Publications by authors named "Ohlson L"

In a large case-control study of Swedish incident type I diabetes patients and controls, 0-34 years of age, we tested the hypothesis that the GIMAP5 gene, a key genetic factor for lymphopenia in spontaneous BioBreeding rat diabetes, is associated with type I diabetes; with islet autoantibodies in incident type I diabetes patients or with age at clinical onset in incident type I diabetes patients. Initial scans of allelic association were followed by more detailed logistic regression modeling that adjusted for known type I diabetes risk factors and potential confounding variables. The single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) rs6598, located in a polyadenylation signal of GIMAP5, was associated with the presence of significant levels of IA-2 autoantibodies in the type I diabetes patients.

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SUMO4 M55V, located in IDDM5, has been a focus for debate because of its association to type I diabetes (TIDM) in Asians but not in Caucasians. The current study aims to test the significance of M55V association to TIDM in a large cohort of Swedish Caucasians, and to test whether M55V is associated in those carrying human leukocyte antigen (HLA) class II molecules. A total of 673 TIDM patients and 535 age- and sex-matched healthy controls were included in the study.

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Objective: To explore in a multiethnic primary care population the impact of child gender and of race/ethnicity on parent and child reports of school-age anxiety and on the factor structure of the Screen for Childhood Anxiety and Related Emotional Disorders (SCARED).

Method: A consecutive sample of 515 children (8 to <13 years) and their parent presenting for primary care completed self-report (C) and parent-report (P) versions of the SCARED-41.

Results: Neither SCARED scores nor parent-child difference varied significantly with race/ethnicity.

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Background/aims: The synthetic estrogen 17alpha-ethinyl estradiol (EE), a potent tumor promoter in rat liver, stimulates growth during short-term treatment but inhibits hepatocyte proliferation upon prolonged treatment. To identify the molecular targets of the mitoinhibitory effect of EE, the expression of proteins regulating G(1)- and S-progression were analyzed during the first cell cycle in EE-treated female Wistar rats.

Methods: Long-term (60 days) EE treatment.

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Background/aims: Examine the mitoinhibitory effect of the liver tumor promoter 2-acetylaminofluorene (2-AAF) in vivo, with focus on the proteins regulating G1- and S progression.

Methods: cdk 2 kinase assay to examine histone H1 phosphorylation. cdk 4 kinase assay to examine whether active cdk 4/cyclin D complexes, capable of phosphorylating Rb, are formed.

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Previous studies have indicated that isolated preneoplastic rat hepatocytes in vitro fail to induce nuclear p53 protein and fail to block replication in response to genotoxic compounds. This suggests that defects in the protection of genomic integrity are part of their premalignant character. In the present study, we have investigated if similar defects occur in vivo.

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The effects of dietary 2-acetylaminofluorene (2-AAF) on cell cycle-related proteins was studied in regenerating livers from male Wistar rats. The levels of cyclins, cyclin dependent kinases (cdks), and related proteins were studied at different times during the first cell cycle after partial hepatectomy (PH). The frequency of proliferation cell nuclear antigen (PCNA)-positive nuclei, a marker of S phase progression, was almost zero during the first 27 hours after PH in the mitoinhibited 2-AAF-treated rats, while about 50% of the nuclei were labeled 24 hours after PH in control animals.

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Synthetic estrogens act as tumor promoters in rat liver. Because estrogen treatment markedly increases the secretion of pituitary prolactin, also shown to be a tumor promoter in rat liver, the possibility of a pituitary influence in estrogen promotion was investigated in Wistar rats. In diethylnitrosamine (DEN)-initiated hypophysectomized (hx) female rats, 24 weeks of ethinyl estradiol (EE) administration (500 microg/kg/d, intraperitoneally) did not increase the number of hepatocyte nodules and did not induce hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) in a 2-year study.

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A clustering of metabolic disturbances has been indicated in hypertension. The distribution of such factors was assessed among hypertensives and normotensives in a general population sample of 644 men aged 67 years. Fasting serum insulin, glucose and triglyceride levels were measured.

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Insulin and insulin resistance have attracted considerable interest as possible risk factors for coronary heart disease during the last decade. We therefore examined the 8-year incidence of coronary heart disease in 595 67-year-old men in relation to baseline insulin and other risk factors. The incidence of coronary heart disease increased from 9% among non-diabetic men to 13.

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We examined two 'cohorts' of elderly men, 60 and 67 years old. The two 'cohorts' overlapped to a large extent in terms of numbers but not in the follow-up periods. The mean have been followed-up for 7 and 8 years respectively.

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In 1963 a sample of 973 men, all 50 years old, was drawn from the population register of Gothenburg, Sweden. These men have been followed up for 17 years with repeated examinations regarding a number of variables possibly related to cardiovascular disease. The latest examination, at the age of 67 years, focused on congestive heart failure (CHF).

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The relationship between degree of glucose tolerance and cardiovascular disease has been studied in a cross-sectional population survey of 644 men born in 1913, randomly sampled and examined at the age of 67. The cohort was divided into different groups according to current diagnostic criteria for diabetes and impaired glucose tolerance. An almost 2-fold higher prevalence of hypertension, myocardial infarction, angina pectoris, and congestive heart failure was found in the group with impaired glucose tolerance compared to the group with a normal glucose tolerance.

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To study in the human the conditions for the flow regimes inherent in urinary systems with a dependence of the contraction interval on urine flow rate (boluses-in-contact, leaky-bolus, and open-tube flow regimes), 50 urinary systems were examined at low and high flow rates. Morphometry and volumetry were applied to eight urinary systems. The bolus frequently contacted the preceding contraction ring but the mechanisms differed categorically from that conventionally postulated.

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Ureteral transport was studied in 50 urinary systems by urography with video recording in the upright and recumbent positions using low-osmolality and high-osmolality contrast media. Morphometry and volumetry were applied to right urinary systems in which the urine-filled segments had a circular cross section at maximum peristaltic distension. The filling of the lumbar segment was composed of four fractions, each entering that segment by a specific mechanism: 1) the residual urine left behind by the preceding contraction ring, 2) the postcontraction injection from the pyelocalyceal system, 3) the extraperistaltic flow, and 4) the peristaltic injection produced by the pyelocalyceal contraction rings.

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In 21 of 636 patients with normal renal function and without obstruction of the upper urinary tract, urograms showed that contrast medium filled thin cylindrical structures in the renal pyramids with the same course as that of the collecting ducts. The prevalence of cylinders when the low-osmolality contrast medium iohexol was used was 21 of 158 studies (13.3%) and with the high-osmolality contrast medium amidotrizoate, two of 529 studies (0.

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This report presents data on antecedents of Type 2 (non-insulin-dependent) diabetes mellitus in a homogeneous sample of randomly selected 54-year-old men from an urban Swedish population with a diabetes incidence of 6.1% during 13.5 years of follow-up.

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To see whether well-being and quality-of-life are affected in congestive heart failure (CHF), a number of health variables, self-assessed and objectively measured, were estimated among 67-year-old men sampled from the general population of Gothenburg, Sweden. Based on history, physical examination and drug treatment, 407 men were studied and grouped into 4 stages of CHF, ranging from no signs or symptoms of CHF to advanced CHF. Men with CHF had more of other cardiovascular disease manifestations, utilized more health care, and reported less well-being and a higher rate of self-assessed disability than men with no CHF.

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A cross-sectional analysis of characteristics possibly associated with congestive heart failure (CHF) was performed among 644 men, all 67 years of age and randomly selected from the general population. A total of 13% had symptoms and signs of overt CHF. Another 10% had early or "latent" CHF.

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Dyspnoea is one of the earliest symptoms in several conditions, such as heart disease and airway obstruction. However, the early phases of these two conditions are hard to distinguish in a reproducible way. In a population study of the natural history and epidemiology of congestive heart failure a scoring test to differentiate the two conditions was developed.

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In a longitudinal population study, 855 men, born in 1913 and initially examined when 50 years old, were followed for 17 years with measurements of dyspnoea and other variables performed at ages 50, 54, and 67 years. In addition a sample of 226 men born in 1923 was followed from 50 to 57 years of age. At the latest examination, four different methods for measuring dyspnoea were used, one based on questionnaire, one on interview, and two on visual analogue scales.

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As part of a study of the epidemiology of diabetes mellitus in middle-aged Swedish men, the present paper reports the prevalence and incidence of diabetes and the prevalence of impaired glucose tolerance. Two cohorts of 50-year-old men, representative of the corresponding male population of Gothenburg, Sweden, were examined in 1963 and 1973, respectively, and then followed until 1980. In the cohort of men born in 1913 (n = 855) the diabetes prevalence (WHO criteria), based on a questionnaire and fasting blood glucose, increased from 1.

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The Study of Men Born in 1913 is a prospective population study of cardiovascular diseases in Gothenburg, Sweden, that started in 1963. To describe survival curves and mortality pattern, all boy-children born alive in 1913 in the city of Gothenburg, were identified. This birth cohort was followed from birth to age 70 for residence, vital status and cause of death.

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