Nutrition and dietary intake and their association with mortality and hospitalisation in adults with chronic kidney disease treated with haemodialysis: protocol for DIET-HD, a prospective multinational cohort study.

Nutrition and dietary intake and their association with mortality and hospitalisation in adults with chronic kidney disease treated with haemodialysis: protocol for DIET-HD, a prospective multinational cohort study.

BMJ Open. 2015;5(3):e006897

Authors: Palmer SC, Ruospo M, Campbell KL, Garcia Larsen V, Saglimbene V, Natale P, Gargano L, Craig JC, Johnson DW, Tonelli M, Knight J, Bednarek-Skublewska A, Celia E, Del Castillo D, Dulawa J, Ecder T, Fabricius E, Frazão JM, Gelfman R, Hoischen SH, Schön S, Stroumza P, Timofte D, Török M, Hegbrant J, Wollheim C, Frantzen L, Strippoli GF, DIET-HD Study investigators

Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Adults with end-stage kidney disease (ESKD) treated with haemodialysis experience mortality of between 15% and 20% each year. Effective interventions that improve health outcomes for long-term dialysis patients remain unproven. Novel and testable determinants of health in dialysis are needed. Nutrition and dietary patterns are potential factors influencing health in other health settings that warrant exploration in multinational studies in men and women treated with dialysis. We report the protocol of the “DIETary intake, death and hospitalisation in adults with end-stage kidney disease treated with HaemoDialysis (DIET-HD) study,” a multinational prospective cohort study. DIET-HD will describe associations of nutrition and dietary patterns with major health outcomes for adults treated with dialysis in several countries.
METHODS AND ANALYSIS: DIET-HD will recruit approximately 10?000 adults who have ESKD treated by clinics administered by a single dialysis provider in Argentina, France, Germany, Hungary, Italy, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Spain, Sweden and Turkey. Recruitment will take place between March 2014 and June 2015. The study has currently recruited 8000 participants who have completed baseline data. Nutritional intake and dietary patterns will be measured using the Global Allergy and Asthma European Network (GA(2)LEN) food frequency questionnaire. The primary dietary exposures will be n-3 and n-6 polyunsaturated fatty acid consumption. The primary outcome will be cardiovascular mortality and secondary outcomes will be all-cause mortality, infection-related mortality and hospitalisation.
ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: The study is approved by the relevant Ethics Committees in participating countries. All participants will provide written informed consent and be free to withdraw their data at any time. The findings of the study will be disseminated through peer-reviewed journals, conference presentations and to participants via regular newsletters. We expect that the DIET-HD study will inform large pragmatic trials of nutrition or dietary interventions in the setting of advanced kidney disease.

PMID: 25795691 [PubMed – as supplied by publisher]

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Identifying barriers to chronic disease reporting in Chicago Public Schools: a mixed-methods approach.

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Identifying barriers to chronic disease reporting in Chicago Public Schools: a mixed-methods approach.

BMC Public Health. 2014 Dec 6;14(1):1250

Authors: Rivkina V, Tapke DE, Cardenas LD, Harvey-Gintoft B, Whyte SA, Gupta RS

Abstract
BACKGROUND: Chronic disease among school-aged children is a public health concern, particularly for asthma and food allergy. In Chicago Public Schools (CPS), rates of asthma and food allergy among students are underreported. The aim of this study was to determine the barriers to chronic disease reporting as experienced by CPS parents and school nurses.
METHODS: A mixed-methods approach included focus groups and key informant interviews with parents and school nurses, and a cross-sectional survey was completed by parents. Qualitative data analysis was performed and survey data were analyzed to determine the significant demographic and knowledge variables associated with successfully completing the reporting process.
RESULTS: The three main barriers identified were 1) a lack of parental process knowledge; 2) limited communication from schools; and 3) insufficient availability of school nurses. Parents were significantly more likely to successfully complete the reporting process if they knew about special accommodations for chronic diseases, understood the need for physician verification, and/or knew the school nurse.
CONCLUSIONS: These findings suggest that increasing parental knowledge of the reporting process will allow schools to better identify and manage their students’ chronic conditions. A parent-focused intervention informed by these results has been completed.

PMID: 25481628 [PubMed – as supplied by publisher]

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Comparison of temporal transcriptomic profiles from immature lungs of two rat strains reveals a viral response signature associated with chronic lung dysfunction.

Comparison of temporal transcriptomic profiles from immature lungs of two rat strains reveals a viral response signature associated with chronic lung dysfunction.

PLoS One. 2014;9(12):e112997

Authors: Hines EA, Szakaly RJ, Leng N, Webster AT, Verheyden JM, Lashua AJ, Kendziorski C, Rosenthal LA, Gern JE, Sorkness RL, Sun X, Lemanske RF

Abstract
Early life respiratory viral infections and atopic characteristics are significant risk factors for the development of childhood asthma. It is hypothesized that repeated respiratory viral infections might induce structural remodeling by interfering with the normal process of lung maturation; however, the specific molecular processes that underlie these pathological changes are not understood. To investigate the molecular basis for these changes, we used an established Sendai virus infection model in weanling rats to compare the post-infection transcriptomes of an atopic asthma susceptible strain, Brown Norway, and a non-atopic asthma resistant strain, Fischer 344. Specific to this weanling infection model and not described in adult infection models, Sendai virus in the susceptible, but not the resistant strain, results in morphological abnormalities in distal airways that persist into adulthood. Gene expression data from infected and control lungs across five time points indicated that specific features of the immune response following viral infection were heightened and prolonged in lungs from Brown Norway rats compared with Fischer 344 rats. These features included an increase in macrophage cell number and related gene expression, which then transitioned to an increase in mast cell number and related gene expression. In contrast, infected Fischer F344 lungs exhibited more efficient restoration of the airway epithelial morphology, with transient appearance of basal cell pods near distal airways. Together, these findings indicate that the pronounced macrophage and mast cell responses and abnormal re-epithelialization precede the structural defects that developed and persisted in Brown Norway, but not Fischer 344 lungs.

PMID: 25437859 [PubMed – in process]

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Guest Column: New procedure decreases severity of chronic asthma attacks – Coastal Point

Guest Column: New procedure decreases severity of chronic asthma attacks
Coastal Point
Asthma is a chronic lung disease that can cause the airways to narrow so that less oxygen flows into the lungs. Uncontrolled asthma is serious, as it can cause permanent damage to the airways. Symptoms are wheezing, tightness in the chest, coughing and …

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Resveratrol In Overweight Mild To Moderate Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) Patients (CARMENS-trial)

Conditions:   Pulmonary Disease, Chronic Obstructive;   Overweight
Interventions:   Dietary Supplement: Resveratrol;   Dietary Supplement: Placebo
Sponsors:   Maastricht University Medical Center;   The Netherlands Asthma Foundation;   DSM Nutritional Products, Inc.
Not yet recruiting – verified September 2014

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Asthma Drug Might Relieve Chronic Hives – Nature World News


Nature World News

Asthma Drug Might Relieve Chronic Hives
Nature World News
Omalizumab injection is used to decrease asthma attacks in people with allergic asthma, especially in those whose symptoms don't go away with other steroids. The drug belongs to a class of drugs called monoclonal antibodies and works by blocking the …
Asthma drug may help those with chronic hives19 Action News
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Asthma drug may help those with chronic hives – 19 Action News


Nature World News

Asthma drug may help those with chronic hives
19 Action News
MONDAY, July 21, 2014 (HealthDay News) — A drug already used to treat moderate-to-severe allergic asthma appears to offer relief to people with chronic hives who haven't been helped by standard medications, new research suggests. The prescription …
Asthma Drug Might Relieve Chronic Hives PatientsNature World News
Asthma Drug May Help Chronic HivesMonthly Prescribing Reference

all 10 news articles »

View full post on asthma – Google News

Asthma Drug Might Relieve Chronic Hives Patients – Nature World News


Nature World News

Asthma Drug Might Relieve Chronic Hives Patients
Nature World News
Omalizumab injection is used to decrease asthma attacks in people with allergic asthma, especially in those whose symptoms don't go away with other steroids. The drug belongs to a class of drugs called monoclonal antibodies and works by blocking the …
Asthma Drug May Help Those With Chronic HivesHealthDay

all 6 news articles »

View full post on asthma – Google News