Moyamoya disease (MMD) is well known to be caused by insufficient cerebral vascular formation. However, the essential pathogenesis has not yet been identified. Using our recently developed technique of generating vasculogenic and anti-inflammatory cultures, we investigated endothelial progenitor cell (EPC) expansion and differentiation under the cytokine milieu generated by the peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMNCs) of the operated and non-operated MMD patients. EPC colony forming assay of the cultured PBMNCs disclosed the decline of the definitive EPC colony numbers in the both MMD patients. The level of interleukin-10 (IL-10) was lower in secretory cytokines from the cultured PBMNCs of MMD patients than that in that of controls using a cytometric bead array. The addition of human recombinant IL-10 to PBMNCs cultured from MMD patients restored the EPC colony forming potential of MMD PBMNCs. Following phorbol myristate acetate stimulation of the cultured PBMNCs, flow cytometry revealed a decrease in intracellular IL-10 storage in the main cell populations of the PBMNCs cultured from MMD patients relative to those cultured from controls. The present data provide the expected mechanism of vascular malformation in MMD pathogenesis originated from the insufficient production of IL-10 secreting cells from PBMNCs fostering EPC expansion and differentiation.
The purpose of the present study is to evaluate the vital prognoses of elderly people in their mid-eighties living in a group home (GH) compared to age- and sex-matched outpatient clinic (OPC) in an observational study conducted over 6 years. We investigated the association between mortality and general, cardiac, and nutritional parameters, including eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) in 54 GH residents (83 ± 8 years old) and 57 OPC attendees (83 ± 5 years old). Kaplan-Meier curves and Cox proportional hazard ratio analyses were used to assess the association between EPA drug administration and mortality in the GH residents and OPC attendees, respectively. The 54 GH residents had higher mortality and poorer nutritional states, as indicated by lower EPA/arachidonic acid values (median 0.20 vs 0.55, p < 0.001), and BMI under the condition without EPA drug administration (1800 mg daily) than did the OPC group. The significant factors that differed between survivors and deceased in the GH residents and OPC attendees were nutritional and cardiac factors. Cox proportional hazard ratio analysis confirmed that a possible determinant of the prognosis was a lower incidence of EPA drug administration and lower hemoglobin in GH. Kaplan-Meier curves and Cox proportional hazard ratio analyses revealed that EPA drug administration significantly reduced the relative mortality by 82 % in the GH residents (p < 0.001) but not in the OPC attendees. The vital prognosis in individuals from GHs was potentially improved by EPA drug administration, which was not the case in the OPC group; however, further prospective studies are needed.
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