1.Glucocorticoid for coronavirus disease 2019: a dilemma.
Chinese Critical Care Medicine 2020;32(3):278-278
2.Small molecular agents against MERS-CoV infection.
Xiao-yun ZENG ; Lu LU ; Shi-bo JIANG ; Shu-wen LIU
Acta Pharmaceutica Sinica 2015;50(12):1520-1526
Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV) has caused outbreaks of SARS-like disease with 35% case-fatality rate, mainly in the Middle East. A more severe outbreak of MERS occurred recently in the Republic of Korea, where 186 people contracted the infections, causing great concern worldwide. So far, there has been no clinically available drug for the treatment of MERS-CoV infection. The potential drugs against MERS-CoV mainly consist of monoclonal antibodies, peptides and small molecular agents. Small molecular agents have an advantage of easier synthesis, lower cost in production and relatively higher stability. There is better chance for those candidates to gain a quick development. This article reviews the progress of developing small molecular MERS-CoV agents.
Antibodies, Monoclonal
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pharmacology
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Antiviral Agents
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pharmacology
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Coronavirus Infections
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drug therapy
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Drug Design
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Humans
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Middle East Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus
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drug effects
3.Practice and System Construction of Telemedicine for Coronavirus Disease 2019 Epidemic Prevention and Control.
Jing FAN ; Hong-Yi LIN ; Ming-Wei QIN
Acta Academiae Medicinae Sinicae 2020;42(4):531-534
Telemedicine is one of the five key components of the "Internet Plus Healthcare".Due to its high speed,real-timeness,low cost,and wide spread,telemedicine is highly feasible in the prevention and control of major infectious diseases.This article introduces the practiceof telemedicine in Peking Union Medical College Hospital during the cornavirus disease 2019(COVID-19)epidemic,during which the network resources were applied to break geographical restrictions and resolve communication barriers between hospitals and departments.This article summarizes the telemedicine application before,during and after COVID-19 control and elucidates how to build a telemedicine prevention and control system for infectious diseases,with an attempt to further improve telemedicine and is application in the public health emergency system in China.
Betacoronavirus
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Coronavirus Infections
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drug therapy
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Humans
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Pandemics
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Pneumonia, Viral
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drug therapy
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Telemedicine
5.Usage of ethnomedicine on COVID-19 in China.
Zhi-Yong LI ; Ya TU ; Hai-Tao LI ; Jiang HE ; QUESHENG ; Guang-Ping DONG ; Ming-Shuo ZHANG ; Jian-Qin LIU ; Xiu-Lan HUANG ; Xiao-Rong WANG ; Makabel BOLAT ; Xin FENG ; Fang-Bo ZHANG ; Feng JIANG
China Journal of Chinese Materia Medica 2020;45(10):2265-2274
In December 2019, an outbreak of viral pneumonia began in Wuhan, Hubei Province, which caused the spread of infectious pneumonia to a certain extent in China and neighboring countries and regions, and triggered the epidemic crisis. The coronavirus disease 2019(COVID-19) is an acute respiratory infectious disease listed as a B infectious disease, which is managed according to standards for A infectious disease. Traditional Chinese medicine and integrated traditional Chinese and Western medicine have played an active role in the prevention and control of this epidemic. China's ethnomedicine has recognized infectious diseases since ancient times, and formed a medical system including theory, therapies, formula and herbal medicines for such diseases. Since the outbreak of the COVID-19 epidemic, Tibet Autonomous Region, Qinghai Province, Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region, Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region and Chuxiong Autonomous Prefecture of Yunnan, Qiandongnan Autonomous Prefecture of Guizhou have issued the prevention and control programs for COVID-19 using Tibetan, Mongolian, Uygur, Yi and Miao medicines. These programs reflect the wisdom of ethnomedicine in preventing and treating diseases, which have successfully extracted prescriptions and preventive measures for the outbreak of the epidemic from their own medical theories and traditional experiences. In this paper, we summarized and explained the prescriptions and medicinal materials of ethnomedicine in these programs, and the origin of Tibetan medicine prescriptions and Mongolian medicine prescriptions in ancient books were studied. These become the common characteristics of medical prevention and treatment programs for ethnomedicine to formulate therapeutic programs under the guidance of traditional medicine theories, recommend prescriptions and prevention and treatment methods with characteristics of ethnomedicine, and focus on the conve-nience and standardization. However, strengthening the support of science and technology and the popularization to the public, and improving the participation of ethnomedicine in national public health services and the capacity-building to deal with sudden and critical diseases are key contents in the development of ethnomedicine in the future.
Betacoronavirus
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China
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Coronavirus Infections
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drug therapy
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Humans
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Medicine, Traditional
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Pandemics
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Pneumonia, Viral
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drug therapy
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Tibet
6.Analysis of 131 cases of COVID-19 treated with Ganlu Xiaodu Decoction.
Ling CHEN ; Zhi-Qiang CHENG ; Fang LIU ; Yang XIA ; Yong-Gang CHEN
China Journal of Chinese Materia Medica 2020;45(10):2232-2238
In this study, Donghua Hospital information management system and Meikang clinical pharmacy management system were used to collect medical records of all inpatients diagnosed as coronavirus disease 2019(COVID-19) in Wuhan Third Hospital. The statistics was based on the data of the cases treated with Ganlu Xiaodu Decoction, including demographic statistics, clinical cha-racteristics before medication, outcome of after medication and efficacy of drug combination. Excel 2003 and SPSS Clementine 12.0 software were used to conduct statistics on the included cases, and Apriori algorithm and association rules were used for the association analysis on drug combination. A total of 131 cases of COVID-19 were treated with Ganlu Xiaodu Decoction combined with Chinese and Western medicine. All of the patients were cured and discharged. The drug combination mainly included Ganlu Xiaodu Decoction, abidor, Lianhua Qingwen, moxifloxacin, Qiangli Pipa Lu, vitamin C, glycyrrhizinate diammonium, pantoprazole and Shufeng Jiedu. There is a certain regularity and effectiveness in the treatment of COVID-19 infection patients with the combination of Ganlu Xiaodu Decoction and other drugs, but the rationality and safety still need to be further verified.
Betacoronavirus
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Coronavirus Infections
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drug therapy
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Humans
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Medicine, Chinese Traditional
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Pandemics
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Pneumonia, Viral
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drug therapy
7.Analysis on formula of Mongolian medicine for prevention of COVID-19.
Ming-Yue JI ; Qi-Ge QI ; Lin-Tu-Ya XI ; XIAOHUA ; Ru-Han A ; Jie WANG ; Qin-Yu LI ; Gu-la A ; Min-Hui LI
China Journal of Chinese Materia Medica 2020;45(13):3013-3019
The epidemic situation of coronavirus disease 2019(COVID-19) is developing rapidly in the world, and the influence is serious. In this study, the prescription of Mongolian medicine to prevent new type of COVID-19 was investigated. Based on the second edition and the third edition of COVID-19 Mongolian Medicine Prevention and Treatment Guidance Program issued by the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region Health Commission, using Excel 2007, SPSS Modeler 18, SPSS Statistics 25, Cytoscape 3.7.1 statistical software as a tool, the association rules analysis and cluster analysis of Mongolian medicine included in the standard were carried out. Among the 45 prophylactic prescriptions included in the standard, a total of 34 high-frequency drugs using frequency ≥5 were used, of which Carthami Flos(21 times, 4.46%), Chebulae Fructus(20 times, 4.26%), Moschus(13 times, 2.77%), Myristicae Semen(12 times, 2.55%), Santali Albi Lignum(12 times, 2.55%), and Bovis Calculus(12 times, 2.55%) were the most common. The main drugs for the prevention of COVID-19 were Liang(13 times, 38.23%), Wen(9 times, 26.47%), the flavor was Ku(20 times, 34.48%), Xin(13 times, 22.41%), Gan(11 times, 18.97%), the most used drugs treating hot evil(99 times, 32.46%), treatment of "Heyi" drugs(51 times, 16.72%), treatment of "Badagan" drugs(40 times, 13.11%), treatment of "sticky" drugs(37 times, 12.13%), and a cough, eliminating phlegm and antiasthmatic(31 times, 10.16%), the association rule analysis found that the highest association intensity of the drug pair combination of 11. Clustering analysis using the cluster analysis of inter-group join method found a total of 8 categories. In this study, 45 prescriptions of Mongolian medicine for the prevention of COVID-19 were collec-ted and further analyzed, hoping to provide new ideas for clinical diagnosis and treatment.
Betacoronavirus
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China
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Coronavirus Infections
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drug therapy
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Humans
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Medicine, Mongolian Traditional
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Pandemics
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Pneumonia, Viral
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drug therapy
8.Dangers of scientific bias against herbal drugs for coronavirus disease 2019.
Journal of Integrative Medicine 2020;18(6):459-461
On May 15, 2020, the Lancet published an article titled Use of Herbal Drugs to Treat COVID-19 Should be with Caution. While this is true of all drugs, herbal and otherwise, the data may be biased and deserve a scientific response. We believe these types of reports will unfairly and negatively impact the field of integrative medicine as a whole, and must be answered with facts and statistics that more accurately represent the current situation.
Betacoronavirus
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Bias
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COVID-19
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Coronavirus
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Coronavirus Infections/drug therapy*
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Drugs, Chinese Herbal
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Humans
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Pandemics
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Pneumonia, Viral
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SARS-CoV-2
9.Chinese herbal medicine for COVID-19: Current evidence with systematic review and meta-analysis.
Arthur Yin FAN ; Sherman GU ; Sarah Faggert ALEMI
Journal of Integrative Medicine 2020;18(5):385-394
BACKGROUND:
There is currently no drug or therapy that cures COVID-19, a highly contagious and life-threatening disease.
OBJECTIVE:
This systematic review and meta-analysis summarized contemporary studies that report the use of Chinese herbal medicine (CHM) to treat COVID-19.
SEARCH STRATEGY:
Six electronic databases (PubMed/MEDLINE, Cochrane Library, ScienceDirect, Google Scholar, Wanfang Data and China National Knowledge Infrastructure) were searched from their beginning to May 15, 2020 with the following search terms: traditional Chinese medicine, Chinese medicine, Chinese herbal medicine, COVID-19, new coronavirus pneumonia, SARS-CoV-2, and randomized controlled trial.
INCLUSION CRITERIA:
Randomized controlled trials (RCTs) from peer-reviewed journals and non-reviewed publications were included. Further, included RCTs had a control group that was given standard care (SC; such as conventional Western medicine treatments or routine medical care), and a treatment group that was given SC plus CHM.
DATA EXTRACTION AND ANALYSIS:
Two evaluators screened and collected literature independently; information on participants, study design, interventions, follow-up and adverse events were extracted, and risk of bias was assessed. The primary outcomes included scores that represented changes in symptoms and signs over the course of treatment. Secondary outcomes included the level of inflammatory markers, improvement of pneumonia confirmed by computed tomography (CT), and adverse events. Dichotomous data were expressed as risk ratio or hazard ratio with 95% confidence interval (CI); where time-to-event analysis was used, outcomes were expressed as odds ratio with 95% CI. Continuous data were expressed as difference in means (MD) with 95% CI, and standardized mean difference (SMD) was used when different outcome scales were pooled.
RESULTS:
Seven original studies, comprising a total of 732 adults, were included in this meta-analysis. Compared to SC alone, CHM plus SC had a superior effect on the change of symptom and sign score (-1.30 by SMD, 95% CI [-2.43, -0.16]; 3 studies; n = 261, P = 0.03), on inflammatory marker C-reactive protein (CRP, mg/L; -11.82 by MD, 95% CI [-17.95, -5.69]; 5 studies; n = 325, P = 0.0002), on number of patients with improved lung CT scans (1.34 by risk ratio, 95% CI [1.19, 1.51]; 4 studies; n = 489, P < 0.00001). No significant adverse events were recorded in the included RCTs.
CONCLUSION
Current evidence shows that CHM, as an adjunct treatment with standard care, helps to improve treatment outcomes in COVID-19 cases.
Betacoronavirus
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drug effects
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Coronavirus Infections
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drug therapy
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Drugs, Chinese Herbal
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therapeutic use
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Humans
10.Structure of SARS-CoV-2 and treatment of COVID-19.
Hai-Xia CHEN ; Zhi-Hua CHEN ; Hua-Hao SHEN
Acta Physiologica Sinica 2020;72(5):617-630
Corona virus disease 2019 (COVID-19) is a new type of coronavirus pneumonia, which is caused by infection of a novel coronavirus, SARS-CoV-2. The virus infects lung cells by binding angiotensin-converting enzyme 2 (ACE2) of cell surface, which leads to leukocyte infiltration, increased permeability of blood vessels and alveolar walls, and decreased surfactant in the lung, causing respiratory symptoms. The aggravation of local inflammation causes cytokine storm, resulting in systemic inflammatory response syndrome. In December 2019, a number of new pneumonia cases were reported by Wuhan Municipal Health Commission, after then a novel coronavirus was isolated and identified as SARS-CoV-2. To the date of Sep. 13th, 2020, COVID-19 is affecting 216 countries or regions, causing 28 637 952 cases, 917 417 deaths, and the mortality rate is 3.20%. This review will summarize the structure of SARS-CoV-2 and the pharmaceutical treatment of COVID-19, and their potential relationships.
Betacoronavirus
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COVID-19
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Coronavirus Infections/drug therapy*
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Humans
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Pandemics
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Pneumonia, Viral
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SARS Virus
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SARS-CoV-2