1. The correlations between traditional Chinese medicine syndromes of histiocytic necrotizing lymphadenitis and its pathological types
Ruhui JIN ; Zihui HUANG ; Qianyi XUE ; Jiguo DING ; Quanyong JIN ; Zhiqiao WANG
International Journal of Traditional Chinese Medicine 2020;42(2):110-114
Objective:
To investigate the interaction between traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) syndromes of histiocytic necrotizing lymphadenitis (HNL) and pathological types of HNL, so as to discover the distribution rule of TCM syndromes for indiction of intervention of HNL.
Methods:
A total of 166 patients with HNL were included. The baseline data of the patients, clinical feature, the four diagnosis information of TCM and histopathological of cervical lymph node were collected. The syndromes of TCM were judged. The pathological types were confirmed by cervical lymph node biopsy. The Multi-way ANOVA was used to analyze the correlation between traditional Chinese medicine syndromes of HNL and its pathological types.
Results:
Among the 166 patients, the ratio of different types are as follow: wind-heat and phlegm-toxin syndrome (57.83%, 96/166), heat-toxin exuberance syndrome (34.34%, 57/166), and phlegm and blood stasis syndrome (7.83%, 13/166). The pathological types include proliferative type (57.83%, 96/166), necrotizing type (35.54%, 59/166), and xanthomatous type (6.63%, 11/166). There were significant differences in targeted lymph node diameter, pain scores, body temperature (
2.Personal protection and influencing factors of livestock workers in Xinjiang
Xixiao MA ; Xueying XIANG ; Zhaojie WANG ; Wanting XU ; Jiguo JIN ; Fan WU ; Xiangnan WEI ; Jianyong WU ; Fuye LI
Journal of Environmental and Occupational Medicine 2025;42(5):578-585
Background Personal protection is crucial for reducing the risk of zoonotic pathogen infection among livestock workers. Investigating the current status of its implementation and associated influencing factors can provide empirical evidence for developing more effective intervention measures. Objective To investigate the current status of personal protection implementation among livestock workers in Xinjiang, China and its influencing factors, providing a reference for formulating targeted intervention measures. Methods This study was conducted in Bayingolin Mongol Autonomous Prefecture, Kashgar region, and the First and Eighth Divisions of Xinjiang Production and Construction Corps. We selected large-scale cattle and sheep farms, cooperatives, individual livestock households, livestock trading markets, slaughterhouses, and retail markets. Using cluster sampling, we recruited all livestock workers (
3.Impact of dairy farming on gut microbiota structure and diversity of practitioners
Zhaojie WANG ; Xixiao MA ; Xianxia LIU ; Yanggui CHEN ; Xueying XIANG ; Wanting XU ; Jiguo JIN ; Fan WU ; Xiangnan WEI ; Jianyong WU ; Fuye LI
Journal of Environmental and Occupational Medicine 2025;42(6):668-673
Background Animal farming may affect the structure and diversity of gut microbiota of farm workers, but it needs more studies to provide solid evidence. Objective To analyze the diversity characteristics of gut microbiota in dairy farm workers, dairy cows, and the control population (non-animal contact occupational group), and to assess the impact of dairy farming on the gut microbiota of workers. Methods The 16S rRNA full-length amplicon sequencing technology was used to sequence 60 fecal samples from dairy farm workers, 89 from dairy cows, and 50 from the general population. The gut microbiota structure characteristics, including operational taxonomic units (OTUs), alpha diversity, beta diversity, and the composition of species at the phylum, family, and genus levels were analyzed. The differences in gut microbiota among the three groups of samples were compared to explore the impact of occupational exposure on the gut microbiota structure of dairy farm workers. Results A total of