2.Non-coding RNAs and Their Roles in Stress Response in Plants
Wang JINGJING ; Meng XIANWEN ; Dobrovolskaya B. OXANA ; Orlov L. YURIY ; Chen MING
Genomics, Proteomics & Bioinformatics 2017;15(5):301-312
Eukaryotic genomes encode thousands of non-coding RNAs (ncRNAs), which play cru-cial roles in transcriptional and post-transcriptional regulation of gene expression. Accumulating evidence indicates that ncRNAs, especially microRNAs (miRNAs) and long ncRNAs (lncRNAs), have emerged as key regulatory molecules in plant stress responses. In this review, we have summa-rized the current progress on the understanding of plant miRNA and lncRNA identification, characteristics, bioinformatics tools, and resources, and provided examples of mechanisms of miRNA-and lncRNA-mediated plant stress tolerance.
3.The status quo of service quality evaluation of pension institutions in China and research progress.
L W ZHANG ; Y B ZENG ; L X WANG ; Y FANG
Chinese Journal of Epidemiology 2018;39(11):1524-1529
With the accelerating process of population aging in China, social pension system has been rapidly developed, but its service quality remains poor. How to provide quality and efficient elderly care services has become a major livelihood issue of general public. The existing evaluation standards for service quality in the elderly care institutions vary greatly in terms of literature review and practice, and they have only single perspective and lack systematic review. Based on the three-dimensional theory of "structure-process-result" quality evaluation, this paper systematically compares and evaluates the evaluation index system and evaluation management mechanism of service quality of pension institutions in typical countries and regions, and provides an evidence-based basis for establishing an evaluation management system, which is in line with China's national conditions and covers evaluation principles, subject and object, regulation, rewards and punishments, and classifications.
Aged
;
Aging
;
China
;
Humans
;
Pensions
;
Research
4.Prevalence of cardio metabolic risk factors and related socio-demographic factors in adults aged 18-59 years in 15 provinces of China.
Z H WANG ; B ZHANG ; H J WANG ; L S WANG ; G G DING
Chinese Journal of Epidemiology 2018;39(7):904-908
<b>Objective:b> To analyze the prevalence and co-prevalence of cardio metabolic (CM) risk factors in adults in China. <b>Methods:b> The project data of 2015 Nutritional Status and Health Transition of Chinese Residents were used, and 5 456 adults aged 18-59 years with complete socio-demographic, anthropometric, and blood biochemical data were selected as the study subjects. The definition released by the International Diabetes Federation in 2005 were used to define each CM risk factors, including central obesity, elevated TG, reduced HDL-C, elevated blood pressure and elevated FPG. The co-prevalence of the risk factors was defined as adults having ≥2 risk factors. Multivariable logistic regression analysis was performed to evaluate the relationship between CM risk and socio-demographic factors. <b>Results:b> About 80.8% of adults had at least 1 risk factor, and 54.0% had co-prevalence of risk factors. Gender, age, education level and living area were significantly associated with the prevalence of major metabolic risk factors. After adjusting for other factors, compared with men, women were more likely to have central obesity and reduced HDL-C, but not more likely to have elevated blood pressure, elevated FPG and elevated TG (P<0.01). Compared with adults aged 18-44 years, adults aged 45-59 years were more likely to have central obesity, elevated blood pressure, elevated FPG and elevated TG (P<0.01). The odds of having central obesity, elevated blood pressure and elevated fasting plasma glucose in the adults in eastern China were significantly higher than those in the central and western China. <b>Conclusions:b> In 2015, less than 20% of the adults aged 18-59 years in China had no cardio metabolic risk factors, and more than half of them had two or more risk factors. Gender, age and living areas were the major influencing factors. It is necessary to take effective intervention measures targeting adults at high-risk for the early prevention of cardiovascular disease.
Adolescent
;
Adult
;
Alcohol Drinking/epidemiology*
;
Cardiovascular Diseases/epidemiology*
;
China/epidemiology*
;
Female
;
Humans
;
Male
;
Metabolic Syndrome/ethnology*
;
Middle Aged
;
Obesity/ethnology*
;
Prevalence
;
Risk Factors
;
Smoking/epidemiology*
;
Socioeconomic Factors
;
Young Adult
5.A novel, minimally-invasive technique of cartilage repair in the human knee using arthroscopic microfracture and injections of mesenchymal stem cells and hyaluronic acid--a prospective comparative study on safety and short-term efficacy.
Kevin B L LEE ; Victor T Z WANG ; Yiong Huak CHAN ; James H P HUI
Annals of the Academy of Medicine, Singapore 2012;41(11):511-517
<b>INTRODUCTIONb>Most current cell-based cartilage repair techniques require some form of scaffolds and 2 separate surgical procedures. We propose a novel, scaffold-less technique of cartilage repair in the human knee that combines arthroscopic microfracture and outpatient intra-articular injections of autologous bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) and hyaluronic acid (HA).
<b>MATERIALS AND METHODSb>Seventy matched (age, sex, lesion size) knees with symptomatic cartilage defects underwent cartilage repair with the proposed technique (n = 35) or an open technique (n = 35) in which the MSCs were implanted beneath a sutured periosteal patch over the defect. Prospective evaluation of both groups were performed using the International Cartilage Repair Society (ICRS) Cartilage Injury Evaluation Package, which included questions from the Short-Form (SF-36) Health Survey, International Knee Documentation Committee (IKDC) subjective knee evaluation form, Lysholm knee scale, and Tegner activity level scale. Postoperative magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) evaluation was also performed at 1 year for most patients.
<b>RESULTSb>There were no clinically significant adverse events reported through the course of our study. At the fi nal follow-up (mean = 24.5 months), there was significant improvement in mean IKDC, Lysholm, SF-36 physical component score and visual analogue pain scores in both treatment groups.
<b>CONCLUSIONb>In the short term, the results of this novel technique are comparable to the open procedure with the added advantages of being minimally invasive and requiring only a single operation under general anaesthesia. Its safety has been validated and its efficacy is currently being evaluated in an ongoing randomised controlled trial.
Adult ; Arthroscopy ; methods ; Cartilage, Articular ; injuries ; Combined Modality Therapy ; methods ; Female ; Humans ; Hyaluronic Acid ; therapeutic use ; Knee Injuries ; therapy ; Magnetic Resonance Imaging ; Male ; Mesenchymal Stem Cell Transplantation ; methods ; Outcome Assessment (Health Care) ; Patient Safety ; Prospective Studies ; Singapore ; Viscosupplements ; therapeutic use
6.A case of human infection with highly pathogenic avian influenza A (H7N9) virus through poultry processing without protection measure.
Y MA ; Z B ZHANG ; L CAO ; J Y LU ; K B LI ; W Z SU ; T G LI ; Z C YANG ; M WANG
Chinese Journal of Epidemiology 2018;39(6):799-804
<b>Objective:b> To investigate the infection pattern and etiological characteristics of a case of human infection with highly pathogenic avian influenza A (H7N9) virus and provide evidence for the prevention and control of human infection with highly pathogenic avian influenza virus. <b>Methods:b> Epidemiological investigation was conducted to explore the case's exposure history, infection route and disease progression. Samples collected from the patient, environments and poultry were tested by using real time reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR). Virus isolation, genome sequencing and phylogenetic analysis were conducted for positive samples. <b>Results:b> The case had no live poultry contact history, but had a history of pulled chicken processing without taking protection measure in an unventilated kitchen before the onset. Samples collected from the patient's lower respiratory tract, the remaining frozen chicken meat and the live poultry market were all influenza A (H7N9) virus positive. The isolated viruses from these positive samples were highly homogenous. An insertion which lead to the addition of multiple basic amino acid residues (PEVPKRKRTAR/GL) was found at the HA cleavage site, suggesting that this virus might be highly pathogenic. <b>Conclusions:b> Live poultry processing without protection measure is an important infection mode of "poultry to human" transmission of avian influenza viruses. Due to the limitation of protection measures in live poultry markets in Guangzhou, it is necessary to promote the standardized large scale poultry farming, the complete restriction of live poultry sales and centralized poultry slaughtering as well as ice fresh sale.
Animals
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Chickens
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China
;
Commerce
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Humans
;
Influenza A Virus, H7N9 Subtype/pathogenicity*
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Influenza in Birds/virology*
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Influenza, Human/virology*
;
Phylogeny
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Poultry/virology*
;
Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction
;
Zoonoses
7.Dynamic path analysis on life course epidemiology.
Z W TIAN ; G Y ZENG ; S L WU ; L T HUANG ; B Z WANG ; H Z TAN
Chinese Journal of Epidemiology 2018;39(1):86-89
In the studies of modern epidemiology, exposure in a short term cannot fully elaborate the mechanism of the development of diseases or health-related events. Thus, lights have been shed on to life course epidemiology, which studies the exposures in early life time and their effects related to the development of chronic diseases. When exploring the mechanism leading from one exposure to an outcome and its effects through other factors, due to the existence of time-variant effects, conventional statistic methods could not meet the needs of etiological analysis in life course epidemiology. This paper summarizes the dynamic path analysis model, including the model structure and significance, and its application in life course epidemiology. Meanwhile, the procedure of data processing and etiology analyzing were introduced. In conclusion, dynamic path analysis is a useful tool which can be used to better elucidate the mechanisms that underlie the etiology of chronic diseases.
Chronic Disease/epidemiology*
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Epidemiologic Studies
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Humans
;
Models, Theoretical
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Risk Factors
;
Time
8.A summary of item and method of national chronic obstructive pulmonary disease surveillance in China.
L W FANG ; H L BAO ; B H WANG ; Y J FENG ; S CONG ; N WANG ; J FAN ; L H WANG
Chinese Journal of Epidemiology 2018;39(5):546-550
COPD refers to a group of chronic respiratory diseases which seriously influence the people's health and life quality. The national COPD surveillance in China has been implemented since 2014 with the goal of monitoring the prevalence and trend of COPD and related risk factors in China. The paper summarizes the item and method of national COPD surveillance in China.
Aged
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China/epidemiology*
;
Chronic Disease/psychology*
;
Female
;
Humans
;
Male
;
Middle Aged
;
Population Surveillance/methods*
;
Prevalence
;
Pulmonary Disease, Chronic Obstructive/psychology*
;
Quality of Life
;
Risk Factors
9.Survey of smoking prevalence in adults aged 40 years and older in China, 2014.
N WANG ; Y J FENG ; H L BAO ; S CONG ; J FAN ; B H WANG ; L H WANG ; L W FANG
Chinese Journal of Epidemiology 2018;39(5):551-556
<b>Objective:b> Smoking is the most important risk factor for COPD. Understanding the smoking rate, current smoking rate, average age to start smoking and average daily consumption of cigarettes among people aged ≥40 years in China can provide scientific evidence for the effective control and prevention of COPD. <b>Methods:b> Data were from COPD surveillance in China (2014 to 2015) which covered 31 provinces, autonomous regions and municipalities. A total of 75 107 adults aged ≥40 years selected through multi-stage stratified cluster sampling from 125 surveillance sites (county/district) were surveyed by electronic questionnaire during face to face interviews. The smoking rate and other smoking index were estimated by using weighting complex sampling design. <b>Results:b> The smoking rate and current smoking rate were 40.0% (95%CI: 38.5%-42.0%) and 31.0% (95%CI: 29.7%-32.0%), respectively, among the Chinese aged ≥40 years in 2014. The smoking rate and current smoking rate in males (74.1% and 57.6%) were much higher than those in females (5.4% and 4.0%). And the two rates were significantly higher in rural area (41.2% and 32.4%) than in urban area (38.8% and 29.5%). The mean age of smokers to start smoking was 20.1 (95%CI: 19.7-20.5) years. The younger the smokers were, the earlier their average age to start smoking was (The ages to start smoking for smokers aged 40-, 50-, 60-, ≥70 years were 18.3, 19.2, 20.9 and 23.1 years, respectively). Average daily cigarette consumption of current daily smokers was 18.9 (95%CI: 18.1-19.7) cigarettes, and the daily cigarette consumption was higher in males (19.3 cigarettes) than in females (12.5 cigarettes). <b>Conclusion:b> The smoking rate in males aged ≥40 years is high in China. Compared with urban area, the smoking rate in rural area is higher, posing a big challenge for COPD control and prevention.
Adult
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Aged
;
Asian People/statistics & numerical data*
;
China/epidemiology*
;
Female
;
Humans
;
Male
;
Prevalence
;
Risk Factors
;
Smoking/psychology*
;
Smoking Cessation
;
Surveys and Questionnaires
;
Young Adult
10.Analysis on passive smoking exposure in adults aged 40 years and older in China, 2014.
S CONG ; Y J FENG ; H L BAO ; N WANG ; J FAN ; B H WANG ; L H WANG ; L W FANG
Chinese Journal of Epidemiology 2018;39(5):557-562
<b>Objective:b> To describe and analyze the passive smoking exposure level in adults aged ≥40 years in China. <b>Methods:b> A total of 75 107 adults from 125 sites of COPD surveillance points in China were surveyed by electronic questionnaire during face to face interviews. After comprehensive weighting of the samples, the passive smoking exposure level was analyzed. <b>Results:b> The passive smoking exposure rate of the adults aged ≥40 years was 44.9% (95%CI: 42.3%-47.5%). The exposure rate was highest in those aged from 40 to 49 years (51.0%, 95%CI: 47.9%-54.1%) in term of age groups, in those with senior high school education level and above (48.6%, 95%CI: 44.9%-52.2%) in term of education level, and in office workers (57.7%, 95%CI: 51.8%-63.7%) in term of occupation. The adults reporting passive smoking exposure every days in a week accounted for 27.7% (95%CI: 25.5%-29.8%), and those reporting household passive smoking exposure accounted for 28.3% (95%CI: 26.2%-30.5%). Logistic regression analysis showed that the passive smoking exposure level was different in different age groups and occupation groups. <b>Conclusion:b> The passive smoking exposure level is still high in adults in China. Age and occupation are the influencing factors of passive smoking exposure level.
Adult
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Aged
;
Asian People/statistics & numerical data*
;
China/epidemiology*
;
Environmental Exposure
;
Family Characteristics
;
Female
;
Humans
;
Male
;
Middle Aged
;
Population Surveillance/methods*
;
Smoking/epidemiology*
;
Surveys and Questionnaires
;
Tobacco Smoke Pollution/statistics & numerical data*