1.Association between high air temperature and mortality in summer: A multi-city analysis in China.
G J LUAN ; P YIN ; L J WANG ; J L YOU ; M G ZHOU
Chinese Journal of Epidemiology 2019;40(1):59-63
Objective: To understand the associations between changes of high air temperature and mortality in summer in 31 cities in China. Methods: Daily mortality and meteorological data in 31 cities in China from January 1, 2008 to December 31, 2013 were collected. Distributed lag nonlinear model was used to evaluate the association between high air temperature change and mortality in early summer and late summer after controlling for the long-term trend and the effect of "day of week" . Results: The relative risk of high air temperature on mortality was higher in early summer, with relative risk in the range of 1.08-2.14 in early summer and 1.03-1.67 in late summer. In early summer, the influence of high temperature on mortality was mainly below 5(th) of percentile and above 50(th) of percentile, while in late summer it was mainly above 95(th) of percentile. The lag effect of high air temperature on mortality in early summer was 6 days, while the lag effect in late summer was only about 2 days. Conclusions: Association existed between high air temperature and mortality. The influence of high air temperature on mortality in early summer was stronger than that in late summer. It is necessary to take targeted protection measures.
Air Pollution
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China
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Cities
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Hot Temperature/adverse effects*
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Mortality
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Nonlinear Dynamics
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Temperature
2.A Case of Combined Cholinergic and Cold Urticaria.
Hong Woo CHEON ; Su Jung HAN ; So Jeong YEO ; Sun Hyo LEE ; Min Jin KIM ; Shin Hee KIM ; An Soo JANG
The Korean Journal of Internal Medicine 2012;27(4):478-479
No abstract available.
Acetylcholine/physiology
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Adult
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Cold Temperature/adverse effects
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Exercise
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Hot Temperature/adverse effects
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Humans
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Male
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Urticaria/diagnosis/*etiology/physiopathology
3.Low-grade thermal injury.
Zhao-fan XIA ; Dao-feng BEN ; Bing MA ; Heng-yu LI ; Liu LIU
Chinese Medical Journal 2009;122(3):359-360
Burns
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diagnosis
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pathology
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Hot Temperature
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adverse effects
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Humans
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Male
;
Middle Aged
4.Acute Thermal Injury of the Esophagus from Solid Food: Clinical Course and Endoscopic Findings.
Woo Chul CHUNG ; Chang Nyol PAIK ; Ji Han JUNG ; Jin Dong KIM ; Kang Moon LEE ; Jin Mo YANG
Journal of Korean Medical Science 2010;25(3):489-491
A 53-yr-old man presented with a two-day history of odynophagia and a foreign body sensation. Two days before admission, the patient began to experience odynophagia and a foreign body sensation in the chest after swallowing several extremely hot pieces of solid food (prawn) in haste. Endoscopy revealed a huge longitudinal ulcer, typical of friable hyperemic mucosa with necrotic debris along the full length of the esophagus in the posterolateral region. Here we present the clinical course of serial endoscopy of an acute thermal injury of the esophagus caused by solid food.
Animals
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*Endoscopy
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Esophagus/*pathology
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*Food
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Hot Temperature/*adverse effects
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Humans
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Male
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Middle Aged
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Wound Healing
5.Effects of perming, combing and stretching on hair keratins.
Pin Hua YAN ; Ting Zhi QUE ; Zhen Min ZHAO
Journal of Forensic Medicine 2001;17(4):209-211
OBJECTIVE:
Research of the hair damage due to perming, combing and stretching can be of important value for forensic hair individual identification.
METHODS:
The normal human hairs were treated with perming combing and stretching, and the keratins of the damage hair were analysed by using SDS-PAGGE and laser densimeter.
RESULTS:
Perming, combing and stretching brought about hair damage; The keratins of the damage hair were obviously reduced at the rang of molecular weight of 67,000-43,000 dalton.
CONCLUSION
The loss of the damage hair keratins were increased with the degree of the hair damage.
Adult
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Female
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Forensic Medicine
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Hair/physiopathology*
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Hot Temperature/adverse effects*
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Humans
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Keratins/metabolism*
6.Analysis of the impact of the socio-economic factors on temperature-mortality association in southern China.
Mengjue HU ; Wenjun MA ; Yonghui ZHANG ; Yanjun XU ; Xiaojun XU ; Hualiang LIN ; Tao LIU ; Jianpeng XIAO ; Yuan LUO ; Weilin ZENG
Chinese Journal of Preventive Medicine 2014;48(5):401-405
OBJECTIVETo explore the impact of the socio-economic factors on the temperature-mortality association in different cities in southern China.
METHODSDaily mortality registration data, meteorological data and air pollution data of the cities as Changsha and Kunming during 2006-2009, and cities as Guangzhou and Zhuhai during 2006-2010, were collected to explore modifying effects, stratified by age, gender, education and place of death, of socio-economic factors on the association between temperature and mortality, by distributed lag non-linear model. The accumulative effect of temperature-mortality were separately analyzed in each city, under the high temperature (0-3 days) and low temperature (0-20 days) situation. The association between temperature and mortality was evaluated by general linear threshold model. The above process was firstly adopted to analyze the impact in single city and then Meta analysis was applied to analyze the impact in several cities by effect-combine.
RESULTSThe relationship between temperature and mortality in the four cities showed nonlinearity. The minimum mortality risk was separately 23.5 °C, 20.5 °C, 25.0 °C and 26.0 °C in Changsha, Kunming, Guangzhou and Zhuhai. The results of effect-combine showed that low-temperature (RR = 1.67, 95%CI:1.54-1.80) has a higher gross effect than high-temperature (RR = 1.11, 95%CI:1.01-1.18) on population. With the age increasing, risk of death increased both under high and low temperature situation, and the effect of low temperature was greater (RR = 1.83, 95%CI:1.65-2.04) for the elderly than it of high temperature (RR = 1.17, 95%CI:1.03-1.33). The mortality risk among females (cold and hot effects(95%CI) were 1.75(1.57-1.97) and 1.11(0.99-1.25), respectively)was higher than it among males (cold and hot effects(95%CI) were 1.59(1.45-1.77) and 1.11(1.03-1.19), respectively). Whereas the mortality risk on higher education population was significantly higher (cold and hot effects (95%CI) were 1.89(1.48-2.45)and 1.34(1.19-1.48), respectively) than it on other educated people.
CONCLUSIONAge, gender, educational level and place of death showed modifying effects on the association between temperature and mortality. The elderly, women and highly educated people were vulnerable to the temperature influence on mortality.
Aged ; Air Pollution ; China ; Cold Temperature ; adverse effects ; Female ; Hot Temperature ; adverse effects ; Humans ; Male ; Mortality ; Nonlinear Dynamics ; Risk ; Socioeconomic Factors
7.Combined effect of heat and noise on plasma angiotension II and adreomedullin content in pilots.
Yu LIU ; Gui-xi MA ; Shi-zhen QIN ; Wen-bin LI
Chinese Journal of Industrial Hygiene and Occupational Diseases 2004;22(2):134-135
Adult
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Aircraft
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Angiotensinogen
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analogs & derivatives
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blood
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Hot Temperature
;
adverse effects
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Humans
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Male
;
Neuropeptides
;
blood
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Noise
;
adverse effects
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Occupational Exposure
;
adverse effects
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Stress, Psychological
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blood
;
etiology
;
Time Factors
8.Evaluation of operation ergonomics at high-temperature in the cockpit.
Yinsheng TIAN ; Jing LI ; Li DING ; Qiong WANG ; Zhaosheng REN ; Liyong SHI ; Lihao XUE
Journal of Biomedical Engineering 2011;28(4):702-707
10 male subjects participated in the environmental simulation study to evaluate the operation ergonomics at high-temperature in the cockpit. Grip strength, perception, dexterity, reaction and intelligence were measured respectively during the tests at 40 degrees C and 45 degrees C, simulating the high-temperatures in a simulation cockpit chamber. Then the data obtained were compared to the combined index of heat stress (CIHS). The average values of each item of the subjects' performance at the two different temperatures are compared. The results indicated that CIHS exceeded the heat stress safety line after 45 min at 40 degrees C, grip strength decreased by 12%, and perception increased by 2.89 times. In contrast, at 45 degrees C, CIHS exceeded the safety line after 20 min, grip strength decreased by 3.2%, and perception increased by 4.36 times. However, Finger dexterity was less affected. Reaction ability was first accelerated, and then slowed down. The error rate in the intelligence test increased to a greater extent. At the high temperatures, the minimum perception was the most affected, followed by grip strength, reaction and finger dexterity were less affected, while the intelligence did not decline, but rise.
Adult
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Aerospace Medicine
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Aircraft
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Computer Simulation
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Ergonomics
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Heat Stress Disorders
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physiopathology
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Hot Temperature
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adverse effects
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Humans
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Male
;
Young Adult
9.Effects of ginsenoside-Rg on mechanical allodynia, heat hyperalgeia, depressive state of rats with chronic sciatic nerve constriction injury.
Qiao-Lian ZHANG ; Shuang-Ying LI ; Ping LI
Chinese Journal of Applied Physiology 2019;35(3):228-231
OBJECTIVE:
To investigate the effects of ginsenoside-Rg on mechanical allodynia, heat hyperalgeia, depressive state of rats with chronic sciatic nerve constriction injury.
METHODS:
Fifty SD rats were randomly divided into 5 groups: blank control group (Normal, normal + saline),sham operation group (Sham, sham operation + saline),chronic constriction injury of the sciatic nerve group (CCI, CCI + saline),ginsenoside-Rg low dose group (CCI + Rg 5 mg/kg), and ginsenoside-Rg high dose group (CCI + Rg 10 mg/kg).After the CCI model was established,drug were injected into the abdominal cavity through the syringe once a day,for 14 consecutive days.The mechanical shrinkage foot reflex threshold (MWT) and thermal withdrawal latency(TWL) were determined at 1 d before the operation and at 1,3,5,7,10 and 14 d after the operation.Light-dark transition test, forced swimming test were determined at 1 d before the operation and at 14 d after the operation.
RESULTS:
Compared with the sham group, the MWL and TWL of the CCI rats were decreased significantly (P<0.01), time in the light compartment and number of transition were decreased (P<0.01), the immobility time in FST was also prolonged significantly (P<0.01). At 14 days after CCI operation, the MWL and TWL of the ginsenoside-Rg groups were increased significantly (P<0.01), time in the light compartment and number of transition were also shortened significantly (P<0.01), the immobility time in FST was also shortened significantly (P<0.01).
CONCLUSION
Intraperitoneal injection of ginsenoside-Rg can inhibit the mechanical and thermal pain sensitivity of CCI rats,and can relieve depressive state.
Animals
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Constriction
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Ginsenosides
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pharmacology
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Hot Temperature
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adverse effects
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Hyperalgesia
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drug therapy
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Random Allocation
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Rats
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Rats, Sprague-Dawley
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Sciatic Nerve
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injuries
10.Environmental extreme temperature and daily preterm birth in Sabzevar, Iran: a time-series analysis.
Danial MOHAMMADI ; Elham NAGHSHINEH ; Alireza SARSANGI ; Mohammad Javad ZARE SAKHVIDI
Environmental Health and Preventive Medicine 2019;24(1):5-5
OBJECTIVES:
Most of the studies on the effect of heat stress on preterm birth (PTB) are conducted in temperate climates. Evidence on this effect in hot and arid countries with low and middle income is limited. This paper describes the short-term effect of exposure to the hot and cold environment on a daily number of PTB in Iran.
METHODS:
The daily number of PTB was obtained from all hospitals of the city. Meteorological and air pollution data from 2011 to 2017 were obtained from a metrological station in the city. A semi-parametric generalized additive model following a quasi-Poisson distribution with the distributed lag non-linear model was selected as a modeling framework for time-series analysis to simultaneously model the short-term and lagged effect of heat stress on PTB in the Sabzevar city.
RESULTS:
The minimum and maximum daily temperature were - 11.2 and 45.4 °C respectively. The highest risk estimate at extreme cold temperature was found for apparent temperature (relative risk (RR) 1.83; 95% CI 1.61: 2.09). This pattern was seen for both models. For extreme hot temperatures, the model with mean temperature showed the highest risk increase for both the main model and air pollution adjusted model (RR 1.36; 95% CI 1.25: 1.49). The lowest risk estimate in extremely cold conditions was found in the model with mean temperature. However, for extremely hot temperature conditions, the lowest risk estimate was found for both maximum and apparent temperature.
CONCLUSION
Obstetricians working in semi-arid areas should be aware of the influence of environmental extreme temperature on the incidence of PTB.
Air Pollutants
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analysis
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Climate
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Cold Temperature
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adverse effects
;
Environmental Exposure
;
adverse effects
;
Environmental Monitoring
;
methods
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Female
;
Hospital Records
;
Hot Temperature
;
adverse effects
;
Humans
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Infant, Newborn
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Iran
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epidemiology
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Poisson Distribution
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Pregnancy
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Premature Birth
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etiology
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Risk Factors