1.Intervention effect of moderate-intensity aerobic exercise on Alzheimer's disease
Qing HE ; Jiebin HAN ; Peipei WANG
Journal of Clinical Neurology 2024;37(5):321-325
Objective To investigate the effects of moderate-intensity aerobic exercise intervention and its influencing factors in patients with Alzheimer's disease(AD).Methods Ninety-eight AD patients were randomly assigned into exercise group(50 cases)and control group(48 cases).The exercise group received moderate-intensity aerobic training for 3 months.Cognitive function was assessed using the MMSE and the AD assessment scale-cognitive subscale(ADAS-cog)at baseline,3 months and 6 months.Daily living abilities was evaluated by the AD cooperative study-activities of daily living scale(ADCS-ADL),behavioral symptoms was assessed by the neuropsychiatric Inventory(NPI)and life quality was measured by quality of life in AD(QOL-AD).The difference between 3 months and baseline ADAS-cog(ADAS-cog3-0)score was used as the dependent variable,multiple-factor linear regression was performed to analyze whether baseline characteristics of patients would affect the efficacy of exercise.Patients with an improvement of ≥4 points in ADAS-cog3-0 were classified into good prognosis group,and the others were classified into non-good prognosis group.Variables with P<0.05 in the multiple-factor linear regression analysis were included in Logistic regression analysis to determine the best cutoff value through ROC curve.Results Compared with the control group,the exercise group showed a significant increase in MMSE and QOL-AD scores at 3 and 6 months,a significant decrease in ADAS-cog score at 3 and 6 months,a significant increase in ADCS-ADL score at 3 months,and a significant decrease in NPI score at 3 months(all P<0.05).However,there was no significant difference between the two groups in ADCS-ADL and NPI scores at 6 months.Regression analysis showed that baseline MMSE score had a negative impact on cognitive function improvement in the exercise group,while age,gender,education level,ischemic symptoms,baseline activities of daily living,behavioral and psychological symptoms,and quality of life had no impact.Sensitivity and specificity analysis showed that aerobic exercise was more effective in AD patients with an MMSE score>21.5 points,and aerobic exercise was still effective but had moderate effects in patients with an MMSE score below this cutoff.Conclusions Aerobic exercise has a significant improvement on cognitive function,activities of daily living,behavioral and psychological symptoms,and quality of life in AD patients.The better the cognitive level is preserved in AD patients,the better the short-term effects of aerobic exercise are.
2.Chromosome microarray analysis of patients with 18q deletion syndrome.
Jiebin FENG ; Jiansuo HAO ; Yiyang CHEN ; Fan LI ; Jin HAN ; Ru LI ; Yongling ZHANG ; Tingyin LEI ; Feifei CHEN ; Qiaoli GUO ; Can LIAO ; Hongtao WANG
Chinese Journal of Medical Genetics 2016;33(2):203-207
OBJECTIVETo analyze the correlation between the genotype and phenotype of 18q deletion syndrome with chromosome microarray analysis (CMA).
METHODSEight cases with 18q deletion syndrome were selected, including two affected fetuses and six children patients. DNA was extracted and hybridized with Affymetrix CytoScan TM 750K arrays following the manufacturer's standard protocol. The data was analyzed with a special software package.
RESULTSCMA analysis identified pathogenic copy number variations (CNVs) on 18q in all cases, which ranged from 6.612 Mb to 22.973 Mb. NFATC1, GALR1, MBP, SALL3 and TSHZ1 are likely to be causative genes for congenital heart disease, psychological, growth retardation, and cleft palate.
CONCLUSIONCMA can precisely locate the breakpoints of 18q and facilitate definition of the genotype-phenotype correlations, which is useful for prognosis.
Child, Preschool ; Chromosome Deletion ; Chromosome Disorders ; genetics ; Chromosomes, Human, Pair 18 ; genetics ; DNA Copy Number Variations ; Female ; Humans ; Infant ; Male ; Microarray Analysis

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