The basic feature in the pathogenesis of abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) is the degradation of extracellular matrix components. This process is induced partly by cytokines secreted from inflammatory and mesenchymal cells. Circulating levels of inflammatory cytokines were studied in AAA patients and compared with subjects suffering from atherosclerotic disease only. Furthermore, the predictive value of cytokine concentrations was evaluated for aneurysm expansion rate. Circulating levels of interleukin 1 beta (IL-1 beta), interleukin 6 (IL-6), tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha), and interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma) were measured in 50 AAA patients (40 men, 10 women), 42 patients with coronary heart disease (CHD) (23 men, 19 women), and 38 controls whose angiogram was normal (17 men, 21 women). No differences in cytokine concentrations were found between the CHD patients and the controls. AAA disease was found to be associated with significantly higher IL-1 beta and IL-6 concentrations in both male patients (median concentrations of 19.40 pmol/L and 6.45 pmol/L, respectively) and female patients (19.26 pmol/L and 7.99 pmol/L) than in either the CHD patients or the controls (P < .005). TNF-alpha levels were slightly higher in the AAA patients (1.64 pmol/L in the males and 1.59 pmol/L in the females) than in the other groups (P < .05). IFN-gamma levels were elevated significantly in the female AAA patients (3.75 pmol/L) compared with levels found in the other female (P < .05) or male (P < .01) patient groups. The measured cytokine concentrations were not related to the size of the aneurysm or the maximal thickness of the thrombus within the aneurysm. IFN-gamma concentration showed a significant positive correlation to the aneurysm expansion (R = .37, P < .02) and negative correlation to the concentration of aminoterminal propeptide of type III procollagen during 6-month follow up (R = -.42, P < .005). The results show that circulating levels of inflammatory cytokines are elevated in patients with AAA disease, suggesting that the production of these cytokines is increased in these patients compared with CHD patients and controls. Elevated INF-gamma concentrations seem to predict an increased rate of expansion in AAA.
Cold temperature and low humidity were associated with increased occurrence of RTIs, and a decrease in temperature and humidity preceded the onset of the infections.
Chlamydia trachomatis serotype G is most strongly associated with subsequent development of cervical SCC. Increasing numbers of exposures to different C trachomatis serotypes also increases risk. Our results strengthen the evidence that there is a link between past C trachomatis infection and cervical SCC.
OBJECTIVEThe associations of prenatal exposures to maternal prepregnancy overweight and gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) with offspring overweight are controversial. Research estimating risk for offspring overweight due to these exposures, separately and concomitantly, is limited.RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODSPrevalence of overweight and abdominal obesity at age 16 years and odds ratios (ORs) for prenatal exposures to maternal prepregnancy overweight and GDM were estimated in participants of the prospective longitudinal Northern Finland Birth Cohort of 1986 (N = 4,168).RESULTSThe prevalence and estimates of risk for overweight and abdominal obesity were highest in those exposed to both maternal prepregnancy overweight and GDM (overweight prevalence 40% [OR 4.05], abdominal obesity prevalence 25.7% [3.82]). Even in offspring of mothers with a normal oral glucose tolerance test during pregnancy, maternal prepregnancy overweight is associated with increased risk for these outcomes (overweight prevalence 27.9% [2.56], abdominal obesity prevalence 19.5% [2.60]). In offspring of women with prepregnancy normal weight, the prevalence or risks of the outcomes were not increased by prenatal exposure to GDM. These estimates of risk were adjusted for parental prepregnancy smoking, paternal overweight, and offspring sex and size at birth.CONCLUSIONSMaternal prepregnancy overweight is an independent risk factor for offspring overweight and abdominal obesity at age 16 years. The risks are highest in offspring with concomitant prenatal exposure to maternal prepregnancy overweight and GDM, whereas the risks associated with GDM are only small.
First-trimester antibody positivity is a risk factor for perinatal death but not thyroid hormone status as such. Thyroid dysfunction early in pregnancy seems to affect fetal and placental growth.
Epidemiological evidence suggests that airway obstruction is an independent risk factor for lung cancer and that this cannot be explained by active or passive smoking alone. Chlamydia pneumoniae infection has been associated with chronic bronchitis and its exacerbates. Our aim was to evaluate the association between chronic C. pneumoniae infection and risk of lung cancer among male smokers. Smoking males with lung cancer (n 5 230) and their age-and locality-matched controls were selected among participants of the Alpha-Tocopherol, Beta-Carotene Cancer Prevention Study. The presence of C. pneumoniae infection was assessed by analyzing specific antibodies and immune complexes in 2 serum samples collected with a 3-year interval before the lung cancer diagnosis. The diagnosis of chronic infection was based on stable levels of positive specific IgA antibody (titer H 16) and immune complex (titer H 4). Relative risks were estimated by odds ratios (OR) adjusted for age, locality and smoking history by a conditional logistic regression model. Markers suggesting chronic C. pneumoniae infection were present in 52% of cases and 45% of controls and hence were positively associated with the incidence of lung cancer (OR 1.6; 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.0-2.3). The incidence was especially increased in men younger than 60 years (OR 2.9; 95% CI 1.5-5.4) but not in the older age group (OR 0.9; 95% CI 0.5-1.6). Before concluding that C. pneumoniae infection is a new independent risk factor for lung cancer, corroboration from other studies with larger number of cases and longer follow-up is needed. Int. J. Cancer 74:31-34.Chlamydia pneumoniae is a common intracellular bacterium that causes pneumonia and other respiratory infections world-wide. Like all Chlamydia organisms, it has a tendency to cause persistent and chronic infections. C. pneumoniae has been serologically associated with chronic lung diseases such as chronic bronchitis (von Hertzen et al., 1995) and adult onset asthma (Hahn et al., 1991), as well as and with atherosclerosis (Saikku et al., 1988), in which the organism has been demonstrated in atherosclerotic plaques (Kuo et al., 1993). Chronic bronchitis has been suggested as an independent etiologic factor in lung cancer (Osann, 1991), the effect of which cannot be explained by either active or passive exposure to cigarette smoke. Smoking does, however, appear to promote chronic C. pneumoniae infection, probably through immunosuppression (Karvonen et al., 1994a).In Finland, nearly 30,000 male smokers were followed for 5-8 years in 1985-1993 in the Alpha-Tocopherol, Beta-Carotene Cancer Prevention Study (ATBC Study Group, 1994). We analyzed baseline and 3-year follow-up serum samples from 230 men diagnosed with lung cancer after the third year and their age-, timeand locality-matched controls for C. pneumoniae-specific IgG and IgA antibodies and immune complexes to study the association between markers suggestive of chronic C. pneumoniae infection and lung cancer.
MATERIAL AND METHODS
Base population and follow-u...
These gestational age-specific reference intervals for thyroid hormones provide a framework for clinical decision making. Overweight and obesity are increasing problems among fertile women and they are associated with possibility of thyroid dysfunction during pregnancy.
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