47 results match your criteria: "University of Glasgow College of Medical[Affiliation]"

Prevalence of dementia in ischaemic or mixed stroke populations: systematic review and meta-analysis.

J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry

February 2022

Institute of Cardiovascular and Medical Sciences, University of Glasgow College of Medical, Veterinary and Life Sciences, Glasgow, UK

An understanding of the epidemiology of poststroke dementia (PSD) is necessary to inform research, practice and policy. With increasing primary studies, a contemporary review of PSD could allow for analyses of incidence and prevalence trends. Databases were searched using a prespecified search strategy.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • The COVID-19 pandemic has significantly affected the assessment and management of pediatric inflammatory bowel disease (PIBD), leading to potential secondary harm from altered diagnostic and treatment processes.
  • Disruptions, such as delays in endoscopy and treatment, have raised challenges for managing immunosuppressive therapies without routine surveillance.
  • Despite these challenges, innovative solutions like virtual appointments and home testing have maintained care standards, with the potential to transform future patient management practices.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objective: To evaluate, using a classification tree methodology, the ability of the Testing Emotionalism After Recent Stroke - Questionnaire (TEARS-Q) to determine the need for further assessment of post-stroke emotionalism and to identify those whose emotionalism is sufficiently clear that they need assessment for potential intervention.

Setting: Acute stroke units of nine Scottish hospitals in the context of a longitudinal cohort study of post-stroke emotionalism.

Subjects: A total of 228 stroke survivors recruited between October 1st 2015 and September 30th 2018, within two weeks of stroke.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The emergence of lipid membranes and embedded proteins was essential for the evolution of cells. Translocon complexes mediate cotranslational recruitment and membrane insertion of nascent proteins, but they already contain membrane-integral proteins. Therefore, a simpler mechanism must exist, enabling spontaneous membrane integration while preventing aggregation of unchaperoned protein in the aqueous phase.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objectives: Increasing evidence suggests that inflammatory mechanisms play a key role in chronic tendon disease. After observing T cell signatures in human tendinopathy, we explored the interaction between T cells and tendon stromal cells or tenocytes to define their functional contribution to tissue remodelling and inflammation amplification and hence disease perpetuation.

Methods: T cells were quantified and characterised in healthy and tendinopathic tissues by flow cytometry (FACS), imaging mass cytometry (IMC) and single cell RNA-seq.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Emergency physicians are frequently faced with making decisions regarding how aggressive to be in caring for critically ill patients. We aimed to identify factors that influence decisions to limit treatment in the Emergency Department (ED) through a systematic search of the available literature.

Design: Prospectively registered systematic review of studies employing any methodology to investigate factors influencing decisions to limit treatment in the ED.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Perinatal mortality in beef calves impacts on profitability and animal welfare, but the incidence and causes in UK herds are not well known.

Methods: Data from 11 herds were analysed to establish the risk factors for and incidence of perinatal mortality (full-term calves born dead or died within 48 hours). To establish cause of death, 23 herds in total submitted dead calves for postmortem examination (nine herds submitted all calves, 14 herds submitted calves on an ad hoc basis) and the results were reviewed by a panel.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

X-linked creatine transporter deficiency is caused by the deficiency of the creatine transporter encoded by the gene on Xq28. We here report a 3-year-old boy with global developmental delay, autism and epilepsy. He had a normal MRI of the brain.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • EULAR established a task force to create guidelines for assessing competencies in rheumatology specialty training to ensure high standards and consistency across Europe.
  • A systematic review and focus groups in five countries gathered insights on existing assessment methods, leading to the formulation of 10 key points and 4 overarching principles for effective assessment.
  • The resulting points cover various aspects of assessment strategies, formative evaluations, knowledge and skill assessments, addressing at-risk trainees, and training for assessors, providing a framework for enhancing rheumatology education and improving patient care.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Introduction: Complex population health interventions that are effective in one context may not be effective elsewhere, and may even be harmful. As such, an intervention may require adaptation to ensure it fits with a new context. To date, there is no overarching guidance to help researchers to adapt and evaluate interventions in new contexts, and no criteria to support research funders or journals assess proposed or reported adaptations or evaluation.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objective: We undertook this study to examine microRNA (miRNA) expression across rheumatoid arthritis (RA) phenotypes, along with the effects and mechanisms of action of miRNA-17-5p (miR-17).

Methods: A miRNA array was performed in synovial tissue biopsied from patients with naive erosive RA (n = 3) and patients with nonerosive RA (n = 3). MicroRNA-17 lipoplex was delivered intraarticularly in the murine collagen-induced arthritis model.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objective: To assess how the baby food market in the UK has changed between 2013 and 2019.

Setting: United Kingdom.

Design: A cross-sectional survey of all infant food products available to buy in the UK online and in-store collected in 2019.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Currently, there is a growing interest in Janus kinase (JAK) intracellular signalling since targeted inhibitors against these pathways are proving effective in the treatment of a range of immune-mediated diseases, such as rheumatoid arthritis (RA), psoriasis, psoriatic arthritis (PsA), inflammatory bowel disease and atopic dermatitis. In particular, post marketing experience and the increasing development of new pharmacological inhibitors of broad and increasingly selective JAK pathways provide new insights into the JAK pathway role in viral infections as well as their pathogenic role in immune-mediated inflammatory diseases. Herein we provide an overview of the biological role of JAK signalling and its role in immunity against viruses, with particular regard to herpes zoster reactivation.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The UK Turner syndrome (TS) study examined the effect on final height of oxandrolone 0.05 mg/kg/day (maximum dose 2.5 mg) versus placebo from 9 years of age; and delaying ethinylestradiol induction of puberty by 2 years from 12 (E12) to 14 (E14) years in growth hormone-treated girls with TS.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Macrocyclic lactone treatments for livestock can have detrimental effects on the arthropod populations in livestock faeces. For the last twenty years, avoidance of these products has been a standard recommendation on livestock farms that are managed for wildlife by the Royal Society for Protection of Birds (RSPB). However, the continued decline in the populations of birds (in particular the red-billed chough Pyrrhocorax pyrrhocorax) that are dependent on dung invertebrates on islands in the Inner Hebrides of Scotland prompted us to investigate the effects of livestock treatments that are commonly used on these islands.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Pharmacists' completion of medication reconciliation in the community after hospital discharge is intended to reduce harm due to prescribed or omitted medication and increase healthcare efficiency, but the effectiveness of this approach is not clear. We systematically review the literature to evaluate intervention effectiveness in terms of discrepancy identification and resolution, clinical relevance of resolved discrepancies and healthcare utilisation, including readmission rates, emergency department attendance and primary care workload.

Methods: This is a systematic literature review and meta-analysis of extracted data.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The formation of epithelial tissues allows organisms to specialise and form tissues with diverse functions and compartmentalised environments. The tight controls on cell growth and migration required to maintain epithelia can present problems such as the development and spread of cancer when normal pathways are disrupted. By attaining a deeper understanding of how cell migration is suppressed to maintain the epithelial organisation and how it is reactivated when epithelial tissues become mesenchymal, new insights into both cancer and development can be gained.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background And Aims: Root hairs are responsible for water and nutrient uptake from the soil and their growth is responsive to biotic and abiotic changes in their environment. Root hair expansion is a polarized process requiring secretory and endosomal pathways that deliver and recycle plasma membrane and cell wall material to the growing root hair tip. In this paper, the role of VTI13 (AT3G29100), a member of the VTI vesicular soluble NSF attachment receptor (SNARE) gene family in Arabidopsis thaliana, in root hair growth is described.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Megakaryocytes give rise to platelets via extension of proplatelet arms, which are released through the vascular sinusoids into the bloodstream. Megakaryocytes and their precursors undergo varying interactions with the extracellular environment in the bone marrow during their maturation and positioning in the vascular niche. We demonstrate that podosomes are abundant in primary murine megakaryocytes adherent on multiple extracellular matrix substrates, including native basement membrane.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Objectively measured physical activity is low in British children, and declines as childhood progresses. Observational studies suggest that dog-walking might be a useful approach to physical activity promotion in children and adults, but there are no published public health interventions based on dog-walking with children. The Children, Parents, and Pets Exercising Together Study aims to develop and evaluate a theory driven, generalisable, family-based, dog walking intervention for 9-11 year olds.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF