Objective: To determine whether longer disease duration negatively impacts carotid intima-media thickness (CIMT), flow-mediated dilation (FMD), and pulse wave velocity (PWV) in a cohort of patients with childhood-onset systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), and to compare CIMT, FMD, and PWV in patients with childhood-onset SLE with those in healthy children and explore determinants of vascular test results in childhood-onset SLE.
Methods: Cross-sectional analysis was performed in a prospective longitudinal cohort of patients with childhood-onset SLE at the latest followup visit. Clinical and laboratory data were collected for patients with childhood-onset SLE. CIMT, FMD, and PWV were measured using standardized protocols in patients with childhood-onset SLE and healthy children. Correlations between disease duration and results of the 3 vascular tests were performed. Vascular data in patients with childhood-onset SLE were compared with those in healthy children. Multivariable linear regression was used to identify determinants of CIMT, FMD, and PWV in childhood-onset SLE.
Results: Patients with childhood-onset SLE (n = 149) and healthy controls (n = 178) were enrolled. The median age of the patients was 17.2 years (interquartile range [IQR] 15.7-17.9 years), and their median disease duration was 3.2 years (IQR 1.8-4.9 years). The median age of the healthy children was 14.7 years (IQR 13.1-15.9 years). Longer disease duration correlated with worse FMD (r = -0.2, P = 0.031) in patients with childhood-onset SLE. Patients with childhood-onset SLE had smaller (better) CIMT, higher (better) FMD, and similar PWV compared with healthy controls. Linear regression analysis explained <24% of the variation in vascular test results in patients with childhood-onset SLE, suggesting that other variables should be explored as important determinants of CIMT, FMD, and PWV.
Conclusion: In this cohort of 149 patients with childhood-onset SLE, patients did not have worse CIMT, FMD, or PWV than did healthy controls. Longer disease duration was associated with worse FMD, suggesting progressive endothelial dysfunction over time.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/art.39423 | DOI Listing |
Lupus
January 2025
Pediatric Rheumatology Unit, Instituto da Criança e do Adolescente, Hospital das Clínicas HCFMUSP, Sao Paulo, Brazil.
To identify clusters of autoantibodies in a large cSLE population and to verify possible associations between different autoantibody clusters and the following variables: demographic data, cumulative clinical and laboratory manifestations, disease activity, cumulative damage and mortality. A cross-sectional study was performed in 27 Pediatric Rheumatology University centers, including 912 cSLE patients. The frequencies of seven selected autoantibodies (anti-dsDNA, anti-Ro/SSA, anti-La/SSB, anti-Sm, anti-RNP, aCL IgM and/or IgG and LA) were used for cluster analysis using the K-means method.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSchizophr Res Cogn
June 2025
University Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Children's Hospitals of NICE CHU-Lenval, Nice, France.
Objective: To conduct a systematic review of neurocognitive dysfunctions in patients with childhood-onset schizophrenia (COS), a neuropsychiatric disorder that occurs before age 13 and is rarer and more severe than adult-onset schizophrenia.
Method: A search was made in the PubMed database. Sixty-seven studies (out of 543) which analyzed Intellectual Quotient (IQ), attentional, memory and executive functions were selected by two independent researchers.
Ann Clin Transl Neurol
January 2025
Movement Disorders Program, Department of Neurology, Boston Children's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
Biallelic loss-of-function variants in AP4S1 cause childhood-onset hereditary spastic paraplegia. A recent report suggested that heterozygous AP4S1 variants lead to a syndrome of lower limb spasticity and dysregulation of sphincter function. We critically evaluate this claim against clinical observations in 28 heterozygous carriers of the same AP4S1 variant (NM_007077.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Mol Sci
January 2025
Department of Pathology, Albert Szent-Györgyi Medical Center, Faculty of Medicine, University of Szeged, 6720 Szeged, Hungary.
Fibronectin glomerulopathy (FG) is caused by fibronectin 1 () gene mutations. A renal biopsy was performed on a 4-year-old girl with incidentally discovered proteinuria (150 mg/dL); her family history of renal disease was negative. Markedly enlarged glomeruli (mean glomerular diameter: 196 μm; age-matched controls: 140 μm), α-SMA-positive and Ki-67-positive mesangial cell proliferation (glomerular proliferation index 1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Mol Sci
January 2025
Laboratory of Neuronal Plasticity and Neurorepair, Institute of Neuroscience of Castile and Leon (INCyL), Universidad de Salamanca, 37007 Salamanca, Spain.
In recent decades, the scientific community has faced a major challenge in the search for new therapies that can slow down or alleviate the process of neuronal death that accompanies neurodegenerative diseases. This study aimed to identify an effective therapy using neurotrophic factors to delay the rapid and aggressive cerebellar degeneration experienced by the Purkinje Cell Degeneration (PCD) mouse, a model of childhood-onset neurodegeneration with cerebellar atrophy (CONDCA). Initially, we analyzed the changes in the expression of several neurotrophic factors related to the degenerative process itself, identifying changes in insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF-1) and Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor B (VEGF-B) in the affected animals.
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