1.Reliability and validity of the Chinese version of Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis Impairment Multidomain Scale
Shilei WAN ; Dan YANG ; Nianquan LIU ; Qianping JIANG ; Dandan XU ; Yan ZHAO ; Jing ZHOU
Journal of Chongqing Medical University 2025;50(11):1578-1586
Objective:To translate Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis Impairment Multidomain Scale(AIMS)into Chinese,and to investi-gate its reliability and validity among Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis(ALS)patients.Methods:A total of 161 ALS patients who were registered in the registry system of Integrated Traditional Chinese and Western Medicine Treatment Center for Motor Neuron Disease in Hubei Provincial Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine from August 2023 to July 2024 were enrolled as subjects,and the Chinese version of AIMS was used for investigation after translation and revision.The Rasch model was used to assess the unidimensionality,in-ternal consistency,content validity,construct validity,and criterion-related validity of the questionnaire,and the classical test theory was used for item analysis,test-retest reliability analysis,and criterion-related validity analysis.Results:Unidimensionality testing showed that all three dimensions of AIMS have good unidimensionality.For all items except item 18,information-weighted fit statis-tic mean square(Infit MNSQ)and outlier-sensitive fit statistic mean square(Outfit MNSQ)ranged from 0.5 to 1.5,and point-measure correlation(PT-Measure)ranged from 0.63 to 0.87.The threshold between adjacent options of each item was>1.4 logit.Wright maps showed that item difficulties ranged from-2.24 to 2.08 logit,and the differential item functioning analysis showed that the absolute values of differences between patients across different char-acteristic subgroups were<1 logit.The overall scale and each di-mension had a reliability of>0.9,with an individual reliability of>0.7.The dimension of respiration had a separation index of 1.56,while the overall scale and the other dimensions had a separation in-dex of>2.The item analysis showed that the correlation coefficient between the items in each dimension and their respective dimen-sions ranged from 0.622 to 0.865(P<0.01).The overall scale and the dimensions of medulla oblongata,motor,and respiration had a test-retest reliability of 0.994,0.970,0.990,and 0.972,respectively(P<0.01).The criterion-related validity analysis showed that the correlation coefficients of total score and the score of each dimension between the Chinese version of AIMS and the revised version of AIMS were 0.863,0.829,0.876,and 0.755,respectively(P<0.01).Conclusion:The Chinese version of AIMS has a good degree of fit-ting and relatively high levels of reliability and validity,with moderate item difficulty,reasonable option settings,and high overall qual-ity,and it is suitable for the functional assessment of ALS patients in China.
2.Real-world efficacy and safety of azvudine in hospitalized older patients with COVID-19 during the omicron wave in China: A retrospective cohort study.
Yuanchao ZHU ; Fei ZHAO ; Yubing ZHU ; Xingang LI ; Deshi DONG ; Bolin ZHU ; Jianchun LI ; Xin HU ; Zinan ZHAO ; Wenfeng XU ; Yang JV ; Dandan WANG ; Yingming ZHENG ; Yiwen DONG ; Lu LI ; Shilei YANG ; Zhiyuan TENG ; Ling LU ; Jingwei ZHU ; Linzhe DU ; Yunxin LIU ; Lechuan JIA ; Qiujv ZHANG ; Hui MA ; Ana ZHAO ; Hongliu JIANG ; Xin XU ; Jinli WANG ; Xuping QIAN ; Wei ZHANG ; Tingting ZHENG ; Chunxia YANG ; Xuguang CHEN ; Kun LIU ; Huanhuan JIANG ; Dongxiang QU ; Jia SONG ; Hua CHENG ; Wenfang SUN ; Hanqiu ZHAN ; Xiao LI ; Yafeng WANG ; Aixia WANG ; Li LIU ; Lihua YANG ; Nan ZHANG ; Shumin CHEN ; Jingjing MA ; Wei LIU ; Xiaoxiang DU ; Meiqin ZHENG ; Liyan WAN ; Guangqing DU ; Hangmei LIU ; Pengfei JIN
Acta Pharmaceutica Sinica B 2025;15(1):123-132
Debates persist regarding the efficacy and safety of azvudine, particularly its real-world outcomes. This study involved patients aged ≥60 years who were admitted to 25 hospitals in mainland China with confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infection between December 1, 2022, and February 28, 2023. Efficacy outcomes were all-cause mortality during hospitalization, the proportion of patients discharged with recovery, time to nucleic acid-negative conversion (T NANC), time to symptom improvement (T SI), and time of hospital stay (T HS). Safety was also assessed. Among the 5884 participants identified, 1999 received azvudine, and 1999 matched controls were included after exclusion and propensity score matching. Azvudine recipients exhibited lower all-cause mortality compared with controls in the overall population (13.3% vs. 17.1%, RR, 0.78; 95% CI, 0.67-0.90; P = 0.001) and in the severe subgroup (25.7% vs. 33.7%; RR, 0.76; 95% CI, 0.66-0.88; P < 0.001). A higher proportion of patients discharged with recovery, and a shorter T NANC were associated with azvudine recipients, especially in the severe subgroup. The incidence of adverse events in azvudine recipients was comparable to that in the control group (2.3% vs. 1.7%, P = 0.170). In conclusion, azvudine showed efficacy and safety in older patients hospitalized with COVID-19 during the SARS-CoV-2 omicron wave in China.
3.Application of mixed reality-based surgical navigation system in craniomaxillofacial trauma bone reconstruction.
Chengzhong LIN ; Yong ZHANG ; Shao DONG ; Jinyang WU ; Chuxi ZHANG ; Xinjun WAN ; Shilei ZHANG
West China Journal of Stomatology 2022;40(6):676-684
OBJECTIVES:
This study aimed to build a surgical navigation system based on mixed reality (MR) and optical positioning technique and evaluate its clinical applicability in craniomaxillofacial trauma bone reconstruction. Me-thods We first integrated the software and hardware platforms of the MR-based surgical navigation system and explored the system workflow. The systematic error, target registration error, and osteotomy application error of the system were then analyzed via 3D printed skull model experiment. The feasibility of the MR-based surgical navigation system in craniomaxillofacial trauma bone reconstruction was verified via zygomatico-maxillary complex (ZMC) reduction experiment of the skull model and preliminary clinical study.
RESULTS:
The system error of this MR-based surgical navigation system was 1.23 mm±0.52 mm, the target registration error was 2.83 mm±1.18 mm, and the osteotomy application error was 3.13 mm±1.66 mm. Virtual surgical planning and the reduction of the ZMC model were successfully conducted. In addition, with the guidance of the MR-based navigation system, the frontal bone defect was successfully reconstructed, and the clinical outcome was satisfactory.
CONCLUSIONS
The MR-based surgical navigation system has its advantages in virtual reality fusion effect and dynamic navigation stability. It provides a new method for doctor-patient communications, education, preoperative planning, and intraoperative navigation in craniomaxillofacial surgery.
Humans
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Surgical Navigation Systems
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Augmented Reality
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Plastic Surgery Procedures
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Skull/surgery*

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