1.The efficacy discussion of interventional therapy for advanced pancreatic carcinoma
Tian SONG ; Shimeng YIN ; Rongyue SUN ; Lan SHEN ; Yu QIAN
Journal of Interventional Radiology 2001;0(06):-
Objective To evaluate the efficacy of interventional therapy for advanced pancreatic carcinoma. Methods 33 cases of advanced pancreatic carcinoma accepted interventional therapy from April 2005 were retrospectively analyzed. All patients were unoperable and accepted one or more times of celiac and superior mesenteric arterial chemotheraputics perfusion with dosage of 2:1. The embolization was further introduced with the addition of liver invasion. The repetition interval was kept at 6 weeks with no severe complications. Results The one with follow-up CT imagings showed obvious decrease of the lesion size, together with release or disappearance of the sensation of abdominal pain and abdominal distention. The life span prolonged with average survival of 13 months, including the longest of 22 months and the life quality improved. Conclusions The interventional therapy could be the first method of choice in the management of advanced pancreatic carcinoma.
2.Effects of Self-management Program for Old Patients with Knee Osteoarthritis in Community
Fenglan WANG ; Shenglian DONG ; Fengmei XING ; Yuqian SUN ; Rongyue DENG ; Liwei JING ; Qingwen WU
Chinese Journal of Rehabilitation Theory and Practice 2014;20(12):1184-1187
Objective To study the effects of self-management of knee osteoarthritis (KOA) on the function and quality of life in old patients. Methods From October 2011 to April 2012, 100 patients with KOA from 2 communities in Tangshan, Hebei were recruited, and were as control group and intervention group based on the community. The intervention group learned a KOA self-management course, which consisted of 6 classes of 1.5 to 2 hours, once a week, taught by health professionals. The control group read the KOA self-management handbook only. They were measured with the Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Osteoarthritis Index (WOMAC) and Arthritis Impact Measurement Scale 2nd version- Short Form (AIMS2- SF) before and 6 months after intervention. Results The score of WOMAC and AIMS2-SF improved more in the intervention group than in the control group (P<0.05). Conclusion The KOA self-management program is effective on function and quality of life in old patients with KOA in community.