1.Effect of Tele-exercise Interventions on Quality of Life in Cancer Patients: A Meta-analysis
Xiaoli CHEN ; Chuanmei ZHU ; Juejin LI ; Lin ZHOU ; Shu ZHANG ; Yun ZHANG ; Xiaolin HU
Asian Nursing Research 2024;18(4):348-357
Purpose:
To evaluate the impacts of tele-exercise intervention with cancer patients’ quality of life, taking into account the influence of the duration of tele-exercise intervention, type of intervention, and gender of cancer patients on quality of life.
Methods:
The PubMed (MEDLINE), Embase, CINAHL, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL), Web of Science, and PsycINFO databases were searched from inception to August 21, 2023. The Cochrane Collaboration's risk of bias tool 2 was utilized to estimate the risk of bias, and the Grading of Recommendations, Assessment. For statistical analyses, R Studio was employed.
Results:
This meta-analysis contained eight trials. When compared to controls, tele-exercise interventions (SMD = 0.41, 95% CI: 0.12 to 0.70, p < .010; I2 = 54%, p = .030) have a positive influence on boosting the quality of life within cancer patients. Subgroup analyses demonstrated the greater effectiveness of tele-exercise in enhancing the quality of life of cancer patients when the duration was greater than or equal to 10 weeks. Furthermore, tele-exercise was found to have a stronger advantageous effect on quality of life among female cancer. In addition, among the types of interventions for tele-exercise, neither web-based nor telephone-based formats significantly enhanced quality of life among cancer patients.
Conclusion
Tele-exercise interventions are a cost-effective and feasible non-pharmacologic complementary way to promote cancer patients' quality of life. Additional large-sample, carefully designed randomized controlled trials are warranted to further validate the impact of tele-exercise concerning cancer patients’ quality of life.
2.Effect of Tele-exercise Interventions on Quality of Life in Cancer Patients: A Meta-analysis
Xiaoli CHEN ; Chuanmei ZHU ; Juejin LI ; Lin ZHOU ; Shu ZHANG ; Yun ZHANG ; Xiaolin HU
Asian Nursing Research 2024;18(4):348-357
Purpose:
To evaluate the impacts of tele-exercise intervention with cancer patients’ quality of life, taking into account the influence of the duration of tele-exercise intervention, type of intervention, and gender of cancer patients on quality of life.
Methods:
The PubMed (MEDLINE), Embase, CINAHL, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL), Web of Science, and PsycINFO databases were searched from inception to August 21, 2023. The Cochrane Collaboration's risk of bias tool 2 was utilized to estimate the risk of bias, and the Grading of Recommendations, Assessment. For statistical analyses, R Studio was employed.
Results:
This meta-analysis contained eight trials. When compared to controls, tele-exercise interventions (SMD = 0.41, 95% CI: 0.12 to 0.70, p < .010; I2 = 54%, p = .030) have a positive influence on boosting the quality of life within cancer patients. Subgroup analyses demonstrated the greater effectiveness of tele-exercise in enhancing the quality of life of cancer patients when the duration was greater than or equal to 10 weeks. Furthermore, tele-exercise was found to have a stronger advantageous effect on quality of life among female cancer. In addition, among the types of interventions for tele-exercise, neither web-based nor telephone-based formats significantly enhanced quality of life among cancer patients.
Conclusion
Tele-exercise interventions are a cost-effective and feasible non-pharmacologic complementary way to promote cancer patients' quality of life. Additional large-sample, carefully designed randomized controlled trials are warranted to further validate the impact of tele-exercise concerning cancer patients’ quality of life.
3.The combined detection of S100β,IL-6 and hs CRP significantly improves the sensitivity of acute TBI diagnosis
Xiaogai NIE ; Chuanmei PENG ; Yunfang ZHANG ; Kun TU ; Jiao WANG
The Journal of Practical Medicine 2024;40(11):1580-1585
Objective Through the combined detection method,we tried to find more sensitive biomarkers for the diagnosis of acute TBI,which might provide the exact diagnosis,treatment and monitoring indicators for the clinic.Methods A total of 156 patients with acute TBI admitted to the Emergency Traumatic Center of Yan'an Hospital of Kunming from October 2022 to June 2023 were collected and included the normal and fracture control groups.Peripheral blood samples of the enrolled patients were collected and monitored,S100β and IL-6 were tested and clinical data such as hs-CRP was collected immediately upon admission,then statistical analysisanalysis was conducted.Results Peripheral blood in patients with acute TBI,The levels of S100β,IL-6 and hs-CRP significantly increased,and the area under the ROC curve for diagnosing acute TBI was 0.944,0.915,and 0.897.The combined detection of the three indicators showed an area under the ROC curve of up to 0.975.Person correlation analysis found a positive correlation between the three indicators,especially S100β with IL-6,The correlation coefficient between them is 0.715.Binary logistic regression analysis found that S100β,IL-6 and hs-CRP are independent risk factors for acute TBI.Conclusions The combined detection of S100β,IL-6 and hs-CRP can effectively improve the sensitivity of acute TBI diagnosis.The mutual promotion of S100β and IL-6 may aggravate the secondary craniocerebral injury caused by inflammatory mechanism,and early targeted treatment may improve the prognosis.
4.The Effect and Mechanism of Estrogen and Estrogen Receptors in the Pathogenesis of Non-Invasive Fungal Rhinosinusitis
Chuanmei YANG ; Yafei SU ; Luhua SHEN ; Hong ZHANG ; Teng WANG ; Siyu JI ; Zhiyong XIAO
Journal of Sun Yat-sen University(Medical Sciences) 2024;45(6):1017-1025
[Objective]To explore the role of estrogen and estrogen receptor (ER) in the pathogenesis and regulation of non-invasive fungal rhinosinusitis (NIFR).[Methods]Totally 60 patients with NIFS who met the inclusion criteria in Fuzhou Second General Hospital from November 2020 to November 2023 were selected as the NIFS group,while 30 healthy volunteers were recruited as the blank control group. Samples of each group were collected. The number of eosinophils and mast cells in each group were detected by HE staining;ER expression was detected by immunohistochemistry and immunofluorescence;mRNA expression levels of NF-κB,IKK and MASPIN were detected by qPCR;and protein expression levels of NF-κB,IKK and MASPIN were detected by immunohistochemistry and Western blot.[Results]In the NIFS group,the counts of eosinophils and mast cells were significantly increased respectively,compared with those in the control group,and the inter-group differences are statistically significant (P<0.01 and P<0.05,respectively). The Estrogen Receptor (ER) score in the NIFS group was significantly increased compared with that in the control group,and the inter-group differences are statistically significant (P<0.05). Additionally,the average high-density value in the NIFS group was significantly increased compared with that in the control group,and the inter-group differences are statistically significant (P<0.01). The expression levels of NF-κB,IKK,and MASPIN in the NIFS group were significantly increased respectively,compared with those in the control group,and the inter-group differences are statistically significant (P<0.01,P<0.05,and P<0.01,respectively). The mRNA expression levels of NF-κB,IKK,and MASPIN in the NIFS group were significantly increased,respectively,compared with those in the control group (P<0.01). Furthermore,the protein expression levels of NF-κB,IKK,and MASPIN in the NIFS group were increased,respectively,and the inter-group differences are statistically significant (P<0.01,P<0.01,and P<0.05,respectively).[Conclusion]Our results show that the significant increase in the number of eosinophils and mast cells,and in the expression levels of ER,NF-κB,IKK and MASPIN may indicate a significant increase in eosinophil and mast cell infiltration in ER positive patients,and suggest the involvement of estrogen and its receptors in the pathogenesis of NIFS.
5.Effect of Tele-exercise Interventions on Quality of Life in Cancer Patients: A Meta-analysis
Xiaoli CHEN ; Chuanmei ZHU ; Juejin LI ; Lin ZHOU ; Shu ZHANG ; Yun ZHANG ; Xiaolin HU
Asian Nursing Research 2024;18(4):348-357
Purpose:
To evaluate the impacts of tele-exercise intervention with cancer patients’ quality of life, taking into account the influence of the duration of tele-exercise intervention, type of intervention, and gender of cancer patients on quality of life.
Methods:
The PubMed (MEDLINE), Embase, CINAHL, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL), Web of Science, and PsycINFO databases were searched from inception to August 21, 2023. The Cochrane Collaboration's risk of bias tool 2 was utilized to estimate the risk of bias, and the Grading of Recommendations, Assessment. For statistical analyses, R Studio was employed.
Results:
This meta-analysis contained eight trials. When compared to controls, tele-exercise interventions (SMD = 0.41, 95% CI: 0.12 to 0.70, p < .010; I2 = 54%, p = .030) have a positive influence on boosting the quality of life within cancer patients. Subgroup analyses demonstrated the greater effectiveness of tele-exercise in enhancing the quality of life of cancer patients when the duration was greater than or equal to 10 weeks. Furthermore, tele-exercise was found to have a stronger advantageous effect on quality of life among female cancer. In addition, among the types of interventions for tele-exercise, neither web-based nor telephone-based formats significantly enhanced quality of life among cancer patients.
Conclusion
Tele-exercise interventions are a cost-effective and feasible non-pharmacologic complementary way to promote cancer patients' quality of life. Additional large-sample, carefully designed randomized controlled trials are warranted to further validate the impact of tele-exercise concerning cancer patients’ quality of life.
6.Incidence and Risk Factors for Radiotherapy-Induced Oral Mucositis Among Patients With Nasopharyngeal Carcinoma: A Meta-Analysis
Juejin LI ; Chuanmei ZHU ; Yun ZHANG ; Chang GUAN ; Qi WANG ; Yuxin DING ; Xiaolin HU
Asian Nursing Research 2023;17(2):70-82
Purpose:
To evaluate the incidence and identify the risk factors for radiotherapy-induced oral mucositis among patients with nasopharyngeal carcinoma.
Methods:
A meta-analysis was conducted. Eight electronic databases (Medline, Embase, Cochrane Library, CINAHL Plus with Full Text, Web of Science, China National Knowledge Infrastructure, Wanfang Database, and Chinese Scientific Journals Database) were systematically searched from inception to 4 March 2023 for relevant studies. Study selection and data extraction were conducted by two independent authors. The Newcastle‒Ottawa scale was used for quality assessment among the included studies. Data synthesis and analyses were performed in R software package version 4.1.3 and Review Manager Software 5.4. The pooled incidence was calculated using proportions with 95% confidence intervals (CIs), and the risk factors were evaluated using the odds ratio (OR) with 95% CIs. Sensitivity analysis and predesigned subgroup analyses were also conducted.
Results:
A total of 22 studies published from 2005 to 2023 were included. The results of the meta-analysis showed that the incidence of radiotherapy-induced oral mucositis was 99.0% among nasopharyngeal carcinoma patients, and the incidence of severe radiotherapy-induced oral mucositis was 52.0%. Poor oral hygiene, overweight before radiotherapy, oral pH < 7.0, the use of oral mucosal protective agents, smoking, drinking, combined chemotherapy, and the use of antibiotics at early treatment stage are risk factors for severe radiotherapy-induced oral mucositis. Sensitivity analysis and subgroup analyses also revealed that our results are stable and reliable.
Conclusions
Almost all patients with nasopharyngeal carcinoma have suffered from radiotherapy-induced oral mucositis, and more than half of patients have experienced severe oral mucositis. Facilitating oral health might be the key focus of reducing the incidence and severity of radiotherapy-induced oral mucositis among nasopharyngeal carcinoma patients.Registration numberCRD42022322035.
7.The effect of repeated high-frequency magnetic stimulation of the brain on post-stroke dysphagia
Tong WANG ; Pingping MENG ; Linghui DONG ; Chuanmei YANG ; Ziqing ZHANG ; Zhanfei LI ; Qiang WANG
Chinese Journal of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation 2021;43(4):306-310
Objective:To observe the effect of repeated, bilateral administration of high-frequency transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) in treating post-stroke dysphagia.Methods:Forty-five persons with post-stroke dysphagia were randomly divided into a bilateral group ( n=14 after one dropout), an affected group ( n=15) and a healthy group ( n=15). All received 30 minutes of conventional swallowing rehabilitation training 5 times a week for 2 weeks from a speech therapist. Those in the affected group also received 5Hz rTMS applied to the motor cortex controlling the suprachyoid muscle group. The bilateral group received the same stimulation bilaterally with the same duration and treatment course. Videofluoroscopy was used to assess their swallowing before and after the 2 weeks of treatment. It was rated using the penetration-aspiration scale (PAS) and the functional swallowing disorder scale (FDS). Surface electromyography was employed to evaluate suprachyoid muscle function. Cortical excitability was assessed by measuring the resting motor threshold (RMT) of the unaffected hemisphere. Results:After the treatment, the average PAS, FDS and muscle function values had improved significantly for all three groups, but significant RMT differences were observed only between the bilateral and the unaffected group. Significant differences in the average FDS and PAS scores were observed after the treatment, as well as significant changes in FDS and muscle function between the affected group and the other two groups. The average FDS scores before and after treatment were significantly different between the unaffected and bilateral group, with the former scoring significantly better than the latter. But no significant differences in the average PAS scores were observed after the treatment.Conclusions:5Hz rTMS of either the unaffected or affected cerebral cortex (or bilateral) can effectively improve the swallowing function of persons with post-stroke dysphagia. Bilateral stimulation has the greatest therapeutic effect, followed by stimulation of the unaffected cerebral cortex.
8.The effects of different frequencies of repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation on post-stroke dysphagia
Yichen ZHANG ; Qiang WANG ; Pingping MENG ; Chuanmei YANG ; Zhanfei LI ; Ziqing ZHANG ; Di YANG ; Jiali HU
Chinese Journal of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation 2020;42(4):295-299
Objective:To explore the effect of high-frequency and low-frequency transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) on the unaffected pharyngeal motor cortex of dysphagic stroke survivors.Methods:Forty-two stroke survivors with dysphagia were enrolled and randomly divided into a high-frequency stimulation group ( n=14), a low-frequency stimulation group ( n=13), and a sham group ( n=15). All received conventional swallowing training. The high- and low-frequency stimulation groups additionally received 250 pulses of 5Hz or 1Hz rTMS over the cortical representation of the mylohyoid muscle on the unaffected side daily for 2 consecutive weeks. In the sham group, sham rTMS was applied with identical protocols. Before and after the intervention, all subjects were subjected to a videofluoroscopic swallowing study and surface electromyography (sEMG). They were also evaluated using the fuctional dysphagia scale (FDS) and the penetration aspiration scale (PAS). Results:After the intervention, a significant improvement was observed in the average PAS, FDS and sEMG results in both rTMS groups compared with the sham control group. The average FDS score of the high-frequency stimulation group had improved significantly more than that of the low-frequency group.Conclusions:rTMS of the contra-lesional cortical representation of the mylohyoid muscle at either 5Hz or 1Hz can effectively improve dysphagia post-stroke. The higher frequency gives superior results.
9.Effects of botulinum toxin type A injection on the walking ability of stroke survivors with spastic foot drop and talipes varus
Yongxiang ZHANG ; Wenjie ZHANG ; Qiang WANG ; Jiang LI ; Chao HAN ; Yanguang DONG ; Chuanmei YANG
Chinese Journal of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation 2018;40(12):899-902
Objective To observe the effect of injecting botulinum toxin type A ( BTX-A) into the tibialis anterior muscle on spasm and the walking function of stroke survivors with spastic foot drop and strephenopodia. Methods Fifty-six stroke survivors with spastic foot drop and strephenopodia were randomly divided into a tibialis anterior injection group ( Group TA) and a conventional injection group ( Group CG) , each of 28. Both groups had 50 U of BTX-A injected into the medial-lateral heads of the affected gastrocnemius and soleus muscles, and 35 U in-jected into each of two sites in the tibialis posterior. Group TA was additionally injected with 30 U in the tibialis ante-rior. Before the injection, as well as 2, 4 and 12 weeks afterward, both groups were evaluated using the modified Ashworth scale (MAS) for the plantar flexors and varus muscle groups, a 10-minute walking test (10 m-WT), a simple Fugl-Meyer assessment ( FMA) of the lower limb and a timed up and go test ( TUG) . Results Before the injection, there were no statistically significant differences in the average MAS, 10 m-WT, FMA or TUG results be-tween the two groups. After 2 weeks, however, the average MAS score of both groups had decreased significantly, and that improvement was maintained at 4 and 12 weeks after the injection. Moreover, 2, 4 and 12 weeks after the injec-tion, significant differences in the average MAS score were observed between the two groups. The average 10m-WT re-sults, FMA scores and TUG times of both groups also improved significantly, but there were significant differences between the two groups′10m-WT times and FMA scores after 2 and 4 weeks. Conclusions Injecting a small dose of BTX-A into the tibialis anterior can further relieve spasm in the tibialis anterior muscle and improve the walking a-bility of stroke survivors with spastic foot drop and strephenopodia.
10.The application of mr dti in cerebra infarction of optic radiation
Hong ZHANG ; Chuanting LI ; Chuanmei LIU ; Yanfei DU ; Xiuzhu ZHENG ; Yiyi HUI
Journal of Practical Radiology 2014;(5):730-732,739
Objective To evaluate the fiber altering and clinical relationship in patients with occipital and temporal lobe cerebral infarction with DTI.Methods Fifty patients suffering from cerebral stroke were analyzed with conventional MRI,DWI and DTI. The fibers of visual pathway were depicted ,and their fractional anisotropy (FA),apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC),isotropic im-age (Iso)and T2-weighted trace were measured and analyzed.Results Regions of interest (ROIs)were placed in infarction and nor-mal contralateral tissue for tracking the visual pathways.The different parameters were measured.FA is useful to differentiate hy-per-acute stroke from acute and sub-acute stroke.FA values increased slightly in hyper-acute and decreased in acute,sub-acute and chronic phase.The values of ADC in infarction regions in hyper-acute,acute and sub-acute phases were lower than those of the con-tralateral tissue.Iso and T2-weighted trace increased in acute phase and decreased in chronic phase.DTT was used to show the way and chang of visual pathway.Conclusion DTI could track the fiber of visual pathway,and depict the fiber of infarction zone.DTT could be used in evaluating the prognosis of patients.

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