In patients with clinical findings of tennis leg who undergo US, abnormalities of the medial gastrocnemius muscle appear to be more common than those of the plantaris tendon.
BackgroundSitagliptin, a dipeptidyl peptidase-4 (DPP-4) inhibitor used in type 2 diabetes therapy, has demonstrated protective effects in diabetic chronic kidney disease, in part due to its pleiotropic actions. However, its potential direct effects on the kidney are still not completely defined. Here, by means of proteomics and miRNA profiling, we have further unveiled the role of sitagliptin in oxidative stress, as well as the underlying mechanisms.MethodsRenal cortex samples from 9-month-old wild-type (Wistar), type II diabetic Goto-Kakizaki (GK) and sitagliptin-treated GK rats (GK+Sita) (10 mg kg−1 per day) were subjected to quantitative miRNA transcriptomic array, immunohistochemistry and Western blot studies. Renal GK and GK+Sita samples were also analyzed by differential in-gel electrophoresis. Bioinformatic tools were used to find out the relationships between altered proteins and related miRNA expression. Studies were also carried out in cultured tubular cells to confirm in vivo data.ResultsDiabetic GK rats exhibited proteinuria, renal interstitial inflammatory infiltrates and fibrosis, which improved by 20 weeks of sitagliptin treatment. Proteomic analysis of diabetic GK and Wistar rats showed a differential expression of 39 proteins mostly related to oxidative stress and catabolism. In addition, 15 miRNAs were also significantly altered in GK rats.ConclusionTreatment with sitagliptin was associated with modulation of antioxidant response in the diabetic kidney, involving a downregulation of miR-200a, a novel Keap-1 inhibitor and miR-21, coincidentally with the clinical and the morphological improvement. These data further support the concept that DPP-4 inhibitors could exert a direct reno-protective effect in patients with diabetic nephropathy.
This report describes the natural history of the Segond fracture and documents the radiographic appearance of the healed Segond fracture. The clinical and radiographic records of 129 patients with acute anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injuries were reviewed. Four (3.1%) of these patients had Segond fractures. On follow-up radiographic examination, seven patients demonstrated a characteristic bone excrescence arising 3-6 mm inferior to the lateral tibial plateau. In four of the five patients for whom acute injury films were available this excrescence arose at the site of the earlier Segond fracture. Healing of such fractures is associated with a characteristic bone excrescence distinct from an osteophyte. This excrescence implies significant internal derangement of the knee.
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