Publications by authors named "L M D Delbridge"

Background: With the current shift toward de-escalation of surgical management in low-risk papillary thyroid cancer (PTC), understanding predictors and the clinical significance of additional tumors in the contralateral lobe is important. This study investigated the histopathologic predictors of bilateral disease in low-risk PTC patients and the utility of preoperative ultrasonography in guiding completion thyroidectomy decisions.

Methods: Patients treated with total thyroidectomy (TT) for low-risk PTCs (< 4 cm) at the Endocrine Surgical Unit of the Royal North Shore Hospital, University of Sydney from 2013 to 2020 were identified from a prospectively maintained database.

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Cardiometabolic syndromes including diabetes and obesity are associated with occurrence of heart failure with diastolic dysfunction. There are no specific treatments for diastolic dysfunction, and therapies to manage symptoms have limited efficacy. Understanding of the cardiomyocyte origins of diastolic dysfunction is an important priority to identify new therapeutics.

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The electrophysiological properties of the hearts of women and men are different. These differences are at least partly mediated by the actions of circulating estrogens and androgens on the cardiomyocytes. Experimentally, much of our understanding in this field is based on studies focusing on ventricular tissue, with considerably less known in the context of atrial electrophysiology.

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Article Synopsis
  • - Cardiac glycogen-autophagy, or 'glycophagy,' is disrupted in heart-related metabolic diseases, and its role in heart function is not fully understood.
  • - In this study, researchers found that after intense exercise in mice, glycogen levels peaked at 2 hours post-exercise, linked to the activation of glycogen synthase.
  • - By 4 and 16 hours post-exercise, glycogen breakdown showed decreased levels of a glycophagy marker (STBD1) and increased levels of an autophagy-related protein (GABARAPL1), indicating that glycophagy plays a role in maintaining cardiac glycogen balance after exercise.
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