1.The clinical analysis on the diagnosis and treatment of aortic dissection in twenty-three patients
Beihe LI ; Zhilin ZHU ; Bin YU ; Chao YUAN
Clinical Medicine of China 2010;26(2):152-154
Objective To investigate the clinical features, diagnosis and treatment of aortic dissection. Methods Clinical data including manifestations,imageology, treatment and turnover in 23 patients with aortic dis-section, hospitalized in our hospital from January 2006 to April 2008, were retrospectively analyzed. Results There were 8,5 and 10 cases classified in type Ⅰ ,type Ⅱ and type Ⅲ,all of them were complicated with hypertension. Typi-cal syndromes were manifested in 20 patients (86.9%) and were not in the others (13.0%). Surgical operation were performed in 6 patients of type Ⅰ and 5 patients of type Ⅱ, and endovascular repairments were performed in Ⅰ patient of type Ⅰ and 10 patients of type Ⅲ. All the patients were recovered except that two patients of type Ⅰ died. Conclusions Most patients with aortic dissection present typical manifestision. CT or MRI is one of the most valua-ble diagnosis. The patients in type Ⅰ and type Ⅱ should be treated with the surgical operation, and the patients in type Ⅲ with endovascular stent-graft repairment.
2.Effects of different intensity of lighting on refractive development and form deprivation myopia in guinea pigs
Congying LI ; Jiahe GAN ; Meijun WANG ; Beihe CAO ; Ying HUANG ; Xi HE ; Ziyu HUA ; Minghao SUN ; Shiming LI
Chinese Journal of Experimental Ophthalmology 2022;40(6):491-497
Objective:To investigate the effects of different intensity of lighting on normal refractive development and form deprivation myopia (FDM) in guinea pigs.Methods:A total of 108 healthy 3-week-old guinea pigs were divided into normal refractive development guinea pigs ( n=54) and FDM guinea pigs ( n=54). FDM models were prepared in FDM animals by occlusion of the left eyes using an opaque mask, and the bilateral eyes were open in the normal refractive development guinea pigs.The guinea pigs were randomized to low (20 lx), normal(300 lx), and high intensity-lighting (5 000 lx) groups with a 12-hour light/12-hour dark cycle for 6 consecutive weeks under LED light.The ocular biometry was performed in a two-week interval.Axial length (AL) and dilated diopter were measured by A-scan ultrasonography and retinoscopy, respectively, and were compared after different lighting durations, and the change trends of them in normal refractive development and FDM guinea pigs were evaluated. Results:The AL values were not significantly different among low, normal and high intensity-lighting groups ( Fgroup=0.365, P=0.697), and the AL was gradually prolonged over the lighting duration ( Ftime=353.750, P<0.001). The diopters showed a statistically significant difference among different intensity-lighting groups ( Fgroup=3.576, P=0.034). The diopter in high intensity-lighting for 4 weeks was (+ 2.75±2.15) D, which was significantly higher than (0.41±3.07) D in the normal refrective development guinea pigs ( P<0.001). In the FDM guinea pigs, both AL and diopter were not significantly different among low, normal and high intensity-lighting groups ( Fgroup=0.105, P=0.900; Fgroup=0.973, P=0.387), and significant differences were seen in AL and diopter among three groups ( Ftime=408.302, 27.407; both at P<0.001). The diopter in FDM eyes of low intensity-lighting for 2 weeks was (+ 2.35±1.95) D, which was higher than (+ 1.90±0.97) D before lighting, with no statistically significant difference between them ( P>0.05). The AL was shortest and the AL change was smallest in normal refractive development guinea pigs of high intensity-lighting group.The diopter change in FDM guinea pigs of the low intensity-lighting group was significantly smaller than that in the normal intensity-lighting group ( P<0.001), with a transient hyperopia drift. Conclusions:The 5 000 lx lighting can slow down the development toward myopia in the normal refractive development eyes, and 20 lx lighting tends to delay the progression FDM eyes with a hyperopic shift after lighting for 2 weeks.