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PloS One 2024Neck pain remains a persistent challenge in modern society and is frequently encountered across a wide range of occupations, particularly those involving repetitive and...
BACKGROUND
Neck pain remains a persistent challenge in modern society and is frequently encountered across a wide range of occupations, particularly those involving repetitive and monotonous tasks. It might be expected that patterns of trapezius muscle activity at work, characterized by few breaks and prolonged periods of sustained muscle activity, are linked to neck pain. However, previous cross-sectional studies have generally failed to establish a definitive association. While some longitudinal studies have suggested that extended periods of heightened muscle activity could be a risk factor for neck pain, these findings often relied on limited participant numbers or specific professional groups. This study aimed to investigate the relationship between trapezius muscle activity and neck pain by pooling data from seven Scandinavian research institutes encompassing a diverse range of occupational backgrounds.
METHODS
Electromyographic (EMG) data for the upper trapezius muscle, collected during working hours, were coupled with questionnaire responses pertaining to neck pain, individual characteristics, and potential confounding variables for a total of 731 subjects. Additionally, longitudinal data from 258 subjects were available. The various EMG datasets were consolidated into a standardized format, and efforts were made to harmonize inquiries about neck pain. Regression analyses, adjusting for sex and height, were conducted to explore the associations between muscle activity variables and neck pain. An exposure index was devised to quantify the cumulative neck load experienced during working hours and to differentiate between various occupational categories.
RESULTS
The cross-sectional data displayed a distinct pattern characterized by positive associations for brief periods of sustained muscle activity (SUMA) and negative associations for prolonged SUMA-periods and neck pain. The longitudinal data exhibited a contrasting trend, although it was not as pronounced as the cross-sectional findings. When employing the exposure index, notable differences in cumulative muscle load emerged among occupational groups, and positive associations with longitudinal neck pain were identified.
DISCUSSION
The results suggest that individuals with neck pain experience higher cumulative workloads and extended periods of muscle activity over the long term. In the short term, they appear to compensate by taking frequent short breaks, resulting in a lower cumulative workload. Regardless of their occupation, it is crucial to distribute work breaks throughout the workday to ensure that the cumulative load remains manageable.
Topics: Humans; Neck Pain; Male; Female; Electromyography; Adult; Superficial Back Muscles; Cross-Sectional Studies; Middle Aged; Rest; Occupational Diseases; Surveys and Questionnaires; Longitudinal Studies
PubMed: 38917191
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0297859 -
PloS One 2024This study aimed to understand the health of workers exposed to occupational noise and explore the influencing factors related to workers' health, especially the impact...
OBJECTIVE
This study aimed to understand the health of workers exposed to occupational noise and explore the influencing factors related to workers' health, especially the impact of noise on workers' hearing. This work can provide a basis for formulating relevant measures for occupational noise prevention and control in the future.
METHODS
On the basis of the key occupational disease monitoring project in Chongqing, China, in 2021, the data of 1125 workers exposed to occupational noise were analyzed. Data included demographic information, occupational history, clinical physical examination information, and noise detection information of the working environment. Chi-square test and multifactorial logistic regression were used for statistical analysis.
RESULTS
The prevalence rates of abnormal electrocardiogram (ECG), blood pressure (BP), and pure tone audiometry (PTA) were 21.9% (246/1125), 27.8% (313/1125), and 18.0% (202/1125), respectively. Male workers accounted for 78.8%. Compared with male workers, female workers had a lower prevalence of abnormal PTA (OR = 0.28, 95% CI = 0.16-0.50). Workers working in medium enterprises had a lower prevalence of abnormal BP than workers in micro enterprises (OR = 0.36, 95% CI = 0.19-0.66). The prevalence of abnormal BP and PTA of workers increased with age. After adjusting for age, sex, and body mass index, the prevalence of abnormal ECG of mining workers was higher than that of manufacturing workers (OR = 1.54, 95% CI = 1.07-2.24), and the prevalence of abnormal PTA had a rising trend with the increase in noise exposure value.
CONCLUSION
Noise-exposed workers have a high prevalence of abnormal ECG, BP, and PTA, and factors such as age, enterprise size, and workplace noise exposure are correlated with the aberrant health of workers. Governments, enterprises, and individuals need to attach great importance to the possible adverse effects of noise. They must also actively adopt various effective measures to protect the occupational safety and health of workers.
Topics: Humans; Noise, Occupational; Male; China; Female; Cross-Sectional Studies; Adult; Middle Aged; Occupational Exposure; Prevalence; Hearing Loss, Noise-Induced; Blood Pressure; Occupational Diseases; Electrocardiography; Audiometry, Pure-Tone; Young Adult
PubMed: 38917109
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0305576 -
Frontiers in Public Health 2024When thinking about major health concerns in the U.S. and around the world, eye care ranks lower compared to cardiovascular disease, cancer, and diabetes. However,...
When thinking about major health concerns in the U.S. and around the world, eye care ranks lower compared to cardiovascular disease, cancer, and diabetes. However, people do not think about the direct connection between diabetes and eye health. Untreated diabetes can lead to visual impairments such as blindness or difficulty seeing. Studies have found that eye health associated with nutrition, occupational exposure, diabetes, high blood pressure, and heart disease are some of the known risk factors. This study aimed to identify the potential risk factors that are associated with visual impairment (VI). The data used for this analysis were obtained from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) - Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS) from 2018 to 2021. We found important characteristics, such as the U.S. region, general health perception, employment status, income status, age, and health insurance source, that are associated with VI. Our study confirmed that the common demographical factors including age, race/ethnicity, the U.S. region, and gender are associated with VI. The study also highlights associations with additional risk factors such as health insurance source, general health perceptions, employment status, and income status. Using this information, we can reach out to communities with large numbers of individuals experiencing vision challenges and help educate them on prevention and treatment protocols, thereby effectively addressing VI and blindness challenges within our communities, neighborhoods, and finally, the broader society.
Topics: Humans; United States; Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System; Risk Factors; Male; Female; Adult; Middle Aged; Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, U.S.; Aged; Adolescent; Vision Disorders; Patient Acceptance of Health Care; Young Adult
PubMed: 38915755
DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2024.1335427 -
Frontiers in Public Health 2024The presence of the section (formerly known as ) in the cork industry involves the risk of respiratory diseases such as suberosis.
INTRODUCTION
The presence of the section (formerly known as ) in the cork industry involves the risk of respiratory diseases such as suberosis.
METHODS
The aim of this study was to corroborate the predominant fungi present in this occupational environment by performing a mycological analysis of 360 workers' nasal exudates collected by nasal swabs. Additionally, evaluation of respiratory disorders among the cork workers was also performed by spirometry.
RESULTS
section was detected by qPCR in 37 out of the 360 nasal swabs collected from workers' samples. From those, 25 remained negative for sp. when using culture-based methods. A significant association was found between ventilatory defects and years of work in the cork industry, with those people working for 10 or more years in this industry having an approximately two-fold increased risk of having ventilatory defects compared to those working less time in this setting. Among the workers who detected the presence of section , those with symptoms presented slightly higher average values of CFU.
DISCUSSION
Overall, the results obtained in this study show that working in the cork industry may have adverse effects on worker's respiratory health. Nevertheless, more studies are needed (e.g., using serological assays) to clarify the impact of each risk factor (fungi and dust) on disease etiology.
Topics: Humans; Occupational Exposure; Portugal; Penicillium; Male; Adult; Middle Aged; Female; Spirometry; Industry
PubMed: 38915753
DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2024.1355094 -
Frontiers in Public Health 2024Cardiovascular diseases are the leading cause of morbidity and mortality in the United States. Despite the complexity of cardiovascular disease etiology, we do not fully...
BACKGROUND
Cardiovascular diseases are the leading cause of morbidity and mortality in the United States. Despite the complexity of cardiovascular disease etiology, we do not fully comprehend the interactions between non-modifiable factors (e.g., age, sex, and race) and modifiable risk factors (e.g., health behaviors and occupational exposures).
OBJECTIVE
We examined proximal and distal drivers of cardiovascular disease and elucidated the interactions between modifiable and non-modifiable risk factors.
METHODS
We used a machine learning approach on four cohorts (2005-2012) of the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey data to examine the effects of risk factors on cardiovascular risk quantified by the Framingham Risk Score (FRS) and the Pooled Cohort Equations (PCE). We estimated a network of risk factors, computed their strength centrality, closeness, and betweenness centrality, and computed a Bayesian network embodied in a directed acyclic graph.
RESULTS
In addition to traditional factors such as body mass index and physical activity, race and ethnicity and exposure to heavy metals are the most adjacent drivers of PCE. In addition to the factors directly affecting PCE, sleep complaints had an immediate adverse effect on FRS. Exposure to heavy metals is the link between race and ethnicity and FRS.
CONCLUSION
Heavy metal exposures and race/ethnicity have similar proximal effects on cardiovascular disease risk as traditional clinical and lifestyle risk factors, such as physical activity and body mass. Our findings support the inclusion of diverse racial and ethnic groups in all cardiovascular research and the consideration of the social environment in clinical decision-making.
Topics: Humans; Cardiovascular Diseases; Bayes Theorem; Female; Male; United States; Nutrition Surveys; Middle Aged; Adult; Ethnicity; Risk Factors; Racial Groups; Machine Learning; Heart Disease Risk Factors
PubMed: 38915752
DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2024.1364730 -
Neurology. Genetics Jun 2024Omigapil is a small molecule which inhibits the GAPDH-Siah1-mediated apoptosis pathway. Apoptosis is a pathomechanism underlying the congenital muscular dystrophy...
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES
Omigapil is a small molecule which inhibits the GAPDH-Siah1-mediated apoptosis pathway. Apoptosis is a pathomechanism underlying the congenital muscular dystrophy subtypes LAMA2-related dystrophy (LAMA2-RD) and COL6-related dystrophy (COL6-RD). Studies of omigapil in the (dy/dy) LAMA2-RD mouse model demonstrated improved survival, and studies in the (dy/dy) LAMA2-RD mouse model and the (Col6a1) COL6-RD mouse model demonstrated decreased apoptosis.
METHODS
A phase 1 open-label, sequential group, ascending oral dose, cohort study of omigapil in patients with LAMA2-RD or COL6-RD ages 5-16 years was performed (1) to establish the pharmacokinetic (PK) profile of omigapil at a range of doses, (2) to evaluate the safety and tolerability of omigapil at a range of doses, and (3) to establish the feasibility of conducting disease-relevant clinical assessments. Patients were enrolled in cohorts of size 4, with each patient receiving 4 weeks of vehicle run-in and 12 weeks of study drug (at daily doses ranging from 0.02 to 0.08 mg/kg). PK data from each cohort were analyzed before each subsequent dosing cohort was enrolled. A novel, adaptive dose-finding method (stochastic approximation with virtual observation recursion) was used to allow for dose escalation/reduction between cohorts based on PK data.
RESULTS
Twenty patients were enrolled at the NIH (LAMA2-RD: N = 10; COL6-RD: N = 10). Slightly greater than dose-proportional increases in systemic exposure to omigapil were seen at doses 0.02-0.08 mg/kg/d. The dose which achieved patient exposure within the pre-established target area under the plasma concentration-vs-time curve (AUC) range was 0.06 mg/kg/d. In general, omigapil was safe and well tolerated. No consistent changes were seen in the disease-relevant clinical assessments during the duration of the study.
DISCUSSION
This study represents the thus far only clinical trial of a therapeutic small molecule for LAMA2-RD and COL6-RD, completed with an adaptive trial design to arrive at dose adjustments. The trial met its primary end point and established that the PK profile of omigapil is suitable for further development in pediatric patients with LAMA2-RD or COL6-RD, the most common forms of congenital muscular dystrophy. While within the short duration of the study disease-relevant clinical assessments did not demonstrate significant changes, this study establishes the feasibility of performing interventional clinical trials in these rare disease patient populations.
CLASSIFICATION OF EVIDENCE
This study provides Class IV evidence of omigapil in a dose-finding phase 1 study.
TRIAL REGISTRATION INFORMATION
Clinical Trials NCT01805024.
PubMed: 38915423
DOI: 10.1212/NXG.0000000000200148 -
Scientific Reports Jun 2024Among the myriad of nanoparticles, silica nanoparticles (SiONPs) have gained significant attention since they are extensively produced and used across several kinds of...
Among the myriad of nanoparticles, silica nanoparticles (SiONPs) have gained significant attention since they are extensively produced and used across several kinds of industries. Because of its widespread usage, there has been increasing concern about the potential health effects. This study aims to evaluate the effects of SiONPs on Interleukin-6 (IL-6) gene expression in human lung epithelial cell lines (A549). In this study, A549 cells were exposed to SiONPs at concentrations of 0, 1, 10, 50, 100, and 200 µg/mL for 24 and 48 h. The IL-6 gene expression was assessed using Real-Time RT-PCR. Additionally, the impact of SiONPs on the viability of A549 cells was determined by MTT assay. Statistical analysis was performed using GraphPad Prism software 8.0. MTT assay results indicated a concentration-dependent impact on cell survival. After 24 h, survival decreased from 80 to 68% (1-100 µg/mL), rising to 77% at higher concentrations. After 48 h, survival dropped from 97 to 80%, decreasing to 90% at higher concentrations. RT-PCR showed a dose-response relationship in cellular toxicity up to 10 µg/mL. At higher concentrations, there was increased IL-6 gene expression, mitigating SiONP-induced cytotoxic effects. The study shows that the viability and proliferation of A549 cells are impacted by different SiONPs concentrations. There may be a potential correlation between IL-6 gene expression reduction and a mechanism linked to cellular toxicity. However, at higher concentrations, an unknown mechanism increases IL-6 gene expression, reducing SiONPs' cytotoxic effects. These effects are concentration-dependent and not influenced by exposure times. Further investigation is recommended to determine this mechanism's nature and implications, particularly in cancer research.
Topics: Humans; Silicon Dioxide; A549 Cells; Nanoparticles; Interleukin-6; Cell Survival; DNA Damage
PubMed: 38914713
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-024-65333-5 -
Communications Medicine Jun 2024While potential risk factors for multiple sclerosis (MS) have been extensively researched, it remains unclear how persons with MS theorize about their MS. Such theories...
BACKGROUND
While potential risk factors for multiple sclerosis (MS) have been extensively researched, it remains unclear how persons with MS theorize about their MS. Such theories may affect mental health and treatment adherence. Using natural language processing techniques, we investigated large-scale text data about theories that persons with MS have about the causes of their disease. We examined the topics into which their theories could be grouped and the prevalence of each theory topic.
METHODS
A total of 486 participants of the Swiss MS Registry longitudinal citizen science project provided text data on their theories about the etiology of MS. We used the transformer-based BERTopic Python library for topic modeling to identify underlying topics. We then conducted an in-depth characterization of the topics and assessed their prevalence.
RESULTS
The topic modeling analysis identifies 19 distinct topics that participants theorize as causal for their MS. The topics most frequently cited are Mental Distress (31.5%), Stress (Exhaustion, Work) (29.8%), Heredity/Familial Aggregation (27.4%), and Diet, Obesity (16.0%). The 19 theory topics can be grouped into four high-level categories: physical health (mentioned by 56.2% of all participants), mental health (mentioned by 53.7%), risk factors established in the scientific literature (genetics, Epstein-Barr virus, smoking, vitamin D deficiency/low sunlight exposure; mentioned by 47.7%), and fate/coincidence (mentioned by 3.1%). Our study highlights the importance of mental health issues for theories participants have about the causes of their MS.
CONCLUSIONS
Our findings emphasize the importance of communication between healthcare professionals and persons with MS about the pathogenesis of MS, the scientific evidence base and mental health.
PubMed: 38914643
DOI: 10.1038/s43856-024-00546-3 -
PloS One 2024Gaseous and semi-volatile organic compounds emitted by the transport sector contribute to air pollution and have adverse effects on human health. To reduce harmful...
Gaseous and semi-volatile organic compounds emitted by the transport sector contribute to air pollution and have adverse effects on human health. To reduce harmful effects to the environment as well as to humans, renewable and sustainable bio-hybrid fuels are explored and investigated in the cluster of excellence "The Fuel Science Center" at RWTH Aachen University. However, data on the effects of bio-hybrid fuels on human health is scarce, leaving a data gap regarding their hazard potential. To help close this data gap, this study investigates potential toxic effects of a Ketone-Ester-Alcohol-Alkane (KEAA) fuel blend on A549 human lung cells. Experiments were performed using a commercially available air-liquid interface exposure system which was optimized beforehand. Then, cells were exposed at the air-liquid interface to 50-2000 ppm C3.7 of gaseous KEAA for 1 h. After a 24 h recovery period in the incubator, cells treated with 500 ppm C3.7 KEAA showed significant lower metabolic activity and cells treated with 50, 250, 500 and 1000 ppm C3.7 KEAA showed significant higher cytotoxicity compared to controls. Our data support the international occupational exposure limits of the single KEAA constituents. This finding applies only to the exposure scenario tested in this study and is difficult to extrapolate to the complex in vivo situation.
Topics: Humans; A549 Cells; Lung; Biofuels; Cell Survival; Gases; Volatile Organic Compounds; Alkanes; Air Pollutants
PubMed: 38913629
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0300772 -
Environmental Epidemiology... Dec 2023Manganese (Mn) is an essential nutrient and neurotoxicant, and the neurodevelopmental effects of Mn may depend on exposure timing. Less research has quantitatively...
BACKGROUND
Manganese (Mn) is an essential nutrient and neurotoxicant, and the neurodevelopmental effects of Mn may depend on exposure timing. Less research has quantitatively compared the impact of Mn exposure on neurodevelopment across exposure periods.
METHODS
We used data from 125 Italian adolescents (10-14 years) from the Public Health Impact of Metals Exposure Study to estimate prospective associations of Mn in three early life exposure periods with adolescent attention-related behaviors. Mn was quantified in deciduous teeth using laser ablation-inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry to represent prenatal (2nd trimester-birth), postnatal (birth ~1.5 years), and childhood (~1.5-6 years) exposure. Attention-related behavior was evaluated using the Conners Behavior Rating Scales in adolescence. We used multivariable linear regression models to quantify associations between Mn in each exposure period, and multiple informant models to compare associations across exposure periods.
RESULTS
Median tooth Mn levels (normalized to calcium) were 0.4 area under the curve (AUC) Mn:Ca × 10, 0.1 AUC Mn:Ca × 10, and 0.0006 Mn:Ca for the prenatal, postnatal, and childhood periods. A doubling in prenatal tooth Mn levels was associated with 5.3% (95% confidence intervals [CI] = -10.3%, 0.0%) lower (i.e., better) teacher-reported inattention scores, whereas a doubling in postnatal tooth Mn levels was associated with 4.5% (95% CI = -9.3%, 0.6%) and 4.6% (95% CI = -9.5%, 0.6%) lower parent-reported inattention and attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder index scores, respectively. Childhood Mn was not beneficially associated with reported attention-related behaviors.
CONCLUSION
Protective associations in the prenatal and postnatal periods suggest Mn is beneficial for attention-related behavior, but not in the childhood period.
PubMed: 38912396
DOI: 10.1097/EE9.0000000000000274