1.Unilateral biportal endoscopy assisted bilateral decompression in the treatment of lumbar disc herniation with imaging herniation on one side and clinical symptoms on the contralateral side
Weiliang SU ; Yongfeng DOU ; Dong LIU ; Guohua DAI ; Min ZHANG ; Jianqiang XING ; Dawei WANG ; Peng HU ; Xiaopeng GENG
Chinese Journal of Orthopaedics 2025;45(1):44-50
Objective:To observe the clinical efficacy of unilateral biportal endoscopy (UBE) assisted bilateral decompression in the treatment of lumbar disc herniation with imaging herniation on one side and clinical symptoms on the contralateral side.Methods:A total of 20 patients with lumbar disc herniation with imaging herniation on one side and clinical symptoms on the contralateral side treated with UBE from January 2022 to January 2024 in the Affiliated Hospital of Binzhou Medical University were retrospectively analyzed. There were 9 males and 11 females, aged 50.4±14.0 years (range, 23-72 years). The intervertebral disc herniation level included L 3-4 in 1 case, L 4-5 in 15 cases, and L 5S 1 in 4 cases. There were 10 cases on the left side and 10 cases on the right side. The duration of symptoms was 24.1±33.7 months (range, 1-120 months). Visual analogue scale (VAS) and Oswestry disability index (ODI) were used to evaluate postoperative pain relief and functional recovery. The clinical efficacy was evaluated by modified MacNab criteria at 6 months after operation. Results:All patients successfully completed the operation. The operation time was 90.3±24.6 min (range, 55-134 mins). The VAS scores of patients at 3 days, 1 month, 3 months and 6 months after operation were 3.6±0.9, 2.2±0.7, 1.2±0.5 and 1.0±0.6, respectively, which were lower than those before operation (6.4±0.8), and the differences were statistically significant ( F=668.728, P<0.001). The ODI at 3 days, 1 month, 3 months and 6 months after operation were 34.2%±4.7%, 28.7%±2.8%, 24.3%±2.1% and 20.5%±2.0%, respectively, which were lower than 69.4%±5.2% before operation, and the differences were statistically significant ( F=515.578, P<0.001). The clinical efficacy was evaluated by modified MacNab criteria at 6 months after operation. Among 20 patients, 18 cases were excellent, 1 case was good, and 1 case was fair. All patients were followed up for 9.1±2.1 months (range, 6-14 months). One patient had a dural tear during the operation, but the range was small and there was no defect, and no further treatment was performed. Numbness of the lower limbs occurred 1 day after operation, and the symptoms disappeared after symptomatic treatment. There was no recurrence of lower limb symptoms, lumbar instability, intervertebral space infection or other complications at the last follow-up. Conclusion:Bilateral decompression with UBE is effective in the treatment of lumbar disc herniation with imaging herniation on one side and clinical symptoms on the contralateral side, which can improve the lumbar pain and function of patients.
2.Establishing reference interval for uric acid in normal weight children
Guohua LI ; Yuanyuan MENG ; Yangxi LI ; Ke HUANG ; Wei WU ; Guanping DONG ; Li ZHANG ; Xuelian ZHOU ; Xiaoqiang HAO ; Junfen FU
Chinese Journal of Pediatrics 2025;63(12):1349-1353
Objective:To investigate the reference intervals of serum uric acid levels in normal-weight children and analyze the factors influencing these levels.Methods:In this cross-sectional study, clinical data were collected from 7 910 normal-weight children, aged 1 month to 15 years, who underwent health check-ups at the Children′s Hospital of Zhejiang University School of Medicine between August 2013 and August 2023. Data included sex, age, pubertal signs, blood pressure, and serum uric acid levels. The participants were categorized into 4 age groups: 1-<12 months, 1-<6 years, 6-<11 years, and 11-<16 years, and were further analyzed by sex. The P5 and P95 percentiles of uric acid values were defined as the lower and upper limits of the reference interval, respectively. Correlation analysis and partial correlation analysis were used to assess the relationship between uric acid and other variables such as age, body mass index Z value, and Tanner stage. Multivariate linear regression was used to compare uric acid levels across gender and age groups, respectively. Results:Among the 7 910 children, the distribution across age groups was as follows: 562 (317 boys) in 1-<12 months, 4 120 (2 366 boys) in 1-<6 years, 2 357 (1 432 boys) in 6-<11 years, and 871 (536 boys) in 11-<16 years, the uric acid levels in boys were significantly higher than those in girls ( P<0.05). Uric acid levels exhibited a positive correlation with age ( r=0.47 , 0.20, both P<0.001), and a weak positive correlation with BMI Z-scores(both r=0.11, P<0.001). Among participants aged 6-<11 years and 11-<16 years, uric acid levels in boys were positively correlated with Tanner stage ( r=0.10, 0.27, both P<0.05), but no significant correlation was observed in girls (all P>0.05). The uric acid levels were significantly higher in boys than in girls in the 1-<12 months, 1-<6 years and 11-<16 years age groups (all P<0.05), but no significant gender difference was found in the 6-<11 years groups ( P>0.05). Uric acid levels exhibited statistically significant variations among age groups ( P<0.001). The reference intervals of uric acid values were as follows in 1-<12 months age group, 157-335 μmol/L for boys and 160-315 μmol/L for girls; in 1-<6 years age group, 180-359 μmol/L for boys and 180-355 μmol/L for girls; in 6-<11 years group, 190-375 μmol/L; in 11-<16 years age group, 237-480 μmol/L for boys and 218-410 μmol/L for girls. Conclusions:Reference intervals for uric acid varying significantly across different pediatric age groups. Sex, and pubertal development status are closely related to uric acid levels.
3.The impact of preoperative enteral nutrition preconditioning on postoperative nutrition-related complications and gastrointestinal function following esophageal cancer surgery
Canhui LIU ; Chengxiang ZHU ; Yuanguo LIU ; Guohua DONG ; Weiwei HE
Clinical Medicine of China 2025;41(6):429-435
Objective:To investigate the effects of preoperative enteral nutrition on nutrition-related complications and gastrointestinal function in esophageal cancer patients by administering EN before surgery.Methods:A total of 215 patients who underwent thoracoscopic esophagectomy at Nanjing Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine between January 2018 and December 2020 were retrospectively analyzed in this study. Among them, 145 patients received enteral nutrition preconditioning, while 70 patients received traditional nutritional support. The nutritional risk was assessed according to the Nutritional Risk Screening 2002 (NRS2002), and the patients were categorized into non-nutritional risk group (NRS2002<3) and nutritional risk group (NRS2002≥3). Patients in the traditional nutritional support group with NRS2002<3 were provided with a regular diet three days prior to surgery, whereas those with NRS2002≥3 received intravenous fat emulsion amino acid glucose for nutritional support. In the enteral nutrition preconditioning group, patients with NRS2002<3 received 500 mL/d of enteral nutrition suspension orally in addition to their regular diet for 3 days preoperatively; those with NRS2002≥3 received received 1000 mL/d of enteral nutrition suspension orally or via gastric tube. Postoperative hospital stay, time to gas passage and defecation, hospital expenses, gastrointestinal dysfunction incidence including diarrhea, abdominal distension and constipation, postoperative routine blood indicators, anastomotic fistula occurrence as well as infectious complications such as pneumonia and wound infection were compared between groups. Measurement data with normal distribution was expressed as Mean±SD, independent sample t-test was used on comparison between groups. Counting data was expressed as case(%), χ2 test was used on comparison between groups, P<0.05 was considered as statistically significant. Results:The incidence of anastomotic leakage and infectious complications in the enteral nutrition pre-adaptation group was 4.83% (7/145) and 4.83% (7/145), respectively, showing no statistically significant differences compared to the traditional nutrition support group [2.86% (2/70) and 8.57% (6/70)] ( χ2=0.46 and 1.16, P=0.499 and 0.280, respectively). The incidences of gastrointestinal dysfunction and overall complications in the enteral nutrition pre-adaptation group were 5.52% (8/145) and 13.10% (19/145), respectively, which were significantly lower than those in the traditional nutrition support group [37.14% (26/70) and 45.71% (32/70)] ( χ2=35.47 and 27.75, both P<0.001). Postoperative outcomes in the enteral nutrition pre-adaptation group, including hospital stay (14.05±3.75 days), time to first flatus (25.75±5.03 hours), time to first defecation (49.25±5.98 hours), and hospitalization costs (85,200±13,500 CNY), were significantly better than those in the traditional nutrition support group [(16.46±4.79 days, 31.53±6.55 hours, 63.45±11.43 hours, and 93,500±20,100 CNY)] ( t=3.70, 6.52, 9.77, and 3.17, all P<0.001). No significant differences were observed in routine postoperative blood tests between the two groups (all P>0.05). Stratified analysis revealed that among patients with preoperative nutritional risk, the enteral nutrition pre-adaptation group demonstrated superior outcomes in hospitalization costs (82,300±11,000 CNY), time to first flatus (26.17±5.69 hours), time to first defecation (50.31±5.59 hours), overall complication rate (15.79%), and gastrointestinal dysfunction rate (7.89%) compared to the traditional nutrition support group [100,800±28,800 CNY, 31.42±6.29 hours, 60.80±9.89 hours, 54.55%, and 40.91%] ( t=2.89, P=0.008; t=3.32, P=0.002; t=4.57, P<0.001; χ2=9.97, P=0.002; χ2=9.49, P=0.002). Similarly, among patients without preoperative nutritional risk, the enteral nutrition pre-adaptation group showed better results in hospital stay (13.69±3.83 days), time to first flatus (25.60±4.80 hours), time to first defecation (48.87±6.10 hours), overall complication rate (12.15%), and gastrointestinal dysfunction rate (4.67%) compared to the traditional nutrition support group [16.60±4.36 days, 31.58±6.73 hours, 64.67±11.98 hours, 41.67%, and 35.42%] ( t=4.19, t=5.56, t=8.65, χ2=17.23, χ2=25.72, all P<0.001). Conclusion:Enteral nutrition pre-adaptation positively impacts post-esophagectomy nutrition-related complications and gastrointestinal dysfunction.nutrtional support before surgery can't be neglected.
4.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.
5.Re-admission risk prediction models for patients with heart failure after discharge: A systematic review
Ruilei GAO ; Dan WANG ; Guohua DAI ; Wulin GAO ; Hui GUAN ; Xueyan DONG
Chinese Journal of Clinical Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery 2025;32(05):677-684
Objective To systematically evaluate the predictive models for re-admission in patients with heart failure (HF) in China. Methods Studies related to the risk prediction model for HF patient re-admission published in The Cochrane Library, PubMed, EMbase, CNKI, and other databases were searched from their inception to April 30, 2024. The prediction model risk of bias assessment tool was used to assess the risk of bias and applicability of the included literature, relevant data were extracted to evaluate the model quality. Results Nineteen studies were included, involving a total of 38 predictive models for HF patient re-admission. Comorbidities such as diabetes, N-terminal pro B-type natriuretic peptide/brain natriuretic peptide, chronic renal insufficiency, left ventricular ejection fraction, New York Heart Association cardiac function classification, and medication adherence were identified as primary predictors. The area under the receiver operating characteristic curve ranged from 0.547 to 0.962. Thirteen studies conducted internal validation, one study conducted external validation, and five studies performed both internal and external validation. Seventeen studies evaluated model calibration, while five studies assessed clinical feasibility. The presentation of the models was primarily in the form of nomograms. All studies had a high overall risk of bias. Conclusion Most predictive models for HF patient re-admission in China demonstrate good discrimination and calibration. However, the overall research quality is suboptimal. There is a need to externally validate and calibrate existing models and develop more stable and clinically applicable predictive models to assess the risk of HF patient re-admission and identify relevant patients for early intervention.
6.A Comparative Study of Digital 3D Technology Assisted Versus Traditional One-hole Split Endoscopic Surgery for Lumbar Spinal Stenosis With Degenerative Scoliosis
Weiliang SU ; Min ZHANG ; Guohua DAI ; Kuishuai XU ; Dawei WANG ; Xiaopeng GENG ; Dong LIU ; Yongfeng DOU
Chinese Journal of Minimally Invasive Surgery 2025;25(10):615-622
Objective To compare the clinical efficacy of digital 3D technology assisted and traditional one-hole split endoscopic surgery for lumbar spinal stenosis with degenerative scoliosis(LSS-DS).Methods Clinical data of 42 patients with LSS-DS who underwent one-hole split endoscopic surgery from January 2022 to December 2023 were retrospectively analyzed.Among them,20 cases were treated with digital 3D technology assisted one-hole split endoscopic surgery(3D group),and 22 cases were treated with traditional one-hole split endoscopic surgery(traditional group).The operation time,intraoperative blood loss,lateral articular surface preservation rate,Visual Analogue Scale(VAS)of lower extremity pain,Oswestry Disability Index(ODI)and modified MacNab criteria at the last follow-up were compared between the two groups.Results Both groups of patients were operated successfully.The operation time of the 3D group and the traditional group was(73.3±24.0)min and(65.7±23.8)min,respectively,with no significant difference(t=1.020,P=0.314).The intraoperative blood loss was(65.3±14.7)ml and(66.7±17.1)ml,respectively,with no significant difference(t=-0.298,P=0.767).The retention rate of lateral articular surface in the 3D group[(88.2±6.3)%]was significantly higher than that in the traditional group[(82.7±4.6)%,t=3.201,P=0.003].One patient in the traditional group had dural tear and was cured after conservative treatment.There were 3 cases of calf muscle venous thrombosis in the 3D group and 4 cases in the traditional group.All the 7 patients were given anticoagulant therapy and appropriately delayed time of ambulation.In the3D group,20 cases were followed up for6-13 months,with a mean of(8.2±2.0)months;in the traditional group,22 cases were followed up for 6-12 months,with a mean of(7.7±1.7)months.According to the modified MacNab criteria,the excellent and good rate was 95.0%(19/20)in the 3D group and 90.1%(20/22)in the traditional group at the last follow-up,and there was no significant difference between the two groups(Z=-0.311,P=0.756).The VAS score and ODI of the two groups were significantly improved at 3 months and 6 months after operation(all P=0.000),but there was no significant difference between the two groups at each time point(P>0.05).Conclusion The short-term efficacy of digital 3D technology assisted one-hole split endoscopic surgery in the treatment of LSS-DS is definite,and the symptoms of patients are significantly improved.
7.Incidence and Related Risk Factors of Mid-term Postoperative Cognitive Impairment After Heart Transplantation
Tixiusi XIONG ; Wai Yen YIM ; Yixuan WANG ; Guohua WANG ; Jiawei SHI ; Si CHEN ; Nianguo DONG
Chinese Circulation Journal 2025;40(4):352-358
Objectives:To investigate the incidence and related risk factors of mid-term postoperative cognitive impairment by a single cognitive function test among heart transplant recipients.Methods:The heart transplant recipients who visited our heart transplant outpatient department from May to October of 2019 were recruited and received cognitive function test.Their heart transplantation,anesthesia,cardiopulmonary bypass and immunosuppressive therapy were performed by the same heart transplant team.Mini-mental state examination(MMSE)and Montreal cognitive assessment(MoCA)were used to test the study population and diagnose cognitive impairment.The patients were divided into cognitive impairment group and non-cognitive impairment group,and the clinical characteristics,perioperative characteristics of heart transplantation,hospital outcomes and donor characteristics were compared between the two groups.After excluding those with missing data(n=34),48 patients in the cognitive impairment group and 50 patients in the non-cognitive impairment group were analyzed.Univariate and multivariate logistic regression were used to analyze the potential influencing factors of cognitive impairment diagnosed by a single assessment after heart transplantation.Results:The median time of cognitive test after surgery was 2(1,4)years.The incidence of mid-term postoperative cognitive impairment by a single test among heart transplant recipients was 50.0%(66/132).Compared with the non-cognitive impairment group,patients in the cognitive impairment group were older at heart transplant([40.2±13.4]years vs.[46.4±11.0]years)and at cognitive test([42.3±13.0]years vs.[49.2±11.2]years),with a higher proportion of males(68.0%vs.87.5%),a higher proportion of those with lower education(less than high school)(31.9%vs.63.8%),and a longer postoperative hospital stay(32.0[26.0,38.8]d vs.38.0[20.3,50.0]d),and the differences between groups were statistically significant(all P<0.05).Multivariate logistic regression analysis showed that older age at cognitive test(OR=1.067,95%CI:1.019-1.117,P=0.005),longer postoperative in-hospital stay(OR=1.051,95%CI:1.006-1.097,P=0.025)were associated with higher risk of mid-term postoperative cognitive impairment by a single test,while the education level higher than high school was an independent protective factor(OR=0.132,95%CI:0.029-0.607,P=0.009)of mid-term postoperative cognitive impairment.Conclusions:The incidence of mid-term postoperative cognitive impairment by a single test among heart transplant recipients is high.Patients with an older age,low education level,long postoperative in-hospital stay face increased risk of mid-term postoperative cognitive impairment,these patients need to be monitored for cognitive function during follow up to achieve early recognition and treatment of cognitive decline.
8.The impact of preoperative enteral nutrition preconditioning on postoperative nutrition-related complications and gastrointestinal function following esophageal cancer surgery
Canhui LIU ; Chengxiang ZHU ; Yuanguo LIU ; Guohua DONG ; Weiwei HE
Clinical Medicine of China 2025;41(6):429-435
Objective:To investigate the effects of preoperative enteral nutrition on nutrition-related complications and gastrointestinal function in esophageal cancer patients by administering EN before surgery.Methods:A total of 215 patients who underwent thoracoscopic esophagectomy at Nanjing Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine between January 2018 and December 2020 were retrospectively analyzed in this study. Among them, 145 patients received enteral nutrition preconditioning, while 70 patients received traditional nutritional support. The nutritional risk was assessed according to the Nutritional Risk Screening 2002 (NRS2002), and the patients were categorized into non-nutritional risk group (NRS2002<3) and nutritional risk group (NRS2002≥3). Patients in the traditional nutritional support group with NRS2002<3 were provided with a regular diet three days prior to surgery, whereas those with NRS2002≥3 received intravenous fat emulsion amino acid glucose for nutritional support. In the enteral nutrition preconditioning group, patients with NRS2002<3 received 500 mL/d of enteral nutrition suspension orally in addition to their regular diet for 3 days preoperatively; those with NRS2002≥3 received received 1000 mL/d of enteral nutrition suspension orally or via gastric tube. Postoperative hospital stay, time to gas passage and defecation, hospital expenses, gastrointestinal dysfunction incidence including diarrhea, abdominal distension and constipation, postoperative routine blood indicators, anastomotic fistula occurrence as well as infectious complications such as pneumonia and wound infection were compared between groups. Measurement data with normal distribution was expressed as Mean±SD, independent sample t-test was used on comparison between groups. Counting data was expressed as case(%), χ2 test was used on comparison between groups, P<0.05 was considered as statistically significant. Results:The incidence of anastomotic leakage and infectious complications in the enteral nutrition pre-adaptation group was 4.83% (7/145) and 4.83% (7/145), respectively, showing no statistically significant differences compared to the traditional nutrition support group [2.86% (2/70) and 8.57% (6/70)] ( χ2=0.46 and 1.16, P=0.499 and 0.280, respectively). The incidences of gastrointestinal dysfunction and overall complications in the enteral nutrition pre-adaptation group were 5.52% (8/145) and 13.10% (19/145), respectively, which were significantly lower than those in the traditional nutrition support group [37.14% (26/70) and 45.71% (32/70)] ( χ2=35.47 and 27.75, both P<0.001). Postoperative outcomes in the enteral nutrition pre-adaptation group, including hospital stay (14.05±3.75 days), time to first flatus (25.75±5.03 hours), time to first defecation (49.25±5.98 hours), and hospitalization costs (85,200±13,500 CNY), were significantly better than those in the traditional nutrition support group [(16.46±4.79 days, 31.53±6.55 hours, 63.45±11.43 hours, and 93,500±20,100 CNY)] ( t=3.70, 6.52, 9.77, and 3.17, all P<0.001). No significant differences were observed in routine postoperative blood tests between the two groups (all P>0.05). Stratified analysis revealed that among patients with preoperative nutritional risk, the enteral nutrition pre-adaptation group demonstrated superior outcomes in hospitalization costs (82,300±11,000 CNY), time to first flatus (26.17±5.69 hours), time to first defecation (50.31±5.59 hours), overall complication rate (15.79%), and gastrointestinal dysfunction rate (7.89%) compared to the traditional nutrition support group [100,800±28,800 CNY, 31.42±6.29 hours, 60.80±9.89 hours, 54.55%, and 40.91%] ( t=2.89, P=0.008; t=3.32, P=0.002; t=4.57, P<0.001; χ2=9.97, P=0.002; χ2=9.49, P=0.002). Similarly, among patients without preoperative nutritional risk, the enteral nutrition pre-adaptation group showed better results in hospital stay (13.69±3.83 days), time to first flatus (25.60±4.80 hours), time to first defecation (48.87±6.10 hours), overall complication rate (12.15%), and gastrointestinal dysfunction rate (4.67%) compared to the traditional nutrition support group [16.60±4.36 days, 31.58±6.73 hours, 64.67±11.98 hours, 41.67%, and 35.42%] ( t=4.19, t=5.56, t=8.65, χ2=17.23, χ2=25.72, all P<0.001). Conclusion:Enteral nutrition pre-adaptation positively impacts post-esophagectomy nutrition-related complications and gastrointestinal dysfunction.nutrtional support before surgery can't be neglected.
9.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.
10.Establishing reference interval for uric acid in normal weight children
Guohua LI ; Yuanyuan MENG ; Yangxi LI ; Ke HUANG ; Wei WU ; Guanping DONG ; Li ZHANG ; Xuelian ZHOU ; Xiaoqiang HAO ; Junfen FU
Chinese Journal of Pediatrics 2025;63(12):1349-1353
Objective:To investigate the reference intervals of serum uric acid levels in normal-weight children and analyze the factors influencing these levels.Methods:In this cross-sectional study, clinical data were collected from 7 910 normal-weight children, aged 1 month to 15 years, who underwent health check-ups at the Children′s Hospital of Zhejiang University School of Medicine between August 2013 and August 2023. Data included sex, age, pubertal signs, blood pressure, and serum uric acid levels. The participants were categorized into 4 age groups: 1-<12 months, 1-<6 years, 6-<11 years, and 11-<16 years, and were further analyzed by sex. The P5 and P95 percentiles of uric acid values were defined as the lower and upper limits of the reference interval, respectively. Correlation analysis and partial correlation analysis were used to assess the relationship between uric acid and other variables such as age, body mass index Z value, and Tanner stage. Multivariate linear regression was used to compare uric acid levels across gender and age groups, respectively. Results:Among the 7 910 children, the distribution across age groups was as follows: 562 (317 boys) in 1-<12 months, 4 120 (2 366 boys) in 1-<6 years, 2 357 (1 432 boys) in 6-<11 years, and 871 (536 boys) in 11-<16 years, the uric acid levels in boys were significantly higher than those in girls ( P<0.05). Uric acid levels exhibited a positive correlation with age ( r=0.47 , 0.20, both P<0.001), and a weak positive correlation with BMI Z-scores(both r=0.11, P<0.001). Among participants aged 6-<11 years and 11-<16 years, uric acid levels in boys were positively correlated with Tanner stage ( r=0.10, 0.27, both P<0.05), but no significant correlation was observed in girls (all P>0.05). The uric acid levels were significantly higher in boys than in girls in the 1-<12 months, 1-<6 years and 11-<16 years age groups (all P<0.05), but no significant gender difference was found in the 6-<11 years groups ( P>0.05). Uric acid levels exhibited statistically significant variations among age groups ( P<0.001). The reference intervals of uric acid values were as follows in 1-<12 months age group, 157-335 μmol/L for boys and 160-315 μmol/L for girls; in 1-<6 years age group, 180-359 μmol/L for boys and 180-355 μmol/L for girls; in 6-<11 years group, 190-375 μmol/L; in 11-<16 years age group, 237-480 μmol/L for boys and 218-410 μmol/L for girls. Conclusions:Reference intervals for uric acid varying significantly across different pediatric age groups. Sex, and pubertal development status are closely related to uric acid levels.

Result Analysis
Print
Save
E-mail