Publications by authors named "Sorensen C"

Objective: Mental health problems are increasing worldwide, and research has shown that it can be affected by work-life conflict (WLC). The aim of the present study is to examine the association between WLC and both stress and depressive symptoms in early adulthood.

Methods: A cross-sectional and a 4-year follow-up study was conducted using register data and questionnaire data from The West Jutland Cohort Study (VestLiv), Denmark.

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Nuclear actin polymerization was reported to control different nuclear processes, but its regulation is poorly understood. Here, we show that N-WASP can trigger the formation of nuclear N-WASP/F-actin nodules. While a cancer hotspot mutant of N-WASP lacking the VCA domain (V418fs) had a dominant negative function on nuclear F-actin, an even shorter truncation mutant found in melanoma (R128*) strongly promoted nuclear actin polymerization.

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Over the last decade, the annual Immunorad Conference, held under the joint auspicies of Gustave Roussy (Villejuif, France) and the Weill Cornell Medical College (New-York, USA) has aimed at exploring the latest advancements in the fields of tumor immunology and radiotherapy-immunotherapy combinations for the treatment of cancer. Gathering medical oncologists, radiation oncologists, physicians and researchers with esteemed expertise in these fields, the Immunorad Conference bridges the gap between preclinical outcomes and clinical opportunities. Thus, it paves a promising way toward optimizing radiotherapy-immunotherapy combinations and, from a broader perspective, improving therapeutic strategies for patients with cancer.

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Background: Public health professionals are crucial in implementing health-promoting climate change adaptation and mitigation measures, yet climate education is inconsistently integrated into public health curricula worldwide. We aimed to assess the proportion of institutions that provided public health degrees with climate and health education, the annual number of students trained in climate and health, and the extent to which students had climate and health knowledge during 2023-24.

Methods: From Nov 1, 2023, to March 15, 2024, our online survey quantified climate and health education in public health schools that provide degrees across all WHO regions.

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The global landscape of professional training in environmental health, encompassing ecological public health or environmental public health, lacks consistent global implementation for training programs for public health practitioners, clinical professionals, and individuals across various disciplines, as well as standardized curricula for undergraduates. This training gap is related to the overall lack of capacity in addressing the population impacts of the triple challenge of pollution, biodiversity loss, and climate change, impeding the worldwide transition to and development of ecological sustainability. This paper reviews existing approaches and their potential to address implementation challenges within the necessarily tight timescale.

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Unsustainable globalisation of economic activities, lifestyles and social structures has contributed to environmental degradation, posing major threats to human health at the local and global levels. All these problems including climate change, pollution, and biodiversity loss represent challenges that are unlikely to be met with existing approaches, capabilities and tools. This article acknowledges the need for well-prepared practitioners from many walks of life to contribute to environmental public health (EPH) functions thus strengthening society's capacity and capability to respond effectively and in a timely manner to such complex situations and multiple challenges.

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Objective: To investigate whether hearing-aid fitting based on user-operated audiometry is non-inferior to hearing-aid fitting based on traditional audiometry.

Design: This non-inferiority randomised clinical trial, took place at Odense University Hospital, Odense, Denmark. In a first visit, participants were tested with traditional audiometry as well as user-operated audiometry and filled in the Speech, Spatial and Qualities of Hearing Scale (SSQ12) at baseline.

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To investigate if salivary O-linked glycans are altered in primary Sjögren's syndrome (pSS), and thus contributing to explain symptoms of oral dryness, and an impaired oral mucosal barrier function leading to changes in microbial metabolism and colonization by both pathogenic and commensal microorganisms and increased prevalence of oral diseases. O-linked oligosaccharides from stimulated whole saliva (SWS) samples from 24 patients with pSS, 38 patients with non-pSS sicca, and 23 healthy controls were analyzed using liquid chromatography mass spectrometer (LC-MS). Non-fractionated reduced and alkylated saliva was dot-blotted to PVDF-membrane and O-linked oligosaccharides were released using reductive beta-elimination.

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Article Synopsis
  • Dental caries is a complex disease driven by diet, host factors, saliva, and dental biofilms, remaining one of the world's most common health issues despite a decline since the 1950s.
  • The review highlights the contributions of Henrik Dam, a Nobel Prize winner known for his work on Vitamin K, and how his studies in the mid-20th century explored the effects of Vitamin K, diet, and saliva on dental caries.
  • Dam’s research enhanced our understanding of how saliva and various dietary elements, such as fats and proteins, influence the development and prevention of dental caries.
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Background: Sleep disturbances as well as cortisol hypersecretion are increasingly acknowledged as risk factors for Alzheimer's disease (AD). However, the mechanisms underlying the association, and the interplay with cortisol abnormalities, remain unclear.

Objectives: This study aims to identify how self-reported sleep disturbances are associated with structural brain measures and diurnal cortisol dysregulation among memory clinic patients.

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  • The world is nearing the critical threshold of 1.5°C warming, with 2023 recording an average temperature rise of 1.45°C since pre-industrial times, leading to severe climate-related impacts.
  • The Countdown collaboration, formed to assess the health impacts of climate change post-Paris Agreement, involves over 300 experts analyzing data and trends annually.
  • The 2024 report highlights troubling increases in climate-related health risks, such as a staggering 167% rise in heat-related deaths among seniors, indicating worsening conditions affecting wellbeing globally.
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Homologous recombination (HR) is a highly conserved tool for the removal of DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) and the preservation of stalled and damaged DNA replication forks. Successful completion of HR requires the tumor suppressor BRCA2. Germline mutations in BRCA2 lead to familial breast, ovarian, and other cancers, underscoring the importance of this protein for maintaining genome stability.

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  • Caspase activated DNase (CAD) causes DNA breaks that play a role in both cell differentiation and cancer cell resistance, revealing a complex relationship between these processes.
  • Researchers discovered that certain CAD-targeted genes in muscle cells, like Pax7 and Foxo1a, are also implicated in cancer-related genetic alterations, particularly in alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma.
  • The findings indicate that the DNA breaks induced by CAD in these genes are a natural part of muscle cell differentiation, connecting the dots between normal cellular transitions and cancer development.
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  • A study was conducted on 80 participants with moderate-to-severe depression, who participated in an 8-week trial of heated Bikram yoga to evaluate its effects on their mental health.
  • Participants reported immediate improvements in their depressive symptoms after yoga sessions, with most noting overall positive effects throughout the intervention, such as better sleep, mood, and energy levels.
  • However, some participants also expressed negative experiences with the classes, including dissatisfaction with instruction, difficulty, and boredom, though the majority reported mixed feelings with both positive and negative effects.
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The underlying causes of diabetic kidney disease are still largely unknown. New insights into the contributing causes of diabetic nephropathy are important to prevent this complication. Hyperglycemia and hypertension are some of the risk factors for diabetic nephropathy.

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Background And Aims: Most experimental studies of allograft vasculopathy (AV) have relied on transplantation between major histocompatibility complex-mismatched inbred mouse strains, but this leads to the complete eradication of donor smooth muscle cells (SMCs) and lesions formed by recipient cells. This is unlike human AV which is thought to form mainly by donor SMCs. Here, we studied sources of neointimal cells in a minor histocompatibility antigen-mismatched AV model by combining male-to-female orthotopic carotid transplantations and lineage tracing by SMC-specific expression of fluorescent proteins.

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Objectives: (Bbsl) and tick-borne encephalitis virus (TBEV) are tick-borne pathogens. This study aimed to investigate the seroprevalence of these pathogens in Danish blood donors.

Methods: A total of 1000 plasma samples equally distributed (n = 200) from all five Danish regions were analyzed.

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Objectives: To describe the development, implementation, and results of a training course designed to equip health professionals from the Pan American Health Organization region with the knowledge and tools needed to adapt health systems to current climate realities.

Methods: The course was a 9-week live-virtual course in March-April 2023, which was delivered through Zoom and offered in English, Spanish, and French. All lectures were delivered by local and regional climate and health experts.

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Planetary health is an emerging field that emphasises that humans depend on a healthy Earth for survival and, conversely, that the sustainability of Earth systems is dependent on human behaviours. In response to member demands for resources to support teaching and learning related to planetary health, the Consortium of Universities for Global Health (CUGH) convened a working group to develop a set of planetary health learning objectives (PHLOs) that would complement the existing ten CUGH global health learning objectives. The eight PHLOs feature Earth system changes, planetary boundaries, and climate change science; ecological systems and One Health; human health outcomes; risk assessment, vulnerability, and resilience; policy, governance, and laws (including the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change and the Paris Agreement); roles and responsibilities of governments, businesses, civil society organisations, other institutions, communities, and individuals for mitigation, adaptation, conservation, restoration, and sustainability; environmental ethics, human rights, and climate justice; and environmental literacy and communication.

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To address the health effects of climate change, leaders in healthcare have called for action to integrate climate adaptation and mitigation into training programs for health professionals. However, current educators may not possess sufficient climate literacy and the expertise to effectively include such content in their respective healthcare curricula. We, an international and interprofessional partnership, collaborated with experts to develop and deploy curriculum to increase health educators' and graduate health profession students' knowledge and competencies on climate change.

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Article Synopsis
  • - The study focused on testing a new questionnaire for Pediatric Autoimmune Neuropsychiatric Disorders Associated with Streptococcal infections (PANDAS) and Pediatric Acute-onset Neuropsychiatric Syndrome (PANS) to improve screening and measurement methods related to these disorders.
  • - Researchers analyzed 27 items across ten domains and compared the new questionnaire's results with established ones, finding strong relationships, particularly with ADHD and OCD scales.
  • - The results validated the questionnaire as a reliable tool for assessing symptoms, severity, and daily life impact for individuals with PANDAS/PANS, suggesting its usefulness in healthcare and research.
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Recently, there has been a major push toward the development of next-generation treatments against snakebite envenoming. However, unlike current antivenoms that rely on animal-derived polyclonal antibodies, most of these novel approaches are reliant on an in-depth understanding of the over 2000 known snake venom toxins. Indeed, by identifying similarities (i.

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