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Following PSI-stress, pro-apoptotic (bax) protein expression levels increased and α-2c AR and anti-apoptotic protein (bcl-2) levels decreased in investigated all brain regions. The majority of stress-induced changes were recovered with prazosin treatment. The results of our study may potentially be useful in understanding the effect of prazosin treatment, given the fact that the amygdala, frontal cortex, and hippocampus regions are affected for stress conditions.In this second instalment of the Biophysical Reviews' Meet the Editors Series we hear the story of Prof. Kuniaki Nagayama, one of the five Executive Editors of Biophysical Reviews.BACKGROUND AND AIMS To assess safety of the Exilis™ gastric electrical stimulation (GES) system and to investigate whether the settings can be adjusted for comfortable chronic use in subjects with morbid obesity. Gastric emptying and motility and meal intake were evaluated. METHOD In a multicenter, phase 1, open prospective cohort study, 20 morbidly obese subjects (17 female, mean BMI of 40.8 ± 0.7 kg/m2) were implanted with the Exilis™ system. Amplitude of the Exilis™ system was individually set during titration visits. Subjects underwent two blinded baseline test days (GES ON vs. OFF), after which long-term, monthly follow-up continued for up to 52 weeks. RESULTS The procedure was safe, and electrical stimulation was well tolerated and comfortable in all subjects. No significant differences in gastric emptying halftime (203 ± 16 vs. 212 ± 14 min, p > 0.05), food intake (713 ± 68 vs. 799 ± 69 kcal, p > 0.05), insulin AUC (2448 ± 347 vs. 2186 ± 204, p > 0.05), and glucose AUC (41 ± 2 vs.41 ± 2, p > 0.05) were found between GES ON and OFF. At week 4, 13, and 26, a significant (p  less then  0.01) reduction in weight loss was observed but not at week 52. At this time point, the mean excess weight loss (EWL) was 14.2 ± 4.5%. CONCLUSION Gastric electrical stimulation with the Exilis™ system can be considered as safe. see more No significant effect on food intake, gastric emptying, or gastric motility was observed. The reduction in weight loss with Exilis™ GES was significant but short lasting. Further electrophysiological research is needed to gain more insight in optimal stimulation parameters and lead localization.BACKGROUND In contrast to the energy-storing role of white adipose tissue (WAT), brown adipose tissue (BAT) acts as the main site of non-shivering thermogenesis in mammals and has been reported to play a role in protection against obesity and associated metabolic alterations in rodents. Infrared thermography (IRT) has been proposed as a novel non-invasive, safe, and quick method to estimate BAT thermogenic activation in humans. The aim of this study is to determine whether the IRT could be a potential new tool to estimate BAT thermogenic activation in patients with severe obesity in response to bariatric surgery. METHODS Supraclavicular BAT thermogenic activation was evaluated using IRT in a cohort of 31 patients (50 ± 10 years old, BMI = 44.5 ± 7.8; 15 undergoing laparoscopy sleeve gastrectomy and 16 Roux-en-Y gastric bypass) at baseline and 6 months after a bariatric surgery. Clinical parameters were determined at these same time points. RESULTS Supraclavicular BAT-related activity was detected in our patients by IRT after a cooling stimulus. The BAT thermogenic activation was higher at 6 months after laparoscopy sleeve gastrectomy (0.06 ± 0.1 vs 0.32 ± 0.1), while patients undergoing to a roux-en-Y gastric bypass did not change their thermogenic response using the same cooling stimulus (0.09 ± 0.1 vs 0.08 ± 0.1). CONCLUSIONS Our study postulates the IRT as a potential tool to evaluate BAT thermogenic activation in patients with obesity before and after a bariatric surgery. Further studies are needed to evaluate differences between LSG technique and RYGB on BAT activation.INTRODUCTION Oesophageal bile reflux after bariatric surgery may trigger development of Barrett's oesophagus. Gastro-oesophageal reflux of bile is captured by hepatobiliary iminodiacetic acid (HIDA) scintigraphy; however, anatomical and physiological changes after bariatric surgery warrant protocol modifications to optimise bile reflux detection. METHODS HIDA scintigraphy occurred 6 months after either sleeve gastrectomy, Roux-en-Y gastric bypass or one-anastomosis gastric bypass. Standard HIDA scanning involves (i) 6-h fast and 24-h abstinence from opioids; (ii) IV administration of 99mTc di-isopropyl iminodiacetic acid; and (iii) dual anterior/posterior 60-min dynamic scanning of the duodenum, stomach and oesophagus. Three challenges were identified, and modifications were implemented, namely, (1) anatomical localisation of refluxed bile on planar scintigraphy was improved by adding a SPECT/CT for 3D imaging; (2) impaired cholecystokinin-controlled gallbladder emptying, following bypassed duodenum, was addressed by ingestion of a 'fatty meal'; and (3) intestinal hypomotility after gastric bypass was counteracted by longer scan duration (75-90 min) to allow bile to pass beyond the gastro-jejunal anastomosis. RESULTS HIDA scan was undertaken in 18 patients, 13 of whom underwent the modified protocol. The tailored protocol ameliorated issues identified with the standard HIDA scan protocol; thus, accurate anatomical localisation was achieved in all patients, no delayed gallbladder emptying was observed, and bile was observed beyond the gastro-jejunal anastomosis in all gastric bypass patients. The modified technique was well tolerated by patients. CONCLUSION A tailored HIDA scan protocol with addition of a SPECT-CT scan, ingestion of a fatty meal and prolonged scanning duration results in enhanced bile reflux detection in post-bariatric surgical patients.INTRODUCTION Postprandial hypoglycemia (PPHG) is a well-known complication after bariatric surgery (BS). However, it is not known whether PPHG affects weight loss after BS. AIMS To assess the impact of PPHG on weight loss after BS in subjects without and with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2D). METHODS Data from 338 subjects who had undergone gastric bypass (RYGB) or sleeve gastrectomy (LSG) and were followed up for at least 2 years were analyzed. At each follow-up visit, the patient's anthropometric and biochemical characteristics were recorded and the Edinburgh Questionnaire was performed to evaluate the presence of PPHG symptoms. RESULTS Before surgery younger age and lower BMI predicted PPHG after BS (p = 0.02 and p = 0.0008, respectively). Also, the baseline OGTT indicated that subjects who developed PPHG had an earlier glucose peak and more often had low glucose levels at 2 h compared with the no-PPHG group (p = 0.03 and p = 0.004, respectively). After surgery Mild-to-moderate PPHG occurred equally after RYGB and LSG (38% vs 25%, p = ns when accounting for confounders), and in T2D who achieved remission and those who did not (29.

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