Peripheral artery disease (PAD) generates tissue ischemia through arterial occlusions and insufficient collateral vessel formation. Vascular insufficiency in PAD occurs despite higher circulating levels of vascular endothelial growth factor A (VEGF-A),1,2 a key regulator of angiogenesis. Here, we show that clinical PAD is associated with elevated anti-angiogenic VEGF-A splice isoform (VEGF-A165b), and a corresponding reduction of the pro-angiogenic VEGF-A165a isoform. In a murine model of PAD, VEGF-A165b was upregulated by conditions associated with impaired limb revascularization, including leptin-deficiency, diet-induced obesity, genetic ablation of the secreted frizzled-related protein 5 (Sfrp5) adipokine and transgenic overexpression of Wnt5a in myeloid cells. In PAD models, delivery of VEGF-A165b inhibited revascularization of ischemic hind limbs, whereas treatment with an isoform-specific neutralizing antibody reversed the impaired revascularization phenotype caused by metabolic dysfunction or perturbations in the Wnt5a/Sfrp5 regulatory system. These results indicate that inflammation driven expression of the anti-angiogenic VEGF-A isoform can contribute to impaired collateralization in ischemic cardiovascular disease.
The present study had two aims. The first was to evaluate the reliability and the validity of the Japanese version of the World Health Organization (WHO)-Five Well-Being Index (WHO-5-J) as a brief well-being scale. The second was to examine the discriminatory validity of this test as a screening tool for current depressive episodes in diabetic patients. A sample of 129 diabetic patients completed the WHO-5-J. Of these, 65 were also interviewed by psychiatrists to assess whether they had any current depressive episodes according to DSM-IV. The internal consistency was evaluated using Cronbach's alpha, the Loevinger coefficient of homogeneity, and factor analysis. The external concurrent validity was evaluated by correlations with the external scales potentially related to subjective well-being. Discriminatory validity was evaluated using receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analysis. Cronbach's alpha and the Loevinger coefficient were estimated to be 0.89 and 0.65, respectively. A factor analysis identified only one factor. The WHO-5-J was significantly correlated with a number of major diabetic complications, depression, anxiety, and subjective quality of life. ROC analysis showed that the WHO-5-J can be used to detect a current depressive episode (area under curve: 0.92; 95% confidence interval: 0.85-0.98). A cut-off of <13 yielded the best sensitivity/specificity trade-off: sensitivity, 100%; specificity, 78%. The WHO-5-J was thus found to have a sufficient reliability and validity, indicating that it is a useful instrument for detecting current depressive episodes in diabetic patients.
Background: Adiponectin has vascular protective actions and is bound by T-cadherin. Results: T-cadherin-deficient mice lack skeletal muscle tissue-resident adiponectin and display impaired revascularization that is not improved by treatment with exogenous adiponectin.
Conclusion: Expression of T-cadherin is critical for revascularization actions of adiponectin in vitro and in vivo.Significance: The T-cadherin/adiponectin interaction is important for vascular homeostasis.
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