MedicalResearch.com Interview with:Susan Farr, Ph.D.
Research Professor of Geriatrics
Saint Louis University
MedicalResearch: What are the main findings of the study?Dr. Farr:We found that reducing the conversion of amyloid precursor protein (APP) to beta amyloid with an antisense targeting the beta amyloid portion of amyloid precursor protein in the Tg2576 mouse which overexpresses human beta amyloid, improves learning and memory and reduces neuroinflammatory cytokine (inflammation in the brain).
(more…)
MedicalResearch.com Interview with: Adriana C. Vidal, Ph. D.
Assistant Professor
Department of Obstetrics & Gynecology
Division of Clinical & Epidemiologic Research and
Cancer Prevention, Detection and Control Research Program and Department of Surgery Division of Urology
Duke University School of Medicine Durham, NC 27710
MedicalResearch: What are the main findings of the study?Dr. Vidal: Among 430 veterans at the VA Hospital in Durham, N.C., including 156 men with confirmed prostate cancer, we found that men who self-reported a higher intake of carbohydrates were at a reduced risk of both low-grade and high-grade prostate cancer.
Moreover, we found that intake of foods with high glycemic index increased total prostate cancer risk in black men. However, a higher fiber intake was associated with reduced risk of high grade prostate cancer.
(more…)
MedicalResearch.com Interview with: Dr. Robin Voigt PhD
Department of Internal Medicine
Division of Gastroenterology
Rush University Medical Center
Chicago, Illinois
MedicalResearch: What are the main findings of the study? Dr. Voigt:We found that chronic circadian rhythm disruption has no effect on the intestinal microbiota when mice are fed a standard chow diet but when combined with a high-fat, high-sugar diet circadian rhythm disruption results in intestinal dysbiosis and an increase in pro-inflammatory bacteria.
(more…)
MedicalResearch.com Interview with:Jonathon D. Truwit, MD, MBA
Enterprise Chief Medical Officer
Sr. Administrative Dean
Froedtert-Medical College of Wisconsin
Milwaukee, WI 53226
MedicalResearch.com: What are the main findings of the study?Dr. Truwit: Rosuvastatin did not reduce mortality, nor days free of the breathing machine, in patients with sepsis-associated acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). One in four patients with ARDS die.
(more…)
MedicalResearch.com Interview with:Wei Bao MD, PhD
Postdoc fellow, Epidemiology Branch
Division of Intramural Population Health Research
NICHD/National Institutes of Health
Rockville, MD 20852
MedicalResearch: What are the main findings of the study?Dr. Wei Bao: This study, to our knowledge, is the first attempt to examine the associations of physical activity and sedentary behaviors with risk of type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) among women with a history of gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM), which is a high-risk population of T2DM. The main findings are:
(1) Physical activity is inversely associated with risk of progression from GDM to T2DM. Each 5-metabolic equivalent hours per week increment of total physical activity, which is equivalent to 100 minutes per week of moderate-intensity physical activity or 50 minutes per week of vigorous physical activity, was related to a 9% lower risk of T2DM; this inverse association remained significant after additional adjustment for body mass index (BMI).
(2) An increase in physical activity is associated with a lower risk of progression from gestational diabetes mellitus to T2DM. Compared with women who maintained their total physical activity levels, women who increased their total physical activity levels by 7.5 MET-h/wk or more (equivalent to 150 minutes per week of moderate-intensity physical activityor 75 minutes per week of vigorous physical activity) had a 47% lower risk of T2DM; the association remained significant after additional adjustment for BMI.
(3) Prolonged time spent watching TV, as a common sedentary behavior, is associated with an increased risk of progression from gestational diabetes mellitus to T2DM. Compared with women who watched TV 0 to 5 hours per week, those watched TV 6 to 10, 11 to 20, and 20 or more hours per week had 28%, 41%, and 77%, respectively, higher risk of T2DM. The association was no longer significant after additional adjustment for BMI.
(more…)
MedicalResearch.com Interview with: Malene Nøhr Demant
Department of Cardiology
Copenhagen University Hospital Gentofte
Hellerup, Denmark
MedicalResearch: What are the main findings of the study?Dr. Demant:Our study shows that increasing severity of heart failure is associated with an increased risk of developing diabetes. Increasing loop-diuretic dosage was used as a proxy for heart failure severity. Patients with the most severe heart failure were three times more likely to develop diabetes than those with the least severe. Patients who were also being treated with ACE inhibitors (angiotensin-converting-enzyme inhibitors) had a less pronounced increase in diabetes risk.
Patients who developed diabetes were 16% more likely to die than those who did not develop diabetes.
(more…)
MedicalResearch.com Interview with:Nileshkumar J. Patel MD
Staten Island University Hospital
Staten Island, NY, 10304 and
Abhishek J. Deshmukh MD
University of Arkansas
Little Rock, AR
MedicalResearch: What are the main findings of the study?Answer: We analyzed data from almost 4 million hospitalizations for atrial fibrillation (AF) from more than 1,200 hospitals across 45 states in last decade, and found that
- Hospitalization rates for atrial fibrillation have increased exponentially among US adults during the past 10 years, particularly in those 65 years or older.
- The most frequent coexisting conditions were hypertension (59.99%), diabetes (21.47%) and chronic pulmonary disease (20.01%).
- In terms of geographic distribution of admissions, the hospitals in the South constitute (38.5%) the highest percentage of atrial fibrillation hospitalizations, followed by Midwest (24.9%), Northeast (22.2%) and West (14.4%).
- Overall in-hospital mortality was 1%. The mortality rate was highest in >80 years age group (1.93%) and patients with concomitant heart failure (8.2%).
- The percentage of patients discharged to nursing facility increased from 8.1% in 2000 to 11.5% in 2010 and need for home health care increased from 6.7% to 13.1%. Approximately one fourth of the patients (25.83%) were discharged to long-term care institution if atrial fibrillation hospitalization was complicated by acute ischemic stroke.
- Mean cost of AF hospitalization increased significantly from $6,410 in 2001 to $8,439 in 2010 (24.04% increase, p <0.001) even after adjusting for inflation. This represents an absolute increment in annual national cost from approximate 2.15 billion dollars in 2001 to 3.46 billion dollars in 2010. The mean cost of care was highest if AF hospitalization was associated with heart failure ($33,161) and valvular disorders ($28,030).
(more…)
MedicalResearch.com Interview Professor Kim Bennell
ARC Future Fellow
Department of Physiotherapy
University of Melbourne
Parkville, Vic 3010 Australia
MedicalResearch: What are the main findings of the study?Professor Bennell: In 102 people with painful hip osteoarthritis, we compared a 'real' physical therapy program involving exercise, manual therapy techniques,education and provision of a cane if appropriate to a sham physical therapy treatment that was made to look as though it was real but instead involved turned off ultrasound and gentle application of a hand crème to the hip region. Participants in both groups went to see a physical therapist on 10 occasions over 12 weeks and performed home exercises if in the 'real' physical therapy group or lightly applied the cream at home if in the sham group. Participants were followed for 9 months in total. We found that while both groups showed improvements in pain and physical function, the improvements were similar between the two groups. That is, the real physical therapy program did not show greater benefits over a sham treatment. (more…)
MedicalResearch.com Interview with:Vicki Fung, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor
Department of Medicine, Harvard Medical School
Mongan Institute for Health Policy, Massachusetts General Hospital
MedicalResearch: What are the main findings of the study?Dr. Fung: We found that lower income parents of children with asthma were more likely to delay or avoid taking their children to a doctor's office visit or to the emergency room if they had to pay higher out-of-pocket costs for care; they were also more likely to report borrowing money to pay for asthma care.
(more…)
MedicalResearch Interview with: Charles D. Scales, Jr MD MSHS
Assistant Professor of Surgery
Division of Urologic Surgery
Duke University Medical Center
MedicalResearch: What are the main findings of the study?Dr. Scales:When it comes to treating kidney stones, less invasive is not always better.
We used the best method short of a randomized trial to balance out patients in terms of factors that might influence the success of treatment. In other words, we achieved a “statistical toss-up” for factors that could influence the outcome of the procedure.
When we balanced out all of the factors that might influence the chance of a repeat procedure, we found that about 11% of patients treated with non-invasive SWL had a repeat procedure, as compared to <1% with minimally invasive URS.
(more…)
MedicalResearch.com Interview with:
Nathalie E. Holz, MA
Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry and Psychotherapy
Central Institute of Mental Health, Medical Faculty Mannheim/Heidelberg University, Mannheim, Germany MedicalResearch: What are the main findings of the study?Dr. Holz: Using data from a prospective community sample followed since birth, we investigated the impact of prenatal maternal smoking on lifetime Attention-Deficit/ Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) symptoms and on brain structure and inhibitory control assessed with Magnetic Resonance Imaging in the adult offspring. Those who were prenatally exposed to tobacco not only exhibited more ADHD symptoms, but also showed decreased activity in the inhibitory control network encompassing the inferior frontal gyrus as well as the anterior cingulate cortex. Activity in these regions was inversely related to lifetime ADHD symptoms and novelty seeking, respectively. In addition volume in the inferior frontal gyrus was decreased in these participants.
(more…)
MedicalResearch.com Interview with:Colleen K. McIlvennan, DNP, ANP
Assistant Professor of Medicine
University of Colorado, Division of Cardiology
Section of Advanced Heart Failure and Transplantation
MedicalResearch: What are the main findings of the study?Answer: We interviewed 22 patients who were offered destination therapy left ventricular assist devices (DT LVAD), 15 with DT LVADs and 7 who declined. We found a strong dichotomy between decision processes with some patients (11 accepters) being automatic and others (3 accepters, 7 decliners) being reflective in their approach to decision making. The automatic group was characterized by a fear of dying and an overriding desire to live as long as possible: [LVAD] was the only option I had…that or push up daisies…so I automatically took this. In contrast, the reflective group went through a reasoned process of weighing risks, benefits, and burdens: There are worse things than death. Irrespective of approach, most patients experienced the DT LVAD decision as a highly emotional process and many sought support from their families or spiritually.
(more…)
MedicalResearch.com Interview with:Dr. Price Kerfoot MD, EdM
Rabkin Fellow in Medical Education
Associate Professor of Surgery, Harvard Medical School
MedicalResearch: What are the main findings of the study?Dr. Kerfoot:
(1) An online spaced education game improved clinicians' knowledge of hypertension intensification and generated a modest but significant improvement in time to blood pressure target among their patients with hypertension.
(2) As a method to increase clinicians' long-term knowledge, the spaced education game was significantly more effective than providing the identical content via a traditional method (online posting with e-mail reminders).
(more…)
MedicalResearch.com Interview with: Adnan Custovic DM MD PhD FRCP
Professor of Allergy
Institute of Inflammation and Repair
University of Manchester
University Hospital of South Manchester
Manchester M23 9LT, UK
MedicalResearch: What are the main findings of the study?Dr. Custovic: In a longitudinal analysis of the data from our birth cohort study collected from birth to age eleven years, we demonstrated an association between early-life antibiotic prescription and development of wheezing, but not atopy. Furthermore, amongst children with wheezing, antibiotic prescription in infancy increases the risk of subsequent severe wheeze/asthma exacerbations and hospital admissions. This is the first demonstration that children who receive antibiotics in infancy have impaired antiviral immunity later in life, and that early-life antibiotic prescription is associated with variants on chromosome 17q21 locus (which is an asthma susceptibility locus).
Our findings suggest that the association between antibiotics and childhood asthma reported in previous studies arises through a complex confounding by indication, in which hidden factors which increase the likelihood of both antibiotic prescription in early life and subsequent asthma development are increased susceptibility to virus infections consequent to impaired antiviral immunity, and genetic variants on 17q21. Our results raises an important issue that effects which are often attributed to environmental exposures may be a reflection of genetic predisposition.
(more…)
MedicalResearch.com Interview with: Daniel S. Elliott, M.D
MAYO Clinic, Associate Professor
Department of Urology
Section of Pelvic and Reconstructive Surgery
Rochester, Minnesota
MedicalResearch: What are the main findings of the study? Dr. Elliott:The biggest issue is that we were able to devise a new procedure that is a simple outpatient anti-incontinence surgery for women that does NOT use any synthetic meshes. The importance of this is that all traditional (meaning NON-mesh) surgeries for female incontinence have been large surgeries with fairly significant risks such as pain, bleeding and prolonged recovery. When the meshes came out in the late ‘90’s, their big benefit was that they were outpatient and quick procedures. But now that we are discovering all the long term complications from meshes such as chronic pain, scarring, painful intercourse, vaginal extrusion of the meshes, and organ injury, patients have become VERY reluctant and fearful to undergo any mesh type surgery. Therefore, we devised a new procedure that used a very small piece of the patient’s own tissue (from the rectus fascia) and placed this via the “transobturator route.” In the process, we melded together the “best” of both worlds---a NON-mesh, outpatient anti-incontinence procedure that is safe (no long term problems as seen with meshes) .
(more…)
MedicalResearch.com Interview with: Sarah P. Psutka, MD
Fellow in Urologic Oncology
Department of Urology, Mayo Clinic
MedicalResearch: What are the main findings of each study? Dr. Psutka: In this study we identified all diabetic patients with localized clear cell renal cell carcinomas who were surgically treated between 1990 and 2008 in our institution and matched them with nondiabetic patients.
Our main findings were that, after controlling for major confounders such as age, sex, type of surgery, renal function, smoking status, performance status, and tumor grade and stage, diabetic patients had inferior overall survival than nondiabetic patients. Furthermore, among patients with clear cell carcinoma, diabetic patients also had shorter cancer-specific survival, suggesting that diabetes is a poor prognostic factor for patients with surgically treated renal cell carcinoma.
(more…)
MedicalResearch.com Interview with: Sarah P. Psutka, MD
Fellow in Urologic Oncology
Department of Urology, Mayo Clinic
MedicalResearch: What are the main findings of each study? Dr. Psutka: In this study, we analyzed 1335 patients who underwent radical cystectomy at the Mayo clinic between 1996 and 2006. We categorized patients who stayed in the hospital longer than 10 days, putting them in the top 25th percentile of the length of stay, as having a prolonged hospital stay. We noted that prolonged hospital stay was associated with adverse postoperative outcomes, including serious complications and early postoperative death. Patients who had a prolonged length of stay had a higher burden of comorbidities, American Society of Anesthesiologist score, and their Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group Score. A multivariable analysis, holding these factors and other clinically relevant potential confounders constant, revealed that only the ECOG performance score independently predicted whether or not a patient had a prolonged hospital course following radical cystectomy.
(more…)
MedicalResearch.com Interview with:Jennifer Peltzer-Jones, R.N., Psy.D.
Henry Ford's Department of Emergency Medicine
MedicalResearch: What are the main findings of the study?
Answer: We found that within our group of 255 known Emergency Department “super-frequent users,” 77% had with some type of addiction disorder, and 47 percent visited the Emergency Department seeking narcotics for pain. Women were more likely to be narcotic seeking. Using our individualized Electronic Medical Record care plan intervention, created and overseen by our multidisciplinary team (comprised of Emergency Department staff physicians, a psychologist, residents, nurses and support staff), we found that our plan significantly decreased annual rates of visits by these super-frequent users and those who sought pain-relief narcotics and other super-frequent users.
(more…)
MedicalResearch.com Interview with
Timothy Fernandes, M.D., M.P.H.
University of California, San Diego
La Jolla, CA
MedicalResearch: What are the main findings of this study?
Dr. Fernandes: The fibrinopeptides are cleaved off of fibrinogen by thrombin during the generation of a new clot. These small molecules are excreted into the urine and we have developed a urine assay to measure the level of FPB. We examined the performance of urine FPB as a screening test for acute pulmonary embolism, blood clots that travel to the lungs.
The study group consisted of 344 patients: 61 (18%) with pulmonary embolism and 283 (83%) without. At a threshold of 2.5 ng/ml, urine FPB demonstrated sensitivity of 75.4% (95% CI: 62.4-85.2%), specificity of 28.9% (95% CI: 23.8-34.7%), and negative likelihood ratio of 0.18 (0.11-0.29), weighted by prevalence in the sample population. However, the thresholds of 5 ng/ml and 7.5 ng/ml had sensitivities of only 55.7% (95% CI: 42.5-68.2%), and 42.6% (30.3-55.9%), respectively.
The urine fibrinopeptide B assay at a cut-off of 2.5 ng/ml had a sensitivity of 75.4% for detecting pulmonary embolism. For diagnosis of PE, this sensitivity is comparable to previously published values for the first generation plasma latex and whole blood D-dimer assays (not as well and the D dimer ELISA assay).
(more…)
MedicalResearch.com Interview withT. Jared Bunch, MD
Medical director for Heart Rhythm Services
Director of Heart Rhythm research
Intermountain Medical Center, Utah
MedicalResearch: What are the main findings of the study?Dr. Bunch: The main findings of the study are:
1) Atrial fibrillation patients treated with warfarin anticoagulation that have lower percentages of time in therapeutic range have significantly higher risks of all forms of dementia.
2) The dementia relative risk related to lower percentages of time in therapeutic range was higher than all other variables associated with stroke or risk of bleeding.
3) The risk of dementia related to lower percentages of time in therapeutic range was highest in younger patients in the study (<80 years).
(more…)
MedicalResearch.com Interview with:Dr. Hoi Nam Tse, FCCP, MRCP, MBChB
Associate Consultant, Kwong Wah Hospital, Hong Kong
Life member and Council member of Hong Kong Thoracic Society
MedicalResearch: What are the main findings of the study?Dr. Hoi Nam Tse: N-acetylcysteine (NAC) is an oral mucolytic containing anti-oxidative and anti-inflammatory property. Our study demonstrated that long term use of high-dose :N-acetylcysteine (600 mg twice daily for 1 year) was a well-tolerated treatment, and it reduced exacerbations and prolonged time to first exacerbation in ‘high-risk’ COPD patients--which was defined as patients who had 2 or more exacerbations per year, FEV1<50% or both. Such beneficial effect was not obvious in the ‘low-risk’ COPD patients.
(more…)
MedicalResearch.com Interview with Scott C. Woller, MD
Co-Director Thrombosis Program
Intermountain Medical Center
Associate Professor of Internal Medicine
University of Utah School of Medicine
Murray, UT 84157-7000
Dr. Woller: By way of background, D-dimer, a simple blood test that is used to investigate the diagnosis of suspected pulmonary embolism (PE), and it increases with age. Recent research suggests that the use of an age-adjusted d-dimer threshold may improve diagnostic efficiency without compromising safety. We wished to assess the safety of using an age-adjusted d-dimer threshold in the work-up of patients with suspected pulmonary embolism.
MedicalResearch: What are the main findings of the study?Dr. Woller: In this retrospective cohort study we identified 923 patients age > 50 years who presented to our emergency department with suspected pulmonary embolism, and had their pretest probability of PE calculated along with a d-dimer performed. All patients underwent computed tomography pulmonary angiography (CTPA). We observed that among patients unlikely to have PE, adoption of an age-adjusted D-dimer cut-off (compared with a conventional D-dimer cut-off) reduced the need for CTPA in an additional 18.3% of patients, and was associated with a low 90-day rate of failure to diagnose PE.
(more…)
MedicalResearch. com Interview with: Michael Eisenberg, MD, PhD
Director, Male Reproductive Medicine and Surgery
Assistant Professor, Department of Urology
Assistant Professor, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology
Stanford School of Medicine
MedicalResearch: What are the main findings of the study?Dr. Eisenberg: There is an inverse relationship between semen quality and mortality so that as semen quality declines the likliehood of death increases.
(more…)
MedicalResearch.com Interview with: Maria E.C. Sandberg, MSc PhD
Institutet för Miljömedicin / Institute of Environmental Medicine
Karolinska Institutet
Stockholm, Sweden
MedicalResearch: What are the main findings of the study?Dr. Sandberg: Overweight at diagnosis significantly decreases the chance of achieving good disease control during the early phase of rheumatoid arthritis (RA).
(more…)
MedicalResearch.com Interview with: Dr Nikola Drca
Department of Cardiology at the Karolinska Institute,
Karolinska University Hospital
Stockholm Sweden
MedicalResearch: What are the main findings of the study?Dr. Nikola Drca: We found that intense physical activity like leisure-time exercise of more than five hours per week at the age of 30 increased the risk of developing atrial fibrillation later in life by 19%. In contrast, moderate-intensity physical activity like walking or bicycling of more than 1 hour per day at older age (age 60) decreased the risk by 13%. (more…)
MedicalResearch.com Interview with:David Lassman
Statistician in the National Health Statistics Group, Office of the Actuary
Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS)
Baltimore, Maryland.MedicalResearch: What types of health care spending are included in this report? Answer: In the past, the CMS Office of the Actuary provided periodic updates of health care spending by age and more recently by gender. This report, for the first time, provides a time series of spending by age (five categories – 0-18, 19-44, 45-64, 65-84, and 85+) and gender. We also show spending by three major age categories – children (0-18), working age adults (19-64), and the elderly (age 65 and over). We present data for personal health care only which consists of all the medical goods and services used to treat or prevent a specific disease or condition in a specific person. We provide estimates for the even years between 2002 and 2010. These age and gender estimates are controlled to the most recent Historical National Health Expenditure Accounts.
(more…)
MedicalResearch Interview with:Dr. Teshamae Monteith MD
Assistant professor of Neurology
Chief of the Headache Division
University of Miami Miller School of Medicine.
MedicalResearch: What are the main findings of the study? Dr. Monteith:
A doubling of silent brain infarctions in those with migraine even after adjusting for other stroke risk factors;
No increase in the volume of white-matter hyperintensities (small blood vessel abnormalities) that have been associated with migraine in other studies;
Migraines with aura — changes in vision or other senses preceding the headache — wasn’t common in participants and wasn’t necessary for the association with silent cerebral infarctions.
High blood pressure, another important stroke risk factor, was more common in those with migraine. But the association between migraine and silent brain infarction was also found in participants with normal blood pressure.
MedicalResearch Interview with:
Arya Mani, M.D.
Department of Internal Medicine and Genetics
Yale Cardiovascular Research Center
Yale, New Haven CTMedicalResearch: What are the main findings of the study?Dr. Mani: Our group has identified a gene that when mutated it causes a form of truncal (central) obesity that is associated with a cluster of coronary artery disease risk factors, including high blood pressure, insulin resistance and possibly elevated blood lipids. These associated risk factors are collectively known as the metabolic syndrome, which may lead to development of diseases such as diabetes and coronary artery disease, both of which were very prevalent in the populations we studied. All identified mutations by our group have been so far gain of function mutations, which means they increased the activity of the gene in pathways related to adipogenesis and gluconeogenesis.
(more…)
MedicalResearch Interview with: Patrick S. F. Bellgowan, PhD
Laureate Institute for Brain Research
Faculty of Community Medicine, The University of Tulsa,
Tulsa, Oklahoma
MedicalResearch: What are the main findings of the study?Dr. Bellgowan: These results demonstrate 14% and 24% smaller hippocampal volumes in collegiate football players with and without a history of concussion relative to education-, sex- and age-matched controls participants. Further, the number of years of tackle football experience was correlated with smaller hippocampi and slower baseline reaction times. The hippocampus plays a key role in memory and emotional regulation. Volumetrics of other medial temporal lobe structures (I.e. The amygdala) did NOT show differences among groups suggesting that this effect is localized to the hippocampus.
(more…)
MedicalResearch.com Interview with:András Szentkirályi, MD, PhD
Research fellow:Westfälische Wilhelms-Universität Münster
Institut für Epidemiologie und Sozialmedizin
Germany, D-4814
MedicalResearch: What are the main findings of the study?Dr. Szentkirályi : Based on two prospective, population-based cohort studies, we found that subjects having multiple chronic diseases are at an increased risk of suffering from restless legs syndrome (RLS). Moreover, increased multimorbidity was a significant predictor of developing new onset RLS. It is important to note that the observed relationship was not reduced when well-established causes of secondary restless legs syndrome (e.g. chronic renal disease) were excluded.
(more…)
This website uses cookies to improve your experience. We'll assume you're ok with this, but you can opt-out if you wish.AcceptRejectRead More
Privacy & Cookies Policy
Privacy Overview
This website uses cookies to improve your experience while you navigate through the website. Out of these cookies, the cookies that are categorized as necessary are stored on your browser as they are as essential for the working of basic functionalities of the website. We also use third-party cookies that help us analyze and understand how you use this website. These cookies will be stored in your browser only with your consent. You also have the option to opt-out of these cookies. But opting out of some of these cookies may have an effect on your browsing experience.
Necessary cookies are absolutely essential for the website to function properly. This category only includes cookies that ensures basic functionalities and security features of the website. These cookies do not store any personal information.