Vascular calcification is an active pathological process, characterised by cellular dysregulation and subsequent changes to the extracellular environment. In vivo detection of vascular calcification is only possible late stage via computed tomography, and there is no single biomarker for detecting progression of vascular calcification. There is an unmet clinical need to determine progression of vascular calcification in vulnerable patients.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCardiovascular disease is the major cause of death worldwide. The success of medication and other preventive measures introduced in the last century have not yet halted the epidemic of cardiovascular disease. Although the molecular mechanisms of the pathophysiology of the heart and vessels have been extensively studied, the burden of ischemic cardiovascular conditions has risen to become a top cause of morbidity and mortality.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFVascular calcification involves a series of degenerative pathologies, including inflammation, changes to cellular phenotype, cell death, and the absence of calcification inhibitors, that concomitantly lead to a loss of vessel elasticity and function. Vascular calcification is an important contributor to morbidity and mortality in many pathologies, including chronic kidney disease, diabetes mellitus, and atherosclerosis. Current research models to study vascular calcification are limited and are only viable at the late stages of calcification development in vivo.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: The COVID-19 pandemic and the measures to protect the physically vulnerable may disproportionately affect people with mental health vulnerabilities, who receive psychotherapeutic inpatient treatment, as many of these measures impact the (inter)subjective space crucial to psychotherapy.
Objective: We investigate how people with pre-existing mental health conditions and healthcare professionals experienced changes linked to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Methods: During the first COVID-19 outbreak and lockdown in spring 2020, we conducted semi-structured interviews with patients and healthcare professionals at a clinic for psychosomatic medicine in Germany and analyzed them following the principles of descriptive phenomenology focusing on social interactions, intersubjectivity, and the therapeutic space.
Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is accompanied with extensive cardiovascular calcification, in part correlating with functional vitamin K deficiency. Here, we sought to determine causes for vitamin K deficiency beyond reduced dietary intake. Initially, vitamin K uptake and distribution into circulating lipoproteins after a single administration of vitamin K1 plus K2 (menaquinone 4 and menaquinone 7, respectively) was determined in patients on dialysis therapy and healthy individuals.
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