1.Misdiagnosed bilateral congenital second branchial fistula: one case report.
Zibin HUANG ; Zhimao ZHANG ; Zhi PEI
Journal of Clinical Otorhinolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery 2014;28(3):205-206
Adult
;
Branchial Region
;
abnormalities
;
Branchioma
;
congenital
;
diagnosis
;
Diagnostic Errors
;
Female
;
Fistula
;
congenital
;
diagnosis
;
Humans
2.Research progress on the application of exosomes in periodontal regeneration
Xinyue HUANG ; Xu GONG ; Weiwei GUO ; Zibin ZHANG ; Zihao GONG ; Zhongshan WANG
Journal of Practical Stomatology 2024;40(1):117-121
The prevalence of periodontal disease in Chinese population is more than 90%.The present treatment techniques can only control the development of the disease,inducement of bone tissue regeneration is a promising strategy and a challenge for the treatment.Exosomes are multivesicle structures derived from endosomes.More and more studies have been conducted on their application in perio-dontal regeneration.This paper reviews the application of exosome in periodontal regeneration in recent years,which is expected to pro-vide new idea for periodontal regeneration therapy.
3.Novel STING-targeted PET radiotracer for alert and therapeutic evaluation of acute lung injury.
Duo XU ; Fan YANG ; Jiayao CHEN ; Tianxing ZHU ; Fen WANG ; Yitai XIAO ; Zibin LIANG ; Lei BI ; Guolong HUANG ; Zebo JIANG ; Hong SHAN ; Dan LI
Acta Pharmaceutica Sinica B 2023;13(5):2124-2137
Acute lung injury (ALI), as a common clinical emergency, is pulmonary edema and diffuse lung infiltration caused by inflammation. The lack of non-invasive alert strategy, resulting in failure to carry out preventive treatment, means high mortality and poor prognosis. Stimulator of interferon genes (STING) is a key molecular biomarker of innate immunity in response to inflammation, but there is still a lack of STING-targeted strategy. In this study, a novel STING-targeted PET tracer, [18F]FBTA, was labeled with high radiochemical yield (79.7 ± 4.3%) and molar activity (32.5 ± 2.9 GBq/μmol). We confirmed that [18F]FBTA has a strong STING binding affinity (Kd = 26.86 ± 6.79 nmol/L) and can be used for PET imaging in ALI mice to alert early lung inflammation and to assess the efficacy of drug therapy. Our STING-targeted strategy also reveals that [18F]FBTA can trace ALI before reaching the computed tomography (CT) diagnostic criteria, and demonstrates its better specificity and distribution than [18F]fluorodeoxyglucose ([18F]FDG).