The study was conducted to investigate whether dietary fish oil could influence growth of piglets via regulating the expression of proinflammatory cytokines. A split-plot experimental design was used with sow diet effect in the main plots and differing piglet diet effect in the subplot. The results showed that suckling piglets from fish oil fed dams grew rapidly (P < 0.05) than control. It was also observed that these piglets had higher ADG, feed intake, and final body weight (P < 0.05) during postweaning than those piglets from lard fed dams. Furthermore, there was a significant decrease (P < 0.01) in the expression of interleukin 6 and tumor necrosis factor-α in longissimus dorsi muscle. In contrast, there was a tendency (P < 0.10) towards lower ADG and higher feed : gain in weaned piglets receiving fish oil compared with those receiving lard. Meanwhile, splenic proinflammatory cytokines expression was increased (P < 0.01) in piglets receiving fish oil during postweaning period. The results suggested that 7% fish oil addition to sows' diets alleviated inflammatory response via decreasing the proinflammatory cytokines expression in skeletal muscle and accelerated piglet growth. However, 7% fish oil addition to weaned piglets' diets might decrease piglet growth via increasing splenic proinflammatory cytokines expression.
Background
It has been shown that sexual dysfunction (SD) is highly prevalent among patients with chronic renal failure (CRF), and starting renal replacement therapy may even increase it. However, SD is an infrequently reported problem in these treated patients.
Aim
To investigate the prevalence of SD among patients with CRF undergoing renal replacement therapy, by a meta-analysis method.
Methods
PubMed, Embase, and the Cochrane Library were systematically searched for all studies assessing sexual function in patients with CRF receiving renal replacement therapy from January 2000 to April 2020. Relative risk (RR) with 95% CIs was used for analysis to assess the risk of SD in patients with CRF receiving renal replacement therapy. The cross-sectional study quality methodology checklist was used for the cross-sectional study. The methodologic quality of the case-control and cohort studies was assessed with the Newcastle-Ottawa Scale. Data were pooled for the random-effect model. Sensitivity analyses were conducted to assess potential bias. The Begg and Egger tests were used for publication bias analysis.
Outcomes
The prevalence of SD among patients with CRF receiving renal replacement therapy was summarized using pooled RR and 95% CI.
Results
This meta-analysis included 3,725 participants from 10 studies. Of these, 737 were patients with CRF receiving renal replacement therapy. The mean age of participants ranged from 32.75 to 56.1 years. Based on the random-effect model, synthesis of results demonstrated that the prevalence of SD was significantly increased among patients with CRF receiving renal replacement therapy in women (RR = 2.07, 95% CI: 1.47–2.91, P = .000; heterogeneity: I2 = 78.7%, P = .000) and in men (RR = 2.95, 95% CI: 2.16–4.02, P = .000; heterogeneity: I2 = 86.1%, P = .000). Estimates of the total effects were generally consistent in the sensitivity analysis. No evidence of publication bias was observed.
Clinical Implications
Patients with CRF receiving renal replacement therapy had a significantly increased risk of SD, which suggests that clinicians should evaluate sexual function, when managing patients with CRF receiving renal replacement therapy.
Strengths and Limitations
This is the first study to explore the prevalence of SD among patients with CRF undergoing renal replacement therapy based on all available epidemiologic studies. However, all included studies were an observational design, which may downgrade this evidence.
Conclusion
The prevalence of SD is significantly increased among patients with CRF receiving renal replacement therapy. More research studies are warranted to clarify the relationship.
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