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Acute respiratory distress syndrome is a complex respiratory disease that can be induced by influenza virus infection. Critical care providers are uniquely positioned to manage this pathological progression in adult patients through evidence-based practice.

Influenza and subsequent acute respiratory distress syndrome are associated with extremely high morbidity and mortality in adult patients in the United States. Although evidence-based medical management strategies can alter the clinical trajectory of acute respiratory distress syndrome and improve outcomes, critical care providers do not always implement these measures.

To provide critical care providers with an overview of the pathological progression of influenza-induced acute respiratory distress syndrome and the current evidence-based strategies for management.

This article reviews the epidemiology and pathophysiology associated with influenza-induced acute respiratory distress syndrome, the criteria for diagnosis, and the evidence-based medical management.

This article reviews the epidemiology and pathophysiology associated with influenza-induced acute respiratory distress syndrome, the criteria for diagnosis, and the evidence-based medical management.Developing effective in vivo models for SARS-CoV-2 infection is crucial for mechanistic studies of COVID-19 disease progression. In this issue of JEM, Israelow et al. (https//doi.org/10.1084/jem.20201241) generate a model that supports SARS-CoV-2 infection in mice, which they use to characterize type I IFN-driven pulmonary inflammation.

In long-term care facilities in the United States, certified nursing assistants (CNAs) provide mealtime assistance to residents with dementia, a task that substantially increases caregiver burden due to the time and attention required. The aim of this qualitative study was to explore the individual and interpersonal barriers and facilitators CNAs experience when providing mealtime assistance to residents with dementia.

Focus group questions were developed based on the corresponding levels of the Social Ecological Model. Using purposive sampling, nine focus groups were conducted with 53 CNAs who had at least one year of experience as a CNA working with older adults. Focus groups were audio recorded and transcribed verbatim. Data were analyzed using the directed content analysis approach.

CNAs reported individual skills, training, and personal characteristics that affected their ability to provide mealtime assistance. At the interpersonal level, CNAs identified their relationships with residents, residentmprove interpersonal relationships between CNAs and residents' family members and other coworkers. Developing nonverbal communication skills may foster an improved relationship between CNAs and their residents with dementia. Future research should evaluate interventions that seek to improve these skills to determine their impact on the mealtime experience.Intestinal neuropeptides and neurotrophins as endocrine messengers play a key role in the bidirectional gut-brain interaction both in health and disease status. Their alterations in several neurological disorders have been reported, but whether a remarkable change occurs in Parkinson disease (PD) remains unexplored. In this study, we aimed to investigate the levels of 13 neuropeptides and 4 neurotrophins in the intestine of neurotoxin-induced PD mice. The PD mice were obtained by chronic injection of 1-methyl-4-phenyl-1,2,3,6 tetrahydropyridine (MPTP) or MPTP/probenecid (MPTP/p). The levels of mRNA and protein expression in mouse intestines were measured by using real-time reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction and Western blotting, respectively. We found that the mRNA expression of 2 neuropeptides (cholecystokinin [CCK] and dynorphin A [Dyn A]) and 2 neurotrophins (brain-derived neurotrophic factor [BDNF] and neurotrophin-5) was significantly decreased in the colon of MPTP group compared to the vehicle-treated group. The protein levels of CCK, Dyn A, and BDNF were reduced in the colon of MPTP- or MPTP/p-treated mice compared to those of the vehicle-treated group. Wnt agonist These data suggest that the intestinal expression of CCK, Dyn A, and BDNF was significantly reduced in PD animal models, and may play a role in the gut-brain axis in PD.

Physical activity (PA) in later-life may reduce dementia risk, but little is known regarding long-term cognitive effects of PA that occurred earlier in adulthood or mechanisms underlying associations. PA patterns at different ages may independently contribute to dementia risk, which would implicate multiple critical periods for intervention. The current study tested whether retrospective reports of PA in early- and mid-adulthood were independently associated with later-life longitudinal memory outcomes and whether associations were mediated by late-life cardiometabolic diseases.

Participants comprised 5,200 Health and Retirement Study Life History Mail Survey respondents. Latent growth curves estimated independent associations between retrospectively reported PA in early-adulthood (age 18-29) and mid-adulthood (age 40-49) and 16-year episodic memory trajectories. Indirect pathways involving the maintenance of PA from early- to mid-adulthood and the influence of PA on later-life cardiometabolic diseases (hypertension, diabetes, and heart disease) were also estimated.

PA in early- and mid-adulthood independently predicted higher initial memory level and slower memory decline in later-life, respectively. Early-adulthood PA was indirectly associated with later-life memory level through higher mid-adulthood PA and lower rates of later-life hypertension, as well as with subsequent memory decline through higher mid-adulthood PA.

The current findings highlight the importance of PA throughout adulthood, such that initiating and/or maintaining exercise in early- or mid-adulthood may be protective for later-life cognitive health, and hypertension appears to represent a key mediator of these effects.

The current findings highlight the importance of PA throughout adulthood, such that initiating and/or maintaining exercise in early- or mid-adulthood may be protective for later-life cognitive health, and hypertension appears to represent a key mediator of these effects.

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