Publications by authors named "May J Reed"

Brain microvascular dysfunction is an important feature of Alzheimer's disease (AD). To better understand the brain microvascular molecular signatures of AD, we processed and analyzed isolated human brain microvessels by data-independent acquisition liquid chromatography with tandem mass spectrometry (DIA LC-MS/MS) to generate a quantitative dataset at the peptide and protein level. Brain microvessels were isolated from parietal cortex grey matter using protocols that preserve viability for downstream functional studies.

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  • The blood-brain barrier (BBB) protects the brain from harmful substances but also complicates drug development for central nervous system (CNS) conditions.
  • The review discusses how various transport mechanisms work, such as lipid solubility and different transport systems, which affect drug delivery to the brain.
  • It also explores how diseases can disrupt the BBB, allowing for potential treatment methods, and highlights the historical significance of the BBB in drug delivery strategies.
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  • Normal aging negatively impacts cerebrovascular health, linked to increased risk of ischemic injury, though less is known about the spinal cord compared to the brain.
  • Research using contrast-enhanced ultrasound (CEUS) in aging Fisher 344 rats showed that older rats had significantly more tortuous anterior spinal arteries and higher vascular resistance, alongside reduced blood volume in spinal tissues.
  • When subjected to low oxygen conditions, younger rats exhibited a substantial increase in blood flow, while aged rats did not respond, possibly due to diminished pericyte coverage and activated microglia in the aged group.
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Context: Recent studies show increasing use of mechanical ventilation among people living with dementia. There are concerns that this trend may not be driven by patient preferences.

Objectives: To better understand decision-making regarding mechanical ventilation in people living with dementia.

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Normal aging is associated with significant deleterious cerebrovascular changes; these have been implicated in disease pathogenesis and increased susceptibility to ischemic injury. While these changes are well documented in the brain, few studies have been conducted in the spinal cord. Here, we utilize specialized contrast-enhanced ultrasound (CEUS) imaging to investigate age-related changes in cervical spinal vascular anatomy and hemodynamics in male Fisher 344 rats, a common strain in aging research.

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Background: Frailty and comorbidities are important outcome determinants in older patients (age ≥65) with burns. A Geriatric Burn Bundle (Geri-B) was implemented in 2019 at a regional burn center to standardize care for older adults. Components included frailty screening and protocolized geriatric co-management, malnutrition screening with nutritional support, and geriatric-centered pain regimens.

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Changes in the brain and spinal cord microvasculature during normal aging contribute to the "sensitive" nature of aged central nervous system tissue to ischemic insults. In this review, we will examine alterations in the central nervous system microvasculature during normal aging, which we define as aging without a dominant pathology such as neurodegenerative processes, vascular injury or disease, or trauma. We will also discuss newer technologies to improve the study of central nervous system microvascular structure and function.

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The blood-brain barrier (BBB) is a critical physiochemical interface that regulates communication between the brain and blood. It is comprised of brain endothelial cells which regulate the BBB's barrier and interface properties and is surrounded by supportive brain cell types including pericytes and astrocytes. Recent reports have suggested that the BBB undergoes dysfunction during normative aging and in disease.

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  • Limited research exists on the recovery of older trauma intensive care unit (TICU) survivors, particularly regarding geriatric trauma care's impact on long-term functional ability and health-related quality of life (HRQOL).
  • A study followed 218 patients aged 65 and older, comparing outcomes before and after introducing a geriatric care bundle, with results indicating that the majority of survivors did not return to their preinjury level of functional independence one year later.
  • Interviews showed that many participants reported ongoing challenges such as activity limitations, persistent pain, and cognitive issues, highlighting the need for improved post-TICU support for older adults.
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Background: Identification of novel risk factors for dementia in older adults could facilitate development of methods to identify patients most at risk and improve their cognitive outcomes. We aimed to determine whether lower appendicular lean mass (ALM), assessed by dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry (DXA), and lower grip strength are associated with a greater likelihood of incident dementia among older adults in the Health Aging and Body Composition Study (Health ABC).

Methods: Health ABC data from 1997 to 2008 were analyzed (n = 2 704).

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One important function of the vascular blood-brain barrier (BBB) is to facilitate neuroimmune communication. The BBB fulfills this function, in part, through its ability to transport cytokines and chemokines. C-C motif chemokine receptor 2 (CCL2) (MCP-1) and C-C motif chemokine receptor 5 (CCL5) (RANTES) are proinflammatory chemokines that mediate neuroimmune responses to acute insults and aspects of brain injury and neurodegenerative diseases; however, a blood-to-brain transport system has not been evaluated for either chemokine in vivo.

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Background: Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) can progress to advanced fibrosis, which, in the nonsurgical population, is associated with poor hepatic and extrahepatic outcomes. Despite its high prevalence, NAFLD and related liver fibrosis may be overlooked during the preoperative evaluation, and the role of liver fibrosis as an independent risk factor for surgical-related mortality has yet to be tested. The aim of this study was to assess whether fibrosis-4 (FIB-4), which consists of age, aspartate aminotransferase (AST), alanine aminotransferase (ALT), and platelets, a validated marker of liver fibrosis, is associated with postoperative mortality in the general surgical population.

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Background: Older patients living in rural areas face unique challenges after trauma that may hinder optimal recovery. This study aims to qualitatively assess postdischarge challenges in this vulnerable population.

Methods: We conducted remote interviews with older trauma survivors in Washington State previously hospitalized in 2019 and residing in rural areas as determined by rural-urban commuting area code.

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The brain microvasculature is altered in normal aging and in the presence of disease processes, such as neurodegeneration or ischemia, but there are few methods for studying living tissues. We now report that viable microvessels (MV) are readily isolated from brain tissue of subjects enrolled in studies of neurodegenerative diseases who undergo rapid autopsy (performed with <12 h postmortem interval - PMI). We find that these MV retain their morphology and cellular components and are fairly uniform in size.

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Background: Half of all physical disability, including activity of daily living (ADL) disability, among older adults occurs in the setting of hospitalization. This study examines whether appendicular lean mass (ALM) and grip strength, which are commonly included in various definitions of sarcopenia, are associated with the development of hospital-associated ADL disability in older adults in the Health ABC Study.

Methods: Individuals hospitalized during the first 5 years of follow-up (n = 1 724) were analyzed.

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The blood-brain barrier (BBB) protects the central nervous system (CNS) from unregulated exposure to the blood and its contents. The BBB also controls the blood-to-brain and brain-to-blood permeation of many substances, resulting in nourishment of the CNS, its homeostatic regulation and communication between the CNS and peripheral tissues. The cells forming the BBB communicate with cells of the brain and in the periphery.

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  • This study explores how frailty in older adults affects their use of opioids after surgery, with a focus on pain management and potential misuse.
  • Researchers recruited patients aged 65 and older undergoing elective surgeries, assessing their frailty and pain levels before surgery and tracking their opioid consumption and pain ratings during and after hospitalization.
  • Findings indicated that frail patients were more likely to use opioids and consumed a much larger percentage of the opioids prescribed to them compared to non-frail patients, highlighting a need for tailored pain management strategies in this population.
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  • - The study investigates whether the coronavirus (SARS-CoV-2) can enter the brain, finding that a component of the virus (the S1 subunit of the spike protein) can cross the blood-brain barrier in mice when injected intravenously.
  • - Intranasal administration of the S1 subunit also allows it to enter the brain, but at much lower levels compared to intravenous injection; various factors like APOE genotype and sex influenced uptake in specific brain and organ regions.
  • - The research reveals that the S1 subunit crosses the blood-brain barrier through a process called adsorptive transcytosis and involves a specific enzyme (angiotensin-converting enzyme 2) for uptake in the
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Background: The microvasculature (MV) of brains with Alzheimer's disease neuropathologic change (ADNC) and cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA), in the absence of concurrent pathologies (e.g., infarctions, Lewy bodies), is incompletely understood.

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This cohort study examines the correlation between paraspinous sarcopenia at the T12 level and threshold and the association with long-term outcomes in older trauma patients.

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Purpose: Assessment of frailty can help surgeons predict perioperative risk and guide preoperative counseling. However, current methods are often cumbersome in the clinical setting. We prospectively compared the effectiveness of a rapid picture based Clinical Frailty Scale (CFS-9) assessed by patient and surgeon against reference standard Fried Frailty Index in older patients with pelvic floor conditions.

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There is increasing interest in defining the location, content, and role of extracellular matrix (ECM) components in brain structure and function during development, aging, injury, and neurodegeneration. Studies in vivo confirm brain ECM has a dynamic composition with constitutive and induced alterations that impact subsequent cell-cell and cell-matrix interactions. Moreover, it is clear that for any given ECM component, the brain region, and cell type within that location, determines the direction, magnitude, and composition of those changes.

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Advances in understanding fundamental processes of aging have led to a variety of investigational therapies to delay or prevent age-related diseases and conditions. These geroscience therapeutics hold the promise of revolutionizing medical care of older adults by treating the complex syndromes of aging and preserving health and independence. A crucial bottleneck is the study of geroscience therapeutics in early-stage, first-in-human, or proof-of-concept clinical trials.

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Importance: Older adults are disproportionately affected by trauma and accounted for 47% of trauma fatalities in 2016. In many populations and disease processes, described risk factors for poor clinical outcomes include sarcopenia and brain atrophy, but these remain to be fully characterized in older trauma patients. Sarcopenia and brain atrophy may be opportunistically evaluated via head computed tomography, which is often performed during the initial trauma evaluation.

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Frailty is a syndrome of cumulative decline across multiple physiological systems, which predisposes vulnerable adults to adverse events. Assessing vulnerable patients can potentially lead to interventions that improve surgical outcomes. Anaesthesiologists who care for older patients can identify frailty to improve preoperative risk stratification and subsequent perioperative planning.

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