Publications by authors named "Wake M"

Background: In a world confronted with new and connected challenges, novel strategies are needed to help children and adults achieve their full potential, to predict, prevent and treat disease, and to achieve equity in services and outcomes. Australia's Generation Victoria (GenV) cohorts are designed for multi-pronged discovery (what could improve outcomes?) and intervention research (what actually works, how much and for whom?). Here, we describe the key features of its protocol.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study examines the relationship between socioeconomic disadvantage and body mass index (BMI) among children and adults while considering genetic predisposition to obesity.
  • By analyzing data from a sizable population-based cohort, the researchers found that children with higher polygenic risk for obesity are more affected by socioeconomic disadvantage.
  • Hypothetical interventions to reduce this disadvantage could significantly lower rates of adolescent overweight/obesity, especially among those with high genetic risk, suggesting that addressing childhood disadvantage may be an effective strategy for obesity prevention.
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Background: Few studies have examined the association between 24-hour movement behaviors and health in children in their first 2 years of primary school. This study aimed to examine how 24-hour movement behavior compositions at age 6 were related to body mass index (BMI), waist circumference, and internalizing and externalizing symptoms at ages 6 and 10.

Methods: A subsample of 361 children from the HealthNuts cohort study with valid accelerometer data was included in the cross-sectional analysis.

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Importance: Monogenic causes of childhood hearing loss are well established, as are polygenic risk contributions to age-related hearing loss. However, an untested possibility is that polygenic risk scores (PRS) also contribute to childhood hearing loss of all severities, alongside environmental and/or monogenic causes.

Objective: To examine the association between a PRS for adult hearing loss and childhood hearing loss phenotypes.

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This study describes a protocol to assess a novel workflow called Epi-Genomic Newborn Screening (EpiGNs) on 100,000 infants from the state of Victoria, Australia. The workflow uses a first-tier screening approach called methylation-specific quantitative melt analysis (MS-QMA), followed by second and third tier testing including targeted methylation and copy number variation analyzes with droplet digital PCR, EpiTYPER system and low-coverage whole genome sequencing. EpiGNs utilizes only two 3.

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Physical activity (PA) during childhood and adolescence is important for the accrual of maximal peak bone mass. The precise dose that benefits bone remains unclear as methods commonly used to analyze PA data are unsuitable for measuring bone-relevant PA. Using improved accelerometry methods, this study identified the amount and intensity of PA most strongly associated with bone outcomes in 11-12-year-olds.

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Background: Identifying language disorders earlier can help children receive the support needed to improve developmental outcomes and quality of life. Despite the prevalence and impacts of persistent language disorder, there are surprisingly no robust predictor tools available. This makes it difficult for researchers to recruit young children into early intervention trials, which in turn impedes advances in providing effective early interventions to children who need it.

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When you take the time to observe another organism, there is a sort of gravity that can take hold, a mixture of curiosity and connection that expands and strengthens the more you interact with that organism. Yet, in research, a connection with one's study organism can, at times, feel countercultural. Study organisms are sometimes viewed more as tools to conveniently study biological questions.

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Egg-laying amphibian females produce lipid-rich "milk" to feed offspring after hatching.

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Complex motor skills can be acquired while observing a model without physical practice. Transcranial direct-current stimulation (tDCS) applied to the primary motor cortex (M1) also facilitates motor learning. However, the effectiveness of observational practice for bimanual coordination skills is debated.

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Iron plays a major role in the deterioration of β-thalassemia. Indeed, the high levels of transferrin saturation and iron delivered to erythroid progenitors are associated with production of α-globin precipitates that negatively affect erythropoiesis. Matriptase-2/TMPRSS6, a membrane-bound serine protease expressed in hepatocytes, negatively modulates hepcidin production and thus is a key target to prevent iron overload in β-thalassemia.

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Obesity in children remains a major public health problem, with the current prevalence in youth ages 2-19 years estimated to be 19.7%. Despite progress in identifying risk factors, current models do not accurately predict development of obesity in early childhood.

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Article Synopsis
  • Researchers conducted a study on vocabulary development in children, looking specifically at how genetic factors influence both expressive and receptive vocabulary sizes as children grow.
  • The study involved nearly 38,000 parental reports from children of European descent and analyzed vocabulary measures at different developmental stages, assessing various genetic correlations.
  • Findings indicated that early vocabulary is somewhat heritable and that there's genetic overlap with literacy skills, but a strong link to intelligence and ADHD appears later during toddlerhood.
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  • - Natural history museums hold important specimens, samples, and data that help us understand the natural world.
  • - A recent commentary discusses the need for more compassionate collection methods for specimens in these museums.
  • - It raises the question of whether it's feasible to entirely stop the collection of whole animal specimens in the future.
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Sugar-sweetened beverage (SSB) and non-nutritive sweetened beverage (NNSB) consumption is associated with obesity and are targets for population-level dietary interventions. In children (<16 years), we evaluate whether SSB or NNSB consumption is associated with subsequent (2 years later) overweight and/or obesity, and the effect of consumption on subsequent overweight/obesity differs by BMI polygenic risk score (BMI-PRS). The nationally representative Longitudinal-Study-of-Australian-Children had biennial data collection from birth ( = 5107) until age 14/15 years ( = 3127).

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Background: An increasing body of evidence supports associations between inflammation and mental health difficulties, but the onset and directionality of these relationships are unclear.

Methods: Data sources: Barwon Infant Study (BIS; n = 500 4-year-olds) and Longitudinal Study of Australian Children (LSAC; n = 1099 10-13-year-olds).

Measures: Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire emotional symptoms at 4, 10-11 and 12-13 years, and circulating levels of two inflammatory biomarkers, high-sensitivity C-reactive protein (hsCRP) and glycoprotein acetyls (GlycA), at 4 and 11-12 years.

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In a case with bioprosthetic tricuspid stenosis, simultaneous phonocardiogram and Doppler recordings revealed that the louder diastolic rumble in inspiration (Rivero-Carvallo sign) is related to increased tricuspid gradient caused by less prominent decrease of right atrial pressure compared with that of the right ventricle in inspiration caused by tricuspid stenosis. ().

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  • Newborns needing specialist care can face immediate and long-term effects, and there's currently no comparable dataset in Victoria like the ANZNN to enhance neonatal care quality.
  • The objective is to create a prototype registry for babies in special care nurseries across Victoria, as part of the GenV cohort, covering births from Oct 2021 to Oct 2023.
  • The registry will include a comprehensive dataset on various health metrics and will support ongoing research to improve understanding of outcomes for children requiring specialist care, potentially leading to a lasting clinical quality registry.
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External compression of a vein is a relatively rare but important cause of unilateral leg edema. Here, we present a case of unilateral right leg edema caused by external compression of the right iliac vein due to a markedly distended urinary bladder, secondary to a neurogenic bladder. The patient initially had bilateral leg edema associated with chronic heart failure.

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Through a cross-sectional community study of 2044 children aged 2 years, we (1) examine the impact of hearing loss on early spoken expressive vocabulary outcomes and (2) investigate how early intervention-related factors impact expressive vocabulary outcomes in children with hearing loss predominantly identified through universal newborn hearing screening. We used validated parent/caregiver-reported checklists from two longitudinal cohorts (302 children with unilateral or bilateral hearing loss, 1742 children without hearing loss) representing the same population in Victoria, Australia. The impact of hearing loss and amplification-related factors on vocabulary was estimated using g-computation and multivariable linear regression.

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Background: Across the life course, socioeconomic disadvantage disproportionately afflicts those with genetic predispositions to inflammatory diseases. We describe how socioeconomic disadvantage and polygenic risk for high BMI magnify the risk of obesity across childhood, and using causal analyses, explore the hypothetical impact of intervening on socioeconomic disadvantage to reduce adolescent obesity.

Methods: Data were drawn from a nationally representative Australian birth cohort, with biennial data collection between 2004 and 2018 (research and ethics committee approved).

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Unlabelled: Exposure to ambient air pollution has been associated with reduced cognitive function in childhood and later life, with too few mid-life studies to draw conclusions. In contrast, residential greenness has been associated with enhanced cognitive function throughout the lifecourse. Here we examine the extent to which (1) ambient air pollution and residential greenness predict later cognitive function in adolescence and mid-life, and (2) greenness modifies air pollution-cognitive function associations.

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Background: The impact of shorter door-to-balloon (DTB time on long-term outcomes in ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI treated with primary percutaneous coronary intervention (PPCI has not been fully elucidated.

Methods: We investigated 3283 consecutive patients with acute myocardial infarction selected from a prospective, nationwide, multicenter registry (J-MINUET database comprising 28 institutions in Japan between July 2012 and March 2014. Among the study population, we analyzed 1639 STEMI patients who had PPCI within 12 h of onset.

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Article Synopsis
  • Over 200 genes are linked to monogenic congenital hearing loss, but the impact of multiple genes (polygenic) on hearing decline over a lifetime is less understood.
  • A study examined how polygenic risk scores (PRSs) related to self-reported hearing difficulties in adults aged 40-69 years, analyzing data from children and adults using audiometry and genetic evaluations.
  • Results indicated that higher PRS1 and PRS2 scores were correlated with worse hearing thresholds in adults, suggesting that genetic factors contribute to hearing loss across a person's life.
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