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Browsing by Author "Weissgerber, Tracey L. (6506688349)"

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    Carotid Artery Intima-Media Thickness and Subclinical Atherosclerosis in Women With Remote Histories of Preeclampsia: Results From a Rochester Epidemiology Project-Based Study and Meta-analysis
    (2017)
    Garovic, Vesna D. (6603419874)
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    Milic, Natasa M. (7003460927)
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    Weissgerber, Tracey L. (6506688349)
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    Mielke, Michelle M. (7004869517)
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    Bailey, Kent R. (7202891244)
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    Lahr, Brian (16230827800)
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    Jayachandran, Muthuvel (7004632107)
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    White, Wendy M. (54279565800)
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    Hodis, Howard N. (7006589671)
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    Miller, Virginia M. (55545613900)
    Objective To measure carotid artery intima-media thickness (CIMT), a marker of subclinical atherosclerosis, in postmenopausal women with and without histories of preeclampsia and to synthesize these results with those from prior studies of CIMT performed 10 or more years after preeclamptic pregnancies. Patients and Methods Forty women (median age, 59 years) with histories of preeclampsia and 40 with histories of normotensive pregnancy (confirmed by medical record review) were selected from women who resided and gave birth in Olmsted County, Minnesota, between January 1, 1976, and December 31, 1982. The participants were identified and recruited in 2014-2015, and CIMT was measured by B-mode ultrasonography. Meta-analysis included CIMT studies that were performed 10 or more years after preeclamptic pregnancies and which were identified through PubMed, EMBASE, and Web of Science. Heterogeneity was assessed using the I2 statistic. Standardized mean difference was used as a measure of effect size. Results Carotid artery intima-media thickness, expressed as a median (interquartile range), was greater in the preeclamptic than in the normotensive group (0.80 mm [0.75-0.85 mm] vs 0.73 mm [0.70-0.78]; P=.004); the odds of having CIMT higher than threshold (0.77 mm) was statistically significant after adjusting for confounding factors (odds ratio, 3.17; 95% CI, 1.10-9.14). A meta-analysis of 10 studies conducted 10 or more years post partum included 813 women with and 2874 without histories of preeclampsia. Carotid artery intima-media thickness was greater among women with histories of preeclampsia, with a standardized mean difference of 0.18 and 95% CI of 0.05 to 0.30 mm (P=.004). Conclusion Among women with histories of preeclampsia, CIMT may identify those with subclinical atherosclerosis, thus offering an opportunity for early intervention. © 2017 Mayo Foundation for Medical Education and Research
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    Early onset preeclampsia is associated with glycocalyx degradation and reduced microvascular perfusion
    (2019)
    Weissgerber, Tracey L. (6506688349)
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    Garcia-Valencia, Oscar (57205373508)
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    Milic, Natasa M. (7003460927)
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    Codsi, Elizabeth (57191052907)
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    Cubro, Hajrunisa (57194398691)
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    Nath, Meryl C. (57200731038)
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    White, Wendy M. (54279565800)
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    Nath, Karl A. (7102188130)
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    Garovic, Vesna D. (6603419874)
    Background—The endothelial glycocalyx is a vasoprotective barrier between the blood and endothelium. We hypothesized that glycocalyx degradation is present in preeclampsia, a pregnancy-specific hypertensive disorder characterized by endothelial dysfunction and activation. Methods and Results—We examined the sublingual glycocalyx noninvasively using sidestream dark field imaging in the third trimester among women with normotensive pregnancies (n=73), early (n=14) or late (n=29) onset preeclampsia, or gestational diabetes mellitus (n=21). We calculated the width of the glycocalyx that was permeable to red blood cells (called the perfused boundary region, a measure of glycocalyx degradation) and the percentage of vessels that were filled with red blood cells ≥50% of the time (a measure of microvascular perfusion). In addition, we measured circulating levels of glycocalyx components, including heparan sulfate proteoglycans, hyaluronic acid, and SDC1 (syndecan 1), in a subset of participants by ELISA. Repeated-measures ANOVA was performed to adjust for vessel diameter and caffeine intake. Women with early onset preeclampsia showed higher glycocalyx degradation, indicated by a larger perfused boundary region (mean: 2.14 [95% CI, 2.05–2.20]), than the remaining groups (mean: normotensive: 1.99 [95% CI, 1.95–2.02], P=0.002; late-onset preeclampsia: 2.01 [95% CI, 1.96–2.07], P=0.024; gestational diabetes mellitus: 1.97 [95% CI, 1.91–2.04], P=0.004). The percentage of vessels that were filled with red blood cells was significantly lower in early onset preeclampsia. These structural glycocalyx changes were accompanied by elevated plasma concentrations of the glycocalyx components, heparan sulfate proteoglycans and hyaluronic acid, in early onset preeclampsia compared with normotensive pregnancy. Conclusions—Glycocalyx degradation and reduced microvascular perfusion are associated with endothelial dysfunction and activation and vascular injury in early onset preeclampsia. © 2019 The Authors.
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    Electronic Algorithm Is Superior to Hospital Discharge Codes for Diagnoses of Hypertensive Disorders of Pregnancy in Historical Cohorts
    (2018)
    Milic, Natasa M. (7003460927)
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    Codsi, Elisabeth (57191052907)
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    Butler Tobah, Yvonne S. (59157960700)
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    White, Wendy M. (54279565800)
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    Kattah, Andrea G. (23481817000)
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    Weissgerber, Tracey L. (6506688349)
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    Saiki, Mie (57204721885)
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    Parashuram, Santosh (57204718692)
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    Vaughan, Lisa E. (56527921700)
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    Weaver, Amy L. (57203179699)
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    Savic, Marko (57225215986)
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    Mielke, Michelle M. (7004869517)
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    Garovic, Vesna D. (6603419874)
    Objectives: To develop and validate criteria for the retrospective diagnoses of hypertensive disorders of pregnancy that would be amenable to the development of an electronic algorithm, and to compare the accuracy of diagnoses based on both the algorithm and diagnostic codes with the gold standard, of physician-made diagnoses based on a detailed review of medical records using accepted clinical criteria. Patients and Methods: An algorithm for hypertensive disorders of pregnancy was developed by first defining a set of criteria for retrospective diagnoses, which included relevant clinical variables and diagnosis of hypertension that required blood pressure elevations in greater than 50% of readings (“the 50% rule”). The algorithm was validated using the Rochester Epidemiology Project (Rochester, Minnesota). A stratified random sample of pregnancies and deliveries between January 1, 1976, and December 31, 1982, with the algorithm-based diagnoses was generated for review and physician-made diagnoses (normotensive, gestational hypertension, and preeclampsia), which served as the gold standard; the targeted cohort size for analysis was 25 per diagnosis category according to the gold standard. Agreements between (1) algorithm-based diagnoses and (2) diagnostic codes and the gold standard were analyzed. Results: Sensitivities of the algorithm for 25 normotensive pregnancies, 25 with gestational hypertension, and 25 with preeclampsia were 100%, 88%, and 100%, respectively, and specificities were 94%, 100%, and 100%, respectively. Diagnostic code sensitivities were 96% for normotensive pregnancies, 32% for gestational hypertension, and 96% for preeclampsia, and specificities were 78%, 96%, and 88%, respectively. Conclusion: The electronic diagnostic algorithm was highly sensitive and specific in identifying and classifying hypertensive disorders of pregnancy and was superior to diagnostic codes. © 2018 Mayo Foundation for Medical Education and Research
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    Hypertension in pregnancy and future cardiovascular event risk in siblings
    (2016)
    Weissgerber, Tracey L. (6506688349)
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    Turner, Stephen T. (7402275413)
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    Mosley, Thomas H. (56425717100)
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    Kardia, Sharon L.R. (7003691206)
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    Hanis, Craig L. (7005846343)
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    Milic, Natasa M. (7003460927)
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    Garovic, Vesna D. (6603419874)
    Hypertension in pregnancy is a risk factor for future hypertension and cardiovascular disease. This may reflect an underlying familial predisposition or persistent damage caused by the hypertensive pregnancy. We sought to isolate the effect of hypertension in pregnancy by comparing the risk of hypertension and cardiovascular disease in women who had hypertension in pregnancy and their sisters who did not using the dataset from the Genetic Epidemiology Network of Arteriopathy study, which examined the genetics of hypertension in white, black, and Hispanic siblings. This analysis included all sibships with at least one parous woman and at least one other sibling. After gathering demographic and pregnancy data, BP and serum analytes were measured. Disease-free survival was examined using Kaplan-Meier curves and Cox proportional hazards regression.Comparedwith their sisterswho did not have hypertension in pregnancy, women who had hypertension in pregnancy were more likely to develop new onset hypertension later in life, after adjusting for body mass index and diabetes (hazard ratio 1.75, 95% confidence interval 1.27-2.42). A sibling history of hypertension in pregnancy was also associated with an increased risk of hypertension in brothers and unaffected sisters, whereas an increased risk of cardiovascular events was observed in brothers only. These results suggest familial factors contribute to the increased risk of future hypertension in women who had hypertension in pregnancy. Further studies are needed to clarify the potential role of nonfamilial factors. Furthermore, a sibling history of hypertension in pregnancy may be a novel familial risk factor for future hypertension.
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    Impaired cognition and brain atrophy decades after hypertensive pregnancy disorders
    (2016)
    Mielke, Michelle M. (7004869517)
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    Milic, Natasa M. (7003460927)
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    Weissgerber, Tracey L. (6506688349)
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    White, Wendy M. (54279565800)
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    Kantarci, Kejal (6506482731)
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    Mosley, Thomas H. (56425717100)
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    Windham, B. Gwen (6507467716)
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    Simpson, Brittany N. (59270467600)
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    Turner, Stephen T. (7402275413)
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    Garovic, Vesna D. (6603419874)
    Background - Hypertensive pregnancy disorders have been associated with subjective cognitive complaints or brain white-matter lesions 5 to 10 years after the hypertensive pregnancy. The long-term effects of hypertensive pregnancies on brain structure and cognitive function remain unknown. Methods and Results - This study included 1279 women who participated in the Family Blood Pressure Project Genetic Epidemiology Network of Arteriopathy (GENOA) study. As part of the ancillary Genetics of Microangiopathic Brain Injury (GMBI) study, a neurocognitive battery was administered; 1075 also had a brain magnetic resonance imaging. A history of a hypertensive pregnancy disorder was obtained by a self-report using a validated questionnaire. Linear models fit with generalized estimating equations were used to assess the association between hypertensive pregnancy disorders and cognition, adjusting for age, race, education, body mass index, smoking, current hypertension, hypertension duration, and family history of hypertension. Regression models for the brain magnetic resonance imaging outcomes also were adjusted for total intracranial volume. Women with histories of hypertensive pregnancy disorders performed worse on all measures of processing speed (Digital Symbol Substitution Test [mean score, 41.2 versus 43.4; P=0.005], Trail Making Test Part A [mean seconds, 45.1 versus 42.2; P=0.035], and Stroop [mean score, 173.9 versus 181.0; P=0.002]) and had smaller brain volumes compared with women with histories of normotensive pregnancies (286 versus 297; P=0.023). Conclusions - Hypertensive pregnancy disorders are associated with worse performance on tests of processing speed and smaller brain volumes decades later. Population-based studies are needed to provide critical insight as to the contribution of hypertensive pregnancies to risk of cognitive decline and dementia. © 2016 American Heart Association, Inc.
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    Impaired Flow-Mediated Dilation Before, During, and after Preeclampsia: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
    (2016)
    Weissgerber, Tracey L. (6506688349)
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    Milic, Natasa M. (7003460927)
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    Milin-Lazovic, Jelena S. (57023980700)
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    Garovic, Vesna D. (6603419874)
    Endothelial dysfunction is believed to play a critical role in preeclampsia; however, it is unclear whether this dysfunction precedes the pregnancy or is caused by pathophysiological events in early pregnancy. It is also unclear for how long vascular dysfunction may persist postpartum and whether it represents a mechanism linking preeclampsia with future cardiovascular disease. Our objective was to determine whether women with preeclampsia had worse vascular function compared with women who did not have preeclampsia by performing a systematic review and meta-analysis of studies that examined endothelial dysfunction using flow-mediated dilation. We included studies published before May 29, 2015, that examined flow-mediated dilation before, during, or after preeclampsia. Differences in flow-mediated dilation between study groups were evaluated by standardized mean differences. Out of 610 abstracts identified through PubMED, EMBASE, and Web of Science, 37 studies were eligible for the meta-analysis. When compared with women who did not have preeclampsia, women who had preeclampsia had lower flow-mediated dilation before the development of preeclampsia (≈20-29 weeks gestation), at the time of preeclampsia, and for 3 years postpartum, with the estimated magnitude of the effect ranging between 0.5 and 3 standard deviations. Similar effects were observed when the analysis was limited to studies that excluded women with chronic hypertension, smokers, or both. Vascular dysfunction predates preeclampsia and may contribute to its pathogenesis. Future studies should address whether vascular changes that persist after preeclamptic pregnancies may represent a mechanistic link with increased risk for future cardiovascular disease. © 2015 American Heart Association, Inc.
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    Incidence and Long-Term Outcomes of Hypertensive Disorders of Pregnancy
    (2020)
    Garovic, Vesna D. (6603419874)
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    White, Wendy M. (54279565800)
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    Vaughan, Lisa (56527921700)
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    Saiki, Mie (57204721885)
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    Parashuram, Santosh (57204718692)
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    Garcia-Valencia, Oscar (57205373508)
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    Weissgerber, Tracey L. (6506688349)
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    Milic, Natasa (7003460927)
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    Weaver, Amy (57203179699)
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    Mielke, Michelle M. (7004869517)
    Background: Hypertensive disorders of pregnancy (HDP) are associated with increased risks for cardiovascular disease later in life. The HDP incidence is commonly assessed using diagnostic codes, which are not reliable; and typically are expressed per-pregnancy, which may underestimate the number of women with an HDP history after their reproductive years. Objectives: This study sought to determine the incidence of HDP expressed as both per-pregnancy and per-woman, and to establish their associations with future chronic conditions and multimorbidity, a measure of accelerated aging, in a population-based cohort study. Methods: Using the Rochester Epidemiology Project medical record-linkage system, the authors identified residents of Olmsted County, Minnesota, who delivered between 1976 and 1982. The authors classified pregnancies into normotensive, gestational hypertension, pre-eclampsia, eclampsia, pre-eclampsia superimposed on chronic hypertension, and chronic hypertension using a validated electronic algorithm, and calculated the incidence of HDP both per-pregnancy and per-woman. The risk of chronic conditions between women with versus those without a history of HDP (age and parity 1:2 matched) was quantified using the hazard ratio and corresponding 95% confidence interval estimated from a Cox model. Results: Among 9,862 pregnancies, we identified 719 (7.3%) with HDP and 324 (3.3%) with pre-eclampsia. The incidence of HDP and pre-eclampsia doubled when assessed on a per-woman basis: 15.3% (281 of 1,839) and 7.5% (138 of 1,839), respectively. Women with a history of HDP were at increased risk for subsequent diagnoses of stroke (hazard ratio [HR]: 2.27; 95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.37 to 3.76), coronary artery disease (HR: 1.89; 95% CI: 1.26 to 2.82), cardiac arrhythmias (HR: 1.62; 95% CI: 1.28 to 2.05), chronic kidney disease (HR: 2.41; 95% CI: 1.54 to 3.78), and multimorbidity (HR: 1.25; 95% CI: 1.15 to 1.35). Conclusions: The HDP population-based incidence expressed per-pregnancy underestimates the number of women affected by this condition during their reproductive years. A history of HDP confers significant increase in risks for future chronic conditions and multimorbidity. © 2020 American College of Cardiology Foundation
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    Mechanisms of vascular dysfunction in the interleukin-10–deficient murine model of preeclampsia indicate nitric oxide dysregulation
    (2021)
    Cubro, Hajrunisa (57194398691)
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    Nath, Karl A. (7102188130)
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    Suvakov, Sonja (36572404500)
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    Garcia-Valencia, Oscar (57205373508)
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    Parashuram, Santosh (57204718692)
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    White, Wendy M. (54279565800)
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    Weissgerber, Tracey L. (6506688349)
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    Nath, Meryl C. (57200731038)
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    Milic, Natasa M. (7003460927)
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    Sontag, Fernando (56245905600)
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    d'Uscio, Livius V. (6701488280)
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    Zhu, Yi (56589215600)
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    Kirkland, James L. (35594558800)
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    Tchkonia, Tamar (6508197068)
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    Alexander, Mariam P. (55201846000)
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    Quinton, Reade A. (7004911745)
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    Katusic, Zvonimir S. (7006971465)
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    Grande, Joseph P. (7004996226)
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    Garovic, Vesna D. (6603419874)
    Preeclampsia is a pregnancy-specific hypertensive disorder characterized by proteinuria, and vascular injury in the second half of pregnancy. We hypothesized that endothelium-dependent vascular dysfunction is present in a murine model of preeclampsia based on administration of human preeclamptic sera to interleukin-10-/- mice and studied mechanisms that underlie vascular injury. Pregnant wild type and IL-10-/- mice were injected with either normotensive or severe preeclamptic patient sera (sPE) during gestation. A preeclampsia-like phenotype was confirmed by blood pressure measurements; assessment of albuminuria; measurement of angiogenic factors; demonstration of foot process effacement and endotheliosis in kidney sections; and by accumulation of glycogen in placentas from IL-10-/- mice injected with sPE sera (IL-10-/-sPE). Vasomotor function of isolated aortas was assessed. The IL-10-/-sPE murine model demonstrated significantly augmented aortic contractions to phenylephrine and both impaired endothelium-dependent and, to a lesser extent, endothelium-independent relaxation compared to wild type normotensive mice. Treatment of isolated aortas with indomethacin, a cyclooxygenase inhibitor, improved, but failed to normalize contraction to phenylephrine to that of wild type normotensive mice, suggesting the additional contribution from nitric oxide downregulation and effects of indomethacin-resistant vasoconstricting factors. In contrast, indomethacin normalized relaxation of aortas derived from IL-10-/-sPE mice. Thus, our results identify the role of IL-10 deficiency in dysregulation of the cyclooxygenase pathway and vascular dysfunction in the IL-10-/-sPE murine model of preeclampsia and point towards a possible contribution of nitric oxide dysregulation. These compounds and related mechanisms may serve both as diagnostic markers and therapeutic targets for preventive and treatment strategies in preeclampsia. © 2020 International Society of Nephrology
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    Reveal, Don't Conceal: Transforming Data Visualization to Improve Transparency
    (2019)
    Weissgerber, Tracey L. (6506688349)
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    Winham, Stacey J. (57189638853)
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    Heinzen, Ethan P. (57193140004)
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    Milin-Lazovic, Jelena S. (57023980700)
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    Garcia-Valencia, Oscar (57205373508)
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    Bukumiric, Zoran (36600111200)
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    Savic, Marko D. (57225215986)
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    Garovic, Vesna D. (6603419874)
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    Milic, Natasa M. (7003460927)
    Reports highlighting the problems with the standard practice of using bar graphs to show continuous data have prompted many journals to adopt new visualization policies. These policies encourage authors to avoid bar graphs and use graphics that show the data distribution; however, they provide little guidance on how to effectively display data. We conducted a systematic review of studies published in top peripheral vascular disease journals to determine what types of figures are used, and to assess the prevalence of suboptimal data visualization practices. Among papers with data figures, 47.7% of papers used bar graphs to present continuous data. This primer provides a detailed overview of strategies for addressing this issue by (1) outlining strategies for selecting the correct type of figure depending on the study design, sample size, and the type of variable; (2) examining techniques for making effective dot plots, box plots, and violin plots; and (3) illustrating how to avoid sending mixed messages by aligning the figure structure with the study design and statistical analysis. We also present solutions to other common problems identified in the systematic review. Resources include a list of free tools and templates that authors can use to create more informative figures and an online simulator that illustrates why summary statistics are meaningful only when there are enough data to summarize. Last, we consider steps that investigators can take to improve figures in the scientific literature.
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    Uric Acid: A Missing Link between Hypertensive Pregnancy Disorders and Future Cardiovascular Disease?
    (2015)
    Weissgerber, Tracey L. (6506688349)
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    Milic, Natasa M. (7003460927)
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    Turner, Stephen T. (7402275413)
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    Asad, Reem A. (26424557100)
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    Mosley, Thomas H. (56425717100)
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    Kardia, Sharon L.R. (7003691206)
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    Hanis, Craig L. (7005846343)
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    Garovic, Vesna D. (6603419874)
    Objective To determine whether women who had a hypertensive pregnancy disorder (HPD) have elevated uric acid concentrations decades after pregnancy as compared with women who had normotensive pregnancies. Patients and Methods The Genetic Epidemiology Network of Arteriopathy study measured uric acid concentrations in Hispanic (30%), non-Hispanic white (28%), and non-Hispanic black (42%) women (mean age, 60±10 years). This cross-sectional study was conducted between July 1, 2000, and December 31, 2004. Hispanic participants were recruited from families with high rates of diabetes, whereas non-Hispanic participants were recruited from families with high rates of hypertension. This analysis compared uric acid concentrations in women with a history of normotensive (n=1846) or hypertensive (n=408) pregnancies by logistic regression. Results Women who had an HPD had higher uric acid concentrations (median, 5.7 mg/dL vs 5.3 mg/dL; P<.001) and were more likely to have uric acid concentrations above 5.5 mg/dL (54.4% vs 42.4%; P=.001) than were women who had normotensive pregnancies. These differences persisted after adjusting for traditional cardiovascular risk factors, comorbidities, and other factors that affect uric acid concentrations. A family-based subgroup analysis comparing uric acid concentrations in women who had an HPD (n=308) and their parous sisters who had normotensive pregnancies (n=250) gave similar results (median uric acid concentrations, 5.7 mg/dL vs 5.2 mg/dL, P=0.02; proportion of women with uric acid concentrations >5.5 mg/dL, 54.0% vs 40.3%, P<.001). Conclusion Decades after pregnancy, women who had an HPD have higher uric acid concentrations. This effect does not appear to be explained by a familial predisposition to elevated uric acid concentrations. © 2015 Mayo Foundation for Medical Education and Research.
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    Urinary extracellular vesicles of podocyte origin and renal injury in preeclampsia
    (2017)
    Gilani, Sarwat I. (56898676800)
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    Anderson, Ulrik Dolberg (37039291900)
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    Jayachandran, Muthuvel (7004632107)
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    Weissgerber, Tracey L. (6506688349)
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    Zand, Ladan (6506993436)
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    White, Wendy M. (54279565800)
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    Milic, Natasa (7003460927)
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    Suarez, Maria Lourdes Gonzalez (56005758800)
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    Vallapureddy, Rangit Reddy (57195244040)
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    Nääv, Åsa (56584472600)
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    Erlandsson, Lena (57217473506)
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    Lieske, John C. (7003441017)
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    Grande, Joseph P. (7004996226)
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    Nath, Karl A. (7102188130)
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    Hansson, Stefan R. (7006542835)
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    Garovic, Vesna D. (6603419874)
    Renal histologic expression of the podocyte-specific protein, nephrin, but not podocin, is reduced in preeclamptic compared with normotensive pregnancies. We hypothesized that renal expression of podocytespecific proteinswould be reflected in urinary extracellular vesicles (EVs) of podocyte origin and accompanied by increased urinary soluble nephrin levels (nephrinuria) in preeclampsia. We further postulated that podocyte injury and attendant formation of EVs are related mechanistically to cellfree fetal hemoglobin (HbF) in maternal plasma. Our study population included preeclamptic (n=49) and normotensive (n=42) pregnant women recruited at delivery. Plasma measurements included HbF concentrations and concentrations of the endogenous chelators haptoglobin, hemopexin, and a1- microglobulin. We assessed concentrations of urinary EVs containing immunologically detectable podocyte-specific proteins by digital flow cytometry and measured nephrinuria by ELISA. The mechanistic role of HbF in podocyte injury was studied in pregnant rabbits. Compared with urine from women with normotensive pregnancies, urine from women with preeclamptic pregnancies contained a high ratio of podocin-positive to nephrin-positive urinary EVs (podocin+ EVs-to-nephrin+ EVs ratio) and increased nephrinuria, both of which correlated with proteinuria. Plasma levels of hemopexin, which were decreased in women with preeclampsia, negatively correlated with proteinuria, urinary podocin+ EVs-to-nephrin+ EVs ratio, and nephrinuria. Administration of HbF to pregnant rabbits increased the number of urinary EVs of podocyte origin. These findings provide evidence that urinary EVs are reflective of preeclampsia-related altered podocyte protein expression. Furthermore, renal injury in preeclampsia associated with an elevated urinary podocin+ EVs-to-nephrin+ EVs ratio and may be mediated by prolonged exposure to cellfree HbF. © 2017 by the American Society of Nephrology.

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