Cochrane Database Syst Rev
February 2019
Background: Breast cancer is the most common type of cancer amongst women worldwide, and one distressing complication of breast cancer treatment is breast and upper-limb lymphoedema. There is uncertainty regarding the effectiveness of surgical interventions in both the prevention and management of lymphoedema affecting the arm after breast cancer treatment.
Objectives: 1.
Objective: Appropriate glucose levels are essential for survival; thus, the detection and correction of low blood glucose is of paramount importance. Hypoglycemia prompts an integrated response involving reduction in insulin release and secretion of key counter-regulatory hormones glucagon and epinephrine that together promote endogenous glucose production to restore normoglycemia. However, specifically how this response is orchestrated remains to be fully clarified.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAs patients decline from health to type 2 diabetes, glucose-stimulated insulin secretion (GSIS) typically becomes impaired. Although GSIS is driven predominantly by direct sensing of a rise in blood glucose by pancreatic β-cells, there is growing evidence that hypothalamic neurons control other aspects of peripheral glucose metabolism. Here we investigated the role of the brain in the modulation of GSIS.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe mechanisms underpinning impaired defensive counterregulatory responses to hypoglycemia that develop in some people with diabetes who suffer recurrent episodes of hypoglycemia are unknown. Previous work examining whether this is a consequence of increased glucose delivery to the hypothalamus, postulated to be the major hypoglycemia-sensing region, has been inconclusive. Here, we hypothesized instead that increased hypothalamic glucose phosphorylation, the first committed intracellular step in glucose metabolism, might develop following exposure to hypoglycemia.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUltraviolet B (UVB) radiation is known to have various effects on the immune system of fish, but the effect on the actual disease resistance has remained largely unknown. Here we studied the effect of UVB on the resistance of rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) against a bacterium Yersinia ruckeri, the causative agent of enteric red mouth disease, and a trematode parasite Diplostomum spathaceum, which causes cataracts in fish. The fish were exposed to UVB irradiation seven times in 14 days, and inoculated intraperitoneally with Y.
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