1.Characteristics and epidemic trend of pneumoconiosis in Jingmen City in 2011 - 2022
Dongyue YANG ; Yilian ZHOU ; Ting WANG ; Zhuqing LI ; Hongpu YOU ; Shangren GAO
Journal of Public Health and Preventive Medicine 2024;35(4):91-94
Objective To analyze the epidemic characteristics of pneumoconiosis in Jingmen City from 2011 to 2022, and to provide theoretical basis for formulating the occupational disease prevention plan of the “14th Five-Year Plan” in Jingmen City. Methods The data of pneumoconiosis cases in Jingmen City from 2011 to 2022 were collected from the Occupational Disease and Health Hazard Factors Monitoring Information System, and the information of disease classification, enterprise economic type, scale distribution, regional distribution, job distribution, dust exposure years and so on was statistically analyzed. Results A total of 260 cases of pneumoconiosis were reported in Jingmen City from 2011 to 2022, with an average of 13.81 years of exposure to dust, including 164 cases of coal workers' pneumoconiosis, 90 cases of silicosis and 6 cases of other pneumoconiosis. The cases were mainly distributed in Dongbao District with 160 cases (61.54%), Zhongxiang City with 72 cases (27.69%), and Duodao District with 18 cases (6.92%). The difference was statistically significant(χ2=217.846,P<0.05). The cases were mainly distributed in private enterprises (76.54%, 199 cases). The enterprise sizes were mainly medium-sized (28.46%, 74 cases) and small (61.15%, 159 cases) enterprises, and the difference was statistically significant (χ2=46.025,P<0.05). Conclusion Coal workers' pneumoconiosis and silicosis are the main types of occupational pneumoconiosis in Jingmen area, which will become the key prevention and control targets in Jingmen City for a long time and should be paid attention to. The cases are mainly concentrated in joint-stock, private economic type enterprises and small and medium-sized enterprises, which should be monitored intensively.
2.Gene-gene/gene-environment interaction of transforming growth factor-β signaling pathway and the risk of non-syndromic oral clefts
Tianjiao HOU ; Zhibo ZHOU ; Zhuqing WANG ; Mengying WANG ; Siyue WANG ; Hexiang PENG ; Huangda GUO ; Yixin LI ; Hanyu ZHANG ; Xueying QIN ; Yiqun WU ; Hongchen ZHENG ; Jing LI ; Tao WU ; Hongping ZHU
Journal of Peking University(Health Sciences) 2024;56(3):384-389
Objective:To explore the association between polymorphisms of transforming growth factor-β(TGF-β)signaling pathway and non-syndromic cleft lip with or without cleft palate(NSCL/P)among Asian populations,while considering gene-gene interaction and gene-environment interaction.Methods:A total of 1 038 Asian NSCL/P case-parent trios were ascertained from an international consortium,which conducted a genome-wide association study using a case-parent trio design to investigate the genes affec-ting risk to NSCL/P.After stringent quality control measures,343 single nucleotide polymorphism(SNP)spanning across 10 pivotal genes in the TGF-β signaling pathway were selected from the original genome-wide association study(GWAS)dataset for further analysis.The transmission disequilibrium test(TDT)was used to test for SNP effects.The conditional Logistic regression models were used to test for gene-gene interaction and gene-environment interaction.Environmental factors collected for the study in-cluded smoking during pregnancy,passive smoking during pregnancy,alcohol intake during pregnancy,and vitamin use during pregnancy.Due to the low rates of exposure to smoking during pregnancy and al-cohol consumption during pregnancy(<3%),only the interaction between maternal smoking during pregnancy and multivitamin supplementation during pregnancy was analyzed.The threshold for statistical significance was rigorously set at P=1.46 × 10-4,applying Bonferroni correction to account for multiple testing.Results:A total of 23 SNPs in 4 genes yielded nominal association with NSCL/P(P<0.05),but none of these associations was statistically significant after Bonferroni's multiple test correction.How-ever,there were 6 pairs of SNPs rs4939874(SMAD2)and rs1864615(TGFBR2),rs2796813(TGFB2)and rs2132298(TGFBR2),rs4147358(SMAD3)and rs1346907(TGFBR2),rs4939874(SMAD2)and rs1019855(TGFBR2),rs4939874(SMAD2)and rs12490466(TGFBR2),rs2009112(TGFB2)and rs4075748(TGFBR2)showed statistically significant SNP-SNP interaction(P<1.46 × 10-4).In contrast,the analysis of gene-environment interactions did not yield any significant results after being cor-rected by multiple testing.Conclusion:The comprehensive evaluation of SNP associations and interac-tions within the TGF-β signaling pathway did not yield any direct associations with NSCL/P risk in Asian populations.However,the significant gene-gene interactions identified suggest that the genetic architec-ture influencing NSCL/P risk may involve interactions between genes within the TGF-β signaling path-way.These findings underscore the necessity for further investigations to unravel these results and further explore the underlying biological mechanisms.
3.A study of the value of three-dimensional T 1WI using different acceleration methods in the application of brain region segmentation
Gang YAO ; Zhuqing ZHOU ; Feng SHI ; Zehong CAO ; Xiaopeng SONG ; Weijun ZHANG ; Wenwen SHEN
Chinese Journal of Radiology 2024;58(10):1006-1014
Objective:To investigate the value of three-dimensional (3D) T 1WI structural images using different acceleration methods including parallel acquisition technique, joint compressed sensing (uCS) technique, and artificial intelligence-assisted compressed sensing (ACS) technique for brain region segmentation. Methods:In this cross-sectional study, fifty patients (female: n=25, age range: 13 to 87 years old) at Corning Hospital of Ningbo University from July to September 2023 were prospectively and consecutively collected. All the subjects underwent brain MRI. Six groups of 3D T 1WI structural images were obtained using different acceleration technique and parameters, including 3D T 1WI without acceleration factor (3D-T 1WI group), 3D T 1WI with parallel acquisition technique with acceleration factor 3 (3D-T 1WI-PI-3 group), 3D T 1WI with uCS technique with acceleration factor 4.5 and 6.9 (3D-T 1WI-uCS-4.5 group, 3D-T 1WI-uCS-6.9 group), 3D T 1WI by ACS technique with acceleration factors of 3 and 5 (3D-T 1WI-ACS-3 group, 3D-T 1WI-ACS-5 group). T 2WI fluid-attenuated inversion recovery (FLAIR) images were also acquired. Subjective scores (cerebral grey matter and white matter clarity scores, clarity scores of cerebral white matter degeneration lesions in relation to the surrounding white matter, and Gibbs artifact scores) and objective metrics [signal-to-noise ratio (SNR), contrast-to-noise ratio (CNR), cerebrospinal fluid signal homogeneity, peak signal-to-noise ratio (PSNR), structural similarity index (SSIM), and natural image quality evaluator (NIQE)] were used to evaluate image quality in different groups. Totally 109 brain regions were segmented and volumes were measured using the uAI Research Portal image analysis tool. Kappa or intraclass correlation coefficient ( ICC) was used to evaluate the agreement of subjective and objective evaluation indexes between the 3D-T 1WI-PI-3 group, 3D-T 1WI-uCS-4.5 group, 3D-T 1WI-uCS-6.9 group, 3D-T 1WI-ACS-3 group, 3D-T 1WI-ACS-5 group, and 3D-T 1WI group. Kappa or ICC value>0.70 was considered as good agreement. Results:The acquisition time for the 3D-T 1WI group, 3D-T 1WI-PI-3 group, 3D-T 1WI-uCS-4.5 group, 3D-T 1WI-uCS-6.9 group, 3D-T 1WI-ACS-3 group, and 3D-T 1WI-ACS-5 group were 527, 204, 169, 95, 133, 90 s, respectively. Subjective evaluation showed that the 3D-T 1WI-uCS-4.5, 3D-T 1WI-ACS-3, and 3D-T 1WI-ACS-5 groups had excellent agreement with the 3D-T 1WI group in terms of the distribution of cases of cerebral grey matter and white matter clarity scores, respectively (all Kappa value=1.000); The distribution of cases of clarity score of cerebral white matter lesions and surrounding white matter in the 3D-T 1WI-PI-3 group, 3D-T 1WI-uCS-4.5 group, and 3D-T 1WI-ACS-3 group were in good agreement with that of the 3D-T 1WI group ( Kappa values of 0.775, 0.701, and 0.777, respectively); the distribution of the number of cases of the Gibbs artifact score of the 3D-T 1WI-uCS-4.5, 3D-T 1WI-ACS-3, and 3D-T 1WI-ACS-5 groups was in good agreement with the 3D-T 1WI group (all Kappa value=1.000). Objective evaluation showed the CNR of the images in the 3D-T 1WI-PI-3, 3D-T 1WI-uCS-4.5, and 3D-T 1WI-uCS-6.9 groups were in good agreement with those of the 3D-T 1WI group ( ICC of 0.720, 0.759, and 0.752, respectively); PSNR and SSIM were in good agreement among the 3D-T 1WI-PI-3 group, 3D-T 1WI-uCS-4.5 group, 3D-T 1WI-uCS-6.9 group, 3D-T 1WI-ACS-3 group, and 3D-T 1WI-ACS-5 group (PSNR: ICC=0.854; SSIM: ICC=0.851). NIQE of 3D-T 1WI-PI-3 group, 3D-T 1WI-uCS-4.5 group, and 3D-T 1WI-ACS-3 group images were in good agreement with the 3D-T 1WI group ( ICC value of 0.866, 0.727, 0.753, respectively). The ICC values of the volume of each segmented brain region among the 3D-T 1WI-PI-3, 3D-T 1WI-uCS-4.5, 3D-T 1WI-uCS-6.9, 3D-T 1WI-ACS-3, 3D-T 1WI-ACS-5 group and the 3D-T 1WI group images showed decreased in order (all ICC≥0.62). Conclusions:The uCS and ACS techniques used in 3D-T 1WI show high agreement with 3D-T 1WI in terms of brain segmentation. The application of these accelerating techniques can significantly shorten the acquisition time with obtaining images with good image quality, displaying great value.
4.Identification of the target site of antimicrobial peptide AMP-17 against Candida albicans.
Longbing YANG ; Zhuqing TIAN ; Luoxiong ZHOU ; Chaoqin SUN ; Mingjiao HUANG ; Chunren TIAN ; Jian PENG ; Guo GUO
Chinese Journal of Biotechnology 2023;39(1):304-317
Candida albicans is one of the major causes of invasive fungal infections and a serious opportunistic pathogen in immunocompromised individuals. The antimicrobial peptide AMP-17 has prominent anti-Candida activity, and proteomic analysis revealed significant differences in the expression of cell wall (XOG1) and oxidative stress (SRR1) genes upon the action of AMP-17 on C. albicans, suggesting that AMP-17 may exert anti-C. albicans effects by affecting the expression of XOG1 and SRR1 genes. To further investigate whether XOG1 and SRR1 genes were the targets of AMP-17, C. albicans xog1Δ/Δ and srr1Δ/Δ mutants were constructed using the clustered regulatory interspaced short palindromic repeats-associated protein 9 (CRISPR/Cas9) system. Phenotypic observations revealed that deletion of two genes had no significant effect on C. albicans growth and biofilm formation, whereas XOG1 gene deletion affected in vitro stress response and mycelium formation of C. albicans. Drug sensitivity assay showed that the MIC80 values of AMP-17 against xog1Δ/Δ and srr1Δ/Δ mutants increased from 8 μg/mL (for the wild type C. albicans SC5314) to 16 μg/mL, while the MIC80 values against srr1Δ/Δ: : srr1 revertants decreased to the level of the wild type SC5314. In addition, the ability of AMP-17 to inhibit biofilm formation of both deletion strains was significantly reduced compared to that of wild type SC5314, indicating that the susceptibility of the deletion mutants to AMP-17 was reduced in both the yeast state and during biofilm formation. These results suggest that XOG1 and SRR1 genes are likely two of the potential targets for AMP-17 to exert anti-C. albicans effects, which may facilitate further exploration of the antibacterial mechanism of novel peptide antifungal drugs.
Humans
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Candida albicans
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Antimicrobial Peptides
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Proteomics
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Peptides/pharmacology*
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Transcription Factors/metabolism*
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Antifungal Agents/pharmacology*
5.Relationships Among Character Strengths, Self-efficacy, Social Support, Depression, and Psychological Well-being of Hospital Nurses
Jianfei XIE ; Min LIU ; Zhuqing ZHONG ; Qiuxiang ZHANG ; Jianda ZHOU ; Lu WANG ; Keke MA ; Siqing DING ; Xiaohong ZHANG ; Qian SUN ; Andy S.K. CHENG
Asian Nursing Research 2020;14(3):150-157
Purpose:
From the perspective of positive psychology, our study aimed to explore depressive symptomsand psychological well-being among Chinese nurses, as well as analyze the impacts of characterstrengths, self-efficacy and social support on the mental health of nurses.
Methods:
A cross-sectional and descriptive design using five self-reported questionnaires was used toinvestigate a cohort of 4238 nurses during 2018. A structural equation modeling analysis was used toverify a hypothetical model linking character strengths, self-efficacy, social support, depressive symptoms,and psychological well-being.
Results:
The prevalence of depression among this cohort of Chinese nurses was 58.1%. The mean scoresfor caring, inquisitiveness, and self-control were 19.93 (SD = 2.82), 15.94 (SD = 3.00), and 16.34(SD = 2.95), respectively. The hypothesized model was a good fit of the data (x2/df = 1.77, p = .183, rootmean square error of approximation = 0.04, goodness of fit index = 1.00, comparative fit index = 1.00,TuckereLewis index = 1.00). Except for the path from self-control to depression, the other hypotheticalpaths investigated were statistically significant.
Conclusion
Character strengths were directly and positively associated with psychological well-being.Inquisitiveness was the strongest direct protective factor for depression. In addition, characterstrengths indirectly alleviated depression and increased psychological well-being through mediatingvariables of social support and self-efficacy. This study should alert nurse managers that more attentionshould be paid to the character strengths and mental health of nurses. This study provides evidence forinterventions based on character strengths as a management strategy to support the mental health ofnurses.
6.Relationships Among Character Strengths, Self-efficacy, Social Support, Depression, and Psychological Well-being of Hospital Nurses
Jianfei XIE ; Min LIU ; Zhuqing ZHONG ; Qiuxiang ZHANG ; Jianda ZHOU ; Lu WANG ; Keke MA ; Siqing DING ; Xiaohong ZHANG ; Qian SUN ; Andy S.K. CHENG
Asian Nursing Research 2020;14(3):150-157
Purpose:
From the perspective of positive psychology, our study aimed to explore depressive symptomsand psychological well-being among Chinese nurses, as well as analyze the impacts of characterstrengths, self-efficacy and social support on the mental health of nurses.
Methods:
A cross-sectional and descriptive design using five self-reported questionnaires was used toinvestigate a cohort of 4238 nurses during 2018. A structural equation modeling analysis was used toverify a hypothetical model linking character strengths, self-efficacy, social support, depressive symptoms,and psychological well-being.
Results:
The prevalence of depression among this cohort of Chinese nurses was 58.1%. The mean scoresfor caring, inquisitiveness, and self-control were 19.93 (SD = 2.82), 15.94 (SD = 3.00), and 16.34(SD = 2.95), respectively. The hypothesized model was a good fit of the data (x2/df = 1.77, p = .183, rootmean square error of approximation = 0.04, goodness of fit index = 1.00, comparative fit index = 1.00,TuckereLewis index = 1.00). Except for the path from self-control to depression, the other hypotheticalpaths investigated were statistically significant.
Conclusion
Character strengths were directly and positively associated with psychological well-being.Inquisitiveness was the strongest direct protective factor for depression. In addition, characterstrengths indirectly alleviated depression and increased psychological well-being through mediatingvariables of social support and self-efficacy. This study should alert nurse managers that more attentionshould be paid to the character strengths and mental health of nurses. This study provides evidence forinterventions based on character strengths as a management strategy to support the mental health ofnurses.
7.Analysis on clinical factors affecting transrectal natural orifice specimen extraction in rectal cancer surgery
Ben HUANG ; Zhuqing ZHOU ; Huang ZHOU ; Mengcheng LIU ; Tao DU ; Bing LU ; Junyi HAN ; Wei GAO ; Zhe ZHU ; Chuangang FU
Chinese Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery 2020;23(5):480-485
Objective:To identify the factors associated with successful transrectal specimen extraction after laparoscopic rectal cancer resection.Methods:A retrospective case-control study was conducted. Clinical data of rectal cancer patients who did or did not successfully undergo transrectal specimen extraction in Shanghai East Hospital between January 2017 and December 2017 were retrieved through the rectal cancer database of Shanghai East Hospital. Case inclusion criteria: (1) tumor size ≤7 cm by pelvic MRI; (2) body mass index (BMI)≤ 30 kg/m 2; (3) no history of neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy; (4) no anal stenosis. Clinical data including age, gender, BMI, tumor obstruction, distance from tumor to anal verge, history of abdominal operation, maximal diameter of tumor and width of mesorectum in the anteroposterior dimension measured by pelvic MRI, etc. were collected. The χ 2 test was used to perform univariate analysis. Multivariate logistic regression was used to identify factors affecting transrectal specimen extraction. Results:A total of 208 patients were included in the analysis. Of 208 patients, 132 were men and 76 were women; mean age was (63±11) years old and median tumor size was 3.8 (IQR, 3.0 to 5.0) cm. Sixty-six (31.7%) patients completed transrectal specimen extraction successfully. Univariate analysis showed that patients who completed transrectal specimen extraction were more likely to have a lower BMI (χ 2=7.420, P=0.006), be free from malignant obstruction (χ 2=8.972, P=0.003), have a shorter distance from tumor to the anal verge (<5.0 cm) (χ 2=14.960, P<0.001), a smaller tumor size (≤5.0 cm) (χ 2=18.495, P<0.001) and a thinner mesorectum in the anteroposterior dimension (≤6.0 cm) (χ 2=34.612, P<0.001) than those who failed to perform transrectal specimen extraction. Gender, age or history of abdominal operation were not associated with the successful extraction (all P>0.05). Multivariate analysis revealed that BMI ≤25.0 kg/m 2 (OR=2.32, 95% CI: 1.06 to 5.06, P=0.034), free from malignant obstruction (OR=3.01, 95% CI: 1.82 to 6.69, P<0.001), the distance from tumor to the anal verge <5.0 cm (OR=3.73, 95% CI: 1.22 to 11.43, P=0.021), tumor size ≤ 5.0 cm (OR=4.43, 95% CI: 1.39 to 14.09, P=0.012), and the anteroposterior width of mesorectum ≤ 6.0 cm (OR=4.30, 95% CI: 2.02 to 9.18, P<0.001) were independent protective factors for successful transrectal specimen extraction. Conclusion:Preoperative assessment of BMI, malignant obstruction, distance from tumor to the anal verge, tumor size and anteroposterior width of mesorectum is beneficial to choose appropriate patients with rectal cancer to undergo transrectal specimen extraction.
8.Analysis on clinical factors affecting transrectal natural orifice specimen extraction in rectal cancer surgery
Ben HUANG ; Zhuqing ZHOU ; Huang ZHOU ; Mengcheng LIU ; Tao DU ; Bing LU ; Junyi HAN ; Wei GAO ; Zhe ZHU ; Chuangang FU
Chinese Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery 2020;23(5):480-485
Objective:To identify the factors associated with successful transrectal specimen extraction after laparoscopic rectal cancer resection.Methods:A retrospective case-control study was conducted. Clinical data of rectal cancer patients who did or did not successfully undergo transrectal specimen extraction in Shanghai East Hospital between January 2017 and December 2017 were retrieved through the rectal cancer database of Shanghai East Hospital. Case inclusion criteria: (1) tumor size ≤7 cm by pelvic MRI; (2) body mass index (BMI)≤ 30 kg/m 2; (3) no history of neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy; (4) no anal stenosis. Clinical data including age, gender, BMI, tumor obstruction, distance from tumor to anal verge, history of abdominal operation, maximal diameter of tumor and width of mesorectum in the anteroposterior dimension measured by pelvic MRI, etc. were collected. The χ 2 test was used to perform univariate analysis. Multivariate logistic regression was used to identify factors affecting transrectal specimen extraction. Results:A total of 208 patients were included in the analysis. Of 208 patients, 132 were men and 76 were women; mean age was (63±11) years old and median tumor size was 3.8 (IQR, 3.0 to 5.0) cm. Sixty-six (31.7%) patients completed transrectal specimen extraction successfully. Univariate analysis showed that patients who completed transrectal specimen extraction were more likely to have a lower BMI (χ 2=7.420, P=0.006), be free from malignant obstruction (χ 2=8.972, P=0.003), have a shorter distance from tumor to the anal verge (<5.0 cm) (χ 2=14.960, P<0.001), a smaller tumor size (≤5.0 cm) (χ 2=18.495, P<0.001) and a thinner mesorectum in the anteroposterior dimension (≤6.0 cm) (χ 2=34.612, P<0.001) than those who failed to perform transrectal specimen extraction. Gender, age or history of abdominal operation were not associated with the successful extraction (all P>0.05). Multivariate analysis revealed that BMI ≤25.0 kg/m 2 (OR=2.32, 95% CI: 1.06 to 5.06, P=0.034), free from malignant obstruction (OR=3.01, 95% CI: 1.82 to 6.69, P<0.001), the distance from tumor to the anal verge <5.0 cm (OR=3.73, 95% CI: 1.22 to 11.43, P=0.021), tumor size ≤ 5.0 cm (OR=4.43, 95% CI: 1.39 to 14.09, P=0.012), and the anteroposterior width of mesorectum ≤ 6.0 cm (OR=4.30, 95% CI: 2.02 to 9.18, P<0.001) were independent protective factors for successful transrectal specimen extraction. Conclusion:Preoperative assessment of BMI, malignant obstruction, distance from tumor to the anal verge, tumor size and anteroposterior width of mesorectum is beneficial to choose appropriate patients with rectal cancer to undergo transrectal specimen extraction.
9.Feasibility analysis on 3D laparoscopic surgery via transrectal extraction of specimens without abdominal incision in the treatment of slow transit constipation.
Bing LU ; Chuangang FU ; Zhuqing ZHOU ; Junyi HAN ; Tao DU ; Zhe ZHU ; Wei GAO ; Qixin JIANG ; Fang JI ; Zhenyu ZHANG
Chinese Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery 2018;21(8):901-907
OBJECTIVETo investigate the safety and feasibility of 3D laparoscopic surgery via transrectal extraction of specimens without abdominal incision in the treatment of slow transit constipation (STC).
METHODSFrom May 2015 to January 2017, 8 STC patients (6 females and 2 males) with informed consent were selected to receive subtotal colectomy with 3D laparoscopy as the no-incision incision group, in which the initial part of ascending colon and rectum were end-to-end anastomosed directly after extraction of the specimen through the rectum. Twelve STC patients (9 females and 3 males) undergoing traditional subtotal colectomy with 3D laparoscopy were selected as the traditional group by case matching method (gender, age, BMI, the difference of receiving operation time less than 12 months, same surgeon team). Perioperative parameters (operation duration, intraoperative blood loss, exhausting time, postoperative hospital stay, complications, postoperative pain score and additional pain management), inflammation index at postoperative day 1 and day 3 (leukocyte, procalcitonin, interleukin 6, C-reactive protein), postoperative peritoneal infection, wound healing, short-term and long-term efficacy, patient satisfaction evaluation (subjective hundred-mark system) at postoperative one year were compared between two groups.
RESULTSThere were no significant differences between two groups in operation duration, intraoperative blood loss, exhausting time, postoperative hospital stay and morbidity of complication (all P>0.05). Significantly lower pain scores at postoperative 6-hour (median 3.0 vs. 4.5, U=23.0, P=0.042), lower ratio of additional analgesic at postoperative day 1(1/8 vs. 7/12, P=0.040) were found in the no-incision group. Leukocyte level at postoperative day 1 was significantly lower in the no-incision group [(11.0±3.5)×10/L vs. (14.7±3.6)×10/L, t=-2.281, P=0.035]. C-reactive protein concentration at postoperative day 3 was not significantly different between two groups but with different trend [median 78.1(0.1 to 154.0) mg/L vs. 22.0 (7.0 to 55.9) mg/L,U=33.0, P=0.047]. There were no significant differences of interleukin-6 and procalcitonin between two groups(all P>0.05). All the patients had follow-up for 14-31 months. Subjective effectiveness score was 90±9 in the no-incision group and 94±6 in the traditional group without significant difference(t=-1.099, P=0.286). No long-term complications associated with abdominal infection was observed in the no-incision group.
CONCLUSION3D laparoscopic subtotal colectomy via transrectal extraction of specimens without abdominal incision in the treatment of STC has similar short-term and long-term efficacies compared with traditional laparoscopic assisted surgery, and does not increase the probability of abdominal contamination.
Colectomy ; methods ; Constipation ; surgery ; Female ; Humans ; Laparoscopy ; Length of Stay ; Male ; Operative Time ; Rectum ; Treatment Outcome
10.Effect of macrophages on the expression of vascular cell adhesion molecule 1 in ovarian carcinoma cells and its mechanism
Ru ZHOU ; Qian FENG ; Shentong YU ; Tong YANG ; Shuhong YU ; Shuang LIU ; Zhuqing CUI ; Jing ZHANG
Cancer Research and Clinic 2018;30(10):649-654
Objective To explore the effect of macrophages on the expression of vascular cell adhesion molecule 1 (VCAM1) in ovarian carcinoma cells and its mechanism. Methods Phorbol ester and lipopolysaccharide were used to activate the monocyte THP-1 that would become macrophages . Enzyme linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) was used to detect the cytokines level in the supernatant of macrophages. The effect of macrophages ' supernatant on VCAM1 mRNA expression of ovarian HEY and IGROV1 carcinoma cells was detected by using quantitative real-time and polymerase chain reaction (qRT-PCR). Western blot was used to detect the effect of macrophages ' supernatant on VCAM1 protein expression of ovarian carcinoma cells with VCAM1 over expression (HEY-VCAM1 and IGROV1-VCAM1). Dual-luciferase report gene assay was used to detect the effect of macrophages' supernatant and the cytokines on promoter transcriptional activity in different truncations of human embryonic kidney cells HEK293T VCAM1 gene. Results Compared with the supernatant of THP-1 cells, the release number of tumor necrosis factor α (TNF-α), interleukin (IL)-6 and IL-12 in supernatant from macrophages was increased (all P< 0.05), and IL-10 was decreased (t=3.841, P=0.019). The levels of VCAM1 mRNA in HEY and IGROV1 cells were upregulated by macrophages' supernatant and 1 ng/ml TNF-α, and macrophages' supernatant could promote the expression levels of VCAM1 protein in HEY-VCAM1 cells and IGROV1-VCAM1 cells. Compared with the empty vector (pGV354) control group [(8.6 ±0.2) ×10-3 relative light unit (RLU)], the reporter gene luciferase activity of human embryonic kidney cells HEK293T VCAM1 gene promoter region were upregulated by supernatant from macrophages located at -1641 bp to +12 bp including the transcription binding site of AP-1 [(109.4±3.4)×10-3 RLU], and there was a significant difference (t=29.42, P<0.001). Compared with the negative control group untreated by cytokine [(21.0 ±0.5) ×10-3 RLU], 100 ng/ml TNF-α could promote the transcriptional activity of -1641 bp to +12 bp promoter of VCAM1 in HEK293T cells [(23.4±0.4)×10-3 RLU;t=4.134, P=0.001]. 150 ng/ml IL-6 had no effect on the transcriptional activity of the promoter [(21.4±1.0)× 10-3 RLU; t= 0.328, P= 0.708]. 5 ng/ml IL-12 inhibited the transcriptional activity of the promoter [(14.3 ± 1.0)×10-3 RLU;t= 6.390, P< 0.001]. Conclusion Macrophages can promote VCAM1 expression in ovarian carcinoma cells by secreting inflammatory factors like TNF-α to affect VCAM1 promoter region containing AP1 transcription binding site and can promote VCAM1 mRNA expression in ovarian cancer cells.


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