1.Controversies on the values for health instruments of Chinese medicine.
Zheng-Kun HOU ; Xiang CHANG ; Feng-Bin LIU ; Nelson XIE ; Nicole GUO ; Xin-Lin CHEN
Chinese journal of integrative medicine 2017;23(2):146-152
Currently, there are increasing debates on the necessity of health instruments in Chinese medicine (CM) emerging in China. This study aims to reevaluate its status and values. Analyzing the causes, limits, advantages, and properties characters of health instruments in CM, it is found that weak fundamental research, incomplete self-awareness, and complicated social factors are the primary causes of debates. A comprehensive analysis showed health instruments in CM have health evaluation benefits to people from a dominant Chinese culture, meet the requirements of cultural background, and bring long-term value to Chinese instrument researches. However, its values and status should be treated differently depending on various subtypes. Although little theoretical and practical evidences proved that patients-reported health instruments in CM should be proposed independently, the doctors- and nurses-reported questionnaires are necessary. With this in mind, the study group proposes the 'Chinese cultural instruments (CCIs)' and 'health-related CCIs'. The latter one aims to evaluate the health status of people in a dominant Chinese culture. The CCIs theory represents Chinese instrument researches on a larger regional and higher level, and resolves the debates on instruments between CM and Western medicine in China. Health instruments in CM bring more scientific and social benefits for Chinese instrument researches. However, it does not include cultural demands, and lacks scientific significance. CCIs have all its virtues, and add solutions to the latter's theory bottleneck and scientific debates, thus bringing increased benefits to clinical assessment in complementary and alternative medicine researches.
China
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Culture
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Dissent and Disputes
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Humans
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Medicine, Chinese Traditional
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methods
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standards
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Patient Outcome Assessment
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Research Design
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standards
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Self Report
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Surveys and Questionnaires
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standards
2.Inaccuracy of Self-reported Low Sodium Diet among Chinese: Findings from Baseline Survey for Shandong & Ministry of Health Action on Salt and Hypertension (SMASH) Project.
Juan ZHANG ; Xiao Lei GUO ; Dong Chul SEO ; Ai Qiang XU ; Peng Cheng XUN ; Ji Xiang MA ; Xiao Ming SHI ; Nicole LI ; Liu Xia YAN ; Yuan LI ; Zi Long LU ; Ji Yu ZHANG ; Jun Li TANG ; Jie REN ; Wen Hua ZHAO ; Xiao Feng LIANG
Biomedical and Environmental Sciences 2015;28(2):161-167
This study was aimed to evaluate the agreement between the self-reported sodium intake level and 24-h urine sodium excretion level in Chinese. The 24-h urine collection was conducted among 2112 adults aged 18-69 years randomly selected in Shandong Province, China. The subjects were asked whether their sodium intake was low, moderate, or high. The weighted kappa statistics was calculated to assess the agreement between 24-h urine sodium excretion level and self-reported sodium intake level. One third of the subjects reported low sodium intake level. About 70% of the subjects had mean 24-h sodium excretion>9 g/d, but reported low or moderate sodium intake. The agreement between self-reported sodium intake level and 24-h urine sodium excretion level was low in both normotensive subjects and hypertensive subjects. These findings suggested that many subjects who reported low sodium intake had actual urine sodium excretion>9 g/d. Sodium intake is often underestimated in both hypertensive and normotensive participants in China.
Adolescent
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Adult
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Aged
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Asian Continental Ancestry Group
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Awareness
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China
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epidemiology
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Diet Records
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Diet Surveys
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Diet, Sodium-Restricted
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Female
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Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice
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Humans
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Hypertension
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epidemiology
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prevention & control
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Male
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Rural Population
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Sodium
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urine
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Sodium Chloride
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adverse effects
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Sodium, Dietary
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administration & dosage
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Surveys and Questionnaires
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Young Adult
3.Four new polyhydroxylated steroids from the South Sea sponge Plakortis sp.
Kun-Ya WANG ; Ping-Lin LI ; Jing-Fan SUN ; Nicole J DE VOOGD ; Xu-Li TANG ; Guo-Qiang LI
Chinese Journal of Natural Medicines (English Ed.) 2020;18(11):844-849
Four new polyhydroxylated steroids plaksterols A-D (1-4), together with two known related steroids ergost-7,9(11),22-trien-3β,5α,6α-triol (5) and ergosta-6β-methoxy-7,22-diene-3β,5α-diol (6), were isolated from methanol extract of the South China Sea marine sponge Plakortis sp. Their structures were identified by spectroscopic analysis, including NMR, MS, and IR. The cytotoxicity of the polyhydroxylated steroids were evaluated, and compound 6 showed moderate inhibitory activities against K562, HL-60 and BEL-7402 cells.
5.DPHL:A DIA Pan-human Protein Mass Spectrometry Library for Robust Biomarker Discovery
Zhu TIANSHENG ; Zhu YI ; Xuan YUE ; Gao HUANHUAN ; Cai XUE ; Piersma R. SANDER ; Pham V. THANG ; Schelfhorst TIM ; Haas R.G.D. RICHARD ; Bijnsdorp V. IRENE ; Sun RUI ; Yue LIANG ; Ruan GUAN ; Zhang QIUSHI ; Hu MO ; Zhou YUE ; Winan J. Van Houdt ; Tessa Y.S. Le Large ; Cloos JACQUELINE ; Wojtuszkiewicz ANNA ; Koppers-Lalic DANIJELA ; B(o)ttger FRANZISKA ; Scheepbouwer CHANTAL ; Brakenhoff H. RUUD ; Geert J.L.H. van Leenders ; Ijzermans N.M. JAN ; Martens W.M. JOHN ; Steenbergen D.M. RENSKE ; Grieken C. NICOLE ; Selvarajan SATHIYAMOORTHY ; Mantoo SANGEETA ; Lee S. SZE ; Yeow J.Y. SERENE ; Alkaff M.F. SYED ; Xiang NAN ; Sun YAOTING ; Yi XIAO ; Dai SHAOZHENG ; Liu WEI ; Lu TIAN ; Wu ZHICHENG ; Liang XIAO ; Wang MAN ; Shao YINGKUAN ; Zheng XI ; Xu KAILUN ; Yang QIN ; Meng YIFAN ; Lu CONG ; Zhu JIANG ; Zheng JIN'E ; Wang BO ; Lou SAI ; Dai YIBEI ; Xu CHAO ; Yu CHENHUAN ; Ying HUAZHONG ; Lim K. TONY ; Wu JIANMIN ; Gao XIAOFEI ; Luan ZHONGZHI ; Teng XIAODONG ; Wu PENG ; Huang SHI'ANG ; Tao ZHIHUA ; Iyer G. NARAYANAN ; Zhou SHUIGENG ; Shao WENGUANG ; Lam HENRY ; Ma DING ; Ji JIAFU ; Kon L. OI ; Zheng SHU ; Aebersold RUEDI ; Jimenez R. CONNIE ; Guo TIANNAN
Genomics, Proteomics & Bioinformatics 2020;18(2):104-119
To address the increasing need for detecting and validating protein biomarkers in clinical specimens, mass spectrometry (MS)-based targeted proteomic techniques, including the selected reaction monitoring (SRM), parallel reaction monitoring (PRM), and massively parallel data-independent acquisition (DIA), have been developed. For optimal performance, they require the fragment ion spectra of targeted peptides as prior knowledge. In this report, we describe a MS pipe-line and spectral resource to support targeted proteomics studies for human tissue samples. To build the spectral resource, we integrated common open-source MS computational tools to assemble a freely accessible computational workflow based on Docker. We then applied the workflow to gen-erate DPHL, a comprehensive DIA pan-human library, from 1096 data-dependent acquisition (DDA) MS raw files for 16 types of cancer samples. This extensive spectral resource was then applied to a proteomic study of 17 prostate cancer (PCa) patients. Thereafter, PRM validation was applied to a larger study of 57 PCa patients and the differential expression of three proteins in prostate tumor was validated. As a second application, the DPHL spectral resource was applied to a study consisting of plasma samples from 19 diffuse large B cell lymphoma (DLBCL) patients and 18 healthy control subjects. Differentially expressed proteins between DLBCL patients and healthy control subjects were detected by DIA-MS and confirmed by PRM. These data demonstrate that the DPHL supports DIA and PRM MS pipelines for robust protein biomarker discovery. DPHL is freely accessible at https://www.iprox.org/page/project.html?id=IPX0001400000.