As heart failure develops, the heart utilizes ketone bodies at increased rates, indicating an adaptive stress response. Thus, increasing ketone body availability exerts protective effects against heart failure. However, although it is the widely used approach for increasing ketone body availability, the ketogenic diet shows limited cardioprotective effects against heart failure. This study was aimed at examining the effects of the ketogenic diet on heart failure and the underlying mechanisms. Pressure overload-induced heart failure was established by transverse aortic constriction (TAC) in mice. Continuous ketogenic diet feeding for 8 weeks failed to protect the heart against heart failure. It showed no significant effects on cardiac systolic function and fibrosis but aggravated cardiac diastolic function in TAC mice. Specifically, it induced systemic lipid metabolic disorder and hepatic dysfunction in TAC mice. It decreased the content of 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl-CoA lyase (HMGCL), a key enzyme in ketogenesis, and impaired the capacity of hepatic ketogenesis in TAC mice. It preserved the capacity of hepatic ketogenesis and exerted cardioprotective effects against heart failure, increasing cardiac function and decreasing cardiac fibrosis, in liver-specific HMGCL-overexpressed TAC mice. Importantly, we found that alternate-day ketogenic diet feeding did not impair the capacity of hepatic ketogenesis and exerted potent cardioprotective effects against heart failure. These results suggested that alternate-day but not continuous ketogenic diet protects against heart failure through preservation of ketogenesis in the liver.
PurposeWe aimed to build a model to qualitatively and quantitatively evaluate publications of research of spinal cord injury rehabilitation from 1997 to 2016.MethodsData were obtained from the Web of Science Core Collection on October 6, 2017. We conducted a qualitative and quantitative analysis of publication outputs, journals, authors, institutions, countries, cited references, keywords, and terms by bibliometric methods and bibliometric software packages.ResultsWe identified 5,607 publications on rehabilitation of spinal cord injury from 1997 to 2016, and found that the annual publication rate increased with time. The Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation published the largest number of literature, the most active country was USA, the most active institution was University of Washington, and Post MWM was the leading author. Keyword analysis indicated that life satisfaction, muscle strength, wheelchair training, walking, gait, and others were the hot spots of these research studies, whereas classification, exoskeleton, plasticity, and old adult were research frontiers.ConclusionThis bibliometric study revealed that research on rehabilitation of spinal cord injury is a well-developed and promising research field. Global scientific research cooperation is close. However, higher quality research is needed. Our findings provide valuable information for researchers to identify better perspectives and develop the future research direction.
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Although many papers have reported suction influence on sediment transport, only few of them considered effects of suction zone length on sediment transport rate. In this study, experiments were conducted to investigate suction effects on sediment transport rate in a horizontal conduit with a suction zone with variable lengths. The results show that at the same suction intensity in the form of suction velocity ratio, the sediment transport rate increases with suction zone length, while all the data collapse if suction intensity in the form of suction rate ratio is used. Moreover, velocities measured using particle image velocimetry are used to explain the effect of suction zone length on the transport rate. Finally, a modified densimetric Froude number involving the effect of suction rate in terms of changes to the near-bed streamwise velocity is developed on the basis of this finding.
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