Medicine (RMH) - Research Publications

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    Carpal Tunnel Syndrome in Fabry Disease
    Ghali, J ; Murugasu, A ; Day, T ; Nicholls, K (SPRINGER-VERLAG BERLIN, 2012)
    Carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS) is a common peripheral mononeuropathy affecting up to 4% of the general population, typically women in late middle age. The incidence in patients with Fabry disease (FD) is unclear, but may affect 25% of patients with this X-linked lysosomal storage disease. We report three cases of CTS in young Caucasian male patients with classical FD, who developed CTS symptoms with supportive nerve conduction study (NCS) findings. Two patients had bilateral CTS and two had evidence of concurrent ulnar nerve neuropathy on NCS, suggesting a systemic process contributed to nerve compression. All were receiving enzyme replacement therapy (ERT) and had a moderate burden of FD complications. It is possible that an increase in connective tissue in the intracarpal canal in FD patients may be incited by injury to fibroblasts, via either accumulation of globotriaosylceramide (GL3) or local ischaemia through endothelial injury. The former hypothesis may be a more plausible explanation for the development of CTS, as histology of the flexor retinaculae from our patients has demonstrated fibroblasts with characteristic vacuolation and excessive myxomatous stroma, despite endothelial clearance of GL3 in these patients receiving ERT. CTS should not be overlooked in FD patients and young patients presenting with CTS should be evaluated for an underlying systemic or genetic disorder. Surgical carpal tunnel decompression was effective in our patients, already troubled by long-standing acroparesthesia, in providing sustained relief of symptoms.
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    Gata-3 Negatively Regulates the Tumor-Initiating Capacity of Mammary Luminal Progenitor Cells and Targets the Putative Tumor Suppressor Caspase-14
    Asselin-Labat, M-L ; Sutherland, KD ; Vaillant, F ; Gyorki, DE ; Wu, D ; Holroyd, S ; Breslin, K ; Ward, T ; Shi, W ; Bath, ML ; Deb, S ; Fox, SB ; Smyth, GK ; Lindeman, GJ ; Visvader, JE (AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY, 2011-11)
    The transcription factor Gata-3 is a definitive marker of luminal breast cancers and a key regulator of mammary morphogenesis. Here we have explored a role for Gata-3 in tumor initiation and the underlying cellular mechanisms using a mouse model of "luminal-like" cancer. Loss of a single Gata-3 allele markedly accelerated tumor progression in mice carrying the mouse mammary tumor virus promoter-driven polyomavirus middle T antigen (MMTV-PyMT mice), while overexpression of Gata-3 curtailed tumorigenesis. Through the identification of two distinct luminal progenitor cells in the mammary gland, we demonstrate that Gata-3 haplo-insufficiency increases the tumor-initiating capacity of these progenitors but not the stem cell-enriched population. Overexpression of a conditional Gata-3 transgene in the PyMT model promoted cellular differentiation and led to reduced tumor-initiating capacity as well as diminished angiogenesis. Transcript profiling studies identified caspase-14 as a novel downstream target of Gata-3, in keeping with its roles in differentiation and tumorigenesis. A strong association was evident between GATA-3 and caspase-14 expression in preinvasive ductal carcinoma in situ samples, where GATA-3 also displayed prognostic significance. Overall, these studies identify GATA-3 as an important regulator of tumor initiation through its ability to promote the differentiation of committed luminal progenitor cells.
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    Refugee health update
    Schulz, TR ; Leder, K ; Maloof, T ; Biggs, BA (Medicine Today, 2012-03-01)
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    Prevalence and risk factors for symptoms of common mental disorders in early and late pregnancy in Vietnamese women: A prospective population-based study
    Fisher, J ; Tran, T ; Tran, TD ; Dwyer, T ; Nguyen, T ; Casey, GJ ; Simpson, JA ; Hanieh, S ; Biggs, B-A (Elsevier, 2013-04-05)
    BACKGROUND: Little is known about the prevalence of and risk factors for common mental disorders (CMD) in pregnant women in low-income countries. The aim of this study was to establish the prevalence of and psychosocial risk factors for clinically significant symptoms of CMD in early and late pregnancy in women in rural Viet Nam. METHODS: A population-based sample of women was surveyed in early and late pregnancy. CMD were assessed by the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale-Viet Nam Validation and psychosocial risks by study-specific structured interviews. RESULTS: In total 497/523 (97%) eligible women were recruited and 419 (84%) provided complete data. Prevalence of CMD only in early pregnancy was 22.4% (95% CI 18.4-26.4); only in late pregnancy was 10.7% (95% CI 7.8-13.7) and at both assessment waves was 17.4% (95% CI 13.8-21.1). Non-economic and economic coincidental life adversity, intimate partner violence, past pregnancy loss, and childhood abuse were positively associated with persistent antenatal CMD. Older age, having a preference for the baby's sex, and nulli- or primiparity were risk factors for CMD in early pregnancy. CONCLUSIONS: Persistent antenatal CMD are prevalent in rural areas of Viet Nam. Psychosocial risk factors play a major role in this significant public health problem.
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    Improvements in patient care: videoconferencing to improve access to interpreters during clinical consultations for refugee and immigrant patients
    Schulz, TR ; Leder, K ; Akinci, I ; Biggs, B-A (CSIRO Publishing, 2015)
    OBJECTIVE: To demonstrate the suitability of accessing interpreters via videoconference for medical consultations and to assess doctor and patient perceptions of this compared with either on-site or telephone interpreting. METHODS: We assessed the suitability and acceptability of accessing interpreters via videoconference during out-patient clinical consultations in two situations: (i) when the doctor and patient were in a consulting room at a central hospital and the interpreter sat remotely; and (ii) when the doctor, patient and interpreter were each at separate sites (during a telehealth consultation). The main outcome measures were patient and doctor satisfaction, number of problems recorded and acceptability compared with other methods for accessing an interpreter. RESULTS: Ninety-eight per cent of patients were satisfied overall with the use of an interpreter by video. When comparing videoconference interpreting with telephone interpreting, 82% of patients thought having an interpreter via video was better or much better, 15% thought it was the same and 3% considered it worse. Compared with on-site interpreting, 16% found videoconferencing better or much better, 58% considered it the same and 24% considered it worse or much worse. CONCLUSIONS: The present study has demonstrated that accessing an interpreter via videoconference is well accepted and preferred to telephone interpreting by both doctors and patients.
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    Body Mass Index and Vascular Disease in Men Aged 65 Years and Over: HIMS (Health In Men Study)
    Lacey, B ; Yeap, BB ; Golledge, J ; Lewington, S ; McCaul, KA ; Norman, PE ; Flicker, L ; Almeida, OP ; Hankey, GJ (WILEY, 2017-12)
    BACKGROUND: Understanding the relationship between body mass index (BMI) and vascular disease at older age has become increasingly important in the many countries where both average age and BMI are rising. METHODS AND RESULTS: In this prospective cohort study, 12 203 men (aged ≥65) were recruited in 1996-1999 from the general population in Perth, Australia. To limit reverse causality, analyses excluded those with past vascular disease and the first 4 years of follow-up. During a further 8 (SD3) years of follow-up, there were 1136 first-ever major vascular events (nonfatal myocardial infarction, nonfatal stroke, or death from any vascular cause). Cox regression (adjusted for age, education, and smoking) related BMI at recruitment to incidence of major vascular events. At ages 65 to 94, the lowest risk of major vascular events was at ≈ 22.5 to 25 kg/m2. In the higher BMI range (≥25 kg/m2), 5 kg/m2 higher BMI was associated with 33% higher risk of major vascular events (hazard ratio, 1.33 [95% confidence interval, 1.18-1.49]): 24% higher risk of ischemic heart disease (1.24 [1.06-1.46]); 34% higher risk of stroke (1.34 [1.11-1.63]); and 78% higher risk of other vascular death (1.78 [1.32-2.41]). In the lower BMI range, there were fewer events and no strong evidence of an association (hazard ratio per 5 kg/m2 higher BMI, 0.82 [95% confidence interval, 0.61-1.12]). CONCLUSIONS: In this population of older men, risk of major vascular events was lowest at ≈ 22.5 to 25 kg/m2. Above this range, BMI was strongly related to incidence of major vascular events, with each 5 kg/m2 higher BMI associated with ≈30% higher risk.
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    Physical activity and vascular disease in a prospective cohort study of older men: The Health In Men Study (HIMS)
    Lacey, B ; Golledge, J ; Yeap, BB ; Lewington, S ; Norman, PE ; Flicker, L ; Almeida, OP ; Hankey, GJ (BMC, 2015-12-09)
    BACKGROUND: The dose-response relationship between volume of physical activity and incidence of major vascular events at older age is unclear. We aimed to investigate this association in a cohort of older men. METHODS: For this prospective cohort study, 7564 men aged 65-83 years and without prior vascular disease were recruited in 1996-99 from the general population in Perth, Western Australia. Men were followed up using the Western Australian Data Linkage System to identify deaths and hospitalisations. During mean follow-up of 11 (SD 4) years, there were 1557 first major vascular events: 833 ischaemic heart disease events, 551 stroke events and 173 other vascular events. Cox regression was used to calculate hazard ratios (adjusted for age, education and smoking) for incidence of major vascular events by volume of baseline recreational physical activity (measured in metabolic equivalent [MET] hours per week). RESULTS: Hazard ratios among men who performed 0, 1-14, 15-24, 25-39, ≥40 MET-hours per week of recreational physical activity were 1.00 (95% CI 0.91-1.10; referent), 0.88 (0.79-1.00), 0.81 (0.72-0.91), 0.81 (0.72-0.91) and 0.80 (0.71-0.89), respectively (P(trend) =0.006). The association was slightly attenuated with further adjustment for BMI. There was evidence of stronger associations at older ages and greater intensity of activity, but no evidence of effect modification by smoking, alcohol intake or BMI. There was also no evidence that the association varied by type of vascular event. CONCLUSIONS: Among men aged over 65 years, there was a curvilinear association between recreational physical activity and incidence of major vascular events, with an inverse association up to about 20 MET-hours per week (equivalent to 1 h of non-vigorous, or half an hour of vigorous, physical activity per day) and no evidence of further reductions in risk thereafter.
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    The effects of hormonal changes during menstrual cycle on brain excitability and hand dexterity (A pilot study)
    Zoghi, M ; Vaseghi, B ; Bastani, A ; Jaberzadeh, S ; Galea, M (Elsevier BV, 2015-03)
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    The effects of within session repeated cathodal transcranial direct current stimulation on epileptic patients (a pilot study)
    Zoghi, M ; O’Brien, T ; Kwan, P ; Galea, M ; Jaberzadeh, S (Elsevier BV, 2015-03)
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