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Biologic aging results in a chronic inflammatory condition, termed inflammaging, which establishes a risk for such age-related diseases as neurocardiovascular diseases; therefore, it is of great importance to develop rejuvenation strategies that are able to attenuate inflammaging as a means of intervention for age-related diseases. A promising rejuvenation factor that is present in young blood has been found that can make aged neurons younger; however, the component in the young blood and its mechanism of action are poorly elucidated. We assessed rejuvenation in naturally aged mice with extracellular vesicles (EVs) or exosomes extracted from young murine serum on the basis of different spectrums of microRNAs in these vesicles from young and old sera. We found that EVs extracted from young donor mouse serum, rather than EVs extracted from old donor mouse serum or non-EV supernatant extracted from young donor mouse serum, were able to attenuate inflammaging in old mice. Inflammaging is attributed to multiple factors, one of which is thymic aging-released self-reactive T cell-induced pathology. We found that the attenuation of inflammaging after treatment with EVs from young serum partially contributed to the rejuvenation of thymic aging, which is characterized by partially reversed thymic involution, enhancement of negative selection signals, and reduced autoreactions in the periphery. Our results provide evidence for understanding of the potential rejuvenation factor in the young donor serum, which holds great promise for the development of novel therapeutics to reduce morbidity and mortality caused by age-related inflammatory diseases.-Wang, W., Wang, L., Ruan, L., Oh, J., Dong, X., Zhuge, Q., Su, D.-M. Extracellular vesicles extracted from young donor serum attenuate inflammaging via partially rejuvenating aged T-cell immunotolerance.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1096/fj.201800059R | DOI Listing |
J Diabetes Complications
August 2025
Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Bd de la Plaine 2, 1050 Ixelles, Belgium; KidZ Health Castle, Universiteit Ziekenhuis Brussel, Av du Laerbeek 101, 1090 Jette, Belgium. Electronic address:
Aims: Our review aimed to determine the prevalence of - and factors associated with - hearing loss, oral and olfactory disease, frozen shoulder, trigger finger, and hair loss in young adults with type 1 diabetes. These conditions were selected based on research team interests, existing literature, and group discussion.
Methods: We conducted a quantitative narrative review using a systematic process to identify cohort and cross-sectional studies involving young adults with type 1 diabetes (mean age 18-30 years).
Ann Plast Surg
September 2025
Department of Plastic Surgery, University of Tennessee Health Science Center, Memphis, TN.
Background: Mandibular fractures are the most common facial fractures treated in the emergency setting, with significant variability in operative management across surgical specialties. Plastic and reconstructive surgery (PRS), otolaryngology (ENT), and oral and maxillofacial surgery (OMFS) each approach mandibular fracture repair with different philosophies, particularly regarding tooth extraction within the fracture line. However, few studies directly compare these practices.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS One
September 2025
Centre for Innovative Drug Development and Therapeutic Trials for Africa (CDT Africa), College of Health Sciences, Addis Ababa University, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
Background: We aimed to describe the prevalence of exposure to traumatic events and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in pregnant women attending antenatal care (ANC) in rural Ethiopia. We hypothesised that antenatal PTSD symptoms would be associated with previous obstetric complications and intimate partner violence (IPV) and impact negatively on women´s satisfaction with ANC.
Methods: The design was a facility-based cross-sectional study in primary health centres providing ANC in southern Ethiopia.
IEEE J Biomed Health Inform
September 2025
The multi-user motor imagery brain-computer interface (BCI) is a new approach that uses information from multiple users to improve decision-making and social interaction. Although researchers have shown interest in this field, the current decoding methods are limited to basic approaches like linear averaging or feature integration. They ignored accurately assessing the coupling relationship features, which results in incomplete extraction of multi-source information.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHRB Open Res
July 2025
School of Nursing, Psychotherapy and Community Health, Faculty of Science and Health, Dublin City University - Glasnevin Campus, Glasnevin, County Dublin, D09 V209, Ireland.
Background: Public and Patient Involvement (PPI) refers to the active collaboration of patients and the public in health and social care research decision-making, enhancing research success, cost-effectiveness, and impact. Children, young people, and their families bring unique lived experiences to PPI in research, relating to others with similar experiences, while factors like age, cognitive maturation, and developmental stage create differences between researchers and patients or the public. Collaboration with children, young people, and their families should be guided by specific project context and a strong evidence base.
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