1.Clinical study of wet compressing with borneul and Norfloxacin in treating patients with stage Ⅳ pressure sore
Chinese Journal of Practical Nursing 2009;25(10):40-41
Objective To explore the efficacy of borneol and Norfloxaein in treating patients with stage IV pressure sore. Methods 132 patients with pressure sore were randomly divided into the obser-vation group(applying borneol and Norfloxaein)and the control group(applying iodophors and gentamycin). The effect of the two methods was compared. Results The curative rate of the observation group was 98.5%,and 47.7% for the eantrol group. Total effective rate of the observation group was 100%,and 81.5% for the control group.The average curative time for the observation group was shorter than that of the control group. Conclusions Borneol and Norfloxaein is superior to iodophors and gentamycin in treating pa-tients with stage Ⅳ pressure sore.
2.Genome Warehouse: A Public Repository Housing Genome-scale Data
Chen MEILI ; Ma YINGKE ; Wu SONG ; Zheng XINCHANG ; Kang HONGEN ; Sang JIAN ; Xu XINGJIAN ; Hao LILI ; Li ZHAOHUA ; Gong ZHENG ; Xiao JINGFA ; Zhang ZHANG ; Zhao WENMING ; Bao YIMING
Genomics, Proteomics & Bioinformatics 2021;19(4):584-589
The Genome Warehouse (GWH) is a public repository housing genome assembly data for a wide range of species and delivering a series of web services for genome data submission, storage, release, and sharing. As one of the core resources in the National Genomics Data Center (NGDC), part of the China National Center for Bioinformation (CNCB;https://ngdc.cncb.ac.cn), GWH accepts both full and partial (chloroplast, mitochondrion, and plasmid) genome sequences with different assembly levels, as well as an update of existing genome assemblies. For each assembly, GWH collects detailed genome-related metadata of biological project, biological sample, and genome assembly, in addition to genome sequence and annotation. To archive high-quality genome sequences and annotations, GWH is equipped with a uniform and standardized procedure for quality control. Besides basic browse and search functionalities, all released genome sequences and annotations can be visualized with JBrowse. By May 21, 2021, GWH has received 19,124 direct submissions covering a diversity of 1108 species and has released 8772 of them. Collectively, GWH serves as an important resource for genome-scale data management and provides free and publicly accessible data to support research activities throughout the world. GWH is publicly accessible at https://ngdc.cncb.ac.cn/gwh.
3.The Global Landscape of SARS-CoV-2 Genomes, Variants, and Haplotypes in 2019nCoVR
Song SHUHUI ; Ma LINA ; Zou DONG ; Tian DONGMEI ; Li CUIPING ; Zhu JUNWEI ; Chen MEILI ; Wang ANKE ; Ma YINGKE ; Li MENGWEI ; Teng XUFEI ; Cui YING ; Duan GUANGYA ; Zhang MOCHEN ; Jin TONG ; Shi CHENGMIN ; Du ZHENGLIN ; Zhang YADONG ; Liu CHUANDONG ; Li RUJIAO ; Zeng JINGYAO ; Hao LILI ; Jiang SHUAI ; Chen HUA ; Han DALI ; Xiao JINGFA ; Zhang ZHANG ; Zhao WENMING ; Xue YONGBIAO ; Bao YIMING
Genomics, Proteomics & Bioinformatics 2020;18(6):749-759
On January 22, 2020, China National Center for Bioinformation (CNCB) released the 2019 Novel Coronavirus Resource (2019nCoVR), an open-access information resource for the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2). 2019nCoVR features a comprehensive integra-tion of sequence and clinical information for all publicly available SARS-CoV-2 isolates, which are manually curated with value-added annotations and quality evaluated by an automated in-house pipeline. Of particular note, 2019nCoVR offers systematic analyses to generate a dynamic landscape of SARS-CoV-2 genomic variations at a global scale. It provides all identified variants and their detailed statistics for each virus isolate, and congregates the quality score, functional annotation,and population frequency for each variant. Spatiotemporal change for each variant can be visualized and historical viral haplotype network maps for the course of the outbreak are also generated based on all complete and high-quality genomes available. Moreover, 2019nCoVR provides a full collection of SARS-CoV-2 relevant literature on the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), including published papers from PubMed as well as preprints from services such as bioRxiv and medRxiv through Europe PMC. Furthermore, by linking with relevant databases in CNCB, 2019nCoVR offers data submission services for raw sequence reads and assembled genomes, and data sharing with NCBI. Collectively, SARS-CoV-2 is updated daily to collect the latest information on genome sequences, variants, hap-lotypes, and literature for a timely reflection, making 2019nCoVR a valuable resource for the global research community. 2019nCoVR is accessible at https://bigd.big.ac.cn/ncov/.