PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Fibrosis and fatty liver disease increase risk of early atherosclerosis

2012-04-25
(Press-News.org) Italian researchers report that severe fibrosis increases the early atherosclerosis risk in patients with genotype 1 chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection. A second study found that fatty liver disease also increases risk of developing atherosclerosis at an earlier period. Both studies appear in the May issue of Hepatology, a journal published by Wiley-Blackwell on behalf of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases.

In the first study, researchers led by Dr. Salvatore Petta from the Di.Bi.M.I.S. University of Palermo in Italy evaluated 174 patients with chronic HCV (genotype 1) along with 174 controls from an outpatient cardiology unit for signs of atherosclerosis. Ultrasonography was used to measure thickening of the carotid artery. Severity of fibrosis was determined for all HCV patients.

The team found carotid plaques in 42% of HCV patients compared to 23% of patients in the control group. Older age and severe liver fibrosis were independently associated with the presence of carotid plaque according to the authors. In patients 55 years or younger who had less sever fibrosis (stage F0-F2) only 22% had plaques in their artery compared to 52% with more sever fibrosis (stage F3-F4). Patients older the 55 years of age had similar prevalence of carotid lesions for those with or without severe fibrosis at 58% and 51% respectively.

"Our findings suggest that severe liver fibrosis places chronic HCV patients at higher risk of early atherosclerosis," said Dr. Petta. "This patient group should be carefully monitored to prevent progression of cardiovascular disease that is independent of their metabolic profile." The authors also caution that a majority of the European study participants were overweight, which should be considered in applying results to other patient populations.

A second study by Dr. Michaela Kozakova and colleagues from the University of Pisa further explored whether the association between fatty liver disease and early atherosclerosis is a consequence of shared conventional risk factors or is it determined by a specific circulating factor originating from liver or adipose tissue. For this purpose the researches investigated the association between the presence of early carotid plaques and the fatty liver index (FLI), which is an established surrogate marker for fatty liver disease based on body mass index (BMI), waist circumference, triglycerides and gamma glutamyltransferase (GGT), in subjects who were part of the multicenter European RISC (Relationship between Insulin Sensitivity and Cardiovascular risk) study group. For the present study, a subgroup of 1.012 RISC subjects who were free of hypertension, diabetes, cardiovascular diseases, chronic hepatic, inflammatory and neoplastic diseases, abnormal lipid levels, and metabolic syndrome were included.

In such a healthy population, only about 5% of subjects had small carotid plaques, and these subjects were older, had a FLI of 60 or more, and had higher blood pressure, LDL cholesterol, glucose, GGT and C-reactive protein than participants without plaques. In logistic regression model, after adjustment for conventional cardiovascular risk factors, family history, liver transaminase and alcohol consumption, the independent predictors of plaque presence were age, FLI of 60 or more and smoking habit. However, when FLI in the model was replaced by variables used in its equation the predictors of early atherosclerosis were age, GGT and smoking.

"Our cross-sectional study indicates that GGT may represent a link between fatty liver disease and development of early atherosclerosis," concludes Dr. Kozakova. On the basis of these results the authors suggest the GGT levels in the blood could be used as a biomarker of atherosclerosis.

###Full Citations:Carotid Atherosclerosis and Chronic Hepatitis C: A Prospective Study of Risk Associations." Salvatore Petta, Daniele Torres, Giovanni Fazio, Calogero Cammà, Daniela Cabibi, Vito Di Marco, Anna Licata, Giulio Marchesini, Alessandra Mazzola,Gaspare Parrinello, Salvatore Novo, Giuseppe Licata and Antonio Craxì. Hepatology; April 4, 2012 (DOI: 10.1002/hep.25508); Print Issue Date: May 2012. http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/hep.25508/abstract.

"Fatty Liver Index, Gamma-glutamyltransferase and Early Carotid Plaques." Michaela Kozakova, Carlo Palombo, Marco Paterni Eng, Jacqueline Dekker, Allan Flyvbjerg, Asimina Mitrakou, Amalia Gastaldelli, Ele Ferrannini and the RISC Investigators. Hepatology; Published Online: April 19, 2012 (DOI: 10.1002/hep.25555); Print Issue Date: May 2012. http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/hep.25555/abstract.

Author Contact: Media representative at the University of Pisa is Dr. Roberta Filidei who can be reached at R.Filidei@adm.unipi.it. or 804-827-0890. Contacts at the University Hospital are Dr. Del Mauro and Dr. Zanotto who can be reached at ufficio.stampa@ao-pisa.toscana.it.

These studies are published in Hepatology. Media wishing to receive a PDF of the article may contact healthnews@wiley.com.

About the Journal Hepatology is the premier publication in the field of liver disease, publishing original, peer-reviewed articles concerning all aspects of liver structure, function and disease. Hepatology's current impact factor is 10.885.Each month, the distinguished Editorial Board monitors and selects only the best articles on subjects such as immunology, chronic hepatitis, viral hepatitis, cirrhosis, genetic and metabolic liver diseases and their complications, liver cancer, and drug metabolism. Hepatology is published on behalf of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases (AASLD). For more information, please visit http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1002/(ISSN)1527-3350.

About Wiley-Blackwell Wiley-Blackwell is the international scientific, technical, medical, and scholarly publishing business of John Wiley & Sons, with strengths in every major academic and professional field and partnerships with many of the world's leading societies. Wiley-Blackwell publishes nearly 1,500 peer-reviewed journals and 1,500+ new books annually in print and online, as well as databases, major reference works and laboratory protocols. For more information, please visit http://www.wileyblackwell.com or our new online platform, Wiley Online Library (http://www.wileyonlinelibrary.com), one of the world's most extensive multidisciplinary collections of online resources, covering life, health, social and physical sciences, and humanities.


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Bile – not acid – is bad guy in triggering precancerous condition associated with reflux disease

2012-04-25
For many people with gastroesophageal reflux disease or GERD, acid reflux drugs are the answer to their woes, curbing the chronic heartburn and regurgitation of food or sour liquid characteristic of the disorder. But when it comes to Barrett's esophagus, a condition commonly found in people with GERD, acid control may be less important than beating back another bodily fluid – bile. A new study published in the Annals of Surgery shows that bile – a digestive fluid that leaks backwards from the stomach into the esophagus along with acid in patients with GERD – plays a ...

Improving on the amazing: Ames Laboratory scientists seek new conductors for metamaterials

Improving on the amazing: Ames Laboratory scientists seek new conductors for metamaterials
2012-04-25
AMES, Iowa -- Scientists at the U.S. Department of Energy's Ames Laboratory have designed a method to evaluate different conductors for use in metamaterial structures, which are engineered to exhibit properties not possible in natural materials. The work was reported this month in Nature Photonics. Cloaking devices that hide planes from RADAR, microscopes that can see inside a single cell, and miniature antennae that measure only a few millimeters all sound like parts of a science fiction movie. But, within the span of the decade since they began their work, Ames Laboratory ...

Binge eating may lead to addiction-like behaviors

2012-04-25
HERSHEY, Pa. -- A history of binge eating -- consuming large amounts of food in a short period of time -- may make an individual more likely to show other addiction-like behaviors, including substance abuse, according to Penn State College of Medicine researchers. In the short term, this finding may shed light on the factors that promote substance abuse, addiction, and relapse. In the long term, may help clinicians treat individuals suffering from this devastating disease. "Drug addiction persists as a major problem in the United States," said Patricia Sue Grigson, Ph.D., ...

Yeast cell reaction to Zoloft suggests alternative cause, drug target for depression

Yeast cell reaction to Zoloft suggests alternative cause, drug target for depression
2012-04-25
Princeton University researchers have observed a self-degradation response to the antidepressant Zoloft in yeast cells that could help provide new answers to lingering questions among scientists about how antidepressants work, as well as support the idea that depression is not solely linked to the neurotransmitter serotonin. In findings published in the journal PLoS ONE, researchers based in the lab of Ethan Perlstein, an associate research scholar in Princeton's Lewis-Sigler Institute for Integrative Genomics and senior lecturer in molecular biology, report that sertraline ...

Pod corn develops leaves in the inflorescences

Pod corn develops leaves in the inflorescences
2012-04-25
This press release is available in German. In a variant of maize known as pod corn, or tunicate maize, the maize kernels on the cob are not 'naked' but covered by long membranous husks known as glumes. According to scientists from the Max Planck Institute for Plant Breeding Research in Cologne and Friedrich Schiller University in Jena, this variant arises from the activity of a leaf gene in the maize cob that is not usually active there. Thus, pod corn is not a wild ancestor of maize, but a mutant that forms leaves in the wrong place. Pod corn has a spectacular ...

Rhode Island Hospital researcher: Broadening bipolar disorder criteria is a bad idea

2012-04-25
PROVIDENCE, R.I. – A Rhode Island Hospital psychiatrist and researcher explains the negative impact of broadening the diagnostic criteria for bipolar disorder in the upcoming Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition (DSM-5). In a newly published commentary in the Journal of Clinical Psychiatry, Mark Zimmerman, M.D., explains that lowering the diagnostic threshold for bipolar disorder will likely do more harm than good for patients. As the debate continues over the revisions to DSM-IV, Zimmerman, the director of outpatient psychiatry at Rhode ...

Dietary changes help some children with ADHD

2012-04-25
Together with child and adolescent psychiatrists, researchers from the University of Copenhagen have just completed an extensive report which reviews the studies which have been done so far on the significance of diet for children and young people with ADHD. The report shows that there are potential benefits in changing the diets of children with ADHD, but that key knowledge in the area is still lacking. The comprehensive report covers the scientific literature on the significance of diet for children with ADHD: "Our conclusion is that more research is required in the ...

CAM therapy combined with conventional medical care may improve treatment of lower back pain

2012-04-25
New Rochelle, NY, April 23, 2012— Nearly 8 of 10 Americans will experience lower back pain at some time in their lives. Persistent low back pain is a common, incapacitating, costly, and difficult to treat condition. Many patients might benefit significantly from an individualized, multidisciplinary, team-based model of care that includes access to licensed complementary care practitioners (e.g., chiropractors, massage therapists, and acupuncturists) in addition to conventional care providers, as demonstrated in a study published in The Journal of Alternative and Complementary ...

On-the-job deaths steady in Michigan; Number of burn injuries underreported

On-the-job deaths steady in Michigan; Number of burn injuries underreported
2012-04-25
EAST LANSING, Mich. — The rate of workplace deaths in Michigan remained steady in 2011, as 141 workers died on the job compared with 145 in 2010, according to an annual report from Michigan State University. The construction industry had the most deaths at 24, while the agriculture industry had the second most at 22, according to the Michigan Fatality Assessment and Control Evaluation program, or MIFACE. The program – administered by MSU's Division of Occupational and Environmental Medicine, part of the College of Human Medicine – investigates work-related deaths and ...

'Junk DNA' can sense viral infection

2012-04-25
Once considered unimportant "junk DNA," scientists have learned that non-coding RNA (ncRNA) — RNA molecules that do not translate into proteins — play a crucial role in cellular function. Mutations in ncRNA are associated with a number of conditions, such as cancer, autism, and Alzheimer's disease. Now, through the use of "deep sequencing," a technology used to sequence the genetic materials of the human genome, Dr. Noam Shomron of Tel Aviv University's Sackler Faculty of Medicine has discovered that when infected with a virus, ncRNA gives off biological signals that ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Adults diagnosed with ADHD may have reduced life expectancies

Rare pterosaur fossil reveals crocodilian bite 76m years ago

Thousands of European citizen scientists helped identify shifts in the floral traits of insect-pollinated plants

By the numbers: Diarylethene crystal orientation controlled for 1st time

HKU physicists pioneer entanglement microscopy algorithm to explore how matter entangles in quantum many-body systems

Solving the evolutionary puzzle of polyploidy: how genome duplication shapes adaptation

Smoking opioids is associated with lower mortality than injecting but is still high-risk

WPIA: Accelerating DNN warm-up in web browsers by precompiling WebGL programs

First evidence of olaparib maintenance therapy in patients with newly diagnosed homologous recombination deficient positive/BRCA wild-type ovarian cancer: real-world multicenter study

Camel milk udderly good alterative to traditional dairy

New, embodied AI reveals how robots and toddlers learn to understand

Game, set, match: Exploring the experiences of women coaches in tennis

Significant rise in mental health admissions for young people in last decade

Prehab shows promise in improving health, reducing complications after surgery

Exercise and improved diet before surgery linked to fewer complications and enhanced recovery

SGLT-2 drug plus moderate calorie restriction achieves higher diabetes remission

Could the Summerville ghost lantern be an earthquake light?

Will the U.S. have enough pain specialists?

Stronger stress response in monkeys helps them survive

Using infrared heat transfer to modify chemical reactions

Being a ladies' man comes at a price for alpha male baboons

Study shows anti-clotting drug reduced bleeding events in patients with atrial fibrillation

UMaine-led team develops more holistic way to monitor lobster industry

Antiviral protein causes genetic changes implicated in Huntington’s disease progression

SwRI-led PUNCH spacecraft make final pit stop before launch

Claims for the world’s deepest earthquake challenged by new analysis

MSU study finds children of color experience more variability in sleep times

Pregnancy may increase risk of mental illness in people with MS

Multiple sclerosis linked to higher risk of mental illness during and after pregnancy

Beyond ChatGPT: WVU researchers to study use and ethics of artificial intelligence across disciplines

[Press-News.org] Fibrosis and fatty liver disease increase risk of early atherosclerosis