1.Identification and transfusion strategy for anti-Fy combined with Rh Blood Group system antibodies
Wenju XIE ; Chengxin ZHANG ; Qiushi WANG ; Yang LI
Chinese Journal of Blood Transfusion 2026;39(2):236-240
Objective: To investigate the identification process of a case with anti-Fy
combined with Rh blood group system antibodies and to review the transfusion strategy and epidemiological characteristics of Duffy blood group system antibodies. Methods: The antibody specificity of a patient diagnosed with liver cirrhosis, who exhibited unexpected antibodies, was determined using the microcolumn gel method, enzyme method, and elution test. A retrospective analysis was performed to assess the incidence and clinical characteristics of antibodies associated with the Duffy blood group system among a cohort of 652 003 patients treated at our hospital from 2014 to 2024. Results: The patient's serum contained anti-Fy
, anti-c, and anti-E antibodies. Through the targeted recruitment of African international students, the patient successfully received four units of Fy
-negative blood that matched the ABO and Rh phenotypes. Between 2014 and 2024, the incidence of Duffy blood group system antibodies was 0.005 7% (37 out of 652 003), with 9 cases (24.3%) combined with Rh antibodies. Conclusion: Patients with anti-Fy
combined with Rh antibodies require Fy
-negative blood with matched Rh phenotypes. Targeted recruitment based on racial antigen differences can effectively resolve rare blood type transfusion challenges.
2.Equivalence of SYN008 versus omalizumab in patients with refractory chronic spontaneous urticaria: A multicenter, randomized, double-blind, parallel-group, active-controlled phase III study.
Jingyi LI ; Yunsheng LIANG ; Wenli FENG ; Liehua DENG ; Hong FANG ; Chao JI ; Youkun LIN ; Furen ZHANG ; Rushan XIA ; Chunlei ZHANG ; Shuping GUO ; Mao LIN ; Yanling LI ; Shoumin ZHANG ; Xiaojing KANG ; Liuqing CHEN ; Zhiqiang SONG ; Xu YAO ; Chengxin LI ; Xiuping HAN ; Guoxiang GUO ; Qing GUO ; Xinsuo DUAN ; Jie LI ; Juan SU ; Shanshan LI ; Qing SUN ; Juan TAO ; Yangfeng DING ; Danqi DENG ; Fuqiu LI ; Haiyun SUO ; Shunquan WU ; Jingbo QIU ; Hongmei LUO ; Linfeng LI ; Ruoyu LI
Chinese Medical Journal 2025;138(16):2040-2042
3.Guidelines for the diagnosis and treatment of prurigo nodularis.
Li ZHANG ; Qingchun DIAO ; Xia DOU ; Hong FANG ; Songmei GENG ; Hao GUO ; Yaolong CHEN ; Chao JI ; Chengxin LI ; Linfeng LI ; Jie LI ; Jingyi LI ; Wei LI ; Zhiming LI ; Yunsheng LIANG ; Jianjun QIAO ; Zhiqiang SONG ; Qing SUN ; Juan TAO ; Fang WANG ; Zhiqiang XIE ; Jinhua XU ; Suling XU ; Hongwei YAN ; Xu YAO ; Jianzhong ZHANG ; Litao ZHANG ; Gang ZHU ; Fei HAO ; Xinghua GAO
Chinese Medical Journal 2025;138(22):2859-2861
4.Effect and Mechanism of Lobetyolin on Cholesterol Metabolism in HepG2 Cells
Ruiling YANG ; Qiang CHEN ; Guibin XIONG ; Xiaoming ZHANG ; Jie LI ; Faming WU ; Chengxin SUN
World Science and Technology-Modernization of Traditional Chinese Medicine 2025;27(1):154-160
Objective To investigate the mechanism of lobetyolin's intervention in HepG2 cells abnormal cholesterol metabolism.Methods This study used oleic acid(OA)stimulation of HepG2 cells as a model.MTT assay,oil red O staining,biochemical kit assay,qRT-PCR assay,Western blot assay and NBD labeled cholesterol effection assay were used to study the effect of lobetyolin on cholesterol metabolism in HepG2 cells.Results The results showed that lobetyolin could reduce the content of lipid drops,the levels of triglyceride(TG)and total cholesterol(TC)in HepG2 cells stimulated by OA,increase cholesterol effection rate,and up-regulate cytochrome 7A1(CYP7A1),liver x receptor α(LXRα),ATP-binding cassette transporter A1(ABCA1),peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor(PPARγ)and other mRNA or protein expression levels.However,combined intervention with PPARγ antagonist Mifobate(SR-202)can significantly inhibit the promoting effect of lobetyolin on cholesterol metabolism in HepG2 cells.Conclusion This study revealed that lobetyolin can improve the cholesterol effection rate of HepG2 cells stimulated by OA and promote cholesterol catabolism,and the mechanism of action may be related to the regulation of PPARγ/CYP7A1 pathway.
5.Outcomes of mitral regurgitation after surgery for large atrial septal defects
Xiaopu WANG ; Jinguo XU ; Chengxin ZHANG ; Shenglin GE
Chinese Journal of Primary Medicine and Pharmacy 2025;32(8):1159-1163
Objective:To investigate the changes in the severity of mitral regurgitation in patients with large atrial septal defects after surgery.Methods:This study conducted a retrospective analysis using a self-controlled method on 145 patients with secundum atrial septal defects greater than 2 cm who underwent surgical treatment in the Department of Cardiology and Macrovascular Surgery at The First Affiliated Hospital of Anhui Medical University from January 2021 to October 2023. Among these patients, 74 underwent surgical closure, while 71 underwent surgical repair. Data including general information, defect size, number of surgeries of various types, preoperative transthoracic echocardiogram results, and follow-up results from the first and most recent transthoracic echocardiograms after discharge for all patients were collected. The Friedman test was used to compare the degree of mitral regurgitation before surgery and at the first and most recent follow-up after discharge. The differences in the severity of mitral regurgitation in patients before and after surgical treatment were analyzed.Results:Among the 145 patients, there were 25 males and 110 females, with an average age of (36 ± 14) years, height of (163.4 ± 8.2) cm, and body weight of (59.5 ± 10.5) kg. The diameter of the defect was (2.49 ± 0.35) cm. Before surgery, the severity of mitral regurgitation was classified as none, mild, and moderate (including mild to moderate) for 57 patients (39.3%), 83 patients (57.2%), and 5 patients (3.4%), respectively. The average follow-up duration was (324 ± 153) days. At the first follow-up after discharge, the severity of mitral regurgitation was none, mild, and moderate for 50 patients (34.5%), 87 patients (60.0%), and 8 patients (5.5%), respectively. At the most recent follow-up after discharge, the severity of mitral regurgitation was none, mild, and moderate for 30 patients (20.7%), 89 patients (61.4%), and 26 patients (17.9%), respectively. Compared with the preoperative severity of mitral regurgitation, the most recent follow-up showed worsening in 65 patients (44.8%) and improvement in 22 patients (15.2%). The mean rank sums for the three degrees of mitral regurgitation were 1.83, 1.91, and 2.26, with a statistically significant difference ( χ2 = 25.36, P = 0.001). Pairwise comparisons indicated that the most recent follow-up after discharge showed worsening compared with the preoperative severity of mitral regurgitation ( P < 0.05) and that it also worsened compared with the first follow-up after discharge ( P < 0.05). Conclusions:In patients with secundum atrial septal defects greater than 2 cm, undergoing surgery solely for atrial septal defects may result in the potential worsening of mitral regurgitation after the procedure.
6.Impact of body habitus and gender on radiation dose in low-dose chest CT with spectral purification technology
Xinnan SHEN ; Xinyou LI ; Gang PENG ; Chengxin WAN ; Yajing YANG ; Zhiwei ZHANG
Chinese Journal of Radiology 2025;59(7):784-790
Objective:To investigate the effects of body habitus and gender on radiation dose assessment methodologies in low-dose chest CT, with particular emphasis on clarifying discrepancies among various dose quantification approaches and their associations with patient characteristics.Methods:Imaging data from 19 371 patients who underwent low-dose chest CT at the First Affiliated Hospital of Chongqing Medical University between January 2021 and January 2024 were retrospectively analyzed. Patients were categorized into eight groups based on water-equivalent diameter (WED) and gender: Group A (150 mm≤WED<210 mm; 71 males, 1 032 females), Group B (210 mm≤WED<260 mm; 4 525 males, 8 005 females), Group C (260 mm≤WED<300 mm; 4 234 males, 1 105 females), and Group D (WED≥300 mm; 357 males, 42 females). WED, size-specific dose estimate (SSDE), and organ dose-based effective dose(ED Radimetrics)were calculated using Radimetrics software. Scanner-reported dose metrics, including volume CT dose index (CTDIvol), dose-length product (DLP), and DLP-derived effective dose(ED DLP), were recorded. The ratios of SSDE/CTDIvol and ED Radimetrics/ED DLP were used to quantify discrepancies between dose evaluation methods. The Kruskal-Wallis test was employed to analyze dose metric differences across WED groups within the same gender, while the Wilcoxon rank-sum test compared gender-based differences within each WED group. Results:All dose metrics significantly increased with WED for both genders (all P<0.05). Within the same WED group, ED Radimetrics was significantly higher in females ( P<0.05), whereas ED DLP was higher in males ( P<0.05). The SSDE/CTDIvol ratio decreased with increasing WED, declining from 1.74 in Group A to 1.16 in Group D for females and from 1.68 to 1.12 for males. The ED Radimetrics/ED DLP ratio exhibited a decreasing trend with WED in females (1.82 to 1.30) but showed an initial increase in males (1.29 in Group A to 1.31 in Group B) before decreasing to 0.94 in Group D (all intergroup P<0.05). SSDE/CTDIvol and ED Radimetrics/ED DLP ratios of females were consistently higher than that of males within each WED group (all P<0.05). Conclusions:Patient body habitus and gender significantly influence radiation dose distribution in low-dose chest CT. Larger body habitus is associated with higher radiation doses, while females receive greater ED Radimetrics than males within comparable body habitus. Traditional dose metrics (CTDIvol and ED DLP) were underestimated for patients with small body sizes and female individuals.
7.Evolution-guided design of mini-protein for high-contrast in vivo imaging.
Nongyu HUANG ; Yang CAO ; Guangjun XIONG ; Suwen CHEN ; Juan CHENG ; Yifan ZHOU ; Chengxin ZHANG ; Xiaoqiong WEI ; Wenling WU ; Yawen HU ; Pei ZHOU ; Guolin LI ; Fulei ZHAO ; Fanlian ZENG ; Xiaoyan WANG ; Jiadong YU ; Chengcheng YUE ; Xinai CUI ; Kaijun CUI ; Huawei CAI ; Yuquan WEI ; Yang ZHANG ; Jiong LI
Acta Pharmaceutica Sinica B 2025;15(10):5327-5345
Traditional development of small protein scaffolds has relied on display technologies and mutation-based engineering, which limit sequence and functional diversity, thereby constraining their therapeutic and application potential. Protein design tools have significantly advanced the creation of novel protein sequences, structures, and functions. However, further improvements in design strategies are still needed to more efficiently optimize the functional performance of protein-based drugs and enhance their druggability. Here, we extended an evolution-based design protocol to create a novel minibinder, BindHer, against the human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2). It not only exhibits super stability and binding selectivity but also demonstrates remarkable properties in tissue specificity. Radiolabeling experiments with 99mTc, 68Ga, and 18F revealed that BindHer efficiently targets tumors in HER2-positive breast cancer mouse models, with minimal nonspecific liver absorption, outperforming scaffolds designed through traditional engineering. These findings highlight a new rational approach to automated protein design, offering significant potential for large-scale applications in therapeutic mini-protein development.
8.Progress in the root treatment of acute type A aortic dissection
Chinese Journal of Clinical Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery 2025;32(08):1189-1194
Acute type A aortic dissection is a lethal disease that requires immediate surgical intervention and lifesaving measures. The treatment of this condition primarily involves addressing the complex structure and vital role of the aortic root. Since 1968, surgical techniques for aortic dissection type A have rapidly advanced, significantly improving patients' outcomes. In recent years, various approaches to aortic root management have emerged. This article provides a comprehensive overview of these approaches.
9.Application of echocardiography in early efficacy evaluation after transapical transcatheter aortic valve replacement via transapical approach
Chaolong JIN ; Xuegong SHI ; Chengxin ZHANG ; Youfeng LIANG ; Jie XIAO ; Zhe SHENG ; Dingxin ZHANG
Journal of Jilin University(Medicine Edition) 2025;51(1):228-237
Objective:To discuss the clinical application value of echocardiography in evaluating the early outcomes of transcatheter aortic valve replacement(TAVR)via the transapical approach,and to clarify the role of echocardiography in assessing the efficacy of the surgery.Methods:The clinical data of 85 patients who received J-Valve prosthetic valves via the transapical TAVR were retrospectively analyzed.The patients were divided into AS group(simple aortic stenosis,n=20),AR group(simple aortic regurgitation,n=37),and AS&AR group(aortic stenosis with regurgitation,n=28).Echocardiographic examination was performed on all the patients before operation,1 week after operation,3 months after operation,and 6 months after operation.The parameters including left ventricular end-diastolic volume(LVEDV),left ventricular end-systolic volume(LVESV),left ventricular ejection fraction(LVEF),left ventricular fractional shortening(LVFS),interventricular septal thickness(IVST),left ventricular posterior wall thickness(LVPWT),aortic valve peak flow velocity(AV Vmax),aortic valve mean transvalvular pressure gradient(AV PGmean),and paravalvular leak(PVL)width were measured to evaluate the cardiac function and the function of the prosthetic valve;the occurrence of postoperative complications of the patients in various groups was also analyzed.Results:J-Valve prosthetic valves were successfully implanted in all 85 patients.There were no significant differences in age,gender,New York Heart Association(NYHA)heart function classification,history of hypertension,history of diabetes,history of hyperlipidemia,and history of coronary artery disease among various groups befor operation(P>0.05),ensuring comparability.Compared with before operation,1 week after operation,the AV Vmax and AV PGmean of the patients in AS group and AS&AR group were decreased(P<0.05);there were no significant differences in various parameters of the patients in AR group(P>0.05).Compared with before operation,3 months after operation,the LVEF and LVFS of the patients in AS group were increased(P<0.05),while the AV Vmax and AV PGmean were decreased(P<0.05);the LVEDV and LVESV of the patients in AR group were decreased(P<0.05),while the LVEF and LVFS were increased(P<0.05);the LVEDV,LVESV,AV Vmax,and AV PGmean of the patients in AS&AR group were decreased(P<0.05),while the LVEF and LVFS were increased(P<0.05).Compared with before operation,LVEDV,LVESV,IVST,and LVPWT of the patients in all three groups 6 months after operation were decreased(P<0.05),while LVEF and LVFS were increased(P<0.05);the AV Vmax and AV PGmean of the patients in AS group and AS&AR group were decreased(P<0.05);the AV PGmean of the patients in AR group was decreased(P<0.05).The postoperative complications included 3 cases of permanent pacemaker implantation(2 cases in AS group,1 case in AR group),1 case of stroke(in AS group),and 13 cases of PVL(4 cases in AS group,5 cases in AR group,4 cases in AS&AR group).No deaths occurred during follow-up.Conclusion:Echocardiography can accurately and quantitatively evaluate early changes in cardiac function and the functional state of prosthetic valves after transapical TAVR,providing objective evidence for evaluating surgical outcomes and postoperative complications.
10.Impact of body habitus and gender on radiation dose in low-dose chest CT with spectral purification technology
Xinnan SHEN ; Xinyou LI ; Gang PENG ; Chengxin WAN ; Yajing YANG ; Zhiwei ZHANG
Chinese Journal of Radiology 2025;59(7):784-790
Objective:To investigate the effects of body habitus and gender on radiation dose assessment methodologies in low-dose chest CT, with particular emphasis on clarifying discrepancies among various dose quantification approaches and their associations with patient characteristics.Methods:Imaging data from 19 371 patients who underwent low-dose chest CT at the First Affiliated Hospital of Chongqing Medical University between January 2021 and January 2024 were retrospectively analyzed. Patients were categorized into eight groups based on water-equivalent diameter (WED) and gender: Group A (150 mm≤WED<210 mm; 71 males, 1 032 females), Group B (210 mm≤WED<260 mm; 4 525 males, 8 005 females), Group C (260 mm≤WED<300 mm; 4 234 males, 1 105 females), and Group D (WED≥300 mm; 357 males, 42 females). WED, size-specific dose estimate (SSDE), and organ dose-based effective dose(ED Radimetrics)were calculated using Radimetrics software. Scanner-reported dose metrics, including volume CT dose index (CTDIvol), dose-length product (DLP), and DLP-derived effective dose(ED DLP), were recorded. The ratios of SSDE/CTDIvol and ED Radimetrics/ED DLP were used to quantify discrepancies between dose evaluation methods. The Kruskal-Wallis test was employed to analyze dose metric differences across WED groups within the same gender, while the Wilcoxon rank-sum test compared gender-based differences within each WED group. Results:All dose metrics significantly increased with WED for both genders (all P<0.05). Within the same WED group, ED Radimetrics was significantly higher in females ( P<0.05), whereas ED DLP was higher in males ( P<0.05). The SSDE/CTDIvol ratio decreased with increasing WED, declining from 1.74 in Group A to 1.16 in Group D for females and from 1.68 to 1.12 for males. The ED Radimetrics/ED DLP ratio exhibited a decreasing trend with WED in females (1.82 to 1.30) but showed an initial increase in males (1.29 in Group A to 1.31 in Group B) before decreasing to 0.94 in Group D (all intergroup P<0.05). SSDE/CTDIvol and ED Radimetrics/ED DLP ratios of females were consistently higher than that of males within each WED group (all P<0.05). Conclusions:Patient body habitus and gender significantly influence radiation dose distribution in low-dose chest CT. Larger body habitus is associated with higher radiation doses, while females receive greater ED Radimetrics than males within comparable body habitus. Traditional dose metrics (CTDIvol and ED DLP) were underestimated for patients with small body sizes and female individuals.

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