INTRODUCTION:The prevalence of childhood obesity is increasing with its negative medical and psychosocial consequences. This paper examines the association between body mass index (BMI), motor abilities and leisure habits of 668 children within the CHILT (Children's Health InterventionaL Trial) project. METHOD: A total of 668 children (51.0% boys; 49.0% girls) and their parents were questioned on sport and leisure behaviour of the children. The anthropometric data were measured. Motor abilities were determined by a body gross motor development test for children (Köperkoordinationstest für Kinder; KTK) and a 6-min run. RESULTS: The children were 6.7070.42 y old, 122.7275.36 cm tall and weighed 24.4774.59 kg, the average BMI was 16.1772.27 kg/m 2 . KTK showed an average motor quotient (MQ) of 93.49715.01, the 6-min run an average of 835.247110.87 m. Both tests were inversely correlated with BMI (KTK and BMI r ¼ À0.164 (Po0.001); 6-min run and BMI r ¼ À0.201 (Po0.001)); the group of overweight/obese children showed poorer results than the normal/underweight ones, even after adjustment for gender and age (in each case Po0.001). Children with the greatest extent of exercise achieve the highest MQ (P ¼ 0.035). SUMMARY: Overweight/obesity is associated with a poorer body gross motor development and endurance performance. On the other hand, an active lifestyle is positively correlated with a better gross motor development in first-grade children. Therefore, to prevent the negative consequences of physical inactivity and overweight/obesity early intervention to support exercise and movement is recommended.
Background: The investigation of disease progression provides important information on the dynamics of cell death in Parkinson disease (PD).Objective: To determine the progression of dopaminergic impairment in PD with the use of positron emission tomography (PET).Design: Longitudinal prospective cohort study with a follow-up period of 64.5 ± 22.6 months (mean ±SD).Setting: University hospital. Patients: A consecutive sample of patients with PD (N=31; age at symptom onset, 53.6 ± 11.3 years) with a wide range of symptom duration and severity at the time of study entry. Interventions: Investigation by serial fluorodopa F 18 ([ 18 F]fluorodopa) PET as a marker for striatal dopaminergic function. Main Outcome Measures: Changes in caudate and putaminal [ 18 F]fluorodopa influx constant (K i ) values.Results: In patients with PD, the decline rate of putaminal [ 18 F]fluorodopa K i correlated inversely with disease duration before study inclusion (r=−0.46, P =.01) and positively with baseline K i values (r =0.44, P =.01), indicating a negative exponential loss of dopamine neurons. Annual disease progression rates ranged from 4.4% in the caudate nucleus to 6.3% in the putamen. A mean preclinical period of 5.6±3.2 years was calculated with symptom onset at a putaminal K i threshold of 69% from controls. Assuming nonlinear progression kinetics, the required sample size to prove neuroprotection with the use of [ 18 F]fluorodopa PET was found to increase strongly with the preceding symptom duration of study subjects. Conclusion:These data suggest that the neurodegenerative process in PD follows a negative exponential course and slows down with increasing symptom duration, contradicting the long-latency hypothesis of PD.
Muscles and bones of patients with congenital heart disease (CHD) are subject to various potentially deleterious influences during growth. The aim of the present study was to analyse the outcome of bone and muscle parameters in adolescents and young adults with a spectrum of CHD. Bone and muscle parameters of the forearm were examined at two standard sites, 4% and 65%, in 29 adolescents and young adults with CHD, aged 14-24 years, by quantitative computed tomography. For the entire study population, bone and muscle parameters did not deviate significantly from the reference values except for age- and gender-corrected body height (ASDS-height: -0.6+/-1.2, p=0.01). Both age- and gender- and height- and gender-corrected (HSDS) abnormal bone mass (BMC) was found at the distal radius in patients with Fontan repair (ASDS-BMC4%: -1.5+/-0.9, p=0.008; HSDS-BMC4%: -1.2+/-1.0, p=0.05) and in those in NYHA class III (ASDS-BMC4%: -1.3+/-0.4, p=0.001; HSDS-BMC4%: -1.4+/-0.5, p=0.004). There was minimal overlap between Fontan patients (n=6) and NYHA class III (5 Fontan patients were in NYHA class I or II). In conclusion, most patients with CHD show a normal muscle and bone development in proportion to their reduced body height. Further follow-up is required to determine whether patients in a worse clinical status (NYHA III) and those with single ventricle physiology are at increased risk of osteoporosis and fractures.
Limited access to expert tutors is a problem that can be addressed by using tutors from different stages of medical or non-medical (under-, post-) graduate education. To address whether such differences in qualification affect the results of process evaluation by participants or their learning outcome (exam results), we analysed the data of a 4-year prospective study performed with 787 3rd-year medical students (111 groups of 5-10 participants) taking an obligatory problem-based learning (PbL)-course of basic pharmacology. We compared peer tutors (undergraduate medical students, >/=4th year), non-expert (junior) staff tutors (physicians, pharmacists, veterinarians, biologists, or chemists during postgraduate education), and expert (senior) staff tutors (completed postgraduate education). Evaluation scores related to PbL gave the highest values for senior staff-led groups. The tutor's performance score of peer-led groups did not differ from those of staff-led groups, but the score obtained from groups tutored by junior staff was lower than that obtained with senior staff tutors. Students' weekly preparation time tended to be lower in peer-led groups, while learning time spent specifically on exam preparation seemed to be increased compared to PbL-groups of staff tutors. As a putative confounding variable, tutors' experience in coaching PbL-groups was also investigated. Groups led by experienced tutors, defined as tutors with at least one term of previous PbL tutoring, were found to have significantly higher evaluation scores. Interestingly, neither tutors' subject-matter expertise (peer students, junior staff, or senior staff) nor their teaching-method expertise showed any influence on PbL-groups' mean test scores in a written exam. This indicates that the effect of tutor expertise on the learning process is not associated with a difference in learning outcome when just factual knowledge is assessed by traditional methods.
Background/aims: To study the optic nerve head (ONH) characteristics in a cross sectional study with confocal laser scanning tomography using the Heidelberg retina tomograph (HRT I) and thereby to obtain a new HRT database for comparison of healthy and glaucomatous eyes. Methods: White adults with no history of ocular pathology were eligible for the study. The examination comprised: assessment of visual acuity; slit lamp examination of the anterior and posterior segment; Goldmann applanation tonometry; computerised perimetry, and optic nerve head tomography with HRT. Eyes with ocular pathology were excluded. Mean (standard deviation, SD) and difference between right and left eye (RE-LE) were calculated for HRT I measurements. Differences in mean topographic parameters between male and female participants and between the age quartiles were analysed. The study included 1764 eyes of 882 healthy adults (154 females and 728 males, mean age of 46.8 (SD 8.6) years). The population investigated was larger and older in comparison with similar studies using confocal laser scanning tomography. Results: With HRT I, a mean disc area of 1.82 (SD 0.39) mm 2 , a mean cup area of 0.44 (SD 0.32) mm 2 and a mean cup:disc area ratio of 0.22 (SD 0.13) was observed. Right eyes showed a larger mean retinal nerve fibre layer thickness (RNFLT) (0.263 (SD 0.066) mm) compared with left eyes (0.252 (SD 0.065) mm, p,0.001). Higher values in younger volunteers (mean age 35.7 years) in comparison with elderly participants (mean age 59.1 years) were noted for disc area (1.84 mm 2 v 1.78 mm2) and mean RNFLT (0.263 (SD 0.06) mm v 0.249 (SD 0.07) mm) but were not significant (p.0.01). The presented results differ from published data on ONH measurements of healthy volunteers with different techniques. Conclusion: The observed differences in ONH measurements between left and right eyes seem not to be of clinical importance. This is also true for age or sex dependent changes in ONH topographies. The presented data provide a new basis for comparison of optic disc characteristics between healthy eyes and glaucomatous eyes.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.