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Resilienz als Schutzfaktor vor der Entwicklung psychischer Erkrankungen ist angesichts der zunehmenden gesellschaftlichen Belastung durch chronischen Stress und stressassoziierte Folgeerkrankungen ein hochaktuelles Forschungsthema. Obwohl bereits zahlreiche Erhebungen zur Resilienz existieren, herrscht kein Konsens über die konkrete Operationalisierung des Konzepts. In der Folge differieren vorliegende Studienergebnisse stark voneinander, sind nur schwer miteinander vergleichbar und fraglich auf die Gesellschaft zu übertragen. Die vorliegende Arbeit untersucht daher, ob Haarcortisol einen geeigneten Biomarker in der Resilienzforschung darstellt und einen Beitrag zur Vereinheitlichung und Objektivierung dieses Forschungsgebietes leisten kann.
Zur Beantwortung dieser Frage wurde auf die Daten des aktuell laufenden Langzeitforschungsprojekts „Longitudinal Resilience Assessment“ der Universitätskliniken Frankfurt und Mainz aus den Jahren 2017 bis 2019 zurückgegriffen. Alle Proband*innen der psychisch gesunden Stichprobe (N= 192, 18-50 Jahre) füllten zu insgesamt drei Erhebungszeitpunkten nach Studieneinschluss und im Abstand von je drei Monaten Onlinefragebögen zur Ermittlung der aktuell vorherrschenden Stressexposition, der allgemeinen psychischen Gesundheit sowie des subjektiven Stresserlebens aus. Gleichzeitig fand die Entnahme von Haarproben für die Analyse der Haarcortisolkonzentration statt. Zum Studieneinschluss erfolgte ergänzend die Erhebung der Traumatisierung und negativen Erfahrungen im Kindesalter.
Mittels linearer multivariater Regression wurde ein Effekt möglicher anthropometrischer und soziodemographischer Einflussfaktoren auf die Cortisolkonzentration im Haar ausgeschlossen. Ferner wurde die Auswirkung der Lagerungszeit auf die Höhe der Cortisolwerte im Haar untersucht. Es zeigte sich, dass Haarproben mit einer kürzeren Lagerungszeit signifikant höhere Cortisolwerte aufwiesen als solche mit einer längeren Lagerungszeit. Die Stabilität der Cortisolkonzentrationen über die einzelnen Messzeitpunkte hinweg erwies sich dabei insgesamt nur als mäßig hoch. Zur Untersuchung des Zusammenhangs zwischen subjektivem und objektivem Stress, Traumatisierung und negativen kindlichen Erfahrungen, allgemeiner psychischer Gesundheit, Resilienz und HCC wurden Spearman-Rang-Korrelationen angewandt. Auch hier ließen sich keine statistisch signifikanten Zusammenhänge feststellen. Dennoch konnten bei Personen mit einer Veränderung des Stressniveaus während des Beobachtungszeitraumes eine insgesamt deskriptiv erhöhte Stressexposition sowie statistisch signifikant höhere Mengen an Haarcortisol beobachtet werden. Bei weiteren explorativen Datenanalysen innerhalb einer kleinen Subpopulation der Studienstichprobe konnten während des Einwirkens eines intensiven spezifischen Stressors erhöhte HCC-Werte in Verbindung mit schlechteren psychischen Gesundheitsergebnissen gebracht werden.
Auf Grundlage dieser Arbeit lässt sich kein relevanter Einfluss verschiedener Stressvariablen auf die Cortisolkonzentration im Haar ableiten. Auch die individuelle Resilienz steht in keinem Zusammenhang zum HCC. Die Ergebnisse der explorativen Untersuchungen deuten in Zusammenschau mit einer mäßig hohen Stabilität des HCC jedoch darauf hin, dass Haarcortisol ein veränderungssensitiver Biomarker sein kann. Bei intensiver spezifischer Stresseinwirkung steht es in Zusammenhang mit schlechteren Gesundheitsergebnissen und damit indirekt mit der individuellen Resilienz. In zukünftigen Arbeiten sollte untersucht werden, auf welche Weise die Höhe des Haarcortisols Hinweise auf die Auswirkungen einer spezifischen Stressexposition und damit auf den psychischen Gesundheitszustand eines Individuums liefern kann, um so Risikogruppen identifizieren und diese durch frühzeitige Interventionen vor der Entwicklung psychischer Erkrankungen schützen zu können.
Highlights
• Constrictional structures range from dome-and-basin folds to coeval folds and boudins.
• Under bulk constriction, the competent layer rotates slower than a passive plane.
• Extension-parallel and –perpendicular folds grow simultaneously.
• Extension-perpendicular folds affect previous boudins.
Abstract
We conducted scaled analogue modelling to show the influence of varying single layer initial orientation on the geometry of folds and boudins in a bulk constrictional strain field. The initial angle between the plane of shortening and the competent layer (θZ(i)) was incrementally increased from 0° to 90° by multiples of 11.25°. While the amount of layer thickening decreased with increasing θZ(i), the deformation structures produced range from pure dome-and-basin folds to coeval folds and boudins. Based on the attitude of fold axes, there are extension-parallel (FEPR) and extension-perpendicular (FEPP) folds, with axes subparallel and subperpendicular to the principal stretching axis (X), respectively. Coeval growth of FEPR folds and boudins occurred when θZ(i) > ca. 25°. The FEPP folds can be subdivided into a first type which affect the entire layer (if θZ(i) ranges between 11.25 and 78.75°) and a second type, referred to as FBEPP folds, which are affecting pre-existing boudins if θZ(i) > 45°. The interlimb angle of all types of folds increases with increasing θZ(i). Folds and boudins similar to the ones produced in this study can be found in salt domes and in tectonites of subduction zones.
Background/Objective: Evidence-based clinical pathways can be a useful tool for guideline implementation. However, there seem to be barriers to the use of clinical pathways. The aim of the present questionnaire survey was to assess the perceived usability of the clinical pathway “Overweight/obesity in children and adolescents at primary care level” and to identify factors promoting and hindering the use of the clinical pathway.
Methods: In January 2020, an online questionnaire survey was sent out to 3,916 general practitioners and 470 pediatricians in Austria. The data collected were analysed descriptively.
Results: A total of 148 people took part in the questionnaire survey (response rate 3.7 %). The majority of respondents indicated that they, in general, perceive evidence-based clinical pathways as helpful (90 %) and also make use of them (57 %). Few respondents (9 %) felt well-informed about new clinical pathways developed in Austria. Most of the respondents considered the clinical pathway “Overweight/obesity in children and adolescents at primary care level” as a useful support (60 %), as a reference work (72 %) or as a facilitator for justifying their approach to their patients (68 %). However, a large proportion of the respondents stated that the clinical pathway is not easily applicable in everyday practice. The three most frequently cited barriers to using the clinical pathway were lack of time resources, lack of structures and lack of financial incentives. Other display and access options (e. g., individualisation, integration into practice software) were most frequently cited as factors that might promote the use of the pathway.
Conclusion: Although the majority of the respondents had positive expectations regarding the use of the clinical pathway “Overweight/obesity in children and adolescents at primary care level”, many of them still perceived its usability in everyday clinical practice as difficult. The necessary next steps to improve the use of evidence-based clinical pathways seem to be: an economic and practicable design, easy accessibility of clinical pathways and the creation of framework conditions that facilitate their use in everyday practice.
Although exercise guidelines now recommend exercise for patients with MCI, the long-term effects of exercise in patients with MCI has not been reviewed systematically. The aim was to assess (1) the effectiveness of exercise and physical activity (EXPA) interventions in improving long-term patient-relevant cognitive and non-cognitive outcomes in people with mild cognitive impairment, (2) how well the included trials reported details of the intervention, and (3) the extent to which reported endpoints were in line with patient preferences that were assessed in patient workshops. Following PRISMA guidelines, we performed a systematic review and meta-analysis including randomized controlled trials. A total of ten studies were included after searching in six electronic sources from 1995 onwards. There is a trend that 6 + -month EXPA interventions improve global cognition 12 months after initiation. Evidence on long-term effects of EXPA interventions on non-cognitive health outcomes could not be meaningfully pooled and the individual studies reported mixed results. Workshop participants considered freedom from pain and stress, mood, motivation and self-efficacy to be important, but these outcomes were rarely addressed. Too little information is available on intervention details for EXPA programs to be replicated and confidently recommended for patients with MCI. PROSPERO registration in December, 2021 (CRD42021287166).
Objectives: Patient-level factors that influence compliance with a recommendation for CBT in nursing home residents diagnosed with depression were identified.
Methods: Within a cluster-randomized trial on stepped care for depression in nursing homes (DAVOS-study, Trial registration: DRKS00015686), participants received an intake interview administered by a licensed psychotherapist. If psychotherapy was required, patients were offered a referral for CBT. Sociodemographic characteristics, severity of depression, loneliness, physical health, antidepressant medication, prior experience with psychotherapy, and attitudes towards own aging were assessed. A binary regression determined predictors of compliance with referral.
Results: Of 123 residents receiving an intake interview, 80 were recommended a CBT. Forty-seven patients (58.8 %) followed the recommendation. The binary logistic regression model on compliance with recommended CBT was significant, χ2(9) = 21.64, p = .010. Significant predictors were age (Odds Ratio (OR) = 0.9; 95 % Confidence Interval (CI) = 0.82, 0.99; p = .024) and depression (OR = 1.33; 95 % CI = 1.08, 1.65; p = .008).
Conclusion: Within the implemented setting compliance rate was comparable to other age groups. Future interventions should include detailed psychoeducation on the benefits of psychotherapy on mild depressive symptoms in older age and evidence-based interventions to address the stigma of depression. Interventions such as reminiscence-based methods or problem-solving could be useful to increase compliance with referral, especially in very old patients (80+). Language barriers and a culturally sensitive approach should be considered when screening residents.
Association of mortality and early tracheostomy in patients with COVID-19: a retrospective analysis
(2022)
COVID-19 adds to the complexity of optimal timing for tracheostomy. Over the course of this pandemic, and expanded knowledge of the disease, many centers have changed their operating procedures and performed an early tracheostomy. We studied the data on early and delayed tracheostomy regarding patient outcome such as mortality. We performed a retrospective analysis of all tracheostomies at our institution in patients diagnosed with COVID-19 from March 2020 to June 2021. Time from intubation to tracheostomy and mortality of early (≤ 10 days) vs. late (> 10 days) tracheostomy were the primary objectives of this study. We used mixed cox-regression models to calculate the effect of distinct variables on events. We studied 117 tracheostomies. Intubation to tracheostomy shortened significantly (Spearman’s correlation coefficient; rho = − 0.44, p ≤ 0.001) during the course of this pandemic. Early tracheostomy was associated with a significant increase in mortality in uni- and multivariate analysis (Hazard ratio 1.83, 95% CI 1.07–3.17, p = 0.029). The timing of tracheostomy in COVID-19 patients has a potentially critical impact on mortality. The timing of tracheostomy has changed during this pandemic tending to be performed earlier. Future prospective research is necessary to substantiate these results.
Aim: To evaluate the influence of the width of keratinized tissue (KT) on the prevalence of peri-implant diseases, and soft- and hard-tissue stability.
Materials and methods: Clinical studies reporting on the prevalence of peri-implant diseases (primary outcome), plaque index (PI), modified plaque index (mPI), bleeding index (mBI), bleeding on probing (BOP), probing pocket depths (PD), mucosal recession (MR), and marginal bone loss (MBL) and/or patient-reported outcomes (PROMs; secondary outcomes) were searched. The weighted mean differences (WMD) were estimated for the assessed clinical and radiographic parameters by employing a random-effect model that considered different KT widths (i.e., <2 and ≥2 mm).
Results: Twenty-two articles describing 21 studies (15 cross-sectional, five longitudinal comparative studies, and one case series with pre–post design) with an overall high to low risk of bias were included. Peri-implant mucositis and peri-implantitis affected 20.8% to 42% and at 10.5% to 44% of the implants with reduced or absent KT (i.e., <2 mm or 0 mm). The corresponding values at the implant sites with KT width of ≥2 mm or >0 mm were 20.5% to 53% and 5.1% to 8%, respectively. Significant differences between implants with KT < 2 mm and those with KT ≥ 2 mm were revealed for WMD for BOP, mPI, PI, MBL, and MR all favoring implants with KT ≥ 2 mm.
Conclusion: Reduced KT width is associated with an increased prevalence of peri-implantitis, plaque accumulation, soft-tissue inflammation, mucosal recession, marginal bone loss, and greater patient discomfort.
Compressive knee joint contact force during walking is thought to be related to initiation and progression of knee osteoarthritis. However, joint loading is often evaluated with surrogate measures, like the external knee adduction moment, due to the complexity of computing joint contact forces. Statistical models have shown promising correlations between medial knee joint contact forces and knee adduction moments in particularly in individuals with knee osteoarthritis or after total knee replacements (R2 = 0.44–0.60). The purpose of this study was to evaluate how accurately model-based predictions of peak medial and lateral knee joint contact forces during walking could be estimated by linear mixed-effects models including joint moments for children and adolescents with and without valgus malalignment. Peak knee joint moments were strongly correlated (R2 > 0.85, p < 0.001) with both peak medial and lateral knee joint contact forces. The knee flexion and adduction moments were significant covariates in the models, strengthening the understanding of the statistical relationship between both moments and medial and lateral knee joint contact forces. In the future, these models could be used to evaluate peak knee joint contact forces from musculoskeletal simulations using peak joint moments from motion capture software, obviating the need for time-consuming musculoskeletal simulations.
Objective: To assess predictive factors for poststroke pneumonia (PSP) in patients with acute ischemic stroke (AIS) due to large vessel occlusion (LVO) of the anterior circulation, with special regard to the impact of intravenous thrombolysis (IVT) and endovascular treatment (EVT) on the risk of PSP. As a secondary goal, the validity of the A2DS2, PNEUMONIA, and ISAN scores in LVO will be determined.
Methods: Analysis was based on consecutive data for the years 2017 to 2019 from the prospective inpatient stroke registry covering the entire federal state of Hesse, Germany, using the Kruskal-Wallis test and binary logistic regression.
Results: Data from 4,281 patients with LVO were included in the analysis (54.8% female, median age = 78 years, range = 18–102), of whom 66.4% (n = 2,843) received recanalization therapy (RCT). In total, 19.4% (n = 832) of all LVO patients developed PSP. Development of PSP was associated with an increase in overall in-hospital mortality of 32.1% compared with LVO patients without PSP (16.4%; p < 0.001). Incidence of PSP was increased in 2132 patients with either EVT (n = 928; 25.9% PSP incidence) or combined EVT plus IVT (n = 1,204; 24.1%), compared with 2,149 patients with IVT alone (n = 711; 15.2%) or conservative treatment only (n = 1,438; 13.5%; p < 0.001). Multivariate analysis identified EVT (OR 1.5) and combined EVT plus IVT (OR 1.5) as significant independent risk factors for PSP. Furthermore, male sex (OR 1.9), age ≥ 65 years (OR 1.7), dysphagia (OR 3.2) as well as impaired consciousness at arrival (OR 1.7) and the comorbidities diabetes (OR 1.4) and atrial fibrillation (OR 1.3) were significantly associated risk factors (each p < 0.001). Minor stroke (NIHSS ≤ 4) was associated with a significant lower risk of PSP (OR 0.5). Performance of risk stratification scores varied between A2DS2 (96.1% sensitivity, 20.7% specificity), PNEUMONIA (78.2% sensitivity and 45.1% specificity) and ISAN score (98.0% sensitivity, 20.0% specificity).
Conclusion: Nearly one in five stroke patients with LVO develops PSP during acute care. This risk of PSP is further increased if an EVT is performed. Other predictive factors are consistent with those previously described for all AIS patients. Available risk stratification scores proved to be sensitive tools in LVO patients but lack specificity.
Das CD-44-Molekül ist ein membranständiger Oberflächenrezeptor, der als Adhäsionselement von Tumorzellen im Rahmen der Metastasierung genutzt wird. Berichte verweisen auf eine direkte Korrelation zwischen CD-44-Expression eines Tumors und der klinischen Prognose. Darüber hinaus kann der CD-44-Rezeptor auch intrazelluläre Signalwege aktivieren, und als solches Signalelement in die Regulation des Zellzyklus eingreifen.
Im Rahmen der vorliegenden Arbeit wurde postuliert, dass der CD-44-Rezeptor zellzyklusabhängige Veränderungen erfährt und sich daraus Modifikationen des Adhäsionsverhaltens von Tumorzellen ergeben.
Repräsentativ wurde an der Magenkarzinom-Zell-Linie MKN-45 die CD-44-Expression bzw. dessen Splice-Varianten während des Zellzyklus fluorometrisch untersucht (FACS-Analyse, konfokale Laserscan-Mikroskopie). Parallel wurde das Adhäsionsverhalten an isolierten und kultivierten humanen Endothelzellen evaluiert. Die Tumorzellen wurden zuvor mittels Aphidicolin synchronisiert. Als Kontrolle dienten nicht-synchronisierte Zellen.
Die Untersuchungen verdeutlichten eine spezifische Expression der CD-44-Varianten CD44v4, CD44v5, CD44v7. Die Inkubation der Tumorzellen mit Aphidicolin bewirkte eine ausgeprägte Akkumulation von MKN-45-Zellen in der S-Phase. Nach Absetzen des Aphidicolins und Freisetzung in den Zellzyklus kam es zur signifikanten zyklusabhängigen Modulation der Rezeptorexpression. CD44v4, CD44v5 und CD44v7 waren in der G2/MPhase gegenüber der G0/G1- und S-Phase deutlich vermehrt auf der Membran detektierbar. In der G2/M-Phase erhöhte sich zudem signifikant die Adhäsionskapazität der MKN-45-Zellen. Blockadestudien mit gegen die CD-44-Varianten gerichteten monoklonalen Antikörpern belegten die CD-44-abhängige Tumorzell-Endothelzell-Interaktion.
Die Studien belegen zumindest am in vitro Zellkulturmodell die zellzyklus-gesteuerte CD-44-Expression und CD-44-abhängige Invasionseigenschaften von Tumorzellen. Es lässt sich daraus ableiten, dass eine anti-tumorale Therapie an zuvor synchronisierten Tumorzellen womöglich besonders effektiv sein kann. Auch die pharmakologische Blockade des CD-44-Rezeptors könnte einen anti-tumoralen Effekt besitzen.
A novel approach to measure brain-to-brain spatial and temporal alignment during positive empathy
(2022)
Empathy is defined as the ability to vicariously experience others’ suffering (vicarious pain) or feeling their joy (vicarious reward). While most neuroimaging studies have focused on vicarious pain and describe similar neural responses during the observed and the personal negative affective involvement, only initial evidence has been reported for the neural responses to others’ rewards and positive empathy. Here, we propose a novel approach, based on the simultaneous recording of multi-subject EEG signals and exploiting the wavelet coherence decomposition to measure the temporal alignment between ERPs in a dyad of interacting subjects. We used the Third-Party Punishment (TPP) paradigm to elicit the personal and vicarious experiences. During a positive experience, we observed the simultaneous presence in both agents of the Late Positive Potential (LPP), an ERP component related to emotion processing, as well as the existence of an inter-subject ERPs synchronization in the related time window. Moreover, the amplitude of the LPP synchronization was modulated by the presence of a human-agent. Finally, the localized brain circuits subtending the ERP-synchronization correspond to key-regions of personal and vicarious reward. Our findings suggest that the temporal and spatial ERPs alignment might be a novel and direct proxy measure of empathy.
Two-person neuroscience (2 PN) is a recently introduced conceptual and methodological framework used to investigate the neural basis of human social interaction from simultaneous neuroimaging of two or more subjects (hyperscanning). In this study, we adopted a 2 PN approach and a multiple-brain connectivity model to investigate the neural basis of a form of cooperation called joint action. We hypothesized different intra-brain and inter-brain connectivity patterns when comparing the interpersonal properties of joint action with non-interpersonal conditions, with a focus on co-representation, a core ability at the basis of cooperation. 32 subjects were enrolled in dual-EEG recordings during a computerized joint action task including three conditions: one in which the dyad jointly acted to pursue a common goal (joint), one in which each subject interacted with the PC (PC), and one in which each subject performed the task individually (Solo).
A combination of multiple-brain connectivity estimation and specific indices derived from graph theory allowed to compare interpersonal with non-interpersonal conditions in four different frequency bands. Our results indicate that all the indices were modulated by the interaction, and returned a significantly stronger integration of multiple-subject networks in the joint vs. PC and Solo conditions. A subsequent classification analysis showed that features based on multiple-brain indices led to a better discrimination between social and non-social conditions with respect to single-subject indices. Taken together, our results suggest that multiple-brain connectivity can provide a deeper insight into the understanding of the neural basis of cooperation in humans.
Highlights
• The goal was to assess the intra- and inter-scanner reproducibility of qMRI data.
• Mean scan-rescan variations were not exceeding 2.14%.
• Mean inter-scanner model deviations were not exceeding 5.21%.
• Provided that identical acquisition sequences are used, discrepancies between qMRI data acquired with different scanner models are low.
Abstract
Background: Quantitative MRI (qMRI) techniques allow assessing cerebral tissue properties. However, previous studies on the accuracy of quantitative T1 and T2 mapping reported a scanner model bias of up to 10% for T1 and up to 23% for T2. Such differences would render multi-centre qMRI studies difficult and raise fundamental questions about the general precision of qMRI. A problem in previous studies was that different methods were used for qMRI parameter mapping or for measuring the transmitted radio frequency field B1 which is critical for qMRI techniques requiring corrections for B1 non-uniformities.
Aims: The goal was to assess the intra- and inter-scanner reproducibility of qMRI data at 3 T, using two different scanner models from the same vendor with exactly the same multiparametric acquisition protocol.
Methods: Proton density (PD), T1, T2* and T2 mapping was performed on healthy subjects and on a phantom, performing each measurement twice for each of two scanner models. Although the scanners had different hardware and software versions, identical imaging sequences were used for PD, T1 and T2* mapping, adapting the codes of an existing protocol on the older system line by line to match the software version of the newer scanner. For T2-mapping, the respective manufacturer’s sequence was used which depended on the software version. However, system-dependent corrections were carried out in this case. Reproducibility was assessed by average values in regions of interest.
Results: Mean scan-rescan variations were not exceeding 2.14%, with average values of 1.23% and 1.56% for the new and old system, respectively. Inter-scanner model deviations were not exceeding 5.21% with average values of about 2.2–3.8% for PD, 2.5–3.0% for T2*, 1.6–3.1% for T1 and 3.3–5.2% for T2.
Conclusions: Provided that identical acquisition sequences are used, discrepancies between qMRI data acquired with different scanner models are low. The level of systematic differences reported in this work may help to interpret multi-centre data.
Highlights
• Increased values in SVD, suggesting reduced oxygen extraction fraction (OEF).
• Vascular dysfunction and microstructural impairment limit OEF capacity.
• Association between prolonged and more alkaline intracellular pH.
• Adaptation of intracellular energy metabolism compensates for reduced OEF.
Abstract
Background: We aimed to investigate whether combined phosphorous (31P) magnetic resonance spectroscopic imaging (MRSI) and quantitative T′2 mapping are able to detect alterations of the cerebral oxygen extraction fraction (OEF) and intracellular pH (pHi) as markers the of cellular energy metabolism in cerebral small vessel disease (SVD).
Materials and methods: 32 patients with SVD and 17 age-matched healthy control subjects were examined with 3-dimensional 31P MRSI and oxygenation-sensitive quantitative T′2 mapping (1/T′2 = 1/T2* - 1/T2) at 3 Tesla (T). PHi was measured within the white matter hyperintensities (WMH) in SVD patients. Quantitative T′2 values were averaged across the entire white matter (WM). Furthermore, T′2 values were extracted from normal-appearing WM (NAWM) and the WMH and compared between patients and controls.
Results: Quantitative T′2 values were significantly increased across the entire WM and in the NAWM in patients compared to control subjects (149.51 ± 16.94 vs. 138.19 ± 12.66 ms and 147.45 ± 18.14 vs. 137.99 ± 12.19 ms, p < 0.05). WM T′2 values correlated significantly with the WMH load (ρ=0.441, p = 0.006). Increased T′2 was significantly associated with more alkaline pHi (ρ=0.299, p < 0.05). Both T′2 and pHi were significantly positively correlated with vascular pulsatility in the distal carotid arteries (ρ=0.596, p = 0.001 and ρ=0.452, p = 0.016).
Conclusions: This exploratory study found evidence of impaired cerebral OEF in SVD, which is associated with intracellular alkalosis as an adaptive mechanism. The employed techniques provide new insights into the pathophysiology of SVD with regard to disease-related consequences on the cellular metabolic state.
Background and Objectives: Proteins of the coagulation system contribute to autoimmune inflammation in patients with multiple sclerosis (MS). On blood-brain barrier (BBB) disruption, fibrinogen enters the CNS and is rapidly converted to fibrin, unfolding pleiotropic autoimmune mechanisms. Fibrin accumulation leads to subsequent proteolytic degradation that results in D-dimer generation. The primary objective of this study was to determine intrathecal levels of D-dimer in CSF as a measure of intrathecal coagulation cascade activation and to evaluate its diagnostic utility in patients with MS in contrast to healthy subjects. Key secondary objectives included analysis of CSF D-dimer in differential diagnoses of MS and its relation to routine clinical markers of disease activity.
Methods: Patients admitted for the assessment of suspected MS were prospectively recruited from October 2017 to December 2020. Blood plasma and citrated CSF samples were analyzed using a highly sensitive luminescent oxygen channeling immunoassay. Intrathecal generation of D-dimer was analyzed by adjusting for CSF/serum albumin (Qalb) and CSF/plasma D-dimer quotients (QD-dimer), and corresponding CSF fibrinogen levels were determined. Final diagnoses after full evaluation and clinical data were recorded.
Results: Of 187 patients, 113 patients received a diagnosis of MS or clinically/radiologically isolated syndrome. We found increased intrathecal CSF D-dimer generation levels (QD-dimer/Qalb-index) for patients with relapsing-remitting MS (RRMS; n = 71, median 4.7, interquartile range [IQR] 2.5–8.0) when compared with those for disease controls (n = 22, median 2.6, IQR 2.1–4.8, p = 0.031). Absolute CSF D-dimer values correlated with CSF fibrinogen levels (r = 0.463; p < 0 .001) and CSF leukocytes (r = 0.273; p = 0.003) and were elevated in MS patients with contrast enhancement (CE) compared with MS patients without CE on MRI (n = 48, median 6 ng/mL, and IQR 3–15.25 vs n = 41, median 4 ng/mL, and IQR 2–7; p = 0.026). Exploratory subgroup analyses indicated a correlation of intrathecal inflammatory activity and CSF D-dimer levels.
Discussion: D-dimer in CSF can be reliably determined and correlates with markers of CNS inflammation and CSF fibrinogen levels. Adjusted for BBB dysfunction, CSF D-dimer may allow the identification of intrathecal coagulation cascade activation in patients with MS.
Classification of Evidence: This study provides Class I evidence that CSF D-dimer levels are elevated in patients with RRMS.
Nanoplastics affect the inflammatory cytokine release by primary human monocytes and dendritic cells
(2022)
So far, the human health impacts of nano- and microplastics are poorly understood. Thus, we investigated whether nanoplastics exposure induces inflammatory processes in primary human monocytes and monocyte-derived dendritic cells. We exposed these cells in vitro to nanoplastics of different shapes (irregular vs. spherical), sizes (50–310 nm and polydisperse mixtures) and polymer types (polystyrene; polymethyl methacrylate; polyvinyl chloride, PVC) using concentrations of 30–300 particles cell−1. Our results show that irregular PVC particles induce the strongest cytokine release of these nanoplastics. Irregular polystyrene triggered a significantly higher pro-inflammatory response compared to spherical nanoplastics. The contribution of chemicals leaching from the particles was minor. The effects were concentration-dependent but varied markedly between cell donors. We conclude that nanoplastics exposure can provoke human immune cells to secrete cytokines as key initiators of inflammation. This response is specific to certain polymers (PVC) and particle shapes (fragments). Accordingly, nanoplastics cannot be considered one homogenous entity when assessing their health implications and the use of spherical polystyrene nanoplastics may underestimate their inflammatory effects.
There has been a renewed interest in the potential use of psychedelics for the treatment of psychiatric conditions. Nevertheless, little is known about the mechanism of action and molecular pathways influenced by ayahuasca use in humans. Therefore, for the first time, our study aims to investigate the human metabolomics signature after consumption of a psychedelic, ayahuasca, and its connection with both the psychedelic-induced subjective effects and the plasma concentrations of ayahuasca alkaloids.
Plasma samples of 23 individuals were collected both before and after ayahuasca consumption. Samples were analysed through targeted metabolomics and further integrated with subjective ratings of the ayahuasca experience (i.e., using the 5-Dimension Altered States of Consciousness Rating Scale [ASC]), and plasma ayahuasca-alkaloids using integrated network analysis. Metabolic pathways enrichment analysis using diffusion algorithms for specific KEGG modules was performed on the metabolic output.
Compared to baseline, the consumption of ayahuasca increased N-acyl-ethanolamine endocannabinoids, decreased 2-acyl-glycerol endocannabinoids, and altered several large-neutral amino acids (LNAAs). Integrated network results indicated that most of the LNAAs were inversely associated with 9 out of the 11 subscales of the ASC, except for tryptophan which was positively associated. Several endocannabinoids and hexosylceramides were directly associated with the ayahuasca alkaloids. Enrichment analysis confirmed dysregulation in several pathways involved in neurotransmission such as serotonin and dopamine synthesis.
In conclusion, a crosstalk between the circulating LNAAs and the subjective effects is suggested, which is independent of the alkaloid concentrations and provides insights into the specific metabolic fingerprint and mechanism of action underlying ayahuasca experiences.
Pathologies associated with tissue ischemia/reperfusion (I/R) in highly metabolizing organs such as the brain and heart are leading causes of death and disability in humans. Molecular mechanisms underlying mitochondrial dysfunction during acute injury in I/R are tissue-specific, but their details are not completely understood. A metabolic shift and accumulation of substrates of reverse electron transfer (RET) such as succinate are observed in tissue ischemia, making mitochondrial complex I of the respiratory chain (NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase) the most vulnerable enzyme to the following reperfusion. It has been shown that brain complex I is predisposed to losing its flavin mononucleotide (FMN) cofactor when maintained in the reduced state in conditions of RET both in vitro and in vivo. Here we investigated the process of redox-dependent dissociation of FMN from mitochondrial complex I in brain and heart mitochondria. In contrast to the brain enzyme, cardiac complex I does not lose FMN when reduced in RET conditions. We proposed that the different kinetics of FMN loss during RET is due to the presence of brain-specific long 50 kDa isoform of the NDUFV3 subunit of complex I, which is absent in the heart where only the canonical 10 kDa short isoform is found. Our simulation studies suggest that the long NDUFV3 isoform can reach toward the FMN binding pocket and affect the nucleotide affinity to the apoenzyme. For the first time, we demonstrated a potential functional role of tissue-specific isoforms of complex I, providing the distinct molecular mechanism of I/R-induced mitochondrial impairment in cardiac and cerebral tissues. By combining functional studies of intact complex I and molecular structure simulations, we defined the critical difference between the brain and heart enzyme and suggested insights into the redox-dependent inactivation mechanisms of complex I during I/R injury in both tissues.