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Background: Gastrointestinal hormones (GIHs) are crucial for the regulation of a variety of physiological functions and have been linked to hunger, satiety, and appetite control. Thus, they might constitute meaningful biomarkers in longitudinal and interventional studies on eating behavior and body weight control. However, little is known about the physiological levels of GIHs, their intra-individual stability over time, and their interaction with other metabolic and lifestyle-related parameters. Therefore, the aim of this pilot study is to investigate the intra-individual stability of GIHs in normal-weight adults over time. Methods: Plasma concentrations of ghrelin, leptin, GLP-1 (glucagon-like-peptide), and PP (pancreatic polypeptide) were assessed by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) in 17 normal-weight, healthy adults in a longitudinal design at baseline and at follow-up six months later. The reliability of the measurements was estimated using intra-class correlation (ICC). In a second step, we considered the stability of GIH levels after controlling for changes in blood glucose and hemoglobin A1 (HbA1c) as well as self-reported physical activity and dietary habits. Results: We found excellent reliability for ghrelin, good reliability for GLP1 and PP, and moderate reliability for leptin. After considering glucose, HbA1c, physical activity, and dietary habits as co-variates, the reliability of ghrelin, GLP1, and PP did not change significantly; the reliability of leptin changed to poor reliability. Conclusions: The GIHs ghrelin, GLP1, and PP demonstrated good to excellent test–retest reliability in healthy individuals, a finding that was not modified after adjusting for glucose control, physical activity, or dietary habits. Leptin showed only moderate to poor reliability, which might be linked to weight fluctuations, albeit small, between baseline and follow-up assessment in our study sample. Together, these findings support that ghrelin, GLP1, and PP might be further examined as biomarkers in studies on weight control, with GLP1 and PP serving as anorexic markers and ghrelin as an orexigenic marker. Additional reliability studies in obese individuals are necessary to verify or refute our findings for this cohort.
Deteriorations in slow wave sleep (SWS) have been linked to brain aging and Alzheimer’s disease (AD), possibly due to its key role in clearance of amyloid-beta and tau (Aß/tau), two pathogenic hallmarks of AD. Spermidine administration has been shown to improve sleep quality in animal models. So far, the association between spermidine levels in humans and parameters of SWS physiology are unknown but may be valuable for therapeutic strategies. Data from 216 participants (age range 50–81 years) of the population-based Study of Health in Pomerania TREND were included in our analysis. We investigated associations between spermidine plasma levels, key parameters of sleep macroarchitecture and microarchitecture that were previously associated with AD pathology, and brain health measured via a marker of structural brain atrophy (AD score). Higher spermidine levels were significantly associated with lower coupling between slow oscillations and spindle activity. No association was evident for SWS, slow oscillatory, and spindle activity throughout non-rapid eye movement sleep. Furthermore, elevated spermidine blood levels were significantly associated with a higher AD score, while sleep markers revealed no association with AD score. The association between higher spermidine levels and brain health was not mediated by coupling between slow oscillations and spindle activity. We report that higher spermidine blood levels are associated not only with deteriorated brain health but also with less advantageous markers of sleep quality in older adults. Future studies need to evaluate whether sleep, spermidine, and Aß/tau deposition are interrelated and whether sleep may play a mediating role.
Introduction
Supplementation with spermidine may support healthy aging, but elevated spermidine tissue levels were shown to be an indicator of Alzheimer's disease (AD).
Methods
Data from 659 participants (age range: 21–81 years) of the population-based Study of Health in Pomerania TREND were included. We investigated the association between spermidine plasma levels and markers of brain aging (hippocampal volume, AD score, global cortical thickness [CT], and white matter hyperintensities [WMH]).
Results
Higher spermidine levels were significantly associated with lower hippocampal volume (ß = −0.076; 95% confidence interval [CI]: −0.13 to −0.02; q = 0.026), higher AD score (ß = 0.118; 95% CI: 0.05 to 0.19; q = 0.006), lower global CT (ß = −0.104; 95% CI: −0.17 to −0.04; q = 0.014), but not WMH volume. Sensitivity analysis revealed no substantial changes after excluding participants with cancer, depression, or hemolysis.
Discussion
Elevated spermidine plasma levels are associated with advanced brain aging and might serve as potential early biomarker for AD and vascular brain pathology.
The Effect of the Patients Nutritional Status on Immune Alterations Induced by Ischemic Stroke
(2018)
Ischemic stroke is one of the leading causes of death and disability throughout the world.
One important aspect of stroke pathophysiology are immunological changes after stroke, especially a combination of post stroke immunodepression, leading to
infectious complications after stroke and an activation of the immune system, leading to cerebral injury. Adipose tissue has several immunological functions and obesity
leads to immunological complications and is accompanied by a chronic immune activation.
To study the effects of body weight and obesity on the immune system and measure weight and fat tissue changes after ischemic stroke we conducted the LIPS Trial and enrolled 50 stroke patients and 16 control subjects between July 2015 and July 2016. On the day of admission and on the days 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 7, 30, 90 and 180 after admission stroke patients were weighed with an in-bed scale, body composition was measured with BIA, the triceps-skin fold thickness was measured, the NIHSS scale was obtained and blood was drawn. FACS-analysis was performed and triglycerides,cholesterol, CRP and PCT were measured at the central laboratory facility of the Universitätsmedizin Greifswald. Luminex-multiplex analysis for multiple cyto- and chemokines was performed at the Multiplex Facility at the University Leiden. A cerebral MRI and an abdominal MRI were performed shortly after admission and on days 5-7 for most patients and the infarct volume, abdominal fat and hepatic fat percentage were measured. On days 30, 90 and 180 after stroke Bartel Index and mRS were obtained.
After stroke our patients showed the typical immunological changes described previously as stroke induced immune alterations, namely a post stroke immunodepression as well as signs of an activated immune system and an acute
phase response. Our patients lost weight, but only 1.7 ± 0.5 kg. Skinfold thickness did not change during the course of our trial and abdominal fat measurement did not change in stroke patients. Immunological parameters (leukocytes, neutrophils,CRP, PCT, IL-6) did not differ between BMI subgroups (normal weight: BMI < 25,overweight: BMI ≥ 25, < 30, obese: BMI ≥ 30) and in this trial we could not detect a
difference in patients with normal weight, overweight or obesity in the post stroke periode. In an additional analysis we could show that rapid clinical improvement
did result in a rapid improvement of post stroke immune alterations, especially for leukocytes, neutrophils, IL-6 and CRP.
Hintergrund: VPS ist ein bekannter Inhibitor der HDAC. In den zurückliegenden Jahren sind mehrere Publikationen erschienen, die VPS eine bedeutende Rolle in Bezug auf eine neuroprotektive Wirkung zugeschrieben haben. Jedoch sind in diesem Zeitraum auch gegenteilige Ergebnisse veröffentlicht worden. In bisherigen eigenen Voruntersuchungen sahen wir, dass VPS weder neuroprotektive noch zytotoxische Effekte hervorgerufen hatte. In der vorliegenden Arbeit untersuchten wir unter Verwendung von Dosierungen, die dem therapeutischen Wirkspiegel von VPS entsprachen, ob VPS die neurotoxische Wirkung von MPP+ inhibieren konnte.
Hypothese: Die vorliegende Dissertation soll einen Beitrag zur Erweiterung des Verständnisses der Auswirkungen einer VPS-Gabe auf das Verhalten neuraler Vorläuferzellen liefern. Insbesondere sollte die postulierte neuroprotektive Wirkung von VPS gegenüber dem neurotoxischen Agens MPP+ evaluiert werden.
Methoden: Die fmNPZ werden in einer feuchtigkeitsgesättigten Atmosphäre in einem Expansionsmedium propagiert. Die Differenzierung erfolgt auf PLL beschichteten Kulturplatten in P4-8F Medium mit ohne VPS, 100μg/ml VPS und 200μg/ml VPS für bis zu 96 Stunden. Zur Detektion neuroprotektiver Effekte von VPS verwendeten wir einen Zytotoxizitästest: neben der simultanen Gabe von MPP+ und VPS erfolgte eine 24-stündige Vorbehandlung mit VPS, bevor MPP+ appliziert wurde. Zur Auswertung der Tests kamen histochemische Verfahren (PI/bisBenzimid-Färbung) zur Anwendung. Zur Evaluation des Proliferationspotenzials der fmNPZ unter Anwendung von VPS nutzen wir immunhistochemische Verfahren nach Standardprotokollen unter Verwendung folgender Antikörper: Maus Anti-BrdU (Konzentration: 60μl 5mM Stocklösung/ml), Kaninchen Anti-Ki-67 (1:500) und entsprechende Floureszenz-gelabelte Sekundär-AK (1:500).
Ergebnisse: 100μg/ml als auch 200μg/ml VPS - als Einzelsubstanz - bewirkten nach 96 Stunden Differenzierungszeit eine signifikante Zunahme an avitalen Zellen. MPP+ - als Einzelsubstanz - zeigte die erwartete konzentrationsabhängige signifikante Zunahme an nekrotischen Zellen. Nach Simultangabe von MPP+/VPS bewirkte VPS sowohl unter Expansions- als auch unter Differenzierungsbedingungen keinen signifikant neuroprotektiven Effekt gegenüber MPP+. Nach 24-stündiger Vorbehandlung mit VPS sahen wir unter Expansionsbedingungen nach Applikation von 200μg/ml VPS einen die Toxizität von MPP+ verstärkenden Effekt. Unter Differenzierungsbedingungen bewirkte erst die Zugabe von 60μM MPP+ und eine weitere gemeinsame Kultivierungszeit von 72 Stunden einen signifikanten Anstieg an avitalen Zellen.
Die Proliferationskapazität der fmNPZ war nach Zugabe von 100μg/ml VPS nicht verändert.
Schlussfolgerungen: Zur Klärung der Frage welche Effekte VPS auf das Verhalten prädopaminerger, neuraler Progenitorzellen auslöst, konnte diese Arbeit einen weiteren wichtigen Beitrag leisten. Das gesetzte Ziel konnten wir somit erreichen.
Die Therapie neurodegenerativer Erkrankungen wie die des Morbus Parkinson besteht derzeit in einer rein symptomatischen Behandlung ohne die Progredienz der Erkrankungen deutlich verlangsamen oder gar stoppen zu können. Eine kausale Therapie wie zum Beispiel eine zellbasierte Ersatztherapie konnte bis dato noch nicht erfolgreich etabliert werden.
Unsere Arbeit liefert einen weiteren Beitrag zum Verständnis der Wirkungen von VPS auf das Differenzierungs- und Expansionsverhalten prädopaminerger, neuraler Progenitorzellen.
Unter Berücksichtigung des in dieser Arbeit verwendeten Versuchsaufbaus kann postuliert werden, dass VPS keinen neuroprotektiven Effekt auf die fmNPZ ausübt. In höherer Dosierung als die die dem therapeutischen Wirkspiegel von VPS entsprechen, konnte unter bestimmten Bedingungen ein zytotoxischer Effekt nachgewiesen werden. Diese Ergebnisse passen sowohl zu früheren Publikationen mit anderen Zellsystemen, die einen toxischen Effekt von VPS beobachtet hatten, als auch zu den Ergebnissen eigener Voruntersuchungen.
Die gewonnenen Erkenntnisse sind unter dem Aspekt der zukünftigen Entwicklung Stammzell-basierter Zellersatztherapien als auch der pharmakologischen Beeinflussung der in vivo Neurogenese von Bedeutung, weil diese Erkenntnisse einerseits Wirkungen von VPS auf Ebene neuraler Vorläuferzellen aufzeigen und andererseits daraus folgend eine kritische Evaluation der Anwendung von VPS ermöglicht.
Stigmatisierung tritt bei psychischen, körperlichen sowie chronisch neurologischen Erkrankungen auf. Stigma kann vielfältige Auswirkungen auf Betroffene haben: Es vergrößert Gesundheitsunterschiede, verringert Lebensqualität und schafft Hürden, Gesundheitsleistungen zu nutzen. Internationale Studien zu diesem Thema zeig-ten, dass Stigma bei MS-Patient*innen u.a. die Lebensqualität, das psychische Wohlbefinden, das Offenlegen der Erkrankung und die Einhaltung von Therapien beeinflusst. Hinsichtlich der Stigmatisierung bei chronisch neurologischen Erkran-kungen, wie Multipler Sklerose (MS), gibt es in Deutschland bisher keine Studien. Ziel dieser Arbeit war eine erstmalige Datenerhebung zu Stigmatisierung bei MS. Endpunkte der Erhebung sind, welche Formen von Stigma in dieser Kohorte vorlie-gen und ob es psychische Komponenten, krankheitsspezifische Eigenschaften o-der soziodemographische Daten gibt, die im Zusammenhang mit Stigma stehen. Diese Daten wurden daraufhin in Vergleich zu internationalen Daten gestellt. Auch bisher noch kaum erforschte Assoziationen zu Stigma und Fatigue wurden näher betrachtet.
Die Studie wurde als prospektive Kohortenstudie in Form validierter Fragebögen an der Universität Greifswald (Klinik für Psychiatrie und Klinik für Neurologie) durchge-führt. Zur Auswertung unserer Daten wurden zunächst Basistabellen mit Angaben aus Mittelwert, Standardabweichung, Median und Interquartilenabstand verwendet. Um einen monotonen Zusammenhang zwischen den Variablen zu untersuchen, wurde der Rangkorrelationskoeffizient nach Spearman angewandt; um Assoziatio-nen aufzuzeigen die negative binomiale Regression.
Die Zusammensetzung der Kohorte mit dem Anteil an Männern (26%) und Frauen (74%) ist repräsentativ für MS. Alter und Erkrankungsdauer sind heterogen verteilt. 88 Personen hatten den schubförmig remittierenden MS-Typ, 11 den sekundär pro-gredienten und ein Patient den primär progredienten Verlaufstyp. Der Stigmatisie-rungsgrad in dieser MS-Kohorte ist gering. Der Modalwert für beide Stigma-Skalen liegt jeweils beim Minimum. Stigmatisierung korreliert signifikant auf hohem zweisei-tigen Signifikanzniveau (p>0,05) mit Depression (Korrelationskoeffizient 0,55), Fati-gue (0,51) und Behinderung (0,34). Für Lebensqualität liegt eine negative Korrelati-on vor (-0,54). Bei hohem Signifikanzniveau (p=0,001) erhöhen Behinderung und Depression das Risiko für MS-bezogene Stigmatisierung im Vergleich zu einer ge-sunden Referenzgruppe: Behinderung erhöht es jährlich um 38% und Depression um 5%. Mit jedem weiteren Lebensjahr der Patient*innen sinkt das Stigma-Risiko um 2,7 %. Bei Menschen mit Fatigue steigt das Risiko stigmatisiert zu werden jähr-lich um 2%.
Durch die vorliegende Arbeit konnten Ergebnisse internationaler Studien hinsicht-lich der Zusammenhänge zwischen Depression und Behinderung zu Stigma bestä-tigt werden. Ebenfalls konnte bestätigt werden, dass der Stigmatisierungsgrad bei MS eher gering ist. Der Grad der Behinderung beeinflusst das Stigmatisierungser-leben am stärksten, was sich häufiger in Form von internalisiertem statt öffentlichem Stigma äußert. Dass Jüngere eher betroffen sind, kann mit dem Vorkommen von erwartetem Stigma bei Unvorhersagbarkeit der Diagnose erklärt werden. Das erwar-tete Stigma kann schließlich besonders bei jüngeren Patient*innen zur Verheimli-chung der Erkrankung führen. Dies wurde im Prozess dieser Arbeit herausgearbei-tet und sollte in weiteren Studien noch eingehender untersucht werden. Da im Alter Stigmatisierung vorliegt und Behinderung ebenso wie behinderungsbezogenes Stigma mit dem Alter zunehmen, liegt die Vermutung nahe, dass im Alter andere Formen von Stigma eine Rolle spielen.
Abstract
Objective
This study was undertaken to calculate epilepsy‐related direct, indirect, and total costs in adult patients with active epilepsy (ongoing unprovoked seizures) in Germany and to analyze cost components and dynamics compared to previous studies from 2003, 2008, and 2013. This analysis was part of the Epi2020 study.
Methods
Direct and indirect costs related to epilepsy were calculated with a multicenter survey using an established and validated questionnaire with a bottom‐up design and human capital approach over a 3‐month period in late 2020. Epilepsy‐specific costs in the German health care sector from 2003, 2008, and 2013 were corrected for inflation to allow for a valid comparison.
Results
Data on the disease‐specific costs for 253 patients in 2020 were analyzed. The mean total costs were calculated at €5551 (±€5805, median = €2611, range = €274–€21 667) per 3 months, comprising mean direct costs of €1861 (±€1905, median = €1276, range = €327–€13 158) and mean indirect costs of €3690 (±€5298, median = €0, range = €0–€11 925). The main direct cost components were hospitalization (42.4%), antiseizure medication (42.2%), and outpatient care (6.2%). Productivity losses due to early retirement (53.6%), part‐time work or unemployment (30.8%), and seizure‐related off‐days (15.6%) were the main reasons for indirect costs. However, compared to 2013, there was no significant increase of direct costs (−10.0%), and indirect costs significantly increased (p < .028, +35.1%), resulting in a significant increase in total epilepsy‐related costs (p < .047, +20.2%). Compared to the 2013 study population, a significant increase of cost of illness could be observed (p = .047).
Significance
The present study shows that disease‐related costs in adult patients with active epilepsy increased from 2013 to 2020. As direct costs have remained constant, this increase is attributable to an increase in indirect costs. These findings highlight the impact of productivity loss caused by early retirement, unemployment, working time reduction, and seizure‐related days off.
Objective: To evaluate the efficacy and tolerability of brivaracetam (BRV) in a severely drug refractory cohort of patients with epileptic encephalopathies (EE).
Method: A multicenter, retrospective cohort study recruiting all patients treated with EE who began treatment with BRV in an enrolling epilepsy center between 2016 and 2017.
Results: Forty-four patients (27 male [61%], mean age 29 years, range 6 to 62) were treated with BRV. The retention rate was 65% at 3 months, 52% at 6 months and 41% at 12 months. A mean retention time of 5 months resulted in a cumulative exposure to BRV of 310 months. Three patients were seizure free during the baseline. At 3 months, 20 (45%, 20/44 as per intention-to-treat analysis considering all patients that started BRV including three who were seizure free during baseline) were either seizure free (n = 4; 9%, three of them already seizure-free at baseline) or reported at least 25% (n = 4; 9%) or 50% (n = 12; 27%) reduction in seizures. An increase in seizure frequency was reported in two (5%) patients, while there was no change in the seizure frequency of the other patients. A 50% long-term responder rate was apparent in 19 patients (43%), with two (5%) free from seizures for more than six months and in nine patients (20%, with one [2 %] free from seizures) for more than 12 months. Treatment-emergent adverse events were predominantly of psychobehavioural nature and were observed in 16%.
Significance: In this retrospective analysis the rate of patients with a 50% seizure reduction under BRV proofed to be similar to those seen in regulatory trials for focal epilepsies. BRV appears to be safe and relatively well tolerated in EE and might be considered in patients with psychobehavioral adverse events while on levetiracetam.
Background
Neuroinflammation and maladaptive neuroplasticity play pivotal roles in migraine (MIG), trigeminal autonomic cephalalgias (TAC), and complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS). Notably, CRPS shares connections with calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) in its pathophysiology. This study aims to assess if the documented links between CRPS and MIG/TAC in literature align with clinical phenotypes and disease progressions. This assessment may bolster the hypothesis of shared pathophysiological mechanisms.
Methods
Patients with CRPS (n = 184) and an age-/gender-matched control group with trauma but without CRPS (n = 148) participated in this case–control study. Participant answered well-established questionnaires for the definition of CRPS symptoms, any headache complaints, headache entity, and clinical management.
Results
Patients with CRPS were significantly more likely to suffer from migraine (OR: 3.23, 95% CI 1.82–5.85), TAC (OR: 8.07, 95% CI 1.33–154.79), or non-classified headaches (OR: 3.68, 95% CI 1.88–7.49) compared to the control group. Patients with MIG/TAC developed CRPS earlier in life (37.2 ± 11.1 vs 46.8 ± 13.5 years), had more often a central CRPS phenotype (60.6% vs. 37.0% overall) and were three times more likely to report allodynia compared to CRPS patients with other types of headaches. Additionally, these patients experienced higher pain levels and more severe CRPS, which intensified with an increasing number of headache days. Patients receiving monoclonal antibody treatment targeting the CGRP pathway for headaches reported positive effects on CRPS symptoms.
Conclusion
This study identified clinically relevant associations of MIG/TAC and CRPS not explained by chance. Further longitudinal investigations exploring potentially mutual pathomechanisms may improve the clinical management of both CRPS and primary headache disorders.
Trial registration
German Clinical Trials Register (DRKS00022961).