Objective. To investigate the endogenous involvement of transient receptor potential vanilloid 1 (TRPV1) in a model of knee joint inflammation in the mouse.Methods. Following characterization of wild-type (WT) and TRPV1-knockout mice, inflammation was induced via intraarticular (IA) injection of Freund's complete adjuvant (CFA). Knee swelling was assessed as diameter, and inflammatory heat hyperalgesia was determined using the Hargreaves technique, for up to 3 weeks. At 18 hours, acute hyperpermeability was measured with 125 I-albumin, and cytokines and myeloperoxidase activity, a marker of neutrophils, were assayed in synovial fluid extracts. The possibility that exogenous tumor necrosis factor ␣ (TNF␣) was involved in influencing TRPV1 activation was investigated in separate experiments.Results. Increased levels of knee swelling, hyperpermeability, leukocyte accumulation, and TNF␣ were found in WT mice 18 hours after IA CFA treatment compared with saline treatment. Significantly less knee swelling and hyperpermeability were found in TRPV1 ؊/؊ mice, but leukocyte accumulation and TNF␣ levels were similar in WT and TRPV1 ؊/؊ mice. Knee swelling in response to CFA remained significantly higher for a longer period in WT mice compared with TRPV1 ؊/؊ mice, with thermal hyperalgesic sensitivity observed at 24 hours and at 1 week in WT, but not TRPV1 ؊/؊ , mice. Knee swelling was attenuated (P < 0.05) in TRPV1 ؊/؊ compared with WT mice 4 hours after IA administration of TNF␣.Conclusion. Our findings indicate that TRPV1 has a role in acute and chronic inflammation in the mouse knee joint. Thus, selective antagonism of TRPV1 should be considered as a potential target for treatment of acute and chronic joint inflammation.
Highlights• Patient perceptions of the quality of their interactions with their physicians have a significant association with total diabetes-related distress. Diabetes-related distress and patient-physician interactions have a significant independent association with insulin adherence and HbA1c level.• This study delineates specific aspects of the patient-physician interaction that are linked to diabetes-related distress, insulin adherence behavior, and glycemic control. Perceived physician inattention and lack of engagement (and diabetes-related distress) directly affect insulin adherence and glycemic control.
AimsTo investigate the rates and risk of hospitalisations in patients with type 2 diabetes (T2D) mellitus in England.MethodsThis retrospective population-based cohort study used computerised records from the General Practice Research Database linked to Hospital Episode Statistics data in England. Patients with T2D from January 2006 to December 2010 were selected. Primary outcome measures were all-cause, non-diabetes-related, diabetes-related and hypoglycaemia-related hospitalisations. Factors associated with all-cause and diabetes-related hospitalisations were investigated with Cox's proportional hazards models.ResultsAmongst 97,689 patients with T2D, approximately 60% had at least one hospitalisation during the 4-year study period. Rates of hospitalisation were as follows: all-cause, 33.9 per 100 patient-years (pt-yrs); non-diabetes-related, 29.1 per 100 pt-yrs; diabetes-related, 18.8 per 100 pt-yrs and hypoglycaemia, 0.3 per 100 pt-yrs. The risk of all-cause hospitalisation increased with hospitalisation in the previous year, insulin use and the presence of major comorbidities. The risk of a diabetes-related hospitalisation increased with age, female gender, insulin use, chronic renal insufficiency, hypoglycaemia (as diagnosed by a general practitioner) and diabetes-related hospitalisation in the previous year.ConclusionsPatients with T2D are hospitalised at a considerably high rate for causes directly related with diabetes complications and stay longer in hospital. History of hospitalisation and complications of diabetes were found to be predictive of inpatient hospitalisations suggesting previous hospitalisation episodes could serve as points of intervention. This study highlights important areas for healthcare intervention and provides a reminder for vigilance when risk factors for hospitalisation in patients with T2D are present.
Patient and physician experience with insulin and diabetes/insulin education were associated with fewer perceived barriers to insulin progression. Future studies should use multilevel longitudinal designs to quantify the relative impact of potential patient, provider, and health system factors on progression and health outcomes.
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