Abstract-Tooth loss has been associated with an increased risk of vascular diseases such as coronary heart disease and cerebrovascular disease. Little is known whether hypertension is an important factor linking 2 phenomena in postmenopausal women. We compared an incidence of hypertension and traditional risk factors for vascular diseases between 2 age-matched groups: 67 postmenopausal women with missing teeth and 31 without missing teeth. In addition to blood pressure, serum concentration of total cholesterol, high-and low-density lipoprotein cholesterol and triglycerides, plasma angiotensin-converting enzyme activity, plasma angiotensin II concentration, plasma renin activity, and resting heart rate were measured as traditional risk factors for vascular diseases. Subjects without missing teeth had significantly lower diastolic blood pressure than did subjects with missing teeth (Pϭ0.021). The former tended to have lower systolic blood pressure than did the latter (Pϭ0.058). There were no significant differences in other variables between subjects with and without missing teeth. The odds ratio of having hypertension in subjects with missing teeth was 3.59 (95% confidence interval, 1.10 to 11.7) after adjustment of obesity, hypercholesterolemia, and hypertriglyceridemia. Our results suggest that hypertension may be an important factor linking tooth loss and an increased risk of vascular diseases in postmenopausal women.
Fetal DNA in maternal plasma and serum has been shown to be a useful material for fetal gender determination and for screening tests for abnormal pregnancies except during early gestational ages. Maternal serum samples were obtained from 81 pregnant women during the 5th-10th weeks of gestation. Fetal gender was determined by conventional polymerase chain reaction (PCR) to detect a Y-chromosomal sequence (DYS14) in maternal serum during early gestation and confirmed by examination of the newborns after delivery. Real-time quantitative analyses of the SRY and beta-globin genes were also performed in order to determine fetal gender and to quantify fetal DNA concentration in maternal serum during early gestation. When using conventional PCR, the total sensitivity of identifying a male fetus was 95%, but its sensitivity after the 7th week was 100%, whereas in real-time quantitative PCR, the total sensitivity after the 5th week was 100%. Quantitative analyses of the SRY gene revealed that the mean concentration of fetal DNA in maternal serum was 30.55 copies/ml, that fetal DNA concentration showed a tendency to increase with the progression of pregnancy, and that it had a wide normal range. Thus, we could confidently determine fetal gender by using maternal serum samples taken as early as the 7th week.
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