1.Comparative study of percutaneous endoscopic treatment of L5/S1 disc herniation by two approaches
Zhiwei SHI ; Jianming WU ; Yahui NIU ; Chen GONG
The Journal of Practical Medicine 2024;40(6):807-813
Objective To compare the efficacy of percutaneous transforaminal approach and translaminar approach in the treatment of L5/S1 disc herniation(LDH)under endoscopic discectomy.Methods Adopted a retro-spective case-control study,and selected 62 cases of patients with L5/S1 LDH who were treated with percutaneous endoscopic surgery in the spine surgery department of our hospital from June 2020 to December 2022,and the transforaminal approach was used.(TELD)in 32 cases(TELD group),and interlaminar approach(IELD)in 30 cases(IELD group).The observation indicators included intraoperative fluoroscopy times,operation time,hospitaliza-tion days,hospitalization expenses,leg pain VAS score,ODI score,modified MacNab curative effect evaluation and complications.Results All 62 patients successfully completed the operation and follow-up,and no serious complications occurred.There were statistically significant differences in operation time,fluoroscopy times,and hospitalization expenses between the two groups(P<0.001),but there was no significant difference in hospitaliza-tion days between the two groups(P>0.05).The lower extremity VAS scores at the last follow-up and the last follow-up were significantly improved compared with those before operation(P<0.001),and the ODI scores of the two groups were significantly improved at 2 days,1 month and at the last follow-up(P<0.001).At the same time point,there was no statistical difference(P>0.05);there was no significant difference in the excellent and good rate of surgery between the two groups(P>0.05).11 patients with high iliac crest in the TELD group successfully completed the surgery.Conclusions Both the endoscopic surgery through the intervertebral foramen and the inter-laminar approach can achieve satisfactory results in the treatment of L5/S1 LDH.However,local anesthesia through the intervertebral foramen approach reduces hospitalization costs,and patients with high iliac crest can successfully complete the surgery by selecting a suitable puncture path.The translaminar approach has fewer fluoroscopy times and shorter surgical time,but there is a higher risk of dura mater and nerve damage,which requires careful opera-tion for beginners.
2.Clinical risk factors for early adverse cardiovascular events after surgical correction of supravalvar aortic stenosis: A retrospective cohort study
Simeng ZHANG ; Caiyi WEI ; Lizhi lǚ ; Bo PENG ; Jianming XIA ; Qiang WANG ; Jun YAN ; Yi SHI
Chinese Journal of Clinical Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery 2024;31(10):1448-1454
Objective To identify clinical risk factors for early major adverse cardiovascular events (MACEs) following surgical correction of supravalvar aortic stenosis (SVAS). Methods Patients who underwent SVAS surgical correction between 2002 and 2019 in Beijing and Yunnan Fuwai Cardiovascular Hospitals were included. The patients were divided into a MACEs group and a non-MACEs group based on whether MACEs concurring during postoperative hospitalization or within 30 days following surgical correction for SVAS. Their preoperative, intraoperative, and postoperative clinical data were collected for multivariate logistic regression. Results This study included 302 patients. There were 199 males and 103 females, with a median age of 63.0 (29.2, 131.2) months. The incidence of early postoperative MACEs was 7.0% (21/302). The multivariate logistic regression model identified independent risk factors for early postoperative MACEs, including ICU duration (OR=1.01, 95%CI 1.00-1.01, P=0.032), intraoperative cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) time (OR=1.02, 95%CI 1.01-1.04, P=0.014), aortic annulus diameter (OR=0.65, 95%CI 0.43-0.97, P=0.035), aortic sinus inner diameter (OR=0.75, 95%CI 0.57-0.98, P=0.037), and diameter of the stenosis (OR=0.56, 95%CI 0.35-0.90, P=0.016). Conclusion The independent risk factors for early postoperative MACEs include ICU duration, intraoperative CPB time, aortic annulus diameter, aortic sinus inner diameter, and diameter of the stenosis. Early identification of high-risk populations for MACEs is beneficial for the development of clinical treatment strategies.
3.Guidelines for clinical diagnosis and treatment of Pneumocystis jirovecii pneumonia after kidney transplantation in China
Branch of Organ Transplantation of Chinese Medical Association ; Zhen WANG ; Xiaofeng SHI ; Jianming ZHENG ; Gang FENG ; Jie ZHAO ; Wenli SONG
Organ Transplantation 2024;15(5):726-736
After kidney transplantation,the recipients have been under long-term immunosuppression due to the use of immunosuppressive drugs,and they are high-risk population of Pneumocystis jirovecii pneumonia(PJP).The risk of PJP is the highest within 6 months after kidney transplantation and after intensified anti-rejection therapy.Fever,dry cough,progressive dyspnea and hypoxemia are common clinical manifestations of PJP after kidney transplantation.Trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole(TMP-SMX)can effectively prevent and treat PJP,and significantly reduce the incidence rate and fatality of PJP.To standardize the diagnosis,treatment and prevention of PJP after kidney transplantation,Branch of Organ Transplantation of Chinese Medical Association organized relevant Chinese experts to formulate the"Guidelines for Clinical Diagnosis and Treatment of Pneumocystis Jirovecii Pneumonia After Kidney Transplantation in China"based on clinical concerns,aiming to provide guidance for the prevention and comprehensive clinical treatment of PJP after kidney transplantation.
4.Expert consensus on clinical application of 177Lu-prostate specific membrane antigen radio-ligand therapy in prostate cancer
Guobing LIU ; Weihai ZHUO ; Yushen GU ; Zhi YANG ; Yue CHEN ; Wei FAN ; Jianming GUO ; Jian TAN ; Xiaohua ZHU ; Li HUO ; Xiaoli LAN ; Biao LI ; Weibing MIAO ; Shaoli SONG ; Hao XU ; Rong TIAN ; Quanyong LUO ; Feng WANG ; Xuemei WANG ; Aimin YANG ; Dong DAI ; Zhiyong DENG ; Jinhua ZHAO ; Xiaoliang CHEN ; Yan FAN ; Zairong GAO ; Xingmin HAN ; Ningyi JIANG ; Anren KUANG ; Yansong LIN ; Fugeng LIU ; Cen LOU ; Xinhui SU ; Lijun TANG ; Hui WANG ; Xinlu WANG ; Fuzhou YANG ; Hui YANG ; Xinming ZHAO ; Bo YANG ; Xiaodong HUANG ; Jiliang CHEN ; Sijin LI ; Jing WANG ; Yaming LI ; Hongcheng SHI
Chinese Journal of Clinical Medicine 2024;31(5):844-850,封3
177Lu-prostate specific membrane antigen(PSMA)radio-ligand therapy has been approved abroad for advanced prostate cancer and has been in several clinical trials in China.Based on domestic clinical practice and experimental data and referred to international experience and viewpoints,the expert group forms a consensus on the clinical application of 177Lu-PSMA radio-ligand therapy in prostate cancer to guide clinical practice.
5.Propionic and butyric acid levels can predict ability in the activities of daily living after an ischemic stroke
Hankui YIN ; Zhongli WANG ; Ming ZENG ; Ming SHI ; Yun REN ; Linhua TAO ; Yunhai YAO ; Jianming FU ; Xudong GU
Chinese Journal of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation 2024;46(7):631-634
Objective:To seek a correlation between short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs) and skill in the activities of daily living (ADL) after an ischemic stroke.Methods:Ninety ischemic stroke survivors were assessed using the Barthel Index (BI). Fecal samples were collected and analyzed for the concentration of acetic acid, propionic acid, butyric acid, isobutyric acid, valeric acid, and isovaleric acid using gas chromatography. Spearman correlation analysis was conducted to identify SCFAs that correlated with the total BI score. Linear regressions were evaluated to explore the correlation between the total BI score and SCFAs.Results:The concentrations of propionic and butyric acids in the feces were found to correlate significantly with the total BI scores. Data including propionic acid and butyric acid levels, age, gender, body mass index, disease duration, any history of hypertension or diabetes, and other SCFAs were included in the regression models. Propionic and butyric acid levels were found to be potentially useful predictors of total BI scores.Conclusions:The concentration of propionic and butyric acids in the feces after an ischemic stroke can predict the survivor′s total BI score. Those concentrations could therefore be useful for predicting ADL ability.
6.α-Gal Nanoparticles in CNS Trauma: I. In Vitro Activation of Microglia Towards a Pro-Healing State
Bhavani GOPALAKRISHNAN ; Uri GALILI ; August DUNBAR ; Luis SOLORIO ; Riyi SHI ; Jianming LI
Tissue Engineering and Regenerative Medicine 2024;21(3):409-419
BACKGROUND:
Macrophages and microglia play critical roles after spinal cord injury (SCI), with the pro-healing, antiinflammatory (M2) subtype being implicated in tissue repair. We hypothesize that promoting this phenotype within the post-injured cord microenvironment may provide beneficial effects for mitigating tissue damage. As a proof of concept, we propose the use of nanoparticles incorporating the carbohydrate antigen, galactose-α-1,3-galactose (α-gal epitope) as an immunomodulator to transition human microglia (HMC3) cells toward a pro-healing state.
METHODS:
Quiescent HMC3 cells were acutely exposed to α-gal nanoparticles in the presence of human serum and subsequently characterized for changes in cell shape, expression of anti or pro-inflammatory markers, and secretion of phenotype-specific cytokines.
RESULTS:
HMC3 cells treated with serum activated α-gal nanoparticles exhibited rapid enlargement and shape change in addition to expressing CD68. Moreover, these activated cells showed increased expression of anti-inflammatory markers like Arginase-1 and CD206 without increasing production of pro-inflammatory cytokines TNF-α or IL-6.
CONCLUSION
This study is the first to show that resting human microglia exposed to a complex of α-gal nanoparticles and anti-Gal (from human serum) can be activated and polarized toward a putative M2 state. The data suggests that α-gal nanoparticles may have therapeutic relevance to the CNS microenvironment, in both recruiting and polarizing macrophages/microglia at the application site. The immunomodulatory activity of these α-gal nanoparticles post-SCI is further described in the companion work (Part II).
7.α-Gal Nanoparticles in CNS Trauma: II. Immunomodulation Following Spinal Cord Injury (SCI) Improves Functional Outcomes
Bhavani GOPALAKRISHNAN ; Uri GALILI ; Megan SAENGER ; Noah J. BURKET ; Wendy KOSS ; Manjari S. LOKENDER ; Kaitlyn M. WOLFE ; Samantha J. HUSAK ; Collin J. STARK ; Luis SOLORIO ; Abigail COX ; August DUNBAR ; Riyi SHI ; Jianming LI
Tissue Engineering and Regenerative Medicine 2024;21(3):437-453
BACKGROUND:
Previous investigations have shown that local application of nanoparticles presenting the carbohydrate moiety galactose-a-1,3-galactose (α-gal epitopes) enhance wound healing by activating the complement system and recruiting pro-healing macrophages to the injury site. Our companion in vitro paper suggest α-gal epitopes can similarly recruit and polarize human microglia toward a pro-healing phenotype. In this continuation study, we investigate the in vivo implications of α-gal nanoparticle administration directly to the injured spinal cord.
METHODS:
α-Gal knock-out (KO) mice subjected to spinal cord crush were injected either with saline (control) or with α-gal nanoparticles immediately following injury. Animals were assessed longitudinally with neurobehavioral and histological endpoints.
RESULTS:
Mice injected with α-gal nanoparticles showed increased recruitment of anti-inflammatory macrophages to the injection site in conjunction with increased production of anti-inflammatory markers and a reduction in apoptosis. Further, the treated group showed increased axonal infiltration into the lesion, a reduction in reactive astrocyte populations and increased angiogenesis. These results translated into improved sensorimotor metrics versus the control group.
CONCLUSIONS
Application of α-gal nanoparticles after spinal cord injury (SCI) induces a pro-healing inflammatory response resulting in neuroprotection, improved axonal ingrowth into the lesion and enhanced sensorimotor recovery. The data shows α-gal nanoparticles may be a promising avenue for further study in CNS trauma.GRAPHICAL ABSTRACT Putative mechanism of therapeutic action by α-gal nanoparticles. A. Nanoparticles injected into the injured cord bind to anti-Gal antibodies leaked from ruptured capillaries. The binding of anti-Gal to α-gal epitopes on the α-gal nanoparticles activates the complement system to release complement cleavage chemotactic peptides such as C5a, C3a that recruit macrophages and microglia. These recruited cells bind to the anti-Gal coated α-gal nanoparticles and are further polarized into the M2 state. B. Recruited M2 macrophages and microglia secrete neuroprotective and prohealing factors to promote tissue repair, neovascularization and axonal regeneration (C.).
8.Effect of Wnt/β-catenin signaling pathway in neural differentiation of human bone marrow mesenchymal stem cells.
Chinese Journal of Reparative and Reconstructive Surgery 2023;37(10):1276-1283
OBJECTIVE:
To explore the effect of basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF), epidermal growth factor (EGF), and the combination of bFGF and EGF in the neural differentiation of human bone marrow mesenchymal stem cells (hBMSCs), and the role of Wnt/β-catenin signaling pathway in this process.
METHODS:
The identified 4th-generation hBMSCs were divided into five groups according to different induction conditions, namely control group (group A), EGF induction group (group B), bFGF induction group (group C), EGF and bFGF combined induction group (group D), and EGF, bFGF, and Dickkopf-related protein 1 (DKK-1) combined induction group (group E). After 7 days of continuous induction, the cell morphology was observed by inverted fluorescence phase contrast microscopy, levels of genes that were related to neural cells [Nestin, neuron-specific enolase (NSE), microtubule-associated protein 2 (MAP-2), and glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP)] and key components of the Wnt/β-catenin signaling pathway (β-catenin and Cyclin D1) were detected by RT-PCR, and the levels of proteins that were related to neural cells (Nestin and GFAP) as well as genes that were involved in Wnt/β-catenin signaling pathway [β-catenin, phosphorylation β-catenin (P-β-catenin), Cytoplasmic β-catenin, and Nuclear β-catenin] were explored by cellular immunofluorescence staining and Western blot.
RESULTS:
When compared to groups A and B, the typical neuro-like cell changes were observed in groups C-E, and most obviously in group D. RT-PCR showed that the relative expressions of Nestin, NSE, and MAP-2 genes in groups C-E, the relative expressions of GFAP gene in groups D and E, the relative expression of NSE gene in group B, the relative expressions of β-catenin gene in groups C and D, and the relative expressions of Cyclin D1 gene in groups B-D significantly increased when compared with group A ( P<0.05). Compared with group E, the relative expressions of Nestin, NSE, MAP-2, GFAP, β-catenin, and CyclinD1 genes significantly increased in group D ( P<0.05); compared with group C, the relative expression of Nestin gene in group D significantly decreased ( P<0.05), while NSE, MAP-2, and GFAP genes significantly increased ( P<0.05). The cellular immunofluorescence staining showed that the ratio of NSE- and GFAP-positive cells significantly increased in groups C-E than in group A, in group D than in groups C and E ( P<0.05). Western blot assay showed that the relative expression of NSE protein was significantly higher in groups C and D than in group A and in group D than in groups C and E ( P<0.05). In addition, the relative expression of GFAP protein was significantly higher in groups C-E than in group A and in group D than in group E ( P<0.05). Besides, the relative expressions of β-catenin, Cytoplasmic β-catenin, Nuclear β-catenin, and the ratio of Nuclear β-catenin to Cytoplasmic β-catenin were significantly higher in groups C and D than in group A and in group D than in group E ( P<0.05), whereas the relative expression of P-β-catenin protein was significantly lower in groups C and D than in group A and in group D than in group E ( P<0.05).
CONCLUSION
Different from EGF, bFGF can induce neural differentiation of hBMSCs. In addition, EGF can enhance the hBMSCs neural differentiation of bFGF, while the Wnt/β-catenin signaling pathway may play a positive regulatory role in these processes.
Humans
;
beta Catenin/metabolism*
;
Bone Marrow Cells
;
Cell Differentiation
;
Cells, Cultured
;
Epidermal Growth Factor/metabolism*
;
Mesenchymal Stem Cells
;
Wnt Signaling Pathway
;
Neurons
;
Fibroblast Growth Factor 2/metabolism*
9.Two cases of pancreas retransplantation
Jianming ZHENG ; Yeqi NIAN ; Xiaofeng SHI ; Qing DU ; Chunbai MO ; Wenli SONG
Chinese Journal of Organ Transplantation 2023;44(2):109-111
The risk of graft loss is relatively high in early stages after pancreatic transplantation so that some patients are placed back on a waiting list for pancreatic transplantation. This review summarized the experiences of two recipients of pancreatic re-transplantation after simultaneous pancreas-kidney transplantation. Both patients could successfully discontinue insulin dosing, blood sugar levels were maintained at a normal level and function of kidney graft improved obviously as compared to pre-transplant levels.
10.Blood flow restriction can improve knee proprioception and motor coordination after anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction
Aimei SHI ; Qi ZHENG ; Xiaolong LI ; Xudong GU ; Yunhai YAO ; Jianming FU ; Xin JIN
Chinese Journal of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation 2023;45(4):341-345
Objective:To explore any effect of blood flow restriction during exercise on knee proprioception and motor coordination after anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) reconstruction.Methods:Thirty patients recovering from ACL reconstruction were randomly divided into an experimental group and a control group, each of 15. Both groups were given routine rehabilitation training, while the experimental group was additionally provided with 45 minutes of training with blood flow restriction, 3 times a week for 8 weeks. The blood flow restriction training involved constant pressure in the groin while the patient performed knee flexion and extension resistance training, squats, alternate knee flexion and extension and ergometer cycling. Before and after the intervention, both groups′ knee function, proprioception and lower limb motor coordination were evaluated using the Lysholm knee scale, the Humac isokinetic measurement system and surface electromyography.Results:Before the experiment there were no significant differences between the two groups in any of the measurements. After the intervention, both groups′ average Lysholm score had improved significantly, and errors in reproducing a knee angle had decreased significantly. Significantly better improvement was observed in the observation group than in the control group. That group′s average coordinated contraction rate on the affected side in extension and flexion was also significantly better than the control group′s ave-rage. Indeed, there were no significant differences in the contraction rates between the healthy and affected sides.Conclusions:Training with restricted blood flow can significantly improve knee function, proprioception and motor coordination after anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction.

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