Introduction: Risk of developing cardiovascular disease (CVD) is increased in systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) compared with the general population. Traditional risk factors cannot account for the ...totality of CV events and adequate prevention may be challenging.
Areas covered: This review summarizes traditional and emerging risk factors of CVD in SLE patients and goes over potential pathogenic mechanisms involved in CVD development. Role of commonly used drugs and preventive strategies exploitable in everyday clinical practice are also discussed.
Expert opinion: SLE-related risk factors involve both disease- and treatment-related features, including disease activity, disease phenotype, corticosteroid misuse and alterations of innate and adaptive immunity. Primary prevention is mandatory in management of lupus patients through appropriate disease control, corticosteroid tapering, use of antimalarials and eventually vitamin D supplementation.
Primary myocardial involvement is common in systemic sclerosis (SSc). Ventricular-arterial coupling (VAC) reflecting the interplay between ventricular performance and arterial load, is a key ...determinant of cardiovascular (CV) performance. We aimed to investigate VAC, VAC-derived indices, and the potential association between altered VAC and survival free from death/hospitalization for major adverse CV events (MACE) in scleroderma. Only SSc patients without any anamnestic and echocardiographic evidence of primary myocardial involvement who underwent three-dimensional echocardiography (3DE) were included in this cross-sectional study and compared with healthy matched controls. 3DE was used for noninvasive measurements of end-systolic elastance (Ees), arterial elastance (Ea), VAC (Ea/Ees) and end-diastolic elastance (Eed); the occurrence of death/hospitalization for MACE was recorded during follow-up. Sixty-five SSc patients (54 female; aged 56 ± 14 years) were included. Ees (
= 0.04), Ea (
= 0.04) and Eed (
= 0.01) were higher in patients vs. controls. Thus, VAC was similar in both groups. Ees was lower and VAC was higher in patients with diffuse cutaneous form (dcSSc) vs. patients with limited form (lcSSc) (
= 0.001 and
= 0.02, respectively). Over a median follow-up of 4 years, four patients died for heart failure and 34 were hospitalized for CV events. In patients with VAC > 0.63 the risk of MACE was higher (HR 2.5; 95% CI 1.13-5.7;
= 0.01) and survival free from death/hospitalization was lower (
= 0.005) than in those with VAC < 0.63. Our study suggests that VAC may be impaired in SSc patients without signs and symptoms of primary myocardial involvement. Moreover, VAC appears to have a prognostic role in SSc.
Background Gait speed represents a functional predictor and an impairment severity index in stroke survivors; gait analysis parameters are descriptors of walking strategies used to compensate for the ...muscle impairment such as vaulting, circumduction and hip hiking. The aim of this study was to assess if there is a relationship between the gait compensatory strategy and gait speed of progression. Methods A sample of 30 patients with post-stroke hemiparesis was assessed for gait compensatory patterns through gait analysis and videorecording. BMI, pain-VAS, Barthel Index, Nottingham Extended ADL Scale, Motricity Index, lower limb muscles strength and aROMs were also included in the assessment. Results In 19 patients it was possible to identify one or more compensatory strategies; in 11 patients no specific gait pattern was found. The vaulting and hip hiking combined gait strategy had an effect on gait speed. Gait speed was directly related to Barthel Index, Nottingham Extended ADL Scale, Motricity Index of the paretic side and in particular with quadriceps and iliopsoas strength and hip extension aROM. Gender, age and paretic side did not influence gait speed. Conclusion Compensatory gait strategies influence gait speed but studies with larger sample size are needed to better highlight their impact.
Objective. To determine whether Adaptive Physical Activity (APA-stroke), a community-based exercise program for participants with hemiparetic stroke, improves function in the community. Methods. ...Nonrandomized controlled study in Tuscany, Italy, of participants with mild to moderate hemiparesis at least 9 months after stroke. Forty-nine participants in a geographic health authority (Empoli) were offered APA-stroke (40 completed the study). Forty-four control participants in neighboring health authorities (Florence and Pisa) received usual care (38 completed the study). The APA intervention was a community-based progressive group exercise regimen that included walking, strength, and balance training for 1 hour, thrice a week, in local gyms, supervised by gym instructors. No serious adverse clinical events occurred during the exercise intervention. Outcome measures included the following: 6-month change in gait velocity (6-Minute Timed Walk), Short Physical Performance Battery (SPPB), Berg Balance Scale, Stroke Impact Scale (SIS), Barthel Index, Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression, and Index of Caregivers Strain. Results. After 6 months, the intervention group improved whereas controls declined in gait velocity, balance, SPPB, and SIS social participation domains. These between-group comparisons were statistically significant at P < .00015. Individuals with depressive symptoms at baseline improved whereas controls were unchanged (P < .003). Oral glucose tolerance tests were performed on a subset of participants in the intervention group. For these individuals, insulin secretion declined 29% after 6 months (P = .01). Conclusion. APA-stroke appears to be safe, feasible, and efficacious in a community setting.
Objectives: To investigate the relationships between the severity of flexed posture (FP), skeletal fragility, and functional status level in elderly women.
Design: Cross‐sectional study.
Setting: ...Geriatric rehabilitation research hospital.
Participants: Sixty elderly women (aged 70–93) with FP referred to a geriatric rehabilitation department for chronic back pain without apparent comorbid conditions.
Measurements: Multidimensional clinical assessment included the severity of FP (standing occiput‐to‐wall distance) demographic (age) and anthropometric (height, weight) data, clinical profile (number of falls, pain assessment, Mini‐Mental State Examination, Comorbidity Severity Index, Geriatric Depression Scale, Multidimensional Fatigue Inventory), measures of skeletal fragility (number of vertebral fractures by spine radiograph, bone mineral density (BMD), and T‐score of lumbar spine and proximal femur), muscular impairment assessment (muscle strength and length), motor performance (Short Physical Performance Battery, Performance Oriented Mobility Assessment, instrumented gait analysis), and evaluation of disability (Barthel Index, Nottingham Extended Activities of Daily Living Index).
Results: The severity of FP was classified as mild in 11, moderate in 28, and severe in 21 patients. Although there were no differences between FP groups on the skeletal fragility measurements, the moderate and severe FP groups were significantly different from the mild FP group for greater pain at the level of the cervical and lumbar spine. The severe FP group was also significantly different from the mild but not the moderate FP group in the following categories: clinical profile (greater depression, reduced motivation), muscle impairment (weaker spine extensor, ankle plantarflexor, and dorsiflexor muscles; shorter pectoralis and hip flexor muscles), the motor function performance‐based tests (lower scores in the balance and gait subsets of the Performance Oriented Mobility Assessment), the instrumented gait analysis (slower and wider base of support), and disability (lower score on the Nottingham Extended Activities of Daily Living Index). The total number of vertebral fractures was not associated with differences in severity of FP, demographic and anthropometric characteristics, clinical profile, muscular function, performance‐based and instrumental measures of motor function, and disability, but it was associated with reduced proximal femur and lumbar spine BMD.
Conclusion: The severity of FP in elderly female patients (without apparent comorbid conditions) is related to the severity of vertebral pain, emotional status, muscular impairments, and motor function but not to osteoporosis, and FP has a measurable effect on disability. In contrast, the presence of vertebral fractures in patients with FP is associated with lower BMD but not patients' clinical and functional status. Therefore, FP, back pain, and mobility problems can occur without osteoporosis. Older women with FP and vertebral pain may be candidates for rehabilitation interventions that address muscular impairments, posture, and behavior modification. Randomized controlled trials are needed to support these conclusions.
Abstract We have investigated the use of an Artificial Neural Network (ANN) for the assessment of fall-risk (FR) in patients with different neural pathologies. The assessment integrates a clinical ...tool based on a wearable device (WD) with accelerometers (ACCs) and rate gyroscopes (GYROs) properly suited to identify trunk kinematic parameters that can be measured during a posturography test with different constraints. Our ANN – a Multi Layer Perceptron Neural Network with four layers and 272 neurones – shows to be able to classify patients in three well-known fall-risk levels. The training of the neural network was carried on three groups of 30 subjects with different Fall-Risk Tinetti scores. The validation of our neural network was carried out on three groups of 100 subjects with different Fall-Risk Tinetti scores and this validation demonstrated that the neural network had high specificity (≥0.88); sensitivity (≥0.87); area under Receiver-Operator Characteristic Curves (>0.854).
In the present study, we investigated the effects of the Titchener circles illusion in perception and action. In this illusion, two identical discs can be perceived as being different in size when ...one is surrounded by an annulus of smaller circles and the other is surrounded by an annulus of larger circles. This classic size-contrast illusion, known as Ebbinghaus or Titchener Circles Illusion, has a strong perceptual effect. By contrast, it has recently been demonstrated that when subjects are required to pick up one of the discs, their grip aperture during reaching is largely appropriate to the size of the target. This result has been considered as evidence of a clear dissociation between visual perception and visuomotor behaviour in the intact human brain. In this study, we suggest and investigate an alternative explanation for these results. We argue that, in a previous study, while perception was subjected to the simultaneous influence of the large and small circles displays, in the grasping task only the annulus of circles surrounding the target object was influential. We tested this hypothesis by requiring 18 subjects to perceptually estimate and grasp a disc centred in a single annulus of Titchener circles. The results showed that both the perceptual estimation and the hand shaping while grasping the disc were similarly influenced by the illusion. Moreover, the stronger the perceptual illusion, the greater the effect on the grip scaling. We discuss the results as evidence of an interaction between the functional pathways for perception and action in the intact human brain.
Abstract
Objectives
Patients with SLE are often exposed to prolonged immunosuppression since few data on flare recurrence in remitted patients who discontinued immunosuppressants are available. We ...aimed to assess the rate and predictors of flare after immunosuppressant withdrawal in SLE patients in remission.
Methods
SLE patients diagnosed between 1990 and 2018 (according to the ACR criteria), ever treated with immunosuppressants and currently in follow-up were considered. Immunosuppressant discontinuation was defined as complete withdrawal of any immunosuppressive drug. Reasons for discontinuation were remission, defined as clinical SLEDAI-2K = 0 on a stable immunosuppressive and/or antimalarial therapy and/or on prednisone ⩽5 mg/day, or poor adherence/intolerance. Flares were defined according to the SLEDAI Flare Index. Predictors of a subsequent flare were analysed by multivariate logistic regression.
Results
There were 319 eligible patients out of 456 (69.9%). Of the 319 patients, 139 (43.5%) discontinued immunosuppressants, 105 (75.5%) due to remission, 34 (24.5%) due to poor adherence/intolerance. The mean (s.d.) follow-up time after immunosuppressant withdrawal was 91 (71) months (range 6–372). Among the patients who discontinued immunosuppressants, 26/105 remitted (24.7%) and 23/34 unremitted patients (67.6%) experienced a flare (P < 0.001) after a median (range) follow-up of 57 (6–264) and 8 months (1–72), respectively (P = 0.009). In patients who discontinued immunosuppressants due to remission, maintenance therapy with antimalarials (OR 0.243, 95% CI 0.070, 0.842) and the duration of remission at immunosuppressant discontinuation (OR 0.870, 0.824–0.996) were independent protective factors against disease flare.
Conclusion
SLE flares are not uncommon after immunosuppressant discontinuation, even in remitted patients; however, antimalarial therapy and durable remission can significantly reduce the risk of flare.
Objectives: To explore the association between an individual's functional status, movement task difficulty, and effectiveness of compensatory movement strategies within a sit‐to‐stand (STS) paradigm.
...Design: Cross‐sectional study.
Settings: Rehabilitation unit of the Istituto Nazionale Riposo e Cura Anziani Geriatric Hospital of Florence, Italy.
Participants: A convenience sample (131 subjects) of the outpatient clinic and day‐hospital population.
Measurements: A performance‐based test (repeated chair standing) was used to divide the subjects into five functional groups. Subjects performed a series of single STS tasks across a range of five descending seat heights. They were instructed to stand without using arms or compensatory strategies. If unable, swinging the arms was allowed, and if the inability persisted, subjects could push with their arms during subsequent attempts. The strategy or inability to stand formed the dependent measures.
Results: Subjects within the two highest functional groups could complete the single STS task at all seat heights, with a slight increased use of compensatory strategies at the lowest seat height. The effectiveness of the compensatory strategies decreased rapidly as a function of seat height and functional status. One‐third (35.5%) of the subjects in the middle functional group swung their arms at the lower seat heights. Across the three least functional groups, 11.8%, 30.6%, and 83.3% of the subjects, respectively, were unable to stand at the lowest seat height.
Conclusion: The individual's functional status and difficulty of the task influenced the effectiveness of a compensatory strategy to maintain the ability to stand, supporting the idea that disability depends on the interplay between environmental demands and physical ability.
To investigate the prevalence of foot pain in older people and its association with pathological conditions of the feet and with disability in basic and instrumental activities of daily living.
...Cross-sectional survey of a community-dwelling older population.
A total of 459 subjects, 73% of the population aged 65 years and older living in Dicomano, Florence, Italy.
A standardized medical examination was performed by a geriatrician to collect information on the presence of pain, specific problems of the feet, gait, and several indicators of physical health status. Disability in basic and instrumental activities of daily living was evaluated by self-report.
The prevalence of foot pain was very high, especially in subjects affected by calluses or corns, hallux deformities, hammer toes, pes planus, and edema and among those who complained of difficulty in looking after the basic needs of the feet. Patients with foot pain needed a greater number of steps and longer time to walk the same distance. Foot pain was associated with a higher prevalence of disability in instrumental activities of daily living, particularly those related to standing and ambulation capacities, but it was not related to higher prevalence of disability in basic activities of daily living.
Foot pain is associated with specific conditions of the feet and disability in instrumental activities of daily living. Adequate assessment and treatment of foot problems may prevent foot pain and potentially reduce risk of disability. This hypothesis needs to be tested in longitudinal studies and specific intervention trials.