1.Clinical study for nasopharyngeal angiofi-bromas with intracranial or sinus cavernous extension
Yanqiao WU ; Xiaoming LI ; Weiyan YANG ; Dongyi HAN ; Deliang HUANG ; Wenming WU ; Jialing WANG ; Yaodong SHANG
Chinese Archives of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery 2006;0(06):-
OBJECTIVE To evaluate the clinical feature and surgical treatment of large nasopharyngeal angiofibromas with intracranial orcavernous sinus extension.METHODS A total of 16 male patients were collected with a age ranged from 11 to 35 years(mean,17.21 years).All patients underwent resection of nasopharyngeal angiofibromas with intracranial or cavernous sinus extension.The procedure included lateral rhinotomy,craniofacial combined approach,median labiomandibulotomy combined with a trans-palatal,transmaxillary approach and middle face degloving approach.RESULTS Sixteen cases received 28 procedures.Seven patients had no recurrence but 9 patients had recurrence at least once.Twenty eight procedures include 11 times lateral rhinotomy,6 times craniofacial combined approach,2 times frontotemporal approach,4 times transpalatal approach,2 transmaxillary approach,1 median labiomandibulotomy combined with a trans-palatal and 2 times middle face degloving approaches.CONCLUSION Radical operative resection is the main treatment method for nasopharyngeal angiofibroma with intracranial or cavernous sinus extension.The first operation recurrence rate is 8/15(53.0%) and sphenoid tumor residual may often be ignored in the operation and it is the main site of tumor recurrence.Craniofacial,median labiomandibulotomy combined with a trans-palatal and middle face degloving approaches were the best choices for large nasopharyngeal angio fi broma with intracranial or cavernous sinus extension.
2.Methodology of transfecting gene into liver graft mediated by adeno-associated virus vector
Sheng TAI ; Zhilei SU ; Zhibing WANG ; Taishi FANG ; Wengang SHANG ; Dequan WU ; Deen HAN
Chinese Journal of Digestive Surgery 2008;7(2):116-119
Objective To investigate the effective route and proper method in transfecting gene into liver graft mediated by adeno-associated virus vector.Methods Three routes including hepatic artery,portal vein and hepatic artery+portal vein,and 3 methods,i.e.routine,circulation and clamping were employed for infusion.The best infusion route and method of gene transfection into liver graft were determined by observing the color change of liver and detecting liver function and transfoetion rate of liver cells.The safety of these methods was evaluated.Results In all the infusion procedures,the color of the liver grafts turned from red to white,no apparent color differenee of the livers and no enlargement nor mottling were observed under surgical microscope.The liver color was back to normal immediately after blood flow was restored.No significantly statistical differences of the ALT values were observed among all the groups(F=0.343,1.265,0.055,P>0.05).Adeno-associated virus vectors coding for the enhanced green fluorescence protein(AAV2-EGFP)were successfully transfected into liver cells by the 3 infusion routes 1 week later,and the difierences of transfection rates via the 3 routes had no statistical significance(F=0.080,0.091,0.045,P>0.05).The transfoction rate of AAV2-EGFP was the highest at any time points when using the clamping method,and then followed by circulation method and routine method,with statistical differenee(F=3.880,2.976,5.129,P<0.05).The transfection rates of AAV2-EGFP were increased progressively and peaked at the 6th week,and then they were decreased gradually.Conclusions Infusion via hepatic artery is the effective route for gene transfection and clamping the vessels can elevate the transfection rate of AAV2-EGFP.All procedures were performed without detectable liver injury.The transfection of gene into liver graft mediated by adeno-associated virus vector is a slow and persistent process.
3.Ultrastructural study of alveolar type Ⅱ cells in young rats with lipopolysaccharide-induced acute lung injury
Linhua SHU ; Xindong XUE ; Linhong SHU ; Chunfeng LIU ; Hongmin WU ; Xiaohua HAN ; Yunxiao SHANG ; Xuxu CAI ; Wei XU ; Kelun WEI
International Journal of Pediatrics 2007;34(3):166-168,封3
Objective Acute lung injury (ALI) and acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) are common and life-threatening disease in children with mortality as high as 40%-70%. Alveolar type Ⅱ cells (ATII cells),characterized by the presence of lamellar bodies (LBs),synthesize and secret surfactant proteins (SPs),which contribute significantly to surfactant homeostasis and pulmonary immunity.The functions of ATⅡ cells including pulmonary surfactant production are autocratically dominated by the structural integrity of ATII cells.Our study is focused on the ultrastructural alterations of AT Ⅱ cells in rats with lipopolysaccharide(LPS)-induced ALI.Methods Rat ALI models were established by intraperitoneal injection of LPS (4 mg/kg).0.9 % NS with same amount was given in the normal control group.The rats were randomly chosen and sacrificed at 24, 48 and 72 hrs after LPS injection (8 rats at each time point).Lung samples (1 mm3 of the size) were obtained from the lower parts of left lungs and fixed with 2.5% glutaraldehyde for the transmission electron microscope examination.Results The microvilli around ATII cells disappeared and the number of LBs increased at 24 hrs after LPS administration.LBs rearranged like a ring around the nuclei.It was commonly seen that two nuclei were present in one AT Ⅱ cell.Vacuole-like deformity prominently occurred in cytoplasm at 48 hrs.Giant LBs presented at the same time.The shapes of nuclei were irregular and some of the borders were unclear at 48 and 72 hrs.The remnant of ruptured LBs scattered in cytoplasm at 72 hrs.The number of LBs reduced obviously.Karyolysis occurred in some of the nuclei.Conclusions The ALI-related alterations of ATII cells characterized by the changes of LBs,nuclei,and nucleoli were time-dependent. ATII cell injury was serious at 48 and 72 hrs.This may lead to the insufficiency of pulmonary surfactant synthesis and unstability of pulmonary homeostasis,which contributed to to the pathogenesis of acute lung injury.
4.Risk Factors Analysis for Prevalence of Acute Myocardial Infarction in Young and Middle-aged Population
Quanle HAN ; Ruiying MAO ; Jing YU ; Shouling WU ; Jingsheng GAO ; Qi ZHANG ; Meiling WU ; Qinghua ZHANG ; Xiaoming LIU ; Xiaoming SHANG ; Xiaokun LIU
Chinese Circulation Journal 2016;31(7):632-635
Objective: To study the risk factors for prevalence of acute myocardial infarction (AMI) in young and middle-aged population. Methods: A prospective cohort study was conducted in 110100 subjects at the age of (18-98) years who received physical examination in Kailuan Group from 2012-06 to 2014-10. Based on the limitations of male≤53 years and female≤63 years, a total of 62367 subjects were enrolled in our study. The subjects were followed-up for 2 years by the end point event of AMI to analyze the risk factors ofAMI occurrence. Results: According to AMI occurrence at the follow-up period, the subjects were divided into 2 groups: AMI group, n=56 and Control group, n=62152. Compared with Control group, AMI group had increased BMI, SBP, DBP and elevated blood levels of LDL-C, TG; AMI group also showed the higher ratios of subjects with the history of diabetes and taking anti-hypertension medication. Cox proportional hazard regression analysis indicated that age (RR=1.37), male (RR=60.54), LDL-C (RR=1.12), and TG (RR=5.93) were the risk factors forAMI occurrence in young and middle-aged population, allP<0.05. Conclusion: Age, male gender, blood levels of LDL-C, and TG were the risk factors for AMI occurrence in young and middle-aged population.
5.A study of the liver pathology and direct sequencing of all exons of WD gene in a patient with fulminant Wilson disease.
Gang HE ; Xu YANG ; Kai-zhong LUO ; Yong-fang JIANG ; Han-chun CHEN ; Shang-wu LÜ
Chinese Journal of Hepatology 2007;15(9):712-713
Child
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Exons
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Hepatolenticular Degeneration
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genetics
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pathology
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Humans
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Male
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Sequence Analysis
6.Distribution characteristics of traditional Chinese medicine syndromes and their elements in people with subhealth fatigue.
Tianfang WANG ; Jiajia WANG ; Xiaolin XUE ; Ping HAN ; Yajing ZHANG ; Guanru LI ; Xiuyan WU ; Yan ZHAO ; Lilong TANG ; Yuyue LIU ; Conglu SUI ; Chen FU ; Yongmei SHANG ; Bo ZHOU
Journal of Integrative Medicine 2010;8(3):220-3
To investigate the characteristics of traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) syndromes and their elements in people with subhealth fatigue.
7.Effects of the combination of musk and olibanum on the expressions of tight junction proteins in the prostate epithelial cells of rats.
Qun-fang LIN ; Pei HUANG ; Xue-fei TIAN ; Xue-jun SHANG ; Yang-peng WU ; Ping HAN ; Rui-song GAO ; Qing ZHOU
National Journal of Andrology 2015;21(12):1110-1115
OBJECTIVETo investigate the effects of the combination of musk and olibanum on the tight junction protein expressions in prostatic epithelial cells of normal and chronic prostatitis (CP) rats.
METHODSEighty male SD rats were randomly divided into 8 groups of equal number: normal control, normal musk, normal olibanum, normal musk + olibanum, CP model control, CP model musk, CP model olibanum, and CP model musk + olibanum. At 60 days after modeling, the rats in the control, musk, olibanum, and musk + olibanum groups were treated intragastrically with normal saline, musk (0.021 g per kg body weight per day), olibanum (1.05 g per kg body weight per day), or musk + olibanum respectively, all for 3 days. Then, all the rats were sacrificed and their prostate tissues harvested for detection of the expressions of the tight junction proteins Claudin-1, Claudin-3, Occludin, and ZO-1 in the prostatic epithelial cells by immunohistochemical staining.
RESULTSIn the CP models, only the expression of Claudin-1 was significantly increased. In the normal rats, the expression of Claudin-1 was remarkably upregulated after treated with musk (824.6 ± 393.3, P < 0.05), olibanum (982.0 ± 334.0, P < 0.05), and musk + olibanum (1088.1 ± 640.2, P < 0.01); that of Claudin-3 was elevated markedly by olibanum (1 009.5 ± 243.6, P < 0.05) and insignificantly by musk (597.5 ± 80.7), but the increasing effect of olibanum was reduced by musk + olibanum (678.4 ± 255.1). No statistically significant differences were found in the expression of Occludin among the rats treated with musk (693.0 ± 424.8), olibanum (732.1 ± 302.0), and musk + olibanum (560.2 ± 202.3), or in that of ZO-1 in the animals treated with musk (290.0 ± 166.8) and olibanum (419.7 ± 108.1), but the latter was markedly decreased in the musk + olibanum group (197.7 ± 98.2, P < 0.05). In the CP rat models, both the expressions of Claudin-1 (823.0 ± 100.1, P < 0.01) and Occludin (1160.0 ± 32.2, P < 0.05) were significantly increased. The expression of Claudin-1 was remarkably down-regulated by musk (764.9 ± 179.0), olibanum (468.4 ± 220.4), and musk + olibanum (335.1 ± 204.0) (all P < 0.05), but that of Claudin-3 up-regulated by musk (744.6 ± 94.5) and olibanum (700.1 ± 223.7) (both P < 0.05). The expression of Occludin was reduced by musk (615.0 ± 221.0), olibanum (749.6 ± 321.7), and musk + olibanum (505.8 ± 523.7), while that of ZO-1 increased by olibaum (443.2 ± 44.9) and decreased by musk + olibanum (213.5 ± 24.9, P < 0.05).
CONCLUSIONIn physiological and pathological conditions, the combination of musk and olibanum acts on the expressions of tight junction proteins in prostate epithelial cells in a selective and dual-targeting manner, promoting their permeability by down-regulating the expression of ZO-1 and maintaining their structural stability by regulating the expressions of Claudin-1, Claudin-3, and Occludin.
Animals ; Claudins ; metabolism ; Down-Regulation ; Epithelial Cells ; drug effects ; Fatty Acids, Monounsaturated ; chemistry ; Frankincense ; chemistry ; Male ; Occludin ; metabolism ; Prostate ; cytology ; Prostatitis ; Rats ; Rats, Sprague-Dawley ; Tight Junction Proteins ; metabolism ; Up-Regulation
8.Oogenesis in summer females of the rice water weevil, Lissorhoptrus oryzophilus Kuschel (Coleoptera: Curculionidae), in southern Zhejiang, China.
Sheng-wei SHI ; Ming-xing JIANG ; Han-wu SHANG ; Hui-ping LV ; Jia-an CHENG
Journal of Zhejiang University. Science. B 2007;8(1):33-38
The rice water weevil, Lissorhoptrus oryzophilus Kuschel, has two generations in southern Zhejiang, China. To determine oogenesis in first-generation females (summer females) and its relations to temperature, females were collected from a rice field in early and mid-July and reared on young rice plants at 28, 31 and 34 degrees C in the laboratory. Percentage of females having oocytes, number of oocytes of different stages (stage-I, from early previtellogenesis to middle vitellogenesis; stage-II, late vitellogenesis; and mature-oocyte stage), and length of ovarioles were determined every 10 d of feeding. At each temperature, oogenesis took place in over 40% of females after 20~40 d of feeding, but only 0.0~3.3 stage-I, 0.0~0.8 stage-II and 0.0~1.1 mature oocytes were observed at each observation date. Temperature had significant effect on number of stage-I oocytes but not on number of stage-II and mature oocytes in early July females; temperature had no significant effect on number of oocytes of either stage in mid-July females. Conclusively, in southern Zhejiang, summer L. oryzophilus females have great potential to become reproductive on rice, but their oogenesis activity is very low, with the overall procedures little affected by temperature.
Animals
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China
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Female
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Oogenesis
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Oryza
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parasitology
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Seasons
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Temperature
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Weevils
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genetics
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pathogenicity
9.Impact of Pulmonary Vein Anatomy on Long-term Outcome of Cryoballoon Ablation for Atrial Fibrillation
Shang-Wei HUANG ; Qi JIN ; Ning ZHANG ; Tian-You LING ; Wen-Qi PAN ; Chang-Jian LIN ; Qing-Zhi LUO ; Yan-Xin HAN ; Li-Qun WU
Journal of Huazhong University of Science and Technology (Medical Sciences) 2018;38(2):259-267
Variant pulmonary vein anatomy (PVA) has been reported to influence the recurrence of atrial fibrillation (AF) after radiofrequency ablation.However,the effects of PVA on AF in patients undergoing cryoballoon ablation (CBA) remain unknown.The present study aimed to examine the impact of PVA on the long-term outcome of CBA for AF.A total of 78 patients (mean age 60.7±10.9 years,64.1% males) with symptomatic and drug-refractory paroxysmal AF were enrolled in the study.Left atrium (LA) and PVA acquired at computed tomography angiography (CTA) were reconstructed with CARTO(R) 3 SYSTEM.Patients were routinely evaluated by 24-hour Holter monitoring following CBA.Cox regression was used to detect the predictors of AF recurrence after CBA.The results showed abnormal PVA in 30 patients (38.5%) and 18 patients (23.1%) had left common PV (LCPV).Electrical pulmonary vein isolation was achieved in all patients.After a mean follow-up of 689.5±103.8 days,it was found that patients with abnormal PVA had similar AF recurrence rate to those with normal PVA (26.7% vs.25.0%,P=0.54),and there was no significant difference in AF recurrence rate between LCPV patients and non-LCPV patients (33.7% vs.23.3%,P=0.29).Cox regression analysis showed that AF duration (72.9±9.0 vs.42.3±43.2 months,HR 1.001;95%CI 1.003-1.014;P<0.001) and cryo-applications of right-side PVs (3.0±1.6 vs.4.7±1.7,HR 0.661;95% CI 0.473-0.925;P=0.016) were independent predictors of freedom from AF,but PVA was not identified as a predictor of long-term success.In conclusion,the variant PVA cannot significantly influence the long-term outcome of AF patients undergoing CBA;longer AF duration and less cryo-applications of right-side PVs are associated with higher AF recurrent rate.
10.Inhibition of caspase-1-dependent apoptosis suppresses peste des petits ruminants virus replication
Lingxia LI ; Shengqing LI ; Shengyi HAN ; Pengfei LI ; Guoyu DU ; Jinyan WU ; Xiaoan CAO ; Youjun SHANG
Journal of Veterinary Science 2023;24(5):e55-
Background:
Peste des petits ruminants (PPR), caused by the PPR virus (PPRV), is an acute and fatal contagious disease that mainly infects goats, sheep, and other artiodactyls.Peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) are considered the primary innate immune cells.
Objectives:
PBMCs derived from goats were infected with PPRV and analyzed to detect the relationship between PPRV replication and apoptosis or the inflammatory response.
Methods:
Quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction was used to identify PPRV replication and cytokines expression. Flow cytometry was conducted to detect apoptosis and the differentiation of CD4+ and CD8+T cells after PPRV infection.
Results:
PPRV stimulated the differentiation of CD4+ and CD8+ T cells. In addition, PPRV induced apoptosis in goat PBMCs. Furthermore, apoptosis and the inflammatory response induced by PPRV could be suppressed by Z-VAD-FMK and Z-YVAD-FMK, respectively.Moreover, the virus titer of PPRV was attenuated by inhibiting caspase-1-dependent apoptosis and inflammation.
Conclusions
This study showed that apoptosis and the inflammatory response play an essential role in PPR viral replication in vitro, providing a new mechanism related to the cell host response.