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Träfflista för sökning "WFRF:(Hammar Mats 1950 ) srt2:(2020-2023)"

Sökning: WFRF:(Hammar Mats 1950 ) > (2020-2023)

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1.
  • Liffner, Susanne, 1974- (författare)
  • Infertility in Men in Relation to Their Birth Characteristics
  • 2021
  • Doktorsavhandling (övrigt vetenskapligt/konstnärligt)abstract
    • Background: About 10-15 % of couples worldwide suffer from infertility, the inability to achieve a pregnancy after more than 12 months of unprotected intercourse. Causes can be related to female factors, male factors, or both. In about 20 % of the couples, the cause remains unexplained. Male factor infertility is based on semen sample evaluation and is defined as poor semen quantity or quality, preferably in two or more samples. When assisted reproductive technology (ART) is considered for a couple with male factor infertility, intra-cytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI) where the sperm is injected into the oocyte, is often needed to achieve embryo development.Men born small for gestational age (SGA), with low birth weight (LBW, £2,5000g) and/or prematurely (before the 37th gestational week) do not become fathers as often as men born with appropriate size for gestational age (AGA) at term. The aims of the present thesis were to investigate if this lower likelihood to become a father for men born SGA, preterm, or with low birth weight could be related to an increased risk of male factor infertility, if ICSI and sperm donation more often were needed and if the chance of conceiving by ART was lower than in men born AGA. An additional aim was to investigate if sperm DNA damage was more common in men born SGA compared with men born with normal size for gestational age.Material and Methods: Paper I and II were based on retrospective case control studies on men becoming fathers by ART in study I, and infertile men, patients at the Centre of Reproductive Medicine, University Hospital, Linköping, Sweden (RMC), in study II. Paper III was based on a cohort study on all men born in Sweden between 1973 and 1993. All three studies used data from national registers held by the National Board of Health and Welfare and Statistics Sweden. Study III also used information from the Swedish National Quality Register of Assisted Reproduction.Paper IV was based on a case series study of sperm DNA fragmentation in infertile patients and sperm donors at RMC, where two different methods of measuring sperm DNA fragmentation were compared, Halosperm® (easier to perform) and Sperm Chromatin Structure Assay (reference method). Paper V was based on a cohort study of men undergoing ART at RMC. The proportion of sperm with DNA fragmentation was compared between men born SGA and men born AGA.Results and conclusions: Men becoming fathers after ART were more often born with low birth weight than men conceiving naturally. Men becoming fathers after ICSI, presuming a poor semen sample, were more often born SGA than men conceiving by conventional IVF, or conceiving without treatment. ICSI had to be performed in 63% of men born SGA but only in 45% of men born AGA. Men with male factor infertility were more often born SGA or with LBW than men with female factor infertility, or when the infertility was unexplained. The results after ART were not affected by birth weight or size at birth.The likelihood of becoming a father was lower for men born SGA or with LBW compared with men born with normal birth weight. These men were also more often single (never married or with a registered partner) and had a higher risk of being born with undescended testicles, which increases the risk of infertility. Men born SGA more often needed ICSI or sperm donation.The two different methods to analyse sperm DNA fragmentation had high correlation and agreement, and Halosperm® could be considered a reliable and more easily handled method in the clinical setting. The median proportion of sperm with DNA fragmentation were higher for men born SGA (16.6%) compared with men born AGA (6.4%). The result was not statistically significant as the absolute number of men born SGA was much smaller than expected in this sample of 550 men. Larger studies are needed to confirm the hypothesis that DNA fragmentation contributes to a lower likelihood to become a father in men born SGA.
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2.
  • Berin, Emilia, 1992- (författare)
  • Resistance Training and Physical Activity in Postmenopausal Women : Effects on Vasomotor Symptoms, Quality of Life and Microcirculation
  • 2023
  • Doktorsavhandling (övrigt vetenskapligt/konstnärligt)abstract
    • Background  Menopause is a physiological event, but is associated with bothersome symptoms as well as physical changes that affect women’s health. About 75 % of women experience vasomotor symptoms (hot flushes and night sweats) related to menopause that often reduce quality of life. The vasomotor symptoms may be attributed to dysfunctional temperature regulation centrally in the hypothalamus and peripherally in the skin’s circulation. The most effective treatment for vasomotor symptoms is menopausal hormone therapy, but not all women are able to, or want to, use it.  In addition to the impact on quality of life, studies have associated vasomotor symptoms and menopause with macrovascular endothelial dysfunction. Previous studies on the association of these factors with the skin’s microcirculatory function are small and few. Observational studies have associated physical activity and exercise with less vasomotor symptoms, but the evidence from intervention trials is of low quality and the results are ambiguous. Physical activity has established general health effects, and could potentially decrease vasomotor symptoms by effects on endogenous opioids centrally, and by more efficient thermoregulation peripherally.  The aim of this thesis was to investigate the effect of resistance training on vasomotor symptoms and health-related quality of life in postmenopausal women, and to explore the women’s experiences of the training to find barriers and facilitators. We also aimed to investigate whether the skin’s microcirculatory function differed between women regarding menopausal status, vasomotor symptoms, menopausal hormone therapy, and physical activity.  Material and methods  The first study was an open randomized controlled trial including 65 postmenopausal women with moderate to severe vasomotor symptoms and low physical activity levels. We randomized the women to 15 weeks of resistance training (intervention) or unchanged physical activity (control). The participants registered vasomotor symptoms daily in a diary, and answered health-related quality of life questionnaires at baseline and at 15 weeks. The first 15 women to finish the intervention were recruited to a qualitative study. The women’s experiences of the resistance training intervention were explored in individual interviews after the intervention period, and all were followed-up with telephone interviews after one year. The third study was cross-sectional, including 1148 women from Linköping, 50-64 years old, who participated in the Swedish CArdioPulmonary bioImage Study (SCAPIS). These women answered a questionnaire about menopausal status, vasomotor symptoms and menopausal hormone therapy use, and wore accelerometers for seven days to assess physical activity. The skin’s microcirculation was assessed at rest and during post-occlusive reactive hyperemia.  Results  Moderate to severe vasomotor symptoms per 24 hours decreased significantly more in the group of women randomized to resistance training compared with the control group (mean difference -2.7, 95% CI -4.2 to -1.3). The resistance training group improved in domains of menopause-specific health-related quality of life compared with the control group but there was little impact on generic health-related quality of life. In the qualitative study we found that the vasomotor symptoms acted as a “trigger” for the women to become motivated to exercise. Their motivation then evolved from being driven by hopes of symptom relief into being driven by a wish for general well-being, which was still a driving force after one year. Microvascular function did not differ between postmenopausal and premenopausal women, or between women with or without vasomotor symptoms or menopausal hormone therapy. Women with higher levels of objectively measured and self-reported physical activity had a better reactivity of the skin’s microcirculation. The differences remained significant after adjusting for BMI, smoking, hypertension, diabetes, and education.   Conclusions  Resistance training could be effective for decreasing vasomotor symptoms and improving some aspects of health-related quality of life in motivated postmenopausal women. The vasomotor symptoms themselves spurred motivation to exercise, indicating they present an opportunity to increase physical activity. When a woman seeks medical advice for vasomotor symptoms, this could be a chance for health care professionals to help her initiate or increase exercise. Women who performed more physical activity and exercise had better skin microvascular function, but no association with VMS was found. Future studies are needed to investigate what type and dose of exercise is the most effective to reduce vasomotor symptoms and whether there is a way to predict for whom exercise will or will not be an effective intervention.   
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3.
  • Leijon, Ingemar, 1942-, et al. (författare)
  • God prognos för unga vuxna med mycket låg födelsevikt [Follow-up study of very low birthweight children in Sweden at the age of 27-28]
  • 2020
  • Ingår i: Läkartidningen. - Stockholm, Sweden : Sveriges Läkarförbund. - 0023-7205 .- 1652-7518. ; 117
  • Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
    • Studies show that very low birthweight can be an important risk factor for mental problems, disturbed fertility and neuroendocrine dysregulation. In a regional long-term study 56 of 86 adult individuals 27 to 28 years of age with a very low birthweight were compared with normal birthweight controls. Analyses of self-reported mental health, socio-demographic factors, sex hormone levels, and hair cortisol levels showed no significant differences between the groups. However, in order to analyse subgroups with different risk factors from the newborn period or children with a variety of social background factors, larger patient groups are needed.
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4.
  • Leijon, Ingemar, 1942-, et al. (författare)
  • Self-reported mental health and cortisol activity at 27-28 years of age in individuals born with very low birthweight
  • 2020
  • Ingår i: Acta Paediatrica. - : Wiley-Blackwell Publishing Inc.. - 0803-5253 .- 1651-2227. ; 109:5, s. 948-958
  • Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
    • AimTo assess mental health outcomes of very low birthweight (VLBW, <1500 g) subjects to adulthood and to examine salivary cortisol and hair cortisol levels and their relation to birth characteristics and mental health.MethodsA Swedish regional cohort of 56 VLBW subjects and 55 full‐term controls were assessed at the ages 27‐28 with adult self‐reported scales and the mean of 2 days diurnal salivary cortisol and hair cortisol. The cohorts had been assessed at 15 years of age with youth self‐reported scales.ResultsThere were no differences between the groups in youth self‐reported scales and adult self‐reported scores. The 24 participating VLBW girls scored lower on youth self‐reported scales externalising and total problem scores than the control girls. In adulthood, the 21 participating VLBW women had significantly higher morning concentrations of salivary cortisol than control women, P = .014. No significant associations were found between cortisol concentrations and adult self‐reported scales internalising, externalising and total scores.ConclusionSelf‐reported mental health in VLBW subjects was comparable with normal birthweight controls indicating a satisfying transition from adolescence to adulthood. VLBW females had higher morning salivary cortisol concentrations, suggesting a gender difference. We found no correlations between cortisol and mental health.
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5.
  • Nilsson, Sigrid, et al. (författare)
  • Resistance training reduced luteinising hormone levels in postmenopausal women in a substudy of a randomised controlled clinical trial: A clue to how resistance training reduced vasomotor symptoms
  • 2022
  • Ingår i: PLOS ONE. - : Public Library of Science (PLoS). - 1932-6203. ; 17:5
  • Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
    • Background: Vasomotor symptoms (VMS) are common around menopause. Menopausal hormone therapy is the most effective treatment for VMS. Physical exercise has been proposed as an alternative treatment since physically active women have previously been found to experience fewer VMS than inactive women. In our randomised controlled trial on resistance training to treat VMS, sympoms were reduced by 50% in the intervention group compared with the control group.Objectives: To propose a mechanism to explain how resistance training reduced VMS and to assess if luteinizing hormone (LH) and follicle stimulating hormone (FSH) were affected in accordance with the proposed mechanism.Trial design and methods: A substudy of a randomized controlled trial on 65 postmenopausal women with VMS and low physical activity who were randomised to 15 weeks of resistance training three times per week (n = 33) or to a control group (n = 32). To be regarded compliant to the intervention we predecided a mean of two training sessions per week. The daily number of VMS were registered before and during the 15 weeks. Blood samples were drawn for analysis of LH and FSH at baseline and after 15 weeks.Results: LH decreased significantly in the compliant intervention group compared with the control group (-4.0±10.6 versus 2.9±9.0, p = 0.028 with Mann-Whitney U test). FSH also decreased in the compliant intervention group compared with the control group, however not enough to reach statistical significance (-3.5±16.3 versus 3.2±18.2, p = 0.063 with Mann-Whitney U test). As previously published the number of hot flushes decreased significantly more in the intervention group than in the control group but there was no association between change in LH or FSH and in number of VMS.Conclusions: We propose that endogenous opiods such as β-endorphin or dynorphin produced during resistance training decreased VMS by stimulating KNDγ-neurons to release neurokinin B to the hypothalamic thermoregulatory centre. Through effects on KNDγ-neurons, β-endorphin could also inhibit GnRH and thereby decrease the production of LH and FSH. The significanty decreased LH in the compliant intervention group compared with the control group was in accordance with the proposed mechanism.
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