1.Temporally shifted hemodynamic response model helps to extract acupuncture-induced functional magnetic resonance imaging blood oxygenation-level dependent activities.
Tsung-Jung HO ; Jeng-Ren DUANN ; Chun-Ming CHEN ; Jeon-Hor CHEN ; Wu-Chung SHEN ; Tung-Wu LU ; Jan-Ray LIAO ; Zen-Pin LIN ; Kuo-Ning SHAW ; Jaung-Geng LIN
Chinese Medical Journal 2009;122(7):823-829
BACKGROUNDThe onsets of needling sensation introduced by acupuncture stimulus can vary widely from subject to subject. This should be explicitly accounted for by the model blood oxygenation-level dependent (BOLD) time course used in general linear model (GLM) analysis to obtain more consistent across-subject group results. However, in standard GLM analysis, the model BOLD time course obtained by convolving a canonical hemodynamic response function with an experimental paradigm time course is assumed identical across subjects. Although some added-on properties to the model BOLD time course, such as temporal and dispersion derivatives, may be used to account for different BOLD response onsets, they can only account for the BOLD onset deviations to the extent of less than one repetition time (TR).
METHODSIn this study, we explicitly manipulated the onsets of model BOLD time course by shifting it with -2, -1, or 1 TR and used these temporally shifted BOLD model to analyze the functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) data obtained from three acupuncture fMRI experiments with GLM analysis. One involved acupuncture stimulus on left ST42 acupoint and the other two on left GB40 and left BL64 acupoints.
RESULTSThe model BOLD time course with temporal shifts, in addition to temporal and dispersion derivatives, could result in better statistical power of the data analysis in terms of the average correlation coefficients between the used BOLD models and extracted BOLD responses from individual subject data and the T-values of the activation clusters in the grouped random effects.
CONCLUSIONSThe GLM analysis with ordinary BOLD model failed to catch the large variability of the onsets of the BOLD responses associated with the acupuncture needling sensation. Shifts in time with more than a TR on model BOLD time course might be required to better extract the acupuncture stimulus-induced BOLD activities from individual fMRI data.
Acupuncture ; Adult ; Female ; Hemodynamics ; physiology ; Humans ; Magnetic Resonance Imaging ; Male ; Oxygen ; blood ; Young Adult
2.PM
Ying-Hsiang CHOU ; Disline Manli TANTOH ; Ming-Chi WU ; Yeu-Sheng TYAN ; Pei-Hsin CHEN ; Oswald Ndi NFOR ; Shu-Yi HSU ; Chao-Yu SHEN ; Chien-Ning HUANG ; Yung-Po LIAW
Environmental Health and Preventive Medicine 2020;25(1):68-68
BACKGROUND:
Particulate matter (PM) < 2.5 μm (PM
METHODS:
We obtained DNA methylation and exercise data of 496 participants (aged between 30 and 70 years) from the Taiwan Biobank (TWB) database. We also extracted PM
RESULTS:
DLEC1 methylation and PM
CONCLUSIONS
We found significant positive associations between PM
Adult
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Aged
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Air Pollutants/adverse effects*
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DNA Methylation/drug effects*
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Environmental Exposure/adverse effects*
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Exercise
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Female
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Humans
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Male
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Middle Aged
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Particulate Matter/adverse effects*
;
Taiwan
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Tumor Suppressor Proteins/metabolism*
3.Eligibility of C-BIOPRED severe asthma cohort for type-2 biologic therapies.
Zhenan DENG ; Meiling JIN ; Changxing OU ; Wei JIANG ; Jianping ZHAO ; Xiaoxia LIU ; Shenghua SUN ; Huaping TANG ; Bei HE ; Shaoxi CAI ; Ping CHEN ; Penghui WU ; Yujing LIU ; Jian KANG ; Yunhui ZHANG ; Mao HUANG ; Jinfu XU ; Kewu HUANG ; Qiang LI ; Xiangyan ZHANG ; Xiuhua FU ; Changzheng WANG ; Huahao SHEN ; Lei ZHU ; Guochao SHI ; Zhongmin QIU ; Zhongguang WEN ; Xiaoyang WEI ; Wei GU ; Chunhua WEI ; Guangfa WANG ; Ping CHEN ; Lixin XIE ; Jiangtao LIN ; Yuling TANG ; Zhihai HAN ; Kian Fan CHUNG ; Qingling ZHANG ; Nanshan ZHONG
Chinese Medical Journal 2023;136(2):230-232