1.Association of mobile phone use with childhood abuse experiences and sleep quality in medical students
LI Ruoyu, LI Shuqin, JIANG Zhicheng, JIN Zhengge, WANG Rui, SONG Xianbing, ZHANG Shichen, WAN Yuhui
Chinese Journal of School Health 2022;43(1):82-86
Objective:
To explore the mediating effect and gender difference of mobile phone use in the association between different types of childhood abuse experiences and sleep quality of medical students, so as to provide reference for promoting sleep quality of medical students.
Methods:
A longitudinal study design method was used to select freshmen and sophomores in two medical colleges in Anhui Province from November to December 2019, follow up data were collected from May to June 2020, and a total of 6 879 students were included in this study. Spearman correlation was used to analyze the association between baseline childhood abuse experiences, baseline mobile phone use and follow up sleep quality. Bootstrap program and Process software were applied to test the mediating effect of mobile phone use in the relationship between childhood abuse and sleep quality.
Results:
Childhood abuse experiences were positively correlated with mobile phone use and sleep quality score ( r = 0.27 , 0.24, P <0.01), and mobile phone use was positively correlated with sleep quality score ( r =0.31, P <0.01). In the total sample, after adjusting for confounding factors, mobile phone use played a partial mediating role in childhood abuse experiences (including emotional abuse, physical abuse, sexual abuse) and sleep quality, and the mediating effect was 18.08% (18.12%, 17.15%, 24.09%). The mediating effect of mobile phone use on the relationship between childhood emotional abuse, sexual abuse, childhood abuse and sleep quality in girls(18.32%, 28.05%, 18.24%) was higher than in boys(17.81%, 18.94%, 17.63%).
Conclusion
Mobile phone use has a mediating effect on the relationship between childhood abuse and sleep quality, controlling mobile phone overuse may contribute to improving the sleep quality for those who have experienced childhood abuse.
2.Application and prospect for generative adversarial networks in cross-modality reconstruction of medical images.
Jie SUN ; Shichen JIN ; Rong SHI ; Chuantao ZUO ; Jiehui JIANG
Journal of Central South University(Medical Sciences) 2022;47(8):1001-1008
Cross-modality reconstruction of medical images refers to predicting the image from one modality to another so as to achieve more accurate personalized medicine. Generative adversarial networks is the most commonly used deep learning technique in cross-modality reconstruction. It can generate realistic images by learning features from implicit distributions that follow the distributions of real data and then reconstruct the image of another modality rapidly. With the sharp increase in clinical demand for multi-modality medical image, this technology has been widely used in the task of cross modal reconstruction between different medical image modalities, such as magnetic resonance imaging, computed tomography and positron emission computed tomography. It can achieve accurate and efficient cross-modality image reconstruction in different parts of the body, such as the brain, heart, etc. In addition, although GAN has achieved some success in cross-modality reconstruction, its stability, generalization ability, and accuracy still need further research and improvement.
Brain/diagnostic imaging*
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Image Processing, Computer-Assisted/methods*
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Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods*
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Positron-Emission Tomography
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Tomography, X-Ray Computed
3.Surgical site infection following abdominal surgery in China: a multicenter cross-sectional study.
Zhiwei WANG ; Jun CHEN ; Jianan REN ; Peige WANG ; Zhigang JIE ; Weidong JIN ; Jiankun HU ; Yong LI ; Jianwen ZHANG ; Shuhua LI ; Jiancheng TU ; Haiyang ZHANG ; Hongbin LIU ; Liang SHANG ; Jie ZHAO ; Suming LUO ; Hongliang YAO ; Baoqing JIA ; Lin CHEN ; Zeqiang REN ; Guangyi LI ; Hao ZHANG ; Zhiming WU ; Daorong WANG ; Yongshun GAO ; Weihua FU ; Hua YANG ; Wenbiao XIE ; Erlei ZHANG ; Yong PENG ; Shichen WANG ; Jie CHEN ; Junqiang ZHANG ; Tao ZHENG ; Gefei WANG
Chinese Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery 2018;21(12):1366-1373
OBJECTIVE:
To determine the incidence of surgical site infection (SSI) after abdominal surgery and to further evaluate the related risk factors of SSI in China.
METHODS:
The multicenter cross-sectional study collected clinical data of all adult patients who underwent abdominal surgery from May 1, 2018 to May 31, 2018 in 30 domestic hospitals, including basic information, perioperative parameters, and incisional microbial culture results. The primary outcome was the incidence of SSI within postoperative 30 days. SSI was classified into superficial incision infection, deep incision infection, and organ/gap infection according to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) criteria. The secondary outcome variables were ICU stay, postoperative hospital stay, total hospital stay, 30-day mortality and treatment costs. Multivariate logistic regression was used to analyze the risk factors of SSI.
RESULTS:
A total of 1666 patients were enrolled in the study, including 263 cases of East War Zone Hospital of PLA, 140 cases of Affiliated Hospital of Qingdao University, 108 cases of The First Affiliated Hospital of Nanchang University, 87 cases of Central War Zone Hospital of PLA, 77 cases of West China Hospital, 74 cases of Guangdong General Hospital, 71 cases of Chenzhou First People's Hospital, 71 cases of Zigong First People's Hospital, 64 cases of Zhangjiagang First People's Hospital, 56 cases of Nanyang City Central Hospital, 56 cases of Lanzhou General Hospital of Lanzhou Military Command, 56 cases of Shandong Provincial Hospital, 52 cases of Shangqiu First People's Hospital, 52 cases of People's Hospital of Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, 48 cases of The Second Xiangya Hospital of Central South University, 48 cases of Chinese PLA General Hospital, 44 cases of Affiliated Hospital of Xuzhou Medical University, 38 cases of Hunan Province People's Hospital, 36 cases of Dongguan Kanghua Hospital, 30 cases of Shaoxing Central Hospital, 30 cases of Northern Jiangsu People's Hospital, 29 vases of The First Affiliated Hospital of Zhengzhou University, 27 cases of General Hospital of Tianjin Medical University, 22 cases of Zigong Fourth People's Hospital, 21 cases of The Second Hospital of University of South China, 18 cases of Tongji Hospital, 15 cases of Nanchong Central Hospital, 12 cases of The 901th Hospital of PLA, 11 cases of Hunan Cancer Hospital, 10 cases of Lanzhou University Second Hospital. There were 1019 males and 647 females with mean age of (56.5±15.3) years old. SSI occurred in 80 patients (4.8%) after operation, including 39 cases of superficial incision infection, 16 cases of deep incision infection, and 25 cases of organ/interstitial infection. Escherichia coli was the main pathogen of SSI, and the positive rate was 32.5% (26/80). Compared with patients without SSI, those with SSI had significantly higher ICU occupancy rate [38.8%(31/80) vs. 13.9%(220/1586), P<0.001], postoperative hospital stay (median 17 days vs. 7 days, P<0.001) and total hospital stay (median 22 days vs. 13 days, P<0.001), and significantly higher cost of treatment (median 75 000 yuan vs. 44 000 yuan, P<0.001). Multivariate analysis showed that male rise(OR=2.110, 95%CI:1.175-3.791, P=0.012), preoperative blood glucose level rise(OR=1.100, 95%CI: 1.012-1.197, P=0.026), operative time (OR=1.006, 95%CI:1.003-1.009, P<0.001) and surgical incision grade (clean-contaminated incision:OR=10.207, 95%CI:1.369-76.120, P=0.023; contaminated incision: OR=10.617, 95%CI:1.298-86.865, P=0.028; infection incision: OR=20.173, 95%CI:1.768-230.121, P=0.016) were risk factors for SSI; and laparoscopic surgery (OR=0.348, 95%CI:0.192-0.631, P=0.001) and mechanical bowel preparation(OR=0.441,95%CI:0.221-0.879, P=0.020) were protective factors for SSI.
CONCLUSIONS
The incidence of postoperative SSI in patients with abdominal surgery in China is 4.8%. SSI can significantly increase the medical burden of patients. Preoperative control of blood glucose and mechanical bowel preparation are important measures to prevent SSI.
Abdomen
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surgery
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Adult
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Aged
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China
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Cross-Sectional Studies
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Female
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General Surgery
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statistics & numerical data
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Humans
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Male
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Middle Aged
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Operative Time
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Postoperative Complications
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prevention & control
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Preoperative Period
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Retrospective Studies
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Risk Factors
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Surgical Wound Infection
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prevention & control