1.Progress in practice of infectious disease epidemiology in China
Weizhong YANG ; Luzhao FENG ; Zhongjie LI ; Yu LI ; Qiangru HUANG ; Xuancheng HU ; Zeni WU ; Xiaodan FAN ; Ting ZHANG ; Qing WANG ; Yanxia SUN ; Jianxing YU ; Enmin DING ; Mengmeng JIA
Chinese Journal of Epidemiology 2025;46(7):1276-1282
With the change of infectious disease incidence pattern and the development of related technologies, progresses have been made in the research of infectious disease epidemiology. In recent years, due to the change in the requirements of infectious disease prevention and control, the research focus has expanded from common infectious diseases to diseases which have been eliminated or might be eliminated, as well as emerging and re-emerging infectious diseases. Infectious disease data has been characterized by multiple sources and modalities. Along with the rapid development of pathogen detection methods, infectious disease surveillance has shifted from a single disease-targted one to a comprehensive one. Moreover, novel technologies such as multi-omics and artificial intelligence have been applied in infectious disease epidemiology research. The international cooperation in this field has become increasingly crucial, and the revision of the International Health Regulations and the negotiation of pandemic agreement will have a profound impact. In the future, infectious disease epidemiology research will develop with more powerful tools to improve its capabilities.
2.Laparoscopic surgical management and outcomes of diaphragmatic hernia after diaphragmatic rupture
Yiping LI ; Enmin HUANG ; Ning MA ; Zehui HOU ; Shuang CHEN ; Taicheng ZHOU
Chinese Journal of General Surgery 2025;40(9):691-695
Objective:To evaluate the clinical diagnosis and laparoscopic surgical management of diaphragmatic rupture.Methods:Clinical data of 19 patients diagnosed with diaphragmatic hernia secondary to diaphragmatic rupture, admitted to the Sixth Affiliated Hospital of Sun Yat-sen University from Jan 2022 to Sep 2024 was retrospectively analyzed.Results:There were 7 males and 12 females. Traumatic etiology was confirmed in 9 cases, all developed after closed injuries, including one vehicular accident, seven blunt traumas, and one fall from height. Iatrogenic factors accounted for the remaining 10 cases. Left-sided diaphragmatic hernias were observed in 13 patients, while right-sided hernias occurred in 6 patients. Hiatal hernias were complicated in 5 patients. All patients underwent elective laparoscopic tension-free repair using composite patch for defect closure. Postoperatively, one patient was readmitted into ICU due to reexpansion pulmonary edema but was subsequently discharged following recovery. The median postoperative hospital stay was 10 days.Conclusions:The incidence of diaphragmatic rupture is relatively uncommon, primarily occurring as a result of traumatic or iatrogenic injuries. Early diagnosis coupled with prompt laparoscopic surgical intervention has proven to be effective in managing this condition.
3.Central role of surgical management in the diagnosis and treatment of gastroesoph- ageal reflux disease and its indications decision-making framework
Enmin HUANG ; Zehui HOU ; Ning MA ; Shuang CHEN ; Taicheng ZHOU
Chinese Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery 2025;28(10):1118-1122
The surgical management of gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) has completed a paradigm shift from symptomatic palliation to curative intervention. For high-risk patients with pathological acid exposure (AET>6%), progressive anatomical destruction (e.g., ≥2 cm hiatal hernia or Hill grade III/IV lesions), or those requiring interruption of carcinogenic progression (such as Barrett's esophagus with dysplasia), anti-reflux surgery provides superior long-term efficacy compared to pharmacotherapy. Surgical indications require a three-dimensional assessment integrating anatomical, functional, and risk factors: patients with dominant anatomical defects are recommended to undergo combined hernia repair and fundoplication (biological mesh reinforcement for recurrent hernias reduces recurrence rates to 16.7%); functionally decompensated groups require decision-making based on objective reflux metrics (e. g.,>75 reflux events/24 hours); special populations such as post-bariatric GERD should preferentially undergo Roux-en-Y gastric bypass (reflux control rate: 93%), while those with motility disorders (e. g., scleroderma) are suitable for partial fundoplication to mitigate dysphagia risk (OR=0.285). Precision decision-making is achieved through a stepwise evaluation pathway (endoscopy→pH-impedance monitoring→high-resolution manometry). Intraoperative strategies are individualized based on motility status: patients with normal esophageal motility undergo the Nissen procedure, the elderly or those with ineffective esophageal motility are prioritized for Toupet fundoplication for optimized long-term safety, and magnetic sphincter augmentationenables 96% of PPI-responsive but medication-averse patients to discontinue drug dependency. The core value of surgical intervention lies in simultaneously achieving anatomical restoration and functional reconstruction, along with blocking Barrett's esophageal carcinogenesis (OR=0.41). This dual mechanism signifies a fundamental transformation in GERD management strategy.
4.Progress in practice of infectious disease epidemiology in China
Weizhong YANG ; Luzhao FENG ; Zhongjie LI ; Yu LI ; Qiangru HUANG ; Xuancheng HU ; Zeni WU ; Xiaodan FAN ; Ting ZHANG ; Qing WANG ; Yanxia SUN ; Jianxing YU ; Enmin DING ; Mengmeng JIA
Chinese Journal of Epidemiology 2025;46(7):1276-1282
With the change of infectious disease incidence pattern and the development of related technologies, progresses have been made in the research of infectious disease epidemiology. In recent years, due to the change in the requirements of infectious disease prevention and control, the research focus has expanded from common infectious diseases to diseases which have been eliminated or might be eliminated, as well as emerging and re-emerging infectious diseases. Infectious disease data has been characterized by multiple sources and modalities. Along with the rapid development of pathogen detection methods, infectious disease surveillance has shifted from a single disease-targted one to a comprehensive one. Moreover, novel technologies such as multi-omics and artificial intelligence have been applied in infectious disease epidemiology research. The international cooperation in this field has become increasingly crucial, and the revision of the International Health Regulations and the negotiation of pandemic agreement will have a profound impact. In the future, infectious disease epidemiology research will develop with more powerful tools to improve its capabilities.
5.Central role of surgical management in the diagnosis and treatment of gastroesoph- ageal reflux disease and its indications decision-making framework
Enmin HUANG ; Zehui HOU ; Ning MA ; Shuang CHEN ; Taicheng ZHOU
Chinese Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery 2025;28(10):1118-1122
The surgical management of gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) has completed a paradigm shift from symptomatic palliation to curative intervention. For high-risk patients with pathological acid exposure (AET>6%), progressive anatomical destruction (e.g., ≥2 cm hiatal hernia or Hill grade III/IV lesions), or those requiring interruption of carcinogenic progression (such as Barrett's esophagus with dysplasia), anti-reflux surgery provides superior long-term efficacy compared to pharmacotherapy. Surgical indications require a three-dimensional assessment integrating anatomical, functional, and risk factors: patients with dominant anatomical defects are recommended to undergo combined hernia repair and fundoplication (biological mesh reinforcement for recurrent hernias reduces recurrence rates to 16.7%); functionally decompensated groups require decision-making based on objective reflux metrics (e. g.,>75 reflux events/24 hours); special populations such as post-bariatric GERD should preferentially undergo Roux-en-Y gastric bypass (reflux control rate: 93%), while those with motility disorders (e. g., scleroderma) are suitable for partial fundoplication to mitigate dysphagia risk (OR=0.285). Precision decision-making is achieved through a stepwise evaluation pathway (endoscopy→pH-impedance monitoring→high-resolution manometry). Intraoperative strategies are individualized based on motility status: patients with normal esophageal motility undergo the Nissen procedure, the elderly or those with ineffective esophageal motility are prioritized for Toupet fundoplication for optimized long-term safety, and magnetic sphincter augmentationenables 96% of PPI-responsive but medication-averse patients to discontinue drug dependency. The core value of surgical intervention lies in simultaneously achieving anatomical restoration and functional reconstruction, along with blocking Barrett's esophageal carcinogenesis (OR=0.41). This dual mechanism signifies a fundamental transformation in GERD management strategy.
6.Laparoscopic surgical management and outcomes of diaphragmatic hernia after diaphragmatic rupture
Yiping LI ; Enmin HUANG ; Ning MA ; Zehui HOU ; Shuang CHEN ; Taicheng ZHOU
Chinese Journal of General Surgery 2025;40(9):691-695
Objective:To evaluate the clinical diagnosis and laparoscopic surgical management of diaphragmatic rupture.Methods:Clinical data of 19 patients diagnosed with diaphragmatic hernia secondary to diaphragmatic rupture, admitted to the Sixth Affiliated Hospital of Sun Yat-sen University from Jan 2022 to Sep 2024 was retrospectively analyzed.Results:There were 7 males and 12 females. Traumatic etiology was confirmed in 9 cases, all developed after closed injuries, including one vehicular accident, seven blunt traumas, and one fall from height. Iatrogenic factors accounted for the remaining 10 cases. Left-sided diaphragmatic hernias were observed in 13 patients, while right-sided hernias occurred in 6 patients. Hiatal hernias were complicated in 5 patients. All patients underwent elective laparoscopic tension-free repair using composite patch for defect closure. Postoperatively, one patient was readmitted into ICU due to reexpansion pulmonary edema but was subsequently discharged following recovery. The median postoperative hospital stay was 10 days.Conclusions:The incidence of diaphragmatic rupture is relatively uncommon, primarily occurring as a result of traumatic or iatrogenic injuries. Early diagnosis coupled with prompt laparoscopic surgical intervention has proven to be effective in managing this condition.
7.Therapeutic effect of Dor gastric fundus folding surgery on gastroesophageal reflux disease after sleeve gastrectomy
Enmin HUANG ; Zehui HOU ; Ning MA ; Shuang CHEN ; Taicheng ZHOU
Chinese Journal of General Surgery 2024;39(6):439-443
Objective:To explore the efficacy and safety of laparoscopic Dor fundoplication in treating gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) after laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy (LSG).Methods:A retrospective analysis was conducted on 11 patients undergoing laparoscopic Dor fundoplication between Oct 2021 and Oct 2023. These patients had previously undergone LSG due to obesity and related metabolic diseases and developed GERD postoperatively. The GerdQ scale scores, results of endoscopy, upper gastrointestinal radiography, and gastric window color Doppler ultrasonography were analyzed.Result:Surgeries were successfully performed in these 11 patients. After esophageal hiatus repair, 10 patients underwent reinforcement of the diaphragmatic crus using biological or synthetic anti-adhesion patches. The average operative time was (120±31) minutes, and the average postoperative hospital stay was (9±3) days. Follow-up at 6 months revealed complete resolution of GERD symptoms in 10 patients. Intraoperatively one patient sustained injuries to the left hepatic vein and esophagus. Postoperative complications included one case of intestinal obstruction and one case of dysphagia, one patient failed to get experience improvement in GERD symptoms. All complications were managed successfully except for one needing re-admission for interventional esophageal balloon dilation due to dysphagia.Conclusion:Laparoscopic Dor fundoplication serves as a safe and effective revision surgery for GERD following LSG.
8.Surgical treatment strategies for gastroesophageal reflux disease
Shuang CHEN ; Enmin HUANG ; Taicheng ZHOU
Journal of Surgery Concepts & Practice 2024;29(4):292-295
Gastroesophageal reflux disease(GERD)is a common digestive disorder with a global prevalence of approximately 13%.The primary surgical options include the 360° Nissen fundoplication,270° Toupet fundoplication,and 180° Dor fundoplication.While the Nissen procedure demonstrates superior long-term outcomes compared to the other methods,it is associated with a higher incidence of postoperative dysphagia.Surgical decisions should be individualized based on esophageal motility and pH monitoring.The surgery not only aims to repair anatomical structures,but also to restore function,including the length of the abdominal esophagus and the angulation between the crura diaphragm and the spine.Reconstruction of the gastroesophageal valve and the phrenoesophageal fascia is crucial for optimizing surgical outcomes and preventing postoperative complications.Given the physiological and psychological changes associated with GERD,personalized treatment is essential for improving symptoms and enhancing quality of life.

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