1.Application of Ion Torrent PGM™ System in Detection of Fetal DNA in Maternal Plasma.
Ya-nan LIU ; Xue-ying ZHAO ; Yuan PING ; Qing-wen XU ; Jiang-ping HUANG ; Kai-nan ZOU ; Huai-gu ZHOU
Journal of Forensic Medicine 2015;31(6):432-435
OBJECTIVE:
To explore the feasibility of detecting of Y-STR of fetal DNA in maternal plasma using Ion Torrent PGM™ System.
METHODS:
A total of 16 fetal DNA samples from maternal plasmas (8 cases from 38 weeks gestational age and 8 ones from 12 weeks) were prepared and a multiplex assay with 7 STR loci (DYS390, DYS391, DYS393, DYS438, DYS437, DYS456, DYS635) was designed for multiplex-PCR amplification. Using Ion Torrent PGM™ System, the results of Y-STR sequences and capillary electrophoresis were obtained and compared.
RESULTS:
Y-STR specific alleles were detected in the maternal plasma of all the pregnant women having male babies of second and third trimester, which were higher than that detected by capillary electrophoresis. Consistent Y-STR genotypes were observed between fetal DNA from maternal plasma and genomic DNA from the newborn babies.
CONCLUSION
Based on Ion Torrent PGM™ System, the prenatal Y-STR detection method may provide a high-sensitive and high-throughput choice for prenatal STR detection in forensic testing.
Alleles
;
Chromosomes, Human, Y/genetics*
;
DNA/blood*
;
Family
;
Female
;
Fetal Blood/chemistry*
;
Genotype
;
Haplotypes
;
Humans
;
Male
;
Polymerase Chain Reaction
;
Polymorphism, Genetic
;
Pregnancy
;
Sensitivity and Specificity
;
Sex Determination Analysis
;
Tandem Repeat Sequences/genetics*
2.Effect of low-intensity microwave radiation on proliferation of cultured epithelial cells of rabbit lens.
Kai-jun WANG ; Ke YAO ; De-qiang LU ; Huai JIANG ; Jian TAN ; Wen XU
Chinese Journal of Industrial Hygiene and Occupational Diseases 2003;21(5):346-349
OBJECTIVETo compare the effects of different doses of microwave on the proliferative activity and cell cycle of cultured epithelial cells of rabbit lens, and to investigate the limit tolerant of microwave exposure.
METHODSCultured epithelial cells of rabbit lens were exposed to microwave radiation with frequency of 2,450 MHz and power density of 0.10, 0.25, 0.50, 1.00, 2.00 mW/cm(2) for 8 h in vitro. HE staining was used to observe the morphological changes of lens epithelial cells, the proliferative activity and cell cycle were measured by MTT assay and PI fluorescent staining.
RESULTS8 h after radiation, 0.50, 1.00 and 2.00 mW/cm(2) microwave could decrease the proliferation of lens epithelial cells, make the cells disordered arrangement, shrinkage, detachment, and inhibit the synthesis of cell DNA. The percentage of G(0)/G(1) phase cells were 71.95% +/- 2.12%, 75.68% +/- 3.35% and 82.40% +/- 8.68% respectively, which were higher than that in control group (61.68% +/- 5.76%, P < 0.05 or P < 0.01). The percentage of S phase cells were 19.32% +/- 3.07%, 16.08% +/- 4.91% and 12.98% +/- 8.08% respectively, which were lower than that in control group (28.05% +/- 5.12%, P < 0.05 or P < 0.01). No obvious changes could be detected in 0.10, 0.25 mW/cm(2) microwave groups (P > 0.05).
CONCLUSIONMicrowave exceeding 0.50 mW/cm(2) may make injury to lens epithelial cells after 8 hour radiation, which may be related to the effect of microwave radiation on cell cycle.
Animals ; Cell Cycle ; radiation effects ; Cells, Cultured ; DNA ; metabolism ; Epithelial Cells ; cytology ; metabolism ; radiation effects ; Lens, Crystalline ; cytology ; metabolism ; radiation effects ; Microwaves ; Rabbits
3.Relationship between hepatitis B virus DNA and hepatitis B virus large envelope protein.
Huai-kai WEN ; Jian YU ; Xiao-yong LI ; Hong-qun TAO ; Xin-liang ZHANG
Journal of Zhejiang University. Medical sciences 2010;39(4):386-389
OBJECTIVETo investigate the relationship between HBV DNA and hepatitis B virus large envelope protein (HBV-LP) in patients with chronic hepatitis B.
METHODSSerum HBV DNA was detected by RT-PCR and the HBV-LP was detected by enzyme linked immunosorbent assay in 320 serum samples collected from patients with chronic hepatitis B.
RESULTSThere were no significant difference between positive rate of HBV-LP and that of HBV DNA in different HBeAg patterns (P>0.05). Serum HBV-LP levels were closely correlated with HBV DNA copies (r=0.949).
CONCLUSIONSerum HBV-LP is a reliable serological marker that can reflect the replication of HBV.
Adolescent ; Adult ; Aged ; DNA, Viral ; blood ; Female ; Hepatitis B virus ; physiology ; Hepatitis B, Chronic ; blood ; virology ; Humans ; Male ; Middle Aged ; Viral Envelope Proteins ; blood ; Virus Replication ; Young Adult
4.Quantitation of albumin in urine by HPLC and initial clinical application
Xiao-Fei CHEN ; Jian-Rong YANG ; Li-Ling CHEN ; Yao-Sheng XIE ; Huai-Kai WEN ; Xiao-Fang HUANG ; Yu-Min WANG ;
Chinese Journal of Laboratory Medicine 2001;0(01):-
Objective To measure albumin in urine by HPLC and conduct primary clinical application Methods Solvent gradient and appropriate wave length was optimized and performance of the HPLC method was evaluated.Urine albumin of 46 patients with diabetes was measured.Results In standard and urine,retention time of Alb was 13.1 min.The linear measuring range extends to 1 820 mg/L.The lower limit of measurment for Alb was 4.2 mg/L.The intra-assay CV and the inter-assay CV were 3.36%,4.12% and 1.93%,1.97% at 24.5 mg/L and 546.9 mg/L of Alb respectively.Analytical recovery rate were 96.3%,98.2% and 97.5%.Microalbuminuria rate was 54.3% by HPLC,26.1% by immunoassay in 46 patients with diabetes.Conclusions Measurement of Alb in urine by HPLC is feasible as routine method until quantifying urinary total Alb conveniently.HPLC is the same to suit research for diabetic nephropathy and so on.
5.Application of CUA Guidelines on Prostatitis in the management of chronic pelvic pain syndrome: a nationwide survey.
Kai ZHANG ; Wen-Jun BAI ; Xue-Jun SHANG ; Yun-Xiang XIAO ; Ji-Hong LIU ; Zheng LI ; Chun-Hua DENG ; Huai-Peng WANG
National Journal of Andrology 2013;19(2):127-131
OBJECTIVETo investigate the application of the Chinese Urological Association (CUA) Guidelines on Prostatitis and its effects on the clinical practice patterns of diagnosing and treating chronic pelvic pain syndrome (CPPS) among Chinese urologists and andrologists.
METHODSWe conducted a questionnaire investigation on the application of the CUA Guidelines on Prostatitis among the urologists and andrologists of 173 hospitals in 21 cities of China, and performed statistical analyses on all the eligible questionnaires collected.
RESULTSOf the 1 056 questionnaires distributed, 851 (80.6%) were eligible, of which 71.6% were from the urologists or andrologists in grade 3 hospitals, 80.7% of them with senior or intermediate professional titles and 97.5% had studied the CUA Guidelines. Most of the subjects agreed that Type III prostatitis is a clinical syndrome, whose diagnosis should exclude other conditions with similar symptoms, and whose treatment should aim at relieving pain, alleviating urination symptoms and improving the quality of life. Those who had and those who had not studied the CUA Guidelines differed in their viewpoints on CPPS as illustrated in the book. In clinical practice, the most common treatment options for CPPS were psychological therapy (80.7%), medication (80.4%) and life style adjustment (79.6%), and the most frequently used drugs were phytotherapy (80.0%), alpha-blockers (68.9%) and antibiotics (61.0%).
CONCLUSIONCUA Guidelines on Prostatitis has gained a nationwide application and promoted the standardization of the management of CPPS in China.
Humans ; Male ; Pelvic Pain ; diagnosis ; therapy ; Physicians ; Practice Guidelines as Topic ; Prostatitis ; diagnosis ; therapy ; Surveys and Questionnaires
6.Treatment of intracranial hydatid cysts.
Sailike DUISHANBAI ; Dangmurenjiafu GENG ; Chen LIU ; Huai-Rong GUO ; Yu-Jun HAO ; Bo LIU ; Yong-Xin WANG ; Kun LUO ; Kai ZHOU ; Hao WEN ; null
Chinese Medical Journal 2011;124(18):2954-2958
BACKGROUNDEchinococcosis is still endemic in many countries, including China, where it is especially prevalent in the northwest. The aim of this study was to enrich the international literature about the treatment of intracranial hydatid cysts.
METHODSWe retrospectively reviewed the clinical features, radiological manifestations, and surgical outcome of 97 patients with intracranial hydatid cysts, who received surgical treatment at the Neurosurgical Department of First Affiliated Hospital of Xinjiang Medical University from 1985 to 2010 and followed up the patient via sending a questionnaire or telephone contact. Clinical outcome was evaluated using the Karnofsky Performance Scale Index.
RESULTSHeadache and vomiting were the most common initial symptoms in our patients. Neurological deficits caused by the mass effect of the cysts were seen in 82 cases. On the X-ray, significant bone erosion was seen in only two cases with epidural hydatid cysts. Round-shaped and thin-walled homogeneous low-density cystic lesions without surrounding edema and enhancement were the main findings on computerized tomography (CT) in 95 patients with intraparenchymal hydatid cysts, while two cases with epidural hydatid cysts presented as a heterodensity lesions. On magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), hydatid cyst presented as a round-shaped low signal lesion in T1-weighted images and high signal lesion in T2-weighted images, without enhancement after contrast media injection, while the two cases with epidural cysts presented as mixed signal masses. Surgical removal of cyst was performed in all cases. Total removal was achieved in 93 cases without rupturing the cyst wall. Only two cysts ruptured during the dissection, resulting in two surgery-related mortalities. There was no other additional neurological deficit caused directly by surgery. In 97.2% of the patients, the Karnofsky Performance Scale score was 80 to 90 at the last follow-up.
CONCLUSIONSIntracranial hydatid cyst is still a main cause of increased intracranial pressure among the patients in endemic areas for echinococcosis. CT and MRI are the best diagnostic methods and surgery is the treatment of choice for intracranial hydatid cysts.
Adult ; Brain Diseases ; diagnostic imaging ; pathology ; surgery ; Child ; Echinococcosis ; diagnostic imaging ; pathology ; surgery ; Female ; Humans ; Magnetic Resonance Imaging ; Male ; Retrospective Studies ; Tomography, X-Ray Computed
7.Changes of serum leptin and vascular endothelial growth factor in children with congenital heart disease.
Yuan-Hai ZHANG ; Ru-Lian XIANG ; Xing-Ti HU ; Huai-Kai WEN ; Mao-Ping ZHU ; Yue REN ; Rong-Zhou WU ; Qi CHEN
Chinese Journal of Contemporary Pediatrics 2009;11(10):802-804
OBJECTIVETo study the changes of serum leptin (LEP) and vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) in children with congenital heart disease(CHD) and their roles in CHD.
METHODSForty-eight children with acyanotic CHD (ACHD group), 20 age-matched children with cyanotic CHD (CCHD group) and 20 healthy children (control group) were enrolled. The ACHD group was subdivided into two groups with (n=20) or without concurrent heart failure (n=28). Serum LEP, VEGF, total protein and albumin levels and body mass index (BMI) were measured.
RESULTSSerum total protein and albumin levels were not apparently different in all CHD children from healthy controls, but there was a significant difference in the BMI between them (p<0.01). Serum LEP and VEGF levels and the ratio of LEP/BMI in all CHD children were significantly higher than those in healthy controls (p<0.01). Compared with the ACHD group without heart failure, the serum LEP and VEGF levels and the ratio of LEP/BMI in the CCHD and the ACHD with heart failure groups increased significantly (p<0.01). In the ACHD group, serum LEP level was positively correlated with BMI (p<0.01). In the CCHD group, there were positive correlations between serum LEP level and serum VEGF level (p<0.01) and between hemoglobin concentration and serum VEGF level (p<0.01). Arterial oxygen saturation was negatively correlated with serum VEGF (p<0.01) and LEP levels (p<0.01) in the CCHD group.
CONCLUSIONSBoth VEGF and LEP play roles in the pathophisiological process of CHD. VEGF and LEP are associated with the development of heart failure in children with ACHD.
Body Mass Index ; Child ; Child, Preschool ; Female ; Heart Defects, Congenital ; blood ; Hemoglobins ; analysis ; Humans ; Infant ; Leptin ; blood ; Male ; Oxygen ; blood ; Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor A ; blood
8.Chinese Pediatric Reference Intervals for Serum Cortisol on IMMULITE 2000
Ling Li WANG ; Li Yue ZHANG ; Hui Yan WANG ; Huai Kai WEN ; Hong Qun TAO ; Xiao Wei ZHAO
Annals of Laboratory Medicine 2018;38(1):59-62
Clinical interpretation of the test results for cortisol based on continuous reference intervals with appropriate partitions improves pediatric diagnosis; however, these values are available only for Caucasians. To develop the pediatric reference intervals for Chinese population, we examined the serum cortisol levels in 1,143 healthy Chinese children aged 4–18 years (566 boys and 577 girls), using an IMMULITE 2000 Immunoassay System (Siemens Healthcare GmbH). Phlebotomy was performed at 7–9 a.m. for 284 boys and 287 girls and at 1–3 p.m. for the others. They were divided into four age groups according to the Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute guideline EP28-A3c, with the last group further stratified according to sampling time. Separate reference intervals of 49.6–323.7, 70.9–395.3, and 90.1–448.7 nmol/L were established for children aged 4–8, 9–12, and 13–15 years, respectively. Further, reference intervals of 118.2–464.7 and 71.4–446.7 nmol/L were established for morning and afternoon cortisol levels, respectively, in children aged 16–18 years. Further studies are necessary to transfer and validate these reference intervals in other analytical systems and pediatric populations, and to allow for broader applications.
Asian Continental Ancestry Group
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Child
;
Delivery of Health Care
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Diagnosis
;
Female
;
Humans
;
Hydrocortisone
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Immunoassay
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Pediatrics
;
Phlebotomy
9.Detection of RNA of SARS coronavirus in hospital sewage.
Xin-Wei WANG ; Jin-Song LI ; Ting-Kai GUO ; Bei ZHEN ; Qing-Xin KONG ; Bang YI ; Zhong LI ; Nong SONG ; Min JIN ; Wen-Jun XIAO ; Xiu-Mei ZHU ; Chang-Qing GU ; Jing YIN ; Wei WEI ; Wei YAO ; Chao LIU ; Jian-Feng LI ; Guo-Rong OU ; Min-Nian WANG ; Tong-Yu FANG ; Gui-Jie WANG ; Yao-Hui QIU ; Huai-Huan WU ; Fu-Huan CHAO ; Jun-Wen LI
Chinese Journal of Preventive Medicine 2004;38(4):257-260
OBJECTIVEIn order to explore the existence of SARS coronavirus (Co-V) and/or its RNA in sewage of hospitals administered SARS patients.
METHODSA novel electropositive filter was used to concentrate the SARS-CoV from the sewage of two hospitals administered SARS patients in Beijing, including twelve 2,500 ml sewage samples from the hospitals before disinfection, and ten 25,000 ml samples after disinfection; as well as cell culture, RT-PCR and sequencing of gene to detect and identify the viruses from sewage.
RESULTSThere was no live SARS-CoV detected in the sewage in this study. The nucleic acid of SARS-CoV had been found in the 12 sewage samples before disinfection from both hospitals by semi-nested PCR. After disinfection, SARS-CoV RNA could only be detected from the samples from the 309th Hospital, and the others were negative.
CONCLUSIONIt provides evidence that there is no live SARS-Cov in the sewage from hospitals with SARS patients though SARS-CoV RNA can be detected.
Hospitals ; Humans ; Nucleocapsid ; analysis ; RNA, Viral ; analysis ; Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction ; SARS Virus ; genetics ; isolation & purification ; Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome ; virology ; Sewage ; virology
10. Systems pharmacology dissection of action mechanisms for herbs in osteoporosis treatment
Ying HUAI ; Wen-juan ZHANG ; Wei WANG ; Kai DANG ; Shan-feng JIANG ; Zhi-ping MIAO ; Yu LI ; Ai-rong QIAN ; Ying HUAI ; Wen-juan ZHANG ; Wei WANG ; Kai DANG ; Shan-feng JIANG ; Zhi-ping MIAO ; Yu LI ; Ai-rong QIAN ; Ying HUAI ; Wen-juan ZHANG ; Wei WANG ; Kai DANG ; Shan-feng JIANG ; Zhi-ping MIAO ; Yu LI ; Ai-rong QIAN ; Dan-ming LI ; Meng LI ; Qiang HAO
Chinese Herbal Medicines 2021;13(3):313-331
Objective: Osteoporosis has become the biggest cause of non-fatal health issue. Currently, the limitations of traditional anti-osteoporosis drugs such as long-term ill-effects and drug resistance, have raised concerns toward complementary and alternative therapies, particularly herbal medicines and their natural active compounds. Thus, this study aimed to provide an integrative analysis of active chemicals, drug targets and interacting pathways of the herbs for osteoporosis treatment. Methods: Here, we introduced a systematic pharmacology model, combining the absorption, distribution, metabolism, and excretion (ADME) screening model, drug targeting and network pharmacology, to probe into the therapeutic mechanisms of herbs in osteoporosis. Results: We obtained 86 natural compounds with favorable pharmacokinetic profiles and their 58 targets from seven osteoporosis-related herbs. Network analysis revealed that they probably synergistically work through multiple mechanisms, such as suppressing inflammatory response, maintaining bone metabolism or improving organism immunity, to benefit patients with osteoporosis. Furthermore, experimental results showed that all the five compounds (calycosin, asperosaponin VI, hederagenin, betulinic acid and luteolin) enhanced osteoblast proliferation and differentiation in vitro, which corroborated the validity of this system pharmacology approach. Notably, gentisin and aureusidin among the identified compounds were first predicted to be associated with osteoporosis. Conclusion: Herbs and their natural compounds, being characterized as the classical combination therapies, might be engaged in multiple mechanisms to coordinately improve the osteoporosis symptoms. This work may contribute to offer novel strategies and clues for the therapy and drug discovery of osteoporosis and other complex diseases.