The microbiota-gut-brain axis may play a role in the pathophysiology of anorexia nervosa (AN). Here, the relationship between the gastrointestinal microbiota and symptoms of depression, anxiety, and eating disorder pathology in patients with AN before ( = 55) and after weight restoration ( = 44) was investigated by reanalyzing the data of the MICROBIAN study. The gastrointestinal microbiota was analyzed using 16S rRNA amplicon sequencing.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: The gastrointestinal (GI) microbiota is a complex and dynamic ecosystem whose composition and function are influenced by many internal and external factors. Overall, the individual GI microbiota composition appears to be rather stable but can be influenced by extreme shifts in environmental exposures. To date, there is no systematic literature review that examines the effects of extreme environmental conditions, such as strict isolation and confinement, on the GI microbiota.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHyperpolarized xenon-129 is a noninvasive contrast agent for lung MRI, which upon inhalation dissolves in parenchymal structures, thus mirroring the gas-exchange process for oxygen in the lung. Multiple-exchange-time xenon polarization transfer contrast (MXTC) MRI is an implementation of the XTC MRI technique in four dimensions (three spatial dimensions plus exchange time). The aim of this study was to evaluate the sensitivity of MXTC MRI for the detection of microstructural deformations of the healthy lung in response to gravity-induced tissue compression and the degree of lung inflation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: To develop and test a method to noninvasively assess the functional lung microstructure.
Materials And Methods: The Multiple exchange time Xenon polarization Transfer Contrast technique (MXTC) encodes xenon gas-exchange contrast at multiple delay times permitting two lung-function parameters to be derived: (i) MXTC-F, the long exchange-time depolarization value, which is proportional to the tissue to alveolar-volume ratio and (ii) MXTC-S, the square root of the xenon exchange-time constant, which characterizes thickness and composition of alveolar septa. Three healthy volunteers, one asthmatic, and two chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) (GOLD stage I and II) subjects were imaged with MXTC MRI.
Despite a myriad of technical advances in medical imaging, as well as the growing need to address the global impact of pulmonary diseases, such as asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, on health and quality of life, it remains challenging to obtain in vivo regional depiction and quantification of the most basic physiological functions of the lung-gas delivery to the airspaces and gas uptake by the lung parenchyma and blood-in a manner suitable for routine application in humans. We report a method based on MRI of hyperpolarized xenon-129 that permits simultaneous observation of the 3D distributions of ventilation (gas delivery) and gas uptake, as well as quantification of regional gas uptake based on the associated ventilation. Subjects with lung disease showed variations in gas uptake that differed from those in ventilation in many regions, suggesting that gas uptake as measured by this technique reflects such features as underlying pathological alterations of lung tissue or of local blood flow.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRationale And Objectives: Hyperpolarized gases such as (129)Xe and (3)He have high potential as imaging agents for functional lung magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). We present new technology offering (129)Xe production rates with order-of-magnitude improvement over existing systems, to liter per hour at 50% polarization. Human lung imaging studies with xenon, initially limited by the modest quantity and quality of hyperpolarized gas available, can now be performed with multiliter quantities several times daily.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: The authors review the result of the selection of patients with a low rectal cancer for pre-operative radiotherapy.
Methods: The selection was based on the findings of digital examination eventually combined with surgical staging consisting of bimanual palpation during a staging laparotomy or "trial" operation. This selection was used to divide the patients into three groups: one where local radicality could be expected from primary surgery (group 1), one with deeply infiltrating, but mobile tumours requiring 10 x 3 Gy pre-operative radiotherapy (group 2) and one with fixed or borderline resectable tumours requiring protracted pre-operative radiotherapy with 55-59 Gy (group 3).