1.Clinical guideline for diagnosis and treatment of nonunion of osteoporotic vertebral fractures (version 2025)
Haipeng SI ; Le LI ; Junjie NIU ; Wencan ZHANG ; Fuxin WEI ; Jinqiu YUAN ; Qiang YANG ; Hongli WANG ; Guangchao WANG ; Shihong CHEN ; Yunzhen CHEN ; Xiaoguang CHENG ; Jianwen DONG ; Shiqing FENG ; Rui GU ; Yong HAI ; Tianyong HOU ; Bo HUANG ; Xiaobing JIANG ; Lei ZANG ; Chunhai LI ; Nianhu LI ; Hua LIN ; Hongjian LIU ; Peng LIU ; Xinyu LIU ; Sheng LU ; Shibao LU ; Chunshan LUO ; Lvy CHAOLIANG ; Lvy WEIJIA ; Xuexiao MA ; Wei MEI ; Chunyang MENG ; Cailiang SHEN ; Chunli SONG ; Ruoxian SONG ; Jiacan SU ; Honglin TENG ; Hui SHENG ; Beiyu WANG ; Bingwu WANG ; Liang WANG ; Xiangyang WANG ; Nan WU ; Guohua XU ; Yayi XIA ; Jin XU ; Youjia XU ; Jianzhong XU ; Cao YANG ; Maowei YANG ; Zibin YANG ; Xiaojian YE ; Hailong YU ; Xijie YU ; Hua YUE ; Zhili ZENG ; Xinli ZHAN ; Hui ZHANG ; Peixun ZHANG ; Wei ZHANG ; Zhenlin ZHANG ; Jianguo ZHANG ; Tengyue ZHU ; Qiang LIU ; Huilin YANG
Chinese Journal of Trauma 2025;41(10):932-945
Nonunion of osteoporotic vertebral fractures (OVF), predominantly affecting the elderly, can lead to intractable pain, vertebral collapse, progressive kyphotic deformity, and neurological impairment, significantly compromising patients′ quality of life. There exists considerable debate on diagnosis and management of OVF, encompassing key issues such as clinical diagnosis and staging criteria for nonunion, surgical indications and procedure selection, and postoperative rehabilitation planning. Currently, there lacks standardized clinical guideline and expert consensus on the diagnosis and management of OVF nonunion in China. To address this gap, Minimally Invasive Surgery Group of Chinese Orthopedic Association, Osteoporosis Committee of Chinese Association of Orthopedic Surgeons, Prevention and Rehabilitation Committee for Osteoporosis of Chinese Association of Rehabilitation Medicine and Minimally Invasive Orthopedic Surgery Branch of China Association for Geriatric Care jointly organized domestic experts in spinal surgery, endocrinology, and rehabilitation to formulate the Clinical guideline for the diagnosis and treatment for nonunion of osteoporotic vertebral fractures ( version 2025), based on existing literature and clinical experience and adhering to principles of scientific rigor and practicality. The guideline provided 13 evidence-based recommendations encompassing diagnosis and treatment of OVF nonunion, aiming to standardize its clinical management.
2.Clinical guideline for diagnosis and treatment of nonunion of osteoporotic vertebral fractures (version 2025)
Haipeng SI ; Le LI ; Junjie NIU ; Wencan ZHANG ; Fuxin WEI ; Jinqiu YUAN ; Qiang YANG ; Hongli WANG ; Guangchao WANG ; Shihong CHEN ; Yunzhen CHEN ; Xiaoguang CHENG ; Jianwen DONG ; Shiqing FENG ; Rui GU ; Yong HAI ; Tianyong HOU ; Bo HUANG ; Xiaobing JIANG ; Lei ZANG ; Chunhai LI ; Nianhu LI ; Hua LIN ; Hongjian LIU ; Peng LIU ; Xinyu LIU ; Sheng LU ; Shibao LU ; Chunshan LUO ; Lvy CHAOLIANG ; Lvy WEIJIA ; Xuexiao MA ; Wei MEI ; Chunyang MENG ; Cailiang SHEN ; Chunli SONG ; Ruoxian SONG ; Jiacan SU ; Honglin TENG ; Hui SHENG ; Beiyu WANG ; Bingwu WANG ; Liang WANG ; Xiangyang WANG ; Nan WU ; Guohua XU ; Yayi XIA ; Jin XU ; Youjia XU ; Jianzhong XU ; Cao YANG ; Maowei YANG ; Zibin YANG ; Xiaojian YE ; Hailong YU ; Xijie YU ; Hua YUE ; Zhili ZENG ; Xinli ZHAN ; Hui ZHANG ; Peixun ZHANG ; Wei ZHANG ; Zhenlin ZHANG ; Jianguo ZHANG ; Tengyue ZHU ; Qiang LIU ; Huilin YANG
Chinese Journal of Trauma 2025;41(10):932-945
Nonunion of osteoporotic vertebral fractures (OVF), predominantly affecting the elderly, can lead to intractable pain, vertebral collapse, progressive kyphotic deformity, and neurological impairment, significantly compromising patients′ quality of life. There exists considerable debate on diagnosis and management of OVF, encompassing key issues such as clinical diagnosis and staging criteria for nonunion, surgical indications and procedure selection, and postoperative rehabilitation planning. Currently, there lacks standardized clinical guideline and expert consensus on the diagnosis and management of OVF nonunion in China. To address this gap, Minimally Invasive Surgery Group of Chinese Orthopedic Association, Osteoporosis Committee of Chinese Association of Orthopedic Surgeons, Prevention and Rehabilitation Committee for Osteoporosis of Chinese Association of Rehabilitation Medicine and Minimally Invasive Orthopedic Surgery Branch of China Association for Geriatric Care jointly organized domestic experts in spinal surgery, endocrinology, and rehabilitation to formulate the Clinical guideline for the diagnosis and treatment for nonunion of osteoporotic vertebral fractures ( version 2025), based on existing literature and clinical experience and adhering to principles of scientific rigor and practicality. The guideline provided 13 evidence-based recommendations encompassing diagnosis and treatment of OVF nonunion, aiming to standardize its clinical management.
3.Research on the application of non-contact physiological and psychological detection in the analysis of long-term simulated weightlessness effects
Shuai DING ; Zi XU ; Qian RONG ; Shujuan LIU ; Zihao LIU ; Yuan WU ; Yao YU ; Zhili LI ; Cheng SONG ; Lina QU ; Hao WANG ; Yinghui LI
Space Medicine & Medical Engineering 2024;35(2):78-83,98
Objective Explore a non-contact physiological and psychological detection model based on facial video in simulations of weightlessness effects,research new methods for non-contact heart rate and negative mood state detection in long-term simulations of weightlessness effect analysis.Methods Construct a non-contact physiological and psychological data collection system for fusion analysis of visible light and thermal infrared videos.Collect physiological and psychological data of volunteers in the"Earth Star-Ⅱ"90-day head-down bed rest experiment.A non-contact heart rate detection model based on GCN facial multi-region feature fusion and a non-contact negative mood state detection model considering data reliability were constructed,and the effectiveness of the models were validated with finger clip heart rate and POMS-SF scale as labels.Results The experimental results show that the average difference in the Bland-Altman plot of the non-contact heart rate detection model is-1.26 bpm,and 96.3%of value error detection data falls within the 95%confidence interval,indicating a high consistency between the model detected heart rate and the finger clip heart rate.The non-contact negative mood state detection model achieves an accuracy of>0.85 for detecting tension,depression,anger,and fatigue.Features such as heart rate,AU06,eye gaze,and head pose were observed to be important to mood state detection.Conclusion Non-contact physiological and psychological detection methods not only can be utilized for long-term physiological analysis in simulations of weightlessness effects,but also provide a novel technical approach for on-orbit astronauts health assurance during long-term space flight in the future.
4.Oral gavage of Lactococcus lactis expressing urate oxidase regulates serum uric acid level in mice.
Hao CHENG ; Guoqing XIONG ; Jiazhen CUI ; Zhili CHEN ; Chen ZHU ; Na SONG ; Qingyang WANG ; Xianghua XIONG ; Gang LIU ; Huipeng CHEN
Chinese Journal of Biotechnology 2024;40(11):4111-4119
Urate oxidase (Uox) plays a pivotal role in uric acid (UA) degradation, and it has been applied in controlling serum UA level in clinical treatment of hyperuricemia (HUA). However, because Uox is a heterogenous protein to the human body, the immune rejections typically occur after intravenous administration, which greatly hampers the application of Uox-based agents. In this study, we used Lactococcus lactis NZ9000, a food-grade bacterium, as a host to express exogenous Uox genes, to generate the Uox-expressing engineered strains to treat HUA. Aspergillus flavus-derived Uox (aUox) and the "resurrected" human-derived Uox (hUox) were cloned into vector and expressed in NZ9000, to generate engineered strains, respectively. The engineered NZ9000 strains were confirmed to express Uox and showed UA-lowering activity in a time-dependent manner in vitro. Next, in an HUA mice model established by oral gavage of yeast paste, the UA levels were increased by 85.4% and 106.2% at day 7 and day 14. By contrast, in mice fed with NZ9000-aUox, the UA levels were increased by 39.5% and 48.3% while in mice fed with NZ9000-hUox were increased by 57.0% and 82.9%, suggesting a UA-lowering activity of both engineered strains. Furthermore, compared with allopurinol, the first-line agent for HUA treatment, mice fed with NZ9000-aUox exhibited comparable liver safety but better kidney safety than allopurinol, indicating that the use of engineered NZ9000 strains not only alleviated kidney injury caused by HUA, but could also avoided the risk of kidney injury elicited by using allopurinol. Collectively, our study offers an effective and safe therapeutic approach for HUA long-term treatment and controlling.
Animals
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Lactococcus lactis/metabolism*
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Urate Oxidase/genetics*
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Mice
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Uric Acid/blood*
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Hyperuricemia
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Humans
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Administration, Oral
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Aspergillus flavus/genetics*
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Male
5.Correlation between the characteristics of motor evoked potential and severity of spinal cord injury in patients with acute cervical hyperextension injury and central spinal cord syndrome
Lijuan ZHAO ; Jianjie WANG ; Chunya GU ; Yuhui CHEN ; Zhili ZENG ; Ning XIE ; Bin MA ; Yan YU ; Wei XU ; Xiao HU ; Yilong REN ; Liming CHENG
Chinese Journal of Orthopaedic Trauma 2022;24(7):570-576
Objective:To study the correlation between the acute-phase characteristics of motor evoked potential (MEP) and severities of spinal cord injury in patients with acute cervical hyperextension injury and central cord syndrome (CCS).Methods:Retrospectively analyzed were the data of 45 patients with acute cervical hyperextension injury and CCS (observation group) who had been admitted to Department of Orthopedics, Tongji Hospital Affiliated to Tongji University from December 2018 to July 2021 and 20 healthy controls. Examination of transcranial magnetic stimulation-induced MEP was performed in patients with CCS and healthy controls using a magpro x100 magnetic stimulator, and recording was conducted in bilateral abductor pollicis brevis (APB). The characteristics of MEP waveform latency, amplitude and motor threshold were described and compared between the healthy control and observation groups; the correlations were analyzed between the MEP latency and the severity of spinal cord injury [American Spinal Injury Association (ASIA) total score and motor function of Upper Extremity Motor Subscores (UEMS)] in the observation group. According to different MEP-induced states, the patients in the observation group were divided into a resting group ( n=19), a facilitation group ( n=18), and a no-waveform group ( n=8). The severity of spinal cord injury (ASIA total score) and the functional independence of the spinal cord (SCIM-Ⅲ score) were compared among the 3 groups to analyze the correlation between the MEP-induced state and the severity of spinal cord injury (ASIA total score). Results:The observation group had a significantly longer MEP latency [(30.16±6.32) ms], a significantly smaller amplitude [(0.54±0.30) mV] and a significantly higher motor threshold [(65%±11%)] than the healthy control group (all P<0.05). The MEP latency in the observation group was significantly correlated with ASIA total score ( r=-0.730, P<0.001) and UEMS ( r=-0.740, P<0.001). The ASIA total score and SCIM-Ⅲ score were significantly different among the 3 groups ( P<0.05), and the MEP-induced state was significantly correlated with the severity of spinal cord injury (ASIA total score) ( r=0.668, P<0.001). Conclusions:In patients with acute cervical hyperextension injury and CCS, the MEP latency is prolonged, the amplitude lowered, and the motor threshold enhanced. The MEP latency is strongly correlated with the severity of spinal cord injury and upper limb motor function. The MEP-induced state is also closely related to the severity of spinal cord injury.
6.Evaluation of the performance of systems for whole blood C-reactive protein detection: a multi-center study
Juan CHENG ; Huaiyuan LI ; Haipeng LIU ; Yuxin WANG ; Jin XU ; Shangyang SHE ; Wei QU ; Yidong WU ; Guixia LI ; Junmei YANG ; Liya MO ; Yun XIANG ; Jiangwei KE ; Liyue KUI ; Lei ZHENG ; Hongbing CHEN ; Zhili YANG ; Xin LYU ; Hong ZHANG ; Zhenhua TANG ; Lijuan MA ; Hongquan LUO ; Xiangyang LI ; Wenli ZHANG ; Hui JIA ; Huiming YE ; Lijun TIAN ; Qiuhui PAN
Chinese Journal of Laboratory Medicine 2021;44(7):633-643
Objective:To explore the performance of the commonly used whole blood C-reactive protein (CRP) detection systems and give related recommendation on the performance requirements of detection systems.Methods:A total of 7 540 venous blood samples from 26 maternal, child and children′s hospitals were collected to conduct this multi-center study on the analytical performance of 5 commonly used whole blood CRP detection systems from March to April in 2019. The blank check, carryover, repeatability, intermediate precision, linearity, sample stability, influence of hematocrit/triglyceride/bilirubin, comparison with SIEMENS specific protein analyzer and trueness were evaluated. The 5 systems included BC-5390CRP autohematology analyzer, AstepPLUS specific protein analyzer, Ottoman-1000 Automated Specific Protein POCT Workstation, i-CHROMA Immunofluorometer equipment Reader and Orion QuikRead go detecting instrument. The 5 systems were labeled as a, b, c, d and e randomly.Results:Within the 5 systems, all values of blank check were less than 1.00 mg/L, the carryovers were lower than 1.00%. The repeatability of different ranges of CRP concentrations including 3.00-10.00, 10.00-30.00 and>30.00 mg/L were less than 10.00%, 6.00% and 5.00%, respectively, and the intermediate precision was less than 10.00%. The linearity correlation coefficients of the 5 systems were all above 0.975, while the slope was within 0.950-1.050. Whole blood samples were stable within 72 hours both at room temperature (18-25 ℃) and refrigerated temperature (2-8 ℃). The CRP results were rarely influenced by high triglyceride or bilirubin, except for the immmunoturbidimetric test based on microparticles coated with anti-human CRP F(ab) 2 fragments. When triglyceride was less than 15.46 mmol/L, the deviation of CRP was less than 10.00%. When bilirubin was less than 345.47 μmol/L, the deviation of CRP was less than 10.00%. CRP was more susceptible to Hct on the systems without Hct correction. The deviation of CRP between different Hct dilution concentration and 40% dilution concentration can reach as high as 67.48%. The correlation coefficients ( r) of 5 systems were all more than 0.975 in the range of 0-300.00 mg/L compared with Siemens specific protein analyzer. All systems passed the trueness verification using the samples with specified values of 12.89 and 30.60 mg/L. Conclusion:The performance of 5 systems can basically meet the clinical needs, but it is suggested that the whole blood CRP detection system without automatic Hct correction should be modified manually.
7.Analysis on prevention and control of some infectious diseases in the elderly aged 60 years and above in China and countermeasure recommendation
Ying CHENG ; Juan LI ; Zhibin PENG ; Muli ZHANG ; Ying QIN ; Xiaokun YANG ; Zhili LI ; Hongting ZHAO ; Chengxi SUN ; Jixiang MA ; Xin GAO ; Zhijie AN ; Dapeng YIN ; Zhongjie LI
Chinese Journal of Epidemiology 2021;42(1):28-32
As the progress of population aging in China, the proportion of elderly population is increasing. Both chronic diseases and infectious diseases can threaten the health of the elderly. There are many kinds of infectious diseases, including vaccine preventable infectious diseases affecting the health of adults, such as influenza, pneumococcal diseases and herpes zoster. In addition, the newly emerged COVID-19 has caused a pandemic in the world, resulting the highest proportion of deaths occurred in the elderly and posing a serious threat to the health of the elderly. This paper mainly summarizes the prevention and control of vaccine preventable diseases and COVID-19 to which the elderly are susceptible, analyzes the infectious disease problems affecting the health of elderly population, and recommends countermeasures for the prevention and control of these diseases in elderly population.
8.A retrospective comparison of MRI, ultrasound and X-ray mammography in detecting breast ductal carcinoma in situ
Yuxin LI ; Yingxuan WANG ; Liuquan CHENG ; Yiqiong ZHENG ; Mei LIU ; Zhili WANG ; Xiru LI ; Jiandong WANG ; Menglu LI
Chinese Journal of Radiology 2020;54(6):557-562
Objective:To compare the efficacies of MRI, X-ray mammography (XMG) and Ultrasound (US) in detecting and diagnosing breast ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS).Methods:Two hundred and forty one consecutive patients with pathology-confirmed DCIS were retrospectively recruited from January 2011 to December 2017 in PLA General Hospital. The imaging examination modalities included MRI and/or XMG and/or US.The breast imaging reporting and data system (BI-RADS) categorizations by MRI, XMG and US were compared and their sensitivities of detecting DCIS were calculated. The causes of underestimation on MRI were interpreted with the information of XMG and US. Chi-square test was used to compare the differences.Results:The diagnostic sensitivity of XMG, US and MRI was 65.9% (29/44), 71.6% (101/141) and 91.2% (145/159), respectively, with statistical significant differences (χ2 =24.034, P<0.001). Breast density and lesion type would influence the sensitivity of XMG. And the sensitivity of US was decreased because of non-mass lesion. Of the 14 cases under-evaluated as BI-RADS category 1 to 3 on MRI, 5 were corrected by XMG and/or US to BI-RADS category 4. The cause of underestimation on MRI was the coexistence of DCIS with adenoma or other benign lesion. Conclusion:The retrospective comparison of MRI, XMG and US in this study showed that MRI had significant higher sensitivity in detecting breast DCIS, while the false negative rates of XMG and US were un-negligible.
9. Interfacility transport with extracorporeal membrane oxygenation in pediatric patients: a multicenter study in China
Xiaoyang HONG ; Dongliang CHENG ; Ru LIN ; Changsong SHI ; Gangfeng YAN ; Zhe ZHAO ; Yingyue LIU ; Zhili LI ; Qiang YU ; Xiaojuan ZHANG ; Yan XING ; Guoping LU ; Zhichun FENG
Chinese Journal of Pediatrics 2019;57(5):350-354
Objective:
To investigate application and safety of pediatric interfacility-transport with extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) in China.
Methods:
The data of 48 patients transported inter-hospital from February 2016 to May 2018 were collected from the following 4 centers: pediatric intensive care unit (PICU) of Bayi Children′s Hospital Affiliated to the 7th Medical Center of PLA General Hospital, Pediatric Hospital of Fudan University, Henan Provincial People′s Hospital and Children′s Hospital of Zhejiang University School of Medicine. The data of patients′ characteristics, ECMO mode and wean rate, and mortality were reviewed, which was further compared with the data of 57 compatible inner-hospital ECMO cases with
10.Physiological effects of weightlessness: countermeasure system development for a long-term Chinese manned spaceflight.
Linjie WANG ; Zhili LI ; Cheng TAN ; Shujuan LIU ; Jianfeng ZHANG ; Siyang HE ; Peng ZOU ; Weibo LIU ; Yinghui LI
Frontiers of Medicine 2019;13(2):202-212
The Chinese space station will be built around 2020. As a national space laboratory, it will offer unique opportunities for studying the physiological effects of weightlessness and the efficacy of the countermeasures against such effects. In this paper, we described the development of countermeasure systems in the Chinese space program. To emphasize the need of the Chinese space program to implement its own program for developing countermeasures, we reviewed the literature on the negative physiological effects of weightlessness, the challenges of completing missions, the development of countermeasure devices, the establishment of countermeasure programs, and the efficacy of the countermeasure techniques in American and Russian manned spaceflights. In addition, a brief overview was provided on the Chinese research and development on countermeasures to discuss the current status and goals of the development of countermeasures against physiological problems associated with weightlessness.
China
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Humans
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Program Evaluation
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Space Flight
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Weightlessness
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Weightlessness Simulation

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