12 results match your criteria: "1550 E indian School Rd[Affiliation]"

Article Synopsis
  • The ETCHED study aims to explore how negative factors during pregnancy and early childhood contribute to obesity and metabolic issues in minority groups, particularly American Indian/Alaska Native and Hispanic populations.
  • This longitudinal study involves monitoring pregnant women and their children over 18 years, collecting data on health history, lifestyle, and biological samples to assess the risk factors for obesity.
  • Multiple check-ups will occur at various stages of the child’s development, with a focus on comprehensive health assessments and environmental influences, using medical records for additional context.
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Novel signals and polygenic score for height are associated with pubertal growth traits in Southwestern American Indians.

Hum Mol Genet

May 2024

Phoenix Epidemiology and Clinical Research Branch, National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, National Institutes of Health, 1550 E indian School Rd, Phoenix, AZ 85014, United States.

Most genetic variants associated with adult height have been identified through large genome-wide association studies (GWASs) in European-ancestry cohorts. However, it is unclear how these variants influence linear growth during adolescence. This study uses anthropometric and genotypic data from a longitudinal study conducted in an American Indian community in Arizona between 1965-2007.

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Background: In type 2 diabetes (T2DM), the Chronic Kidney Disease Epidemiology Collaboration (CKD-EPI) equation for estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) systematically underestimates the measured adjusted glomerular filtration rate (aGFR) when aGFR is high. We studied the extent to which glycemic variables associate with kidney function, and developed equations including these variables that estimate aGFR in people with T2DM.

Methods: Diabetic Pima people had aGFR measured from iothalamate clearance divided by body surface area.

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Changes in waist circumference independent of weight: Implications for population level monitoring of obesity.

Prev Med

June 2018

Global Obesity Centre, Deakin University, Locked Bag 20000, Geelong, Victoria 3220, Australia; School of Public Health and Preventive Medicine, Monash University, Melbourne, Locked Bag 20000, Geelong, Victoria 3220, Australia. Electronic address:

Unlabelled: Population monitoring of obesity is most commonly conducted using body mass index (BMI). We test the hypothesis that because of increases in waist circumference (WC) independent of increases in weight, BMI alone detects an increasingly smaller proportion of the population with obesity.

Methods: Australian adults with measured height, weight, and WC were selected from three nationally representative cross-sectional surveys (1989, 1999-2000, 2011-12; n=8313, 5903 & 3904).

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Differential methylation of genes in individuals exposed to maternal diabetes in utero.

Diabetologia

April 2017

Phoenix Epidemiology and Clinical Research Branch, National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, National Institutes of Health, 1550 E. Indian School Rd, Phoenix, AZ, 85014, USA.

Aims/hypothesis: Individuals exposed to maternal diabetes in utero are more likely to develop metabolic and cardiovascular diseases later in life. This may be partially attributable to epigenetic regulation of gene expression. We performed an epigenome-wide association study to examine whether differential DNA methylation, a major source of epigenetic regulation, can be observed in offspring of mothers with type 2 diabetes during the pregnancy (OMD) compared with offspring of mothers with no diabetes during the pregnancy (OMND).

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Translating Findings from Lifestyle Intervention Trials of Cardiovascular Disease and Diabetes to the Primary Care Setting.

Curr Nutr Rep

December 2012

Nutrition Program, Graduate School of Public Health, Medical Sciences Campus, University of Puerto Rico, San Juan, PR 00935, USA.

Preventing or delaying type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease is a key public health issue. Large, randomized, clinical trials have shown that intensive lifestyle interventions can be used to prevent or delay type 2 diabetes and to improve cardiovascular disease risk factors, but the key question that remains is how to best translate the results from these large, clinical trials into interventions that can be effectively delivered in primary care and community-based settings. Several effective approaches have been identified and tested.

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Childhood predictors of young-onset type 2 diabetes.

Diabetes

December 2007

Diabetes Epidemiology and Clinical Research Section, National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, National Institutes of Health, 1550 E. Indian School Rd., Phoenix, AZ 85014, USA.

Objective: Optimal prevention of young-onset type 2 diabetes requires identification of the early-life modifiable risk factors. We aimed to do this using longitudinal data in 1,604 5- to 19-year-old initially nondiabetic American Indians.

Research Design And Methods: For type 2 diabetes prediction, we derived an optimally weighted, continuously distributed, standardized multivariate score (zMS) comprising commonly measured metabolic, anthropometric, and vascular traits (i.

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Hyperglycemia and long duration of diabetes are widely recognized risk factors for diabetic retinopathy, but inherited susceptibility may also play a role because retinopathy aggregates in families. A genome-wide linkage analysis was conducted in 211 sibships in which > or =2 siblings had diabetes and retinal photographs were available from a longitudinal study. These sibships were a subset of 322 sibships who had participated in a previous linkage study of diabetes and related traits; they comprised 607 diabetic individuals in 725 sibpairs.

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Effect of periodontitis on overt nephropathy and end-stage renal disease in type 2 diabetes.

Diabetes Care

February 2007

Diabetes Epidemiology and Clinical Research Section, Phoenix Epidemiology and Clinical Research Branch, National Institutes of Health, 1550 E. Indian School Rd., Phoenix, AZ 85014-4972, USA.

Objective: The purpose of this study was to investigate the effect of periodontitis on development of overt nephropathy, defined as macroalbuminuria, and end-stage renal disease (ESRD) in type 2 diabetes.

Research Design And Methods: Individuals residing in the Gila River Indian Community aged > or =25 years with type 2 diabetes, one or more periodontal examination, estimated glomerular filtration rate > or =60 ml/min per 1.73 m(2), and no macroalbuminuria (urinary albumin-to-creatinine ratio > or =300 mg/g) were identified.

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Endothelium-derived nitric oxide (NO) facilitates skeletal muscle glucose uptake. Energy expenditure induces the endothelial NO synthase (eNOS) gene, providing a mechanism for insulin-independent glucose disposal. The object was to test 1) the association of genetic variation in eNOS, as assessed by haplotype-tagging single nucleotide polymorphisms (htSNPs) with type 2 diabetes, and 2) the interaction between eNOS haplotypes and total energy expenditure on glucose intolerance.

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Early growth in offspring of diabetic mothers.

Diabetes Care

March 2005

Diabetes Epidemiology and Clinical Research Section, National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, 1550 E. Indian School Rd., Phoenix, AZ 85014, USA.

Objective: By age 5 years, offspring of diabetic mothers (ODMs) are heavier and have altered glucose metabolism compared with offspring of mothers without diabetes (non-DMs). This study evaluates the growth pattern of ODMs before the age of 5 years.

Research Design And Methods: Anthropometric measures (z scores) from birth, 1.

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Interaction between an 11betaHSD1 gene variant and birth era modifies the risk of hypertension in Pima Indians.

Hypertension

November 2004

Phoenix Epidemiology and Clinical Research Branch, National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, National Institutes of Health, 1550 E Indian School Rd, Phoenix, AZ 85014, USA.

11beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase type 1 (11betaHSD1) is a candidate gene for hypertension, diabetes, and obesity through altered glucocorticoid production. This study explored the association of 11betaHSD1 gene variants with diabetes, hypertension, and obesity in a longitudinal population study of American Indians (N=918; exams=5508). In multivariate mixed models assuming an additive effect of genotype, a 5' upstream variant (rs846910) was associated with blood pressure (diastolic blood pressure beta=1.

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