1.Craniotomy in traumatic frontal sinus fracture cerebrospinal fluid leaks
Yongjia DENG ; Chengyi LUO ; Jianping LIU ; Ting LIU ; Weichao HUANG
Chinese Journal of Primary Medicine and Pharmacy 2016;23(6):904-907
Objective To assess the craniotomy in traumatic frontal sinus fracture cerebrospinal fluid( CSF) leaks.Methods Clinical data of 12 traumatic frontal sinus fracture CSF leaks from January 2010 to December 2014, who treated by craniotomy and conservation treatment was invalid were reviewed.Combined typical clinical presenta-tion and basicranial thin-layer computed tomography(CT),made qualitative diagnosis and localization.Craniotomy by bilateral coronary incision and epidural approach was performed.Repairation was mainly for the endocranium and the basicranium.Bone cement was used to reconstruct the osseous defect of the frontal sinus,and then with pedicle periosteal flap coverage.Dural defects was fixed with autogenous fascia.After operation,staying in bed and using anti-biotic for 7-14 days were required,while mannital or lumbar-drainage as needed.Results All 12 cases got posi-tive preoperative CT results.Craniotomy was performed,succeeded without reoperation.None of intracranial infection happened,while 1 case suffered from anosphrasia.Followed up for 3 -12 months, none CSF leaks relapsed. Conclusion Craniotomy by coronary incision,dispose the endocranium and the basicranium for the patients who suf-fered from frontal sinus fracture CSF leaks while conservation treatment is invalid,can obtain satisfied result.
2.Relation of perceived social support to mental health in prison police: a moderated mediating analysis
Chengyi TING ; Jianbing ZOU ; Zhiyu WANG ; Mei YANG ; Zao HUANG ; Guoping HUANG
Sichuan Mental Health 2023;36(3):259-265
BackgroundThe mental health level of the prison police is relatively low, so finding innovative ways to improve the mental health of them is of great significance for the safety of prison supervision and the implementation of peaceful China initiative. ObjectiveTo explore the relationship between perceived social support, perceived stress and psychological resilience with mental health of prison police, and to provide references for improving their mental health. MethodsIn March 2022, 424 policemen working in a male prison in a western province were selected by cluster sampling method, and investigated with the Perceived Social Support Scale (PSSS), Chinese Perceived Stress Scale (CPSS), Connor-Davidson Resilience Scale (CD-RISC) and General Health Questionnaire 20 (GHQ-20), then Process 4.2 was used employed to verify the mediating role of perceived stress as well as the moderating role of psychological resilience in the relationship between perceived social support and mental health. Results①Male subjects scored higher on GHQ-20 than female subjects (t=2.095, P<0.05). ②CPSS score was negatively correlated with PSSS and GHQ-20 scores (r=-0.670, -0.703, P<0.01), and GHQ-20 score showed a positive correlation with PSSS and CD-RISC scores (r=0.580, 0.693, P<0.01). ③Perceived social support positively predict mental health (β=0.154, 95% CI: 0.133~0.175, P<0.01). ④Perceived stress played a mediating role in the relationship between perceived social support and mental health, and the mediation effect size was 0.087, accounting for 88.78% of the total effect (95% CI: 0.064~0.112, P<0.01). ⑤Psychological resilience played a moderating role in the second half (perceived stress→mental health) of the mediating path of "perceived social support→perceived stress→mental health"(