4 results on '"Krasner, S."'
Search Results
2. Cardiac Remodeling After Hypertensive Pregnancy Following Physician-Optimized Blood Pressure Self-Management: The POP-HT Randomized Clinical Trial Imaging Substudy.
- Author
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Kitt J, Krasner S, Barr L, Frost A, Tucker K, Bateman PA, Suriano K, Kenworthy Y, Lapidaire W, Lacharie M, Mills R, Roman C, Mackillop L, Cairns A, Aye C, Ferreira V, Piechnik S, Lukaschuk E, Thilaganathan B, Chappell LC, Lewandowski AJ, McManus RJ, and Leeson P
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Female, Humans, Pregnancy, Blood Pressure, Echocardiography, Prospective Studies, Stroke Volume, Ventricular Function, Right, Ventricular Remodeling, Antihypertensive Agents therapeutic use, Hypertension, Pregnancy-Induced drug therapy
- Abstract
Background: Hypertensive pregnancy disorders are associated with adverse cardiac remodeling, which can fail to reverse in the postpartum period in some women. The Physician-Optimized Postpartum Hypertension Treatment trial demonstrated that improved blood pressure control while the cardiovascular system recovers postpartum associates with persistently reduced blood pressure. We now report the effect on cardiac remodeling., Methods: In this prospective, randomized, open-label, blinded end point trial, in a single UK hospital, 220 women were randomly assigned 1:1 to self-monitoring with research physician-optimized antihypertensive titration or usual postnatal care from a primary care physician and midwife. Participants were 18 years of age or older, with preeclampsia or gestational hypertension, requiring antihypertensives on hospital discharge postnatally. Prespecified secondary cardiac imaging outcomes were recorded by echocardiography around delivery, and again at blood pressure primary outcome assessment, around 9 months postpartum, when cardiovascular magnetic resonance was also performed., Results: A total of 187 women (101 intervention; 86 usual care) underwent echocardiography at baseline and follow-up, at a mean 258±14.6 days postpartum, of which 174 (93 intervention; 81 usual care) also had cardiovascular magnetic resonance at follow-up. Relative wall thickness by echocardiography was 0.06 (95% CI, 0.07-0.05; P <0.001) lower in the intervention group between baseline and follow-up, and cardiovascular magnetic resonance at follow-up demonstrated a lower left ventricular mass (-6.37 g/m
2 ; 95% CI, -7.99 to -4.74; P <0.001), end-diastolic volume (-3.87 mL/m2 ; 95% CI, -6.77 to -0.98; P =0.009), and end-systolic volume (-3.25 mL/m2 ; 95% CI, 4.87 to -1.63; P <0.001) and higher left and right ventricular ejection fraction by 2.6% (95% CI, 1.3-3.9; P <0.001) and 2.8% (95% CI, 1.4-4.1; P <0.001), respectively. Echocardiography-assessed left ventricular diastolic function demonstrated a mean difference in average E/E' of 0.52 (95% CI, -0.97 to -0.07; P =0.024) and a reduction in left atrial volumes of -4.33 mL/m2 (95% CI, -5.52 to -3.21; P <0.001) between baseline and follow-up when adjusted for baseline differences in measures., Conclusions: Short-term postnatal optimization of blood pressure control after hypertensive pregnancy, through self-monitoring and physician-guided antihypertensive titration, associates with long-term changes in cardiovascular structure and function, in a pattern associated with more favorable cardiovascular outcomes., Registration: URL: https://www.clinicaltrials.gov; Unique identifier: NCT04273854., Competing Interests: Disclosures L.M. and P.L. are supported by the National Institute for Health and Care Research Oxford Biomedical Research Centre. L.M. is a part-time employee of EMIS Group plc. P.L. is a founder and shareholder of a health care imaging company and a named inventor on patents related to cardiovascular imaging. R.M. has received blood pressure monitors for research from Omron and has worked with Omron and Sensyne on telemonitoring interventions for which licensing and consultancy fees have been paid to the University of Oxford. C.R. has received consultancy fees from Sensyne Health for work on telemonitoring products. J.K. is an executive committee member of the British Society of Cardiac Imaging and Cardiac Computed Tomography. The other authors report no conflicts.- Published
- 2024
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3. Ingested Nitrate, Disinfection By-products, and Kidney Cancer Risk in Older Women.
- Author
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Jones RR, Weyer PJ, DellaValle CT, Robien K, Cantor KP, Krasner S, Beane Freeman LE, and Ward MH
- Subjects
- Aged, Disinfectants analysis, Drinking Water adverse effects, Drinking Water analysis, Female, Humans, Middle Aged, Nitrates analysis, Proportional Hazards Models, Risk Factors, Disinfectants adverse effects, Kidney Neoplasms chemically induced, Nitrates adverse effects
- Abstract
Background: N-nitroso compounds formed endogenously after nitrate/nitrite ingestion are animal renal carcinogens. Previous epidemiologic studies of drinking water nitrate did not evaluate other potentially toxic water contaminants, including the suspected renal carcinogen chloroform., Methods: In a cohort of postmenopausal women in Iowa (1986-2010), we used historical measurements to estimate long-term average concentrations of nitrate-nitrogen (NO3-N) and disinfection by-products (DBP) in public water supplies. For NO3-N and the regulated DBP (total trihalomethanes [THM] and the sum of five haloacetic acids [HAA5]), we estimated the number of years of exposure above one-half the current maximum contaminant level (>½-MCL NO3-N; >5 mg/L). Dietary intakes were assessed via food frequency questionnaire. We estimated hazard ratios (HRs) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs) with Cox models, and evaluated interactions with factors influencing N-nitroso compound formation., Results: We identified 125 incident kidney cancers among 15,577 women reporting using water from public supplies >10 years. In multivariable models, risk was higher in the 95th percentile of average NO3-N (HRp95vsQ1 = 2.3; CI: 1.2, 4.3; Ptrend = 0.33) and for any years of exposure >½-MCL; adjustment for total THM did not materially change these associations. There were no independent relationships with total THM, individual THMs chloroform and bromodichloromethane, or with haloacetic acids. Dietary analyses yielded associations with high nitrite intake from processed meats but not nitrate or nitrite overall. We found no interactions., Conclusions: Relatively high nitrate levels in public water supplies were associated with increased risk of renal cancer. Our results also suggest that nitrite from processed meat is a renal cancer risk factor.
- Published
- 2017
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4. Drinking Water Disinfection By-products, Genetic Polymorphisms, and Birth Outcomes in a European Mother-Child Cohort Study.
- Author
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Kogevinas M, Bustamante M, Gracia-Lavedán E, Ballester F, Cordier S, Costet N, Espinosa A, Grazuleviciene R, Danileviciute A, Ibarluzea J, Karadanelli M, Krasner S, Patelarou E, Stephanou E, Tardón A, Toledano MB, Wright J, Villanueva CM, and Nieuwenhuijsen M
- Subjects
- Case-Control Studies, Cohort Studies, DNA Copy Number Variations, Disinfectants analysis, Disinfection methods, Europe, Female, Gene-Environment Interaction, Genetic Markers, Humans, Infant, Low Birth Weight, Infant, Newborn, Infant, Small for Gestational Age, Male, Maternal Exposure statistics & numerical data, Pregnancy, Premature Birth etiology, Prospective Studies, Risk Factors, Trihalomethanes analysis, Water Pollutants, Chemical analysis, Disinfectants toxicity, Drinking Water analysis, Drinking Water chemistry, Maternal Exposure adverse effects, Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide, Pregnancy Outcome, Trihalomethanes toxicity, Water Pollutants, Chemical toxicity
- Abstract
Background: We examined the association between exposure during pregnancy to trihalomethanes, the most common water disinfection by-products, and birth outcomes in a European cohort study (Health Impacts of Long-Term Exposure to Disinfection By-Products in Drinking Water). We took into account exposure through different water uses, measures of water toxicity, and genetic susceptibility., Methods: We enrolled 14,005 mothers (2002-2010) and their children from France, Greece, Lithuania, Spain, and the UK. Information on lifestyle- and water-related activities was recorded. We ascertained residential concentrations of trihalomethanes through regulatory records and ad hoc sampling campaigns and estimated route-specific trihalomethane uptake by trimester and for whole pregnancy. We examined single nucleotide polymorphisms and copy number variants in disinfection by-product metabolizing genes in nested case-control studies., Results: Average levels of trihalomethanes ranged from around 10 μg/L to above the regulatory limits in the EU of 100 μg/L between centers. There was no association between birth weight and total trihalomethane exposure during pregnancy (β = 2.2 g in birth weight per 10 μg/L of trihalomethane, 95% confidence interval = 3.3, 7.6). Birth weight was not associated with exposure through different routes or with specific trihalomethane species. Exposure to trihalomethanes was not associated with low birth weight (odds ratio [OR] per 10 μg/L = 1.02, 95% confidence interval = 0.95, 1.10), small-for-gestational age (OR = 0.99, 0.94, 1.03) and preterm births (OR = 0.98, 0.9, 1.05). We found no gene-environment interactions for mother or child polymorphisms in relation to preterm birth or small-for-gestational age., Conclusions: In this large European study, we found no association between birth outcomes and trihalomethane exposures during pregnancy in the total population or in potentially genetically susceptible subgroups. (See video abstract at http://links.lww.com/EDE/B104.).
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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