1.Hotspots and trends in self-advocacy research among patients with chronic diseases: a CiteSpace-based analysis
Jiazhu LIU ; Dongmei LIN ; Rong LIU ; Hui LI ; Yunping QIAN ; Yanran FAN ; Limin MENG
Chinese Journal of Modern Nursing 2025;31(28):3828-3835
Objective:To explore the current research status, hotspots, and trends of self-advocacy among patients with chronic diseases, and to provide a reference for conducting research on self-advocacy in chronic diseases.Methods:A computer-based search was conducted in the China National Knowledge Infrastructure, Wanfang Data, VIP, China Biology Medicine disc, and the Web of Science Core Collection for literature related to self-advocacy among patients with chronic diseases, with the time frame from database inception to October 1, 2024. The CiteSpace 6.3.R1 software was used to perform visual analysis on publication volume, countries, institutions, authors, keywords, and citation status.Results:A total of 721 articles were included in the study. The country with the largest number of publications related to self-advocacy among patients with chronic diseases was the United States. Authors and journals were mainly from the fields of psychology and sociology. Research hotspots mainly included women, cancer, breast cancer, quality of life (health-related quality of life), cancer screening, and individual experiences. Future research trends are expected to focus on influencing factors and theoretical research, impacts on medical decision-making, psychological and social support, as well as the development of scales and assessment tools of self-advocacy.Conclusions:Research on self-advocacy in China started relatively late. It is suggested that in the future, domestic scholars conduct multi-center and large-sample studies on self-advocacy among populations in different regions and with various types of chronic diseases.
2.Electroacupuncture at neuro-arterial stimulation points for post-stroke shoulder-hand syndrome: a randomized controlled trial.
Man ZHANG ; Zhifang XU ; Meidan ZHAO ; Xiumei YIN ; Jiazhu WU ; Zhixin LIU ; Yuanhao DU
Chinese Acupuncture & Moxibustion 2025;45(9):1241-1247
OBJECTIVE:
To compare the clinical efficacy of electroacupuncture (EA) at neuro-arterial stimulation points with topical western medication in treating post-stroke shoulder-hand syndrome (SHS).
METHODS:
A total of 72 patients with post-stroke SHS were randomly assigned to an observation group (n=36, 2 cases dropped out) and a control group (n=36, 3 cases dropped out). Both groups received standard neurological treatment, comprehensive rehabilitation, and physical therapy. The observation group received EA at neuro-arterial stimulation points, including the ipsilateral stellate ganglion point, vagus nerve trunk and auricular branch (left side), and stimulation points of the radial and ulnar arteries, radial nerve, ulnar nerve, and median nerve, once daily for 4 weeks. The control group was treated with topical diclofenac diethylamine emulgel, and mucopolysaccharide polysulfate cream was added for patients with pronounced early-stage edema, twice a day for 4 weeks. The VAS pain score and hand edema volume were recorded before treatment, at 2 and 4 weeks during treatment, and 2 weeks after treatment completion (follow-up). Musculoskeletal ultrasound was used to measure the thickness of the dorsal hand and middle finger skin on the affected side before and after 4 weeks of treatment.
RESULTS:
Compared before treatment, the VAS pain scores and edema volume of the affected hand in both groups were decreased at week 2, week 4, and follow-up (P<0.05). At week 4, both groups showed lower VAS pain scores and edema volume than those at week 2 (P<0.05); during follow-up, both VAS pain scores and edema volume were further reduced compared to those at week 4 (P<0.05). At week 2, week 4, and follow-up, the VAS scores and edema volume of the affected hand in the observation group were lower than those in the control group (P<0.05). Compared before treatment, the dorsal hand skin thickness and middle finger skin thickness on the affected side were decreased in both groups after 4 weeks of treatment (P<0.05). Compared with the control group, the observation group showed thinner dorsal hand and middle finger skin thickness after 4 weeks of treatment (P<0.05).
CONCLUSION
EA at neuro-arterial stimulation points effectively alleviates pain and edema in patients with post-stroke SHS, and demonstrates superior efficacy compared to topical western medication.
Humans
;
Male
;
Female
;
Middle Aged
;
Electroacupuncture
;
Aged
;
Stroke/complications*
;
Acupuncture Points
;
Adult
;
Reflex Sympathetic Dystrophy/physiopathology*
;
Treatment Outcome
;
Hand
3.Hotspots and trends in self-advocacy research among patients with chronic diseases: a CiteSpace-based analysis
Jiazhu LIU ; Dongmei LIN ; Rong LIU ; Hui LI ; Yunping QIAN ; Yanran FAN ; Limin MENG
Chinese Journal of Modern Nursing 2025;31(28):3828-3835
Objective:To explore the current research status, hotspots, and trends of self-advocacy among patients with chronic diseases, and to provide a reference for conducting research on self-advocacy in chronic diseases.Methods:A computer-based search was conducted in the China National Knowledge Infrastructure, Wanfang Data, VIP, China Biology Medicine disc, and the Web of Science Core Collection for literature related to self-advocacy among patients with chronic diseases, with the time frame from database inception to October 1, 2024. The CiteSpace 6.3.R1 software was used to perform visual analysis on publication volume, countries, institutions, authors, keywords, and citation status.Results:A total of 721 articles were included in the study. The country with the largest number of publications related to self-advocacy among patients with chronic diseases was the United States. Authors and journals were mainly from the fields of psychology and sociology. Research hotspots mainly included women, cancer, breast cancer, quality of life (health-related quality of life), cancer screening, and individual experiences. Future research trends are expected to focus on influencing factors and theoretical research, impacts on medical decision-making, psychological and social support, as well as the development of scales and assessment tools of self-advocacy.Conclusions:Research on self-advocacy in China started relatively late. It is suggested that in the future, domestic scholars conduct multi-center and large-sample studies on self-advocacy among populations in different regions and with various types of chronic diseases.
4.Contextual Fear Learning and Extinction in the Primary Visual Cortex of Mice.
Xiaoke XIE ; Shangyue GONG ; Ning SUN ; Jiazhu ZHU ; Xiaobin XU ; Yongxian XU ; Xiaojing LI ; Zhenhong DU ; Xuanting LIU ; Jianmin ZHANG ; Wei GONG ; Ke SI
Neuroscience Bulletin 2023;39(1):29-40
Fear memory contextualization is critical for selecting adaptive behavior to survive. Contextual fear conditioning (CFC) is a classical model for elucidating related underlying neuronal circuits. The primary visual cortex (V1) is the primary cortical region for contextual visual inputs, but its role in CFC is poorly understood. Here, our experiments demonstrated that bilateral inactivation of V1 in mice impaired CFC retrieval, and both CFC learning and extinction increased the turnover rate of axonal boutons in V1. The frequency of neuronal Ca2+ activity decreased after CFC learning, while CFC extinction reversed the decrease and raised it to the naïve level. Contrary to control mice, the frequency of neuronal Ca2+ activity increased after CFC learning in microglia-depleted mice and was maintained after CFC extinction, indicating that microglial depletion alters CFC learning and the frequency response pattern of extinction-induced Ca2+ activity. These findings reveal a critical role of microglia in neocortical information processing in V1, and suggest potential approaches for cellular-based manipulation of acquired fear memory.
Mice
;
Animals
;
Primary Visual Cortex
;
Extinction, Psychological/physiology*
;
Learning/physiology*
;
Fear/physiology*
;
Hippocampus/physiology*
5.Analysis of the characteristic of clinical symptoms and cone-beam CT imaging changes in temporomandibular joint osteoarthritis patients with chewing side preference
Xiaoting ZHAI ; Dongzong HUANG ; Yifan HU ; Xinyu XU ; Jiazhu WANG ; Hongbo LI ; Min HU ; Hongchen LIU ; Hua JIANG
Chinese Journal of Stomatology 2022;57(7):688-693
Objective:To investigate the clinical symptoms and cone-beam CT (CBCT) imaging characteristics of temporomandibular joint osteoarthritis (TMJOA) with chewing side preference (CSP).Methods:One hundred patients with TMJOA diagnosed in the Department of Stomatology, General Hospital of the Chinese PLA from January 2018 to December 2020 were enrolled, including 32 males and 68 females, with an median age of 27.5 years (16-71 years). According to the habit of CSP, 100 cases were divided into 71 cases of TMJOA with CSP group and 29 cases of TMJOA without CSP group. The clinical symptoms were observed, including pain, TMJ sounds, limited mouth opening as well as the radiograph imaging changes of condylar bone. When analyzing the radiograph imaging changes of condylar, the cases with bilateral TMJ symptoms were excluded and the remaining cases were divided into symptomatic sides and asymptomatic sides with CSP or without CSP according to the symptoms of the chief complaint. SPSS 25.0 was used to analyze the statistical data. Age data did not conform to normal distribution so that median and quartile spacing were used for description, and Mann-Whitney U test was used for nonparametric test. Qualitative data such as gender, clinical symptoms and condylar lesion types were described by composition ratio and chi-square test was performed. Results:There was no statistical significance in age and gender of TMJOA patients in the group with or without CSP ( P>0.05). The incidence of pain in CSP group [83.1% (59/71)] was marginally higher than that in non-CSP group [65.5% (19/29)] but without statistical difference (χ2 =3.71, P=0.054). There was also no significant difference in TMJ sounds and limitation of mandibular movement between the two groups (χ2 =0.11, P=0.742; χ2 =0.48, P=0.489). Among all of joints, the most common types of TMJOA were articular flattening and shortening and erosion. CBCT showed that erosion [65.0% (130/200)], flattening and shortening [73.0% (146/200)], subcortical sclerosis [42.0% (84/200)], osteophyte [30.5% (61/200)] and subcortical cystic [15.5% (31/200)]. According to the different groups of chief complaint sides, intra-group comparisons show that the proportion of erosion in symptomatic sides of CSP group [80.0% (40/50)] was significantly higher than that in asymptomatic sides of CSP group [50.0% (25/50)] (χ2=9.89, P=0.002). Inter-group comparisons show that the proportion of condyle flattening and shortening in symptomatic sides of CSP group [84.0% (42/50)] was significantly higher than that in bilateral joint of non-CSP group (8/15) (χ2=8.81, P=0.032). There was no significant difference in the proportion of subcortical sclerosis, osteophyte and subcortical cystic between the group with or without CSP ( P>0.05). Conclusions:TMJOA patients with CSP may be more prone to clinical symptoms of pain and CBCT imaging changes of condyle erosion as well as flattening and shortening. CSP may be a promoting factor for the development of TMJOA.
6.A comparative study on the radiographs of spiral CT and cone-beam CT in temporomandibular joint osteoarthrosis
Huawei LIU ; Wenting BI ; Yongfeng LI ; Jiazhu WANG ; Zhaowu WANG ; Min HU
Chinese Journal of Stomatology 2021;56(8):747-752
Objective:To observe and compare the radiographs of spiral CT and cone-beam CT (CBCT) in the imaging of temporomandibular joint osteoarthrosis (TMJOA) and to explore the difference between CBCT and spiral CT in detection accuracy so as to provide references for clinical diagnosis and treatment.Methods:A total of 52 patients with TMJOA diagnosed in the Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery, General Hospital of Chinese PLA, from January 2018 to December 2019 were selected. There were 10 males and 42 females, with an average age of 38.6 years (21-70 years). All patients underwent spiral CT and CBCT examinations. Two oral radiologists and two oral and maxillofacial surgeons measured and evaluated the joint spaces and condylar bone lesions of each side of temporomandibular joint. According to the presence or absence of osteoarthrosis, the patients were divided into osteoarthrosis group (92 sides) and non osteoarthrosis group (12 sides). The mean size of joint spaces and the detection rate of lesions were compared between the two groups. SPSS 20.0 was used to analyze the data.Results:There was no significant difference between the measurements of joint space size and joint position in the spiral CT group and the CBCT group ( P>0.05). The mean size of the anterior space and the ratio of the posterior condyle in the osteoarthrosis side were larger than that in the normal side. The linear percentage index was smaller in the osteoarthrosis side than that in the normal side indicating that the position of the posterior condyle in the osteoarthrosis side was deviated. However, the difference was not statistically significant ( P>0.05). Both spiral CT and CBCT showed good consistency in displaying condylar osteopathy. The most common types of condylar osteopathy was surface defect. The detection rates of defects by spiral CT were surface erosion (85.6%, 89/104), articular surface flattening and shortening (82.7%, 86/104), subcortical sclerosis (40.4%, 42/104), osteophyte (40.4%, 42/104) and subcortical cyst (11.5%, 12/104) respectively. The detection rates of defects by CBCT were surface erosion (88.5%, 92/104), articular surface flattening and shortening (86.5%, 90/104), subcortical sclerosis (35.6%, 37/104), osteophyte (41.3%, 43/104) and subcortical cyst (11.5%, 12/104). There was no statistical difference between the two groups ( P>0.05), respectively. Conclusions:Both spiral CT and CBCT showed good accuracies in displaying the osteopathy of TMJOA and the sizes of the joint spaces measured by spiral CT and CBCT were basically the same. Both spiral CT and CBCT could be used as a routine diagnostic method for TMJOA.

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