1.Cerebral oxygen metabolism and brain electrical activity of healthy full-term neonates in high-altitude areas:a multicenter clinical research protocol
Bi ZE ; Jin GAO ; Xiao-Fen ZHAO ; Yang-Fang LI ; Tie-Song ZHANG ; Xiao-Mei LIU ; Hui MAO ; Ming-Cai QIN ; Yi ZHANG ; Yong-Li YANG ; Chun-Ye HE ; Yan ZHAO ; Kun DU ; Lin LIU ; Wen-Hao ZHOU ; Chinese High Altitude Neonatal Medicine Alliance
Chinese Journal of Contemporary Pediatrics 2024;26(4):403-409
Further evidence is needed to explore the impact of high-altitude environments on the neurologic function of neonates.Non-invasive techniques such as cerebral near-infrared spectroscopy and amplitude-integrated electroencephalography can provide data on cerebral oxygenation and brain electrical activity.This study will conduct multiple cerebral near-infrared spectroscopy and amplitude-integrated electroencephalography monitoring sessions at various time points within the first 3 days postpartum for healthy full-term neonates at different altitudes.The obtained data on cerebral oxygenation and brain electrical activity will be compared between different altitudes,and corresponding reference ranges will be established.The study involves 6 participating centers in the Chinese High Altitude Neonatal Medicine Alliance,with altitude gradients divided into 4 categories:800 m,1 900 m,2 400 m,and 3 500 m,with an anticipated sample size of 170 neonates per altitude gradient.This multicenter prospective cohort study aims to provide evidence supporting the impact of high-altitude environments on early brain function and metabolism in neonates.[Chinese Journal of Contemporary Pediatrics,2024,26(4):403-409]
2.Factors Associated With Coronary Heart Disease Among Adult Residents in Jinjiang District,Chengdu City.
Qin-Xin LIU ; Chang SUN ; Lin-Hua LI ; Yu-Ju WU ; Yi-Shan ZHOU ; Jia-Hui MA ; Yan DU ; Lu LIU ; Huan ZHOU
Acta Academiae Medicinae Sinicae 2023;45(4):556-562
Objective To analyze the prevalence of coronary heart disease among community residents over 18 years old in Jinjiang district of Chengdu city,Sichuan province,and explore its associated factors,so as to provide a reference for the prevention and control of coronary heart disease in communities.Methods From October 15 to November 10 in 2021,a total of 5220 adult residents from 33 communities in Jinjiang were selected by multi-stage stratified random sampling for face-to-face questionnaire survey,physical examination,and laboratory blood test.Binary Logistic regression was employed to predict the factors associated with coronary heart disease among adult residents in Jinjiang.Results The crude and standard prevalence rates of coronary heart disease among 5220 adult residents were 3.39% and 2.11%,respectively.Logistic regression analysis showed that age (OR=1.068,95%CI=1.051-1.086,P<0.001),depressive symptoms (OR=1.639,95%CI=1.037-2.591,P=0.034),regular exercise (OR=0.584,95%CI=0.378-0.902,P=0.015),elevated blood pressure (OR=3.529,95%CI=2.344-5.312,P<0.001),dyslipidemia (OR=2.152,95%CI=1.291-3.587,P=0.003),and core knowledge score of chronic diseases (OR=1.144,95%CI=1.066-1.228,P<0.001) were associated with coronary heart disease among adult residents in Jinjiang.Conclusions The prevalence of coronary heart disease is high among adult residents in Jinjiang district of Chengdu.The urban residents who are older,have depressive symptoms,lack of exercise,elevated blood pressure,dyslipidemia,and score higher on core knowledge of chronic diseases are prone to coronary heart disease.
Adult
;
Humans
;
Adolescent
;
Risk Factors
;
Coronary Disease/epidemiology*
;
Hypertension
;
Surveys and Questionnaires
;
Dyslipidemias
;
China/epidemiology*
;
Prevalence
3.Quality requirements of human use experience research on traditional Chinese medicine.
Ya-Qin TANG ; Zhong-Qi YANG ; Yan LING ; Yan-Ping DU ; Hui-Min TANG ; Shi-Hao NI ; Lu LU
China Journal of Chinese Materia Medica 2023;48(17):4825-4828
The human use experience of traditional Chinese medicine(TCM) is of great significance for the development of new traditional Chinese medicine. In 2023, the National Medical Products Administration(NMPA) issued the Special Regulations on Registration Management of Traditional Chinese Medicine, which explicitly encouraged the conduct of high-quality human use experience research on TCM clinical practice to obtain sufficient evidence for registration support. It also required that human use experience research should comply with relevant requirements and undergo registration verification. The quality of human use experience research on TCM directly determines the reliability of the evidence. This article discussed the quality requirements for human use experience research on TCM from the perspectives of basic requirements, organizational management, key pharmaceutical information, scientific research, risk management, ethical compliance, and study implementation and proposed differential treatment in quality requirements and registration verification focus based on different research purposes, stages, and types of studies. While ensuring the authenticity of data, retrospective studies should pay particular attention to the integrity of the data, and prospective studies should focus on the normativity of the data, which may affect the research conclusions. Human use experience research, as part of drug registration materials, falls within the scope of relevant regulatory oversight. Researchers should have a strong awareness of regulations to avoid serious quality issues. The standardized conduct of human use experience research on TCM requires joint efforts from regulatory authorities, applicants, research institutions, and researchers to establish a research quality management system based on the clinical characteristics of TCM.
Humans
;
Medicine, Chinese Traditional
;
Prospective Studies
;
Reproducibility of Results
;
Retrospective Studies
;
Pharmaceutical Preparations
;
Drugs, Chinese Herbal/therapeutic use*
4.Construction of clinical efficacy evaluation system based on optimal clinical experience.
Zhong-Qi YANG ; Ya-Qin TANG ; Hui-Min TANG ; Yan LING ; Yan-Ping DU ; Shi-Hao NI ; Wen-Jie LONG
China Journal of Chinese Materia Medica 2023;48(18):4829-4833
Evidence-based medicine plays an important role in promoting the scientific nature of clinical decision-making. Howe-ver, there is a problem where evidence derived from clinical research may not necessarily be applicable to individual patients. Evidence-based medicine has been introduced into the field of traditional Chinese medicine(TCM) for over 20 years, and although certain achievements have been made, the overall level of clinical research evidence based on the principles of evidence-based medicine in TCM is not high. The acceptance of TCM diagnosis and treatment guidelines developed based on evidence-based medicine methods is generally low. As revealed by the analysis of the problems in the application of evidence-based medicine in the field of TCM, it is found that there is a structural contradiction between clinical randomized controlled trial(RCT) of TCM and the characteristics of TCM clinical practice. They cannot comprehensively, objectively, and truthfully reflect the clinical efficacy and safety of TCM. Conducting clinical RCTs of TCM in pursuit of "evidence" actually means giving up the advantages of TCM in clinical treatment based on syndrome differentiation, prescription changes along with syndromes, and treatment in accordance with three categories of disease cause, which leads to sacrificing some clinical effectiveness of TCM. Based on the concept of evidence-based medicine, this article proposed the construction of "clinical syndrome-based medicine" based on the optimal clinical experience, which was suitable for the characteristics of TCM clinical practice. The key to clinical syndrome-based medicine is the optimal clinical experience, and the core elements of the optimal clinical experience are regularity and reproducibility. Real-world research methods are recommended as a reference for obtaining the optimal clinical experience. Clinical syndrome-based medicine, combining the characteristics of TCM clinical practice and incorporating the concept of evidence-based medicine, is the product of integrating TCM into evidence-based medicine. It is dedicated to improving the clinical efficacy of TCM along with evidence-based medicine.
Humans
;
Reproducibility of Results
;
Medicine, Chinese Traditional
;
Treatment Outcome
;
Evidence-Based Medicine
;
Syndrome
;
Drugs, Chinese Herbal/therapeutic use*
5.DCK confers sensitivity of DCTD-positive cancer cells to oxidized methylcytidines.
Ya-Hui ZHAO ; Wei JIANG ; Hai GAO ; Guo-Zheng PANG ; Yu-Shuang WU ; Yuan-Xian WANG ; Meng-Yao SHENG ; Jia-Ying XIE ; Wan-Ling WU ; Zhi-Jian JI ; Ya-Rui DU ; Lei ZHANG ; Xiao-Qin WANG ; Colum P WALSH ; Hai JIANG ; Guo-Liang XU ; Dan ZHOU
Protein & Cell 2023;14(7):532-537
6.UPLC-Q-Orbitrap-MS based metabolomics and analysis of the effect of Suanzaoren Decoction on serum of chronic unpredictable mild stress depression rats
Jiang WU ; Rui HAN ; Ni ZHAO ; Ying-xin CHU ; Yin-jie ZHANG ; Xue-mei QIN ; Chen-hui DU ; Yan YAN
Acta Pharmaceutica Sinica 2023;58(7):1952-1962
A UPLC-Q-Orbitrap-MS based metabolomic approach combined with biochemical assay and histopathological inspection were employed to study the intervention effects of Suanzaoren Decoction (SZRD) on chronic unpredictable mild stress (CUMS) depression rats, and to clarify the metabolic regulation pathway of SZRD. The rats were randomly divided into normal control group, CUMS model group, positive drug venlafaxine group, SZRD high (24 g·kg-1) and low (12 g·kg-1) dose groups, respectively. The CUMS model was replicated by subjecting to a variety of stimulus, such as thermal stimulation, ice water swimming, ultrasonic stimulation, tail clamping, day and night reversal, plantar electric shock and so on for rats. After oral administration of drugs for 28 days, the behavioral indexes of rats in each group were observed and the hippocampus and serum samples of rats were collected for biochemical assay and histopathological inspection. Compared with the CUMS model group, low dose and high dose SZRD groups can significantly reduce the immobility time of forced swimming (
7.Exploring the mechanism of anti-hereditary Parkinson's disease of baicalein based on PINK1 RNAi Drosophila model
Sheng-hui HAO ; Ruo-fan JIA ; Jiao-rui WANG ; Li GAO ; Xue-mei QIN ; Guan-hua DU ; Jian-qin ZHANG
Acta Pharmaceutica Sinica 2023;58(3):672-678
The aim of this study was to investigate the effect of baicalein on a
8.Study on the tissue distribution of eight effective components of Ziziphi Spinosae Semen aqueous extract by ultra-performance liquid chromatography-quadrupole time-of-flight mass spectrometry
Yan YAN ; Ying-xin CHU ; Hui-zhu DUAN ; Hui WANG ; Xue-mei QIN ; Chen-hui DU
Acta Pharmaceutica Sinica 2023;58(3):740-749
The aim is to study the tissue distribution characteristics of eight effective components in normal rats after oral administration of Ziziphi Spinosae Semen (ZSS) aqueous extract. An ultra-performance liquid chromatography-quadrupole time-of-flight mass spectrometry (UPLC-Q-TOF-MS) analysis method was developed and validated for the determination of four flavonoids and four saponins in rat tissue using puerarin and ginsenoside Re as the internal standard (IS), respectively. Tissue samples including the heart, liver, spleen, lung, kidney, muscle, brain, small intestine, and serum, were collected from each rat at 0.5 h, 1.0 h, and 2.0 h after oral administration of ZSS aqueous extract (15 g·kg-1). All calibration curves exhibited good linearity (
9.Research Progress on Microbial Community Succession in the Postmortem Interval Estimation.
Qing-Qing XIANG ; Li-Fang CHEN ; Qin SU ; Yu-Kun DU ; Pei-Yan LIANG ; Xiao-Dong KANG ; He SHI ; Qu-Yi XU ; Jian ZHAO ; Chao LIU ; Xiao-Hui CHEN
Journal of Forensic Medicine 2023;39(4):399-405
The postmortem interval (PMI) estimation is a key and difficult point in the practice of forensic medicine, and forensic scientists at home and abroad have been searching for objective, quantifiable and accurate methods of PMI estimation. With the development and combination of high-throughput sequencing technology and artificial intelligence technology, the establishment of PMI model based on the succession of the microbial community on corpses has become a research focus in the field of forensic medicine. This paper reviews the technical methods, research applications and influencing factors of microbial community in PMI estimation explored by using high-throughput sequencing technology, to provide a reference for the related research on the use of microbial community to estimate PMI.
Humans
;
Postmortem Changes
;
Artificial Intelligence
;
Autopsy
;
Cadaver
;
Microbiota
10.Clinical and genetic characteristics of young patients with myeloproliferative neoplasms
Mengyu ZHANG ; Mei BAO ; Dayu SHI ; Hongxia SHI ; Xiaoli LIU ; Na XU ; Minghui DUAN ; Junling ZHUANG ; Xin DU ; Ling QIN ; Wuhan HUI ; Rong LIANG ; Meifang WANG ; Ye CHEN ; Dongyun LI ; Wei YANG ; Gusheng TANG ; Weihua ZHANG ; Xia KUANG ; Wei SU ; Yanqiu HAN ; Limei CHEN ; Jihong XU ; Zhuogang LIU ; Jian HUANG ; Chunting ZHAO ; Hongyan TONG ; Jianda HU ; Chunyan CHEN ; Xiequn CHEN ; Zhijian XIAO ; Qian JIANG
Chinese Journal of Hematology 2023;44(3):193-201
Objectives:To investigate the clinical and genetic features of young Chinese patients with myeloproliferative neoplasms (MPN) .Methods:In this cross-sectional study, anonymous questionnaires were distributed to patients with MPN patients nationwide. The respondents were divided into 3 groups based on their age at diagnosis: young (≤40 years) , middle-aged (41-60 years) , and elderly (>60 years) . We compared the clinical and genetic characteristics of three groups of MPN patients.Results:1727 assessable questionnaires were collected. There were 453 (26.2%) young respondents with MPNs, including 274 with essential thrombocythemia (ET) , 80 with polycythemia vera (PV) , and 99 with myelofibrosis. Among the young group, 178 (39.3%) were male, and the median age was 31 (18-40) years. In comparison to middle-aged and elderly respondents, young respondents with MPN were more likely to present with a higher proportion of unmarried status (all P<0.001) , a higher education level (all P<0.001) , less comorbidity (ies) , fewer medications (all P<0.001) , and low-risk stratification (all P<0.001) . Younger respondents experienced headache (ET, P<0.001; PV, P=0.007; MF, P=0.001) at diagnosis, had splenomegaly at diagnosis (PV, P<0.001) , and survey (ET, P=0.052; PV, P=0.063) . Younger respondents had fewer thrombotic events at diagnosis (ET, P<0.001; PV, P=0.011) and during the survey (ET, P<0.001; PV, P=0.003) . JAK2 mutations were found in fewer young people (ET, P<0.001; PV, P<0.001; MF, P=0.013) ; however, CALR mutations were found in more young people (ET, P<0.001; MF, P=0.015) . Furthermore, mutations in non-driver genes (ET, P=0.042; PV, P=0.043; MF, P=0.004) and high-molecular risk mutations (ET, P=0.024; PV, P=0.023; MF, P=0.001) were found in fewer young respondents. Conclusion:Compared with middle-aged and elderly patients, young patients with MPN had unique clinical and genetic characteristics.

Result Analysis
Print
Save
E-mail