms are unclear.

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Background: Venous congestion (VC) is a hallmark of symptomatic heart failure (HF) requiring hospitalization; however, its role in the pathogenesis of HF progression remains unclear. We investigated whether peripheral VC exacerbates inflammation, oxidative stress and neurohormonal and endothelial cell (EC) activation in patients with HF with reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF).

Methods And Results: Two matched groups of patients with HFrEF and with no peripheral VC vs without recent HF hospitalization were studied.

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Increased cardiovascular risk in obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) persists after continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) and alternative therapies are needed. Impaired endothelial protection against complement is a cholesterol-dependent process that initiates endothelial inflammation in OSA, which increases cardiovascular risk. To investigate directly whether lowering cholesterol improves endothelial protection against complement and its proinflammatory effects in OSA.

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Objective: The aim of this study was to assess the prevalence and severity of sleep-disordered breathing (SDB) across racial/ethnic groups in 3702 pregnant people at 6 to 15 and 22 to 31 weeks gestational age, examine whether BMI modifies the association between race/ethnicity and SDB, and investigate whether interventions to reduce weight might reduce racial/ethnic disparities in SDB.

Methods: Differences by race/ethnicity in SDB prevalence and severity were quantified via linear, logistic, or quasi-Poisson regression. Controlled direct effect was used to estimate whether intervening on BMI would remove/diminish differences by race/ethnicity in SDB severity.

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Background: Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) has been identified as a possible contributor to interstitial lung disease. While positive airway pressure (PAP) is effective therapy for OSA, it causes large increases in lung volumes during the night that are potentially deleterious, analogous to ventilator-induced lung injury, although this has not been previously studied. The goal of this study was to assess the impact of PAP therapy on four biomarkers of alveolar epithelial and endothelial injury and extracellular matrix remodeling in patients with OSA.

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The Go Red for Women movement was initiated by the American Heart Association (AHA) in the early 2000s to raise awareness concerning cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk in women. In 2016, the AHA funded 5 research centers across the United States to advance our knowledge of the risks and presentation of CVD that are specific to women. This report highlights the findings of the centers, showing how insufficient sleep, sedentariness, and pregnancy-related complications may increase CVD risk in women, as well as presentation and factors associated with myocardial infarction with nonobstructive coronary arteries and heart failure with preserved ejection fraction in women.

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Study Objective: Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is highly prevalent and triples vascular thromboembolic risk. Intermittent hypoxia (IH) during transient cessation of breathing in OSA impairs endothelial protection against complement. Complement activation stimulates the endothelial release of a pro-thrombotic von Willebrand factor (vWF).

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