3 results match your criteria: "UCLA-Orthopaedic Hospital Research Center[Affiliation]"

Update in vitamin D.

J Clin Endocrinol Metab

February 2010

UCLA-Orthopaedic Hospital Research Center, 615 Charles Young Drive South, Room 410E, Los Angeles, California 90095-7358, USA.

The past decade, particularly the last 18 months, witnessed a vigorous increase in interest in vitamin D from both the lay and biomedical worlds. Much of the growing interest in vitamin D is powered by new data being extracted from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES). The newest statistics demonstrate that more than 90% of the pigmented populace of the United States (Blacks, Hispanics, and Asians) now suffer from vitamin D insufficiency (25-hydroxyvitamin D <30 ng/ml), with nearly three fourths of the white population in this country also being vitamin D insufficient.

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Immune blood biomarkers of Alzheimer disease patients.

J Neuroimmunol

May 2009

Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, UCLA Orthopaedic Hospital Research Center, Los Angeles, CA 90095, United States.

Alzheimer disease (AD) patients have an impairment of anti-amyloid-beta (Abeta) innate immunity and a defect in immune gene transcription [Fiala, M., Liu, P.T.

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Neuronal accumulation of oligomeric amyloid-beta (Alphabeta) is considered the proximal cause of neuronal demise in Alzheimer disease (AD) patients. Blood-borne macrophages might reduce Abeta stress to neurons by immigration into the brain and phagocytosis of Alphabeta. We tested migration and export across a blood-brain barrier model, and phagocytosis and clearance of Alphabeta by AD and normal subjects' macrophages.

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