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Fecal transfer could be the transplant of youth

Article Type
Changed
Thu, 05/05/2022 - 08:23

 

Fecal matter may be in the fountain of youth

Yes, you read that headline correctly. New research by scientists at Quadram Institute and the University of East Anglia, both in Norwich, England, supports the claim that transferring fecal microbes might actually have some positive effects on reversing the aging process in the eyes, brain, and gut.

How do they know? Mice, of course. In the study, scientists took the gut microbes from older mice and transferred them into the younger mince. The young mice displayed inflamed signs of aging in their guts, brains, and eyes, which, we all know, decline in function as we age. What happens is a chronic inflammation of cells as we get older that can be found in the brain or gut that leads to a degenerative state over time.

Albrecht Fietz/Pixabay

When the older mice received the gut microbes from younger mice, the investigators saw the reverse: Gut, brain, and eye functionality improved. In a way, minimizing the inflammation.

There’s tons of research out there that suggests gut health is the key to a healthy life, but this study points directly to an improvement in brain and vision functionality as a result of the transfer.

Now, we’re not insinuating you get a poo transfer as you reach old age. And the shift to human studies on microbiota replacement therapy is still in the works. But this definitely is a topic to watch and could be a game changer in the age-old quest to bottle youth or at least improve quality of life as we age.

For now, the scientists did find some connections between the beneficial bacteria in the transplants and the human diet that could have similar effects, like changes in the metabolism of certain fats and vitamin that could have effects on the inflammatory cells in the eye and brain.

The more you know!
 

It’s not lying, it’s preemptive truth

Lying is bad. Bold statement, we know, but a true one. After all, God spent an entire commandment telling people not to do the whole bearing false witness thing, and God is generally known for not joking around. He’s a pretty serious dude.

In case you’ve been wandering around the desert for a while and haven’t had wifi, we have a bit of a misinformation problem these days. People lie all the time about a lot of things, and a lot of people believe the lies. According to new research, however, there are also a lot of people who recognize the lies but accept them anyway because they believe that the lies will become true in the future.

Peter Timmerhues/Pixabay

Imagine the following scenario: A friend gets a job he’s not qualified for because he listed a skill he doesn’t have. That’s bad, right? And the people the researchers interviewed agreed, at least initially. But when informed that our friend is planning on obtaining the skill in summer classes in the near future, the study participants became far more willing to excuse the initial lie.

A friend jumping the gun on training he doesn’t have yet is fairly innocuous as far as lying goes, but as the researchers found, this willingness to forgive lies because they could become true extends far further. For example, millions of people do not vote illegally in U.S. elections, nor do White people get approved for mortgages at rates 300% higher than minorities, but when asked to imagine scenarios in which those statements could be true, study participants were less likely to condemn the lie and prevent it from spreading further, especially if their political viewpoints aligned with the respective falsehood.

It seems, then, that while we may aspire to not tell lies, we take after another guy with magic powers who spent too much time in the desert: “What I told you was true, from a certain point of view.
 

 

 

It tastes like feng shui, but it’s not

You know about biomes. You’ve read about various microbiomes. Allow us to introduce you to the envirome,

The envirome “includes all the natural and man-made elements of our environment throughout the lifespan, notably the built environment,” said Robert Schneider, dean of the College of Integrative Medicine at Maharishi International University. Located in – you guessed it – Fairfield, Iowa, and home of the Fighting Transcendentalists. MAHARISHI RULES!

Free-Photos/Pixabay


[Editor’s note: You made that up, right? Well, it really is in Iowa, but they don’t seem to have an athletic program.]

In an effort to maximize the envirome’s potential to improve quality of life, Dr. Schneider and his associates systematically integrated the principles of Maharishi Vastu architecture (MVA) into a comprehensive building system. MVA is “a holistic wellness architectural system that aligns buildings with nature’s intelligence, creating balanced, orderly, and integrated living environments with the goal of improving occupants’ lives,” the university explained in a written statement.

Since “modern medicine now recognizes the powerful effects of the ‘envirome’ on health,” Dr. Schneider said in that statement, the researchers reviewed 40 years’ worth of published studies on MVA’s benefits – an analysis that appears in Global Advances in Health and Medicine.

As far as our homes are concerned, here are some of the things MVA says we should be doing:

  • The headboard of a bed should be oriented to the east or south when you sleep. This will improve mental health.
  • While sitting at a desk or work area, a person should face east or north to improve brain coherence.
  • The main entrance of a house should face east because morning light is superior to afternoon light.

And you were worried about feng shui. Well, forget feng shui. Feng shui is for amateurs. MVA is the way to go. MVA is the GOAT. MAHARISHI RULES!

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Fecal matter may be in the fountain of youth

Yes, you read that headline correctly. New research by scientists at Quadram Institute and the University of East Anglia, both in Norwich, England, supports the claim that transferring fecal microbes might actually have some positive effects on reversing the aging process in the eyes, brain, and gut.

How do they know? Mice, of course. In the study, scientists took the gut microbes from older mice and transferred them into the younger mince. The young mice displayed inflamed signs of aging in their guts, brains, and eyes, which, we all know, decline in function as we age. What happens is a chronic inflammation of cells as we get older that can be found in the brain or gut that leads to a degenerative state over time.

Albrecht Fietz/Pixabay

When the older mice received the gut microbes from younger mice, the investigators saw the reverse: Gut, brain, and eye functionality improved. In a way, minimizing the inflammation.

There’s tons of research out there that suggests gut health is the key to a healthy life, but this study points directly to an improvement in brain and vision functionality as a result of the transfer.

Now, we’re not insinuating you get a poo transfer as you reach old age. And the shift to human studies on microbiota replacement therapy is still in the works. But this definitely is a topic to watch and could be a game changer in the age-old quest to bottle youth or at least improve quality of life as we age.

For now, the scientists did find some connections between the beneficial bacteria in the transplants and the human diet that could have similar effects, like changes in the metabolism of certain fats and vitamin that could have effects on the inflammatory cells in the eye and brain.

The more you know!
 

It’s not lying, it’s preemptive truth

Lying is bad. Bold statement, we know, but a true one. After all, God spent an entire commandment telling people not to do the whole bearing false witness thing, and God is generally known for not joking around. He’s a pretty serious dude.

In case you’ve been wandering around the desert for a while and haven’t had wifi, we have a bit of a misinformation problem these days. People lie all the time about a lot of things, and a lot of people believe the lies. According to new research, however, there are also a lot of people who recognize the lies but accept them anyway because they believe that the lies will become true in the future.

Peter Timmerhues/Pixabay

Imagine the following scenario: A friend gets a job he’s not qualified for because he listed a skill he doesn’t have. That’s bad, right? And the people the researchers interviewed agreed, at least initially. But when informed that our friend is planning on obtaining the skill in summer classes in the near future, the study participants became far more willing to excuse the initial lie.

A friend jumping the gun on training he doesn’t have yet is fairly innocuous as far as lying goes, but as the researchers found, this willingness to forgive lies because they could become true extends far further. For example, millions of people do not vote illegally in U.S. elections, nor do White people get approved for mortgages at rates 300% higher than minorities, but when asked to imagine scenarios in which those statements could be true, study participants were less likely to condemn the lie and prevent it from spreading further, especially if their political viewpoints aligned with the respective falsehood.

It seems, then, that while we may aspire to not tell lies, we take after another guy with magic powers who spent too much time in the desert: “What I told you was true, from a certain point of view.
 

 

 

It tastes like feng shui, but it’s not

You know about biomes. You’ve read about various microbiomes. Allow us to introduce you to the envirome,

The envirome “includes all the natural and man-made elements of our environment throughout the lifespan, notably the built environment,” said Robert Schneider, dean of the College of Integrative Medicine at Maharishi International University. Located in – you guessed it – Fairfield, Iowa, and home of the Fighting Transcendentalists. MAHARISHI RULES!

Free-Photos/Pixabay


[Editor’s note: You made that up, right? Well, it really is in Iowa, but they don’t seem to have an athletic program.]

In an effort to maximize the envirome’s potential to improve quality of life, Dr. Schneider and his associates systematically integrated the principles of Maharishi Vastu architecture (MVA) into a comprehensive building system. MVA is “a holistic wellness architectural system that aligns buildings with nature’s intelligence, creating balanced, orderly, and integrated living environments with the goal of improving occupants’ lives,” the university explained in a written statement.

Since “modern medicine now recognizes the powerful effects of the ‘envirome’ on health,” Dr. Schneider said in that statement, the researchers reviewed 40 years’ worth of published studies on MVA’s benefits – an analysis that appears in Global Advances in Health and Medicine.

As far as our homes are concerned, here are some of the things MVA says we should be doing:

  • The headboard of a bed should be oriented to the east or south when you sleep. This will improve mental health.
  • While sitting at a desk or work area, a person should face east or north to improve brain coherence.
  • The main entrance of a house should face east because morning light is superior to afternoon light.

And you were worried about feng shui. Well, forget feng shui. Feng shui is for amateurs. MVA is the way to go. MVA is the GOAT. MAHARISHI RULES!

 

Fecal matter may be in the fountain of youth

Yes, you read that headline correctly. New research by scientists at Quadram Institute and the University of East Anglia, both in Norwich, England, supports the claim that transferring fecal microbes might actually have some positive effects on reversing the aging process in the eyes, brain, and gut.

How do they know? Mice, of course. In the study, scientists took the gut microbes from older mice and transferred them into the younger mince. The young mice displayed inflamed signs of aging in their guts, brains, and eyes, which, we all know, decline in function as we age. What happens is a chronic inflammation of cells as we get older that can be found in the brain or gut that leads to a degenerative state over time.

Albrecht Fietz/Pixabay

When the older mice received the gut microbes from younger mice, the investigators saw the reverse: Gut, brain, and eye functionality improved. In a way, minimizing the inflammation.

There’s tons of research out there that suggests gut health is the key to a healthy life, but this study points directly to an improvement in brain and vision functionality as a result of the transfer.

Now, we’re not insinuating you get a poo transfer as you reach old age. And the shift to human studies on microbiota replacement therapy is still in the works. But this definitely is a topic to watch and could be a game changer in the age-old quest to bottle youth or at least improve quality of life as we age.

For now, the scientists did find some connections between the beneficial bacteria in the transplants and the human diet that could have similar effects, like changes in the metabolism of certain fats and vitamin that could have effects on the inflammatory cells in the eye and brain.

The more you know!
 

It’s not lying, it’s preemptive truth

Lying is bad. Bold statement, we know, but a true one. After all, God spent an entire commandment telling people not to do the whole bearing false witness thing, and God is generally known for not joking around. He’s a pretty serious dude.

In case you’ve been wandering around the desert for a while and haven’t had wifi, we have a bit of a misinformation problem these days. People lie all the time about a lot of things, and a lot of people believe the lies. According to new research, however, there are also a lot of people who recognize the lies but accept them anyway because they believe that the lies will become true in the future.

Peter Timmerhues/Pixabay

Imagine the following scenario: A friend gets a job he’s not qualified for because he listed a skill he doesn’t have. That’s bad, right? And the people the researchers interviewed agreed, at least initially. But when informed that our friend is planning on obtaining the skill in summer classes in the near future, the study participants became far more willing to excuse the initial lie.

A friend jumping the gun on training he doesn’t have yet is fairly innocuous as far as lying goes, but as the researchers found, this willingness to forgive lies because they could become true extends far further. For example, millions of people do not vote illegally in U.S. elections, nor do White people get approved for mortgages at rates 300% higher than minorities, but when asked to imagine scenarios in which those statements could be true, study participants were less likely to condemn the lie and prevent it from spreading further, especially if their political viewpoints aligned with the respective falsehood.

It seems, then, that while we may aspire to not tell lies, we take after another guy with magic powers who spent too much time in the desert: “What I told you was true, from a certain point of view.
 

 

 

It tastes like feng shui, but it’s not

You know about biomes. You’ve read about various microbiomes. Allow us to introduce you to the envirome,

The envirome “includes all the natural and man-made elements of our environment throughout the lifespan, notably the built environment,” said Robert Schneider, dean of the College of Integrative Medicine at Maharishi International University. Located in – you guessed it – Fairfield, Iowa, and home of the Fighting Transcendentalists. MAHARISHI RULES!

Free-Photos/Pixabay


[Editor’s note: You made that up, right? Well, it really is in Iowa, but they don’t seem to have an athletic program.]

In an effort to maximize the envirome’s potential to improve quality of life, Dr. Schneider and his associates systematically integrated the principles of Maharishi Vastu architecture (MVA) into a comprehensive building system. MVA is “a holistic wellness architectural system that aligns buildings with nature’s intelligence, creating balanced, orderly, and integrated living environments with the goal of improving occupants’ lives,” the university explained in a written statement.

Since “modern medicine now recognizes the powerful effects of the ‘envirome’ on health,” Dr. Schneider said in that statement, the researchers reviewed 40 years’ worth of published studies on MVA’s benefits – an analysis that appears in Global Advances in Health and Medicine.

As far as our homes are concerned, here are some of the things MVA says we should be doing:

  • The headboard of a bed should be oriented to the east or south when you sleep. This will improve mental health.
  • While sitting at a desk or work area, a person should face east or north to improve brain coherence.
  • The main entrance of a house should face east because morning light is superior to afternoon light.

And you were worried about feng shui. Well, forget feng shui. Feng shui is for amateurs. MVA is the way to go. MVA is the GOAT. MAHARISHI RULES!

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CDC flags uptick in hypertensive disorders in pregnancy

Article Type
Changed
Wed, 05/04/2022 - 12:41

Hypertensive disorders in pregnancy affect nearly 16% of women who give birth in U.S. hospitals and appear to be increasing, according to an April 29 report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Older patients and Black women are substantially more likely to experience hypertension in pregnancy, the analysis found.

“Addressing hypertensive disorders in pregnancy is a key strategy in reducing inequities in pregnancy-related mortality,” study coauthor Wanda Barfield, MD, MPH, director of CDC’s Division of Reproductive Health, said in a statement.
 

Age, obesity, diabetes

The overall prevalence of hypertensive disorders in pregnancy increased from 13.3% in 2017 to 15.9% in 2019, the researchers reported in the CDC’s Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report.

The uptick in hypertension coincides with trends toward older maternal age and higher rates of obesity and diabetes, which may explain the increase, they said.

For the study, Dr. Barfield and her colleagues analyzed nationally representative data from the National Inpatient Sample. They identified patients with a diagnosis of chronic hypertension, pregnancy-associated hypertension, or unspecified maternal hypertension during their hospitalization.

Among women aged 45-55 years, the prevalence of hypertension was 31%. Among those aged 35-44 years, it was 18%.

Hypertension diagnoses were more common in women who were Black (20.9%) or American Indian or Alaska Native (16.4%), than in other groups.

Of patients who died during delivery hospitalization, 31.6% had a hypertensive disorder.

The study shows a marked increase in hypertensive disorders over a relatively short time, according to Jane van Dis, MD, of the department of obstetrics and gynecology at the University of Rochester (N.Y.), who was not involved in the research. The phenomenon is consistent with her own experience, she said.

“When I am admitting patients, I’m oftentimes surprised when someone does not have a hypertensive disorder because I feel like the majority of patients these days do,” Dr. van Dis told this news organization.

Dr. Van Dis speculated that factors related to the environment, including air pollution and endocrine disrupters, could contribute to elevated rates of hypertensive disorders.

Natalie Bello, MD, MPH, director of hypertension research at Smidt Heart Institute, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, said rates of hypertension today could be even higher than in the study.

The CDC report relied on pre-COVID data, and the pandemic “increased disparities in health outcomes,” Dr. Bello said in an interview. “I’m worried that in actuality these numbers are an underestimation of the current state of hypertension in pregnancy.”

Dr. Bello, who has studied the need for better training in cardio-obstetrics, applauded Vice President Kamala Harris’ efforts to improve maternal health.

“The racial and geographic disparities that we continue to see in the field are disheartening but should be a call to action to redouble our work to improve maternal outcomes,” Dr. Bello told this news organization. “The good news is that a lot of morbidity related to hypertension can be avoided with timely diagnosis and treatment of blood pressure. However, we need to act to provide all pregnant persons with optimal care.”

Janet Wright, MD, director of CDC’s Division for Heart Disease and Stroke Prevention, said blood pressure home monitoring is a “great example” of a strategy clinicians can use to identify and manage patients with hypertension.

But one approach – self-monitoring blood pressure from home during pregnancy – did not significantly improve the health of pregnant women, according to new results from randomized trials in the United Kingdom.

Trial results published in JAMA show that blood pressure home-monitoring coupled to telemonitoring, as compared with usual care, did not significantly improve blood pressure control among patients with chronic or gestational hypertension.

A second trial published in JAMA that included patients at risk for preeclampsia found that self-monitoring with telemonitoring did not lead to significantly earlier diagnoses of hypertension.

“Individuals at risk for a hypertensive disorder of pregnancy, or with gestational or chronic hypertension, cannot be treated with a single approach,” Malavika Prabhu, MD, with Weill Cornell Medicine, New York, and coauthors write in an editorial accompanying the JAMA studies. Although the data suggest that self-monitoring of blood pressure is practical and tolerated, “More research is needed to determine optimal, high-value, equitable approaches to averting adverse perinatal outcomes associated with hypertensive disorders of pregnancy,” they write.

The CDC study authors and Dr. van Dis have disclosed no relevant financial relationships. Dr. Bello is funded by the National Institutes of Health to study blood pressure monitoring in pregnancy. The JAMA editorial authors disclosed university, government, and corporate grants and work with publishing companies.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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Hypertensive disorders in pregnancy affect nearly 16% of women who give birth in U.S. hospitals and appear to be increasing, according to an April 29 report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Older patients and Black women are substantially more likely to experience hypertension in pregnancy, the analysis found.

“Addressing hypertensive disorders in pregnancy is a key strategy in reducing inequities in pregnancy-related mortality,” study coauthor Wanda Barfield, MD, MPH, director of CDC’s Division of Reproductive Health, said in a statement.
 

Age, obesity, diabetes

The overall prevalence of hypertensive disorders in pregnancy increased from 13.3% in 2017 to 15.9% in 2019, the researchers reported in the CDC’s Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report.

The uptick in hypertension coincides with trends toward older maternal age and higher rates of obesity and diabetes, which may explain the increase, they said.

For the study, Dr. Barfield and her colleagues analyzed nationally representative data from the National Inpatient Sample. They identified patients with a diagnosis of chronic hypertension, pregnancy-associated hypertension, or unspecified maternal hypertension during their hospitalization.

Among women aged 45-55 years, the prevalence of hypertension was 31%. Among those aged 35-44 years, it was 18%.

Hypertension diagnoses were more common in women who were Black (20.9%) or American Indian or Alaska Native (16.4%), than in other groups.

Of patients who died during delivery hospitalization, 31.6% had a hypertensive disorder.

The study shows a marked increase in hypertensive disorders over a relatively short time, according to Jane van Dis, MD, of the department of obstetrics and gynecology at the University of Rochester (N.Y.), who was not involved in the research. The phenomenon is consistent with her own experience, she said.

“When I am admitting patients, I’m oftentimes surprised when someone does not have a hypertensive disorder because I feel like the majority of patients these days do,” Dr. van Dis told this news organization.

Dr. Van Dis speculated that factors related to the environment, including air pollution and endocrine disrupters, could contribute to elevated rates of hypertensive disorders.

Natalie Bello, MD, MPH, director of hypertension research at Smidt Heart Institute, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, said rates of hypertension today could be even higher than in the study.

The CDC report relied on pre-COVID data, and the pandemic “increased disparities in health outcomes,” Dr. Bello said in an interview. “I’m worried that in actuality these numbers are an underestimation of the current state of hypertension in pregnancy.”

Dr. Bello, who has studied the need for better training in cardio-obstetrics, applauded Vice President Kamala Harris’ efforts to improve maternal health.

“The racial and geographic disparities that we continue to see in the field are disheartening but should be a call to action to redouble our work to improve maternal outcomes,” Dr. Bello told this news organization. “The good news is that a lot of morbidity related to hypertension can be avoided with timely diagnosis and treatment of blood pressure. However, we need to act to provide all pregnant persons with optimal care.”

Janet Wright, MD, director of CDC’s Division for Heart Disease and Stroke Prevention, said blood pressure home monitoring is a “great example” of a strategy clinicians can use to identify and manage patients with hypertension.

But one approach – self-monitoring blood pressure from home during pregnancy – did not significantly improve the health of pregnant women, according to new results from randomized trials in the United Kingdom.

Trial results published in JAMA show that blood pressure home-monitoring coupled to telemonitoring, as compared with usual care, did not significantly improve blood pressure control among patients with chronic or gestational hypertension.

A second trial published in JAMA that included patients at risk for preeclampsia found that self-monitoring with telemonitoring did not lead to significantly earlier diagnoses of hypertension.

“Individuals at risk for a hypertensive disorder of pregnancy, or with gestational or chronic hypertension, cannot be treated with a single approach,” Malavika Prabhu, MD, with Weill Cornell Medicine, New York, and coauthors write in an editorial accompanying the JAMA studies. Although the data suggest that self-monitoring of blood pressure is practical and tolerated, “More research is needed to determine optimal, high-value, equitable approaches to averting adverse perinatal outcomes associated with hypertensive disorders of pregnancy,” they write.

The CDC study authors and Dr. van Dis have disclosed no relevant financial relationships. Dr. Bello is funded by the National Institutes of Health to study blood pressure monitoring in pregnancy. The JAMA editorial authors disclosed university, government, and corporate grants and work with publishing companies.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Hypertensive disorders in pregnancy affect nearly 16% of women who give birth in U.S. hospitals and appear to be increasing, according to an April 29 report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Older patients and Black women are substantially more likely to experience hypertension in pregnancy, the analysis found.

“Addressing hypertensive disorders in pregnancy is a key strategy in reducing inequities in pregnancy-related mortality,” study coauthor Wanda Barfield, MD, MPH, director of CDC’s Division of Reproductive Health, said in a statement.
 

Age, obesity, diabetes

The overall prevalence of hypertensive disorders in pregnancy increased from 13.3% in 2017 to 15.9% in 2019, the researchers reported in the CDC’s Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report.

The uptick in hypertension coincides with trends toward older maternal age and higher rates of obesity and diabetes, which may explain the increase, they said.

For the study, Dr. Barfield and her colleagues analyzed nationally representative data from the National Inpatient Sample. They identified patients with a diagnosis of chronic hypertension, pregnancy-associated hypertension, or unspecified maternal hypertension during their hospitalization.

Among women aged 45-55 years, the prevalence of hypertension was 31%. Among those aged 35-44 years, it was 18%.

Hypertension diagnoses were more common in women who were Black (20.9%) or American Indian or Alaska Native (16.4%), than in other groups.

Of patients who died during delivery hospitalization, 31.6% had a hypertensive disorder.

The study shows a marked increase in hypertensive disorders over a relatively short time, according to Jane van Dis, MD, of the department of obstetrics and gynecology at the University of Rochester (N.Y.), who was not involved in the research. The phenomenon is consistent with her own experience, she said.

“When I am admitting patients, I’m oftentimes surprised when someone does not have a hypertensive disorder because I feel like the majority of patients these days do,” Dr. van Dis told this news organization.

Dr. Van Dis speculated that factors related to the environment, including air pollution and endocrine disrupters, could contribute to elevated rates of hypertensive disorders.

Natalie Bello, MD, MPH, director of hypertension research at Smidt Heart Institute, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, said rates of hypertension today could be even higher than in the study.

The CDC report relied on pre-COVID data, and the pandemic “increased disparities in health outcomes,” Dr. Bello said in an interview. “I’m worried that in actuality these numbers are an underestimation of the current state of hypertension in pregnancy.”

Dr. Bello, who has studied the need for better training in cardio-obstetrics, applauded Vice President Kamala Harris’ efforts to improve maternal health.

“The racial and geographic disparities that we continue to see in the field are disheartening but should be a call to action to redouble our work to improve maternal outcomes,” Dr. Bello told this news organization. “The good news is that a lot of morbidity related to hypertension can be avoided with timely diagnosis and treatment of blood pressure. However, we need to act to provide all pregnant persons with optimal care.”

Janet Wright, MD, director of CDC’s Division for Heart Disease and Stroke Prevention, said blood pressure home monitoring is a “great example” of a strategy clinicians can use to identify and manage patients with hypertension.

But one approach – self-monitoring blood pressure from home during pregnancy – did not significantly improve the health of pregnant women, according to new results from randomized trials in the United Kingdom.

Trial results published in JAMA show that blood pressure home-monitoring coupled to telemonitoring, as compared with usual care, did not significantly improve blood pressure control among patients with chronic or gestational hypertension.

A second trial published in JAMA that included patients at risk for preeclampsia found that self-monitoring with telemonitoring did not lead to significantly earlier diagnoses of hypertension.

“Individuals at risk for a hypertensive disorder of pregnancy, or with gestational or chronic hypertension, cannot be treated with a single approach,” Malavika Prabhu, MD, with Weill Cornell Medicine, New York, and coauthors write in an editorial accompanying the JAMA studies. Although the data suggest that self-monitoring of blood pressure is practical and tolerated, “More research is needed to determine optimal, high-value, equitable approaches to averting adverse perinatal outcomes associated with hypertensive disorders of pregnancy,” they write.

The CDC study authors and Dr. van Dis have disclosed no relevant financial relationships. Dr. Bello is funded by the National Institutes of Health to study blood pressure monitoring in pregnancy. The JAMA editorial authors disclosed university, government, and corporate grants and work with publishing companies.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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Seven hours of sleep is ideal for middle aged and older

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Thu, 05/05/2022 - 10:41

Consistently sleeping 7 hours per night was associated with optimal cognitive function and mental health for middle-aged adults, a new study found.

Sleep disturbances are common in older age, and previous studies have shown associations between too much or too little sleep and increased risk of cognitive decline, but the ideal amount of sleep for preserving mental health has not been well described, according to the authors of the new paper.

In the study published in Nature Aging, the team of researchers from China and the United Kingdom reviewed data from the UK Biobank, a national database of individuals in the United Kingdom that includes cognitive assessments, mental health questionnaires, and brain imaging data, as well as genetic information.

Sleep is important for physical and psychological health, and also serves a neuroprotective function by clearing waste products from the brain, lead author Yuzhu Li of Fudan University, Shanghai, China, and colleagues wrote.

The study population included 498,277 participants, aged 38-73 years, who completed touchscreen questionnaires about sleep duration between 2006 and 2010. The average age at baseline was 56.5 years, 54% were female, and the mean sleep duration was 7.15 hours.

The researchers also reviewed brain imaging data and genetic data from 39,692 participants in 2014 to examine the relationships between sleep duration and brain structure and between sleep duration and genetic risk. In addition, 156,884 participants completed an online follow-up mental health questionnaire in 2016-2017 to assess the longitudinal impact of sleep on mental health.

Both excessive and insufficient sleep was associated with impaired cognitive performance, evidenced by the U-shaped curve found by the researchers in their data analysis, which used quadratic associations.

Specific cognitive functions including pair matching, trail making, prospective memory, and reaction time were significantly impaired with too much or too little sleep, the researchers said. “This demonstrated the positive association of both insufficient and excessive sleep duration with inferior performance on cognitive tasks.”

When the researchers analyzed the association between sleep duration and mental health, sleep duration also showed a U-shaped association with symptoms of anxiety, depression, mental distress, mania, and self-harm, while well-being showed an inverted U-shape. All associations between sleep duration and mental health were statistically significant after controlling for confounding variables (P < .001).

On further analysis (using two-line tests), the researchers determined that consistent sleep duration of approximately 7 hours per night was optimal for cognitive performance and for good mental health.

The researchers also used neuroimaging data to examine the relationship between sleep duration and brain structure. Overall, greater changes were seen in the regions of the brain involved in cognitive processing and memory.

“The most significant cortical volumes nonlinearly associated with sleep duration included the precentral cortex, the superior frontal gyrus, the lateral orbitofrontal cortex, the pars orbitalis, the frontal pole, and the middle temporal cortex,” the researchers wrote (P < .05 for all).

The association between sleep duration and cognitive function diminished among individuals older than 65 years, compared with those aged approximately 40 years, which suggests that optimal sleep duration may be more beneficial in middle age, the researchers noted. However, no similar impact of age was seen for mental health. For brain structure, the nonlinear relationship between sleep duration and cortical volumes was greatest in those aged 44-59 years, and gradually flattened with older age.
 

 

 

Research supports sleep discussions with patients

“Primary care physicians can use this study in their discussions with middle-aged and older patients to recommend optimal sleep duration and measures to achieve this sleep target,” Noel Deep, MD, a general internist in group practice in Antigo, Wisc., who was not involved in the study, said in an interview.

Dr. Noel Deep

“This study is important because it demonstrated that both inadequate and excessive sleep patterns were associated with cognitive and mental health changes,” said Dr. Deep. “It supported previous observations of cognitive decline and mental health disorders being linked to disturbed sleep. But this study was unique because it provides data supporting an optimal sleep duration of 7 hours and the ill effects of both insufficient and excessive sleep duration.

“The usual thought process has been to assume that older individuals may not require as much sleep as the younger individuals, but this study supports an optimal time duration of sleep of 7 hours that benefits the older individuals. It was also interesting to note the mental health effects caused by the inadequate and excessive sleep durations,” he added.

As for additional research, “I would like to look into the quality of the sleep, in addition to the duration of sleep,” said Dr. Deep. For example, whether the excessive sleep was caused by poor quality sleep or fragmented sleep leading to the structural and subsequent cognitive decline.
 

Study limitations

“The current study relied on self-reporting of the sleep duration and was not observed and recorded data,” Dr. Deep noted. “It would also be beneficial to not only rely on healthy volunteers reporting the sleep duration, but also obtain sleep data from individuals with known brain disorders.”

The study findings were limited by several other factors, including the use of total sleep duration only, without other measures of sleep hygiene, the researchers noted. More research is needed to investigate the mechanisms driving the association between too much and not enough sleep and poor mental health and cognitive function.

The study was supported by the National Key R&D Program of China, the Shanghai Municipal Science and Technology Major Project, the Shanghai Center for Brain Science and Brain-Inspired Technology, the 111 Project, the National Natural Sciences Foundation of China and the Shanghai Rising Star Program.

The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose. Dr. Deep had no financial conflicts to disclose, but serves on the editorial advisory board of Internal Medicine News.
 

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Consistently sleeping 7 hours per night was associated with optimal cognitive function and mental health for middle-aged adults, a new study found.

Sleep disturbances are common in older age, and previous studies have shown associations between too much or too little sleep and increased risk of cognitive decline, but the ideal amount of sleep for preserving mental health has not been well described, according to the authors of the new paper.

In the study published in Nature Aging, the team of researchers from China and the United Kingdom reviewed data from the UK Biobank, a national database of individuals in the United Kingdom that includes cognitive assessments, mental health questionnaires, and brain imaging data, as well as genetic information.

Sleep is important for physical and psychological health, and also serves a neuroprotective function by clearing waste products from the brain, lead author Yuzhu Li of Fudan University, Shanghai, China, and colleagues wrote.

The study population included 498,277 participants, aged 38-73 years, who completed touchscreen questionnaires about sleep duration between 2006 and 2010. The average age at baseline was 56.5 years, 54% were female, and the mean sleep duration was 7.15 hours.

The researchers also reviewed brain imaging data and genetic data from 39,692 participants in 2014 to examine the relationships between sleep duration and brain structure and between sleep duration and genetic risk. In addition, 156,884 participants completed an online follow-up mental health questionnaire in 2016-2017 to assess the longitudinal impact of sleep on mental health.

Both excessive and insufficient sleep was associated with impaired cognitive performance, evidenced by the U-shaped curve found by the researchers in their data analysis, which used quadratic associations.

Specific cognitive functions including pair matching, trail making, prospective memory, and reaction time were significantly impaired with too much or too little sleep, the researchers said. “This demonstrated the positive association of both insufficient and excessive sleep duration with inferior performance on cognitive tasks.”

When the researchers analyzed the association between sleep duration and mental health, sleep duration also showed a U-shaped association with symptoms of anxiety, depression, mental distress, mania, and self-harm, while well-being showed an inverted U-shape. All associations between sleep duration and mental health were statistically significant after controlling for confounding variables (P < .001).

On further analysis (using two-line tests), the researchers determined that consistent sleep duration of approximately 7 hours per night was optimal for cognitive performance and for good mental health.

The researchers also used neuroimaging data to examine the relationship between sleep duration and brain structure. Overall, greater changes were seen in the regions of the brain involved in cognitive processing and memory.

“The most significant cortical volumes nonlinearly associated with sleep duration included the precentral cortex, the superior frontal gyrus, the lateral orbitofrontal cortex, the pars orbitalis, the frontal pole, and the middle temporal cortex,” the researchers wrote (P < .05 for all).

The association between sleep duration and cognitive function diminished among individuals older than 65 years, compared with those aged approximately 40 years, which suggests that optimal sleep duration may be more beneficial in middle age, the researchers noted. However, no similar impact of age was seen for mental health. For brain structure, the nonlinear relationship between sleep duration and cortical volumes was greatest in those aged 44-59 years, and gradually flattened with older age.
 

 

 

Research supports sleep discussions with patients

“Primary care physicians can use this study in their discussions with middle-aged and older patients to recommend optimal sleep duration and measures to achieve this sleep target,” Noel Deep, MD, a general internist in group practice in Antigo, Wisc., who was not involved in the study, said in an interview.

Dr. Noel Deep

“This study is important because it demonstrated that both inadequate and excessive sleep patterns were associated with cognitive and mental health changes,” said Dr. Deep. “It supported previous observations of cognitive decline and mental health disorders being linked to disturbed sleep. But this study was unique because it provides data supporting an optimal sleep duration of 7 hours and the ill effects of both insufficient and excessive sleep duration.

“The usual thought process has been to assume that older individuals may not require as much sleep as the younger individuals, but this study supports an optimal time duration of sleep of 7 hours that benefits the older individuals. It was also interesting to note the mental health effects caused by the inadequate and excessive sleep durations,” he added.

As for additional research, “I would like to look into the quality of the sleep, in addition to the duration of sleep,” said Dr. Deep. For example, whether the excessive sleep was caused by poor quality sleep or fragmented sleep leading to the structural and subsequent cognitive decline.
 

Study limitations

“The current study relied on self-reporting of the sleep duration and was not observed and recorded data,” Dr. Deep noted. “It would also be beneficial to not only rely on healthy volunteers reporting the sleep duration, but also obtain sleep data from individuals with known brain disorders.”

The study findings were limited by several other factors, including the use of total sleep duration only, without other measures of sleep hygiene, the researchers noted. More research is needed to investigate the mechanisms driving the association between too much and not enough sleep and poor mental health and cognitive function.

The study was supported by the National Key R&D Program of China, the Shanghai Municipal Science and Technology Major Project, the Shanghai Center for Brain Science and Brain-Inspired Technology, the 111 Project, the National Natural Sciences Foundation of China and the Shanghai Rising Star Program.

The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose. Dr. Deep had no financial conflicts to disclose, but serves on the editorial advisory board of Internal Medicine News.
 

Consistently sleeping 7 hours per night was associated with optimal cognitive function and mental health for middle-aged adults, a new study found.

Sleep disturbances are common in older age, and previous studies have shown associations between too much or too little sleep and increased risk of cognitive decline, but the ideal amount of sleep for preserving mental health has not been well described, according to the authors of the new paper.

In the study published in Nature Aging, the team of researchers from China and the United Kingdom reviewed data from the UK Biobank, a national database of individuals in the United Kingdom that includes cognitive assessments, mental health questionnaires, and brain imaging data, as well as genetic information.

Sleep is important for physical and psychological health, and also serves a neuroprotective function by clearing waste products from the brain, lead author Yuzhu Li of Fudan University, Shanghai, China, and colleagues wrote.

The study population included 498,277 participants, aged 38-73 years, who completed touchscreen questionnaires about sleep duration between 2006 and 2010. The average age at baseline was 56.5 years, 54% were female, and the mean sleep duration was 7.15 hours.

The researchers also reviewed brain imaging data and genetic data from 39,692 participants in 2014 to examine the relationships between sleep duration and brain structure and between sleep duration and genetic risk. In addition, 156,884 participants completed an online follow-up mental health questionnaire in 2016-2017 to assess the longitudinal impact of sleep on mental health.

Both excessive and insufficient sleep was associated with impaired cognitive performance, evidenced by the U-shaped curve found by the researchers in their data analysis, which used quadratic associations.

Specific cognitive functions including pair matching, trail making, prospective memory, and reaction time were significantly impaired with too much or too little sleep, the researchers said. “This demonstrated the positive association of both insufficient and excessive sleep duration with inferior performance on cognitive tasks.”

When the researchers analyzed the association between sleep duration and mental health, sleep duration also showed a U-shaped association with symptoms of anxiety, depression, mental distress, mania, and self-harm, while well-being showed an inverted U-shape. All associations between sleep duration and mental health were statistically significant after controlling for confounding variables (P < .001).

On further analysis (using two-line tests), the researchers determined that consistent sleep duration of approximately 7 hours per night was optimal for cognitive performance and for good mental health.

The researchers also used neuroimaging data to examine the relationship between sleep duration and brain structure. Overall, greater changes were seen in the regions of the brain involved in cognitive processing and memory.

“The most significant cortical volumes nonlinearly associated with sleep duration included the precentral cortex, the superior frontal gyrus, the lateral orbitofrontal cortex, the pars orbitalis, the frontal pole, and the middle temporal cortex,” the researchers wrote (P < .05 for all).

The association between sleep duration and cognitive function diminished among individuals older than 65 years, compared with those aged approximately 40 years, which suggests that optimal sleep duration may be more beneficial in middle age, the researchers noted. However, no similar impact of age was seen for mental health. For brain structure, the nonlinear relationship between sleep duration and cortical volumes was greatest in those aged 44-59 years, and gradually flattened with older age.
 

 

 

Research supports sleep discussions with patients

“Primary care physicians can use this study in their discussions with middle-aged and older patients to recommend optimal sleep duration and measures to achieve this sleep target,” Noel Deep, MD, a general internist in group practice in Antigo, Wisc., who was not involved in the study, said in an interview.

Dr. Noel Deep

“This study is important because it demonstrated that both inadequate and excessive sleep patterns were associated with cognitive and mental health changes,” said Dr. Deep. “It supported previous observations of cognitive decline and mental health disorders being linked to disturbed sleep. But this study was unique because it provides data supporting an optimal sleep duration of 7 hours and the ill effects of both insufficient and excessive sleep duration.

“The usual thought process has been to assume that older individuals may not require as much sleep as the younger individuals, but this study supports an optimal time duration of sleep of 7 hours that benefits the older individuals. It was also interesting to note the mental health effects caused by the inadequate and excessive sleep durations,” he added.

As for additional research, “I would like to look into the quality of the sleep, in addition to the duration of sleep,” said Dr. Deep. For example, whether the excessive sleep was caused by poor quality sleep or fragmented sleep leading to the structural and subsequent cognitive decline.
 

Study limitations

“The current study relied on self-reporting of the sleep duration and was not observed and recorded data,” Dr. Deep noted. “It would also be beneficial to not only rely on healthy volunteers reporting the sleep duration, but also obtain sleep data from individuals with known brain disorders.”

The study findings were limited by several other factors, including the use of total sleep duration only, without other measures of sleep hygiene, the researchers noted. More research is needed to investigate the mechanisms driving the association between too much and not enough sleep and poor mental health and cognitive function.

The study was supported by the National Key R&D Program of China, the Shanghai Municipal Science and Technology Major Project, the Shanghai Center for Brain Science and Brain-Inspired Technology, the 111 Project, the National Natural Sciences Foundation of China and the Shanghai Rising Star Program.

The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose. Dr. Deep had no financial conflicts to disclose, but serves on the editorial advisory board of Internal Medicine News.
 

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Severe COVID-19 adds 20 years of cognitive aging: Study

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Wed, 05/11/2022 - 11:07

Cognitive impairment from severe COVID-19 is equivalent to 20 years of aging, report scientists behind a new study, adding that the impairment is “equivalent to losing 10 IQ points.”

In their study, published in eClinicalMedicine, a team of scientists from the University of Cambridge and Imperial College London said there is growing evidence that COVID-19 can cause lasting cognitive and mental health problems. Patients report fatigue, “brain fog,” problems recalling words, sleep disturbances, anxiety, and even posttraumatic stress disorder months after infection.

The researchers analyzed data from 46 individuals who received critical care for COVID-19 at Addenbrooke’s Hospital between March and July 2020 (27 females, 19 males, mean age 51 years, 16 of whom had mechanical ventilation) and were recruited to the NIHR COVID-19 BioResource project.

At an average of 6 months after acute COVID-19 illness, the study participants underwent detailed computerized cognitive tests via the Cognitron platform,  comprising eight tasks deployed on an iPad measuring mental function such as memory, attention, and reasoning. Also assessed were anxiety, depression, and posttraumatic stress disorder via standard mood, anxiety, and posttraumatic stress scales – specifically the Generalized Anxiety Disorder 7 (GAD-7), the Patient Health Questionnaire 9 (PHQ-9), and the PTSD Checklist for Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders 5 (PCL-5). Their data were compared against 460 controls – matched for age, sex, education, and first language – and the pattern of deficits across tasks was qualitatively compared with normal age-related decline and early-stage dementia.
 

Less accurate and slower response times

The authors highlighted how this was the first time a “rigorous assessment and comparison” had been carried out in relation to the after-effects of severe COVID-19.

“Cognitive impairment is common to a wide range of neurological disorders, including dementia, and even routine aging, but the patterns we saw – the cognitive ‘fingerprint’ of COVID-19 – was distinct from all of these,” said David Menon, MD, division of anesthesia at the University of Cambridge, England, and the study’s senior author.

The scientists found that COVID-19 survivors were less accurate and had slower response times than the control population, and added that survivors scored particularly poorly on verbal analogical reasoning and showed slower processing speeds.

Critically, the scale of the cognitive deficits correlated with acute illness severity, but not fatigue or mental health status at the time of cognitive assessment, said the authors.
 

Recovery ‘at best gradual’

The effects were strongest for those with more severe acute illness, and who required mechanical ventilation, said the authors, who found that acute illness severity was “better at predicting the cognitive deficits.”

The authors pointed out how these deficits were still detectable when patients were followed up 6 months later, and that, although patients’ scores and reaction times began to improve over time, any recovery was “at best gradual” and likely to be influenced by factors such as illness severity and its neurological or psychological impacts.

“We followed some patients up as late as 10 months after their acute infection, so were able to see a very slow improvement,” Dr. Menon said. He explained how, while this improvement was not statistically significant, it was “at least heading in the right direction.”

However, he warned it is very possible that some of these individuals “will never fully recover.”

The cognitive deficits observed may be due to several factors in combination, said the authors, including inadequate oxygen or blood supply to the brain, blockage of large or small blood vessels due to clotting, and microscopic bleeds. They highlighted how the most important mechanism, however, may be “damage caused by the body’s own inflammatory response and immune system.”

Adam Hampshire, PhD, of the department of brain sciences at Imperial College London, one of the study’s authors, described how around 40,000 people have been through intensive care with COVID-19 in England alone, with many more despite having been very sick not admitted to hospital. This means there is a “large number of people out there still experiencing problems with cognition many months later,” he said. “We urgently need to look at what can be done to help these people.”

A version of this article first appeared on Univadis.

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Cognitive impairment from severe COVID-19 is equivalent to 20 years of aging, report scientists behind a new study, adding that the impairment is “equivalent to losing 10 IQ points.”

In their study, published in eClinicalMedicine, a team of scientists from the University of Cambridge and Imperial College London said there is growing evidence that COVID-19 can cause lasting cognitive and mental health problems. Patients report fatigue, “brain fog,” problems recalling words, sleep disturbances, anxiety, and even posttraumatic stress disorder months after infection.

The researchers analyzed data from 46 individuals who received critical care for COVID-19 at Addenbrooke’s Hospital between March and July 2020 (27 females, 19 males, mean age 51 years, 16 of whom had mechanical ventilation) and were recruited to the NIHR COVID-19 BioResource project.

At an average of 6 months after acute COVID-19 illness, the study participants underwent detailed computerized cognitive tests via the Cognitron platform,  comprising eight tasks deployed on an iPad measuring mental function such as memory, attention, and reasoning. Also assessed were anxiety, depression, and posttraumatic stress disorder via standard mood, anxiety, and posttraumatic stress scales – specifically the Generalized Anxiety Disorder 7 (GAD-7), the Patient Health Questionnaire 9 (PHQ-9), and the PTSD Checklist for Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders 5 (PCL-5). Their data were compared against 460 controls – matched for age, sex, education, and first language – and the pattern of deficits across tasks was qualitatively compared with normal age-related decline and early-stage dementia.
 

Less accurate and slower response times

The authors highlighted how this was the first time a “rigorous assessment and comparison” had been carried out in relation to the after-effects of severe COVID-19.

“Cognitive impairment is common to a wide range of neurological disorders, including dementia, and even routine aging, but the patterns we saw – the cognitive ‘fingerprint’ of COVID-19 – was distinct from all of these,” said David Menon, MD, division of anesthesia at the University of Cambridge, England, and the study’s senior author.

The scientists found that COVID-19 survivors were less accurate and had slower response times than the control population, and added that survivors scored particularly poorly on verbal analogical reasoning and showed slower processing speeds.

Critically, the scale of the cognitive deficits correlated with acute illness severity, but not fatigue or mental health status at the time of cognitive assessment, said the authors.
 

Recovery ‘at best gradual’

The effects were strongest for those with more severe acute illness, and who required mechanical ventilation, said the authors, who found that acute illness severity was “better at predicting the cognitive deficits.”

The authors pointed out how these deficits were still detectable when patients were followed up 6 months later, and that, although patients’ scores and reaction times began to improve over time, any recovery was “at best gradual” and likely to be influenced by factors such as illness severity and its neurological or psychological impacts.

“We followed some patients up as late as 10 months after their acute infection, so were able to see a very slow improvement,” Dr. Menon said. He explained how, while this improvement was not statistically significant, it was “at least heading in the right direction.”

However, he warned it is very possible that some of these individuals “will never fully recover.”

The cognitive deficits observed may be due to several factors in combination, said the authors, including inadequate oxygen or blood supply to the brain, blockage of large or small blood vessels due to clotting, and microscopic bleeds. They highlighted how the most important mechanism, however, may be “damage caused by the body’s own inflammatory response and immune system.”

Adam Hampshire, PhD, of the department of brain sciences at Imperial College London, one of the study’s authors, described how around 40,000 people have been through intensive care with COVID-19 in England alone, with many more despite having been very sick not admitted to hospital. This means there is a “large number of people out there still experiencing problems with cognition many months later,” he said. “We urgently need to look at what can be done to help these people.”

A version of this article first appeared on Univadis.

Cognitive impairment from severe COVID-19 is equivalent to 20 years of aging, report scientists behind a new study, adding that the impairment is “equivalent to losing 10 IQ points.”

In their study, published in eClinicalMedicine, a team of scientists from the University of Cambridge and Imperial College London said there is growing evidence that COVID-19 can cause lasting cognitive and mental health problems. Patients report fatigue, “brain fog,” problems recalling words, sleep disturbances, anxiety, and even posttraumatic stress disorder months after infection.

The researchers analyzed data from 46 individuals who received critical care for COVID-19 at Addenbrooke’s Hospital between March and July 2020 (27 females, 19 males, mean age 51 years, 16 of whom had mechanical ventilation) and were recruited to the NIHR COVID-19 BioResource project.

At an average of 6 months after acute COVID-19 illness, the study participants underwent detailed computerized cognitive tests via the Cognitron platform,  comprising eight tasks deployed on an iPad measuring mental function such as memory, attention, and reasoning. Also assessed were anxiety, depression, and posttraumatic stress disorder via standard mood, anxiety, and posttraumatic stress scales – specifically the Generalized Anxiety Disorder 7 (GAD-7), the Patient Health Questionnaire 9 (PHQ-9), and the PTSD Checklist for Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders 5 (PCL-5). Their data were compared against 460 controls – matched for age, sex, education, and first language – and the pattern of deficits across tasks was qualitatively compared with normal age-related decline and early-stage dementia.
 

Less accurate and slower response times

The authors highlighted how this was the first time a “rigorous assessment and comparison” had been carried out in relation to the after-effects of severe COVID-19.

“Cognitive impairment is common to a wide range of neurological disorders, including dementia, and even routine aging, but the patterns we saw – the cognitive ‘fingerprint’ of COVID-19 – was distinct from all of these,” said David Menon, MD, division of anesthesia at the University of Cambridge, England, and the study’s senior author.

The scientists found that COVID-19 survivors were less accurate and had slower response times than the control population, and added that survivors scored particularly poorly on verbal analogical reasoning and showed slower processing speeds.

Critically, the scale of the cognitive deficits correlated with acute illness severity, but not fatigue or mental health status at the time of cognitive assessment, said the authors.
 

Recovery ‘at best gradual’

The effects were strongest for those with more severe acute illness, and who required mechanical ventilation, said the authors, who found that acute illness severity was “better at predicting the cognitive deficits.”

The authors pointed out how these deficits were still detectable when patients were followed up 6 months later, and that, although patients’ scores and reaction times began to improve over time, any recovery was “at best gradual” and likely to be influenced by factors such as illness severity and its neurological or psychological impacts.

“We followed some patients up as late as 10 months after their acute infection, so were able to see a very slow improvement,” Dr. Menon said. He explained how, while this improvement was not statistically significant, it was “at least heading in the right direction.”

However, he warned it is very possible that some of these individuals “will never fully recover.”

The cognitive deficits observed may be due to several factors in combination, said the authors, including inadequate oxygen or blood supply to the brain, blockage of large or small blood vessels due to clotting, and microscopic bleeds. They highlighted how the most important mechanism, however, may be “damage caused by the body’s own inflammatory response and immune system.”

Adam Hampshire, PhD, of the department of brain sciences at Imperial College London, one of the study’s authors, described how around 40,000 people have been through intensive care with COVID-19 in England alone, with many more despite having been very sick not admitted to hospital. This means there is a “large number of people out there still experiencing problems with cognition many months later,” he said. “We urgently need to look at what can be done to help these people.”

A version of this article first appeared on Univadis.

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Abortion politics lead to power struggles over family planning grants

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Wed, 05/04/2022 - 09:09

BOZEMAN, Mont. – In a busy downtown coffee shop, a drawing of a ski lift with intrauterine devices for chairs draws the eyes of sleepy customers getting their morning underway with a caffeine jolt.

The flyer touts the services of Bridgercare, a nonprofit reproductive health clinic a few miles up the road. The clinic offers wellness exams, birth control, and LGBTQ+ services – and, starting in April, it oversees the state’s multimillion-dollar share of federal family planning program funding.

In March, Bridgercare beat out the state health department to become administrator of Montana’s $2.3 million Title X program, which helps pay for family planning and preventive health services. The organization applied for the grant because its leaders were concerned about a new state law that sought to restrict which local providers are funded.

What is happening in Montana is the latest example of an ongoing power struggle between nonprofits and conservative-leaning states over who receives federal family planning money. That has intensified in recent years as the Title X program has increasingly become entangled with the politics of abortion.

This year, the federal government set aside $257 million for family planning and preventive care. The providers that get that funding often serve families with low incomes, and Title X is one of the few federal programs in which people without legal permission to be in the United States can participate.

“The program permeates into communities that otherwise would be unreached by public health efforts,” said Rebecca Kreitzer, an associate professor of public policy at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

The Montana Department of Public Health and Human Services controlled the distribution of the state’s Title X funds for decades. Bridgercare sought the administrator role to circumvent a Republican-sponsored law passed last year that required the state to prioritize the money for local health departments and federally qualified health centers. That would have put the nonprofit – which doesn’t provide abortion procedures – and similar organizations at the bottom of the list. The law also banned clinics that perform abortions from receiving Title X funds from the state health department.

Bridgercare Executive Director Stephanie McDowell said the group applied for the grant to try to protect the program from decisions coming out of the state capitol. “Because of the politicization of Title X, we’re seeing how it’s run, swinging back and forth based on partisan leadership,” Ms. McDowell said.

A U.S. Department of Health & Human Services spokesperson, Tara Broido, didn’t answer a question about whether the agency intentionally awarded grants to nonprofits to avoid state politics. Instead, she said in a statement that applicants were evaluated in a competitive process by a panel of independent reviewers based on criteria to deliver high-quality, client-centered services.

Federal law prohibits the money from being used to perform abortions. But it can cover other services provided by groups that offer abortions – the largest and best-known by far is Planned Parenthood. In recent years, conservative politicians have tried to keep such providers from receiving Title X funding.

In some cases, contraception has entered the debate around which family planning services government should help fund. Some abortion opponents have raised concerns that long-lasting forms of birth control, such as IUDs, lead to abortions. Those claims are disputed by reproductive health experts.

In 2019, the Trump administration introduced several new rules for Title X, including disqualifying from receiving the funding family planning clinics that also offered abortion services or referrals. Many clinics across the nation left the program instead of conforming to the rules. Simultaneously, the spread of COVID-19 interrupted routine care. The number of patients served by Title X plummeted.

The Biden administration reversed most of those rules, including allowing providers with abortion services back into the Title X program. States also try to influence the funding’s reach, either through legislation or budget rules.

The current Title X funding cycle is 5 years, and the amount of money available each year could shift based on the state’s network of providers or federal budget changes. Jon Ebelt, a spokesperson for the Montana Department of Public Health and Human Services, didn’t answer when asked whether the state planned to reapply to administer the funding in 2027. He said the department was disappointed with the Biden administration’s “refusal” to renew the state’s funding.

“We recognize, however, that recent proabortion federal rule changes have distorted Title X and conflict with Montana law,” he said.

Conservative states have been tangling with nonprofits and the federal government over Title X funding for more than a decade. In 2011, during the Obama administration, Texas whittled down the state’s family planning spending and prioritized sending the federal money to general primary care providers over reproductive health clinics. As a result, 25% of family planning clinics in Texas closed. In 2013, a nonprofit now called Every Body Texas joined the competition to distribute the state’s Title X dollars and won.

“Filling and rebuilding those holes have taken this last decade, essentially,” said Berna Mason, director of service delivery improvement for Every Body Texas.

In 2019, the governor of Nebraska proposed a budget that would have prohibited the money from going to any organization that provided abortions or referred patients for abortions outside of an emergency. It also would have required that funding recipients be legally and financially separate from such clinics, a restriction that would have gone further than the Trump administration’s rules. Afterward, a family planning council won the right to administer Title X money.

In 2017, the nonprofit Arizona Family Health Partnership lost its status as that state’s only Title X administrator when the state health department was given 25% of the funding to deliver to providers. That came after Arizona lawmakers ordered the department to apply for the funds and distribute them first to state- or county-owned clinics, with the remaining money going to primary care facilities. The change was backed by groups that were opposed to abortion, and reproductive health care providers saw it as an attempt to weaken clinics that offer abortion services.

However, the state left nearly all the money it received untouched, and although it’s still required by law to apply for Title X funding, it hasn’t received a portion of the grant since.

Bré Thomas, CEO of Arizona Family Health Partnership, said that, even though the nonprofit is the sole administrator of the Title X funding again, the threat remains that some or all could be taken away because of politics. “We’re at the will of who’s in charge,” Ms. Thomas said.

Nonprofits say they have an advantage over state agencies in expanding services because they have more flexibility in fundraising and fewer administrative hurdles.

In April, Mississippi nonprofit Converge took over administration of Title X funds, a role the state had held for decades. The organization’s founders said they weren’t worried that conservative politicians would restrict access to services but simply believed they could do a better job. “Service quality was very low, and it was very hard to get appointments,” said cofounder Danielle Lampton.

A Mississippi State Department of Health spokesperson, Liz Sharlot, said the agency looks forward to working with Converge.

In Montana, Bridgercare plans to restore funding to Planned Parenthood clinics that have been cut off from the program since 2019, recruit more health centers to participate, and expand the program’s reach in rural, frontier, and tribal communities using telehealth services, Ms. McDowell said.

The organization’s goal is to increase the number of patients benefiting from the federal program by at least 10% in each year of the 5-year grant cycle. The clinic also plans to apply to keep its Title X role beyond this grant.

“In 5 years, our grant application should be a clear front-runner for funding,” she said. “It’s less about ‘How do we beat someone in 5 years?’ And more about ‘How do we grow this program to serve patients?’”
 

KHN (Kaiser Health News) is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues. Together with Policy Analysis and Polling, KHN is one of the three major operating programs at KFF (Kaiser Family Foundation). KFF is an endowed nonprofit organization providing information on health issues to the nation.

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BOZEMAN, Mont. – In a busy downtown coffee shop, a drawing of a ski lift with intrauterine devices for chairs draws the eyes of sleepy customers getting their morning underway with a caffeine jolt.

The flyer touts the services of Bridgercare, a nonprofit reproductive health clinic a few miles up the road. The clinic offers wellness exams, birth control, and LGBTQ+ services – and, starting in April, it oversees the state’s multimillion-dollar share of federal family planning program funding.

In March, Bridgercare beat out the state health department to become administrator of Montana’s $2.3 million Title X program, which helps pay for family planning and preventive health services. The organization applied for the grant because its leaders were concerned about a new state law that sought to restrict which local providers are funded.

What is happening in Montana is the latest example of an ongoing power struggle between nonprofits and conservative-leaning states over who receives federal family planning money. That has intensified in recent years as the Title X program has increasingly become entangled with the politics of abortion.

This year, the federal government set aside $257 million for family planning and preventive care. The providers that get that funding often serve families with low incomes, and Title X is one of the few federal programs in which people without legal permission to be in the United States can participate.

“The program permeates into communities that otherwise would be unreached by public health efforts,” said Rebecca Kreitzer, an associate professor of public policy at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

The Montana Department of Public Health and Human Services controlled the distribution of the state’s Title X funds for decades. Bridgercare sought the administrator role to circumvent a Republican-sponsored law passed last year that required the state to prioritize the money for local health departments and federally qualified health centers. That would have put the nonprofit – which doesn’t provide abortion procedures – and similar organizations at the bottom of the list. The law also banned clinics that perform abortions from receiving Title X funds from the state health department.

Bridgercare Executive Director Stephanie McDowell said the group applied for the grant to try to protect the program from decisions coming out of the state capitol. “Because of the politicization of Title X, we’re seeing how it’s run, swinging back and forth based on partisan leadership,” Ms. McDowell said.

A U.S. Department of Health & Human Services spokesperson, Tara Broido, didn’t answer a question about whether the agency intentionally awarded grants to nonprofits to avoid state politics. Instead, she said in a statement that applicants were evaluated in a competitive process by a panel of independent reviewers based on criteria to deliver high-quality, client-centered services.

Federal law prohibits the money from being used to perform abortions. But it can cover other services provided by groups that offer abortions – the largest and best-known by far is Planned Parenthood. In recent years, conservative politicians have tried to keep such providers from receiving Title X funding.

In some cases, contraception has entered the debate around which family planning services government should help fund. Some abortion opponents have raised concerns that long-lasting forms of birth control, such as IUDs, lead to abortions. Those claims are disputed by reproductive health experts.

In 2019, the Trump administration introduced several new rules for Title X, including disqualifying from receiving the funding family planning clinics that also offered abortion services or referrals. Many clinics across the nation left the program instead of conforming to the rules. Simultaneously, the spread of COVID-19 interrupted routine care. The number of patients served by Title X plummeted.

The Biden administration reversed most of those rules, including allowing providers with abortion services back into the Title X program. States also try to influence the funding’s reach, either through legislation or budget rules.

The current Title X funding cycle is 5 years, and the amount of money available each year could shift based on the state’s network of providers or federal budget changes. Jon Ebelt, a spokesperson for the Montana Department of Public Health and Human Services, didn’t answer when asked whether the state planned to reapply to administer the funding in 2027. He said the department was disappointed with the Biden administration’s “refusal” to renew the state’s funding.

“We recognize, however, that recent proabortion federal rule changes have distorted Title X and conflict with Montana law,” he said.

Conservative states have been tangling with nonprofits and the federal government over Title X funding for more than a decade. In 2011, during the Obama administration, Texas whittled down the state’s family planning spending and prioritized sending the federal money to general primary care providers over reproductive health clinics. As a result, 25% of family planning clinics in Texas closed. In 2013, a nonprofit now called Every Body Texas joined the competition to distribute the state’s Title X dollars and won.

“Filling and rebuilding those holes have taken this last decade, essentially,” said Berna Mason, director of service delivery improvement for Every Body Texas.

In 2019, the governor of Nebraska proposed a budget that would have prohibited the money from going to any organization that provided abortions or referred patients for abortions outside of an emergency. It also would have required that funding recipients be legally and financially separate from such clinics, a restriction that would have gone further than the Trump administration’s rules. Afterward, a family planning council won the right to administer Title X money.

In 2017, the nonprofit Arizona Family Health Partnership lost its status as that state’s only Title X administrator when the state health department was given 25% of the funding to deliver to providers. That came after Arizona lawmakers ordered the department to apply for the funds and distribute them first to state- or county-owned clinics, with the remaining money going to primary care facilities. The change was backed by groups that were opposed to abortion, and reproductive health care providers saw it as an attempt to weaken clinics that offer abortion services.

However, the state left nearly all the money it received untouched, and although it’s still required by law to apply for Title X funding, it hasn’t received a portion of the grant since.

Bré Thomas, CEO of Arizona Family Health Partnership, said that, even though the nonprofit is the sole administrator of the Title X funding again, the threat remains that some or all could be taken away because of politics. “We’re at the will of who’s in charge,” Ms. Thomas said.

Nonprofits say they have an advantage over state agencies in expanding services because they have more flexibility in fundraising and fewer administrative hurdles.

In April, Mississippi nonprofit Converge took over administration of Title X funds, a role the state had held for decades. The organization’s founders said they weren’t worried that conservative politicians would restrict access to services but simply believed they could do a better job. “Service quality was very low, and it was very hard to get appointments,” said cofounder Danielle Lampton.

A Mississippi State Department of Health spokesperson, Liz Sharlot, said the agency looks forward to working with Converge.

In Montana, Bridgercare plans to restore funding to Planned Parenthood clinics that have been cut off from the program since 2019, recruit more health centers to participate, and expand the program’s reach in rural, frontier, and tribal communities using telehealth services, Ms. McDowell said.

The organization’s goal is to increase the number of patients benefiting from the federal program by at least 10% in each year of the 5-year grant cycle. The clinic also plans to apply to keep its Title X role beyond this grant.

“In 5 years, our grant application should be a clear front-runner for funding,” she said. “It’s less about ‘How do we beat someone in 5 years?’ And more about ‘How do we grow this program to serve patients?’”
 

KHN (Kaiser Health News) is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues. Together with Policy Analysis and Polling, KHN is one of the three major operating programs at KFF (Kaiser Family Foundation). KFF is an endowed nonprofit organization providing information on health issues to the nation.

BOZEMAN, Mont. – In a busy downtown coffee shop, a drawing of a ski lift with intrauterine devices for chairs draws the eyes of sleepy customers getting their morning underway with a caffeine jolt.

The flyer touts the services of Bridgercare, a nonprofit reproductive health clinic a few miles up the road. The clinic offers wellness exams, birth control, and LGBTQ+ services – and, starting in April, it oversees the state’s multimillion-dollar share of federal family planning program funding.

In March, Bridgercare beat out the state health department to become administrator of Montana’s $2.3 million Title X program, which helps pay for family planning and preventive health services. The organization applied for the grant because its leaders were concerned about a new state law that sought to restrict which local providers are funded.

What is happening in Montana is the latest example of an ongoing power struggle between nonprofits and conservative-leaning states over who receives federal family planning money. That has intensified in recent years as the Title X program has increasingly become entangled with the politics of abortion.

This year, the federal government set aside $257 million for family planning and preventive care. The providers that get that funding often serve families with low incomes, and Title X is one of the few federal programs in which people without legal permission to be in the United States can participate.

“The program permeates into communities that otherwise would be unreached by public health efforts,” said Rebecca Kreitzer, an associate professor of public policy at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

The Montana Department of Public Health and Human Services controlled the distribution of the state’s Title X funds for decades. Bridgercare sought the administrator role to circumvent a Republican-sponsored law passed last year that required the state to prioritize the money for local health departments and federally qualified health centers. That would have put the nonprofit – which doesn’t provide abortion procedures – and similar organizations at the bottom of the list. The law also banned clinics that perform abortions from receiving Title X funds from the state health department.

Bridgercare Executive Director Stephanie McDowell said the group applied for the grant to try to protect the program from decisions coming out of the state capitol. “Because of the politicization of Title X, we’re seeing how it’s run, swinging back and forth based on partisan leadership,” Ms. McDowell said.

A U.S. Department of Health & Human Services spokesperson, Tara Broido, didn’t answer a question about whether the agency intentionally awarded grants to nonprofits to avoid state politics. Instead, she said in a statement that applicants were evaluated in a competitive process by a panel of independent reviewers based on criteria to deliver high-quality, client-centered services.

Federal law prohibits the money from being used to perform abortions. But it can cover other services provided by groups that offer abortions – the largest and best-known by far is Planned Parenthood. In recent years, conservative politicians have tried to keep such providers from receiving Title X funding.

In some cases, contraception has entered the debate around which family planning services government should help fund. Some abortion opponents have raised concerns that long-lasting forms of birth control, such as IUDs, lead to abortions. Those claims are disputed by reproductive health experts.

In 2019, the Trump administration introduced several new rules for Title X, including disqualifying from receiving the funding family planning clinics that also offered abortion services or referrals. Many clinics across the nation left the program instead of conforming to the rules. Simultaneously, the spread of COVID-19 interrupted routine care. The number of patients served by Title X plummeted.

The Biden administration reversed most of those rules, including allowing providers with abortion services back into the Title X program. States also try to influence the funding’s reach, either through legislation or budget rules.

The current Title X funding cycle is 5 years, and the amount of money available each year could shift based on the state’s network of providers or federal budget changes. Jon Ebelt, a spokesperson for the Montana Department of Public Health and Human Services, didn’t answer when asked whether the state planned to reapply to administer the funding in 2027. He said the department was disappointed with the Biden administration’s “refusal” to renew the state’s funding.

“We recognize, however, that recent proabortion federal rule changes have distorted Title X and conflict with Montana law,” he said.

Conservative states have been tangling with nonprofits and the federal government over Title X funding for more than a decade. In 2011, during the Obama administration, Texas whittled down the state’s family planning spending and prioritized sending the federal money to general primary care providers over reproductive health clinics. As a result, 25% of family planning clinics in Texas closed. In 2013, a nonprofit now called Every Body Texas joined the competition to distribute the state’s Title X dollars and won.

“Filling and rebuilding those holes have taken this last decade, essentially,” said Berna Mason, director of service delivery improvement for Every Body Texas.

In 2019, the governor of Nebraska proposed a budget that would have prohibited the money from going to any organization that provided abortions or referred patients for abortions outside of an emergency. It also would have required that funding recipients be legally and financially separate from such clinics, a restriction that would have gone further than the Trump administration’s rules. Afterward, a family planning council won the right to administer Title X money.

In 2017, the nonprofit Arizona Family Health Partnership lost its status as that state’s only Title X administrator when the state health department was given 25% of the funding to deliver to providers. That came after Arizona lawmakers ordered the department to apply for the funds and distribute them first to state- or county-owned clinics, with the remaining money going to primary care facilities. The change was backed by groups that were opposed to abortion, and reproductive health care providers saw it as an attempt to weaken clinics that offer abortion services.

However, the state left nearly all the money it received untouched, and although it’s still required by law to apply for Title X funding, it hasn’t received a portion of the grant since.

Bré Thomas, CEO of Arizona Family Health Partnership, said that, even though the nonprofit is the sole administrator of the Title X funding again, the threat remains that some or all could be taken away because of politics. “We’re at the will of who’s in charge,” Ms. Thomas said.

Nonprofits say they have an advantage over state agencies in expanding services because they have more flexibility in fundraising and fewer administrative hurdles.

In April, Mississippi nonprofit Converge took over administration of Title X funds, a role the state had held for decades. The organization’s founders said they weren’t worried that conservative politicians would restrict access to services but simply believed they could do a better job. “Service quality was very low, and it was very hard to get appointments,” said cofounder Danielle Lampton.

A Mississippi State Department of Health spokesperson, Liz Sharlot, said the agency looks forward to working with Converge.

In Montana, Bridgercare plans to restore funding to Planned Parenthood clinics that have been cut off from the program since 2019, recruit more health centers to participate, and expand the program’s reach in rural, frontier, and tribal communities using telehealth services, Ms. McDowell said.

The organization’s goal is to increase the number of patients benefiting from the federal program by at least 10% in each year of the 5-year grant cycle. The clinic also plans to apply to keep its Title X role beyond this grant.

“In 5 years, our grant application should be a clear front-runner for funding,” she said. “It’s less about ‘How do we beat someone in 5 years?’ And more about ‘How do we grow this program to serve patients?’”
 

KHN (Kaiser Health News) is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues. Together with Policy Analysis and Polling, KHN is one of the three major operating programs at KFF (Kaiser Family Foundation). KFF is an endowed nonprofit organization providing information on health issues to the nation.

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When it’s not long, but medium COVID?

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Tue, 05/24/2022 - 15:54

Symptom timelines surrounding COVID infection tend to center on either the immediate 5-day quarantine protocols for acute infection or the long-COVID symptoms that can last a month or potentially far longer.

But some patients report a “middle-range” COVID that will resolve before it becomes long COVID, yet still lasts longer than is typical for viral infections. People may return to work or daily routines, but something is off: What had been simple exercise regimens become onerous. Everyday tasks take more effort.

Does this ill-defined subset point to a “medium COVID?”

Farha Ikramuddin, MD, MHA, a physiatrist and rehabilitation specialist at the University of Minnesota and M Health Fairview in Minneapolis, points out there is no definition or diagnostic code or shared official understanding of a middle category for COVID.

“But am I seeing that? Absolutely,” she said in an interview.

“I have seen patients who are younger, healthier, [and] with not so many comorbidities have either persistence of symptoms or reappearance after the initial infection is done,” she said.

Some patients report they had very low infection or were nonsymptomatic and returned to their normal health fairly quickly after infection. Then a week later they began experiencing fatigue, lost appetite, loss of smell, and feeling full after a few bites, Dr. Ikramuddin said.

Part of the trouble in categorizing the space between returning to normal after a week and having symptoms for months is that organizations can’t agree on a timeline for when symptoms warrant a “long-COVID” label.

For instance, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention defines it as 4 or more weeks after infection. The World Health Organization defines it as starting 3 months after COVID-19 symptom onset.

“I’m seeing ‘medium COVID’ – as one would call it – in younger and healthier patients. I’m also noticing that these symptoms are not severe enough to warrant stopping their job or changing their job schedules,” Dr. Ikramuddin said.

They go back to work, she said, but start noticing something is off.

“I am seeing that.”

“I discharge at least two patients a week from my clinic because they have moved on and no longer have symptoms,” Dr. Ikramuddin said.

In a story from Kaiser Health News published last month, WHYY health reporter Nina Feldman writes: “What I’ve come to think of as my ‘medium COVID’ affected my life. I couldn’t socialize much, drink, or stay up past 9:30 p.m. It took me 10 weeks to go for my first run – I’d been too afraid to try.”

She described a dinner with a friend after ending initial isolation protocols: “One glass of wine left me feeling like I’d had a whole bottle. I was bone-achingly exhausted but couldn’t sleep.”
 

Medical mystery

Dr. Ikramuddin notes the mechanism behind prolonged COVID-19 symptoms is still a medical mystery.

“In one scenario,” she said, “the question is being asked about whether the virus is staying dormant, similar to herpes zoster or HIV.”

“Right now, instead of getting more answers, we’re getting more questions,” Dr. Ikramuddin  said.

Mouhib Naddour, MD, a pulmonary specialist with Sharp HealthCare in San Diego, said he’s seeing that it’s taking some patients who have had COVID longer to recover than it would for other viral infections.

Some patients fall between those recovering within 2-3 weeks and patients having long COVID. Those patients in the gap could be lumped into a middle-range COVID, he told this news organization.

“We try to put things into tables and boxes but it is hard with this disease,” Dr. Naddour said.

He agrees there’s no medical definition for “medium” COVID, but he said the idea should bring hope for patients to know that, if their symptoms are persisting they don’t necessarily have long COVID – and their symptoms may still disappear.

“This is an illness that may take longer to completely recover from,” he said. “The majority of patients we’re seeing in this group could be healthy young patients who get COVID, then 2-3 weeks after they test negative, still have lingering symptoms.”
 

 

 

Common symptoms

Some commonly reported symptoms of those with enduring illness, which often overlap with other stages of COVID, are difficulty breathing, chest tightness, dry cough, chest pain, muscle and joint pain, fatigue, difficulty sleeping, and mood swings, Dr. Naddour said. 

“We need to do an extensive assessment to make sure there’s no other problem causing these symptoms,” he said.

Still, there is no set timeline for the medium-COVID range, he noted, so checking in with a primary care physician is important for people experiencing symptoms.
 

It’s a continuum, not a category

Fernando Carnavali, MD, coordinator for Mount Sinai’s Center for Post-COVID Care in New York, said he is not ready to recognize a separate category for a “medium” COVID.

He noted that science can’t even agree on a name for lasting post-COVID symptoms, whether it’s “long COVID” or “long-haul COVID,” “post-COVID syndrome” or “post-acute sequelae of COVID-19 (PASC ).” There’s no agreed-upon pathophysiology or biomarker.

“That creates these gaps of understanding on where we are,” Dr. Carnavali said in an interview.

He said he understands people’s need to categorize symptoms, but rather than a middle ground he sees a continuum.

It doesn’t mean what others may call COVID’s middle ground doesn’t exist, Dr. Carnavali said: “We are in the infancy of defining this. Trying to classify them may create more anxiety.”

The clinicians interviewed for this story report no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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Symptom timelines surrounding COVID infection tend to center on either the immediate 5-day quarantine protocols for acute infection or the long-COVID symptoms that can last a month or potentially far longer.

But some patients report a “middle-range” COVID that will resolve before it becomes long COVID, yet still lasts longer than is typical for viral infections. People may return to work or daily routines, but something is off: What had been simple exercise regimens become onerous. Everyday tasks take more effort.

Does this ill-defined subset point to a “medium COVID?”

Farha Ikramuddin, MD, MHA, a physiatrist and rehabilitation specialist at the University of Minnesota and M Health Fairview in Minneapolis, points out there is no definition or diagnostic code or shared official understanding of a middle category for COVID.

“But am I seeing that? Absolutely,” she said in an interview.

“I have seen patients who are younger, healthier, [and] with not so many comorbidities have either persistence of symptoms or reappearance after the initial infection is done,” she said.

Some patients report they had very low infection or were nonsymptomatic and returned to their normal health fairly quickly after infection. Then a week later they began experiencing fatigue, lost appetite, loss of smell, and feeling full after a few bites, Dr. Ikramuddin said.

Part of the trouble in categorizing the space between returning to normal after a week and having symptoms for months is that organizations can’t agree on a timeline for when symptoms warrant a “long-COVID” label.

For instance, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention defines it as 4 or more weeks after infection. The World Health Organization defines it as starting 3 months after COVID-19 symptom onset.

“I’m seeing ‘medium COVID’ – as one would call it – in younger and healthier patients. I’m also noticing that these symptoms are not severe enough to warrant stopping their job or changing their job schedules,” Dr. Ikramuddin said.

They go back to work, she said, but start noticing something is off.

“I am seeing that.”

“I discharge at least two patients a week from my clinic because they have moved on and no longer have symptoms,” Dr. Ikramuddin said.

In a story from Kaiser Health News published last month, WHYY health reporter Nina Feldman writes: “What I’ve come to think of as my ‘medium COVID’ affected my life. I couldn’t socialize much, drink, or stay up past 9:30 p.m. It took me 10 weeks to go for my first run – I’d been too afraid to try.”

She described a dinner with a friend after ending initial isolation protocols: “One glass of wine left me feeling like I’d had a whole bottle. I was bone-achingly exhausted but couldn’t sleep.”
 

Medical mystery

Dr. Ikramuddin notes the mechanism behind prolonged COVID-19 symptoms is still a medical mystery.

“In one scenario,” she said, “the question is being asked about whether the virus is staying dormant, similar to herpes zoster or HIV.”

“Right now, instead of getting more answers, we’re getting more questions,” Dr. Ikramuddin  said.

Mouhib Naddour, MD, a pulmonary specialist with Sharp HealthCare in San Diego, said he’s seeing that it’s taking some patients who have had COVID longer to recover than it would for other viral infections.

Some patients fall between those recovering within 2-3 weeks and patients having long COVID. Those patients in the gap could be lumped into a middle-range COVID, he told this news organization.

“We try to put things into tables and boxes but it is hard with this disease,” Dr. Naddour said.

He agrees there’s no medical definition for “medium” COVID, but he said the idea should bring hope for patients to know that, if their symptoms are persisting they don’t necessarily have long COVID – and their symptoms may still disappear.

“This is an illness that may take longer to completely recover from,” he said. “The majority of patients we’re seeing in this group could be healthy young patients who get COVID, then 2-3 weeks after they test negative, still have lingering symptoms.”
 

 

 

Common symptoms

Some commonly reported symptoms of those with enduring illness, which often overlap with other stages of COVID, are difficulty breathing, chest tightness, dry cough, chest pain, muscle and joint pain, fatigue, difficulty sleeping, and mood swings, Dr. Naddour said. 

“We need to do an extensive assessment to make sure there’s no other problem causing these symptoms,” he said.

Still, there is no set timeline for the medium-COVID range, he noted, so checking in with a primary care physician is important for people experiencing symptoms.
 

It’s a continuum, not a category

Fernando Carnavali, MD, coordinator for Mount Sinai’s Center for Post-COVID Care in New York, said he is not ready to recognize a separate category for a “medium” COVID.

He noted that science can’t even agree on a name for lasting post-COVID symptoms, whether it’s “long COVID” or “long-haul COVID,” “post-COVID syndrome” or “post-acute sequelae of COVID-19 (PASC ).” There’s no agreed-upon pathophysiology or biomarker.

“That creates these gaps of understanding on where we are,” Dr. Carnavali said in an interview.

He said he understands people’s need to categorize symptoms, but rather than a middle ground he sees a continuum.

It doesn’t mean what others may call COVID’s middle ground doesn’t exist, Dr. Carnavali said: “We are in the infancy of defining this. Trying to classify them may create more anxiety.”

The clinicians interviewed for this story report no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Symptom timelines surrounding COVID infection tend to center on either the immediate 5-day quarantine protocols for acute infection or the long-COVID symptoms that can last a month or potentially far longer.

But some patients report a “middle-range” COVID that will resolve before it becomes long COVID, yet still lasts longer than is typical for viral infections. People may return to work or daily routines, but something is off: What had been simple exercise regimens become onerous. Everyday tasks take more effort.

Does this ill-defined subset point to a “medium COVID?”

Farha Ikramuddin, MD, MHA, a physiatrist and rehabilitation specialist at the University of Minnesota and M Health Fairview in Minneapolis, points out there is no definition or diagnostic code or shared official understanding of a middle category for COVID.

“But am I seeing that? Absolutely,” she said in an interview.

“I have seen patients who are younger, healthier, [and] with not so many comorbidities have either persistence of symptoms or reappearance after the initial infection is done,” she said.

Some patients report they had very low infection or were nonsymptomatic and returned to their normal health fairly quickly after infection. Then a week later they began experiencing fatigue, lost appetite, loss of smell, and feeling full after a few bites, Dr. Ikramuddin said.

Part of the trouble in categorizing the space between returning to normal after a week and having symptoms for months is that organizations can’t agree on a timeline for when symptoms warrant a “long-COVID” label.

For instance, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention defines it as 4 or more weeks after infection. The World Health Organization defines it as starting 3 months after COVID-19 symptom onset.

“I’m seeing ‘medium COVID’ – as one would call it – in younger and healthier patients. I’m also noticing that these symptoms are not severe enough to warrant stopping their job or changing their job schedules,” Dr. Ikramuddin said.

They go back to work, she said, but start noticing something is off.

“I am seeing that.”

“I discharge at least two patients a week from my clinic because they have moved on and no longer have symptoms,” Dr. Ikramuddin said.

In a story from Kaiser Health News published last month, WHYY health reporter Nina Feldman writes: “What I’ve come to think of as my ‘medium COVID’ affected my life. I couldn’t socialize much, drink, or stay up past 9:30 p.m. It took me 10 weeks to go for my first run – I’d been too afraid to try.”

She described a dinner with a friend after ending initial isolation protocols: “One glass of wine left me feeling like I’d had a whole bottle. I was bone-achingly exhausted but couldn’t sleep.”
 

Medical mystery

Dr. Ikramuddin notes the mechanism behind prolonged COVID-19 symptoms is still a medical mystery.

“In one scenario,” she said, “the question is being asked about whether the virus is staying dormant, similar to herpes zoster or HIV.”

“Right now, instead of getting more answers, we’re getting more questions,” Dr. Ikramuddin  said.

Mouhib Naddour, MD, a pulmonary specialist with Sharp HealthCare in San Diego, said he’s seeing that it’s taking some patients who have had COVID longer to recover than it would for other viral infections.

Some patients fall between those recovering within 2-3 weeks and patients having long COVID. Those patients in the gap could be lumped into a middle-range COVID, he told this news organization.

“We try to put things into tables and boxes but it is hard with this disease,” Dr. Naddour said.

He agrees there’s no medical definition for “medium” COVID, but he said the idea should bring hope for patients to know that, if their symptoms are persisting they don’t necessarily have long COVID – and their symptoms may still disappear.

“This is an illness that may take longer to completely recover from,” he said. “The majority of patients we’re seeing in this group could be healthy young patients who get COVID, then 2-3 weeks after they test negative, still have lingering symptoms.”
 

 

 

Common symptoms

Some commonly reported symptoms of those with enduring illness, which often overlap with other stages of COVID, are difficulty breathing, chest tightness, dry cough, chest pain, muscle and joint pain, fatigue, difficulty sleeping, and mood swings, Dr. Naddour said. 

“We need to do an extensive assessment to make sure there’s no other problem causing these symptoms,” he said.

Still, there is no set timeline for the medium-COVID range, he noted, so checking in with a primary care physician is important for people experiencing symptoms.
 

It’s a continuum, not a category

Fernando Carnavali, MD, coordinator for Mount Sinai’s Center for Post-COVID Care in New York, said he is not ready to recognize a separate category for a “medium” COVID.

He noted that science can’t even agree on a name for lasting post-COVID symptoms, whether it’s “long COVID” or “long-haul COVID,” “post-COVID syndrome” or “post-acute sequelae of COVID-19 (PASC ).” There’s no agreed-upon pathophysiology or biomarker.

“That creates these gaps of understanding on where we are,” Dr. Carnavali said in an interview.

He said he understands people’s need to categorize symptoms, but rather than a middle ground he sees a continuum.

It doesn’t mean what others may call COVID’s middle ground doesn’t exist, Dr. Carnavali said: “We are in the infancy of defining this. Trying to classify them may create more anxiety.”

The clinicians interviewed for this story report no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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Supreme Court appears ready to overturn Roe

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Tue, 05/03/2022 - 11:07
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Supreme Court appears ready to overturn Roe

The U.S. Supreme Court may be on the cusp of overturning 50 years of American abortion law, according to a draft opinion in a Mississippi case that was leaked to the news outlet Politico.

The draft opinion, written by Justice Samuel Alito, outlines ways a presumed majority of the nine justices believes the 1973 ruling in Roe v. Wade was incorrect. If signed by a majority of the court, the ruling would eliminate the protections for abortion rights that Roe provided and give the 50 states the power to legislate abortion.

“We hold that Roe and Casey must be overruled,” Justice Alito writes in the draft. “It is time to heed the Constitution and return the issue of abortion to the people’s elected representatives.”

While a final ruling was not expected from the court until June, the leaked draft – a nearly unprecedented breach of the court’s internal workings – gives a strong signal of the court’s five most conservative members’ decisions. During oral arguments in the case in December, conservative justices appeared prepared to undo at least part of the country’s abortion protections.

President Joe Biden said his administration was already preparing for a potential ruling that struck down federal abortion protections.

The White House, he said in a statement, is working on a “response to the continued attack on abortion and reproductive rights, under a variety of possible outcomes in the cases pending before the Supreme Court. We will be ready when any ruling is issued.”

But if the draft opinion becomes final, he said the fight will move to the states.

“It will fall on our nation’s elected officials at all levels of government to protect a woman’s right to choose,” he said. “And it will fall on voters to elect pro-choice officials this November.”

With more pro-abortion rights members of Congress, it would be possible to pass federal legislation protecting abortion rights, “which I will work to pass and sign into law.”

Should the Alito draft become law, its first impact would be to allow a Mississippi law that bans abortions after 15 weeks to take effect.

But quickly after that, abortions would become illegal in many states. Several conservative-leaning states, mostly in the South and Midwest, have already passed laws severely restricting abortions well beyond what Roe allowed. Should Roe be overturned then, those laws would take effect without the threat of lengthy lawsuits or rulings from lower-court judges who have blocked them.

Nearly half of the states, mostly in the Northeast and West, would likely allow abortion to continue in some way. In fact, several states, including Colorado and Vermont, have already passed laws granting the right to an abortion into state law.

The leaked draft, however, is still a draft, meaning it remains possible Roe survives. Anthony Kreis, PhD, a professor of law at Georgia State University, says that could have been the point of whoever leaked the draft.

“It suggests to me that whoever leaked it knew that public outrage was the last resort to stopping the court from overturning Roe v. Wade and letting states ban all abortions,” Dr. Kreis said. “The danger that abortions won’t be legal in most of the country is very real.”

A version of this article first appeared on WebMD.com.

This article was updated 5/3/22.

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The U.S. Supreme Court may be on the cusp of overturning 50 years of American abortion law, according to a draft opinion in a Mississippi case that was leaked to the news outlet Politico.

The draft opinion, written by Justice Samuel Alito, outlines ways a presumed majority of the nine justices believes the 1973 ruling in Roe v. Wade was incorrect. If signed by a majority of the court, the ruling would eliminate the protections for abortion rights that Roe provided and give the 50 states the power to legislate abortion.

“We hold that Roe and Casey must be overruled,” Justice Alito writes in the draft. “It is time to heed the Constitution and return the issue of abortion to the people’s elected representatives.”

While a final ruling was not expected from the court until June, the leaked draft – a nearly unprecedented breach of the court’s internal workings – gives a strong signal of the court’s five most conservative members’ decisions. During oral arguments in the case in December, conservative justices appeared prepared to undo at least part of the country’s abortion protections.

President Joe Biden said his administration was already preparing for a potential ruling that struck down federal abortion protections.

The White House, he said in a statement, is working on a “response to the continued attack on abortion and reproductive rights, under a variety of possible outcomes in the cases pending before the Supreme Court. We will be ready when any ruling is issued.”

But if the draft opinion becomes final, he said the fight will move to the states.

“It will fall on our nation’s elected officials at all levels of government to protect a woman’s right to choose,” he said. “And it will fall on voters to elect pro-choice officials this November.”

With more pro-abortion rights members of Congress, it would be possible to pass federal legislation protecting abortion rights, “which I will work to pass and sign into law.”

Should the Alito draft become law, its first impact would be to allow a Mississippi law that bans abortions after 15 weeks to take effect.

But quickly after that, abortions would become illegal in many states. Several conservative-leaning states, mostly in the South and Midwest, have already passed laws severely restricting abortions well beyond what Roe allowed. Should Roe be overturned then, those laws would take effect without the threat of lengthy lawsuits or rulings from lower-court judges who have blocked them.

Nearly half of the states, mostly in the Northeast and West, would likely allow abortion to continue in some way. In fact, several states, including Colorado and Vermont, have already passed laws granting the right to an abortion into state law.

The leaked draft, however, is still a draft, meaning it remains possible Roe survives. Anthony Kreis, PhD, a professor of law at Georgia State University, says that could have been the point of whoever leaked the draft.

“It suggests to me that whoever leaked it knew that public outrage was the last resort to stopping the court from overturning Roe v. Wade and letting states ban all abortions,” Dr. Kreis said. “The danger that abortions won’t be legal in most of the country is very real.”

A version of this article first appeared on WebMD.com.

This article was updated 5/3/22.

The U.S. Supreme Court may be on the cusp of overturning 50 years of American abortion law, according to a draft opinion in a Mississippi case that was leaked to the news outlet Politico.

The draft opinion, written by Justice Samuel Alito, outlines ways a presumed majority of the nine justices believes the 1973 ruling in Roe v. Wade was incorrect. If signed by a majority of the court, the ruling would eliminate the protections for abortion rights that Roe provided and give the 50 states the power to legislate abortion.

“We hold that Roe and Casey must be overruled,” Justice Alito writes in the draft. “It is time to heed the Constitution and return the issue of abortion to the people’s elected representatives.”

While a final ruling was not expected from the court until June, the leaked draft – a nearly unprecedented breach of the court’s internal workings – gives a strong signal of the court’s five most conservative members’ decisions. During oral arguments in the case in December, conservative justices appeared prepared to undo at least part of the country’s abortion protections.

President Joe Biden said his administration was already preparing for a potential ruling that struck down federal abortion protections.

The White House, he said in a statement, is working on a “response to the continued attack on abortion and reproductive rights, under a variety of possible outcomes in the cases pending before the Supreme Court. We will be ready when any ruling is issued.”

But if the draft opinion becomes final, he said the fight will move to the states.

“It will fall on our nation’s elected officials at all levels of government to protect a woman’s right to choose,” he said. “And it will fall on voters to elect pro-choice officials this November.”

With more pro-abortion rights members of Congress, it would be possible to pass federal legislation protecting abortion rights, “which I will work to pass and sign into law.”

Should the Alito draft become law, its first impact would be to allow a Mississippi law that bans abortions after 15 weeks to take effect.

But quickly after that, abortions would become illegal in many states. Several conservative-leaning states, mostly in the South and Midwest, have already passed laws severely restricting abortions well beyond what Roe allowed. Should Roe be overturned then, those laws would take effect without the threat of lengthy lawsuits or rulings from lower-court judges who have blocked them.

Nearly half of the states, mostly in the Northeast and West, would likely allow abortion to continue in some way. In fact, several states, including Colorado and Vermont, have already passed laws granting the right to an abortion into state law.

The leaked draft, however, is still a draft, meaning it remains possible Roe survives. Anthony Kreis, PhD, a professor of law at Georgia State University, says that could have been the point of whoever leaked the draft.

“It suggests to me that whoever leaked it knew that public outrage was the last resort to stopping the court from overturning Roe v. Wade and letting states ban all abortions,” Dr. Kreis said. “The danger that abortions won’t be legal in most of the country is very real.”

A version of this article first appeared on WebMD.com.

This article was updated 5/3/22.

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Sexually transmitted infections on a 30-year rise worldwide

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Wed, 05/04/2022 - 14:26

The incidence of sexually transmitted infection (STI) as well as disability-adjusted life-years (DALYs) increased worldwide over 30 years, according to an observational trend study from China.

“Most countries had a decrease in age-standardized rates of incidence and DALY for STIs, whereas the absolute incident cases and DALYs increased from 1990 to 2019,” the authors write in The Lancet Infectious Diseases. “Therefore, STIs still represent a global public health challenge, especially in sub-Saharan Africa and Latin America, where more attention and health prevention services are warranted.”

“Our study also suggested an upward trend of age-standardized incidence rates among young populations, especially for syphilis, after 2010,” they add.
 

STIs are a major worldwide public health challenge

To assess global STI burden and trends, co–lead study author Yang Zheng, MD, of Zhejiang University School of Medicine in Hangzhou, China, and colleagues analyzed data from the Global Burden of Disease (GBD) study 2019.

They calculated incidence and DALYs of STIs in the general population at national, regional, and global levels over 30 years. They also calculated annual percentage changes in the age-standardized incidence rate and the age-standardized DALY rate of the five STIs included in the GBD study.

Of 204 countries in GBD 2019, 161 provided data on syphilis, 64 on gonorrhea, 94 on chlamydia, 56 on trichomonas, and 77 on genital herpes. The authors included 95% uncertainty intervals (UIs) and used Bayesian meta-regression to model the data.

  • Overall, they found that the global age-standardized incidence rate of STIs trended downward, with an estimated annual percentage change of –0.04 (95% UI, –0.08 to 0.00) from 1990 to 2019, reaching 9,535.71 per 100,000 person-years (8,169.73-11,054.76) in 2019.
  • The age-standardized DALY rate decreased with an estimated annual percentage change of –0.92 (–1.01 to –0.84) and reached 22.74 per 100,000 person-years (14.37-37.11) in 2019.
  • Sub-Saharan Africa, one of the hotspots, had the highest age-standardized incidence rate (19,973.12 per 100,000 person-years, 17,382.69-23,001.57) and age-standardized DALY rate (389.32 per 100,000 person-years, 154.27-769.74).
  • The highest incidence rate was among adolescents (18,377.82 per 100,000 person-years, 14,040.38-23,443.31), with stable total STI trends except for an increase in syphilis between 2010 (347.65 per 100,000 person-years, 203.58-590.69) and 2019 (423.16 per 100,000 person-years, 235.70-659.01).
  • The age-standardized incidence rate was higher among males (10,471.63 per 100,000 person-years, 8,892.20-12,176.10) than females (8,602.40 per 100,000 person-years, 7,358.00-10,001.18), whereas the age-standardized DALY rate was higher among females (33.31 per 100,000 person-years, 21.05-55.25) than males (12.11 per 100,000 person-years, 7.63-18.93).

The authors deliver a call to action

“This paper is a call to action to focus on the STI pandemic with granular data on key target populations,” Yukari C. Manabe, MD, FIDSA, FRCP, who was not involved in the study, told this news organization. “If behavioral messaging and testing in adolescents is not improved, HIV incidence rates will be impacted, and the gains that have been made in this area will be threatened.”

“Although the number of countries from which data could be culled was limited, the change in incident cases is particularly striking, with most countries showing an increase and with African countries showing the largest rise,” said Dr. Manabe, professor of medicine, international health, and molecular microbiology and immunology at Johns Hopkins Medicine and director of the Johns Hopkins Center for Innovative Diagnostics for Infectious Diseases, Baltimore.

“The increase in syphilis incidence rates, particularly in younger people, including men who have sex with men, is also alarming,” she added in an email. “It is interesting to see the gender gap grow as more countries adopt antenatal syphilis screening.”

Ken S. Ho, MD, MPH, infectious diseases specialist and medical director of the Pitt Men’s Study at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pennsylvania, called the study’s findings a wake-up call for clinicians to discuss sexual health and wellness with their patients, to increase STI screening, and to address STI stigma.

“Overall, STI rates in most countries have trended down, but paradoxically, the number of cases may be going up, because we have more younger, sexually actively people,” Dr. Ho said in an email.

“The study helps us understand the populations most impacted by STIs and allows us to design and create public health interventions that target the most impacted communities and demographic groups,” Dr. Ho, who also was not involved in the study, added. “It allows us to reflect on how we address disparities. For example, the greater burden of disease seen in women may be due to the fact that women may not be screened and are diagnosed later.”

Dr. Ho explained that the high STI rates in sub-Saharan Africa and Latin America are thought to be due to factors such as poverty and limited access to health care, known drivers of health care disparities.

The 2016 global incidence of common STIs was estimated to be up to 563.3 million, including 6.3 million cases of syphilis, 86.9 million cases of gonorrhea, 127.2 million cases of chlamydia, 156.0 million cases of trichomonas, and 186.9 million cases of genital herpes, the authors write.

The World Health Organization aims to end the STI epidemic by 2030, they note.

The study was funded by Mega-Project of National Science and Technology for the 13th Five-Year Plan of China and the National Natural Science Foundation of China. The authors, Dr. Manabe, and Dr. Ho have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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The incidence of sexually transmitted infection (STI) as well as disability-adjusted life-years (DALYs) increased worldwide over 30 years, according to an observational trend study from China.

“Most countries had a decrease in age-standardized rates of incidence and DALY for STIs, whereas the absolute incident cases and DALYs increased from 1990 to 2019,” the authors write in The Lancet Infectious Diseases. “Therefore, STIs still represent a global public health challenge, especially in sub-Saharan Africa and Latin America, where more attention and health prevention services are warranted.”

“Our study also suggested an upward trend of age-standardized incidence rates among young populations, especially for syphilis, after 2010,” they add.
 

STIs are a major worldwide public health challenge

To assess global STI burden and trends, co–lead study author Yang Zheng, MD, of Zhejiang University School of Medicine in Hangzhou, China, and colleagues analyzed data from the Global Burden of Disease (GBD) study 2019.

They calculated incidence and DALYs of STIs in the general population at national, regional, and global levels over 30 years. They also calculated annual percentage changes in the age-standardized incidence rate and the age-standardized DALY rate of the five STIs included in the GBD study.

Of 204 countries in GBD 2019, 161 provided data on syphilis, 64 on gonorrhea, 94 on chlamydia, 56 on trichomonas, and 77 on genital herpes. The authors included 95% uncertainty intervals (UIs) and used Bayesian meta-regression to model the data.

  • Overall, they found that the global age-standardized incidence rate of STIs trended downward, with an estimated annual percentage change of –0.04 (95% UI, –0.08 to 0.00) from 1990 to 2019, reaching 9,535.71 per 100,000 person-years (8,169.73-11,054.76) in 2019.
  • The age-standardized DALY rate decreased with an estimated annual percentage change of –0.92 (–1.01 to –0.84) and reached 22.74 per 100,000 person-years (14.37-37.11) in 2019.
  • Sub-Saharan Africa, one of the hotspots, had the highest age-standardized incidence rate (19,973.12 per 100,000 person-years, 17,382.69-23,001.57) and age-standardized DALY rate (389.32 per 100,000 person-years, 154.27-769.74).
  • The highest incidence rate was among adolescents (18,377.82 per 100,000 person-years, 14,040.38-23,443.31), with stable total STI trends except for an increase in syphilis between 2010 (347.65 per 100,000 person-years, 203.58-590.69) and 2019 (423.16 per 100,000 person-years, 235.70-659.01).
  • The age-standardized incidence rate was higher among males (10,471.63 per 100,000 person-years, 8,892.20-12,176.10) than females (8,602.40 per 100,000 person-years, 7,358.00-10,001.18), whereas the age-standardized DALY rate was higher among females (33.31 per 100,000 person-years, 21.05-55.25) than males (12.11 per 100,000 person-years, 7.63-18.93).

The authors deliver a call to action

“This paper is a call to action to focus on the STI pandemic with granular data on key target populations,” Yukari C. Manabe, MD, FIDSA, FRCP, who was not involved in the study, told this news organization. “If behavioral messaging and testing in adolescents is not improved, HIV incidence rates will be impacted, and the gains that have been made in this area will be threatened.”

“Although the number of countries from which data could be culled was limited, the change in incident cases is particularly striking, with most countries showing an increase and with African countries showing the largest rise,” said Dr. Manabe, professor of medicine, international health, and molecular microbiology and immunology at Johns Hopkins Medicine and director of the Johns Hopkins Center for Innovative Diagnostics for Infectious Diseases, Baltimore.

“The increase in syphilis incidence rates, particularly in younger people, including men who have sex with men, is also alarming,” she added in an email. “It is interesting to see the gender gap grow as more countries adopt antenatal syphilis screening.”

Ken S. Ho, MD, MPH, infectious diseases specialist and medical director of the Pitt Men’s Study at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pennsylvania, called the study’s findings a wake-up call for clinicians to discuss sexual health and wellness with their patients, to increase STI screening, and to address STI stigma.

“Overall, STI rates in most countries have trended down, but paradoxically, the number of cases may be going up, because we have more younger, sexually actively people,” Dr. Ho said in an email.

“The study helps us understand the populations most impacted by STIs and allows us to design and create public health interventions that target the most impacted communities and demographic groups,” Dr. Ho, who also was not involved in the study, added. “It allows us to reflect on how we address disparities. For example, the greater burden of disease seen in women may be due to the fact that women may not be screened and are diagnosed later.”

Dr. Ho explained that the high STI rates in sub-Saharan Africa and Latin America are thought to be due to factors such as poverty and limited access to health care, known drivers of health care disparities.

The 2016 global incidence of common STIs was estimated to be up to 563.3 million, including 6.3 million cases of syphilis, 86.9 million cases of gonorrhea, 127.2 million cases of chlamydia, 156.0 million cases of trichomonas, and 186.9 million cases of genital herpes, the authors write.

The World Health Organization aims to end the STI epidemic by 2030, they note.

The study was funded by Mega-Project of National Science and Technology for the 13th Five-Year Plan of China and the National Natural Science Foundation of China. The authors, Dr. Manabe, and Dr. Ho have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

The incidence of sexually transmitted infection (STI) as well as disability-adjusted life-years (DALYs) increased worldwide over 30 years, according to an observational trend study from China.

“Most countries had a decrease in age-standardized rates of incidence and DALY for STIs, whereas the absolute incident cases and DALYs increased from 1990 to 2019,” the authors write in The Lancet Infectious Diseases. “Therefore, STIs still represent a global public health challenge, especially in sub-Saharan Africa and Latin America, where more attention and health prevention services are warranted.”

“Our study also suggested an upward trend of age-standardized incidence rates among young populations, especially for syphilis, after 2010,” they add.
 

STIs are a major worldwide public health challenge

To assess global STI burden and trends, co–lead study author Yang Zheng, MD, of Zhejiang University School of Medicine in Hangzhou, China, and colleagues analyzed data from the Global Burden of Disease (GBD) study 2019.

They calculated incidence and DALYs of STIs in the general population at national, regional, and global levels over 30 years. They also calculated annual percentage changes in the age-standardized incidence rate and the age-standardized DALY rate of the five STIs included in the GBD study.

Of 204 countries in GBD 2019, 161 provided data on syphilis, 64 on gonorrhea, 94 on chlamydia, 56 on trichomonas, and 77 on genital herpes. The authors included 95% uncertainty intervals (UIs) and used Bayesian meta-regression to model the data.

  • Overall, they found that the global age-standardized incidence rate of STIs trended downward, with an estimated annual percentage change of –0.04 (95% UI, –0.08 to 0.00) from 1990 to 2019, reaching 9,535.71 per 100,000 person-years (8,169.73-11,054.76) in 2019.
  • The age-standardized DALY rate decreased with an estimated annual percentage change of –0.92 (–1.01 to –0.84) and reached 22.74 per 100,000 person-years (14.37-37.11) in 2019.
  • Sub-Saharan Africa, one of the hotspots, had the highest age-standardized incidence rate (19,973.12 per 100,000 person-years, 17,382.69-23,001.57) and age-standardized DALY rate (389.32 per 100,000 person-years, 154.27-769.74).
  • The highest incidence rate was among adolescents (18,377.82 per 100,000 person-years, 14,040.38-23,443.31), with stable total STI trends except for an increase in syphilis between 2010 (347.65 per 100,000 person-years, 203.58-590.69) and 2019 (423.16 per 100,000 person-years, 235.70-659.01).
  • The age-standardized incidence rate was higher among males (10,471.63 per 100,000 person-years, 8,892.20-12,176.10) than females (8,602.40 per 100,000 person-years, 7,358.00-10,001.18), whereas the age-standardized DALY rate was higher among females (33.31 per 100,000 person-years, 21.05-55.25) than males (12.11 per 100,000 person-years, 7.63-18.93).

The authors deliver a call to action

“This paper is a call to action to focus on the STI pandemic with granular data on key target populations,” Yukari C. Manabe, MD, FIDSA, FRCP, who was not involved in the study, told this news organization. “If behavioral messaging and testing in adolescents is not improved, HIV incidence rates will be impacted, and the gains that have been made in this area will be threatened.”

“Although the number of countries from which data could be culled was limited, the change in incident cases is particularly striking, with most countries showing an increase and with African countries showing the largest rise,” said Dr. Manabe, professor of medicine, international health, and molecular microbiology and immunology at Johns Hopkins Medicine and director of the Johns Hopkins Center for Innovative Diagnostics for Infectious Diseases, Baltimore.

“The increase in syphilis incidence rates, particularly in younger people, including men who have sex with men, is also alarming,” she added in an email. “It is interesting to see the gender gap grow as more countries adopt antenatal syphilis screening.”

Ken S. Ho, MD, MPH, infectious diseases specialist and medical director of the Pitt Men’s Study at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pennsylvania, called the study’s findings a wake-up call for clinicians to discuss sexual health and wellness with their patients, to increase STI screening, and to address STI stigma.

“Overall, STI rates in most countries have trended down, but paradoxically, the number of cases may be going up, because we have more younger, sexually actively people,” Dr. Ho said in an email.

“The study helps us understand the populations most impacted by STIs and allows us to design and create public health interventions that target the most impacted communities and demographic groups,” Dr. Ho, who also was not involved in the study, added. “It allows us to reflect on how we address disparities. For example, the greater burden of disease seen in women may be due to the fact that women may not be screened and are diagnosed later.”

Dr. Ho explained that the high STI rates in sub-Saharan Africa and Latin America are thought to be due to factors such as poverty and limited access to health care, known drivers of health care disparities.

The 2016 global incidence of common STIs was estimated to be up to 563.3 million, including 6.3 million cases of syphilis, 86.9 million cases of gonorrhea, 127.2 million cases of chlamydia, 156.0 million cases of trichomonas, and 186.9 million cases of genital herpes, the authors write.

The World Health Organization aims to end the STI epidemic by 2030, they note.

The study was funded by Mega-Project of National Science and Technology for the 13th Five-Year Plan of China and the National Natural Science Foundation of China. The authors, Dr. Manabe, and Dr. Ho have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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A New Approach to an Old Problem: Not Just the Azoles for Vulvovaginal Candidiasis

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Mon, 05/02/2022 - 09:38

At the conclusion of this activity, the participant will be able to:
• Appreciate the scope of the problem of Candida infection in terms of cost, lost productivity, and medical visits
• Learn current diagnostic and treatment patterns for vulvovaginal candidiasis
• Appreciate the attributes of the new antifungal class (triterpenoids) for vulvovaginal candidiasis
• Analyze clinical trial data with the non-azole approach to vulvovaginal candidiasis

Click here to read this supplement

To access post-test and evaluation, visit www.worldclasscme.com/online-courses/new-approach-old-problem-no-longer-just-azoles-candida

World Class CME designates this journal-based CME activity for a maximum of 1.0 AMA PRA Category1 Credit™.

 

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This supplement is supported by an educational grant from SCYNEXIS, Inc. It was…
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This supplement is supported by an educational grant from SCYNEXIS, Inc. It was…
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This supplement is supported by an educational grant from SCYNEXIS, Inc. It was…

At the conclusion of this activity, the participant will be able to:
• Appreciate the scope of the problem of Candida infection in terms of cost, lost productivity, and medical visits
• Learn current diagnostic and treatment patterns for vulvovaginal candidiasis
• Appreciate the attributes of the new antifungal class (triterpenoids) for vulvovaginal candidiasis
• Analyze clinical trial data with the non-azole approach to vulvovaginal candidiasis

Click here to read this supplement

To access post-test and evaluation, visit www.worldclasscme.com/online-courses/new-approach-old-problem-no-longer-just-azoles-candida

World Class CME designates this journal-based CME activity for a maximum of 1.0 AMA PRA Category1 Credit™.

 

At the conclusion of this activity, the participant will be able to:
• Appreciate the scope of the problem of Candida infection in terms of cost, lost productivity, and medical visits
• Learn current diagnostic and treatment patterns for vulvovaginal candidiasis
• Appreciate the attributes of the new antifungal class (triterpenoids) for vulvovaginal candidiasis
• Analyze clinical trial data with the non-azole approach to vulvovaginal candidiasis

Click here to read this supplement

To access post-test and evaluation, visit www.worldclasscme.com/online-courses/new-approach-old-problem-no-longer-just-azoles-candida

World Class CME designates this journal-based CME activity for a maximum of 1.0 AMA PRA Category1 Credit™.

 

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Drug combo holds promise as on-demand contraceptive: Study

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Wed, 05/04/2022 - 13:22

A combination of ulipristal acetate (UA) and a cyclo-oxygenase-2 (COX-2) inhibitor holds promise as a pericoital, “on- demand” female oral contraceptive, taken only when needed, according to an exploratory study published in BMJ Sexual & Reproductive Health.

The prospective, open-label, pilot study showed that UA and meloxicam successfully disrupted ovulation at “the peak of luteal surge, when conception risk is highest,” reported lead author Erica P Cahill, MD, of Stanford (Calif.) University, and colleagues.

“There are many people who report being interested in preventing pregnancy who are not using contraception,” Dr. Cahill said in an interview. The ideal is to be able to take a medication to prevent ovulation and know that you wouldn’t ovulate or be able to become pregnant for the next 3-5 days. These would be pericoital contraceptive pills that one could take prior to or immediately after intercourse that would expand the contraceptive options available and meet some of this need, she said.

Dr. Cahill said currently approved emergency contraceptives containing ulipristal acetate or levonorgestrel “work by inhibiting ovulation at the level of the luteal surge, the pituitary signal that starts the ovulation cascade. Because of this mechanism, they are only effective when taken prior to that signal. If they are taken near or after ovulation has occurred, they are not effective.” She said combining meloxicam with UA could address this because meloxicam “has been shown to prevent some of the later steps of ovulation just prior to the egg being released.”

The study included nine healthy women, with a mean age of 31.4 years, and a mean body mass index of 24.5 ± 3.9 kg/m2. All subjects had no exposure to hormonal medication, pregnancy, or lactation in the prior 3 months.

Each participant was followed for two cycles: The first without treatment, to establish normal ovulatory function; and the second during treatment with a one-time dose of UA 30 mg and meloxicam 30 mg during the “fertile window.” This window was defined as when the lead ovarian follicle had a mean diameter of 18 mm, and was determined via thrice-weekly ultrasounds, as well as luteinizing hormone (LH) measurements.

The primary outcome of the study was ovulation disruption, defined as unruptured dominant follicle for 5 days, a blunted LH peak, defined as <15 IU/L, and a nonovulatory luteal phase progesterone level, defined as <3 ng/mL.

Ovulation disruption was achieved in six subjects (67.7%), with eight subjects (88.9%) meeting some criteria.

“When we compare ovulation disruption rates in our study with the previous studies on which our protocol is based, the combination of UA and meloxicam disrupted ovulation at each phase of the fertile window more than any other medication previously studied,” the researchers wrote. “This medication combination is an important candidate to evaluate as oral pericoital contraception.”

When comparing subjects’ baseline cycles with their treatment cycles, the latter were approximately 3 days longer, although there was no difference in endometrial stripe thickness or irregular bleeding.

“Cycle length changes are an important parameter as people interested in oral, on-demand contraception may also be using fertility awareness methods which can be affected by cycle length changes.”

The authors noted that measures of full efficacy and side effects were beyond the scope of the study and would require repeat dosing. Similarly, liver enzymes were not measured, because there was only one dose of study medication, but “given the potential impact of repeat UA on liver enzymes, this measurement is critical for future studies.”

Asked to comment on the study, Eve Espey, MD, said that although it was limited in size and the use of an “intermediate outcome” of ovulation disruption, “the combination does show some promise as a focus of future research.” However, Dr. Espey, distinguished professor and chair in the department of obstetrics and gynecology at the University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, said it is too early to determine the significance of the findings. “But it does point the way to further research,” she noted. “Compared with existing emergency contraception, this study shows that the UA-meloxicam combination disrupts ovulation over a broader mid-cycle time period – [an] extended duration of action [that] could theoretically translate into increased effectiveness as a contraceptive.”

The study was supported by the Society for Family Planning Research Fund. None of the authors, or Dr. Espey, declared competing interests.

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A combination of ulipristal acetate (UA) and a cyclo-oxygenase-2 (COX-2) inhibitor holds promise as a pericoital, “on- demand” female oral contraceptive, taken only when needed, according to an exploratory study published in BMJ Sexual & Reproductive Health.

The prospective, open-label, pilot study showed that UA and meloxicam successfully disrupted ovulation at “the peak of luteal surge, when conception risk is highest,” reported lead author Erica P Cahill, MD, of Stanford (Calif.) University, and colleagues.

“There are many people who report being interested in preventing pregnancy who are not using contraception,” Dr. Cahill said in an interview. The ideal is to be able to take a medication to prevent ovulation and know that you wouldn’t ovulate or be able to become pregnant for the next 3-5 days. These would be pericoital contraceptive pills that one could take prior to or immediately after intercourse that would expand the contraceptive options available and meet some of this need, she said.

Dr. Cahill said currently approved emergency contraceptives containing ulipristal acetate or levonorgestrel “work by inhibiting ovulation at the level of the luteal surge, the pituitary signal that starts the ovulation cascade. Because of this mechanism, they are only effective when taken prior to that signal. If they are taken near or after ovulation has occurred, they are not effective.” She said combining meloxicam with UA could address this because meloxicam “has been shown to prevent some of the later steps of ovulation just prior to the egg being released.”

The study included nine healthy women, with a mean age of 31.4 years, and a mean body mass index of 24.5 ± 3.9 kg/m2. All subjects had no exposure to hormonal medication, pregnancy, or lactation in the prior 3 months.

Each participant was followed for two cycles: The first without treatment, to establish normal ovulatory function; and the second during treatment with a one-time dose of UA 30 mg and meloxicam 30 mg during the “fertile window.” This window was defined as when the lead ovarian follicle had a mean diameter of 18 mm, and was determined via thrice-weekly ultrasounds, as well as luteinizing hormone (LH) measurements.

The primary outcome of the study was ovulation disruption, defined as unruptured dominant follicle for 5 days, a blunted LH peak, defined as <15 IU/L, and a nonovulatory luteal phase progesterone level, defined as <3 ng/mL.

Ovulation disruption was achieved in six subjects (67.7%), with eight subjects (88.9%) meeting some criteria.

“When we compare ovulation disruption rates in our study with the previous studies on which our protocol is based, the combination of UA and meloxicam disrupted ovulation at each phase of the fertile window more than any other medication previously studied,” the researchers wrote. “This medication combination is an important candidate to evaluate as oral pericoital contraception.”

When comparing subjects’ baseline cycles with their treatment cycles, the latter were approximately 3 days longer, although there was no difference in endometrial stripe thickness or irregular bleeding.

“Cycle length changes are an important parameter as people interested in oral, on-demand contraception may also be using fertility awareness methods which can be affected by cycle length changes.”

The authors noted that measures of full efficacy and side effects were beyond the scope of the study and would require repeat dosing. Similarly, liver enzymes were not measured, because there was only one dose of study medication, but “given the potential impact of repeat UA on liver enzymes, this measurement is critical for future studies.”

Asked to comment on the study, Eve Espey, MD, said that although it was limited in size and the use of an “intermediate outcome” of ovulation disruption, “the combination does show some promise as a focus of future research.” However, Dr. Espey, distinguished professor and chair in the department of obstetrics and gynecology at the University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, said it is too early to determine the significance of the findings. “But it does point the way to further research,” she noted. “Compared with existing emergency contraception, this study shows that the UA-meloxicam combination disrupts ovulation over a broader mid-cycle time period – [an] extended duration of action [that] could theoretically translate into increased effectiveness as a contraceptive.”

The study was supported by the Society for Family Planning Research Fund. None of the authors, or Dr. Espey, declared competing interests.

A combination of ulipristal acetate (UA) and a cyclo-oxygenase-2 (COX-2) inhibitor holds promise as a pericoital, “on- demand” female oral contraceptive, taken only when needed, according to an exploratory study published in BMJ Sexual & Reproductive Health.

The prospective, open-label, pilot study showed that UA and meloxicam successfully disrupted ovulation at “the peak of luteal surge, when conception risk is highest,” reported lead author Erica P Cahill, MD, of Stanford (Calif.) University, and colleagues.

“There are many people who report being interested in preventing pregnancy who are not using contraception,” Dr. Cahill said in an interview. The ideal is to be able to take a medication to prevent ovulation and know that you wouldn’t ovulate or be able to become pregnant for the next 3-5 days. These would be pericoital contraceptive pills that one could take prior to or immediately after intercourse that would expand the contraceptive options available and meet some of this need, she said.

Dr. Cahill said currently approved emergency contraceptives containing ulipristal acetate or levonorgestrel “work by inhibiting ovulation at the level of the luteal surge, the pituitary signal that starts the ovulation cascade. Because of this mechanism, they are only effective when taken prior to that signal. If they are taken near or after ovulation has occurred, they are not effective.” She said combining meloxicam with UA could address this because meloxicam “has been shown to prevent some of the later steps of ovulation just prior to the egg being released.”

The study included nine healthy women, with a mean age of 31.4 years, and a mean body mass index of 24.5 ± 3.9 kg/m2. All subjects had no exposure to hormonal medication, pregnancy, or lactation in the prior 3 months.

Each participant was followed for two cycles: The first without treatment, to establish normal ovulatory function; and the second during treatment with a one-time dose of UA 30 mg and meloxicam 30 mg during the “fertile window.” This window was defined as when the lead ovarian follicle had a mean diameter of 18 mm, and was determined via thrice-weekly ultrasounds, as well as luteinizing hormone (LH) measurements.

The primary outcome of the study was ovulation disruption, defined as unruptured dominant follicle for 5 days, a blunted LH peak, defined as <15 IU/L, and a nonovulatory luteal phase progesterone level, defined as <3 ng/mL.

Ovulation disruption was achieved in six subjects (67.7%), with eight subjects (88.9%) meeting some criteria.

“When we compare ovulation disruption rates in our study with the previous studies on which our protocol is based, the combination of UA and meloxicam disrupted ovulation at each phase of the fertile window more than any other medication previously studied,” the researchers wrote. “This medication combination is an important candidate to evaluate as oral pericoital contraception.”

When comparing subjects’ baseline cycles with their treatment cycles, the latter were approximately 3 days longer, although there was no difference in endometrial stripe thickness or irregular bleeding.

“Cycle length changes are an important parameter as people interested in oral, on-demand contraception may also be using fertility awareness methods which can be affected by cycle length changes.”

The authors noted that measures of full efficacy and side effects were beyond the scope of the study and would require repeat dosing. Similarly, liver enzymes were not measured, because there was only one dose of study medication, but “given the potential impact of repeat UA on liver enzymes, this measurement is critical for future studies.”

Asked to comment on the study, Eve Espey, MD, said that although it was limited in size and the use of an “intermediate outcome” of ovulation disruption, “the combination does show some promise as a focus of future research.” However, Dr. Espey, distinguished professor and chair in the department of obstetrics and gynecology at the University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, said it is too early to determine the significance of the findings. “But it does point the way to further research,” she noted. “Compared with existing emergency contraception, this study shows that the UA-meloxicam combination disrupts ovulation over a broader mid-cycle time period – [an] extended duration of action [that] could theoretically translate into increased effectiveness as a contraceptive.”

The study was supported by the Society for Family Planning Research Fund. None of the authors, or Dr. Espey, declared competing interests.

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