2.Congenital penile curvature: long-term results of operative treatment using the plication procedure.
S-S LEE ; E MENG ; F-P CHUANG ; C-Y YEN ; S-Y CHANG ; D-S YU ; G-H SUN
Asian Journal of Andrology 2004;6(3):273-276
AIMTo determine the long-term outcome, effectiveness and patient satisfaction of congenital penile curvature correction by plication of tunica albuginea.
METHODSFrom January 1992 to January 2002, 106 young patients underwent surgical correction of congenital penile curvature by corporeal plication. Indications for operation were difficult or impossible vaginal penetration and cosmetic problems. The technique of corporeal plication consists of placing longitudinal plication sutures of 2-zero braided polyester on the convex side of the curvature until the curvature is corrected when erection is artificially induced. Results of this procedure were obtained by retrospective chart reviews and questionnaires via mail. Long-term follow-up ranged from 11 to 132 (mean 69.3) months and data were available for 68 patients.
RESULTSPenile straightening was excellent in 62 patients (91 %) and good with less than 15 degree of residual curvature in 6 patients (9 %). Sixty-seven patients reported no change in erectile rigidity or maintenance postoperatively, while 1 described early detumescence. Shortening of the penis without functional problems was noted by 26 patients (38 %). Thirty-Five patients (51 %) reported feeling palpable indurations (suture knots) on the penis. Temporary numbness of glans penis was described in 3 patients. Overall, 60 patients were very satisfied, 6 satisfied, 2 unsatisfied.
CONCLUSIONCorporeal plication is an effective and durable procedure with a high rate of patient satisfaction.
Adolescent ; Adult ; Follow-Up Studies ; Humans ; Male ; Penile Erection ; Penis ; abnormalities ; surgery ; Retrospective Studies ; Surgical Procedures, Operative ; Treatment Outcome
3.Fine Mapping of a Deafness Mutation hml on Mouse Chromosome 10.
Qing Yin ZHENG ; Belinda S HARRIS ; Patricia F WARD-BAILEY ; Heping YU ; Roderick T BRONSON ; Muriel T DAVISSON ; Kenneth R JOHNSON
Academic Journal of Xi'an Jiaotong University 2004;25(3):209-212
OBJECTIVE: to map a mouse deafness gene, identify the underlying mutation and develop a mouse model for human deafness. METHODS: genetic linkage cross and genome scan were used to map a novel mutation named hypoplasia of the membranous labyrinth (hml), which causes hearing loss in mutant mice. RESULTS: 1. hml was mapped on mouse Chr 10 (~43 cM from the centromere) suggests that the homologous human gene is on 12q22-q24, which was defined on the basis of known mouse-human homologies (OMIM, 2004). 2. This study has generated 25 polymorphic microsatellite markers, placed 3 known human genes in the correct order in a high-resolution mouse map and narrowed the hml candidate gene region to a 500kb area.
4.Association Between Leisure Time Physical Activity, Cardiopulmonary Fitness, Cardiovascular Risk Factors, and Cardiovascular Workload at Work in Firefighters.
Clare C W YU ; Chun T AU ; Frank Y F LEE ; Raymond C H SO ; John P S WONG ; Gary Y K MAK ; Eric P CHIEN ; Alison M MCMANUS
Safety and Health at Work 2015;6(3):192-199
BACKGROUND: Overweight, obesity, and cardiovascular disease risk factors are prevalent among firefighters in some developed countries. It is unclear whether physical activity and cardiopulmonary fitness reduce cardiovascular disease risk and the cardiovascular workload at work in firefighters. The present study investigated the relationship between leisure-time physical activity, cardiopulmonary fitness, cardiovascular disease risk factors, and cardiovascular workload at work in firefighters in Hong Kong. METHODS: Male firefighters (n = 387) were randomly selected from serving firefighters in Hong Kong (n = 5,370) for the assessment of cardiovascular disease risk factors (obesity, hypertension, diabetes mellitus, dyslipidemia, smoking, known cardiovascular diseases). One-third (Target Group) were randomly selected for the assessment of off-duty leisure-time physical activity using the short version of the International Physical Activity Questionnaire. Maximal oxygen uptake was assessed, as well as cardiovascular workload using heart rate monitoring for each firefighter for four "normal" 24-hour working shifts and during real-situation simulated scenarios. RESULTS: Overall, 33.9% of the firefighters had at least two cardiovascular disease risk factors. In the Target Group, firefighters who had higher leisure-time physical activity had a lower resting heart rate and a lower average working heart rate, and spent a smaller proportion of time working at a moderateintensity cardiovascular workload. Firefighters who had moderate aerobic fitness and high leisuretime physical activity had a lower peak working heart rate during the mountain rescue scenario compared with firefighters who had low leisure-time physical activities. CONCLUSION: Leisure-time physical activity conferred significant benefits during job tasks of moderate cardiovascular workload in firefighters in Hong Kong.
Cardiovascular Diseases
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Developed Countries
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Diabetes Mellitus
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Dyslipidemias
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Firefighters*
;
Heart Rate
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Hong Kong
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Humans
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Hypertension
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Leisure Activities*
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Male
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Motor Activity*
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Obesity
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Overweight
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Oxygen
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Risk Factors*
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Smoke
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Smoking
5.Osteoactivin inhibition of osteoclastogenesis is mediated through CD44-ERK signaling.
Gregory R SONDAG ; Thomas S MBIMBA ; Fouad M MOUSSA ; Kimberly NOVAK ; Bing YU ; Fatima A JABER ; Samir M ABDELMAGID ; Werner J GELDENHUYS ; Fayez F SAFADI
Experimental & Molecular Medicine 2016;48(9):e257-
Osteoactivin is a heavily glycosylated protein shown to have a role in bone remodeling. Previous studies from our lab have shown that mutation in Osteoactivin enhances osteoclast differentiation but inhibits their function. To date, a classical receptor and a signaling pathway for Osteoactivin-mediated osteoclast inhibition has not yet been characterized. In this study, we examined the role of Osteoactivin treatment on osteoclastogenesis using bone marrow-derived osteoclast progenitor cells and identify a signaling pathway relating to Osteoactivin function. We reveal that recombinant Osteoactivin treatment inhibited osteoclast differentiation in a dose-dependent manner shown by qPCR, TRAP staining, activity and count. Using several approaches, we show that Osteoactivin binds CD44 in osteoclasts. Furthermore, recombinant Osteoactivin treatment inhibited ERK phosphorylation in a CD44-dependent manner. Finally, we examined the role of Osteoactivin on receptor activator of nuclear factor-κ B ligand (RANKL)-induced osteolysis in vivo. Our data indicate that recombinant Osteoactivin inhibits RANKL-induced osteolysis in vivo and this effect is CD44-dependent. Overall, our data indicate that Osteoactivin is a negative regulator of osteoclastogenesis in vitro and in vivo and that this process is regulated through CD44 and ERK activation.
Bone Remodeling
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In Vitro Techniques
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Osteoclasts
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Osteolysis
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Phosphorylation
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Stem Cells
6.BGVD:An Integrated Database for Bovine Sequencing Variations and Selective Signatures
Chen NINGBO ; Fu WEIWEI ; Zhao JIANBANG ; Shen JIAFEI ; Chen QIUMING ; Zheng ZHUQING ; Chen HONG ; Sonstegard S. TAD ; Lei CHUZHAO ; Jiang YU
Genomics, Proteomics & Bioinformatics 2020;18(2):186-193
Next-generation sequencing has yielded a vast amount of cattle genomic data for global characterization of population genetic diversity and identification of genomic regions under natural and artificial selection. However, efficient storage, querying, and visualization of such large datasets remain challenging. Here, we developed a comprehensive database, the Bovine Genome Variation Database (BGVD). It provides six main functionalities:gene search, variation search, genomic sig-nature search, Genome Browser, alignment search tools, and the genome coordinate conversion tool. BGVD contains information on genomic variations comprising ~60.44 M SNPs, ~6.86 M indels, 76,634 CNV regions, and signatures of selective sweeps in 432 samples from modern cattle worldwide. Users can quickly retrieve distribution patterns of these variations for 54 cattle breeds through an interactive source of breed origin map, using a given gene symbol or genomic region for any of the three versions of the bovine reference genomes (ARS-UCD1.2, UMD3.1.1, and Btau 5.0.1). Signals of selection sweep are displayed as Manhattan plots and Genome Browser tracks. To further investigate and visualize the relationships between variants and signatures of selection, the Genome Browser integrates all variations, selection data, and resources, from NCBI, the UCSC Genome Browser, and Animal QTLdb. Collectively, all these features make the BGVD a useful archive for in-depth data mining and analyses of cattle biology and cattle breeding on a global scale. BGVD is publicly available at http://animal.nwsuaf.edu.cn/BosVar.
8.Wash-out of hepatocellular carcinoma: quantitative region of interest analysis on CT.
Cher Heng TAN ; Choon Hua THNG ; Albert S C LOW ; Veronique K M TAN ; Septian HARTONO ; Tong San KOH ; Brian K P GOH ; Peng Chung CHEOW ; Yu Meng TAN ; Alexander Y F CHUNG ; London L OOI ; Arul EARNEST ; Pierce K H CHOW
Annals of the Academy of Medicine, Singapore 2011;40(6):269-275
INTRODUCTIONThis study aims to determine if the quantitative method of region-of-interest (ROI) analysis of lesion attenuation on CT may be a useful adjunct to the conventional approach of diagnosis by visual assessment in assessing tracer wash-out in hepatocellular carcinomas.
MATERIALS AND METHODSFrom a surgical database of 289 patients from 2 institutions, all patients with complete surgical, pathological and preoperative multiphasic CT scans available for review were selected. For each phase of scanning, HU readings of lesion obtained (Lesion(arterial), Lesion(PV) and Lesion(equilibrium)) were analysed using receiver operating curves (ROC) to determine the optimal method and cut-off value for quantitative assessment of tumour wash-out (Lesion(arterial - equilibrium), Lesion(PV - equilibrium) or Lesion(peak - equilibrium)).
RESULTSNinety-four patients with one lesion each met the inclusion criteria. The area under the curve (AUC) values for Lesion(arterial - equilibrium) (0.941) was higher than the AUC for Lesion(pv - equilibrium) (0.484) and for Lesion(peak - equilibrium) (0.667). Based on ROC analysis, a cut-off of 10HU value for Lesion(arterial - equilibrium) would yield sensitivity and specificity of 91.5% and 80.9%, respectively. ROI analysis detected 9/21 (42.9%) of lesions missed by visual analysis. Combined ROI and visual analysis yields a sensitivity of 82/94 (87.2%) compared to 73/94 (77.7%) for visual analysis alone.
CONCLUSIONUsing a cut-off of 10 HU attenuation difference between the arterial and equilibrium phases is a simple and objective method that can be included as an adjunct to visual assessment to improve sensitivity for determining lesion wash-out on CT.
Adult ; Aged ; Aged, 80 and over ; Carcinoma, Hepatocellular ; diagnosis ; pathology ; surgery ; Confidence Intervals ; Databases, Factual ; Female ; Humans ; Liver ; pathology ; Liver Neoplasms ; diagnosis ; pathology ; surgery ; Male ; Middle Aged ; Preoperative Period ; ROC Curve ; Retrospective Studies ; Sensitivity and Specificity ; Tomography, X-Ray Computed ; instrumentation ; Young Adult
9.Association of neutrophil-lymphocyte ratio and platelet-lymphocyte ratio with diabetic kidney disease among adult patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus: A meta-analysis of observational studies.
Lilluck F. ALACAPA ; Marc Gregory Y. YU ; Mark Anthony S. SANDOVAL
Acta Medica Philippina 2022;56(5):17-22
Objective: This meta-analysis aimed to evaluate the association of neutrophil-lymphocyte ratio (NLR) and platelet-lymphocyte ratio (PLR) with the presence of diabetic kidney disease (DKD) among adult patients with Type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM).
Methods: A systematic search of articles was performed in various databases. Studies must have fulfilled the following criteria for inclusion: 1) Randomized controlled trial or observational study; 2) Included adults diagnosed with T2DM; 3) Reported data associating NLR or PLR with the presence of DKD; and 4) Controlled for confounders using logistic regression. Data analysis was performed using Review Manager 5.4 software. The estimates were derived using the generic inverse variance method and pooled using the random effects model. Results were presented as odds ratios (OR) and standard errors (SE) with 95% confidence intervals (CI), and graphically shown as forest plots. The I2 value and Chi-square test were used to assess heterogeneity across studies.
Results: Seven studies were included in the review, totaling 1,486 patients. All were cross-sectional studies and had satisfactory methodological quality as evaluated using the Newcastle-Ottawa Quality Assessment Scale. Pooled analysis from six studies showed a statistically significant association between increased NLR and the presence of DKD, defined as either the presence of albuminuria (95% CI, OR 1.68 [1.28, 2.19], p<0.01); or an estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) <60 mL/min/1.73m2 (95% CI, OR 1.56 [1.09, 2.23], p=0.01). In both analyses, there was no significant heterogeneity across studies (I2=0%, Chi2=3.54; and I2=28%, Chi2=2.76 respectively). On the other hand, pooled analysis from two studies did not show a statistically significant association between PLR and albuminuria (95% CI, OR 1.75 [0.85, 3.60], p=0.13), although both studies were homogeneous (I2=0%, Chi2=0.57).
Conclusion: We found a statistically significant association between increased NLR and the presence of DKD. However, a similar association was not found with PLR. Larger studies with more robust designs are recommended.
Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 ; Diabetic Nephropathies
10.Introduction on 'assessing the risk of bias of individual studies' in systematic review of health-care intervention programs revised by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality.
J C YANG ; Z R YANG ; S Q YU ; S Y ZHAN ; F SUN
Chinese Journal of Epidemiology 2019;40(1):106-111
This paper summarizes the Risk of Bias of Individual Studies in Systematic Reviews of Health Care Interventions revised by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) and introduces how to use Revman software make risk of bias graph or risk of bias summary. AHRQ tool can be used to evaluate following study designs: RCTs, cohort study, case-control study (including nested case-control), case series study and cross-sectional study. The tool evaluates the risk of bias of individual studies from selection bias, performance bias, attrition bias, detection bias and reporting bias. Each of the bias domains contains different items, and each item is available for the assessment of one or more study designs. It is worth noting that the appropriate items should be selected for evaluation different study designs instead of using all items to directly assess the risk of bias. AHRQ tool can be used to evaluate risk of bias individual studies when systematic reviews of health care interventions is including different study designs. Moreover, the tool items are relatively easy to understand and the assessment process is not complicated. AHRQ recommends the use of high, medium and low risk classification methods to assess the overall risk of bias of individual studies. However, AHRQ gives no recommendations on how to determine the overall bias grade. It is expected that future research will give corresponding recommendations.
Bias
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Evidence-Based Medicine/standards*
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Health Services Research
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Systematic Reviews as Topic