1.Visual analysis of home-based rehabilitation exercises for patient with Parkinson's disease based on Web of Science
Erming YANG ; Qiaohong WANG ; Yanming WU ; Xiaoqing ZHANG ; Yibao WANG ; Hui YANG
Chinese Journal of Modern Nursing 2023;29(28):3896-3901
Objective:To explore the research hotspot and trends of home rehabilitation exercise for patients with Parkinson's disease.Methods:Literature related to home-based rehabilitation exercises for Parkinson's disease patients included in the core set of Web of Science database from establishment of databases to March 31, 2023 was retrieved. The source countries, institutions, authors, key words and references of the literature were visually analyzed by CiteSpace software, and the scientific knowledge map was drawn.Results:A total of 472 articles were included, and the annual publication volume was increasing year by year. The top three countries in terms of publication volume were the United States (176 articles) , the United Kingdom (54 articles) and Australia (54 articles) . The top three institutions with the highest number of publications were La Trobe University, Catholic University of Leuven and Radboud University. The research in this field mainly focused on randomized controlled trials and Meta-analysis. The initial stage of the research mainly focused on the effect of Parkinson's disease on the body, later transferred to gait research, and in recent years, began to focus on the application of virtual reality technology in the home-based rehabilitation of Parkinson's disease patients.Conclusions:Home-based rehabilitation exercises for Parkinson's disease patients can be carried out in many ways, but it is limited by disease symptoms and other influencing factors. Virtual reality technology, telemedicine, wearable devices and other technologies can promote the development of home-based rehabilitation exercises. It is necessary to increase the research efforts of such technology in the future and explore comprehensive home-based rehabilitation exercises programs.
2.Diversity analysis of archaeal and fungal communities in adjacent cucumber root soil samples in greenhouse by small-subunit rRNA gene cloning.
Zhixiang ZHAO ; Xiaofei LU ; Guohua CHEN ; Zhenchuan MAO ; Yuhong YANG ; Erming LIU ; Bingyan XIE
Chinese Journal of Biotechnology 2011;27(1):41-51
Soil archaea and fungi play important roles in the greenhouse soil ecosystem. To develop and apply rich microbial resources in greenhouse ecological environment, and to understand the interaction between microbes and plants, we constructed archaeal 16S rRNA and fungal 18S rRNA gene libraries to analyze the compositions of archaeal and fungal communities. Total greenhouse soil DNA was directly extracted and purified by skiving-thawing-lysozyme-proteinase K-SDS hot treatment and treatment of cetyltriethylammnonium bromide (CTAB). After PCR amplification, retrieving, ligating, transforming, screening of white clones, archaeal 16S rRNA and fungal 18S rRNA gene libraries were constructed. The sequences of archaea and fungi were defined into operational taxonomic units (OTUs) when 97% similarity threshold for OTU assignment was performed by using the software DOTUR. Phylogenetic analysis showed that crenarchaeota and unidentified-archaea were the two major sub-groups and only a few of euryarchaeota existed in the archaeal clone library, total 45 OTUs. All the crenarchaeota belonged to thermoprotei; except for Basidiomycotina, the other four sub-group fungi were discovered in the fungal library, total 24 OTUs. The diversities of archaea were very abundant and a few euryarchaeota (methanebacteria) existed in the archaeal clone library, it might be directly related to the long-term high temperature, high humidity, and high content of organic matter. The limitation of oxygen was the other reason for causing this phenomenon; Ascomycotina (over 80%) was the dominant sub-groups in fungal library. It was because most of the plant fungal diseases belonged to soil-borne diseases which gone through the winter by the ways of scierotium or perithecium and became the sources of primary infection.
Archaea
;
genetics
;
growth & development
;
Biodiversity
;
Cloning, Molecular
;
Cucumis sativus
;
growth & development
;
Fungi
;
genetics
;
growth & development
;
Gene Library
;
Genes, rRNA
;
Microclimate
;
Phylogeny
;
Plant Roots
;
microbiology
;
RNA, Archaeal
;
genetics
;
RNA, Fungal
;
genetics
;
RNA, Ribosomal, 16S
;
genetics
;
RNA, Ribosomal, 18S
;
genetics
;
Soil Microbiology
3.Summary of the best evidence for home-based exercise management in patients with mild-to-moderate Parkinson's disease
Qiaohong WANG ; Caihong QIAO ; Erming YANG ; Xiaoqing ZHANG ; Li LI ; Bin HAO ; Hui YANG
Chinese Journal of Modern Nursing 2024;30(1):36-44
Objective:To retrieve, evaluate and summarize relevant evidence on home-based exercise management in patients with mild to moderate Parkinson's disease, so as to provide reference and guidance for clinical healthcare professionals to construct and improve patient home-based exercise intervention plans.Methods:According to the top-down principle of the "6S" evidence model, UpToDate, BMJ, National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence, Guidelines International Network, National Guideline Clearinghouse, Medlive, Clinical Guidelines Network, Joanna Briggs Institute, Cochrane Library, PubMed, CINAHL, Web of Science, Embase, China National Knowledge Infrastructure, Wanfang Data, VIP and China Biology Medicine Disc were systematically searched for relevant literature on home-based exercise management in patients with Parkinson's disease, including guidelines, expert consensuses, systematic reviews, evidence summaries, clinical decisions, recommended practices and best practices. The search period was from the establishment of the databases to October 31, 2022. Two researchers independently evaluated the quality of the literature and extracted and integrated evidence.Results:A total of 27 articles were included, including three guidelines, five expert opinions and consensuses, three clinical practice suggestions, 15 systematic evaluations and one clinical decision. A total of 45 pieces of evidence were summarized from six aspects, such as organizational management, health education, exercise evaluation, exercise prescription, family and social support and monitoring guidance.Conclusions:This study summarized the best evidence of home-based exercise management for patients with mild to moderate Parkinson's disease, which can provide evidence-based basis for clinical staff to formulate home-based exercise management programs and standardize practice standards.