12 results match your criteria: "Rush University and Rush-Presbyterian-St. Luke's Medical Center[Affiliation]"

Mycophenolate mofetil (MM) is an immunosuppressive agent developed and originally used to prevent acute rejection of solid-organ transplantation. There have been preliminary reports of its successful use in the treatment of autoimmune myasthenia gravis (MG). We conducted a double-blind, placebo-controlled pilot trial of MM in the treatment of suboptimally controlled, stable MG.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We examined whether or not blood pressure is related to cognitive function in a cross-sectional study of a biracial community of 5,816 persons aged 65 years and older. Blood pressure had a curvilinear association with cognitive performance in linear regression models adjusted for age, sex, race and education. Scores were lower by 2-5 percentiles at 100 mm Hg systolic pressure compared to scores at the mean of 140 mm Hg and lower by <1 percentile at 180 mm Hg.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) was used to compare frontal-lobe activation in younger and older adults during encoding of words into memory. Participants made semantic or nonsemantic judgments about words. Younger adults exhibited greater activation for semantic relative to nonsemantic judgments in several regions, with the largest activation in the left inferior frontal gyrus.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The role of substantia nigra pathology in Alzheimer's disease (AD) is uncertain. Detection of pathology may be obscured by intraneuronal neuromelanin and influenced by stains. We determined methods for optimal visualization of nigral pathology in 45 cases of AD.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Alzheimer disease will affect increasing numbers of people as baby boomers (persons born between 1946 and 1964) age. This work reports projections of the incidence of Alzheimer disease(AD) that will occur among older Americans in the future. Education adjusted age-specific incidence rates of clinically diagnosed probable AD were obtained from stratified random samples of residents 65 years of age and older in a geographically defined community.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Previously, we showed that exposure of human osteoblasts to titanium particles stimulates protein tyrosine phosphorylation (PTP), activates the transcription factor nuclear factor kappaB (NF-kappaB), and causes an approximately 50% decrease in the steady-state messenger RNA (mRNA) level of procollagen alpha1[I]. In this study, we identify three NF-kappaB binding sites within the human procollagen alpha1[I] gene promoter, show that titanium particles stimulate their binding of the NF-kappaB subunits Rel A (p65) and NF-kappaB1 (p50), and find NF-kappaB activation correlates with collagen gene suppression by titanium particles in osteoblasts. Protein tyrosine kinase (PTK) inhibitors, which significantly reduce the suppressive effect of titanium particles on collagen gene expression, inhibited NF-kappaB binding activity showing that titanium particle stimulation of PTK signals in osteoblasts are critical for both NF-kappaB activation and collagen gene expression.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A large proportion of people with Alzheimer's disease (AD) are women; however, it is not clear whether this is due to higher risk of disease or solely to the larger number of women alive at ages when AD is common. Beginning in 1982, two stratified random samples of people aged > or =65 years in East Boston, Massachusetts underwent detailed, structured clinical evaluation for prevalent (467 people) and incident (642 people from a cohort previously ascertained to be disease-free) probable AD. The prevalence sample was followed for mortality for up to 11 years (through December 1992).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Previous studies have found that subjects diagnosed with verbal auditory agnosia (VAA) from bilateral brain lesions may experience difficulties at the prephonemic level of acoustic processing. In this case study, we administered a series of speech and nonspeech discrimination tests to an individual with unilateral VAA as a result of left-temporal-lobe damage. The results indicated that the subject's ability to perceive steady-state acoustic stimuli was relatively intact but his ability to perceive dynamic stimuli was drastically reduced.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Information regarding the prevalence of dizziness and its association with functional disability among African American and white residents from defined community populations is limited.

Methods: A total of 6,158 persons 65 years and older (78.8% of age-eligible persons) completed in-home interviews that included three common measures of self-reported disability: the Katz Activities of Daily Living (ADL) Scale, the Rosow-Breslau Functional Health Scale, and the Nagi Physical Disability Scale.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: The relation of blood pressure to Alzheimer's disease (AD) is complex because both an association of high blood pressure with increased risk of the disease and lower blood pressure as a consequence of the disease are possible.

Methods: We examined the cross-sectional association of blood pressure and AD in the Chicago Health and Aging Project (CHAP), a study of a geographically defined, biracial community. After in-home interviews with 6.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In most people, blood pressure (BP) displays a characteristic diurnal pattern, with a decline during sleep and a sharp increase around the time of awakening. The early morning surge in BP is synchronous with an increase in the risk of catastrophic cardiovascular events, including acute myocardial infarction, sudden cardiac death, and stroke. Although most clinical investigations have centered on modulating or even preventing the morning surge, emerging data suggest that it may be important to avoid nocturnal hypotension, especially in elderly patients and in those with established atherosclerotic disease.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Change in self-reported physical function was examined using baseline and 5 years of follow-up data between 1982 and 1991 from the four Established Populations for Epidemiologic Studies of the Elderly studies. In East Boston, Massachusetts (n = 3,809), Iowa and Washington Counties, Iowa (n = 3,673), New Haven, Connecticut (n = 2,812), and North Carolina (n = 4,163), noninstitutionalized persons aged 65 years and older were asked a series of questions to assess their physical function: a modified Katz Activities of Daily Living (ADL) scale, three items from the Rosow-Breslau Functional Health Scale, and questions on physical performance, adapted from Nagi, as well as information on demographic, social, and health characteristics. Longitudinal statistical analyses (random effects and Markov transition models) were used to evaluate improvement, stability, and deterioration in functional ability at both an individual and a population level over multiple years of data.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF