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Chronic lifestyle diseases display seasonal sensitive comorbid trend in human population evidence from Google Trends

Seasonal and human physiological changes are important factors in the development of many diseases. But, the study of genuine seasonal impact on these diseases is difficult to measure due to many other environment and lifestyle factors which directly affect these diseases. However, several clinical...

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Autores principales: Patel, Jai Chand, Khurana, Pankaj, Sharma, Yogendra Kumar, Kumar, Bhuvnesh, Ragumani, Sugadev
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6291106/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30540756
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0207359
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author Patel, Jai Chand
Khurana, Pankaj
Sharma, Yogendra Kumar
Kumar, Bhuvnesh
Ragumani, Sugadev
author_facet Patel, Jai Chand
Khurana, Pankaj
Sharma, Yogendra Kumar
Kumar, Bhuvnesh
Ragumani, Sugadev
author_sort Patel, Jai Chand
collection PubMed
description Seasonal and human physiological changes are important factors in the development of many diseases. But, the study of genuine seasonal impact on these diseases is difficult to measure due to many other environment and lifestyle factors which directly affect these diseases. However, several clinical studies have been conducted in different parts of the world, and it has clearly indicated that certain groups of population are highly subjected to seasonal changes, and their maladaptation can possibly lead to several disorders/diseases. Thus, it is crucial to study the significant seasonal sensitive diseases spread across the human population. To narrow down these disorders/diseases, the study hypothesized that high altitude (HA) associated diseases and disorders are of the strong variants of seasonal physiologic changes. It is because, HA is the only geographical condition for which humans can develop very efficient physiological adaptation mechanism called acclimatization. To study this hypothesis, PubMed was used to collect the HA associated symptoms and disorders. Disease Ontology based semantic similarity network (DSN) and disease-drug networks were constructed to narrow down the benchmark diseases and disorders of HA. The DSN which was further subjected to different community structure analysis uncovered the highly associated or possible comorbid diseases of HA. The predicted 12 lifestyle diseases were assumed to be “seasonal (sensitive) comorbid lifestyle diseases (SCLD)”. A time series analyses on Google Search data of the world from 2004–2016 was conducted to investigate whether the 12 lifestyle diseases have seasonal patterns. Because, the trends were sensitive to the term used as benchmark; the temporal relationships among the 12 disease search volumes and their temporal sequences similarity by dynamic time warping analyses was used to predict the comorbid diseases. Among the 12 lifestyle diseases, the study provides an indirect evidence in the existence of severe seasonal comorbidity among hypertension, obesity, asthma and fibrosis diseases, which is widespread in the world population. Thus, the present study has successfully addressed this issue by predicting the SCLD, and indirectly verified them among the world population using Google Search Trend. Furthermore, based on the SCLD seasonal trend, the study also classified them as severe, moderate, and mild. Interestingly, seasonal trends of the severe seasonal comorbid diseases displayed an inverse pattern between USA (Northern hemisphere) and New Zealand (Southern hemisphere). Further, knowledge in the so called “seasonal sensitive populations” physiological response to seasonal triggers such as winter, summer, spring, and autumn become crucial to modulate disease incidence, disease course, or clinical prevention.
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spelling pubmed-62911062018-12-28 Chronic lifestyle diseases display seasonal sensitive comorbid trend in human population evidence from Google Trends Patel, Jai Chand Khurana, Pankaj Sharma, Yogendra Kumar Kumar, Bhuvnesh Ragumani, Sugadev PLoS One Research Article Seasonal and human physiological changes are important factors in the development of many diseases. But, the study of genuine seasonal impact on these diseases is difficult to measure due to many other environment and lifestyle factors which directly affect these diseases. However, several clinical studies have been conducted in different parts of the world, and it has clearly indicated that certain groups of population are highly subjected to seasonal changes, and their maladaptation can possibly lead to several disorders/diseases. Thus, it is crucial to study the significant seasonal sensitive diseases spread across the human population. To narrow down these disorders/diseases, the study hypothesized that high altitude (HA) associated diseases and disorders are of the strong variants of seasonal physiologic changes. It is because, HA is the only geographical condition for which humans can develop very efficient physiological adaptation mechanism called acclimatization. To study this hypothesis, PubMed was used to collect the HA associated symptoms and disorders. Disease Ontology based semantic similarity network (DSN) and disease-drug networks were constructed to narrow down the benchmark diseases and disorders of HA. The DSN which was further subjected to different community structure analysis uncovered the highly associated or possible comorbid diseases of HA. The predicted 12 lifestyle diseases were assumed to be “seasonal (sensitive) comorbid lifestyle diseases (SCLD)”. A time series analyses on Google Search data of the world from 2004–2016 was conducted to investigate whether the 12 lifestyle diseases have seasonal patterns. Because, the trends were sensitive to the term used as benchmark; the temporal relationships among the 12 disease search volumes and their temporal sequences similarity by dynamic time warping analyses was used to predict the comorbid diseases. Among the 12 lifestyle diseases, the study provides an indirect evidence in the existence of severe seasonal comorbidity among hypertension, obesity, asthma and fibrosis diseases, which is widespread in the world population. Thus, the present study has successfully addressed this issue by predicting the SCLD, and indirectly verified them among the world population using Google Search Trend. Furthermore, based on the SCLD seasonal trend, the study also classified them as severe, moderate, and mild. Interestingly, seasonal trends of the severe seasonal comorbid diseases displayed an inverse pattern between USA (Northern hemisphere) and New Zealand (Southern hemisphere). Further, knowledge in the so called “seasonal sensitive populations” physiological response to seasonal triggers such as winter, summer, spring, and autumn become crucial to modulate disease incidence, disease course, or clinical prevention. Public Library of Science 2018-12-12 /pmc/articles/PMC6291106/ /pubmed/30540756 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0207359 Text en © 2018 Patel et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Patel, Jai Chand
Khurana, Pankaj
Sharma, Yogendra Kumar
Kumar, Bhuvnesh
Ragumani, Sugadev
Chronic lifestyle diseases display seasonal sensitive comorbid trend in human population evidence from Google Trends
title Chronic lifestyle diseases display seasonal sensitive comorbid trend in human population evidence from Google Trends
title_full Chronic lifestyle diseases display seasonal sensitive comorbid trend in human population evidence from Google Trends
title_fullStr Chronic lifestyle diseases display seasonal sensitive comorbid trend in human population evidence from Google Trends
title_full_unstemmed Chronic lifestyle diseases display seasonal sensitive comorbid trend in human population evidence from Google Trends
title_short Chronic lifestyle diseases display seasonal sensitive comorbid trend in human population evidence from Google Trends
title_sort chronic lifestyle diseases display seasonal sensitive comorbid trend in human population evidence from google trends
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6291106/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30540756
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0207359
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