1.Disposition of medical support equipment support unit for medical service support of synthetic battalion
Yu XIANG ; Jing YANG ; Xi ZENG ; Zi-Fang SHU
Chinese Medical Equipment Journal 2024;45(4):83-87
Objective To analyze the disposition of medical support equipment support units for medical service support of the synthetic battalion to carry out efficiently demand matching and replenishment for war loss,so as to enhance the efficiency of deployment and decision making of medical support equipment.Methods War loss of the medical support equipment was analyzed with queuing theory with the support service of the synthetic battalion as the basic research framework and desired equipment intact rate in the battlefield as the goal.A M/M/1/∞/∞ model and a M/M/c/∞/∞ model were established to investigate the disposition process of medical support equipment support units by simulating actual conditions of the battlefield.Multi synthetic battalions were assumed to be deployed to carry out 2 missions with different tasks and combat intensities,of which 40 synthetic battalions were involved in for mission 1 and 35 synthetic battalions for mission 2.The disposition of medical support equipment support units was calculated with the two models constructed.Results With the M/M/c/∞/∞ model it's suggested 5 medical support equipment support units be deployed to serve for 40 synthetic battalions;with the M/M/1/∞/∞ model only one unit was employed to support 35 battalions.The two models both met the requirements of 90%intact rate.Conclusion The research contributes to the decision making of medical support equipment support forces during synthetic battalion medical support and enhances the precision support of medical support equipment.[Chinese Medical Equipment Journal,2024,45(4):83-87]
2. Effects of different extraction parts of Tibetan medicine Pulicaria insignis Drumm ex Dunn on CIA rats
Fang-Yuan LIU ; Ji-Xiao ZHU ; Lin LIU ; Jie SUN ; Yu-Jie WANG ; Jin-Xiang ZENG ; Min LI ; Jing YANG
Chinese Pharmacological Bulletin 2023;39(7):1378-1384
Aim To clarify the anti-rheumatoid arthritis effect of Tibetan medicine Pulicaria insignis (P. insignis),sift out the active parts against rheumatoid arthritis,and investigate the mechanism. Methods Rat rheumatoid arthritis (CIA) model was established with bovine type II collagen and incomplete Freund's adjuvant. The effects of the total extract of P. insignis, macroporous resin eluted parts with different concentrations of ethanol and Tripterygium Glycosides (GTW) on the degree of foot swelling in CIA rats were observed,the levels of tumor necrosis factor (TNF-α), intd rheumaerleukin-1β (IL-1β) antoid factor (RF) in serum of rats were detected, the pathological changes of synovial tissues were investigated, and the effects on MAPK/p38/NF-κB, TLR4/NF-κB protein expressions were explored by Western blot. Results Compared with the model group, the total extract of P. insignis and the eluted part of macroporous resin 60% ethanol could significantly reduce the degree of joint swelling in CIA rats, effectively improve the pathological changes of rats synovium tissues, and significantly reduce the levels of rat tumor necrosis factor (TNF-α), interleukin-1β (IL-1β) and rheumatoid factor (RF) in serum inflammatory factors, and markedly decrease the expression of related inflammatory proteins (TLR4, NF-κB, Myd88, p-p38, p-IκBα, iNOS, etc) in synovial tissue. Conclusions (1) P. insignis can relieve the symptoms of joint inflammation in rats with rheumatoid arthritis, and the eluted part of macroporous resin 60% ethanol of P. insignis is the effective active part for anti-rheumatoid arthritis. (2) The total and partial extracts of P. insignis can relieve arthritis symptoms in CIA rats through inhibiting the MAPK/ p38/NF-κB and TLR4/NF-κB signaling pathways.
3.The research progress of high altitude environment-associated chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and therapeutic drugs.
Xiang-Hai ZENG ; Ge-Le SUONAN ; Qin HUANG ; Yu LI ; Xiao-Jing ZHANG ; Wen-Bin LI ; Rong WANG
Acta Physiologica Sinica 2023;75(5):691-702
The plateau environment is characterized by low oxygen, low air pressure, low temperature, and strong ultraviolet rays, etc. Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is a preventable and treatable chronic lung disease. High altitude environment increases COPD prevalence, clinical manifestation and mortality. The therapeutic window of theophylline drugs for COPD is narrow, and the high altitude environment has an influence on the pharmacokinetics of the drugs. This review summarizes the differences in the prevalence, mortality, clinical manifestation and clinical symptoms of COPD in the plateau and plain, providing a basis for identifying the risk factors of COPD in the plateau areas. The effects of plateau hypoxic environment on the pharmacokinetics of COPD drugs were also discussed. It can provide a rationale for more effective prevention and treatment of COPD at high altitude.
Humans
;
Altitude
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Pulmonary Disease, Chronic Obstructive/drug therapy*
;
Oxygen
;
Hypoxia
4.Effect of High-Concentration Uric Acid on Nitric Oxide.
Si-Yu QIN ; Rong-Yu LAN ; Jia ZENG ; Xue BAI ; Jing-Tao WANG ; Xiang-Lin YIN ; Rui-Jie QU ; Ming-Hai QU ; Hao JIANG ; Wen-Long LI ; Si-Ying PEI ; Zhi-Ling HOU ; Bao-Sheng GUAN ; Hong-Bin QIU
Acta Academiae Medicinae Sinicae 2023;45(4):666-671
Uric acid (UA) is the final product of purine metabolism in human body,and its metabolic disorder will induce hyperuricemia (HUA).The occurrence and development of HUA are associated with a variety of pathological mechanisms such as oxidative stress injury,activation of inflammatory cytokines,and activation of renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system.These mechanisms directly or indirectly affect the bioavailability of endogenous nitric oxide (NO).The decrease in NO bioavailability is common in the diseases with high concentration of UA as an independent risk factor.In this review,we summarize the mechanisms by which high concentrations of UA affect the endogenous NO bioavailability,with a focus on the mechanisms of high-concentration UA in decreasing the synthesis and/or increasing the consumption of NO.This review aims to provide references for alleviating the multisystem symptoms and improving the prognosis of HUA,and lay a theoretical foundation for in-depth study of the correlations between HUA and other metabolic diseases.
Humans
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Nitric Oxide
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Uric Acid
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Hyperuricemia
;
Biological Availability
;
Cytokines
5.Design for online monitoring of occupational hazard factors based on internet of things.
Zhi Wei ZENG ; Jing Ming ZHAN ; Xiang Ming XUE ; Qing Dong WU ; Yu Jian DUAN ; Jian Yu FU
Chinese Journal of Industrial Hygiene and Occupational Diseases 2023;41(6):467-471
At present, there are disadvantages with the detection for occupational hazard factors, such as insufficient monitoring data, poor timeliness, weak representativeness, long detection cycles, and inability to continuously monitor. Taking advantages of internet of things technology, an online monitoring platform for occupational hazard factors has been designed. The platform collects the concentration (intensity) of hazard factors through sensors, transmits the occupational hazards data collected online in realtime. The online monitoring cloud center for occupational hazard factors processes and analyzes online monitoring data in realtime, stores the hazard factors data to form database management, and provides user application services to form an intelligent online monitoring service model for occupational hazard factors. Based on the online monitoring platform of occupational hazard factors, multi-level government health supervision departments and employers can grasp the status of hazard factors in real time, which is conducive to improving the level of occupational hazard supervision.
Internet of Things
;
Internet
6.Expert consensus on the prevention and treatment of adverse reactions in subcutaneous immunotherapy(2023, Chongqing).
Yu Cheng YANG ; Yang SHEN ; Xiang Dong WANG ; Yan JIANG ; Qian Hui QIU ; Jian LI ; Shao Qing YU ; Xia KE ; Feng LIU ; Yuan Teng XU ; Hong Fei LOU ; Hong Tian WANG ; Guo Dong YU ; Rui XU ; Juan MENG ; Cui Da MENG ; Na SUN ; Jian Jun CHEN ; Ming ZENG ; Zhi Hai XIE ; Yue Qi SUN ; Jun TANG ; Ke Qing ZHAO ; Wei Tian ZHANG ; Zhao Hui SHI ; Cheng Li XU ; Yan Li YANG ; Mei Ping LU ; Hui Ping YE ; Xin WEI ; Bin SUN ; Yun Fang AN ; Ya Nan SUN ; Yu Rong GU ; Tian Hong ZHANG ; Luo BA ; Qin Tai YANG ; Jing YE ; Yu XU ; Hua Bin LI
Chinese Journal of Otorhinolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery 2023;58(7):643-656
7.Triaging patients in the outbreak of COVID-2019
Guo-Qing HUANG ; Wei-Qian ZENG ; Wen-Bo WANG ; Yan-Min SONG ; Xiao-Ye MO ; Jia LI ; Ping WU ; Ruo-Long WANG ; Fang-Yi ZHOU ; Jing WU ; Bin YI ; Zeng XIONG ; Lu ZHOU ; Fan-Qi WANG ; Yang-Jing TIAN ; Wen-Bao HU ; Xia XU ; Kai YUAN ; Xiang-Min LI ; Xin-Jian QIU ; Jian QIU ; Ai-Min WANG
Chinese Journal of Infection Control 2023;22(3):295-303
In the outbreak of COVID-19,triage procedures based on epidemiology were implemented in a local hospital in Changsha to control the transmission of SARS-CoV-2 and avoid healthcare-associated infection.This re-trospective study analyzed the data collected during the triage period and found that COVID-19 patients were en-riched 7 folds into the Section A designated for patients with obvious epidemiological history.On the other side,nearly triple amounts of visits were received at the Section B for patients without obvious epidemiological history.8 COVID-19 cases were spotted out of 247 suspected patients.More than 50%of the suspected patients were submi-tted to multiple rounds of nucleic acid analysis for SARS-CoV-2 infection.Of the 239 patients who were diagnosed as negative of the virus infection,188 were successfully revisited and none was reported as COVID-19 case.Of the 8 COVID-19 patients,3 were confirmed only after multiple rounds of nucleic acid analysis.Besides comorbidities,delayed sharing of epidemiological history added complexity to the diagnosis in practice.The triaging experience and strategy will be helpful for the control of infectious diseases in the future.
8.Effect analysis of BOPPPS model in online teaching activities of radiobiology
Guifen MA ; Zhaochong ZENG ; Shisuo DU ; Xiaomei ZHAO ; Yun BAI ; Xianshu GAO ; Yuhan CHEN ; Dehua WU ; Yixing CHEN ; Xiang′ou PAN ; Jing SUN
Chinese Journal of Radiological Medicine and Protection 2022;42(8):561-566
Objective:To explore the effect of a new teaching mode, which includes bridge-in, outcome, pre-test, participation, post-test and summary (BOPPPS), on the online teaching of radiobiology related knowledge for cancer radiotherapy practitioners.Methods:Taking the cell survival curve, cell cycle and radiosensitivity as examples, the radiotherapy practitioners in multiple university-affiliated hospitals were organized to carry out a multicenter prospective randomized control study. All practitioners were randomly divided into BOPPPS group and control group. The courses for BOPPPS group were designed as an online classroom, consisting of pre-class preparation, online teaching and post-class stages. The online teaching stage included video viewing, basic knowledge learning, literature discussion, group discussion and others. The control group employed the traditional teaching mode. The χ2 test was used to compare the consistency of general conditions between the two groups, and nonparametric test was used to compare the differences in scores between two or more groups. Results:The score of the pre-class test was 58.56 ± 0.99. Post-class average score for BOPPPS group was 85.48±0.85 and for control group 77.79±1.10, with the former being higher 7.69 ( Z=5.31, P<0.001) than the latter. The average answer time was (296.62±15.40) s for BOPPPS group and (386.41±21.27) s for control group, with the former being shorter 89.79 s ( Z=3.34, P=0.001) than latter. Subgroup analysis shown that the scores of BOPPPS group were significantly rising, regardless of whether or not the students had studied radiobiology courses. Among the students who have not studied these courses, the scores were rising greatly. Moreover, From the analysis of different positions, it was found that both the scores of BOPPPS group and control group have risen, especially for doctors, deputy chief doctors, physicists and technicians. There were also statistically differences between different degrees, with significantly rise in scores for undergraduate and doctoral students ( Z=3.64, 4.18, P<0.001). Conclusions:The flexible application of BOPPPS teaching mode to the online education of such boring disciplines, like radiobiology, is of great significance to raise the theoretical basis of radiotherapy practitioners.
9.Immunogenicity and safety of a recombinant fusion protein vaccine (V-01) against coronavirus disease 2019 in healthy adults: a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, phase II trial.
Ya-Jun SHU ; Jian-Feng HE ; Rong-Juan PEI ; Peng HE ; Zhu-Hang HUANG ; Shao-Min CHEN ; Zhi-Qiang OU ; Jing-Long DENG ; Pei-Yu ZENG ; Jian ZHOU ; Yuan-Qin MIN ; Fei DENG ; Hua PENG ; Zheng ZHANG ; Bo WANG ; Zhong-Hui XU ; Wu-Xiang GUAN ; Zhong-Yu HU ; Ji-Kai ZHANG
Chinese Medical Journal 2021;134(16):1967-1976
BACKGROUND:
Innovative coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) vaccines, with elevated global manufacturing capacity, enhanced safety and efficacy, simplified dosing regimens, and distribution that is less cold chain-dependent, are still global imperatives for tackling the ongoing pandemic. A previous phase I trial indicated that the recombinant COVID-19 vaccine (V-01), which contains a fusion protein (IFN-PADRE-RBD-Fc dimer) as its antigen, is safe and well tolerated, capable of inducing rapid and robust immune responses, and warranted further testing in additional clinical trials. Herein, we aimed to assess the immunogenicity and safety of V-01, providing rationales of appropriate dose regimen for further efficacy study.
METHODS:
A randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled phase II clinical trial was initiated at the Gaozhou Municipal Centre for Disease Control and Prevention (Guangdong, China) in March 2021. Both younger (n = 440; 18-59 years of age) and older (n = 440; ≥60 years of age) adult participants in this trial were sequentially recruited into two distinct groups: two-dose regimen group in which participants were randomized either to follow a 10 or 25 μg of V-01 or placebo given intramuscularly 21 days apart (allocation ratio, 3:3:1, n = 120, 120, 40 for each regimen, respectively), or one-dose regimen groups in which participants were randomized either to receive a single injection of 50 μg of V-01 or placebo (allocation ratio, 3:1, n = 120, 40, respectively). The primary immunogenicity endpoints were the geometric mean titers of neutralizing antibodies against live severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2, and specific binding antibodies to the receptor binding domain (RBD). The primary safety endpoint evaluation was the frequencies and percentages of overall adverse events (AEs) within 30 days after full immunization.
RESULTS:
V-01 provoked substantial immune responses in the two-dose group, achieving encouragingly high titers of neutralizing antibody and anti-RBD immunoglobulin, which peaked at day 35 (161.9 [95% confidence interval [CI]: 133.3-196.7] and 149.3 [95%CI: 123.9-179.9] in 10 and 25 μg V-01 group of younger adults, respectively; 111.6 [95%CI: 89.6-139.1] and 111.1 [95%CI: 89.2-138.4] in 10 and 25 μg V-01 group of older adults, respectively), and remained high at day 49 after a day-21 second dose; these levels significantly exceed those in convalescent serum from symptomatic COVID-19 patients (53.6, 95%CI: 31.3-91.7). Our preliminary data show that V-01 is safe and well tolerated, with reactogenicity predominantly being absent or mild in severity and only one vaccine-related grade 3 or worse AE being observed within 30 days. The older adult participants demonstrated a more favorable safety profile compared with those in the younger adult group: with AEs percentages of 19.2%, 25.8%, 17.5% in older adults vs. 34.2%, 23.3%, 26.7% in younger adults at the 10, 25 μg V-01 two-dose group, and 50 μg V-01 one-dose group, respectively.
CONCLUSIONS:
The vaccine candidate V-01 appears to be safe and immunogenic. The preliminary findings support the advancement of the two-dose, 10 μg V-01 regimen to a phase III trial for a large-scale population-based evaluation of safety and efficacy.
TRIAL REGISTRATION
http://www.chictr.org.cn/index.aspx (No. ChiCTR2100045107, http://www.chictr.org.cn/showproj.aspx?proj=124702).
Aged
;
Antibodies, Viral
;
COVID-19/therapy*
;
COVID-19 Vaccines
;
Double-Blind Method
;
Humans
;
Immunization, Passive
;
Recombinant Fusion Proteins
;
SARS-CoV-2
10.Family cohesion and adaptability among rural children with sexual abuse experience
SHAO Lijing,ZENG Jing,HE Qiuping,CAI Li,YANG Mei,XIANG Bing
Chinese Journal of School Health 2021;42(2):245-248
Objective:
To understand the prevalence of sexual abuse among rural children and its association with family cohesion and adaptability, and to explore factors that may affect household functions of the victims.
Methods:
A total of 1 666 rural middle school students in Hanchuan and Yunxi, Hubei were recruited with stratified cluster sampling method, multivariate Logistic regression was used to analyze associated factors of the household functions of the victims.
Results:
A total of 175 (10.50%) reported non-contact sexual abuse and 44 (2.64%) reported contact sexual abuse. Compared with control group, sexual abuse victims reported lower scores of family cohesion (F=8.97,P<0.01) and adaptability (F=4.09,P=0.02). Among the victims, maternal absence was a risk factor for poor family cohesion(OR=0.20,P<0.01), higher parental educational level and appropriate parenting methods(P<0.05) were protective factors for family cohesion and family adaptability.
Conclusion
Household functions of children sexual abuse victims in rural areas are generally poor, especially for victims with mothers absence, low parental education and improper parenting style. More attention should be paid to such children to minimize the impact of negative events such as sexual abuse.


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