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Dive into the research topics where David E. Michalik is active.

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Featured researches published by David E. Michalik.


The Lancet | 2017

Coronary atherosclerosis in indigenous South American Tsimane: a cross-sectional cohort study

Hillard Kaplan; Randall C. Thompson; Benjamin C. Trumble; L. Samuel Wann; Adel H. Allam; Bret Beheim; Bruno Frohlich; M. Linda Sutherland; James D. Sutherland; Jonathan Stieglitz; D. Rodríguez; David E. Michalik; Chris J. Rowan; Guido P. Lombardi; Ram Bedi; Angela Garcia; James K. Min; Jagat Narula; Caleb E. Finch; Michael Gurven; Gregory S. Thomas

BACKGROUND Conventional coronary artery disease risk factors might potentially explain at least 90% of the attributable risk of coronary artery disease. To better understand the association between the pre-industrial lifestyle and low prevalence of coronary artery disease risk factors, we examined the Tsimane, a Bolivian population living a subsistence lifestyle of hunting, gathering, fishing, and farming with few cardiovascular risk factors, but high infectious inflammatory burden. METHODS We did a cross-sectional cohort study including all individuals who self-identified as Tsimane and who were aged 40 years or older. Coronary atherosclerosis was assessed by coronary artery calcium (CAC) scoring done with non-contrast CT in Tsimane adults. We assessed the difference between the Tsimane and 6814 participants from the Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis (MESA). CAC scores higher than 100 were considered representative of significant atherosclerotic disease. Tsimane blood lipid and inflammatory biomarkers were obtained at the time of scanning, and in some patients, longitudinally. FINDINGS Between July 2, 2014, and Sept 10, 2015, 705 individuals, who had data available for analysis, were included in this study. 596 (85%) of 705 Tsimane had no CAC, 89 (13%) had CAC scores of 1-100, and 20 (3%) had CAC scores higher than 100. For individuals older than age 75 years, 31 (65%) Tsimane presented with a CAC score of 0, and only four (8%) had CAC scores of 100 or more, a five-fold lower prevalence than industrialised populations (p≤0·0001 for all age categories of MESA). Mean LDL and HDL cholesterol concentrations were 2·35 mmol/L (91 mg/dL) and 1·0 mmol/L (39·5 mg/dL), respectively; obesity, hypertension, high blood sugar, and regular cigarette smoking were rare. High-sensitivity C-reactive protein was elevated beyond the clinical cutoff of 3·0 mg/dL in 360 (51%) Tsimane participants. INTERPRETATION Despite a high infectious inflammatory burden, the Tsimane, a forager-horticulturalist population of the Bolivian Amazon with few coronary artery disease risk factors, have the lowest reported levels of coronary artery disease of any population recorded to date. These findings suggest that coronary atherosclerosis can be avoided in most people by achieving a lifetime with very low LDL, low blood pressure, low glucose, normal body-mass index, no smoking, and plenty of physical activity. The relative contributions of each are still to be determined. FUNDING National Institute on Aging, National Institutes of Health; St Lukes Hospital of Kansas City; and Paleocardiology Foundation.


NeuroImage: Clinical | 2014

Regional brain gray and white matter changes in perinatally HIV-infected adolescents

Manoj K. Sarma; Rajakumar Nagarajan; Margaret A. Keller; Rajesh Kumar; Karin Nielsen-Saines; David E. Michalik; Jaime G. Deville; Joseph A. Church; M. Albert Thomas

Despite the success of antiretroviral therapy (ART), perinatally infected HIV remains a major health problem worldwide. Although advance neuroimaging studies have investigated structural brain changes in HIV-infected adults, regional gray matter (GM) and white matter (WM) volume changes have not been reported in perinatally HIV-infected adolescents and young adults. In this cross-sectional study, we investigated regional GM and WM changes in 16 HIV-infected youths receiving ART (age 17.0 ± 2.9 years) compared with age-matched 14 healthy controls (age 16.3 ± 2.3 years) using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)-based high-resolution T1-weighted images with voxel based morphometry (VBM) analyses. White matter atrophy appeared in perinatally HIV-infected youths in brain areas including the bilateral posterior corpus callosum (CC), bilateral external capsule, bilateral ventral temporal WM, mid cerebral peduncles, and basal pons over controls. Gray matter volume increase was observed in HIV-infected youths for several regions including the left superior frontal gyrus, inferior occipital gyrus, gyrus rectus, right mid cingulum, parahippocampal gyrus, bilateral inferior temporal gyrus, and middle temporal gyrus compared with controls. Global WM and GM volumes did not differ significantly between groups. These results indicate WM injury in perinatally HIV-infected youths, but the interpretation of the GM results, which appeared as increased regional volumes, is not clear. Further longitudinal studies are needed to clarify if our results represent active ongoing brain infection or toxicity from HIV treatment resulting in neuronal cell swelling and regional increased GM volume. Our findings suggest that assessment of regional GM and WM volume changes, based on VBM procedures, may be an additional measure to assess brain integrity in HIV-infected youths and to evaluate success of current ART therapy for efficacy in the brain.


Global heart | 2014

Why Did Ancient People Have Atherosclerosis?: From Autopsies to Computed Tomography to Potential Causes

Gregory S. Thomas; L. Samuel Wann; Adel H. Allam; Randall C. Thompson; David E. Michalik; M. Linda Sutherland; James D. Sutherland; Guido P. Lombardi; Lucia Watson; Samantha L. Cox; Clide M. Valladolid; Gomaa Abd el-Maksoud; Muhammad Al-Tohamy Soliman; Ibrahem Badr; Abd el-Halim Nur el-din; Emily M. Clarke; Ian G. Thomas; Michael I. Miyamoto; Hillard Kaplan; Bruno Frohlich; Jagat Narula; Alexandre F.R. Stewart; Albert Zink; Caleb E. Finch

Computed tomographic findings of atherosclerosis in the ancient cultures of Egypt, Peru, the American Southwest and the Aleutian Islands challenge our understanding of the fundamental causes of atherosclerosis. Could these findings be true? Is so, what traditional risk factors might be present in these cultures that could explain this apparent paradox? The recent computed tomographic findings are consistent with multiple autopsy studies dating as far back as 1852 that demonstrate calcific atherosclerosis in ancient Egyptians and Peruvians. A nontraditional cause of atherosclerosis that could explain this burden of atherosclerosis is the microbial and parasitic inflammatory burden likely to be present in ancient cultures inherently lacking modern hygiene and antimicrobials. Patients with chronic systemic inflammatory diseases of today, including systemic lupus erythematosus, rheumatoid arthritis, and human immunodeficiency virus infection, experience premature atherosclerosis and coronary events. Might the chronic inflammatory load of ancient times secondary to infection have resulted in atherosclerosis? Smoke inhalation from the use of open fires for daily cooking and illumination represents another potential cause. Undiscovered risk factors could also have been present, potential causes that technologically cannot currently be measured in our serum or other tissue. A synthesis of these findings suggests that a gene-environmental interplay is causal for atherosclerosis. That is, humans have an inherent genetic susceptibility to atherosclerosis, whereas the speed and severity of its development are secondary to known and potentially unknown environmental factors.


Journal of Cardiology | 2014

Is atherosclerosis fundamental to human aging? Lessons from ancient mummies

Emily M. Clarke; Randall C. Thompson; Adel H. Allam; L. Samuel Wann; Guido P. Lombardi; M. Linda Sutherland; James D. Sutherland; Samantha L. Cox; Muhammad Al-Tohamy Soliman; Gomaa Abd el-Maksoud; Ibrahem Badr; Michael I. Miyamoto; Bruno Frohlich; Abdel-Halim Nur el-din; Alexandre F.R. Stewart; Jagat Narula; Albert Zink; Caleb E. Finch; David E. Michalik; Gregory S. Thomas

Case reports from Johan Czermak, Marc Ruffer, and others a century or more ago demonstrated ancient Egyptians had atherosclerosis three millennia ago. The Horus study team extended their findings, demonstrating that atherosclerosis was prevalent among 76 ancient Egyptian mummies and among 61 mummies from each of the ancient cultures of Peru, the American Southwest, and the Aleutian Islands. These findings challenge the assumption that atherosclerosis is a modern disease caused by present day risk factors. An extensive autopsy of an ancient Egyptian teenage male weaver named Nakht found that he was infected with four parasites: Schistosoma haematobium, Taenia species, Trichinella spiralis, and Plasmodium falciparum. Modern day patients with chronic inflammatory disease such as rheumatoid arthritis, systemic lupus erythematosus, and human immunodeficiency virus experience premature atherosclerosis. Could the burden of chronic inflammatory disease have been a risk factor for atherosclerosis in these ancient cultures? The prevalence of atherosclerosis in four diverse ancient cultures is consistent with atherosclerosis being fundamental to aging. The impact of risk factors in modern times, and potentially in ancient times, suggests a strong gene-environmental interplay: human genes provide a vulnerability to atherosclerosis, the environment determines when and if atherosclerosis becomes manifest clinically.


Evolution, medicine, and public health | 2016

Cardiovascular disease and type 2 diabetes in evolutionary perspective: A critical role for helminths?

Michael Gurven; Benjamin C. Trumble; Jonathan Stieglitz; Aaron D. Blackwell; David E. Michalik; Caleb E. Finch; Hillard Kaplan

Heart disease and type 2 diabetes are commonly believed to be rare among contemporary subsistence-level human populations, and by extension prehistoric populations. Although some caveats remain, evidence shows these diseases to be unusual among well-studied hunter-gatherers and other subsistence populations with minimal access to healthcare. Here we expand on a relatively new proposal for why these and other populations may not show major signs of these diseases. Chronic infections, especially helminths, may offer protection against heart disease and diabetes through direct and indirect pathways. As part of a strategy to insure their own survival and reproduction, helminths exert multiple cardio-protective effects on their host through their effects on immune function and blood lipid metabolism. Helminths consume blood lipids and glucose, alter lipid metabolism, and modulate immune function towards Th-2 polarization—which combined can lower blood cholesterol, reduce obesity, increase insulin sensitivity, decrease atheroma progression, and reduce likelihood of atherosclerotic plaque rupture. Traditional cardiometabolic risk factors, coupled with the mismatch between our evolved immune systems and modern, hygienic environments may interact in complex ways. In this review, we survey existing studies in the non-human animal and human literature, highlight unresolved questions and suggest future directions to explore the role of helminths in the etiology of cardio-metabolic disease.


Global heart | 2014

Funerary Artifacts, Social Status, and Atherosclerosis in Ancient Peruvian Mummy Bundles☆

M. Linda Sutherland; Samantha L. Cox; Guido P. Lombardi; Lucia Watson; Clide M. Valladolid; Caleb E. Finch; Albert Zink; Bruno Frohlich; Hillard Kaplan; David E. Michalik; Michael I. Miyamoto; Adel H. Allam; Randall C. Thompson; L. Samuel Wann; Jagat Narula; Gregory S. Thomas; James D. Sutherland

BACKGROUND Evidence of atherosclerotic plaques in ancient populations has led to the reconsideration of risk factors for heart disease and of the common belief that it is a disease of modern times. METHODS Fifty-one wrapped mummy bundles excavated from the sites of Huallamarca, Pedreros, and Rinconada La Molina from the Puruchuco Museum collection in Lima, Peru, were scanned using computed tomography to investigate the presence of atherosclerosis. Funerary artifacts contained within the undisturbed mummy bundles were analyzed as an attempt to infer the social status of the individuals to correlate social status with evidence of heart disease in this ancient Peruvian group. This work also provides an inventory of the museum mummy collection to guide and facilitate future research. RESULTS Statistical analysis concluded that there is little association between the types of grave goods contained within the bundles when the groups are pooled together. However, some patterns of artifact type, material, atherosclerosis, and sex emerge when the 3 excavation sites are analyzed separately. CONCLUSIONS From the current sample, it would seem that social class is difficult to discern, but those from Huallamarca have the most markers of elite status. We had hypothesized that higher-status individuals may have had lifestyles that would place them at a higher risk for atherogenesis. There seems to be some indication of this within the site of Huallamarca, but it is inconclusive in the other 2 archeological sites. It is possible that a larger sample size in the future could reveal more statistically significant results.


Global heart | 2014

Atherosclerosis in Ancient and Modern Egyptians: The Horus Study

Adel H. Allam; Mohamed A. Mandour Ali; L. Samuel Wann; Randall C. Thompson; M. Linda Sutherland; James D. Sutherland; Bruno Frohlich; David E. Michalik; Albert Zink; Guido P. Lombardi; Lucia Watson; Samantha L. Cox; Caleb E. Finch; Michael I. Miyamoto; Sallam L. Sallam; Jagat Narula; Gregory S. Thomas

BACKGROUND Although atherosclerosis is usually thought of as a disease of modernity, the Horus Team has previously reported atherosclerotic vascular calcifications on computed tomographic (CT) scans in ancient Egyptians. OBJECTIVES The purpose of this study was to compare patterns and demographic characteristics of this disease among Egyptians from ancient and modern eras. METHODS We compared the presence and extent of vascular calcifications from whole-body CT scans performed on 178 modern Egyptians from Cairo undergoing positron emission tomography (PET)/CT for cancer staging to CT scans of 76 Egyptian mummies (3100 bce to 364 ce). RESULTS The mean age of the modern Egyptian group was 52.3 ± 15 years (range 14 to 84) versus estimated age at death of ancient Egyptian mummies 36.5 ± 13 years (range 4 to 60); p < 0.0001. Vascular calcification was detected in 108 of 178 (60.7%) of modern patients versus 26 of 76 (38.2%) of mummies, p < 0.001. Vascular calcifications on CT strongly correlated to age in both groups. In addition, the severity of disease by number of involved arterial beds also correlated to age, and there was a very similar pattern between the 2 groups. Calcifications in both modern and ancient Egyptians were seen peripherally in aortoiliac beds almost a decade earlier than in event-related beds (coronary and carotid). CONCLUSIONS The presence and severity of atherosclerotic vascular disease correlates strongly to age in both ancient and modern Egyptians. There is a striking correlation in the distribution of the number of vascular beds involved. Atherosclerotic calcifications are seen in the aortoiliac beds almost a decade earlier than in the coronary and carotid beds.


Journal of the International Association of Providers of AIDS Care | 2015

Low Third-Trimester Serum Levels of Lamivudine/Zidovudine and Lopinavir/Ritonavir in an HIV-Infected Pregnant Woman with Gastric Bypass

David E. Michalik; Janielle T. Jackson-Alvarez; Roxana Flores; Christina Tolentino-Baldridge; Jagmohan S. Batra

Pharmacokinetics of lamivudine (3TC)/zidovudine (ZDV) and lopinavir/ritonavir (LPV/r) are described in a gravid 27-year-old HIV-infected woman with gastric bypass. Blood levels were obtained for these medications at time points 0 (predose) and 1, 2, 4, 6, 8, and 12 hours postdose. For these times, the levels (µg/mL) of 3TC were 0.0801, 0.69, 0.339, 0.237, 0.202, 0.108, and 0.0461; the levels of ZDV were 0.0153, 0.433, 0.0717, 0.0481, 0.0107, 0.0214, and 0.00864; the levels of lopinavir (LPV) were 2.45, 2.64, 1.95, 2.78, 3.83, 3.20, and 1.92; and the levels of ritonavir (RTV) were 0.09, 0.10, 0.07, 0.11, 0.15, 0.15, and 0.06. These data suggest that gastric bypass affected these antiretroviral drug levels. A functional, intact small bowel is responsible for absorption of these medications.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Pilot Assessment of Brain Metabolism in Perinatally HIV-Infected Youths Using Accelerated 5D Echo Planar J-Resolved Spectroscopic Imaging

Zohaib Iqbal; Neil E. Wilson; Margaret A. Keller; David E. Michalik; Joseph A. Church; Karin Nielsen-Saines; Jaime G. Deville; Raissa Souza; Mary-Lynn Brecht; M. Albert Thomas

Purpose To measure cerebral metabolite levels in perinatally HIV-infected youths and healthy controls using the accelerated five dimensional (5D) echo planar J-resolved spectroscopic imaging (EP-JRESI) sequence, which is capable of obtaining two dimensional (2D) J-resolved spectra from three spatial dimensions (3D). Materials and Methods After acquisition and reconstruction of the 5D EP-JRESI data, T1-weighted MRIs were used to classify brain regions of interest for HIV patients and healthy controls: right frontal white (FW), medial frontal gray (FG), right basal ganglia (BG), right occipital white (OW), and medial occipital gray (OG). From these locations, respective J-resolved and TE-averaged spectra were extracted and fit using two different quantitation methods. The J-resolved spectra were fit using prior knowledge fitting (ProFit) while the TE-averaged spectra were fit using the advanced method for accurate robust and efficient spectral fitting (AMARES). Results Quantitation of the 5D EP-JRESI data using the ProFit algorithm yielded significant metabolic differences in two spatial locations of the perinatally HIV-infected youths compared to controls: elevated NAA/(Cr+Ch) in the FW and elevated Asp/(Cr+Ch) in the BG. Using the TE-averaged data quantified by AMARES, an increase of Glu/(Cr+Ch) was shown in the FW region. A strong negative correlation (r < -0.6) was shown between tCh/(Cr+Ch) quantified using ProFit in the FW and CD4 counts. Also, strong positive correlations (r > 0.6) were shown between Asp/(Cr+Ch) and CD4 counts in the FG and BG. Conclusion The complimentary results using ProFit fitting of J-resolved spectra and AMARES fitting of TE-averaged spectra, which are a subset of the 5D EP-JRESI acquisition, demonstrate an abnormal energy metabolism in the brains of perinatally HIV-infected youths. This may be a result of the HIV pathology and long-term combinational anti-retroviral therapy (cART). Further studies of larger perinatally HIV-infected cohorts are necessary to confirm these findings.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2018

ATHEROSCLEROSIS AS MANIFEST BY THORACIC AORTIC CALCIUM: INSIGHTS FROM A REMOTE NATIVE POPULATION WITH EXTREMELY LOW LEVELS OF CORONARY ATHEROSCLEROSIS AND TRADITIONAL CV RISK FACTORS

Randall C. Thompson; Benjamin C. Trumble; Michael Gurven; Chris J. Rowan; Katherine M. Walsworth; Frances Neunuebel; Adel H. Allam; Bruno Frohlich; Samuel Wann; David E. Michalik; M. Linda Sutherland; James D. Sutherland; Guido P. Lombardi; Bret Beheim; Jonathan Steiglitz; Jagat Narula; James K. Min; Caleb E. Finch; Gregory S. Thomas; Hillard Kaplan

Thoracic aortic calcium (TAC) is thought to be a manifestation of atherosclerosis with risk factors similar to those for CAD. To better understand TAC, we examined the Tsimane, a remote Bolivian Amazonian population with few CV factors and the lowest recorded levels of coronary artery calcium (CAC

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Caleb E. Finch

University of Southern California

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Randall C. Thompson

University of Missouri–Kansas City

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Jagat Narula

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Guido P. Lombardi

Cayetano Heredia University

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Hillard Kaplan

University of New Mexico

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