1.Protective effect of sub-hypothermic mechanical perfusion combined with membrane lung oxygenation on a yorkshire model of brain injury after traumatic blood loss.
Xiang-Yu SONG ; Yang-Hui DONG ; Zhi-Bo JIA ; Lei-Jia CHEN ; Meng-Yi CUI ; Yan-Jun GUAN ; Bo-Yao YANG ; Si-Ce WANG ; Sheng-Feng CHEN ; Peng-Kai LI ; Heng CHEN ; Hao-Chen ZUO ; Zhan-Cheng YANG ; Wen-Jing XU ; Ya-Qun ZHAO ; Jiang PENG
Chinese Journal of Traumatology 2025;28(6):469-476
PURPOSE:
To investigate the protective effect of sub-hypothermic mechanical perfusion combined with membrane lung oxygenation on ischemic hypoxic injury of yorkshire brain tissue caused by traumatic blood loss.
METHODS:
This article performed a random controlled trial. Brain tissue of 7 yorkshire was selected and divided into the sub-low temperature anterograde machine perfusion group (n = 4) and the blank control group (n = 3) using the random number table method. A yorkshire model of brain tissue injury induced by traumatic blood loss was established. Firstly, the perfusion temperature and blood oxygen saturation were monitored in real-time during the perfusion process. The number of red blood cells, hemoglobin content, NA+, K+, and Ca2+ ions concentrations and pH of the perfusate were detected. Following perfusion, we specifically examined the parietal lobe to assess its water content. The prefrontal cortex and hippocampus were then dissected for histological evaluation, allowing us to investigate potential regional differences in tissue injury. The blank control group was sampled directly before perfusion. All statistical analyses and graphs were performed using GraphPad Prism 8.0 Student t-test. All tests were two-sided, and p value of less than 0.05 was considered to indicate statistical significance.
RESULTS:
The contents of red blood cells and hemoglobin during perfusion were maintained at normal levels but more red blood cells were destroyed 3 h after the perfusion. The blood oxygen saturation of the perfusion group was maintained at 95% - 98%. NA+ and K+ concentrations were normal most of the time during perfusion but increased significantly at about 4 h. The Ca2+ concentration remained within the normal range at each period. Glucose levels were slightly higher than the baseline level. The pH of the perfusion solution was slightly lower at the beginning of perfusion, and then gradually increased to the normal level. The water content of brain tissue in the sub-low and docile perfusion group was 78.95% ± 0.39%, which was significantly higher than that in the control group (75.27% ± 0.55%, t = 10.49, p < 0.001), and the difference was statistically significant. Compared with the blank control group, the structure and morphology of pyramidal neurons in the prefrontal cortex and CA1 region of the hippocampal gyrus were similar, and their integrity was better. The structural integrity of granulosa neurons was destroyed and cell edema increased in the perfusion group compared with the blank control group. Immunofluorescence staining for glail fibrillary acidic protein and Iba1, markers of glial cells, revealed well-preserved cell structures in the perfusion group. While there were indications of abnormal cellular activity, the analysis showed no significant difference in axon thickness or integrity compared to the 1-h blank control group.
CONCLUSIONS
Mild hypothermic machine perfusion can improve ischemia and hypoxia injury of yorkshire brain tissue caused by traumatic blood loss and delay the necrosis and apoptosis of yorkshire brain tissue by continuous oxygen supply, maintaining ion homeostasis and reducing tissue metabolism level.
Animals
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Perfusion/methods*
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Disease Models, Animal
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Brain Injuries/etiology*
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Swine
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Male
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Hypothermia, Induced/methods*
2.Brain function and connection in patients with refractory overactive bladder and healthy population: Analysis based on resting-state functional MRI.
Yu-Wei ZHANG ; Si-Yi FU ; Yu-Min LIU ; Hui-Hui SONG ; Peng JIANG ; Jia XU ; Bin HU
National Journal of Andrology 2025;31(1):39-44
OBJECTIVE:
To investigate the characteristics of central nervous system regulation in patients with refractory overactive bladder (rOAB) using resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging (rs-fMRI), and to analyze the differences in brain function and connection between the patients and healthy population.
METHODS:
From May 1 to November 30, 2024, we performed rs-fMRI for 47 rOAB patients and another 47 matched healthy controls, documented relevant clinical data from all the participants and obtained their Overactive Bladder Symptom Scores (OABSS) and Overactive Bladder Questionnaire (OAB-Q) scores. Based on rs-fMRI, we compared the results of Independent Component Analysis (ICA), amplitude of low-frequency fluctuations (ALFF), fractional amplitude of low-frequency fluctuations (fALFF), regional homogeneity (ReHo) and degree centrality (DC) between the rOAB patients and healthy controls.
RESULTS:
The rOAB patients, in comparison with the healthy controls, showed dramatically higher daytime urination frequency (11.64 ± 3.85) vs (5.76 ± 0.91), nighttime urination frequency (3.72 ± 1.64) vs (0.31 ± 0.47), OABSS (8.22 ± 2.21) vs (0.64±0.78), OAB-Q1 score (20.85 ± 5.28) vs (6.78 ± 1.04), and OAB-Q2 score (45.04 ± 12.11) vs (14.51 ± 1.66) (all P<0.01). No statistically significant differences were observed in the results of ICA and ALFF between the right superior frontal and right middle frontal regions in the rOAB patients (P>0.05), but fALFF, ReHo and DC were significantly decreased in the patients compared with those in the healthy controls (P<0.01).
CONCLUSION
Compared with healthy population, the functions and connection of the frontal superior right and frontal middle right brain regions in rOAB patients are significantly down-regulated, which may serve as new therapeutic targets.
Humans
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Urinary Bladder, Overactive/physiopathology*
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Magnetic Resonance Imaging
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Brain/physiopathology*
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Female
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Male
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Adult
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Surveys and Questionnaires
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Case-Control Studies
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Middle Aged
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Rest
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Brain Mapping
3.Geneticevolution and pathogenicity analysis of a duck-derived H4N1 subtype avian influenza virus
Qiuyan MAO ; Huitong SI ; Yaxin ZHANG ; Shuo LIU ; Cheng PENG ; Wenming JIANG ; Hualei LIU
Chinese Journal of Veterinary Science 2025;45(5):1002-1008
To comprehend the genetic evolutionary characteristics and biological properties of the H4N1 subtype avian influenza virus(AIV)in China,this study conducted whole genome sequen-cing,genetic evolutionary analysis,and pathogenicity test in BALB/c mice of a duck-derived H4N1 subtype AIV strain(DK/GX/E1424/20)isolated from the live poultry market in the southern re-gion in 2020.The results indicated that the cleavage site motif of the HA protein was PEKASR/GLF,which conformed to the characteristics of low pathogenic AIV.All the eight gene fragments were situated in the Eurasian lineage,and the homology of AIV-related genes of the H1N1,H3N8,H4N6,H6N1,and H10N8 subtypes isolated from wild waterfowl was the highest,representing a recombinant virus strain.Without prior adaptation,it replicated effectively in the lungs and turbi-nates of mice,with viral titers of 3.00 and 2.08 log10EID50/mL respectively,and induced weight loss in infected mice.This study suggested that this virus had significant genetic diversity and low pathogenicity in mice,posing a potential risk for mammalian infection.
4.Triglyceride-glucose index in evaluating metabolic differences and its role in predicting all-cause mortality in patients with heart failure
Qingqing ZHANG ; Xiangwei DING ; Guoyu WANG ; Si SUN ; Suyun JIANG ; Jing ZHENG ; Peng GAO ; Yucheng WU
Chinese Journal of Geriatric Heart Brain and Vessel Diseases 2025;27(2):154-158
Objective To compare TyG index between the patients with CHF and ADHF to eluci-date the metabolic difference between these two stages.Methods A total of 1156 HF patients ad-mitted in Taizhou People's Hospital between January 2020 and December 2022 were enrolled,and according to 2021 ESC Guidelines for Diagnosis and Treatment of Acute and Chronic Heart Fail-ure,they were divided into CHF group(365 cases)and ADHF group(791 cases).The clinical da-ta,results of laboratory tests,and cardiovascular history were collected,and TyG index was calcu-lated.All-cause death outcome was observed in ADHF patients during a follow-up of 1 year.Results The TyG index was significantly lower in the ADHF group than the CHF group[8.27(7.99,8.62)vs 8.35(8.04,8.75),P=0.001].In the ADHF group,the TyG index was positively correlated with SBP,DBP,TC,TG,LDL-C,FPG,HbA1c,BMI,and LVEF,and negatively with age(P<0.01).In the CHF group,the index was positively correlated with DBP,TC,TG,LDL-C,FPG,BMI,and HbA1c,and negatively with age(P<0.05,P<0.01).Both univariate and multiva-riate logistic regression analyses indicated that the TyG index was a protective factor for ADHF(OR=0.647,95%CI:0.503~0.832,P=0.001;OR=0.694,95%CI:0.536~0.898,P=0.005).Multivariate logistic regression analysis showed that the index in ADHF patients was a protective factor for one-year all-cause mortality(OR=0.483,95%CI:0.254-0.916;P=0.026).Conclusion TyG index might be regarded as an important marker for assessing the metabolic status in HF patients and predicting the prognosis in ADHF patients.
5.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.
6.Disease burden of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease under the hierarchical medical system based on medical internet of things
Huanying WANG ; Fengli SI ; Yiqun JIANG ; Peng WU ; Xiaobo SONG ; Bangfeng ZHAO ; Chunfeng SHENG ; Xun XU ; Fan LI ; Tingting WU
Chinese Journal of General Practitioners 2025;24(8):978-984
Objective:To evaluate the impact of implementing a regional hierarchical medical management model based on the medical internet of things (medical IoT) on the frequency of emergency department visits and hospitalizations, as well as related medical expenses, in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD).Methods:This retrospective study included COPD patients enrolled in the regional hierarchical medical management system based on Medical IoT across 21 community health service centers in Songjiang District, Shanghai, between July 2017 and May 2018. Utilizing patient data from the year prior to enrollment as the baseline, changes in the number of emergency visits, hospitalizations, and associated medical costs during the first and second years of management were compared. Changes for patients receiving drug treatment were also analyzed.Results:A total of 973 COPD patients were enrolled. The mean age was 75.2±17.0 years, and 64.34% (626/973) were male. Compared to baseline, all COPD patients in the first year of management showed significant reductions: emergency visits decreased by 33.67%, total emergency costs by 45.60%, hospitalizations by 27.15%, and total hospitalization costs by 25.42%. In the second year, reductions were: emergency visits by 28.08%, total emergency costs by 36.10%, hospitalizations by 35.26%, and total hospitalization costs by 18.13% (all P<0.05). Among patients receiving drug therapy, reductions in the first year were: emergency visits by 39.66%, total emergency costs by 47.54%, hospitalizations by 25.19%, and total hospitalization costs by 28.40%. In the second year, reductions were: emergency visits by 46.98%, total emergency costs by 45.99%, hospitalizations by 41.98%, and total hospitalization costs by 24.94% (all P<0.05). No significant differences were observed before and after management for patients without drug treatment. Conclusion:The implementation of the regional hierarchical medical management model based on Medical IoT significantly reduced the frequency of emergency visits and hospitalizations, as well as related costs, for COPD patients.
7.Generalized Functional Linear Models: Efficient Modeling for High-dimensional Correlated Mixture Exposures.
Bing Song ZHANG ; Hai Bin YU ; Xin PENG ; Hai Yi YAN ; Si Ran LI ; Shutong LUO ; Hui Zi WEIREN ; Zhu Jiang ZHOU ; Ya Lin KUANG ; Yi Huan ZHENG ; Chu Lan OU ; Lin Hua LIU ; Yuehua HU ; Jin Dong NI
Biomedical and Environmental Sciences 2025;38(8):961-976
OBJECTIVE:
Humans are exposed to complex mixtures of environmental chemicals and other factors that can affect their health. Analysis of these mixture exposures presents several key challenges for environmental epidemiology and risk assessment, including high dimensionality, correlated exposure, and subtle individual effects.
METHODS:
We proposed a novel statistical approach, the generalized functional linear model (GFLM), to analyze the health effects of exposure mixtures. GFLM treats the effect of mixture exposures as a smooth function by reordering exposures based on specific mechanisms and capturing internal correlations to provide a meaningful estimation and interpretation. The robustness and efficiency was evaluated under various scenarios through extensive simulation studies.
RESULTS:
We applied the GFLM to two datasets from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES). In the first application, we examined the effects of 37 nutrients on BMI (2011-2016 cycles). The GFLM identified a significant mixture effect, with fiber and fat emerging as the nutrients with the greatest negative and positive effects on BMI, respectively. For the second application, we investigated the association between four pre- and perfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) and gout risk (2007-2018 cycles). Unlike traditional methods, the GFLM indicated no significant association, demonstrating its robustness to multicollinearity.
CONCLUSION
GFLM framework is a powerful tool for mixture exposure analysis, offering improved handling of correlated exposures and interpretable results. It demonstrates robust performance across various scenarios and real-world applications, advancing our understanding of complex environmental exposures and their health impacts on environmental epidemiology and toxicology.
Humans
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Environmental Exposure/analysis*
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Linear Models
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Nutrition Surveys
;
Environmental Pollutants
;
Body Mass Index
8.Geneticevolution and pathogenicity analysis of a duck-derived H4N1 subtype avian influenza virus
Qiuyan MAO ; Huitong SI ; Yaxin ZHANG ; Shuo LIU ; Cheng PENG ; Wenming JIANG ; Hualei LIU
Chinese Journal of Veterinary Science 2025;45(5):1002-1008
To comprehend the genetic evolutionary characteristics and biological properties of the H4N1 subtype avian influenza virus(AIV)in China,this study conducted whole genome sequen-cing,genetic evolutionary analysis,and pathogenicity test in BALB/c mice of a duck-derived H4N1 subtype AIV strain(DK/GX/E1424/20)isolated from the live poultry market in the southern re-gion in 2020.The results indicated that the cleavage site motif of the HA protein was PEKASR/GLF,which conformed to the characteristics of low pathogenic AIV.All the eight gene fragments were situated in the Eurasian lineage,and the homology of AIV-related genes of the H1N1,H3N8,H4N6,H6N1,and H10N8 subtypes isolated from wild waterfowl was the highest,representing a recombinant virus strain.Without prior adaptation,it replicated effectively in the lungs and turbi-nates of mice,with viral titers of 3.00 and 2.08 log10EID50/mL respectively,and induced weight loss in infected mice.This study suggested that this virus had significant genetic diversity and low pathogenicity in mice,posing a potential risk for mammalian infection.
9.Effects of surgical timing on incidence of perioperative complications and postoperative 30-day mortality in elderly patients with hip fracture
Shuangpeng JIANG ; Gang ZHANG ; Teng ZHANG ; Chao DONG ; Di AI ; Qinghua SI ; Libin PENG ; Hongxing SONG ; Qi YAO
Chinese Journal of Orthopaedic Trauma 2025;27(3):204-209
Objective:To investigate the effects of surgical timing on incidence of perioperative complications and postoperative 30-day mortality in elderly patients with hip fracture.Methods:The data were retrospectively analyzed of the 450 elderly patients with hip fracture who had been admitted to Department of Joint Surgery, Beijing Shijitan Hospital, Capital Medical University from January 2016 to December 2021. The patients were divided into 2 groups according to the time from admission to surgery. In the early surgery group of 143 cases [41 males and 102 females with an age of 82(75, 86) years], the time from admission to surgery was ≤ 48 hours. In the delayed surgery group of 307 cases [88 males and 219 females with an age of 83(77, 87) years], the time from admission to surgery was over 48 hours. The 2 groups were compared in terms of comorbidities, perioperative complications, death events within postoperative 30 days, ICU transfer rate and total length of hospital stay.Results:There was no significant difference in the preoperative general data like age and gender between the 2 groups, indicating comparability ( P>0.05). The proportions of patients with coronary atherosclerotic heart disease [30.0%(92/307)], a stroke history [19.9%(61/307)], abnormal heart function [55.4%(170/307)] and abnormal kidney function [24.4%(75/307)] in the delayed surgery group were significantly higher than those in the early surgery group [18.2%(26/143), 10.5% (15/143), 39.2%(56/143), and 12.6%(18/143)] ( P<0.05). The proportions of perioperative pulmonary infection [22.5% (69/307)] and urinary infection [21.2%(65/307)] in the delayed operation group were significantly higher than those in the early operation group [11.9%(17/143) and 11.2%(16/143)] ( P<0.05). The total hospital stay in the delayed operation group [18(14, 22) d] was significantly longer than that in the early operation group [14(10, 17) d] ( P<0.05). There was no significant difference in ICU transfer rate or postoperative 30-day mortality between the 2 groups ( P>0.05). Conclusion:For elderly patients with hip fracture, delayed surgery may increase the incidence of pulmonary infection and urinary infection, and extend their total hospital stay, but have no effect on the postoperative 30-day mortality.
10.Triglyceride-glucose index in evaluating metabolic differences and its role in predicting all-cause mortality in patients with heart failure
Qingqing ZHANG ; Xiangwei DING ; Guoyu WANG ; Si SUN ; Suyun JIANG ; Jing ZHENG ; Peng GAO ; Yucheng WU
Chinese Journal of Geriatric Heart Brain and Vessel Diseases 2025;27(2):154-158
Objective To compare TyG index between the patients with CHF and ADHF to eluci-date the metabolic difference between these two stages.Methods A total of 1156 HF patients ad-mitted in Taizhou People's Hospital between January 2020 and December 2022 were enrolled,and according to 2021 ESC Guidelines for Diagnosis and Treatment of Acute and Chronic Heart Fail-ure,they were divided into CHF group(365 cases)and ADHF group(791 cases).The clinical da-ta,results of laboratory tests,and cardiovascular history were collected,and TyG index was calcu-lated.All-cause death outcome was observed in ADHF patients during a follow-up of 1 year.Results The TyG index was significantly lower in the ADHF group than the CHF group[8.27(7.99,8.62)vs 8.35(8.04,8.75),P=0.001].In the ADHF group,the TyG index was positively correlated with SBP,DBP,TC,TG,LDL-C,FPG,HbA1c,BMI,and LVEF,and negatively with age(P<0.01).In the CHF group,the index was positively correlated with DBP,TC,TG,LDL-C,FPG,BMI,and HbA1c,and negatively with age(P<0.05,P<0.01).Both univariate and multiva-riate logistic regression analyses indicated that the TyG index was a protective factor for ADHF(OR=0.647,95%CI:0.503~0.832,P=0.001;OR=0.694,95%CI:0.536~0.898,P=0.005).Multivariate logistic regression analysis showed that the index in ADHF patients was a protective factor for one-year all-cause mortality(OR=0.483,95%CI:0.254-0.916;P=0.026).Conclusion TyG index might be regarded as an important marker for assessing the metabolic status in HF patients and predicting the prognosis in ADHF patients.

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