1.Extrinsic Bacteriostatic Experiments of Lianhlzhibai Decoction
Shujie XIAO ; Jianpeng XU ; Fengxian BI ; Libo LIU
Chinese Journal of Rehabilitation Theory and Practice 1996;2(4):159-161
The author used five Chinese medicinal herbs,Barbat skullcap,Wolly yam,Anemarrhena,Phellodendron bark,and Dandelion herb,to make up decoctions to treat urinary tract infection(UTI). Ex-trinsic bacteriostatic experiments for colibacillus and bacillus proteus,which commonly occure in urinarytract infection,were observed.The result shows that both Barbat skullcap and Wolly yam are most effectivein treating UTI.So single Chinese medicinal herb can also be used in clinical.
2.The influence of CTP-OD1-HA and CTP-OD2-HA fusion peptides or combine with imatinib on proliferation of K562 cells
Heng XIAO ; Yanbin REN ; Zhiming YANG ; Shujie ZHOU ; Lei YIN ; Zhimei QIN ; Ling XU ; Shouxia LI
International Journal of Laboratory Medicine 2017;38(14):1876-1878
Objective To study the influence of CTP-OD1-HA and CTP-OD2-HA fusion peptides and combined with imatinib on proliferation of K562 cells.Methods K562 cells were treated with CTP-OD1-HA and CTP-OD2-HA peptides or together with imatinib.The proliferation of cells were detected and compared by MTT and clone formation methods.Results MTT examination demonstrated that CTP-OD1-HA and CTP-OD2-HA peptides could inhibit the proliferation of K562 cells,and the effect was more obvious when acted along with imatinib;Clone formation showed that CTP-OD1-HA and CTP-OD2-HA peptides suppressed the continuous colony forming ability of K562 cells.Conclusion CTP-OD1-HA and CTP-OD2-HA could specially inhibit the proliferation of K562 cells,and increase the sensitivity of imatinib.
3.A qualitative study on communication needs of ICU mechanical ventilation patients
Shujie LI ; Limin HOU ; Xuelian SUN ; Xiao LIANG ; Qian XIAO
Chinese Journal of Modern Nursing 2024;30(9):1137-1142
Objective:To gain an in-depth understanding of the communication needs of Intensive Care Unit (ICU) mechanical ventilation patients during the mechanical ventilation process.Methods:This study was a descriptive qualitative study. From January to June 2022, purposive sampling was used to select 15 awake ICU patients with mechanical ventilation at Xuanwu Hospital of Capital Medical University as the research objects, and in-depth interviews were conducted. The content analysis method was used to analyze interview data, summarize and generalize themes.Results:Two themes and ten sub-themes were extracted, namely the multiple needs during mechanical ventilation (physiological needs, communication and physical expression, constraints and activities, longing for family companionship, discomfort to the ICU environment), complex feelings and experiences during mechanical ventilation (pain caused by mechanical ventilation, fear of awakening from sedation, anxiety and concern about the condition, unpleasant communication and nursing experiences, negative emotions) .Conclusions:Medical and nursing staff should promptly identify the communication needs of ICU mechanical ventilation patients, apply intelligent communication tools, provide personalized intervention measures, and meet the communication needs of patients.
4.Progress of the effect of hydroxyacyl-coenzyme A dehydrogenase in cancer development and its mechanism
Guojia WU ; Shujie ZHAI ; Xiao SUN ; Yiran HUANG ; Yongmei LI ; Li SUN
Basic & Clinical Medicine 2024;44(1):119-123
A close relationship between fatty acid metabolism and cancer development is well-established.The hydroxyacyl-coenzyme a dehydrogenase(HADH),a key enzyme in fatty acid beta-oxidation,has recently been identified as an anti-oncogenic factor in various cancers and an oncogenic factor in conditions like acute myeloid leukemia.In cancer cells,HADH not only directly catalyzes fatty acid beta-oxidation but also indirectly influences multiple signaling pathways such as PPAR,TNF-α,JAK-STAT3,PI3K/Akt,IFN-γ,MAPK,and non-canonical Wnt signaling pathways,affecting cancer cell proliferation and migration.HADH shows promise as a potential tumor biomarker for diagnosis,treatment,and prognosis in different cancer types,holding significant clinical value.
5.Visual analysis of professional identity of nursing students in China based on CiteSpace software
Xuemei ZHU ; Han SU ; Shujie SUI ; Ping LIN ; Ningning XIAO ; Hui ZHAI
Chinese Journal of Modern Nursing 2022;28(30):4155-4160
Objective:To analyze the current situation of professional identity of nursing students in China, and explore the research hotspots and development trends.Methods:We searched relevant articles in China National Knowledge Infrastructure, VIP and WanFang Data, and the retrieval time limit was from January 1, 2006 to December 31, 2021. CiteSpace software (version 5.8. R2) was used for bibliometric and visual analysis of the number of articles, authors, institutions and keywords.Results:Since 2016, the number of articles increased significantly. At present, there were large numbers of cross-sectional studies, but there were some limitations and lack of longitudinal studies. There was much cooperation between authors and little cooperation between research institutions, and no large-scale cooperation network was formed. The keyword emergence analysis found that the research on nursing students' professional identity and clinical practice had the longest emergence time, and the keyword with the highest emergence in 2020 was "COVID-19".Conclusions:At present, it is a critical period for the development direction of nursing students' professional identity research to change. It is necessary to establish a large cooperation network model, carry out longitudinal investigation and intervention research, so as to improve nursing students' professional identity.
6.Long-term safety and efficacy of high-dose cytarabine consolidation in patients with acute myeloid leukemia
Xinxin CAO ; Shujie WANG ; Minghui DUAN ; Tienan ZHU ; Wei ZHANG ; Bing HAN ; Junling ZHUANG ; Huacong CAI ; Miao CHEN ; Jun FENG ; Xiao HAN ; Yan ZHANG ; Chen YANG ; Lu ZHANG ; Daobin ZHOU ; Jian LI
Chinese Journal of Hematology 2017;38(4):330-333
7.Efficacy and safety study of Chinese botulinum toxin A 100U in patients with overactive bladder: a prospective, multicenter, double-blind and randomized controlled trial
Limin LIAO ; Huiling CONG ; Zhihui XU ; Enhui LI ; Zhiliang WENG ; Haihong JIANG ; Ben LIU ; Xiao HUANG ; Shujie XIA ; Wei WEN ; Juan WU ; Guowei SHI ; Yang WANG ; Peijun LI ; Yang YU ; Zujun FANG ; Jie ZHENG ; Ye TIAN ; Haodong SHANG ; Hanzhong LI ; Zhongming HUANG ; Liqun ZHOU ; Yunxiang XIAO ; Yaoguang ZHANG ; Jianlong WANG ; Xiaodong ZHANG ; Peng ZHANG ; Dongwen WANG ; Xuhui ZHANG ; Keji XIE ; Bin WANG ; Lulin MA ; Xiaojun TIAN ; Lijun CHEN ; Jinkai DONG
Chinese Journal of Urology 2021;42(6):414-422
Objective:To assess the efficacy and safety of 100 units of botulinum toxin A (BTX-A) intradetrusor injection in patients with overactive bladder.Methods:From April 2016 to December 2018, 17 tertiary hospitals were selected to participate in this prospective, multicenter, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study. Two phases of study were conducted: the primary phase and the extended phase. This study enrolled patients aged 18 to 75 years who had been inadequately managed by anticholinergic therapy (insufficient efficacy or intolerable side effects) and had spontaneous voiding with overactive bladder. Exclusion criteria included patients with severe cardiac, renal and hepatic disorders, patients with previous botulinum toxin treatment for 6 months or allergic to BTX-A, patients with urinary tract infections, patients with urinary stones, urinary tract tumors, diabetes mellitus, and bleeding tendency. Eligible patients were randomly assigned to BTX-A group and placebo control group in a ratio of 2∶1. Two groups of patients received 20 intradetrusor injections of BTX-A 100U or placebo at the depth of the submucosal muscle layer respectively under cystoscope, including 5 injections at the base of the bladder, 3 injections to the bladder triangle, 5 injections each to the left and right walls and 2 injections to the top, sparing the bladder neck. As a placebo control group, patients received same volume of placebo containing no BTX-A and only adjuvant freeze-dried preparations for injection with the same method. A combination of gelatin, sucrose, and dextran served as adjuvants. Average micturition times per 24 hours, urinary incontinence (UI) episodes per day, average micturition volume per day, OAB symptom score(OABSS), and quality of life (QOL) score were recorded at baseline and the 2nd, 6th and 12th week after treatment. The primary efficacy endpoint was the change from baseline in the average micturition times per 24 hours at the 6th week after treatment. The secondary efficacy endpoints included the change from baseline in the average micturition times per 24 hours at 2nd and 12th week, as well as the change from baseline in the OABSS, QOL score, average frequency of urgency and UI episodes per day, urgency score, average micturition volume per day at 2nd, 6th and 12th week after treatment. Patients were followed for 12 weeks to assess adverse events (AEs). After assessed at week 12, if the micturition times has decreased less than 50% compared to baseline and the patient is willing to receive retreatment, then patients could enter the extended trial phase. In that phase, patients in both groups were injected with 100 units BTX-A from 12th week onwards and then followed up the same indicators for 12 weeks.Results:216 patients were enrolled in this trial (144 cases in the BTX-A group and 72 cases in the placebo control group). Baseline characteristics such as age (47.75±14.20 in the BTX-A group and 46.39±15.55 in the control group), sex (25 male/117 female in the BTX-A group and 10/61 in the control group), and disease duration (0.51 years in the BTX-A group and 0.60 years in the control group) were balanced between the two groups( P>0.05). A marked reduction from baseline in average micturition times per 24 hours was observed in all treatment groups at the 6th week and the reduction of the two groups was statistically different ( P<0.001 and P=0.008 respectively). Compared with the baseline, the average micturition times per 24 hours at the 6th week decreased from baseline by 2.40(0.70, 4.60)times for the BTX-A group and 0.70(-1.00, 3.30) times for the placebo control group respectively, and the difference between the two groups was considered to be statistically significant ( P=0.003). The change rates of average micturition times per 24 hours from baseline at the 6th week of the two groups were (16±22)% and (8±25)% respectively, and the difference between the two groups was statistically significant ( P=0.014). Compared with the baseline, the average micturition times per 24 hours at 2nd and 12th week decreased by 2.00(0.00, 4.00)and 3.30(0.60, 5.03)for the BTX-A group, 1.00(-1.00, 3.00)and 1.70(-1.45, 3.85)for the placebo control group respectively. The difference between two groups was considered to be statistically significant ( P=0.038 and P=0.012); the changes of average urgency times per day for the BTX-A group and the control group at the 2nd, 6th and 12th week were 2.00(0.00, 4.30)and 2.40(0.30, 5.00), 3.00(0.30, 5.70)and 0.70(-1.30, 2.70), 0.70(-1.30, 3.00) and 1.35(-1.15, 3.50), respectively. There were significant differences between two groups at the 2nd, 6th and 12th week, ( P=0.010, P=0.003 and P=0.025, respectively). The OABSS of the BTX-A group and the control group at the 6th week decreased by 1.00(0.00, 4.00)and 0.50(-1.00, 2.00) compared with the baseline, and the difference between the two groups was statistically significant ( P=0.003). 47 cases of BTX-A group and 34 cases of placebo control group entered the extended trial phase, and 40 and 28 cases completed the extended trial phase, respectively. The average micturition volume per 24 hours changed by -16.60(-41.60, -0.60)ml and -6.40(-22.40, 13.30)ml, (-35.67±54.41)ml and(-1.76±48.69)ml, (-36.14±41.51)ml and (-9.28±44.59)ml, (-35.85±43.35)ml and(-10.41±40.29)ml for two groups at the 12th, 14th, 18th and 24th week, and the difference between two groups was statistically significant at each follow-up time ( P=0.01, 0.006, 0.012 and 0.016, respectively). There was no significant difference in other parameters( P>0.05). However, adverse reactions after intradetrusor injection included increased residual urine volume (27 in the BTX-A group and 3 in the control group), dysuria (21 in the BTX-A group and 6 in the control group), urinary infection (19 in the BTX-A group and 6 in the control group), bladder neck obstruction (3 in the BTX-A group and 0 in the control group), hematuria (3 in the BTX-A group and 1 in the control group), elevated alanine aminotransferase (3 in the BTX-A group and 0 in the control group), etc. During the follow-up period, there was no significant difference in the other adverse events between two groups except the increase of residual urine volume( P<0.05). In the primary trial phase, among the 27 cases with increased residual urine volume in BTA group, only 1 case (3.70%) with PVR more than 300 ml; the PVR of 3 patients in the placebo group was less than 100 ml. The increase of residual urine volume caused by the injection could be improved or disappeared with the passage of time. Conclusions:Intradetrusor injection of Chinese BTX-A improved the average micturition times per 24 hours, the average daily urgent micturition times, OABSS, and average micturition volume per time, and reduced the adverse effects in patients with overactive bladder.Chinese BTX-A at dose of 100U demonstrated durable efficacy and safety in the management of overactive bladder.