1.MDT treatment strategy for organophosphorus and anticoagulant rodenticide poisoning in an elderly patient with depression
Shasha FU ; Yue JIA ; Hongxia SHAO ; Yu GUO ; Longyan MA ; Tong HAN ; Hao SUN ; Hongzhi YU
Tianjin Medical Journal 2025;53(9):1000-1004
Organophosphorus pesticide(OP)is one of the most widely used pesticides in the world with the largest dosage.Acute organophosphorus pesticide poisoning(AOPP)is a common clinical disease,and AOPP accounts for 20%-50%of poisoning cases in China every year,with case fatality rate of 3%-40%.Bromophos(BDF)is a long-acting anticoagulant rodenticide,which inhibits vitamin K epoxide reductase and interferes with the synthesis of coagulation factorsⅡ,Ⅶ,Ⅸ and Ⅹ,leading to coagulation dysfunction.This article discusses the multidisciplinary diagnosis and treatment(MDT)process of a patient with combined poisoning of dichlorvos and bromadiolone.The article explores blood purification,management of coagulation abnormalities,secondary infection,atropinization and altered consciousnes in patients with organophosphorus poisoning and anticoagulant rodenticide compound poisoning,with the aim of providing clinicians with references for early diagnosis and treatment.
2.Spicy food consumption and risk of vascular disease: Evidence from a large-scale Chinese prospective cohort of 0.5 million people.
Dongfang YOU ; Dianjianyi SUN ; Ziyu ZHAO ; Mingyu SONG ; Lulu PAN ; Yaqian WU ; Yingdan TANG ; Mengyi LU ; Fang SHAO ; Sipeng SHEN ; Jianling BAI ; Honggang YI ; Ruyang ZHANG ; Yongyue WEI ; Hongxia MA ; Hongyang XU ; Canqing YU ; Jun LV ; Pei PEI ; Ling YANG ; Yiping CHEN ; Zhengming CHEN ; Hongbing SHEN ; Feng CHEN ; Yang ZHAO ; Liming LI
Chinese Medical Journal 2025;138(14):1696-1704
BACKGROUND:
Spicy food consumption has been reported to be inversely associated with mortality from multiple diseases. However, the effect of spicy food intake on the incidence of vascular diseases in the Chinese population remains unclear. This study was conducted to explore this association.
METHODS:
This study was performed using the large-scale China Kadoorie Biobank (CKB) prospective cohort of 486,335 participants. The primary outcomes were vascular disease, ischemic heart disease (IHD), major coronary events (MCEs), cerebrovascular disease, stroke, and non-stroke cerebrovascular disease. A Cox proportional hazards regression model was used to assess the association between spicy food consumption and incident vascular diseases. Subgroup analysis was also performed to evaluate the heterogeneity of the association between spicy food consumption and the risk of vascular disease stratified by several basic characteristics. In addition, the joint effects of spicy food consumption and the healthy lifestyle score on the risk of vascular disease were also evaluated, and sensitivity analyses were performed to assess the reliability of the association results.
RESULTS:
During a median follow-up time of 12.1 years, a total of 136,125 patients with vascular disease, 46,689 patients with IHD, 10,097 patients with MCEs, 80,114 patients with cerebrovascular disease, 56,726 patients with stroke, and 40,098 patients with non-stroke cerebrovascular disease were identified. Participants who consumed spicy food 1-2 days/week (hazard ratio [HR] = 0.95, 95% confidence interval [95% CI] = [0.93, 0.97], P <0.001), 3-5 days/week (HR = 0.96, 95% CI = [0.94, 0.99], P = 0.003), and 6-7 days/week (HR = 0.97, 95% CI = [0.95, 0.99], P = 0.002) had a significantly lower risk of vascular disease than those who consumed spicy food less than once a week ( Ptrend <0.001), especially in those who were younger and living in rural areas. Notably, the disease-based subgroup analysis indicated that the inverse associations remained in IHD ( Ptrend = 0.011) and MCEs ( Ptrend = 0.002) risk. Intriguingly, there was an interaction effect between spicy food consumption and the healthy lifestyle score on the risk of IHD ( Pinteraction = 0.037).
CONCLUSIONS
Our findings support an inverse association between spicy food consumption and vascular disease in the Chinese population, which may provide additional dietary guidance for the prevention of vascular diseases.
Humans
;
Male
;
Female
;
Prospective Studies
;
Middle Aged
;
Aged
;
Vascular Diseases/etiology*
;
Risk Factors
;
China/epidemiology*
;
Adult
;
Proportional Hazards Models
;
Cerebrovascular Disorders/epidemiology*
;
East Asian People
3.A scoping review of hypoxemia risk prediction models for postoperative patients
Xiangyuan WANG ; Hongxia GE ; Liying SHI ; Ke SHAO ; Wenzi WANG ; Shutao LI ; Wei WANG
Chinese Journal of Modern Nursing 2025;31(3):398-404
Objective:To summarize the risk prediction models for postoperative hypoxemia and provide a reference for clinical nursing practice and future research on hypoxemia risk prediction models for postoperative patients.Methods:A systematic literature search was conducted in CNKI, CBM, Wanfang, PubMed, Web of Science Core Collection, Cochrane Library, Embase, and CINAHL databases, covering publications up to January 31, 2024. Two researchers independently screened the literature, extracted data, performed integrative analysis, and evaluated the risk of bias in the included studies.Results:Seventeen studies were included, involving 17 different prediction models. The study populations were primarily adult patients, with hypoxemia incidence rates ranging from 2.40% to 49.30%. Modeling methods included Logistic regression and decision tree algorithms. The presentation formats of the models included risk scoring formulas, nomograms, decision tree diagrams, and web calculators. The five most frequently identified predictive factors were body mass index, age, comorbidities, duration of intraoperative cardiopulmonary bypass, and preoperative white blood cell count. Sixteen models reported the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve ranging from 0.667 to 0.916. All 17 studies exhibited varying degrees of bias risk.Conclusions:Existing risk prediction models for postoperative hypoxemia demonstrate good performance; however, the bias risk level of all studies was high. Future research should standardize the model development process according to bias risk assessment checklists to establish models with low bias risk and strong clinical applicability.
4.Advances in ecological momentary assessment based on mobile information devices
Shuotao LI ; Jing XU ; Xiangyuan WANG ; Wenzi WANG ; Ke SHAO ; Liying SHI ; Hongxia GE
Chinese Journal of Modern Nursing 2025;31(4):556-560
This article provides an overview of ecological momentary assessment based on mobile information devices. It reviews the design frameworks, domestic and international research progress, and the challenges associated with its application. The study aims to offer insights and reference methods for developing electronic ecological momentary assessment platforms in China.
5.MDT treatment strategy for organophosphorus and anticoagulant rodenticide poisoning in an elderly patient with depression
Shasha FU ; Yue JIA ; Hongxia SHAO ; Yu GUO ; Longyan MA ; Tong HAN ; Hao SUN ; Hongzhi YU
Tianjin Medical Journal 2025;53(9):1000-1004
Organophosphorus pesticide(OP)is one of the most widely used pesticides in the world with the largest dosage.Acute organophosphorus pesticide poisoning(AOPP)is a common clinical disease,and AOPP accounts for 20%-50%of poisoning cases in China every year,with case fatality rate of 3%-40%.Bromophos(BDF)is a long-acting anticoagulant rodenticide,which inhibits vitamin K epoxide reductase and interferes with the synthesis of coagulation factorsⅡ,Ⅶ,Ⅸ and Ⅹ,leading to coagulation dysfunction.This article discusses the multidisciplinary diagnosis and treatment(MDT)process of a patient with combined poisoning of dichlorvos and bromadiolone.The article explores blood purification,management of coagulation abnormalities,secondary infection,atropinization and altered consciousnes in patients with organophosphorus poisoning and anticoagulant rodenticide compound poisoning,with the aim of providing clinicians with references for early diagnosis and treatment.
6.A scoping review of hypoxemia risk prediction models for postoperative patients
Xiangyuan WANG ; Hongxia GE ; Liying SHI ; Ke SHAO ; Wenzi WANG ; Shutao LI ; Wei WANG
Chinese Journal of Modern Nursing 2025;31(3):398-404
Objective:To summarize the risk prediction models for postoperative hypoxemia and provide a reference for clinical nursing practice and future research on hypoxemia risk prediction models for postoperative patients.Methods:A systematic literature search was conducted in CNKI, CBM, Wanfang, PubMed, Web of Science Core Collection, Cochrane Library, Embase, and CINAHL databases, covering publications up to January 31, 2024. Two researchers independently screened the literature, extracted data, performed integrative analysis, and evaluated the risk of bias in the included studies.Results:Seventeen studies were included, involving 17 different prediction models. The study populations were primarily adult patients, with hypoxemia incidence rates ranging from 2.40% to 49.30%. Modeling methods included Logistic regression and decision tree algorithms. The presentation formats of the models included risk scoring formulas, nomograms, decision tree diagrams, and web calculators. The five most frequently identified predictive factors were body mass index, age, comorbidities, duration of intraoperative cardiopulmonary bypass, and preoperative white blood cell count. Sixteen models reported the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve ranging from 0.667 to 0.916. All 17 studies exhibited varying degrees of bias risk.Conclusions:Existing risk prediction models for postoperative hypoxemia demonstrate good performance; however, the bias risk level of all studies was high. Future research should standardize the model development process according to bias risk assessment checklists to establish models with low bias risk and strong clinical applicability.
7.Advances in ecological momentary assessment based on mobile information devices
Shuotao LI ; Jing XU ; Xiangyuan WANG ; Wenzi WANG ; Ke SHAO ; Liying SHI ; Hongxia GE
Chinese Journal of Modern Nursing 2025;31(4):556-560
This article provides an overview of ecological momentary assessment based on mobile information devices. It reviews the design frameworks, domestic and international research progress, and the challenges associated with its application. The study aims to offer insights and reference methods for developing electronic ecological momentary assessment platforms in China.
8.Summary of the best evidence for prevention and management of radiotherapy-induced oral mucositis in patients with head and neck cancer
Wenzi WANG ; Hongxia GE ; Liying SHI ; Ke SHAO ; Xiangyuan WANG ; Shuotao LI
Chinese Journal of Modern Nursing 2024;30(34):4696-4702
Objective:To summarize the best evidence for preventing and managing radiotherapy-induced oral mucositis in patients with head and neck cancer.Methods:The clinical decisions, best practices, guidelines, expert consensus, systematic reviews, and evidence summaries regarding the prevention and management of radiotherapy-induced oral mucositis in patients with head and neck cancer were retrieved from UpToDate, British Medical Journal (BMJ) Best Practice, Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, Medlive, National Comprehensive Cancer Network, European Society for Medical Oncology, Cochrane Library, Joanna Briggs Institute (JBI) Evidence-Based Health Care Center Database, PubMed, Embase, Web of Science, China National Knowledge Infrastructure, WanFang Data, China Biology Medicine disc and so on. The search period was from database establishment to November 30, 2023.Results:A total of 18 articles were included, involving six guidelines, two expert consensus, eight systematic reviews, and two evidence summaries. Thirty-four best pieces of evidence were summarized from six aspects of assessment: drug prevention, non-drug prevention, anti-infection and analgesic management, health education, and multidisciplinary team management.Conclusions:This study summarizes the best evidence for preventing and managing radiotherapy-induced oral mucositis in patients with head and neck cancer. Medical and nursing staff should consider the patient's characteristics, disease condition, and willingness when selecting and applying evidence.
9.Research status of psychosocial effects and interventions in cancer anorexia/cachexia syndrome patients
Liying SHI ; Hongxia GE ; Huan LIN ; Wenchong LIU ; Ke SHAO
Chinese Journal of Practical Nursing 2023;39(17):1350-1355
Cancer anorexia/cachexia syndrome (cancer anorexia cachexia syndrome, CACS) is a common complication in advanced cancer patients, which is characterized by reduced feeding, sustained weight loss, general fatigue and weakness. CACS related symptoms make patients suffer from a series of adverse psychosocial effects, such as anxiety, pain and social isolation, thus bringing serious adverse effects on patients′ individuals, families and society. This paper reviewed the symptoms associated with CACS and their psychosocial effects, as well as the interventions related to adverse psychosocial effects, in order to provide theoretical reference for alleviating psychosocial distress and improving health-related quality of life of patients with CACS.
10.Chinese-version and reliability and validity of the Health Literacy of Caregivers Scale-Cancer
Huan LIN ; Tingting SHEN ; Wenchong LIU ; Liying SHI ; Ke SHAO ; Hongxia GE
Chinese Journal of Modern Nursing 2023;29(8):1004-1009
Objective:To translate the Health Literacy of Caregivers Scale-Cancer (HLCS-C) into Chinese and test its reliability and validity.Methods:The British translation model was used to translate and back translate the English version scale, and the Chinese version scale was initially verified and revised through expert consultation and pre-test. From June to September 2021, 242 caregivers of cervical cancer patients admitted to Shandong Cancer Hospital were selected by convenient sampling. The revised Chinese version of HLCS-C was used to investigate the caregivers for reliability and validity test. A total of 242 questionnaires were distributed and 226 valid questionnaires were recovered.Results:There were 44 items in the Chinese version of HLCS-C. The exploratory factor analysis showed that the scale included 8 dimensions, namely cancer information collection, cancer information mastery, social support, cancer related communication with patients, understanding of patients' needs and preferences, health and healthcare service use, health information processing, and active participation with medical and nursing staff, with a cumulative variance contribution rate of 73.448%. The scale-level content validity index ( S- CVI) was 0.981, and the item-level content validity index ( I- CVI) was 0.833 to 1.000. The total Cronbach's α coefficient of the scale was 0.946, and Cronbach's α coefficient of each dimension was 0.700 to 0.945. The total half-reliability coefficient of the scale was 0.791, and the half-reliability coefficient of each dimension was 0.635 to 0.867. Conclusions:The Chinese version of HLCS-C has good reliability and validity, and can be used as an assessment tool for the health literacy of cervical cancer caregivers.

Result Analysis
Print
Save
E-mail