1.Chronic Hemorrhagic Radiation Proctitis Treated by Sucralfate Enema.
Geom Seog SEO ; Suck Chei CHOI
The Korean Journal of Gastroenterology 2006;47(5):335-336
No abstract availble.
Aged
;
Chronic Disease
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Colonoscopy
;
*Enema
;
Female
;
Humans
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Proctitis/*drug therapy/pathology
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Radiation Injuries/*drug therapy/pathology
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Sucralfate/*administration & dosage
2.Extensive acute lung injury following limited thoracic irradiation: radiologic findings in three patients.
Jung Hwa HWANG ; Kyung Soo LEE ; Koun Sik SONG ; Hojoong KIM ; O Jung KWON ; Tae Hwan LIM ; Yong Chan AHN ; In Wook CHOO
Journal of Korean Medical Science 2000;15(6):712-717
The aim of our study was to describe the radiologic findings of extensive acute lung injury associated with limited thoracic irradiation. Limited thoracic irradiation occasionally results in acute lung injury. In this condition, chest radiograph shows diffuse ground-glass appearance in both lungs and thin-section CT scans show diffuse bilateral ground-glass attenuation with traction bronchiectasis, interlobular septal thickening and intralobular smooth linear opacities.
Acute Disease
;
Adenocarcinoma/radiotherapy
;
Adenocarcinoma/pathology
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Adenocarcinoma/drug therapy
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Adenocarcinoma/complications*
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Carcinoma, Squamous Cell/radiotherapy
;
Carcinoma, Squamous Cell/pathology
;
Carcinoma, Squamous Cell/drug therapy
;
Carcinoma, Squamous Cell/complications*
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Journal Article
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Human
;
Lung/radiation effects*
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Lung/pathology
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Lung Neoplasms/radiotherapy
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Lung Neoplasms/pathology
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Lung Neoplasms/drug therapy
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Lung Neoplasms/complications*
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Male
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Middle Age
;
Radiation Injuries/radiography
;
Radiation Injuries/pathology
;
Radiation Injuries/etiology*
;
Thorax/radiation effects
3.Protection of Angelica sinensis against radiation-induced pulmonary fibrosis in mice.
Ya-hau ZHONG ; Guang HAN ; Yun-feng ZHOU ; Min PENG ; Cong-hua XIE ; Fu-xiang ZHOU ; Wen-jie ZHANG
Chinese Journal of Preventive Medicine 2007;41(2):105-109
OBJECTIVETo evaluate the Angelica Sinensis as a protecting agent affecting the radiation-induced pulmonary fibrosis in an animal model,
METHODSThe thoraces of C57BL/6 mice were exposed to either sham irradiation or single fraction of 12 Gy. Four groups were defined: that received neither irradiation nor Angelica Sinensis (N group), that received Angelica Sinensis but no irradiation (A group), that underwent irradiation without Angelica Sinensis (NX group) and that received both Angelica Sinensis and irradiation (AX group). Mice were sacrificed at 1, 24, 72 hours and 1, 2, 4, 8, 16, 24 weeks post-irradiation. The lungs tissue were removed and processed for definitive analysis, including hydroxyproline content, HE and Masson staining, and the TGF-beta1, (Transforming Growth Factor beta1, TGF-beta1) mRNA expressions.
RESULTSCompared with N and A group, there was some differences in the AX group, but a significant histological and pathologic changes in NX group. Non-irradiated groups (N and A group) exhibited low levels of hydroxyproline (0.775 +/- 0.024) microg/mg and (0.751 +/- 0.034) microg/mg, and there was a significantly elevated level of hydroxyproline in NX group (0.875 +/- 0.009) microg/mg (P < 0.05). AX group (0.782 +/- 0.010) microg/mg was in between the non-irradiated groups (N and A group) and the radiation-only group (NX group), and the difference between AX group and NX group was significant (P < 0.01). The results of real-time quantitative RT-PCR showed that the relative mRNA expressions of cytokine TGF-beta1 in NX group(249.655 +/- 16.320) was significantly higher than that in group A (1.254 +/- 0.061) and N (1.324 +/- 0.057) (P < 0.01), and that in AX group (108.076 +/- 9.870) decreased than that of NX group (P < 0.01).
CONCLUSIONAn animal model of mice with radiation-induced lung injure was established successfully. This study has demonstrated that Angelica sinensis in Hibits the progress of radiation-induced pulmonary fibrosis, Possibly by down-regulating the expression of the proinflammatory cytokine Tgfb1. These data suggest that Angelica sinensis maybe useful in preventing and/or treating radiation-induced pulmonary fibrosis in the clinic.
Angelica sinensis ; Animals ; Female ; Mice ; Mice, Inbred C57BL ; Phytotherapy ; Pulmonary Fibrosis ; drug therapy ; etiology ; pathology ; Radiation Injuries, Experimental ; drug therapy ; pathology ; Radiation-Protective Agents ; Transforming Growth Factor beta1 ; metabolism
4.Effect of injection Salvia miltiorrhizae composite on colony-forming unit-erythroid and burst forming unit-erythro production in bone marrow of mice with the 60Co-gamma radiation damage.
Jing TAO ; Wei-Dong YANG ; Gui-Ying CHEN
Chinese Journal of Industrial Hygiene and Occupational Diseases 2009;27(6):357-358
5.Effect of Yangyin Humo Decoction on oral mucomembranous reaction to radiotherapy.
An-wei DAI ; Zhang-yan LI ; Liang-hua WANG ; Sheng-ye LI ; Hua YANG
Chinese journal of integrative medicine 2009;15(4):303-306
OBJECTIVETo observe the effect of Yangyin Humo Decoction (YHD) on oral mucomembranous reaction in patients with head-neck tumor undergoing radiotherapy.
METHODSForty-Forty-two patients with head-neck tumor undergoing radiotherapy were randomized equally into two groups. The two conventional Western medical treatment was administered to all, including intravenous dripping of 2% lidocaine 20 mL, dexamethasone 5 mg, gentamycin 80,000 units, vitamin B(12) 5 mg, dissolved in saline 250 mL, and 5% sodium bicarbonate solution for gargling, but to the patients in the tested group, YHD was given additionally. The medication was started simultaneously all through the whole course of the radiotherapy. Patients were examined every day to observe and compare the degree, initiating time, and repairing time of their oral lesions; the dosage of radiation they received was recorded as well.
RESULTSThe degree of mucomembranous reaction that appeared in most patients in the test group was of grade 1-2, while in the control group, it was grade 2-3. The average time for oral lesion of 1, 2, 3 grades to be initiated in the test group was 12.0+/-1.1, 11.0+/-1.3 and 10.0+/-0.8 days, respectively, after radiation started, which was later than that in the control group (P<0.01). Moreover, the average repairing time for the lesions of grades 1, 2, and 3 in the test group was 3.0+/-0.7, 10.0+/-1.3 and 19.0+/-0.8 days, which were shorter than those in the control group respectively (P<0.01). The radiation applied on the primary tumor of patients with oral lesion of grade 1-3 in the test group was 24.2+/-2.2, 42.0+/-2.6 and 58.0+/-1.6 Gy on the average, respectively, which were higher than that applied on patients in the control group (P<0.05 or P<0.01).
CONCLUSIONThe Chinese herbal preparation YHD could alleviate oral mucomembranous reaction to radiation applied in patients with head-neck tumor.
Adult ; Aged ; Combined Modality Therapy ; Drugs, Chinese Herbal ; pharmacology ; therapeutic use ; Female ; Head and Neck Neoplasms ; drug therapy ; pathology ; radiotherapy ; Humans ; Lymphoma ; drug therapy ; pathology ; radiotherapy ; Male ; Middle Aged ; Mouth Mucosa ; drug effects ; pathology ; radiation effects ; Radiation Injuries ; pathology ; prevention & control ; Radiation-Protective Agents ; pharmacology ; therapeutic use ; Radiotherapy Dosage ; Time Factors ; Wound Healing ; drug effects
6.Clarithromycin combined with tanshinone for rhinosinusal and laryngeal radiation injury in patients with nasopharyngeal carcinoma after radiotherapy.
Hui LI ; Huadong WANG ; Yukun MA ; Jianfu ZHAO
Journal of Southern Medical University 2012;32(8):1168-1170
OBJECTIVETo evaluate the therapeutic effect of clarithromycin combined with tanshinone in the treatment of rhinosinusal and laryngeal radiation injury induced by radiotherapy in patients with nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC).
METHODSA total of 255 NPC patients with rhinosinusal and laryngeal radiation injury following radiotherapy were randomized into 3 groups for treatment with clarithromycin (group A, n=69), tanshinone (group B, n=69), and clarithromycin + tanshinone (group C, n=69), and the clinical outcomes of the patients were evaluated.
RESULTSIn all the 3 groups the patients responded favorably to the treatments and showed obvious improvements (P<0.05). The therapeutic effects were similar between groups A and B (P>0.05), but the patients in group C showed the most obvious improvements (P<0.05).
CONCLUSIONSClarithromycin combined with tanshinone can be an effective regimen for treatment of rhinosinusal and laryngeal radiation injury induced by radiotherapy in NPC patients.
Adult ; Aged ; Carcinoma ; Clarithromycin ; therapeutic use ; Combined Modality Therapy ; Diterpenes, Abietane ; therapeutic use ; Female ; Humans ; Larynx ; pathology ; Male ; Middle Aged ; Nasopharyngeal Neoplasms ; radiotherapy ; Nose ; pathology ; Paranasal Sinuses ; pathology ; Pharynx ; pathology ; Radiation Injuries ; drug therapy ; Young Adult
7.Effects of blood-cooling and promoting drugs on rats with radiation-induced lung injury.
Ming-Hui YANF ; Yong-Qi DOU ; Qian ZANG
Chinese Journal of Integrated Traditional and Western Medicine 2007;27(9):827-831
OBJECTIVETo investigate the effect of blood-cooling and promoting drugs (BCPD) on the dy-namic changes of collagens and the expressions of interleukin-6 (IL-6) and transforming growth factor beta (TGF-beta) in lung tissue of rats with radiation-induced lung injury (RILI) to explore the effects and action mech-anism of BCPD in preventing and treating RILI.
METHODSOne hundred and sixty Wistar female rats were ran-domly divided into the radiation group, the treatment group, the blank control group and the drug control group. The rats in the first two groups received right hemithoracic fractionated radiation, and those in the treatment group were given BCPD. Rats in the other two groups were not irradiated and BCPD was given to rats in the drug control group. The rats were sacrificed in batches (8 of each group in every batch) at the 3rd, 5th, 8th, 12th and 26th week of the experimental period, and their lung was taken for observing the dynamic changes and distribution of collagen and the expressions of IL-6 and TGF-beta with HE staining, picrosirius red staining and immunohistochemical staining respectively.
RESULTSThe fibroblast proliferated obviously from the 3rd week after the first radiation in the radiation group, and the type I collagen and the proportion of type I and III collagen were significantly elevated along the time going and the radiation dose increasing, became significantly higher than those in the treatment group at all the time points (P <0.01). In the radiation group the expression of IL-6 and TGF-beta reached their peaks at the 8th and 12th week, respectively, and the levels was significantly lower in the treatment than that in the radiation group at any detecting time points (P <0.01).
CONCLUSIONBCPD applied in the early stage of radiation can suppress the inflammatory and fibrogenic cytokine expressions, inhibit the synthesis of collagens and adjust the proportion of type I and III collagen, so as to re-lieve the early-stage inflammatory reaction and the anaphase lung fibrosis in RILI rats.
Animals ; Drugs, Chinese Herbal ; therapeutic use ; Female ; Immunohistochemistry ; Interleukin-6 ; biosynthesis ; Lung Injury ; drug therapy ; metabolism ; pathology ; Phytotherapy ; Radiation Injuries, Experimental ; drug therapy ; metabolism ; pathology ; Random Allocation ; Rats ; Rats, Wistar ; Transforming Growth Factor beta ; biosynthesis
8.Guilingji Capsules reduce 900 MHz collphone electromagnetic radiation-induced testicular oxidative damage and downregulate Prdx2 protein expression in the rat testis.
Dou-Dou REN ; Xing-Xing LU ; Wan ZHONG ; Hui-Rong MA ; Jing-Wei CHEN ; Ling-Jiao SUN
National Journal of Andrology 2020;26(10):926-933
Objective:
To investigate the relationship of electromagnetic radiation (EMR) from 900 MHz cellphone frequency with testicular oxidative damage and its influence on the Prdx2 protein expression in the rat testis, and to explore the mechanism of Guilingji Capsules (GC) alleviating oxidative damage to the testis tissue.
METHODS:
Fifty healthy SD male rats were randomly divided into five groups of equal number, sham-EMR, 4-h EMR, 8-h EMR, 4-h EMR+GC and 8-h EMR+GC and exposed to 900 MHz EMR (370 μW/cm2) for 0, 4 or 8 hours daily for 15 successive days. The rats of the latter two groups were treated intragastrically with GC suspension and those of the first three groups with pure water after exposure to EMR each day. After 15 days of exposure and treatment, all the rats were sacrificed and their testis tissue collected for observation of the histomorphological and ultrastructural changes by HE staining and transmission electron microscopy, measurement of the levels of serum glutathione (GSH), superoxide dismutase (SOD) and malondialdehyde (MDA) with thiobarbiuric acid and determination of the Prdx2 protein expression by immunohistochemistry and Western blot.
RESULTS:
Compared with the rats in the sham-EMR group, those in the 4-h and 8-h EMR groups showed different degrees of histomorphological and ultrastructural changes in the testis tissue, significantly decreased levels of GSH ([80.62 ± 10.99] vs [69.58 ± 4.18] and [66.17 ± 8.45] mg/L, P < 0.05) and SOD ([172.29 ± 10.98] vs [158.92 ± 6.46] and [148.91 ± 8.60] U/ml, P < 0.05) and increased level of MDA ([7.51 ± 1.73] vs [9.84 ± 1.03] and [11.22 ± 2.13] umol/ml, P < 0.05), even more significantly in the 8-h than in the 4-h EMR group (P < 0.05). In comparison with the sham-EMR group, the expression of the Prdx2 protein was markedly downregulated in the 4-h and 8-h EMR groups (0.56 ± 0.03 vs 0.49 ± 0.03, 0.21 ± 0.01, P < 0.05), but again upregulated in the 4-h and 8-h EMR+GC groups (0.55±0.03 and 0.37±0.04) (P < 0.05).
CONCLUSIONS
Electromagnetic radiation from cellphones can cause ultrastructural damage to the testis tissue of male rats, while Guilingji Capsules can alleviate it, presumably by upregulating the Prdx2 protein expression in the testis tissue and reducing testicular oxidative damage.
Animals
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Capsules
;
Cell Phone
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Drugs, Chinese Herbal/therapeutic use*
;
Electromagnetic Radiation
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Glutathione/blood*
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Male
;
Malondialdehyde/blood*
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Microscopy, Electron, Transmission
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Oxidative Stress
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Peroxiredoxins/metabolism*
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Radiation Injuries, Experimental/drug therapy*
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Rats
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Superoxide Dismutase/blood*
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Testis/pathology*
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Thiobarbituric Acid Reactive Substances/analysis*
9.Heijiangdan ointment relieves oxidative stress from radiation dermatitis induced by (60)Co γ-ray in mice.
Lin YANG ; Ming-wei YU ; Xiao-min WANG ; Yi ZHANG ; Guo-wang YANG ; Xiao-qin LUO ; Rui-yun PENG ; Ya-bing GAO ; Li ZHAO ; Li-feng WANG
Chinese journal of integrative medicine 2016;22(2):110-115
OBJECTIVETo investigate the effects of Heijiangdan Ointment ( HJD) on oxidative stress in (60)Co γ-ray radiation-induced dermatitis in mice.
METHODSFemale Wistar mice with grade 4 radiation dermatitis induced by (60)Co γ-rays were randomly divided into four groups (n=12 per group); the HJD-treated, recombinant human epidermal growth factor (rhEGF)-treated, Trolox-treated, and untreated groups, along with a negative control group. On the 11th and 21st days after treatment, 6 mice in each group were chosen for evaluation. The levels of superoxide dismutase (SOD), malondialdehyde (MDA), and lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) were detected using spectrophotometric methods. The fibroblast mitochondria were observed by transmission electron microscopy (TEM). The expressions of fibroblast growth factor 2 (FGF-2) and transforming growth factor β1 (TGF-β1) were analyzed by western blot.
RESULTSCompared with the untreated group, the levels of SOD, MDA and LDH, on the 11th and 21st days after treatment showed significant difference (P<0.05). TEM analysis indicated that fibroblast mitochondria in the untreated group exhibited swelling and the cristae appeared fractured, while in the HJD group, the swelling of mitochondria was limited and the rough endoplasmic reticulum appeared more relaxed. The expressions of FGF-2 and TGF-β1 increased in the untreated group compared with the negative control group (P<0.05). After treatment, the expression of FGF-2, rhEGF and Trolox in the HJD group were significantly increased compared with the untreated group (P<0.05), or compared with the negative control group (P<0.05). The expression of TGF-β1 showed significant difference between untreated and negative control groups (P<0.05). HJD and Trolox increased the level of TGF-β1 and the difference was marked as compared with the untreated and negative control groups (P<0.05).
CONCLUSIONHJD relieves oxidative stress-induced injury, increases the antioxidant activity, mitigates the fibroblast mitochondrial damage, up-regulates the expression of growth factor, and promotes mitochondrial repair in mice.
Animals ; Biological Products ; pharmacology ; therapeutic use ; Cell Proliferation ; drug effects ; radiation effects ; Cobalt Radioisotopes ; Dermatitis ; complications ; drug therapy ; pathology ; Drugs, Chinese Herbal ; pharmacology ; therapeutic use ; Female ; Fibroblast Growth Factor 2 ; genetics ; metabolism ; Fibroblasts ; drug effects ; pathology ; radiation effects ; Gamma Rays ; Humans ; L-Lactate Dehydrogenase ; metabolism ; Malondialdehyde ; metabolism ; Mice ; Mitochondria ; drug effects ; metabolism ; radiation effects ; Ointments ; Oxidative Stress ; drug effects ; radiation effects ; Pharmaceutical Preparations ; Radiation Injuries ; complications ; drug therapy ; pathology ; Superoxide Dismutase ; metabolism ; Transforming Growth Factor beta1 ; genetics ; metabolism ; Up-Regulation ; drug effects ; radiation effects