-
Kara Parks posted an update 6 months, 1 week ago
Using a circular stapler to create an anastomosis for esophagogastrostomy after esophagectomy is well accepted; however, it remains uncertain if the greater curvature (GC) or lesser curvature (LC) of the gastric conduit is better for the anastomosis. We conducted this prospective study to compare the integrity of esophagogastrostomy between the esophagus and the GC or LC side of the gastric conduit.
The subjects of this study were 70 patients who underwent esophagectomy and were randomized to a “GC” group and an “LC” group (n = 35 each). The primary and secondary end points were anastomotic leakage (AL) and anastomotic stricture (AS), respectively.
The overall AL rate was 22.1%, without a significant difference between the groups. Stump leakage developed in eight of nine patients in the GC group, whereas leakage developed at the esophagogastric anastomosis in five of six patients in the LC group. The rate of stump leakage was significantly higher than that of esophagogastric AL in the GC group. The overall AS rate was 4.4%, with a significant difference between the groups (0% in the GC group vs. 9.1% in the LC group).
AL rates were comparable in the two groups, but the sites of leakage were significantly different.
AL rates were comparable in the two groups, but the sites of leakage were significantly different.While there is an emerging consensus that engagement of the Mu opioid receptor by opioids may modulate various stages the HIV life cycle (e.g. increasing cell susceptibility to infection, promoting viral transcription, and depressing immune responses to virally-infected cells), the overall effect on latency and viral reservoirs remains unclear. Importantly, the hypothesis that the increase in immune activation observed in chronic opioid users by direct or indirect mechanisms (i.e., microbial translocation) would lead to a larger HIV reservoir after ART-suppression has not been supported to date. The potential for a subsequent decrease in reservoirs after ART-suppression has been postulated and is supported by early reports of opioid users having lower latent HIV burden. Here, we review experimental data supporting the link between opioid use and HIV modulation, as well as the scientific premise for expecting differential changes in immune activation and HIV reservoir between different medications for opioid use disorder. Tirzepatide A better understanding of potential changes in HIV reservoirs relative to the engagement of the Mu opioid receptor and ART-mediated immune reconstitution will help guide future cure-directed studies in persons living with HIV and opioid use disorder. Graphical Abstract Review. HIV replication, immune activation and dysbiosis opioids may affect immune reconstitution outcomes despite viral suppression.When neonatal pigs continuously fed formula are supplemented with leucine pulses, muscle protein synthesis and body weight gain are enhanced. To identify the responsible mechanisms, we combined plasma metabolomic analysis with transcriptome expression of the transcriptome and protein catabolic pathways in skeletal muscle. Piglets (n = 23, 7-day-old) were fed continuously a milk replacement formula via orogastric tube for 21 days with an additional parenteral infusion (800 μmol kg-1 h-1) of either leucine (LEU) or alanine (CON) for 1 h every 4 h. Plasma metabolites were measured by liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry. Gene and protein expression analyses of longissimus dorsi muscle were performed by RNA-seq and Western blot, respectively. Compared with CON, LEU pigs had increased plasma levels of leucine-derived metabolites, including 4-methyl-2-oxopentanoate, beta-hydroxyisovalerate, β-hydroxyisovalerylcarnitine, and 3-methylglutaconate (P ≤ 0.05). Leucine pulses downregulated transcripts enriched in the Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes terms “spliceosome,” “GAP junction,” “endocytosis,” “ECM-receptor interaction,” and “DNA replication”. Significant correlations were identified between metabolites derived from leucine catabolism and muscle genes involved in protein degradation, transcription and translation, and muscle maintenance and development (P ≤ 0.05). Further, leucine pulses decreased protein expression of autophagic markers and serine/threonine kinase 4, involved in muscle atrophy (P ≤ 0.01). In conclusion, results from our studies support the notion that leucine pulses during continuous enteral feeding enhance muscle mass gain in neonatal pigs by increasing protein synthetic activity and downregulating protein catabolic pathways through concerted responses in the transcriptome and metabolome.
Unbound ceftriaxone pharmacokinetics in adult patients have been poorly characterised. The objective of this study is to determine the ceftriaxone dose that achieves an unbound trough concentration ≥ 0.5 mg/L in > 90% of adult patients receiving once-daily dosing presenting to the emergency department (ED) with sepsis.
We performed a prospective single-centre pharmacokinetic study. A single unbound plasma ceftriaxone concentration was obtained from each patient using blood collected as part of routine clinical practice within the first dosing interval. Samples were analysed using a validated ultra-high pressure liquid chromatography method. Population pharmacokinetic analysis and Monte Carlo simulations (n = 1000) were performed using Pmetrics for R.
A ceftriaxone concentration obtained throughout the first dosing interval was available for fifty adult patients meeting sepsis criteria. Using this concentration time-curve data, a pharmacokinetic model was developed with acceptable predictive performan.The genus Bartonella comprises emerging bacteria that affect humans and other mammals worldwide. Felids represent an important reservoir for several Bartonella species. Domestic cats are the main reservoir of Bartonella henselae, the agent of cat scratch disease (CSD). It can be transmitted directly by scratches and bites from infected cats and via cat fleas. This study aims to investigate the circulation of Bartonella spp. in free-ranging Neotropical wild felids from Southern Brazil using serological and molecular methods. In this study, 53 live-trapped free-ranging wild felids were sampled, 39 Leopardus geoffroyi and 14 Leopardus wiedii, from five municipalities in the Rio Grande, do Sul state, southern Brazil. All captured animals were clinically healthy. Two blood samples of L. geoffroyi were positive, by PCR, for the presence of B. henselae DNA. Conversely, none of L. wiedii blood samples were positive when tested using PCR. Indirect immunofluorescence assay (IFA) showed that 28% of serum samples of wild felids were reactive (seropositive) for B.