1.Gastric Emptying Time and Volume of the Small Intestine as Objective Markers in Patients With Symptoms of Diabetic Enteropathy
Mette W KLINGE ; Nanna SUTTER ; Esben B MARK ; Anne-Mette HAASE ; Per BORGHAMMER ; Vincent SCHLAGETER ; Sten LUND ; Jesper FLEISCHER ; Karoline KNUDSEN ; Asbjørn M DREWES ; Klaus KROGH
Journal of Neurogastroenterology and Motility 2021;27(3):390-399
Background/Aims:
Patients with diabetes mellitus (DM) often suffer from gastrointestinal (GI) symptoms, but these correlate poorly to established objective GI motility measures. Our aim is to perform a detailed evaluation of potential measures of gastric and small intestinal motility in patients with DM type 1 and severe GI symptoms.
Methods:
Twenty patients with DM and 20 healthy controls (HCs) were included. GI motility was examined with a 3-dimensional-Transit capsule, while organ volumes were determined by CT scans.
Results:
Patients with DM and HCs did not differ with regard to median gastric contraction frequency (DM: 3.0 contractions/minute [interquartile range {IQR}, 2.9-3.0]; HCs: 2.9 [IQR, 2.8-3.1]; P= 0.725), amplitude of gastric contractions (DM: 9 mm [IQR, 8-11]; HCs: 11 mm (IQR, 9-12); P = 0.151) or fasting volume of the stomach wall (DM: 149 cm3 [IQR, 112-187]; HCs: 132 cm3 [IQR, 107-154]; P= 0.121). Median gastric emptying time was prolonged in patients (DM: 3.3 hours [IQR, 2.6-4.6]; HCs: 2.4 hours [IQR, 1.8-2.7];P= 0.002). No difference was found in small intestinal transit time (DM: 5 hours [IQR, 3.7-5.6]; HCs: 4.8 hours [IQR, 3.9-6.0]; P = 0.883). However, patients with DM had significantly larger volume of the small intestinal wall (DM: 623 cm3 [IQR, 487-766]; HCs: 478 cm 3 [IQR, 393-589]; P = 0.003). Among patients, 13 (68%) had small intestinal wall volume and 9 (50%) had gastric emptying time above the upper 95% percentile of HCs.
Conclusion
In our study, gastric emptying time and volume of the small intestinal wall appeared to be the best objective measures in patients with DM type 1 and symptoms and gastroenteropathy.
2.Gastric Emptying Time and Volume of the Small Intestine as Objective Markers in Patients With Symptoms of Diabetic Enteropathy
Mette W KLINGE ; Nanna SUTTER ; Esben B MARK ; Anne-Mette HAASE ; Per BORGHAMMER ; Vincent SCHLAGETER ; Sten LUND ; Jesper FLEISCHER ; Karoline KNUDSEN ; Asbjørn M DREWES ; Klaus KROGH
Journal of Neurogastroenterology and Motility 2021;27(3):390-399
Background/Aims:
Patients with diabetes mellitus (DM) often suffer from gastrointestinal (GI) symptoms, but these correlate poorly to established objective GI motility measures. Our aim is to perform a detailed evaluation of potential measures of gastric and small intestinal motility in patients with DM type 1 and severe GI symptoms.
Methods:
Twenty patients with DM and 20 healthy controls (HCs) were included. GI motility was examined with a 3-dimensional-Transit capsule, while organ volumes were determined by CT scans.
Results:
Patients with DM and HCs did not differ with regard to median gastric contraction frequency (DM: 3.0 contractions/minute [interquartile range {IQR}, 2.9-3.0]; HCs: 2.9 [IQR, 2.8-3.1]; P= 0.725), amplitude of gastric contractions (DM: 9 mm [IQR, 8-11]; HCs: 11 mm (IQR, 9-12); P = 0.151) or fasting volume of the stomach wall (DM: 149 cm3 [IQR, 112-187]; HCs: 132 cm3 [IQR, 107-154]; P= 0.121). Median gastric emptying time was prolonged in patients (DM: 3.3 hours [IQR, 2.6-4.6]; HCs: 2.4 hours [IQR, 1.8-2.7];P= 0.002). No difference was found in small intestinal transit time (DM: 5 hours [IQR, 3.7-5.6]; HCs: 4.8 hours [IQR, 3.9-6.0]; P = 0.883). However, patients with DM had significantly larger volume of the small intestinal wall (DM: 623 cm3 [IQR, 487-766]; HCs: 478 cm 3 [IQR, 393-589]; P = 0.003). Among patients, 13 (68%) had small intestinal wall volume and 9 (50%) had gastric emptying time above the upper 95% percentile of HCs.
Conclusion
In our study, gastric emptying time and volume of the small intestinal wall appeared to be the best objective measures in patients with DM type 1 and symptoms and gastroenteropathy.
3.Predicting COVID-19 epidemiological trend by applying population mobility data in two-stage modeling.
Shu LI ; Qinchuan WANG ; Sicong WANG ; Junlin JIA ; Changzheng YUAN ; Sisi WANG ; Xifeng WU ; Shuyin CAO ; Chen CHEN ; Xiaolin XU ; Yuanqing YE ; Zhengping XU ; Hao LEI ; Zhijun YING ; Kejia HU ; Vermund STEN H
Journal of Zhejiang University. Medical sciences 2021;50(1):68-73
To predict the epidemiological trend of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) by mathematical modeling based on the population mobility and the epidemic prevention and control measures. : As of February 8,2020,the information of 151 confirmed cases in Yueqing,Zhejiang province were obtained,including patients' infection process,population mobility between Yueqing and Wuhan,etc. To simulate and predict the development trend of COVID-19 in Yueqing, the study established two-stage mathematical models,integrating the population mobility data with the date of symptom appearance of confirmed cases and the transmission dynamics of imported and local cases. : It was found that in the early stage of the pandemic,the number of daily imported cases from Wuhan (using the date of symptom appearance) was positively associated with the number of population travelling from Wuhan to Yueqing on the same day and 6 and 9 days before that. The study predicted that the final outbreak size in Yueqing would be 170 according to the number of imported cases estimated by consulting the population number travelling from Wuhan to Yueqing and the susceptible-exposed-infectious-recovered (SEIR) model; while the number would be 165 if using the reported daily number of imported cases. These estimates were close to the 170,the actual monitoring number of cases in Yueqing as of April 27,2020. : The two-stage modeling approach used in this study can accurately predict COVID-19 epidemiological trend.
COVID-19
;
China/epidemiology*
;
Disease Outbreaks
;
Humans
;
Models, Theoretical
;
Pandemics
;
SARS-CoV-2
4.Subjective Well-being and Family Functioning among Adolescents Left Behind by Migrating Parents in Jiangxi Province, China.
Jia ZHOU ; Fang HU ; Jing WU ; Zhi Yong ZOU ; Yi Xin WANG ; Hua Can PENG ; Sten H VERMUND ; Yi Fei HU ; Ying Hua MA
Biomedical and Environmental Sciences 2018;31(5):382-388
We sought to identify the differences between adolescents left behind in their home villages/towns (LBA) and non-left behind adolescents (NLB) on subjective well-being and family functioning due to parental migration in south China. We used a stratified cluster sampling method to recruit middle school students in a city experiencing population-emigration in Jiangxi Province in 2010. Participants included adolescents from families with: (1) one migrant parent, (2) both parents who migrated, or (3) non-left behind adolescents (i.e., no migrant parent). To determine predictors of subjective well-being, we used structural equation models. Adolescents left behind by both parents (LBB) were less likely to express life satisfaction (P = 0.038) in terms of their environments (P = 0.011) compared with NLB. A parent or parents who migrated predicts lower subjective well-being of adolescents (P = 0.051) and also lower academic performance. Being apart from their parents may affect family functioning negatively from an adolescent's viewpoint. Given the hundreds of millions of persons in China, many who are parents, migrating for work, there may be mental health challenges in some of the adolescents left behind.
Adolescent
;
Aging
;
China
;
Emigration and Immigration
;
Female
;
Humans
;
Male
;
Mental Health
;
statistics & numerical data
;
Parent-Child Relations
;
Parents
;
Psychology, Adolescent
;
Rural Population
;
Socioeconomic Factors
;
Surveys and Questionnaires
;
Transients and Migrants
5.Clinical Study on 136 Children with Sudden Sensorineural Hearing Loss.
Feng-Jiao LI ; Da-Yong WANG ; Hong-Yang WANG ; Li WANG ; Feng-Bo YANG ; Lan LAN ; Jing GUAN ; Zi-Fang YIN ; Ulf ROSENHALL ; Lan YU ; Sten HELLSTROM ; Xi-Jun XUE ; Mao-Li DUAN ; Qiu-Ju WANG
Chinese Medical Journal 2016;129(8):946-952
BACKGROUNDThe prevalence of sudden sensorineural hearing loss in children (CSSNHL) is consistently increasing. However, the pathology and prognosis of CSSNHL are still poorly understood. This retrospective study evaluated clinical characteristics and possible associated factors of CSSNHL.
METHODSOne hundred and thirty-six CSSNHL patients treated in Department of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery and Institute of Otolaryngology at Chinese PLA General Hospital between July 2008 and August 2015 were included in this study. These patients were analyzed for clinical characteristics, audiological characteristics, laboratory examinations, and prognostic factors.
RESULTSAmong the 136 patients (151 ears), 121 patients (121 ears, 80.1%) were diagnosed with unilaterally CSSNHL, and 15 patients (30 ears, 19.9%) with bilateral CSSNHL. The complete recovery rate of CSSNHL was 9.3%, and the overall recovery rate was 37.7%. We found that initial degree of hearing loss, onset of treatment, tinnitus, the ascending type audiogram, gender, side of hearing loss, the recorded auditory brainstem response (ABR), and distortion product otoacoustic emissions (DPOAEs) had prognostic significance. Age, ear fullness, and vertigo had no significant correlation with recovery. Furthermore, the relevant blood tests showed 30.8% of the children had abnormal white blood cell (WBC) counts, 22.1% had elevated homocysteine levels, 65.8% had high alkaline phosphatase (ALP), 33.8% had high IgE antibody levels, and 86.1% had positive cytomegalovirus (CMV) IgG antibodies.
CONCLUSIONSCSSNHL commonly occurs unilaterally and results in severe hearing loss. Initial severe hearing loss and bilateral hearing loss are negative prognostic factors for hearing recovery, while positive prognostic factors include tinnitus, gender, the ascending type audiogram, early treatment, identifiable ABR waves, and DPOAEs. Age, vertigo, and ear fullness are not correlated with the recovery. Some serologic indicators, including the level of WBC, platelet, homocysteine, ALP, positive CMV IgG antibody, fibrinogen, and some immunologic indicators, are closely related to CSSNHL.
Adolescent ; Child ; Child, Preschool ; Evoked Potentials, Auditory, Brain Stem ; Female ; Hearing Loss, Sensorineural ; blood ; etiology ; physiopathology ; Humans ; Male ; Otoacoustic Emissions, Spontaneous ; Retrospective Studies
6.Retrograde Stent Placement for Coil Embolization of a Wide-Necked Posterior Inferior Cerebellar Artery Aneurysm.
Hong Gee ROH ; Young Il CHUN ; Jin Woo CHOI ; Joon CHO ; Won Jin MOON ; Sten SOLANDER
Korean Journal of Radiology 2012;13(4):510-514
Wide-necked aneurysms of the posterior inferior cerebellar artery (PICA) are infrequently encountered in cerebrovascular practice, and endovascular treatment is difficult or impossible even with the use of several neck remodeling techniques. We present the case of a patient with a wide-necked aneurysm of the PICA, which was treated by the retrograde stenting through the contralateral vertebral artery and vertebrobasilar junction with antegrade coil embolization.
Cerebellar Diseases/radiography/*therapy
;
Cerebral Angiography
;
Embolization, Therapeutic/instrumentation/*methods
;
Humans
;
Intracranial Aneurysm/radiography/*therapy
;
Male
;
Middle Aged
;
*Stents
;
Tomography, X-Ray Computed
7.Registry of infl ammatory demyelinating diseases of the central nervous system in the Asia-Pacifi c region
Qi Cheng ; Allan G. Kermode ; Bhim Singhal ; Kwang Ho Lee ; Victor HT Chong ; Nguyen Thanh Binh ; Ching-Piao Tsai ; Jusuf Misbach ; Guo-Xin Jiang ; Sten Fredrikson
Neurology Asia 2012;17(1):49-54
Background and Objective: Comparable data are sparse for infl ammatory demyelinating diseases of
the central nervous system (CNS) in the Asia-Pacifi c region, and we aimed to establish a registry
of patients with such diseases in the region. Methods: A network of neurologists in the Asia-Pacifi c
Region was established to register patients with the targeted diseases. A standardized register form and
relevant instructions in English, translated into the local language when needed, were prepared before
the study start and used for data collection. Results: Eight study centres from different countries/areas
participated in the study. In total, 857 patients with a validated diagnosis of different infl ammatory
demyelinating diseases of the CNS were registered, 591 females and 266 males with a female-to-male
ratio 2.2. The mean age at onset for all patients was 35.9 (SD: 12.9) years, signifi cantly younger (p =
0.010) for females (35.1 years, SD: 12.6 years) than for males (37.6 years, SD: 13.4 years).
Conclusion: Patients with different infl ammatory demyelinating diseases of the CNS were in the fi rst
time registered in a multi-centre study from eight countries/areas in the Asia-Pacifi c region. A platform
and basis has been established for further study in the fi eld.
9.Evaluation of BED-CEIA assay with dried blood spot specimens in China
Sheng SHEN ; Fei TIAN ; Hna-Zhou JIANG ; GUO-Qing SUN ; Li-Feng MIAO ; Xiao-Li GUO ; Yao XIAO ; Yu-Jiang JIA ; Vermund H. STEN ; Yan JIANG
Chinese Journal of Epidemiology 2009;30(3):273-276
Objective To study the feasibility of using dried blood spot (DBS) specimens in BED-CEIA assay and to estimate the HIV-1 incidence with DBS in China. Methods 10 313 participants from 27 voluntary counseling and testing(VCT) sites were enrolled in this study. Both plasma and DBS specimens were collected. 349 eligible pairs of HIV-1 positive specimens confirmed by Western Blot were available for BED-CEIA and the results compared. Negative control, low positive control, high positive control and calibrator in DBS were used to evaluate the stability and repeatability of the detection results of DBS specimens. Results Of the total HIV positives, 294 and 53 participants were tested as long-term or recent HIV infections by both DBS and plasma specimens. Two participants showed different results from DBS and plasma specimens, but their final An values were close to the cutoff value of BED-CEIA assay. The concordance rate between the two types of specimens was 99.43% and the R2 linear of the stability and repeatability results of DBS specimens reached 0.9551 and 0.95, respectively. Conclusion Although some individual specimens showed different results, the incidence rates calculated from both types of specimen were equivalent. DBS specimens were suitable for estimating the HIV incidence and could be popularized in China. However, further studies regarding window period and adjustment coefficients of BED-CEIA assay are needed.
10.Sharing of needles and paraphernalia injection in new and long-term injection drug users in Sichuan, China
Jian-Bo LIU ; Ling-Lin ZHANG ; Wen-Hong LAI ; Liao FENG ; Ya-Li ZENG ; Li LIU ; Ying HU ; Jie LI ; Xiao-Lin ZHANG ; Yan XIAO ; H.Vermund STEN ; Yu-Jiang JIA
Chinese Journal of Epidemiology 2009;30(7):656-662
Objective To examine the prevalence and correlates for needle-sharing among new and long-term injection drug users (IDUs) in Sichuan province, China. Methods Three consecutive cross-sectional surveys were conducted in 6 prefectures of Sichuan province, from 2003 to 2005.Questionnaire-based interviews provided information including socio-demographics, drug-use, sexual behaviors, and HIV-related services. Multivariable logistic regression methodology was used for data analysis. Results Of 3852 eligible participants, the rates of needle-sharing in the last 6 months for IDUs with a less than one year, one to three year, and more than three year injection history were 19.9%,29.1%, and 36.3%, respectively. Needle-sharing for IDUs with a less than one-year injection history was independently associated with factors as: being female, having minority background, higher frequency of injection, sharing injecting equipments, ever having had a non-regular sex partner, or a regular sex partner who injected drugs, never had a test on HIV, being recruited in 2005, and from Zigong prefectm'es of Sichuan. Needle-sharing for IDUs with a 1-3 year injection history were independently associated with receiving less education, having higher frequency of injecting behavior, sharing injecting equipments,ever having had a non-regular sex partner/a regular sex partner who injected drugs, ever having had unprotected sex with a non-regular sex partner, ever having had unprotected sex with a commercial sex partner or client, never attended skill training for HIV/STD prevention, being recruited in 2005 and 2004,and being recruited from Deyang, Zigong, and Liangshan prefectures. Needle-sharing for IDUs with a more than three-year injection history was independently associated with factors as: less education, higher frequency of injecting, sharing injecting equipment, ever had a non-regular sex partner, ever had unprotected sex with a non-regular sex partner, ever had unprotected sex with a commercial sex partner or client, having had regular sex partners who inject drugs, never attended needle exchange programs, being recruited in 2005 and 2004, and being recruited from Deyang, Zigong, and Liangshan prefectures. Conclusion The rates for both needle/paraphernalia sharing and unprotected sex behaviors were high in the IDUs in Sichuan province. These rates were higher among longer-term IDUs than in new IDUs. Our data underlined that better targeted, in-depth and sustained comprehensive intervention packages which including needle exchange, condom promotion along with distribution, and education, were urgently needed to reduce both IDU-related and sex-related risk behaviors among both new and longer term IDUs.

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