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This study aims to examine the surgical outcome of Kabuki syndrome patients after neonatal congenital heart surgery.
Methods:
This was a single-centre retrospective study of Kabuki syndrome patients undergoing neonatal congenital heart surgery from 2018 to 2023. Primary outcome was survival to discharge after index surgery. Secondary outcomes were morbidities and complications. Survival and hospital length of stay were compared to neonates with non-Kabuki genetic anomalies undergoing congenital heart surgery in the same time period.
Results:
A total of seven patients were reviewed. All Kabuki syndrome patients had left-sided lesions including three with hypoplastic left heart syndrome, three with aortic stenosis and/or aortic arch hypoplasia, and one with an isolated coarctation of aorta. Hospital survival was 5/7 (71% compared to 88% for neonates with non-Kabuki genetic anomalies). To date, four remain alive, including one with hypoplastic left heart syndrome. A higher percentage of Kabuki syndrome patients had unplanned interventions (43% vs 15% in non-Kabuki), abnormal brain imaging (29% vs 5%), and bacteremia (29% vs 9%). Median total ventilator days for Kabuki patients were also longer (16 days vs 6 days in non-Kabuki) as was hospital length of stay (66 days vs 41 days).
Conclusions:
Despite survival to discharge after index operation, Kabuki syndrome patients with single ventricle physiology remain at high risk of mortality and morbidity after cardiac surgery. However, they may be discharged without ventilator dependency and survive to toddler years.
We assessed specificity protein 1 (SP1) and 4 (SP4) transcription factor levels in peripheral blood mononuclear cells and conducted a voxel-based morphometry analysis on brain structural magnetic resonance images from 11 patients with first-episode psychosis and 14 healthy controls. We found lower SP1 and SP4 levels in patients, which correlated positively with right hippocampal volume. These results extend previous evidence showing that such transcription factors may constitute a molecular pathway to the development of psychosis.
Continuous population aging has raised international policy interest in promoting active aging (AA). AA theoretical models have been defined from a biomedical or a psychosocial perspective. These models may be expanded including components suggested by lay individuals. This paper aims to study the correlates of AA in three European countries, namely, Spain, Poland, and Finland using four different definitions of AA.
Methods:
The EU COURAGE in Europe project was a cross-sectional general adult population survey conducted in a representative sample of the noninstitutionalized population of Finland, Poland, and Spain. Participants (10,800) lived in the community. This analysis focuses on individuals aged 50 years old and over (7,987). Four definitions (two biomedical, one psychosocial, and a complete definition including biomedical, psychosocial, and external variables) of AA were analyzed.
Results:
Differences in AA were found for country, age, education, and occupation. Finland scored consistently the highest in AA followed by Spain and Poland. Younger age was associated with higher AA. Higher education and occupation was associated with AA. Being married or cohabiting was associated with better AA compared to being widowed or separated in most definitions. Gender and urbanicity were not associated with AA, with few exceptions. Men scored higher in AA only in Spain, whereas there was no gender association in the other two countries. Being widowed was only associated with lower AA in Poland and not being married was associated with lower AA in Poland and Finland but not Spain.
Conclusions:
Associations with education, marital status, and occupation suggest that these factors are the most important components of AA. These association patterns, however, seem to vary across the three countries. Actions to promote AA in these countries may be addressed at reducing inequalities in occupation and education or directly tackling the components of AA lacking in each country.