1.Prevalence, awareness, treatment and control of hypertension in population older than 15 years of age in Beijing, 2013-2014.
C X WANG ; X G WU ; H J LIU ; S C GUAN ; C B HOU ; H H LI ; X GU ; Z Y ZHANG ; X H FANG
Chinese Journal of Epidemiology 2018;39(2):179-183
Objective: To investigate the rates on prevalence, awareness, treatment and control of hypertension in population older than 15 years of age in Beijing, 2013-2014. Methods: A cross-sectional survey was conducted in Beijing between 2013-2014. Stratified multistage random sampling method was used to select representative sample of 13 057 Chinese individuals aged over 15 years, from the general population. Blood pressure was measured for three readings at sitting position after resting for at least five minutes with an average reading recorded. A standardized structured questionnaire was developed to collect history of hypertension and antihypertensive treatment. Results: A total of 4 663 community residents aged over 15 years were hypertensive among the 13 057 individuals, with the standardized prevalence rate as 32.7%, in Beijing area. The age-standardized prevalence rates of hypertension appeared 34.6% in men and 30.8% in women. The age-and sexstandardized prevalence of hypertension rates were 33.3% in urban and 24.6% in rural areas. The prevalence of hypertension increased with age and appeared higher in men than in women, in urban than in rural residents. Among the hypertensive patients, rates of awareness, treatment and control were 66.8%, 64.6% and 31.6%, respectively. Conclusion: High prevalence of hypertension with low rates on awareness and treatment and control, appeared in the general population of Beijing. Related strategies should be developed regarding prevention, control and management of hypertension, to reduce the burden of this disease.
Adolescent
;
Adult
;
Age Distribution
;
Aged
;
Antihypertensive Agents/therapeutic use*
;
Asian People/statistics & numerical data*
;
Awareness
;
Blood Pressure
;
Blood Pressure Determination
;
China/epidemiology*
;
Cross-Sectional Studies
;
Female
;
Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice
;
Humans
;
Hypertension/epidemiology*
;
Male
;
Middle Aged
;
Prevalence
;
Rural Population
;
Sex Distribution
;
Surveys and Questionnaires
;
Urban Population
;
Young Adult
2.Diabetic ketoacidosis at diagnosis of type 1 diabetes mellitus in Malaysian children and adolescents
Hong JYH ; Jalaludin MY ; Mohamad Adam B ; Fuziah MZ ; Wu LL ; Rasat R ; Fatimah H ; Premaa S ; Ponnudurai U ; Jamaiyah H.
Malaysian Family Physician 2015;10(3):11-18
Background: Diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA) is a late presentation of newly diagnosed type 1 diabetes
mellitus (DM) in children. The aim of this study was to determine the clinical characteristics of type
1 DM at presentation so that appropriate actions can be taken to promote early diagnosis.
Methods: This was a retrospective cohort review from a patient registry database. Data on all
patients younger than 20 years old diagnosed with type 1 DM who had been registered with the
Malaysian Diabetes in Children and Adolescents Registry (DiCARE) from its inception in 2006
until 2009 were analysed.
Results: The study included 490 children and adolescents, out of which 57.1% were female. The
mean (SD) age at diagnosis was 7.5 (3.7) years, which increased from year 2000 to 2009 [6.6 (3.3)
years to 9.6 (3.5) years; p = 0.001]. An increasing percentage of DKA at diagnosis was observed from
year 2000 (54.5%) to year 2009 (66.7%), which remained high and leveled between 54.5% and
75.0%. DKA was more common in patients with normal weight (p = 0.002) with no significant
association with age, gender, ethnicity and status of family history of diabetes mellitus.
Conclusion: An increasing trend of age at diagnosis of patients with type 1 DM was observed.
Besides that, proportion of DKA at diagnosis had remained high over the past decade. This study
found that normal weight was associated with status of DKA, thus more detailed investigations are
required to determine the risk factors for DKA.
3.Effects of backward masking on the responses of the inferior collicular neurons in the big brown bat, Eptesicus fuscus.
Rui-Hong LUAN ; Fei-Jian WU ; Philip H S JEN ; Xin-De SUN
Acta Physiologica Sinica 2005;57(2):225-232
Temporal features of sound convey information vital for behaviors as diverse as speech recognition by human and echolocation by bats. However, auditory stimuli presented in temporal proximity might interfere with each other. Although much progress has been made in the description of this phenomenon from psychophysical studies, the neural mechanism responsible for its formation at central auditory structures especially at the inferior colliculus (IC), a midbrain auditory nucleus which practically receives massive bilateral projections from all the major auditory structures in the brainstem, remains unclear. This study was designed to investigate it in vivo by using electrophysiological recording from the inferior collicular neurons of the big brown bat, Eptesicus fuscus. In our results, the responses of 12 (38%, n= 31) neurons to the test sound (leading sound) were obviously inhibited by the masker (lagging sound). The inhibitory effects in these neurons were correlated with the inter-stimulus level difference (SLD) and the inter-stimulus onset asynchrony (SOA) interval. The strength of backward masking increased with the masker intensity increasing, the test sound intensity decreasing and the SOA interval shortening. There were no obvious effects of backward masking on the responses of many other neurons (52%, 16/31), and yet in a part of these neurons, the neural inhibition of responses to the test sound was observed at the special SLD and the special SOA intervals. Moreover, few of the 31 sampled IC neurons (10%, 3/31) displayed facilitating responses to the test sound at the special SLD and the special SOA intervals. These data demonstrate that a lot of IC neurons are involved in the generation of the backward masking of acoustical perception. It is conjectured that the temporal dynamic integration between the leading inhibitory inputs evoked by the masker sound and the excitatory inputs evoked by the test sound might play a key role in shaping the acoustical response characteristics of the IC neurons.
Acoustic Stimulation
;
Animals
;
Auditory Perception
;
physiology
;
Chiroptera
;
physiology
;
Echolocation
;
physiology
;
Evoked Potentials, Auditory
;
Inferior Colliculi
;
cytology
;
physiology
;
Male
;
Neurons
;
physiology
;
Perceptual Masking
;
physiology
4.GABAergic inhibition modulates intensity sensitivity of temporally patterned pulse trains in the inferior collicular neurons in big brown bats.
Rui-Hong LUAN ; Fei-Jian WU ; Philip H-S JEN ; Xin-De SUN
Acta Physiologica Sinica 2007;59(6):805-813
The echolocating big brown bats (Eptesicus fuscus) emit trains of frequency-modulated (FM) biosonar signals with duration, amplitude, repetition rate, and sweep structure changing systematically during interception of their prey. In the present study, the sound stimuli of temporally patterned pulse trains at three different pulse repetition rates (PRRs) were used to mimic the sounds received during search, approach, and terminal stages of echolocation. Electrophysiological method was adopted in recordings from the inferior colliculus (IC) of midbrain. By means of iontophoretic application of bicuculline, the effect of GABAergic inhibition on the intensity sensitivity of IC neurons responding to three different PRRs of 10, 30 and 90 pulses per second (pps) was examined. The rate-intensity functions (RIFs) were acquired. The dynamic range (DR) of RIFs was considered as a criterion of intensity sensitivity. Comparing the average DR of RIFs at different PRRs, we found that the intensity sensitivity of some neurons improved, but that of other neurons decayed when repetition rate of stimulus trains increased from 10 to 30 and 90 pps. During application of bicuculline, the number of impulses responding to the different pulse trains increased under all stimulating conditions, while the DR differences of RIFs at different PRRs were abolished. The results indicate that GABAergic inhibition was involved in modulating the intensity sensitivity of IC neurons responding to pulse trains at different PRRs. Before and during bicuculline application, the percentage of changes in responses was maximal in lower stimulus intensity near to the minimum threshold (MT), and decreased gradually with the increment of stimulus intensity. This observation suggests that GABAergic inhibition contributes more effectively to the intensity sensitivity of the IC neurons responding to pulse trains at lower sound level.
Acoustic Stimulation
;
Animals
;
Bicuculline
;
pharmacology
;
Chiroptera
;
Echolocation
;
Electrophysiological Phenomena
;
GABA-A Receptor Antagonists
;
pharmacology
;
Inferior Colliculi
;
cytology
;
Neurons
;
cytology
5.National experts consensus on clinical diagnosis and treatment of inhalation injury (2018 version).
Burn and Trauma Branch of Chinese Geriatrics Society ; F GUO ; Y S ZHU ; J HUANG ; Y H WU ; Z F SUN ; X B XIA ; Xiaobing FU
Chinese Journal of Burns 2018;34(11):770-775
Inhalation injury is caused by inhalation of heat, toxic or irritating gases which lead to respiratory and pulmonary parenchyma damage. At present, the clinical understanding about it is still limited and lack of effective diagnosis and treatment standard. Based on the experience of diagnosis and treatment of domestic inhalation injury, combined with reports of international researches, criteria (expert consensus) for inhalation injury were systematically discussed from pathological and pathophysiological changes, clinical diagnosis and evaluation, and clinical treatment, which provides reference for clinical diagnosis and treatment of patients inflicted with inhalation injury.
Burns, Inhalation
;
Consensus
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Humans
;
Lung
;
Smoke Inhalation Injury
;
diagnosis
;
therapy
6.Management of Percutaneous Endoscopic Gastrostomy Site Gastric Ulcer in a Patient with an Esophageal Stricture and Hiatus Hernia
Clement C H WU ; James W LI ; Keng Sin NG ; Daphne S ANG
Clinical Endoscopy 2018;51(1):99-102
Percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy (PEG) is commonly performed for feeding difficulties, in patients suffering from complications of nasopharyngeal carcinoma and its treatment, namely radiotherapy and surgery. This case report describes the challenges in hemostasis and subsequent re-establishment of enteral access for feeding, in an elderly patient with a history of NPC, treated surgically, followed by radiotherapy, who presented with massive hematemesis following reinsertion of her PEG shortly after an accidental dislodgement. Her previous nasopharyngectomy, wide field radiation therapy, and radical neck dissection precluded nasogastric tube feeding, and the presence of a large hiatus hernia made reinsertion of a new PEG technically challenging. This case highlights the methods used to overcome the above challenges.
Aged
;
Enteral Nutrition
;
Esophageal Stenosis
;
Gastrostomy
;
Hematemesis
;
Hemostasis
;
Hernia, Hiatal
;
Humans
;
Intubation, Gastrointestinal
;
Neck Dissection
;
Radiotherapy
;
Stomach Ulcer
;
Ulcer
7.Validation of Self-Reported Smartphone Usage Against Objectively-Measured Smartphone Usage in Hong Kong Chinese Adolescents and Young Adults
Paul H. LEE ; Andy C. Y. TSE ; Cynthia S. T. WU ; Yim Wah MAK ; Uichin LEE
Psychiatry Investigation 2021;18(2):95-100
Objective:
This study evaluated the validity of self-reported smartphone usage data against objectively-measured smartphone usage data by directly tracking the activities in the participants’ smartphone among Chinese adolescents and young adults in Hong Kong.
Methods:
A total of 187 participants were recruited (mean age 19.4, 71.7% female) between 2017 and 2018. A smartphone usage tracking app was installed on all participants’ smartphone for 7 consecutive days. After the 7-day monitoring period, they completed a selfadministered questionnaire on smartphone usage habits.
Results:
Although the correlation between self-reported and objectively-measured total smartphone usage time was insignificant (ρ=-0.10, p=0.18), in three out of the four usage domains were positively and significantly correlated, namely social network (ρ=0.21, p=0.005), instant messaging (ρ=0.27, p<0.001), and games (ρ=0.64, p<0.001). Participants’ self-report of the total time spent on smartphones exceeded the objective data by around 760 min per week (self-reported 1,930.3 min/wk vs. objectively-measured 1,170.7 min/wk, p<0.001). Most of the over-reporting was contributed by the web browsing domain (self-reported 447.8 min/wk vs. objectively-measured 33.3 min/wk, p<0.001).
Conclusion
Our results showed large discrepancies between self-reported smartphone and objectively-measured smartphone usage except for self-reported usage on game apps.
8.A Meta-analysis on the relations between short-term exposure to PM(2.5) and both mortality and related emergency visits in China.
M LI ; Y WU ; Y H TIAN ; G Y CAO ; S S YAO ; P AI ; Z HUANG ; C HUANG ; X W WANG ; Y Y CAO ; X XIANG ; J JUAN ; Y H HU
Chinese Journal of Epidemiology 2018;39(10):1394-1401
Objective: To carry out a quantitative estimate that related to the effects of short-term exposure to PM(2.5) on all-cause mortality and emergency visits in China by using the systematic review and Meta-analysis. Methods: We selected all the studies published before March 2018 from China National Knowledge Infrastructure, Wanfang database, PubMed and EMBASE and data on relative risk (RR), excess risk (ER) and their 95%CIs: appeared in these papers were extracted. According to the differences in the size or direction (heterogeneity) of the results, we computed summary estimates of the effect values using a random-effect or fixed effect model. We also conducted the subgroup analysis and Meta-analysis to have assessed the selected studies for the evidence of study bias. Results: A total of 33 original studies, indexed in databases, were identified. Among those studies, 39 sets of data on mortality and 4 sets of data on emergency were valid to show that within the daily concentration range from 47.7 to 176.7 μg/m(3), for 10 μg/m(3) increases in PM(2.5) concentrations, it would increase the daily numbers of deaths by 0.49% (95%CI: 0.39%-0.59%) and 0.30% (95%CI: 0.10%-0.51%) for all-cause deaths and all-cause emergency-room visits, respectively. For subgroup analysis, the combined effect of PM(2.5) in causing short-term all-cause deaths in the northern areas (ER=0.42%, 95%CI: 0.30%-0.54%) seemed lower than that in the southern areas (ER=0.63%, 95%CI: 0.44%-0.82%). The combined effect of PM(2.5) concentration below 75 μg/m(3) (ER=0.50%, 95%CI: 0.37%-0.62%) was higher than that of PM(2.5) concentration ≥75 μg/m(3) (ER=0.39%, 95%CI: 0.26%-0.52%). Conclusion: Within the concentration range from 47.7 to 176.7 μg/m(3), short-term exposure to current level of PM(2.5) might increase both the all-cause daily mortality and daily emergency visits in China.
Air Pollutants
;
Air Pollution/statistics & numerical data*
;
China
;
Databases, Factual
;
Emergency Service, Hospital/statistics & numerical data*
;
Environmental Exposure/statistics & numerical data*
;
Female
;
Humans
;
Male
;
Particulate Matter/toxicity*
;
Time Factors
10.Prevalence and control of hypercholesterolaemia as defined by NCEP-ATPIII guidelines and predictors of LDL-C goal attainment in a multi-ethnic Asian population.
Chin Meng KHOO ; Maudrene L S TAN ; Yi WU ; Daniel C H WAI ; Tavintharan SUBRAMANIAM ; E Shyong TAI ; Jeannette LEE
Annals of the Academy of Medicine, Singapore 2013;42(8):379-387
INTRODUCTIONFew studies in Asia have assessed the burden of hypercholesterolaemia based on the global cardiovascular risk assessment. This study determines the burden of hypercholesterolaemia in an Asian population based on the National Cholesterol Education Program-Adult Treatment Panel III (NCEP-ATPIII) guidelines, and examines predictors of low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) goal attainment.
MATERIALS AND METHODSFive thousand and eighty-three Chinese, Malays and Asian-Indians living in Singapore were assigned to coronary heart disease (CHD)-risk category based on the NCEP-ATPIII guidelines. Awareness, treatment and control of hypercholesterolaemia based on risk- specific LDL-C goal were determined, including the use of lipid-lowering therapy (LLT). Cox-regression models were used to identify predictors of LDL-C above goal among those who were aware and unaware of hypercholesterolaemia.
RESULTSOne thousand five hundred and sixty-eight (30.8%) participants were aware of hypercholesterolaemia and 877 (17.3%) were newly diagnosed (unaware). For those who were aware, 39.3% participants received LLT. Among those with 2 risk factors, only 59.7% attained LDL-C goal. The majority of them were taking statin monotherapy, and the median dose of statins was similar across all CHD risk categories. Among participants with 2 risk factors and not receiving LLT, 34.1% would require LLT. Malays or Asian-Indians, higher CHD risk category, increasing body mass index (BMI), current smoking and lower education status were associated with higher risk of LDL-C above goal. Being on LLT reduced the risk of having LDL-C above goal.
CONCLUSIONThe burden of hypercholesterolaemia is high in this multi-ethnic population especially those in the higher CHD risk categories, and might be partly contributed by inadequate titration of statins therapy. Raising awareness of hypercholesterolaemia, appropriate LLT initiation and titration, weight management and smoking cessation may improve LDL-C goal attainment in this population.
Adult ; Aged ; Aged, 80 and over ; Asian Continental Ancestry Group ; Cholesterol, LDL ; blood ; Cross-Sectional Studies ; Female ; Humans ; Hypercholesterolemia ; blood ; epidemiology ; prevention & control ; Male ; Middle Aged ; Practice Guidelines as Topic ; Prevalence ; Singapore ; epidemiology ; Young Adult