Aim: To investigate impact of Yoga and Music Intervention on anxiety, stress, and depression levels of health care workers during the COVID-19 outbreak. Methods: This study was conducted to assess psychological responses of 240 healthcare workers during COVID-19 outbreak. We used Yoga and Music Intervention in normal and abnormal subjects based on Depression Anxiety and Stress Scale-42 (DASS-42). Results: Of all 209 participants, 105 (50.23%) had symptoms of depression (35.88%), anxiety (40.19), and stress (34.92%) alone or in combination. The data suggest that there is significant improvement in test scores after intervention. Majority of persons with abnormal score exhibited improved DASS-42 score on combined interventions of Yoga and music compared to control group. Even subjects without abnormalities on DASS-42 score also showed improved DASS-42 scores in intervention ( n = 52) group compared to nonintervention ( n = 52) group. Conclusions: Our findings highlighted the significance of easily available, simple, inexpensive, safe nonpharmacological interventions like Yoga and Music therapy to overcome stress, anxiety, and depression in present times.
Purpose: The purpose of this study was to assess the microbiota in middle cerebral artery thrombi retrieved in mechanical thrombectomy arising out of symptomatic carotid plaque within 6 hours of acute ischemic stroke. Thrombi were subjected to next-generation sequencing for a bacterial signature to determine their role in atherosclerosis.Materials and Methods: We included 4 human middle cerebral artery thrombus samples (all patients were male). The median age for the patients was 51±13.6 years. Patients enrolled in the study from Pacific Medical University and Hospital underwent mechanical thrombectomy in the stroke window period. All patients underwent brain magnetic resonance angiography (MRA) and circle of Willis and neck vessel MRA along with the standard stroke workup to establish stroke etiology. Only patients with symptomatic carotid stenosis and tandem lesions with ipsilateral middle cerebral artery occlusion were included in the study. Thrombus samples were collected, stored at –80 degrees, and subjected to metagenomics analysis.Results: Of the 4 patients undergoing thrombectomy for diagnosis with ischemic stroke, all thrombi recovered for bacterial DNA in qPCR were positive. More than 27 bacteria were present in the 4 thrombus samples. The majority of bacteria were <i>Lactobacillus, Stenotrophomonas, Pseudomonas, Staphylococcus</i>, and <i>Finegoldia</i>.Conclusion: Genesis of symptomatic atherosclerotic carotid plaque leading to thromboembolism could be either due to direct mechanisms like acidification and local inflammation of plaque milieu with lactobacillus, biofilm dispersion leading to inflammation like with pseudomonas fluorescence, or enterococci or indirect mechanisms like Toll 2 like signaling by gut microbiota.
Background To assess bacterial diversity in infertile couples with their biochemical pregnancy outcomes. Using a retrospective case-control study design, participants were recruited for collection of vaginal swab, follicular fluid, endometrial fluid, and semen samples. The microbial composition was analyzed by 16S ribosomal RNA (rRNA) gene amplification with (MinION) Oxford Nanopore Ltd. Results Our findings revealed that age and endometrial thickness had a significant impact on the pregnancy success rate of pregnant (P) and non-pregnant (NP) patients receiving IVF, with high levels of luteinizing hormone, estrogen, and progesterone in the P group. In addition, the partial least squares discriminant analysis (PLS-DA) revealed a difference in microbial composition between the P and NP groups, as well as a higher microbial abundance in non-pregnant patients compared to pregnant patients. After comparison between pregnant patients and non-pregnant patients, pregnant patients had a higher abundance of Firmicutes and Proteobacteria and a lower abundance of Actinobacteria, Fusobacterium, and Bacteroidetes at the phylum level. Non-pregnant patients had a lower abundance of the probiotics lactobacillus and a higher abundance of infections Prevotella and Gardnerella at the genus level. As a result, a disordered microbiota in non-pregnant patients, characterized by a decrease in probiotics and an increase in pathogens, could be used as a possible marker for a higher IVF failure rate. Conclusion Alteration of the microbiota of the reproductive tract or the presence of certain microbes, regardless of the degree of pathogenicity that can affect fertilization, as well as implantation and subsequent embryonic development. This could result in failed fertility treatments and a lower live birth (LBR) rate.
Background Knowledge of the microbiome is in its infancy in health and human illness, especially concerning human reproduction. We will be better able to treat dysbiosis of the reproductive tract clinically if it is better explained and understood. It has been shown that altered vaginal microbiota affects parturition, and its function is uncertain in assisted reproductive technologies. However, the effects of recognized microbes such as Mycoplasma tuberculosis, Chlamydia trachomatis, and Neisseria gonorrhoeae are well established, resulting in subclinical changes which are considered to be risk factors for infertility and poor reproductive outcomes. Main body Recent studies indicate that the vaginal tract comprises several different organisms of the microbiome. Some microbiota can play an important role not only in the reproductive tract but also in overall health. The microbiome of the female reproductive tract has been identified mainly based on studies that examine vaginal samples across many reproductive technologies, using a metagenomics approach. Conclusion Alteration of reproductive tract microbiota or presence of certain microbiota irrespective of the level of pathogenicity may interfere with fertilization, implantation, and subsequent embryo development. This may lead to failed fertility treatments and reduced live birth rate (LBR).
This study is done to examine the microbiota in thrombi retrieved from the middle cerebral artery after mechanical thrombectomy for symptomatic carotid plaque within 6 hours of an acute ischemic stroke. To evaluate their role in atherosclerosis, thrombi were submitted to next-generation sequencing for a bacterial signature. In these study we are describing allots of bacteria found in thrombus samples, which are associated with stroke. Enrollment of 14 Acute ischemic stroke (AIS) patients was done who underwent mechanical thrombectomy in which 72% (n = 10) male and 28% (n = 4) female. The patients' median age was 16.75 ± 3.68 year old, and they were all female. During the window of acute stroke with symptomatic carotid stenosis and blockage of the ipsilateral middle cerebral artery, all were submitted to mechanical thrombectomy. After mechanical thrombectomy we extracted the DNA from thrombus sample. The microbial composition of all samples was compared using 16S rRNA gene amplicon next-generation sequencing.All of the thrombi retrieved for bacterial DNA in qPCR from the fourteen patients who had thrombectomy for ischemic stroke were positive. The 14 thrombus samples included more than 30 microorganisms. large bacterial diversity was found in thrombus in ischemic stroke patients in this study, which also indicated that microbes present in thrombus also played role in formation of plaque and Bacteria have direct mechanisms such as acidification and local inflammation of the plaque milieu with lactobacillus, biofilm dispersion leading to inflammation with pseudomonas fluorescence, or enterococci, or indirect mechanisms such as Toll 2 like signalling by the gut microbiota, could all lead to thromboembolic and cause stroke. It justifies more research into the involvement of bacteria in thrombus formation in stroke pathophysiology and prognosis.
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