Publications by authors named "Renee Thewissen"

Background: Patients with facioscapulohumeral dystrophy (FSHD) suffer from slowly progressive muscle weakness. Approximately 20% of FSHD patients end up wheelchair-dependent. FSHD patients benefit from physical activity to maintain their muscle strength as much as possible.

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Muscle biopsies are used in clinical trials to measure target engagement of the investigational product. With many upcoming therapies for patients with facioscapulohumeral dystrophy (FSHD), the frequency of biopsies in FSHD patients is expected to increase. Muscle biopsies were performed either in the outpatient clinic using a Bergström needle (BN-biopsy) or in a Magnetic Resonance Imaging machine (MRI-biopsy).

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Objectives: Determine whether preoperative dietary prehabilitation with a low-fat, high-fiber diet reverses the impact of Western diet (WD) on the intestinal microbiota and improves postoperative survival.

Background: We have previously demonstrated that WD fed mice subjected to an otherwise recoverable surgical injury (30% hepatectomy), antibiotics, and a short period of starvation demonstrate reduced survival (29%) compared to mice fed a low-fat, high-fiber standard chow (SD) (100%).

Methods: Mice were subjected to 6 weeks of a WD and underwent dietary pre-habilitation (3 days vs 7 days) with a SD prior to exposure to antibiotics, starvation, and surgery.

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A recent report by the National Institutes of Health on sepsis research has implied there is a trend to move away from mouse models of sepsis. The most commonly used animal model to study the pathogenesis of human sepsis is cecal ligation and puncture (CLP) in mice. The model has been the mainstay of sepsis research for decades and continues to be considered the gold standard to inform novel pathways of sepsis physiology and its therapeutic direction.

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