1.Validation of the Chinese Version of Penn Alcohol Craving Scale for Patients With Alcohol Use Disorder
Yu-Yu KO ; Su-Chen FANG ; Wei-Chien HUANG ; Ming-Chyi HUANG ; Hu-Ming CHANG
Psychiatry Investigation 2024;21(2):159-164
Objective:
The Penn Alcohol Craving Scale (PACS) is a five-item, single-dimension questionnaire that is used to measure a patient’s alcohol craving. We sought to develop the Chinese version of the PACS (PACS-C) and assess its reliability and validity.
Methods:
A total of 160 Taiwanese patients with alcohol use disorder were enrolled in this study. The internal consistency and concurrent validity of the PASC-C with the visual analogue scale (VAS) for craving, the Yale–Brown Obsessive Compulsive Scale for heavy drinking (YBOCS-hd), and the Severity of Alcohol Dependence Questionnaire (SADQ) were assessed. The test–retest reliability of the PASC-C was evaluated 1 day after the baseline measurements. Confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) was performed to examine the psychometric properties of the PACS-C.
Results:
The PACS-C exhibited good internal consistency (Cronbach’s α=0.95) and test–retest reliability (r=0.97). This scale showed high correlations with the VAS (r=0.81) and YBOCS-hd (r=0.81 and 0.79 for the obsession and compulsion subscales, respectively), and moderate correlation with the SADQ-C (r=0.47). Furthermore, CFA results revealed that the PACS-C had good fit indices under various models.
Conclusion
The PACS-C appears to be a reliable and valid tool for assessing alcohol craving in patients with alcohol use disorder in Taiwan.
2.Scaly Ear Rash as the Herald of a Young Girl with Juvenile Systemic Lupus Erythematosus.
Ching Fu HUANG ; Wei Ming WANG ; Chien Ping CHIANG
Annals of Dermatology 2011;23(Suppl 3):S333-S337
Juvenile systemic lupus erythematosus (JSLE) is an autoimmune-mediated multiorgan disease. The cutaneous manifestation is one of the most common initial presentations in JSLE. A typical lesion is a facial malar rash, but a patient may sometimes present with nonclassical lesions. Herein, we report two cases of JSLE with similar persistent scaly ear rashes as the heralding cutaneous symptom preceding systemic symptoms. Identifying this atypical and underestimated cutaneous rash in juvenile patients might help the clinician make the correct diagnosis and provide earlier intervention, which may help prevent disease progression.
Disease Progression
;
Ear
;
Exanthema
;
Humans
;
Lupus Erythematosus, Systemic
3.Clinical characteristics of renal infarction in an Asian population.
Chien-Cheng HUANG ; Wei-Lung CHEN ; Jiann-Hwa CHEN ; Yung-Lung WU ; Chi-Jei SHIAO
Annals of the Academy of Medicine, Singapore 2008;37(5):416-420
INTRODUCTIONRenal infarction is a rare and easily missed disease. There is even less meaningful information on renal infarction in the Asian population. Thus, the aim of this study was to clarify the clinical characteristics of the disease in Asian patients.
CLINICAL PICTUREOver a period of 10 years, 38 Chinese patients with renal infarction diagnosed by contract-enhanced CT or angiography were enrolled in this study. Their demographic data, clinical characteristics, laboratory and image results, risk factors or suspected causes, treatment and final outcomes were retrospectively reviewed. The results were also compared with the analogous Western data. The mean age of the sample population was 60.8 +/- 17.6 years, with patients aged over 50 years and males predominating. The most common symptoms/signs were abdominal (57.9%) and flank pain/tenderness (50%). Only 23.7% of patients had suffered previous thromboembolic events such as coronary or peripheral artery diseases, or cerebral infarction. Cardiogenic factors, such as atrial fibrillation, intra-cardiac thrombus, infective endocarditis and valvular heart disease, were the main causes of renal infarction (57.9%). The most common laboratory abnormalities were elevated serum LDH (92.1%) and proteinuria (76.3%). Only half of the cases involved haematuria at initial presentation.
TREATMENT AND OUTCOMEOne-third of the sample suffered renal impairment after the renal infarction. Overall mortality rate during admission was 13.2% (n = 5). The cause of death was usually not the renal infarction itself but rather the underlying disease and its complications. There was no difference in outcome for anticoagulation treatment with or without thrombolytics. Compared to their Western counterparts, the proportion of males (71.1% versus 48.3%) and bilateral renal infarctions (31.6% versus 12.4%) were significantly higher, and the percentage of leukocytosis (50% versus 85%) significantly lower in our Asian patients.
CONCLUSIONClinical presentation of renal infarction is usually non-specific and differs for Asian and Western populations. In our Asian patients, the most common clinical characteristics were abdominal pain/tenderness, flank pain/tenderness, elevated serum LDH and proteinuria. Early diagnosis and treatment are imperative because of the high rate of renal impairment and associated mortality. If this disease is suspected, contrast-enhanced CT is suggested to exclude or confirm renal infarction and anticoagulation alone is currently the favored treatment.
Abdominal Pain ; etiology ; Aged ; Cerebral Angiography ; Cohort Studies ; Female ; Flank Pain ; etiology ; Humans ; Infarction ; complications ; diagnostic imaging ; ethnology ; Kidney ; blood supply ; diagnostic imaging ; Male ; Middle Aged ; Retrospective Studies ; Taiwan ; Tomography, X-Ray Computed
4.Prognostic value of auto-antibodies to extractable nuclear antigens in neuromyelitis optica
Min-Chien Tu ; Nai-Ching Chen ; Chun-Chung Lui ; Wen-Neng Chang ; Chi-Wei Huang ; Sz-Fan Chen ; Chiung-Chih Chang
Neurology Asia 2014;19(3):287-293
Background: Compared with the Western population, central demyelinating disorders are relatively
rare while the data on the prognostic value of autoantibodies together with clinical characteristics and
cognitive dysfunction has rarely been explored in neuromyelitis optica (NMO) and multiple sclerosis
(MS). Methods: Nineteen patients with MS and 14 with NMO underwent clinical profiling and cognitive
assessment. According to serology tests, they are divided into four subgroups for further analysis.
Results: There was higher frequency of aquaporin-4 immunoglobulin G. sero-positivity (64.3% vs.
10.5%; p=0.003) and antinuclear antibodies (ANA) and/or antibodies to extractable nuclear antigens
(anti-ENA) in NMO compared to MS (42.9% vs. 5.2%; p=0.026). The presence of anti-ENA represented
a unique clinical phenotype, with longer segment of myelitis (p=0.049), female preponderance, and an
inverse correlation between age-of-onset and annual relapse rate (ρ= -0.88, p=0.021). Among patients
with anti-ENA positivity, comprehensive serology panels revealed Sjögren’s syndrome A antibodies
as the most common (83%), in contrast to limited clinical documentation of Sjögren’s syndrome
(16%). There was no significant difference in cognitive assessment by anti-ENA status. MS and NMO
represent two different serologic entities.
Conclusions: Anti-ENA may have prognostic value for its linkage to a unique clinical phenotype,
which has longer initial segment of myelitis, female preponderance, and higher annual relapse rate
on earlier age-of-onset, but has limited clinical impact on cognition. Further studies are warranted
to investigate whether anti-ENA represents an epiphenomenon of myelitis or simply a systemic
inflammatory state.
5.Clinical diagnosis rather than aquaporin-4 immunoglobulin status predicts the cognitive performance in central demyelinating disease
Min-Chien Tu ; Wen-Neng Chang ; Chun-Chung Lui ; Nai-Ching Chen ; Chi-Wei Huang ; Chen-Chang Lee ; Ching Chen ; Chiung-Chih Chang
Neurology Asia 2012;17(4):331-340
Background:Reports on the aquaporin-4 immunoglobulin G (AQP4-IgG) status for cognitive performance
and neuroimaging correlations are limited in neuromyelitis optica (NMO) and multiple sclerosis (MS)
literature. Methods: Cognitive results of 19 MS and 15 NMO patients were compared with 47 agematched
controls. Apparent diffusion coeffi cient (ADC) values were used to delineate gray matter
and white matter damages and correlate with neuropsychological results. Results: Verbal memory test
showed signifi cant differences between MS and NMO in the late registration, early and delay recall
(p<0.05), while their retention rates were even. In MS, ADC values were signifi cantly elevated in the
dorsolateral prefrontal and occipital gray matter which was in contrast with NMO group that showed
elevation in the dorsolateral prefrontal gray matter and parieto-occcipital white matter. AQP4-IgG
status exerted a limited effect on ADC values and neuropsychological results.
Conclusions: Verbal memory test might be helpful in differentiating NMO and MS. ADC values
can be used as a surrogate marker for tissue injury in NMO and MS since they were in line with the
cognition scores. Anatomical regions with elevated ADC values were different in NMO and MS.
6.Perforated Sigmoid Colon Cancer within an Irreducible Inguinal Hernia: a Case Report.
Kai Hsiung KO ; Chih Yung YU ; Chien Chang KAO ; Shih Hung TSAI ; Guo Shu HUANG ; Wei Chou CHANG
Korean Journal of Radiology 2010;11(2):231-233
A perforated sigmoid colon cancer within an inguinal hernia is extremely rare. This unexpected finding is usually discovered during surgery and causes an unavoidable septic evolution. Here, we describe the case of an 84-year-old man who presented with fever, abdominal distension, and a painful, enlarged, left scrotum. A CT showed a left, incarcerated, inguinal hernia containing a perforated sigmoid adenocarcinoma (which was confirmed by histopathology). The possibility of an irreducible inguinal hernia in association with perforated sigmoid colon cancer should be considered in the array of diagnoses. A pre-operative CT scan would be helpful in facilitating an accurate diagnosis.
Adenocarcinoma/complications/*radiography/surgery
;
Aged, 80 and over
;
Colon, Sigmoid/radiography/surgery
;
Diagnosis, Differential
;
Fatal Outcome
;
Fever/etiology
;
Hernia, Inguinal/complications/*radiography/surgery
;
Humans
;
Intestinal Perforation/complications/*radiography/surgery
;
Male
;
Pain/etiology
;
Shock, Septic/complications
;
Sigmoid Neoplasms/complications/*radiography/surgery
;
Tomography, X-Ray Computed
7.Dysregulated Free Fatty Acid Receptor 2 Exacerbates Colonic Adenoma Formation in ApcMin/+ Mice: Relation to Metabolism and Gut Microbiota Composition
Yi-Wen HUANG ; Chien-Wei LIN ; Pan PAN ; Carla Elena ECHEVESTE ; Athena DONG ; Kiyoko OSHIMA ; Martha YEARSLEY ; Jianhua YU ; Li-Shu WANG
Journal of Cancer Prevention 2021;26(1):32-40
Free fatty acid receptor 2 (FFAR2) has been reported as a tumor suppressor in colon cancer development. The current study investigated the effects of FFAR2 signaling on energy metabolism and gut microbiota profiling in a colorectal cancer mouse model (ApcMin/+). FFAR2 deficiency promoted colonic polyp development and enhanced fatty acid oxidation and bile acid metabolism. Gut microbiome sequencing analysis showed distinct clustering among wild-type, ApcMin/+, and ApcMin/+-Ffar2-/- mice. The relative abundance of Flavobacteriaceae and Verrucomicrobiaceae was significantly increased in the ApcMin/+-Ffar2-/- mice compared to the ApcMin/+ mice. In addition, knocking-down FFAR2 in the human colon cancer cell lines (SW480 and HT29) resulted in increased expression of several key enzymes in fatty acid oxidation, such as carnitine palmitoyltransferase 2, acyl-CoA dehydrogenase, longchain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase, C-2 to C-3 short chain, and hydroxyacyl-CoA dehydrogenase/3-ketoacyl-CoA thiolase/enoyl-CoA hydratase, alpha subunit. Collectively, these results demonstrated that FFAR2 deficiency significantly altered profiles of fatty acid metabolites and gut microbiome, which might promote colorectal cancer development.
8.Dysregulated Free Fatty Acid Receptor 2 Exacerbates Colonic Adenoma Formation in ApcMin/+ Mice: Relation to Metabolism and Gut Microbiota Composition
Yi-Wen HUANG ; Chien-Wei LIN ; Pan PAN ; Carla Elena ECHEVESTE ; Athena DONG ; Kiyoko OSHIMA ; Martha YEARSLEY ; Jianhua YU ; Li-Shu WANG
Journal of Cancer Prevention 2021;26(1):32-40
Free fatty acid receptor 2 (FFAR2) has been reported as a tumor suppressor in colon cancer development. The current study investigated the effects of FFAR2 signaling on energy metabolism and gut microbiota profiling in a colorectal cancer mouse model (ApcMin/+). FFAR2 deficiency promoted colonic polyp development and enhanced fatty acid oxidation and bile acid metabolism. Gut microbiome sequencing analysis showed distinct clustering among wild-type, ApcMin/+, and ApcMin/+-Ffar2-/- mice. The relative abundance of Flavobacteriaceae and Verrucomicrobiaceae was significantly increased in the ApcMin/+-Ffar2-/- mice compared to the ApcMin/+ mice. In addition, knocking-down FFAR2 in the human colon cancer cell lines (SW480 and HT29) resulted in increased expression of several key enzymes in fatty acid oxidation, such as carnitine palmitoyltransferase 2, acyl-CoA dehydrogenase, longchain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase, C-2 to C-3 short chain, and hydroxyacyl-CoA dehydrogenase/3-ketoacyl-CoA thiolase/enoyl-CoA hydratase, alpha subunit. Collectively, these results demonstrated that FFAR2 deficiency significantly altered profiles of fatty acid metabolites and gut microbiome, which might promote colorectal cancer development.
9.Protocatechuic Acid, a Gut Bacterial Metabolite of Black Raspberries, Inhibits Adenoma Development and Alters Gut Microbiome Profiles in Apc Min/+ Mice
Athena DONG ; Chien-Wei LIN ; Carla Elena ECHEVESTE ; Yi-Wen HUANG ; Kiyoko OSHIMA ; Martha YEARSLEY ; Xiao CHEN ; Jianhua YU ; Li-Shu WANG
Journal of Cancer Prevention 2022;27(1):50-57
Administration of black raspberries (BRBs) and their anthocyanin metabolites, including protocatechuic acid (PCA), has been demonstrated to exert chemopreventive effects against colorectal cancer through alteration of innate immune cell trafficking, modulation of metabolic and inflammatory pathways, etc. Previous research has shown that the gut microbiome is important in the effectiveness of chemoprevention of colorectal cancer. This study aimed to assess the potency of PCA versus BRB dietary administration for colorectal cancer prevention using an Apc Min/+ mouse model and determine how bacterial profiles change in response to PCA and BRBs. A control AIN-76A diet supplemented with 5% BRBs, 500 ppm PCA, or 1,000 ppm PCA was administered to Apc Min/+ mice. Changes in incidence, polyp number, and polyp size regarding adenomas of the small intestine and colon were assessed after completion of the diet regimen. There were significant decreases in adenoma development by dietary administration of PCA and BRBs in the small intestine and the 5% BRB-supplemented diet in the colon. Pro-inflammatory bacterial profiles were replaced with anti-inflammatory bacteria in all treatments, with the greatest effects in the 5% BRB and 500 ppm PCA-supplemented diets ac-companied by decreased COX-2 and prostaglandin E 2 levels in colonic mucosa. We further showed that 500 ppm PCA, but not 1,000 ppm PCA, increased IFN-γ and SMAD4 levels in primary cultured human natural killer cells. These results suggest that both BRBs and a lower dose PCA can benefit colorectal cancer patients by inhibiting the growth and proliferation of adenomas and promoting a more favorable gut microbiome condition.
10.Tissue Quality Comparison Between Heparinized Wet Suction and Dry Suction in Endoscopic Ultrasound-Fine Needle Biopsy of Solid Pancreatic Masses: A Randomized Crossover Study
Meng-Ying LIN ; Cheng-Lin WU ; Yung-Yeh SU ; Chien-Jui HUANG ; Wei-Lun CHANG ; Bor-Shyang SHEU
Gut and Liver 2023;17(2):318-327
Background/Aims:
A high-quality sample allows for next-generation sequencing and the administration of more tailored precision medicine treatments. We aimed to evaluate whether heparinized wet suction can obtain higher quality samples than the standard dry-suction method during endoscopic ultrasound (EUS)-guided biopsy of pancreatic masses.
Methods:
A prospective randomized crossover study was conducted. Patients with a solid pancreatic mass were randomly allocated to receive either heparinized wet suction first or dry suction first. For each method, two needle passes were made, followed by a switch to the other method for a total of four needle punctures. The primary outcome was the aggregated white tissue length. Histological blood contamination, diagnostic performance and adverse events were analyzed as secondary outcomes. In addition, the correlation between white tissue length and the extracted DNA amount was analyzed.
Results:
A total of 50 patients were enrolled, and 200 specimens were acquired (100 with heparinized wet suction and 100 with dry suction), with one minor bleeding event. The heparinized wet suction approach yielded specimens with longer aggregated white tissue length (11.07 mm vs 7.96 mm, p=0.001) and less blood contamination (p=0.008). A trend towards decreasing tissue quality was observed for the 2nd pass of the dry-suction method, leading to decreased diagnostic sensitivity and accuracy, although the accumulated diagnostic performance was comparable between the two suction methods. The amount of extracted DNA correlated positively to the white tissue length (p=0.001, Spearman ̕s ρ=0.568).
Conclusions
Heparinized wet suction for EUS tissue acquisition of solid pancreatic masses can yield longer, bloodless, DNA-rich tissue without increasing the incidence of adverse events (ClinicalTrials.gov. identifier NCT04707560).