1.Feigan granules improve traditional Chinese medicine symptoms scale scores for influenza patients: a prospective clinical observational study.
Weihao CHEN ; Dongsheng ZHENG ; Shuangshuang DU ; Qian LI ; Guolin WU ; Dongsheng HONG ; Qingwei ZHAO
Journal of Zhejiang University. Medical sciences 2025;54(3):289-296
OBJECTIVES:
To evaluate the clinical efficacy of hospital-prepared Chinese medicine Feigan granules for influenza patients. This study has been registered at the International Traditional Medicine Clinical Trial Registry platform (ITMCTR2025000162).
METHODS:
A prospective observational study was conducted on influenza patients who visited the Fever Clinic of the First Affiliated Hospital, Zhejiang University School of Medicine between February and March 2024. Patients were divided into the observation group (Feigan granules combined with conventional Western medicine) and the control group (conventional Western medicine). Main symptoms (including fever, cough and sore throat) and secondary symptoms (including chest tightness, poor appetite, muscle soreness and dry mouth) were evaluated with traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) symptom scale on the first day of the patient's visit and the third day after treatment. The degrees of improvement in the TCM symptom scores before and after treatment were compared using paired rank-sum test, and the differences in the overall symptom efficacy index between two groups were compared using the Wilcoxon test.
RESULTS:
A total of 217 influenza patients were included. After treatment, the TCM symptom scores of both groups were significantly improved compared with those before treatment (all P<0.01). The median differences in the main symptom score before and after treatment in the observation and the control groups were 7 points (95%CI: 6.0-8.0) and 6 points (95%CI: 6.0-8.0), respectively. The median difference in the secondary symptom score was 3 points (95%CI: 2.0-4.0) in both groups. The median differences in the total score were 9 points (95%CI: 8.0-10.5) and 8 points (95%CI: 7.0-10.0) in the observation and control groups, respectively. In the subgroup with an initial cough score >2, the improvement rates of total score (97.06% vs. 92.59%) and secondary symptoms (92.31% vs. 85.11%) in observation group were significantly higher than those in the control group (P<0.05); while there was no significant difference in the improvement rate of the main symptoms (95.59% vs. 90.74%, P>0.05).
CONCLUSIONS
Feigan granules can improve the TCM syndromes of influenza patients, especially for patients with more severe cough.
Humans
;
Prospective Studies
;
Influenza, Human/drug therapy*
;
Medicine, Chinese Traditional/methods*
;
Drugs, Chinese Herbal/therapeutic use*
;
Female
;
Male
;
Middle Aged
;
Adult
;
Aged
;
Adolescent
;
Young Adult
;
Treatment Outcome
2.Clinical guideline for the diagnosis and treatment of sacroiliac complex injuries (version 2025)
Fulin TAO ; Jinlei DONG ; Gang WANG ; Xianzhong MA ; Guanglin WANG ; Jiandong WANG ; Zhanying SHI ; Wei FENG ; Shiwen ZHU ; Gang LYU ; Guangyao LIU ; Dahui SUN ; Yuqiang SUN ; Ming LI ; Weixu LI ; Yan ZHUANG ; Kaifang CHEN ; Dapeng ZHOU ; Qishi ZHOU ; Zhangyuan LIN ; Chengla YI ; Longpo ZHENG ; Jianzhong GUAN ; Zhiyong HOU ; Shuquan GUO ; Xiaodong GUO ; Xiaoshan GUO ; Xiaodong QIN ; Hua CHEN ; Shicai FAN ; Dongsheng ZHOU ; Lianxin LI
Chinese Journal of Trauma 2025;41(8):709-720
Sacroiliac complex injuries are commonly seen in high-energy pelvic fractures. The injuries make a big difference in treatment patterns due to the diverse injury types, posing considerable challenges in formulating optimal treatment strategies, and hence are persistent clinical difficulties in orthopedic trauma. The clinical management of sacroiliac complex injuries presents several key challenges such as a non-negligible rate of missed diagnoses in associated vascular and visceral injuries, absence of standardized protocols for surgical approaches and reduction-fixation strategies across different injury patterns, and ongoing controversies regarding surgical indications and optimal timing for patients combined with concomitant lumbosacral plexus injuries. Currently, no systematic clinical guidelines are available for the diagnosis and treatment of sacroiliac complex injuries both domestically and internationally. To this end, the Pelvic and Acetabular Surgery Group, Orthopedic Branch, China International Exchange and Promotive Association for Medical and Health Care and Orthopedic Physician Branch, Chinese Medical Doctor Association organized a panel of domestic experts in the field to develop the Clinical guideline for the diagnosis and treatment of sacroiliac complex injuries ( version 2025), based on evidence-based medicine and adhering to the principles of scientific rigor, clinical applicability, and innovation. These guidelines provided 11 recommendations covering diagnosis, therapeutic principles and techniques, management protocols for lumbosacral plexus injuries, outcome evaluation, and postoperative rehabilitation pathways, etc., aiming to standardize the clinical management of sacroiliac complex injuries.
3.Effect of target characteristics on prospective memory in patients with depressive disorder
Min CHEN ; Dongsheng LYU ; Zheng WANG ; You HOU
Sichuan Mental Health 2025;38(1):14-21
BackgroundMany studies have shown that patients with depressive disorder show impairments in prospective memory, while it is deemed necessary for facilitating their social reintegration, and the current research findings are inconsistent regarding the factors affecting prospective memory of patients with depressive disorder. ObjectiveTo explore the impact of target characteristics (emotional valence and salience) on prospective memory in patients with depressive disorder, so as to provide references for the training and recovery of prospective memory function in these patients. MethodsFrom January to December 2022, 53 patients with depressive disorder were recruited from the outpatient department of Inner Mongolia Autonomous Mental Health Center. Meanwhile, 45 healthy individuals were concurrently recruited from surrounding communities as control group. An experiment with a 2 (participant type: depressive disorder, healthy control) ×2 (target salience: salient, non-salient) ×3 (emotional valence: positive, neutral, negative) factorial design was conducted. The positive/neutral/negative emotional pictures from Chinese Affective Picture System (CAPS) were used for emotional stimulation. A dual-task experimental paradigm was adopted, and the response time and accuracy in prospective memory task and ongoing task were recorded for participants with different target characteristics. Results①In the prospective memory task, the main effect of participant type was statistically significant, with the depressive group showing lower accuracy (F=14.892, P<0.01) and longer response time (F=10.642, P=0.002) compared with control group. ② The main effect of target emotional valence on accuracy (F=7.575, P=0.001) and response time (F=3.196, P=0.044) in the prospective memory task was statistically significant. Simple effect analysis revealed that depressive group yielded a shorter response time and higher accuracy rate under negative conditions compared with positive and neutral conditions (P<0.05 or 0.01). ③ The main effect of target salience on accuracy (F=6.659, P=0.012) and response time (F=10.106, P=0.002) in the prospective memory task was also statistically significant, with higher accuracy and shorter response time for salient targets compared with non-salient targets. ConclusionPatients with depressive disorder demonstrate preferential attention to and processing of negative stimuli in prospective memory tasks, while increasing target salience may facilitate spontaneous processing of prospective memory task in patients with depressive disorder. [Funded by Inner Mongolia Health Commission Medical Health Science and Technology Project (number, 202202104)]
4.Value of atherosclerotic index of plasma in predicting risk of coronary heart disease in patients with nonalcoholic fatty liver disease
Shumin YUAN ; Xiaofang OUYANG ; Hao QIN ; Dongsheng LI ; Ting ZHAN ; Meng LIU ; Zheng HAN ; Xia TIAN
Journal of Clinical Medicine in Practice 2025;29(11):55-60
Objective To investigate the predictive value of atherosclerotic index of plasma(AIP)for the risk of coronary heart disease(CHD)in patients with nonalcoholic fatty liver disease(NAFLD).Methods A retrospective analysis was conducted in 299 patients with NAFLD.Based on presence or absence of CHD,the patients were divided into NAFLD with CHD group(n=177)and NAFLD group(n=122).Clinical data were collected from both groups,and AIP was calculat-ed.Multivariate Logistic regression analysis was performed to explore the independent risk factors for CHD in patients with NAFLD.Receiver operating characteristic(ROC)curves were plotted to evalu-ate the predictive value of AIP for the risk of CHD in patients with NAFLD.Results The NAFLD with CHD group had a higher proportion of males,smokers,and higher levels of alanine aminotrans-ferase(ALT),aspartate aminotransferase(AST),fasting plasma glucose(FPG),triglycerides(TG),low-density lipoprotein cholesterol(LDL-C),γ-glutamyltransferase(GGT),uric acid(UA),and AIP than the NAFLD group.The NAFLD with CHD group also had lower levels of high-density lipoprotein cholesterol(HDL-C)than the NAFLD group(P<0.05).Multivariate Logistic regression analysis revealed that males(OR=2.548,95%CI,1.402 to 4.632,P=0.002),high levels of AST(OR=1.038,95%CI,1.002 to 1.077,P=0.041),high levels of LDL-C(OR=1.811,95%CI,1.242 to 2.640,P=0.002),and high AIP(OR=16.117,95%CI,1.874 to 138.609,P=0.011)were independent risk factors for CHD in patients with NAFLD(P<0.05).ROC curve analysis showed that AIP had an area under the curve of 0.746(95%CI,0.688 to 0.804)for pre-dicting CHD in patients with NAFLD,with a sensitivity of 76.3%and a specificity of 73.0%.Conclusion AIP is an independent influencing factor for CHD in patients with NAFLD and has certain predictive value for the risk of CHD in these patients.
5.Design and implementation of a TCM record information retrieval system based on generative large language models
Xuanze WANG ; Jiangyu LI ; Xiangwen ZHENG ; Yu XIAO ; Huajian MAO ; Dongsheng ZHAO
Military Medical Sciences 2025;49(3):207-213
Objective To develop a system for retrieving information from clinical records of Traditional Chinese Medicine(TCM)based on generative large language models(LLMs).Methods Applicational needs of the system were analyzed,and entity types to be retrieved were identified.The functions,workflows,and architecture of the system were designed by combining the automatic retrieval capabilities of LLMs with human-in-the-loop(HITL).The software was developed using such frameworks as vLLM and Node.js.Interaction of multiple commercial/open source LLMs was implemented using OpenAI-compatible interfaces.The quality of information retrieved from LLMs was enhanced by prompt engineering.Results This system supported task allocation,automatic retrieval of structured information,and manual review.To evaluate its performance,the moonshot-v1-8k model was used to retrieve clinical records of TCM before manual edition was performed.Combining large language model pre-annotation with meticulous annotator edits improved accuracy by 26.6%compared to the BERT-BiLSTM-CRF model,and enhanced extraction efficiency by 1.6-fold relative to purely manual methods.Conclusion General generative LLMs can retrieve a wide range of entity information from TCM records with high accuracy and scalability.The design and implementation of this system approach may provide a useful reference for developing other biomedical information retrieval systems.
6.Research on surgical treatment strategies for Mason type III radial head fracture complicated with adult Bado type II Monteggia fracture
Dawei ZHANG ; Honghao CHEN ; Kun WANG ; Jiangming QI ; Yugang PAN ; Shijun ZHENG ; Aiguo WANG ; Yejun ZHA ; Maoqi GONG ; Dongsheng LI
Chinese Journal of Orthopaedics 2025;45(13):848-855
Objective:To explore the surgical treatment strategies for Mason type III radial head fractures complicated with adult Bado type II Monteggia fractures.Methods:A retrospective analysis was performed on the clinical data of 25 adult patients with Mason type III radial head fractures complicated with adult Bado type II Monteggia fractures, admitted to the Upper Extremity Orthopaedics Department of Zhengzhou Orthopaedic Hospital from June 2013 to June 2023. There were 15 males and 10 females, with an average age of 43.5±14.7 years (range: 20-67 years). Among them, 5 cases were complicated with humeroulnar joint dislocation. The patients were divided into two groups: 17 cases were treated with open reduction and internal fixation (ORIF) of radial head fractures combined with ORIF of proximal ulnar fractures (open reduction group), and 8 cases were treated with radial head replacement combined with ORIF of proximal ulnar fractures (radial head replacement group). At the last follow-up, elbow joint range of motion was recorded, and pain, elbow function, and subjective upper limb function were evaluated using the Visual Analogue Scale (VAS), Mayo Elbow Performance Score (MEPS), and Disabilities of the Arm, Shoulder and Hand (DASH) scale. The incidence of complications was also recorded.Results:All 25 patients were followed up for an average of 25.6±9.0 months (range: 12-45 months). At the last follow-up, the affected elbows in the open reduction group had a flexion of 124.47°±12.59° (range, 90°-140°), extension of 21.12°±10.07° (range, 10°-50°), pronation of 48.59°±11.62° (range, 20°-61°), and supination of 48.53°±8.43° (range, 30°-60°). In the radial head replacement group, the affected elbows showed flexion of 128.75°±13.17° (range, 100°-140°), extension of 14.00°±7.71° (range, 0°-25°), pronation of 61.25°±10.26° (range, 60°-80°), and supination of 71.88°±10.33° (range, 60°-80°). The MEPS score in the open reduction group was 82(75, 85) points (range, 55-90 points), the VAS pain score was 1(1, 2) points (range, 0-3 points), and the DASH score was 9(8, 14) points. In the radial head replacement group, the MEPS score was 90(85, 90) points (range, 85-90 points), the VAS pain score was 1(0, 1) points (range, 0-1 points), and the DASH score was 5(5, 6) points. Complications included 5 cases of heterotopic ossification, 1 case of incision infection, 1 case of nonunion, 1 case of ulnar nerve injury combined with traumatic arthritis, and 1 case of proximal radioulnar bone bridge formation.Conclusions:Both radial head replacement and open reduction internal fixation combined with proximal ulnar fracture fixation can effectively treat Mason type III radial head fractures complicated with adult Bado type II Monteggia fractures. There was no significant difference in postoperative flexion and extension, but the radial head replacement group demonstrated better forearm rotation and DASH scores postoperatively.
7.Clinical application of metagenomic next-generation sequencing for identifying non-tuberculous mycobacteria from bronchoalveolar lavage fluid
Jieyuan ZHENG ; Dan ZHANG ; Jieting ZHOU ; Jingchao WANG ; Lingjun YUAN ; Mengxiao XIE ; Binxiao LI ; Dongsheng HAN
Chinese Journal of Clinical Infectious Diseases 2025;18(1):19-24
Objective:To evaluate the application of metagenomic next-generation sequencing(mNGS)in the identification of non-tuberculous mycobacteria(NTM).Methods:A retrospective analysis was conducted on mNGS results of 358 bronchoalveolar lavage fluid(BALF)samples positive for NTM collected at the First Affiliated Hospital of Zhejiang University School of Medicine from February 2021 to January 2024. The analysis included the distribution of NTM species,the detection of mixed pathogens,and the performance of conventional mycobacterial detection methods.Results:The results showed that 362 strains of 15 NTM species were identified from 350 specimens,8 specimens were not precise to the species level. The most frequently detected species were Mycobacterium intracellulare(37.3%,135/362), Mycobacterium abscessus(26.8%,97/362),followed by Mycobacterium avium(11.0%,40/362), Mycobacterium kansasii(8.0%,29/362)and Mycobacterium chelonae(7.7%,28/362). Single NTM species were detected in 339 specimens,while two or three NTM species were simultaneously detected in 11 specimens(3.1%,11/358). Non-NTM microorganisms co-infected were detected in 53.4%(191/358)of NTM-positive BALF samples,including common pathogens such as Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Staphylococcus aureus,and Aspergillus fumigatus;and difficult-to-identify pathogens such as Legionella pneumophila and Talaromyces marneffei. In NTM-positive patients detected by mNGS,the results supported the diagnosis of NTM infection in 298 cases(298/358,83.2%)and 105 cases(105/358,29.3%)initiated anti-NTM treatment accordingly;while in 60 cases(60/358,16.8%)the positive results were considered as colonization or unrelated to clinical infection. For samples tested with acid-fast staining,mycobacterial liquid culture,and DNA microarray,the positivity rates for NTM were 31.5%(73/232),48.7%(57/117),and 43.0%(46/107),respectively. Conclusions:mNGS demonstrates advantages in identification of NTM. However,the test may detect multiple microorganisms,in that case,the interpretation with clinical and radiological results is requried to determine the main pathogens.
8.Expert consensus on the standard of practice for modified electro-convulsive therapy for mental disorders
Xiu ZHANG ; Guohui LAO ; Xiong HUANG ; Wei JIANG ; Qingmei KONG ; Wei LI ; Hu DENG ; Jijun WANG ; Qin XIE ; Wei DENG ; Shaohua HU ; Dongsheng ZHOU ; Xin WEI ; Zhanming SHI ; Cuixia AN ; Sha LIU ; Yanghua TIAN ; Decheng ZOU ; Lingyun ZENG ; Kun LI ; Xingbing HUANG ; Wei ZHENG ; Yuping NING
Chinese Journal of Psychiatry 2025;58(7):506-525
As a physical treatment technique, modified electro-convulsive therapy (MECT) is used to treat mental and certain neurological disorders by causing seizures with short, suitable electrical currents applied to the brain while the patient is under general anesthesia and muscle relaxants. MECT is recognized for its therapeutic efficacy and clinical safety, rendering it one of the most prevalent interventions in psychiatric care. To enhance clinical outcomes and minimize adverse effects, this consensus document delineates the indications, therapeutic parameters, therapeutic procedures, potential adverse effects, and associated management strategies for MECT. These guidelines are informed by the latest clinical research and expert consensus, integrating evidence-based medicine methodologies. The objective is to furnish clinicians with precise operational guidelines and to advance the standardization of MECT practices in clinical settings.
9.Supplementing aerobic exercise with transcranial magnetic stimulation better improves the cognitive functioning of early stage Parkinson′s disease patients
Qi GU ; Xue LI ; Shaopu WU ; Siyuan CHEN ; Dongsheng LI ; Jinhua ZHENG ; Xiaoxue SHI ; Jianjun MA
Chinese Journal of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation 2025;47(2):112-116
Objective:To observe any effect of combining transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) with aerobic exercise on the cognitive functioning of early stage Parkinson′s disease (PD) patients.Methods:A total of 120 PD patients in the early stage were randomly divided into an observation group and a control group, each of 60. Both groups received conventional drug treatment and moderate-intensity aerobic exercise training, while the observation group was additionally provided with high-frequency rTMS treatment. Before and after 3 months of the treatments, everyone′s cognitive and motor functioning was evaluated using the Montreal Cognitive Assessment Scale (MoCA) and the third part of the Unified Parkinson′s Disease Rating Scale (UPDRS-Ⅲ), respectively. Negative emotions were evaluated using the Hamilton Anxiety Scale (HAMA) and the Hamilton Depression Scale (HAMD). Auditory event-related potentials were also detected, and the latency and amplitude of P300 were analyzed.Results:The average MoCA, UPDRS-Ⅲ, HAMA and HAMD scores, as well as the amplitude and latency of P300 had improved significantly in both groups after the treatment. At that point the observation group′s performance was significantly better than that of the control group in terms of the MoCA′s visuospatial and executive function, attention and delayed recall indicators, and also total score. The observation group′s average HAMA score (10.55±3.11), HAMD score (9.78±4.10), the P300 amplitude [(11.29±2.21)μV] and latency [(384.75±48.26)ms] were also significantly better. The UPDRS-Ⅲ scores were negatively correlated with the visuospatial and executive function scores of the MoCA scale in the observation group before and after treatment, while the average HAMA score was negatively correlated with the attention and delayed recall scores.Conclusions:Supplementing aerobic exercise with rTMS can significantly improve the cognition and motor functioning of early stage PD patients. The combination is more effective than aerobic exercise alone. Such combined therapy is worthy of popularization and clinical application.
10.Research on surgical treatment strategies for Mason type III radial head fracture complicated with adult Bado type II Monteggia fracture
Dawei ZHANG ; Honghao CHEN ; Kun WANG ; Jiangming QI ; Yugang PAN ; Shijun ZHENG ; Aiguo WANG ; Yejun ZHA ; Maoqi GONG ; Dongsheng LI
Chinese Journal of Orthopaedics 2025;45(13):848-855
Objective:To explore the surgical treatment strategies for Mason type III radial head fractures complicated with adult Bado type II Monteggia fractures.Methods:A retrospective analysis was performed on the clinical data of 25 adult patients with Mason type III radial head fractures complicated with adult Bado type II Monteggia fractures, admitted to the Upper Extremity Orthopaedics Department of Zhengzhou Orthopaedic Hospital from June 2013 to June 2023. There were 15 males and 10 females, with an average age of 43.5±14.7 years (range: 20-67 years). Among them, 5 cases were complicated with humeroulnar joint dislocation. The patients were divided into two groups: 17 cases were treated with open reduction and internal fixation (ORIF) of radial head fractures combined with ORIF of proximal ulnar fractures (open reduction group), and 8 cases were treated with radial head replacement combined with ORIF of proximal ulnar fractures (radial head replacement group). At the last follow-up, elbow joint range of motion was recorded, and pain, elbow function, and subjective upper limb function were evaluated using the Visual Analogue Scale (VAS), Mayo Elbow Performance Score (MEPS), and Disabilities of the Arm, Shoulder and Hand (DASH) scale. The incidence of complications was also recorded.Results:All 25 patients were followed up for an average of 25.6±9.0 months (range: 12-45 months). At the last follow-up, the affected elbows in the open reduction group had a flexion of 124.47°±12.59° (range, 90°-140°), extension of 21.12°±10.07° (range, 10°-50°), pronation of 48.59°±11.62° (range, 20°-61°), and supination of 48.53°±8.43° (range, 30°-60°). In the radial head replacement group, the affected elbows showed flexion of 128.75°±13.17° (range, 100°-140°), extension of 14.00°±7.71° (range, 0°-25°), pronation of 61.25°±10.26° (range, 60°-80°), and supination of 71.88°±10.33° (range, 60°-80°). The MEPS score in the open reduction group was 82(75, 85) points (range, 55-90 points), the VAS pain score was 1(1, 2) points (range, 0-3 points), and the DASH score was 9(8, 14) points. In the radial head replacement group, the MEPS score was 90(85, 90) points (range, 85-90 points), the VAS pain score was 1(0, 1) points (range, 0-1 points), and the DASH score was 5(5, 6) points. Complications included 5 cases of heterotopic ossification, 1 case of incision infection, 1 case of nonunion, 1 case of ulnar nerve injury combined with traumatic arthritis, and 1 case of proximal radioulnar bone bridge formation.Conclusions:Both radial head replacement and open reduction internal fixation combined with proximal ulnar fracture fixation can effectively treat Mason type III radial head fractures complicated with adult Bado type II Monteggia fractures. There was no significant difference in postoperative flexion and extension, but the radial head replacement group demonstrated better forearm rotation and DASH scores postoperatively.

Result Analysis
Print
Save
E-mail