349 results on '"Fuqiang Gao"'
Search Results
302. The Toronto traumatic brain injury study: injury severity and quantified MRI
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Brian Levine, Elena Irina Nica, Fuqiang Gao, Natasa Kovacevic, Michael L. Schwartz, Sandra E. Black, and G. Cheung
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Adult ,Male ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Traumatic brain injury ,Diffuse Axonal Injury ,Brain mapping ,Gyrus Cinguli ,Nerve Fibers, Myelinated ,Temporal lobe ,White matter ,Diagnosis, Differential ,Atrophy ,Trauma Centers ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Ontario ,Brain Mapping ,Trauma Severity Indices ,Diffuse axonal injury ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Temporal Lobe ,Frontal Lobe ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,nervous system ,Frontal lobe ,Brain Injuries ,Brain size ,Cardiology ,Disease Progression ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Psychology - Abstract
Objective: To assess the relationship between regional brain volume changes and traumatic brain injury (TBI) severity in patients with and without focal lesions. Methods: Sixty-nine chronic-phase TBI patients spanning the full range of severity were recruited from consecutive hospital admissions. Patients received high-resolution structural MRI a minimum of 1 year after injury. Multivariate statistical analyses assessed covariance patterns between volumes of gray matter, white matter, and sulcal/subdural and ventricular CSF across 38 brain regions and TBI severity as assessed by depth of coma at the time of injury. Patients with diffuse and diffuse plus focal injury were analyzed both separately and together. Results: There was a stepwise, dose–response relationship between parenchymal volume loss and TBI severity. Patients with moderate and severe TBI were differentiated from those with mild TBI, who were in turn differentiated from noninjured control subjects. A spatially extensive pattern of volume loss covaried with TBI severity, with particularly widespread effects in white matter volume and sulcal/subdural CSF. The most reliable effects were observed in the frontal, temporal, and cingulate regions, although effects were observed to varying degrees in nearly every brain region. Focal lesions were associated with greater volume loss in frontal and temporal regions, but volume loss remained marked even when analyses were restricted to patients with diffuse injury. Conclusions: Patterns of parenchymal volumetric changes can differentiate among levels of traumatic brain injury (TBI) severity, even in mild TBI. TBI causes a spatially extensive pattern of volume loss that reflects independent but overlapping contributions of focal and diffuse injury.
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- 2008
303. Independent cognitive effects of atrophy and diffuse subcortical and thalamico-cortical cerebrovascular disease in dementia
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Richard H. Swartz, Fuqiang Gao, Donald T. Stuss, and Sandra E. Black
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Male ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pediatrics ,Neuropsychological Tests ,Severity of Illness Index ,Central nervous system disease ,Atrophy ,Mental Processes ,Thalamus ,Memory ,Medicine ,Dementia ,Humans ,Vascular dementia ,Aged ,Advanced and Specialized Nursing ,Aged, 80 and over ,Cerebral Cortex ,business.industry ,Dementia, Vascular ,Memory clinic ,Brain ,Cognition ,Cerebral Infarction ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Hyperintensity ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Alzheimer's disease ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Cognition Disorders ,Factor Analysis, Statistical - Abstract
Background and Purpose—Brain atrophy, cortical infarction, and subcortical ischemic vasculopathy have all been associated with cognitive dysfunction. The interrelationships between these pathologies and their independent contributions to cognitive function remain unclear. Despite the high frequency of Alzheimer disease (AD) in those with clinically diagnosed vascular dementia, and the frequent findings of vascular disease in those with clinically diagnosed AD, many studies of brain-behavior relationships in dementia consider these populations separately. The present study sought to identify the correlates of independent domains of cognitive impairment in an unselected sample across a large range of severity and overlap of AD and VaD.Methods—Two hundred five individuals from the Sunnybrook Dementia Study recruited from a university Memory clinic had detailed neuropsychological testing and MRI quantification using a multi-step postprocessing algorithm. A factor analysis of the cognitive protocol yielded a 3-factor solution, provisionally labeled: (1) short-term memory and language, (2) attention and working memory, and (3) mental flexibility.Results—A factor analysis of brain measures identified 3 independent factors with measures of (1) brain atrophy, (2) subcortical vascular disease, and (3) strategic infarcts (anterior-medial thalamus and cortical infarcts). After accounting for the effects of age and education, measures of brain atrophy were the strongest correlates of all cognitive domains. Small vessel disease was independently associated with general severity, impaired short-term memory/language, and reduced mental flexibility, but not with poor working memory, presumably through disruption of frontal-subcortical connections. In contrast, strategic infarcts to anterior-medial thalamus and cortical gray matter were associated with poor short-term and working memory, but not with impairments in mental flexibility or global severity measures.Conclusions—These data support the hypothesis that the thalamico-cortical network subserves both short-term and working memory. The findings also suggest that each type of pathology (atrophy, small vessel disease, and strategic infarcts) contribute independently to the pattern of cognitive disabilities associated with dementia. Particular attention to cerebrovascular disease in deep white or gray matter structures of the thalamico-cortical system is certainly warranted.
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- 2008
304. Subcortical hyperintensities in Alzheimer's disease: no clear relationship with executive function and frontal perfusion on SPECT
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Fuqiang Gao, Nancy J. Lobaugh, Naama Levy-Cooperman, Curtis B. Caldwell, and Sandra E. Black
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Male ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Neuropsychological Tests ,Severity of Illness Index ,Statistics, Nonparametric ,Central nervous system disease ,Degenerative disease ,Alzheimer Disease ,medicine ,Dementia ,Humans ,Cerebral perfusion pressure ,Aged ,Tomography, Emission-Computed, Single-Photon ,Analysis of Variance ,Chi-Square Distribution ,Cognitive disorder ,Brain ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Hyperintensity ,Frontal Lobe ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Cerebrovascular Disorders ,Cerebrovascular Circulation ,Female ,Geriatrics and Gerontology ,Alzheimer's disease ,Atrophy ,Psychology ,Cognition Disorders ,Neuroscience ,Perfusion - Abstract
Background/Aims: To investigate relationships between subcortical hyperintensities (SH), frontal perfusion and executive function (EF) in a sample of Alzheimer’s disease (AD) patients with varying severities of SH. Methods: A sample of 63 AD patients underwent brain imaging with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) scans. Severity of SH was assessed using a standardized visual rating scale on MRI. Patients were classified into severe (n = 20), moderate (n = 23) or no SH (n = 20) groups. Four frontal SPECT regions of interest (anterior cingulate cortex, dorsolateral prefrontal cortex) and neuropsychological assessment of EF were analyzed. Results: Overall, no significant relationships were found between severity of SH and measures of SPECT perfusion or EF, except for one subsection of the Dementia Rating Scale, with severe SH scoring slightly worse than the other two groups. Conclusion: These findings support previous studies which suggest minimal adverse effects of SH on brain function and cognition. Global severity of SH on MRI in AD was not associated with decline in frontal perfusion and only mildly related to a decline in a specific EF task. More accurate measures of SH volume, not just global severity of SH, may be necessary to capture such complex brain behavior relationships; if they do indeed exist.
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- 2007
305. Strategic subcortical hyperintensities in cholinergic pathways and executive function decline in treated Alzheimer patients
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Demetrios J. Sahlas, David L. Streiner, Richard H. Swartz, Fuqiang Gao, Krista L. Lanctôt, Christian Bocti, Sandra E. Black, and Pearl Behl
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Neuropsychological Tests ,White matter ,Cohort Studies ,Physical medicine and rehabilitation ,Degenerative disease ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Alzheimer Disease ,medicine ,Humans ,Receptors, Cholinergic ,Prospective cohort study ,Psychiatry ,Problem Solving ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Brain Mapping ,Likelihood Functions ,Chi-Square Distribution ,Working memory ,Memory clinic ,Cognition ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Hyperintensity ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Multivariate Analysis ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Cholinesterase Inhibitors ,Alzheimer's disease ,Psychology ,Cognition Disorders ,Mental Status Schedule - Abstract
Objective To investigate changes in cognition, function, and behavior after 1 year in patients with Alzheimer disease being treated with cholinesterase inhibitors, in relation to the presence or absence of subcortical hyperintensities involving the cholinergic pathways. Design One-year prospective cohort study. Setting Memory Clinic, Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre, University of Toronto. Patients Ninety patients with possible/probable Alzheimer disease who were being treated with cholinesterase inhibitors at baseline. Interventions Yearly standardized neuropsychological testing and brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). The Cholinergic Pathways Hyperintensities Scale (CHIPS) was applied to baseline MRIs to rate the severity of subcortical hyperintensities in cholinergic pathways. The consensus-derived Age-Related White Matter Changes (ARWMC) Rating Scale was used as a general measure of white matter disease burden. Main Outcome Measures Tests of global cognition, function, and behavior and specific cognitive and functional domains. Results Patients in the low CHIPS group were equivalent to those in the high CHIPS group with regard to baseline demographic characteristics, cognitive severity, and vascular risk factors. After covarying age and education, no differences were found after 1 year in overall cognition, function, and behavior or on memory, language, and visuospatial tasks. Patients in the high CHIPS group showed improvement on executive function and working memory tasks compared with those in the low CHIPS group. For the ARWMC scale, groups with and without white matter abnormalities were equivalent on baseline demographics and in cognitive, functional, and behavioral outcomes. Conclusion Cerebrovascular compromise of the cholinergic pathways may be a factor that contributes more selectively than does total white matter lesion burden to response to cholinergic therapy in Alzheimer disease, particularly on frontal/executive tasks.
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- 2007
306. Ventral frontal cortex functions and quantified MRI in traumatic brain injury
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Brian Levine, Sandra E. Black, Michael L. Schwartz, Esther Fujiwara, and Fuqiang Gao
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Adult ,Male ,Traumatic brain injury ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Matched-Pair Analysis ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Neuropsychological Tests ,Severity of Illness Index ,Statistics, Nonparametric ,Article ,Temporal lobe ,White matter ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,Discrimination, Psychological ,Reference Values ,medicine ,Humans ,Glasgow Coma Scale ,Diffuse axonal injury ,Recognition, Psychology ,Organ Size ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Frontal Lobe ,Smell ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Games, Experimental ,Frontal lobe ,Posterior cingulate ,Brain Injuries ,Case-Control Studies ,Orbitofrontal cortex ,Female ,Psychology ,Neuroscience ,Olfactory tract - Abstract
Ventral frontal cortex is commonly involved in traumatic brain injury (TBI). The smell identification test (SIT), object alternation (OA), and the Iowa gambling task (IGT) are associated with this brain region in experimental and neuropsychological research. We examined the relationship of performance on these tests to residual structural brain integrity quantified from MRI in 58 TBI patients, including 18 patients with focal cortical contusions and 40 patients with diffuse injury only. Image analysis yielded regional volumetric measures of gray matter, white matter and cerebrospinal fluid. Multivariate analyses identified distributed patterns of regional volume loss associated with test performance across all three behavioral measures. The tasks were sensitive to effects of TBI. In multivariate analyses, performance in all three tasks was related to gray matter loss including ventral frontal cortex, but the SIT was most sensitive to ventral frontal cortex damage, even in patients without focal lesions. The SIT was further related to temporal lobe and posterior cingulate/retrosplenial volumes. OA and the IGT were associated with superior medial frontal volumes. Complex tasks, such as OA and the IGT, do not consistently localize to a single cortical region. The SIT is associated with the integrity of ventral frontal regions, but it is also affected by distributed damage, although the contribution of undetected olfactory tract or bulb damage could not be ruled out. This study illustrates the scope and limitations of functional localization in human ventral frontal cortex.
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- 2007
307. Structural Imaging Reveals Anatomical Alterations in Inferotemporal Cortex in Congenital Prosopagnosia
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Fuqiang Gao, Sandra E. Black, Galia Avidan, and Marlene Behrmann
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Adult ,Male ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Middle temporal gyrus ,170199 Psychology not elsewhere classified ,Neurological disorder ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Functional Laterality ,Temporal lobe ,Visual processing ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,Gyrus ,Reference Values ,Cortex (anatomy) ,medicine ,Humans ,Aged ,Brain Mapping ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Neuropsychology ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Temporal Lobe ,FOS: Psychology ,Prosopagnosia ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Female ,Psychology ,Neuroscience - Abstract
Congenital prosopagnosia (CP) refers to the lifelong impairment in face recognition in individuals who have intact low-level visual processing, normal cognitive abilities, and no known neurological disorder. Although the face recognition impairment is profound and debilitating, its neural basis remains elusive. To investigate this, we conducted detailed morphometric and volumetric analyses of the occipitotemporal (OT) cortex in a group of CP individuals and matched control subjects using high-spatial resolution magnetic resonance imaging. Although there were no significant group differences in the depth or deviation from the midline of the OT or collateral sulci, the CP individuals evince a larger anterior and posterior middle temporal gyrus and a significantly smaller anterior fusiform (aF) gyrus. Interestingly, this volumetric reduction in the aF gyrus is correlated with the behavioral decrement in face recognition. These findings implicate a specific cortical structure as the neural basis of CP and, in light of the familial history of CP, target the aF gyrus as a potential site for further, focused genetic investigation.
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- 2007
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308. Hippocampal contributions to recollection in retrograde and anterograde amnesia
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Morris Moscovitch, Asaf Gilboa, R. Shayna Rosenbaum, Fuqiang Gao, Robyn Westmacott, Amir Poreh, Sandra E. Black, and Gordon Winocur
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Male ,Anterograde amnesia ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Hippocampus ,Amnesia ,Neuropsychological Tests ,Temporal lobe ,Imaging, Three-Dimensional ,medicine ,Humans ,Recognition memory ,Brain Mapping ,Recall ,Fornix ,Age Factors ,Retrograde amnesia ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Amnesia, Anterograde ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Mental Recall ,Linear Models ,Amnesia, Retrograde ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,Neuroscience ,psychological phenomena and processes ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Lesions restricted to the hippocampal formation and/or extended hippocampal system (hippocampal formation, fornix, mammil- lary bodies, and anterior thalamic nuclei) can disrupt conscious recol- lection in anterograde amnesia, while leaving familiarity-based memory relatively intact. Familiarity may be supported by extra-hippocampal medial temporal lobe (MTL) structures. Within-task dissociations in rec- ognition memory best exemplify this distinction in anterograde amnesia. The authors report for the first time comparable dissociations within recognition memory in retrograde amnesia. An amnesic patient (A.D.) with bilateral fornix and septal nuclei lesions failed to recognize details pertaining to personal past events only when recollection was required, during recognition of episodic details. His intact recognition of generic and semantic details pertaining to the same events was ascribed to intact familiarity processes. Recollective processes in the controls were reflected by asymmetrical Receiver's Operating Characteristic curves, whereas the patient's Receiver's Operating Characteristic was symmetri- cal, suggesting that his inferior recognition performance on episodic details was reliant on familiarity processes. Anterograde and retrograde memories were equally affected, with no temporal gradient for retro- grade memories. By comparison, another amnesic person (K.C.) with extensive MTL damage (involving extra-hippocampal MTL structures in addition to hippocampal and fornix lesions) had very poor recognition and no recollection of either episodic or generic/semantic details. These data suggest that the extended hippocampal system is required to sup- port recollection for both anterograde and retrograde memories, regard- less of their age. V V C 2006 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
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- 2006
309. Hippocampal Complex Contribution to Retention and Retrieval of Recent and Remote Episodic and Semantic Memories: Evidence from Behavioral and Neuroimaging Studies of Healthy and Brain-Damaged People
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Fuqiang Gao, Cheryl L. Grady, Mary Pat McAndrews, Sandra Priselac, R. Shayna Rosenbaum, Donna Rose Addis, Robyn Westmacott, Eva Svoboda, Morris Moscovitch, Lynn Nadel, Asaf Gilboa, Brian Richards, Marilyne Ziegler, Stefan Köhler, Gordon Winocur, Brian Levine, Guy B. Proulx, Sandra E. Black, Morris Freedman, Lee Ryan, Indre Viskontas, Kathryn A. Stokes, and Larry Leach
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Cognitive science ,Autobiographical memory ,Long-term memory ,Semantic memory ,Memory consolidation ,Childhood memory ,Psychology ,Episodic memory ,Childhood amnesia ,Cognitive psychology ,Neuroanatomy of memory - Abstract
For over a hundred years, it has been accepted that remote memories are less vulnerable to disruption than are recent memories. The standard consolidation model posits that the hippocampus and related structures are temporary memory structures, necessary for acquisition, retention, and retrieval of all explicit (declarative) memories until they are consolidated elsewhere in the brain. We review lesion and neuroimaging evidence showing that important distinctions exist among different types of explicit memory and the structures that mediate them. We argue that retention and retrieval of detailed, vivid autobiographical memories depend on the hippocampal system no matter how long ago they were acquired. Semantic memories, on the other hand, benefit from hippocampal contribution for some time before they can be retrieved independently of the hippocampus. Even semantic memories, however, can have episodic elements associated with them which continue to depend on the hippocampus. In short, the evidence reviewed suggests strongly that the function of the hippocampus (and possibly of related limbic structures) is to help encode, retain, and retrieve experiences, no matter how long ago the events comprising the experience occurred. We conclude that the evidence favors a multiple trace theory (MTT) of memory over the traditional model, and we indicate what future work is needed to resolve disputes.
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- 2006
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310. The significance of uric acid in the diagnosis and treatment of Parkinson disease: An updated systemic review.
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Zhange Yu, Shuai Zhang, Dongdong Wang, Meng Fan, Fuqiang Gao, Wei Sun, Zirong Li, Shiliang Li, Yu, Zhange, Zhang, Shuai, Wang, Dongdong, Fan, Meng, Gao, Fuqiang, Sun, Wei, Li, Zirong, and Li, Shiliang
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- 2017
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311. Heterotopic ossification related to the use of recombinant human BMP-2 in osteonecrosis of femoral head.
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Lijun Shi, Wei Sun, Fuqiang Gao, Liming Cheng, Zirong Li, Shi, Lijun, Sun, Wei, Gao, Fuqiang, Cheng, Liming, and Li, Zirong
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- 2017
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312. A new visual rating scale to assess strategic white matter hyperintensities within cholinergic pathways in dementia
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Richard H. Swartz, Fuqiang Gao, Demetrios J. Sahlas, Pearl Behl, Christian Bocti, and Sandra E. Black
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Male ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,Neuropsychological Tests ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,Severity of Illness Index ,White matter ,Physical medicine and rehabilitation ,Alzheimer Disease ,Ischemia ,mental disorders ,Medicine ,Dementia ,Humans ,Receptors, Cholinergic ,Cognitive decline ,Stroke ,Aged ,Advanced and Specialized Nursing ,Aged, 80 and over ,Neurons ,Neurotransmitter Agents ,Cholinergic Fibers ,Models, Statistical ,business.industry ,Dementia, Vascular ,Microcirculation ,Leukoaraiosis ,Age Factors ,Brain ,medicine.disease ,Immunohistochemistry ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Hyperintensity ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Case-Control Studies ,Visual Perception ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Alzheimer's disease ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Mental Status Schedule - Abstract
Background and Purpose— One possible mechanism of cognitive decline in individuals with subcortical vascular disease is disruption of cholinergic fibers by ischemic lesions, such as strategically located white matter hyperintensities (WMH). The authors applied a new MRI visual rating scale to assess WMH within cholinergic pathways in patients with Alzheimer Disease (AD) and subcortical ischemic microvascular disease. Methods— Subjects included 60 AD patients with and without WMH, matched for age, as well as 15 control subjects. A visual rating scale was developed based on published immunohistochemical tracings of the cholinergic pathways in humans. On 4 selected axial images, the severity of WMH in the cholinergic pathways was rated on a 3-point scale for ten regions, identified with major anatomical landmarks. A published, consensus-derived, general WMH scale was also applied. All subjects underwent standardized neuropsychological testing. Results— The Cholinergic Pathways HyperIntensities Scale showed reliability and was validated with volumetry of strategic WMH. After accounting for age and education in a multiple linear regression model, The Cholinergic Pathways HyperIntensities Scale ratings were associated with impaired performance on the Mattis Dementia Rating Scale ( r =0.40; P =0.02) and accounted for 12% of the variance (corrected r 2 ). A similar model was not significant for general WMH scores. Conclusions— The new MRI rating scale for WMH in cholinergic pathways is reliable and shows stronger correlations with cognitive performance than a general WMH rating scale in AD with WMH. This new rating scale provides indirect evidence that localization of WMH within neurotransmitter systems may contribute to cognitive decline.
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- 2005
313. Restrictive versus liberal transfusion strategies for red blood cell transfusion after hip or knee surgery: A systematic review and meta-analysis.
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Tianli Mao, Fuqiang Gao, Jun Han, Wei Sun, Wanshou Guo, Zirong Li, Weiguo Wang, Mao, Tianli, Gao, Fuqiang, Han, Jun, Sun, Wei, Guo, Wanshou, Li, Zirong, and Wang, Weiguo
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- 2017
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314. The use of anticoagulants for prevention and treatment of osteonecrosis of the femoral head: A systematic review.
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Peipei Guo, Fuqiang Gao, Yanhua Wang, Zhenkun Zhang, Wei Sun, Baoguo Jiang, Bailiang Wang, and Zirong Li
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- 2017
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315. Extracorporeal shock wave therapy is effective in treating chronic plantar fasciitis: A meta-analysis of RCTs.
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Jiale Sun, Fuqiang Gao, Yanhua Wang, Wei Sun, Baoguo Jiang, Zirong Li, Sun, Jiale, Gao, Fuqiang, Wang, Yanhua, Sun, Wei, Jiang, Baoguo, and Li, Zirong
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- 2017
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316. Adductor Canal Block Versus Femoral Nerve Block for Analgesia After Total Knee Arthroplasty: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis.
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Fuqiang Gao, Jinhui Ma, Wei Sun, Wanshou Guo, Zirong Li, Weiguo Wang, Gao, Fuqiang, Ma, Jinhui, Sun, Wei, Guo, Wanshou, Li, Zirong, and Wang, Weiguo
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- 2017
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317. The efficacy of periarticular drug infiltration for postoperative pain after total hip arthroplasty: A systematic review and meta-analysis.
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Yanyang Wang, Fuqiang Gao, Wei Sun, Bailiang Wang, Wanshou Guo, and Zirong Li
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- 2017
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318. CADASIL accelerated by acute hypotension.
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Pettersen, Jacqueline A., Keith, Julia, Fuqiang Gao, Spence, J. David, and Black, Sandra E.
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- 2017
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319. Extracorporeal shockwave therapy in osteonecrosis of femoral head: A systematic review of now available clinical evidences.
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Qingyu Zhang, Lihua Liu, Wei Sun, Fuqiang Gao, Liming Cheng, Zirong Li, Zhang, Qingyu, Liu, Lihua, Sun, Wei, Gao, Fuqiang, Cheng, Liming, and Li, Zirong
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- 2017
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320. Detecting cognitive dysfunction in multiple sclerosis with a magnetic resonance imaging rating scale: a pilot study
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Fuqiang Gao, Anthony Feinstein, Sandra E. Black, Laury Chamelian, and Christian Bocti
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Multiple Sclerosis ,Pilot Projects ,Neuropsychological Tests ,Severity of Illness Index ,Lesion ,Rating scale ,medicine ,Humans ,Visual Pathways ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Receiver operating characteristic ,business.industry ,Multiple sclerosis ,Neuropsychology ,Brain ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Hyperintensity ,Cognitive test ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Cholinergic Fibers ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Radiology ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Cognition Disorders - Abstract
Objective: In multiple sclerosis (MS), magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) predictors of cognitive impairment are based on sophisticated computer-generated analyses that are difficult to apply in clinical settings. This study investigated the clinical usefulness of a new visual rating scale, the Cholinergic Pathways Hyperintensities Scale (CHIPS), in detecting cognitive dysfunction.Methods: Forty clinically definite MS patients underwent a brain MRI. Based on the CHIPS, cholinergic pathway hyperintensities were rated in 10 regions on four axial slices. Computerized hyperintense lesion volumes were also obtained. For cognitive testing, The Neuropsychological Screening Battery for Multiple Sclerosis was used. “Low” and “High” lesion score groups were computed based on the mean of the total CHIPS score. Optimal sensitivity and specificity of the total CHIPS score in detecting cognitive impairment were determined using a receiver operator characteristic curve.Results: Despite a similar demographic profile, subjects with a “High” lesion score performed significantly worse than the “Low” lesion score group on verbal (P=.007) and visuospatial (P=.02) memory, and on a global index of cognitive functioning (P=.001). Optimal sensitivity (82%) and specificity (83%) were reached with a threshold total CHIPS score of 18 points. Total CHIPS score and total hyperintense lesion load were correlated (σ=0.82, PConclusion: CHIPS is helpful in clinically predicting cognitive impairment in MS.
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- 2005
321. The case of K.C.: contributions of a memory-impaired person to memory theory
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Endel Tulving, Morris Moscovitch, Robyn Westmacott, Stefan Köhler, Daniel L. Schacter, R. Shayna Rosenbaum, Sandra E. Black, and Fuqiang Gao
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Adult ,Male ,Reconstructive memory ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Amnesia ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Neuropsychological Tests ,Hippocampus ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,Source amnesia ,Retrospective memory ,Memory ,Explicit memory ,medicine ,Semantic memory ,Humans ,Episodic memory ,Autobiographical memory ,Middle Aged ,Amnesia, Anterograde ,Temporal Lobe ,Imagination ,Amnesia, Retrograde ,Brain Damage, Chronic ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,Cognitive psychology ,Personality - Abstract
K.C. has been investigated extensively over some 20 years since a motorcycle accident left him with widespread brain damage that includes large bilateral hippocampal lesions, which caused a remarkable case of memory impairment. On standard testing, K.C.'s anterograde amnesia is as severe as that of any other case reported in the literature, including H.M. However, his ability to make use of knowledge and experiences from the time before his accident shows a sharp dissociation between semantic and episodic memory. A good deal of his general knowledge of the world, including knowledge about himself, is preserved, but he is incapable of recollecting any personally experienced events. In displaying such “episodic amnesia,” which encompasses an entire lifetime of personal experiences, K.C. differs from many other amnesic cases. Here, we document for the first time the full extent of K.C.'s brain damage using MRI-based quantitative measurements. We then review the many investigations with K.C. that have contributed to our understanding not only of episodic and semantic memory but also to the development of other aspects of memory theory. These include the distinction between implicit and explicit memory, the prospect of new learning in amnesia, and the fate of recent and remote memory for autobiographical and public events, people, and spatial locations.
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- 2004
322. Semiautomatic brain region extraction: a method of parcellating brain regions from structural magnetic resonance images
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Natasa Kovacevic, Fuqiang Gao, C. Rockel, C. M. O'Toole, P. Roy, Brian Levine, Anthony Feinstein, Lauren A. Dade, Nancy J. Lobaugh, and Sandra E. Black
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Adult ,Male ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Expert Systems ,Brain mapping ,White matter ,Imaging, Three-Dimensional ,Reference Values ,medicine ,Image Processing, Computer-Assisted ,Humans ,Segmentation ,Healthy aging ,Dominance, Cerebral ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Cerebral Cortex ,Observer Variation ,Brain Mapping ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Tissue segmentation ,business.industry ,Age Factors ,Brain ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,Pattern recognition ,Middle Aged ,Mr imaging ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Brain region ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Neurology ,Female ,Artificial intelligence ,Psychology ,business ,Neuroscience ,Software - Abstract
Structural MR imaging has become essential to the evaluation of regional brain changes in both healthy aging and disease-related processes. Several methods have been developed to measure structure size and regional brain volumes, but many of these methods involve substantial manual tracing and/or landmark identification. We present a new technique, semiautomatic brain region extraction (SABRE), for the rapid and reliable parcellation of cortical and subcortical brain regions. We combine the SABRE parcellation with tissue compartment segmentation [NeuroImage 17 (2002) 1087] to produce measures of gray matter (GM), white matter (WM), ventricular CSF, and sulcal CSF for 26 brain regions. Because SABRE restricts user input to a few easily identified landmarks, inter-rater reliability is high for all volumes, with all coefficients between 0.91 and 0.99. To assess construct validity, we contrasted SABRE-derived volumetric data from healthy young and older adults. Results from the SABRE parcellation and tissue segmentation showed significant differences in multiple brain regions in keeping with regional atrophy described in the literature by researchers using lengthy manual tracing methods. Our findings show that SABRE is a reliable semiautomatic method for assessing regional tissue volumes that provides significant timesavings over purely manual methods, yet maintains information about individual cortical landmarks.
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- 2003
323. Recollection Training in Stroke Survivors: A Pilot Study
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Patrick S. R. Davidson, Ves Stamenova, Janine M. Jennings, Fuqiang Gao, Shaun P. Cook, Lisa Walker, and Andra M. Smith
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medicine.medical_specialty ,education.field_of_study ,Recall ,business.industry ,Rehabilitation ,Population ,Group format ,Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation ,Phase (combat) ,Lifestyle management ,Formative assessment ,Physical medicine and rehabilitation ,Physical therapy ,Medicine ,Stroke survivor ,business ,education - Abstract
clinics completed: 3 English and 3 Spanish. 32 participants completed 6month follow up. Phase 2 (nZ59) and formative evaluation are in progress. Conclusions: HEALS Phase 1 suggests that a six week lifestyle management program consisting of a 2-hour small group format, healthy lifestyle content, and led by an occupational therapist may be feasible for the proposed population. Phase 2 will confirm these notions.
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- 2014
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324. Recombinant Human Bone Morphogenetic Protein-2 in Debridement and Impacted Bone Graft for the Treatment of Femoral Head Osteonecrosis
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Fuqiang Gao, Zirong Li, Wanshou Guo, Zhencai Shi, Qidong Zhang, and Wei Sun
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Adult ,Male ,Artificial bone ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Radiography ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Materials Science ,Orthopedic Surgery ,lcsh:Medicine ,Bone Morphogenetic Protein 2 ,Surgical and Invasive Medical Procedures ,Bone healing ,Bone morphogenetic protein ,Biomaterials ,Young Adult ,Femoral head ,Musculoskeletal System Procedures ,Femur Head Necrosis ,Transforming Growth Factor beta ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,medicine ,Humans ,lcsh:Science ,Survival rate ,Retrospective Studies ,Bone Transplantation ,Multidisciplinary ,Debridement ,business.industry ,lcsh:R ,Osteonecrosis ,Biology and Life Sciences ,Middle Aged ,Prognosis ,Recombinant Proteins ,Surgery ,Survival Rate ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Harris Hip Score ,Physical Sciences ,lcsh:Q ,Female ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,business ,Follow-Up Studies ,Research Article ,Biotechnology - Abstract
The purpose of this study was to compare the clinical outcomes of impacted bone graft with or without recombinant human bone morphogenetic protein-2 (rhBMP-2) for osteonecrosis of the femoral head (ONFH). We examined the effect of bone-grafting through a window at the femoral head-neck junction, known as the ‘‘light bulb’’ approach, for the treatment of ONFH with a combination of artificial bone (Novobone) mixed with or without rhBMP-2. A total of 42 patients (72 hips) were followed-up from 5 to 7.67 years (average of 6.1 years). The patients with and without BMP were the first group (IBG+ rhBMP-2) and the second group (IBG), respectively. The clinical effectiveness was evaluated by Harris hip score (HHS). The radiographic follow-up was evaluated by pre-and postoperative X-ray and CT scan. Excellent, good, and fair functions were obtained in 36, 12, and 7 hips, respectively. The survival rate was 81.8% and 71.8% in the first and second group, respectively. However, the survival rate was 90.3% in ARCO stage IIb, c, and only 34.6% in ARCO stage IIIa(P,0.05). It was concluded that good and excellent mid-term follow-up could be achieved in selected patients with ONFH treated with impacted bone graft operation. The rhBMP-2 might improve the clinical efficacy and quality of bone repair.
- Published
- 2014
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325. Comments on 'Numerical Study of Microwave Scattering in Breast Tissue via Coupled Dielectric and Elastic Contrasts'
- Author
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Susan C. Hagness, Fuqiang Gao, and B.D. Van Veen
- Subjects
Physics ,Breast tissue ,business.industry ,Scattering ,Quantitative Biology::Tissues and Organs ,Numerical analysis ,Physics::Medical Physics ,Finite difference method ,Microwave scattering ,Dielectric ,Computational physics ,Finite difference time domain analysis ,Optics ,Microwave imaging ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,business - Abstract
The article comments on the original article by M.Zhao et al, which presented the numerical analysis of microwave scattering in breast tissue via coupled dielectric and elastic contrasts. Fuqiang et al claim that some validations were incorrect and present amended versions.
- Published
- 2010
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326. Poster 41: The Influence of Lesion Tracing Methodology on Subtraction Lesion Analysis: Implications for Establishing Brain-Behavior Relationships After Stroke
- Author
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Cynthia J. Danells, Sandra E. Black, Lisa D. Alexander, William E. McIlroy, and Fuqiang Gao
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Rehabilitation ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Brain behavior ,Subtraction ,Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,Tracing ,medicine.disease ,Lesion ,Lesion analysis ,medicine ,Radiology ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Stroke - Published
- 2008
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327. Subject Index Vol. 21, 2006
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A. Haglund, Alberto Pupi, P. Scheltens, F. Verhey, Karl Herholz, Bettina Beuthien-Baumann, A.-L. Wetterholm, H.C. Weinstein, Paolo Bartolomeo, G. Waldemar, Karalyn Patterson, R. Zhang, K.J. Anstey, R.A. Parslow, Ranjan Duara, Minglei Li, Vjera Holthoff, Sandro Sorbi, John R. Hodges, Gianfranco Dalla Barba, A. Wimo, W. Wen, J. Maller, Peter Roy, Peter P. Zandi, Fabienne Collette, Michelle M. Mielke, P.S. Sachdev, Amarilis Acevedo, Ko Sm, Christian Lemaire, Anne-Catherine Bachoud-Lévi, Tomasz Dziedzic, Hayrettin Tumani, L. Lorentz, Akira Ueki, David A. Loewenstein, R. Schindler, Axel Petzold, A. de Mendonça, H. Brodaty, Christian Degueldre, R. Kumar, Frédéric Peters, Agnieszka Slowik, Eric Salmon, Heii Arai, Guillaume Dolbeau, Tohru Ohnuma, Daniel Schöttle, C.J. Stam, Joscelyn Agron, K. Berman, Conrad Rockel, A.S. Zagami, Sandra E. Black, Masatsugu Nagao, M. Guerreiro, D.L. Knol, Sharon Erzinclioglu, M.J. Valenzuela, H. Soininen, Aleksandra Klimkowicz-Mrowiec, Christian Bocti, J.C.L. Looi, A.F. Jorm, K. Engedal, Sophie Baudic, B. van Harten, Johannes Brettschneider, Silvia Strauman, Latchezar Traykov, Marie-Françoise Boissé, Chie Usui, Ee Heok Kua, A. Ross, D.M. Laman, Daniela Perani, Steffi G. Riedel-Heller, Annett Claus, Matthias C. Angermeyer, Richard Issacson, Uta Guehne, Nobuto Shibata, Shinji Higashi, Patrick Maison, H. Christensen, Taku Ohkubo, Tze Pin Ng, Warren W. Barker, B. Winblad, Elizabeth Crocco, Andrzej Szczudlik, Matthias W. Riepe, FuQiang Gao, F. Ribeiro, and H. van Duijn
- Subjects
Psychiatry and Mental health ,Index (economics) ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Statistics ,Subject (documents) ,Geriatrics and Gerontology ,Mathematics - Published
- 2006
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328. Combined adductor canal block with periarticular infiltration versus periarticular infiltration for analgesia after total knee arthroplasty.
- Author
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Jinhui Ma, Fuqiang Gao, Wei Sun, Wanshou Guo, Zirong Li, Weiguo Wang, Ma, Jinhui, Gao, Fuqiang, Sun, Wei, Guo, Wanshou, Li, Zirong, and Wang, Weiguo
- Published
- 2016
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329. Dynamic Damage Constitutive Model of Rock Based on Piecewise Functions.
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Fuqiang GAO and Kun ZHANG
- Subjects
ROCK deformation ,DEFORMATIONS (Mechanics) ,MATHEMATICAL models ,PIECEWISE affine systems - Abstract
By using RMT-301 rock and concrete mechanics test system, uniaxial compression tests of dry and wet sandstone were performed in the laboratory. For the reason of compaction effect of sandstone sample, the predicted results of stress-strain curves by traditional damage constitutive models are greatly deviated from the test results. Based on the deformation characteristics of sandstone sample, the stress-strain curve is divided into linear elastic stage at the pre peak and the damage stage in the post peak. The micro unit strength is described by the power function and Weibull distribution function respectively, the predicted results of the two models show that piecewise damage constitutive model can well describe the characteristics of test curve, and the power function is better than Weibull distribution function in forecasting precision. The research results provide guidance for the design and construction of underground engineering. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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- View/download PDF
330. Stress Mechanism and Deformation Monitoring of Bias Tunnel.
- Author
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Fuqiang GAO and Jinjun GUO
- Subjects
STRAINS & stresses (Mechanics) ,DEFORMATIONS (Mechanics) ,STABILITY (Mechanics) - Abstract
There are many unsafe factors in the process of tunnel construction, including the bias load, being ultra shallow buried under the surface, etc. Through the analysis of the initial stress field of bias tunnel, it is revealed that the slope angle is an important factor to influence the stress distribution. When the slope angle is more than 30o, the tunnel is prone to shear failure at the arch waist. By monitoring the bending moment of steel support, pressure of surrounding rock and slope deformation in Jinci tunnel, it is revealed that the maximum bending moment of steel support appears at the arch waist near the slope, the maximum pressure of surrounding rock appears at the left arch waist, and the maximum deformation appears at the bottom of the slope. The research results provide guidance for the design and construction of bias tunnels under similar geological conditions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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- View/download PDF
331. Association between hypoxemia and anemia following arthroplasty: A pilot clinical study.
- Author
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FUQIANG GAO, WEI SUN, WANSHOU GUO, LIMING CHENG, ZIRONG LI, and NEPALI KUSH
- Subjects
- *
HYPOXEMIA , *ANEMIA , *ARTHROPLASTY , *ARTERIAL physiology , *PHYSIOLOGICAL effects of oxygen - Abstract
Hypoxia and anemia are common complications following joint arthroplasty. Whether hypoxia indicates that a patient is anemic and whether anemia causes a decline in arterial oxygen pressure accompanied by hypoxemia are not completely understood. The aim of the present study was to determine the association between hypoxemia and anemia following arthroplasty. A total of 135 patients who underwent arthroplasty at the China-Japan Friendship Hospital between January and May 2013 were retrospectively analyzed. The patients were divided into five groups depending on the type of arthroplasty they had experienced: Unilateral total knee arthroplasty (TKA), bilateral TKA, unilateral total hip arthroplasty (THA), bilateral THA or unilateral unicompartmental knee arthroplasty. Perioperative peripheral oxygen saturation (SpO2) and hemoglobin (Hb) levels were assessed, and the associations between the changes in SpO2 (ΔSpO2) and hemoglobin (ΔHb) levels on the first and third postoperative days (PODs) were analyzed using Pearson's correlation test for each group. The perioperative SpO2 curves for the various groups were typically at their lowest on the day of surgery. Significant hypoxemia was observed on POD 0-2, although a stable recovery curve was observed on POD 3-5. Trends in ΔHb were observed among the 5 groups, with the lowest Hb value observed predominantly on POD 2 and 3. By POD 4 and 5 Hb levels had recovered, with a steadily and consistently increasing curve. There was no statistically significant correlation between ΔSpO2 and decrease in Hb levels (P>0.05). SpO2 levels should not serve as a clinical indicator of the incidence and severity of anemia in patients who have undergone primary arthroplasty. To a point, the degree of postoperative anemic status does not affect SpO2 levels. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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332. Effect of synthesis and acid purification methods on the microwave dielectric properties of single-walled carbon nanotube aqueous dispersions
- Author
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Sunny C. Patel, Susan C. Hagness, Balaji Sitharaman, Shawn X. Xie, Fuqiang Gao, and John H. Booske
- Subjects
Permittivity ,Thermogravimetric analysis ,Materials science ,Physics and Astronomy (miscellaneous) ,Analytical chemistry ,Carbon nanotube ,Chemical vapor deposition ,Dielectric ,law.invention ,symbols.namesake ,Chemical engineering ,law ,symbols ,Raman spectroscopy ,Thermal analysis ,Spectroscopy - Abstract
We characterized the microwave-frequency (0.5–6 GHz) dielectric properties of aqueous dispersions of pristine and purified single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs). SWCNTs were synthesized by two CVD-based methods and purified using two acid-based purification methods. We characterized the structural and chemical differences across SWCNT samples using Raman analysis, UV-Vis spectroscopy, atomic force microscopy, and thermogravimetric analysis. We found that the dielectric properties of the pristine SWCNT dispersions did not vary with synthesis method, but the dielectric properties of purified SWCNT dispersions were variably impacted by acid purification due to different degrees of morphological and chemical changes in the SWCNTs.
- Published
- 2013
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- View/download PDF
333. Correlating lesion size and location to deficits after ischemic stroke: the influence of accounting for altered peri-necrotic tissue and incidental silent infarcts
- Author
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Sandra E. Black, Cynthia J. Danells, Gregory M. Szilagyi, Fuqiang Gao, William E. McIlroy, and Lisa D. Alexander
- Subjects
Brain Infarction ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pathology ,Neurology ,Databases, Factual ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Peri ,Lesion volume ,lcsh:RC346-429 ,Brain Ischemia ,Lesion ,03 medical and health sciences ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,Necrosis ,0302 clinical medicine ,Medicine ,Humans ,In patient ,Stroke ,lcsh:Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,Biological Psychiatry ,030304 developmental biology ,Aged ,Cerebral Cortex ,0303 health sciences ,business.industry ,Research ,Incidence ,General Medicine ,Necrotic tissue ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Motor Skills Disorders ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Ischemic stroke ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Background Investigators frequently quantify and evaluate the location and size of stroke lesions to help uncover cerebral anatomical correlates of deficits observed after first-ever stroke. However, it is common to discover silent infarcts such as lacunes in patients identified clinically as 'first-ever' stroke, and it is unclear if including these incidental findings may impact lesion-based investigations of brain-behaviour relationships. There is also debate concerning how to best define the boundaries of necrotic stroke lesions that blend in an ill-defined way into surrounding tissue, as it is unclear whether including this altered peri-necrotic tissue region may influence studies of brain-behaviour relationships. Therefore, for patients with clinically overt stroke, we examined whether including altered peri-necrotic tissue and incidental silent strokes influenced either lesion volume correlations with a measure of sensorimotor impairment or the anatomical localization of this impairment established using subtraction lesion analysis. Methods Chronic stroke lesions of 41 patients were manually traced from digital T1-MRI to sequentially include the: necrotic lesion core, altered peri-necrotic tissue, silent lesions in the same hemisphere as the index lesion, and silent lesions in the opposite hemisphere. Lesion volumes for each region were examined for correlation with motor impairment scores, and subtraction analysis was used to highlight anatomical lesion loci associated with this deficit. Results For subtraction lesion analysis, including peri-necrotic tissue resulted in a larger region of more frequent damage being seen in the basal ganglia. For correlational analysis, only the volume of the lesion core was significantly associated with motor impairment scores (r = -0.35, p = 0.025). In a sub-analysis of patients with small subcortical index lesions, adding silent lesions in the opposite hemisphere to the volume of the index stroke strengthened the volume-impairment association. Conclusions Including peri-necrotic tissue strengthened lesion localization analysis, but the influence of peri-necrotic tissue and incidental lesions on lesion volume correlations with motor impairment was negligible barring a small index lesion. Overall, the potential influence of incidental lesions and peri-necrotic tissue on brain-behaviour relationships may depend on the characteristics of the index stroke and on whether one is examining the relationship between lesion volume and impairment or lesion location and impairment.
- Published
- 2010
334. Extracorporeal shock wave therapy in the treatment of primary bone marrow edema syndrome of the knee: a prospective randomised controlled study.
- Author
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Fuqiang Gao, Wei Sun, Zirong Li, Wanshou Guo, Weiguo Wang, Liming Cheng, Debo Yue, Nianfei Zhang, Savarin, Amanda, Gao, Fuqiang, Sun, Wei, Li, Zirong, Guo, Wanshou, Wang, Weiguo, Cheng, Liming, Yue, Debo, and Zhang, Nianfei
- Subjects
- *
EXTRACORPOREAL shock wave therapy , *BONE marrow , *KNEE injuries , *LONGITUDINAL method , *RANDOMIZED controlled trials , *MAGNETIC resonance imaging , *VISUAL analog scale , *FOLLOW-up studies (Medicine) , *WOUNDS & injuries , *DIAGNOSIS of edema , *COMPARATIVE studies , *BONE marrow diseases , *EDEMA , *HEALTH surveys , *KNEE , *LITHOTRIPSY , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *RESEARCH , *STATISTICAL sampling , *SYNDROMES , *EVALUATION research , *PAIN measurement , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *DISEASE complications , *DIAGNOSIS , *THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
Background: The aim of this prospective study was to evaluate the effectiveness of extracorporeal shock wave therapy (ESWT) in normalizing the symptoms and imaging features of primary bone marrow edema syndrome (BMES) of the knee.Methods: This study compared the outcomes of ESWT (Group A) (n = 20) and intravenously applied prostacyclin and bisphosphonate (Group B) (n = 20) in the treatment of BMES of the knee in our department between 2011 and 2013. The Visual Analog Scale for pain (VAS, 100 mm), the Western Ontario and McMaster University Osteoarthritis Index (WOMAC), the SF-36 scores and MRI scans as well as plain radiographs were obtained before and after therapy between two groups.Results: Compared with Group B, we found greater improvement in VAS, the WOMAC Osteoarthritis Index and SF-36 score at 1, 3 and 6 months post-treatment in Group A (P < 0.05). Furthermore, MRI scans showed a higher incidence of distinct reduction and complete regression of bone marrow edema at 6 months in Group A (95 vs. 65 %; P = 0.018). The MRI at 1 year follow-up showed complete regression in all patients in Group A. However, two cases in Group B continued to normalize over the subsequent follow-up period.Conclusions: ESWT can produce rapid pain relief and functional improvement. It may be an effective, reliable, and non-invasive technique for rapid treatment of BMES of the knee.Trial Registration: Research Registry UIN 528, September 03, 2015. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2015
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- View/download PDF
335. An Updated Meta-Analysis Comparing Artificial Cervical Disc Arthroplasty (CDA) Versus Anterior Cervical Discectomy and Fusion (ACDF) for the Treatment of Cervical Degenerative Disc Disease (CDDD).
- Author
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Fuqiang Gao, Tianli Mao, Wei Sun, Wanshou Guo, Yunting Wang, Zirong Li, Abhinav, Pradhan, Gao, Fuqiang, Mao, Tianli, Sun, Wei, Guo, Wanshou, Wang, Yunting, and Li, Zirong
- Subjects
- *
META-analysis , *RANDOMIZED controlled trials , *DEGENERATION (Pathology) , *SURGERY , *PAIN measurement , *CERVICAL vertebrae , *ARTHROPLASTY , *COMPARATIVE studies , *DISCECTOMY , *LENGTH of stay in hospitals , *SPINE diseases , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *NECK pain , *RESEARCH , *EVALUATION research , *SURGICAL blood loss - Abstract
Study Design: A meta-analysis of published randomized controlled Trials (RCTs).Objective: The aim of this study was to compare the efficacy and safety of cervical disc arthroplasty (CDA) with anterior cervical discectomy and fusion (ACDF) for the treatment of one-level cervical degenerative disc disease (CDDD).Summary Of Background Data: ACDF has been widely performed for the treatment of CDDD. However, the loss of motion at the operated level has been hypothesized to accelerated adjacent-level disc degeneration. CDA is designed to avoid the side effect of fusion. However, it is still uncertain whether CDA is more effective and safer than ACDF.Methods: We performed a meta-analysis of published RCTs to examine whether there was a superior clinical effects of CDA than ACDF. A PubMed database search through October 2014 was performed for relevant studies. We included RCTs that reported relevant data in the treatment of one-level CDDD, which were suitable for detailed extraction of data.Results: We identified 18 RCTs eligible for analysis. The results of the meta-analysis indicated longer operative times, more blood loss, lower neck and arm pain scores reported on a visual analog scale (VAS), better neurological success, greater motion at the operated level, fewer secondary surgical procedures in the CDA group than in the ACDF group (P < 0.05). The 2 groups had similar lengths of hospital stay, Neck Disability Index scores, and rates of adverse events (P > 0.05).Conclusions: Findings of the present meta-analysis indicated that CDA was an effective and safe surgical procedure for the treatment of one-level CDDD, and CDA was found to be more superior than ACDF in terms of VAS neck and arm pain, neurological success, range of motion at the operated level, and secondary surgical procedures.Level Of Evidence: 1. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2015
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- View/download PDF
336. Poster 44: Posterior Putamen Damage is Associated With Persistent Poststroke Motor Impairment
- Author
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Yuan Kong, Nadder Sharif, Sandra E. Black, Cynthia J. Dannela, William E. McIlroy, W. Richard Staines, Fuqiang Gao, David J. Gladstone, and Gregory Szilagy
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Rehabilitation ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Putamen ,Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation ,Motor impairment ,medicine.disease ,Hemiparesis ,Physical medicine and rehabilitation ,medicine ,Physical therapy ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Stroke - Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
337. Post-stroke hemispatial neglect: Evidence for dual networks mediating spatial attention
- Author
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David J. Gladstone, Fuqiang Gao, Mark I. Boulos, Simon J. Graham, W.R. Staines, William E. McIlroy, Sandra E. Black, and Cynthia J. Danells
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology ,Physical medicine and rehabilitation ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Post stroke ,medicine ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Hemispatial neglect ,DUAL (cognitive architecture) ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology - Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
338. The relationship of subcortical MRI hyperintensities and medial temporal lobe atrophy
- Author
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Fuqiang Gao, N. Levy, J. Ramirez, and Sandra E. Black
- Subjects
Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Medial temporal atrophy ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Anatomy ,Psychology ,Hyperintensity - Published
- 2007
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- View/download PDF
339. P2-149 Alzheimer's disease with cerebrovascular disease: possible additional cholinergic system injury by strategic white matter hyperintensities
- Author
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Sandra E. Black, Richard H. Swartz, Fuqiang Gao, Christian Bocti, and Demetrios J. Sahlas
- Subjects
Aging ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,General Neuroscience ,Disease ,Hyperintensity ,Internal medicine ,Cholinergic system ,Cardiology ,Medicine ,Neurology (clinical) ,Geriatrics and Gerontology ,business ,Developmental Biology - Published
- 2004
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340. P2-227 A comparison of medial temporal lobe atrophy ratings with linear and volumetric measures in aging and dementia
- Author
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Richard H. Swartz, Fuqiang Gao, David J.A. Callen, Sandra E. Black, and Philip Scheltens
- Subjects
Aging ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,General Neuroscience ,medicine ,Medial temporal atrophy ,Dementia ,Neurology (clinical) ,Geriatrics and Gerontology ,Audiology ,business ,medicine.disease ,Developmental Biology - Published
- 2004
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- View/download PDF
341. The utility of medial temporal lobe width in discriminating Alzheimer's disease from normal aging
- Author
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Sandra E. Black, David J.A. Callen, Fuqiang Gao, Farrell S. Leibovitch, and Nancy J. Lobaugh
- Subjects
Aging ,business.industry ,General Neuroscience ,Medicine ,Neurology (clinical) ,Disease ,Normal aging ,Geriatrics and Gerontology ,business ,Neuroscience ,Developmental Biology ,Temporal lobe - Published
- 2000
- Full Text
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342. Correlating lesion size and location to deficits after ischemic stroke: the influence of accounting for altered peri-necrotic tissue and incidental silent infarcts.
- Author
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Alexander, Lisa D., Black, Sandra E., Fuqiang Gao, Szilagyi, Gregory, Danells, Cynthia J., and McIlroy, William E.
- Subjects
MEDICAL research ,CORONARY disease ,CEREBROVASCULAR disease ,MAGNETIC resonance imaging ,BRAIN ,HUMAN behavior - Abstract
Background: Investigators frequently quantify and evaluate the location and size of stroke lesions to help uncover cerebral anatomical correlates of deficits observed after first-ever stroke. However, it is common to discover silent infarcts such as lacunes in patients identified clinically as 'first-ever' stroke, and it is unclear if including these incidental findings may impact lesion-based investigations of brain-behaviour relationships. There is also debate concerning how to best define the boundaries of necrotic stroke lesions that blend in an ill-defined way into surrounding tissue, as it is unclear whether including this altered peri-necrotic tissue region may influence studies of brain-behaviour relationships. Therefore, for patients with clinically overt stroke, we examined whether including altered peri-necrotic tissue and incidental silent strokes influenced either lesion volume correlations with a measure of sensorimotor impairment or the anatomical localization of this impairment established using subtraction lesion analysis. Methods: Chronic stroke lesions of 41 patients were manually traced from digital T1-MRI to sequentially include the: necrotic lesion core, altered peri-necrotic tissue, silent lesions in the same hemisphere as the index lesion, and silent lesions in the opposite hemisphere. Lesion volumes for each region were examined for correlation with motor impairment scores, and subtraction analysis was used to highlight anatomical lesion loci associated with this deficit. Results: For subtraction lesion analysis, including peri-necrotic tissue resulted in a larger region of more frequent damage being seen in the basal ganglia. For correlational analysis, only the volume of the lesion core was significantly associated with motor impairment scores (r = -0.35, p = 0.025). In a sub-analysis of patients with small subcortical index lesions, adding silent lesions in the opposite hemisphere to the volume of the index stroke strengthened the volume-impairment association. Conclusions: Including peri-necrotic tissue strengthened lesion localization analysis, but the influence of perinecrotic tissue and incidental lesions on lesion volume correlations with motor impairment was negligible barring a small index lesion. Overall, the potential influence of incidental lesions and peri-necrotic tissue on brainbehaviour relationships may depend on the characteristics of the index stroke and on whether one is examining the relationship between lesion volume and impairment or lesion location and impairment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
343. Patterns of Autobiographical Memory Loss in Medial-Temporal Lobe Amnesic Patients.
- Author
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Rosenbaum, R. Shayna, Moscovitch, Morris, Foster, Jonathan K., Schnyer, David M., Fuqiang Gao, Kovacevic, Natasha, Verfaellie, Mieke, Black, Sandra E., and Levine, Brian
- Subjects
CEREBRAL cortex ,COGNITION disorders ,MEMORY ,FRONTAL lobe ,HUMAN life cycle - Abstract
The issue of whether the hippocampus and related structures in the medial-temporal lobe (MTL) play a temporary or permanent role in autobiographical episodic memory remains unresolved. One long-standing belief is that autobiographical memory (AM), like semantic memory, is initially dependent on the MTL but ultimately can be retained and recovered independently of it. However, evidence that hippocampal amnesia results in severe loss of episodic memory for a lifetime of personally experienced events suggests otherwise. To test the opposing views, we conducted detailed investigations of autobiographical episodic memory in people with amnesia resulting from MTL lesions of varying extent. By combining precise quantification of MTL and neocortical volumes with sensitive measures of recollection of one's personal past, we show that the severity of episodic, but not semantic, AM loss is best accounted for by the degree of hippocampal damage and less likely related to additional neocortical compromise. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
344. Subcortical Hyperintensities in Alzheimer’s Disease: No Clear Relationship with Executive Function and Frontal Perfusion on SPECT.
- Author
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Levy-Cooperman, Naama, Lobaugh, Nancy J., Caldwell, Curtis, FuQiang Gao, and Black, Sandra E.
- Subjects
TOMOGRAPHY ,ALZHEIMER'S disease ,MAGNETIC resonance imaging ,PATIENTS ,PREFRONTAL cortex - Abstract
Background/Aims: To investigate relationships between subcortical hyperintensities (SH), frontal perfusion and executive function (EF) in a sample of Alzheimer’s disease (AD) patients with varying severities of SH. Methods: A sample of 63 AD patients underwent brain imaging with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) scans. Severity of SH was assessed using a standardized visual rating scale on MRI. Patients were classified into severe (n = 20), moderate (n = 23) or no SH (n = 20) groups. Four frontal SPECT regions of interest (anterior cingulate cortex, dorsolateral prefrontal cortex) and neuropsychological assessment of EF were analyzed. Results: Overall, no significant relationships were found between severity of SH and measures of SPECT perfusion or EF, except for one subsection of the Dementia Rating Scale, with severe SH scoring slightly worse than the other two groups. Conclusion: These findings support previous studies which suggest minimal adverse effects of SH on brain function and cognition. Global severity of SH on MRI in AD was not associated with decline in frontal perfusion and only mildly related to a decline in a specific EF task. More accurate measures of SH volume, not just global severity of SH, may be necessary to capture such complex brain behavior relationships; if they do indeed exist. Copyright © 2007 S. Karger AG, Basel [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
345. Strategic Subcortical Hyperintensities in Cholinergic Pathways and Executive Function Decline in Treated Alzheimer Patients.
- Author
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Behl, Pearl, Bocti, Christian, Swartz, Richard H., FuQiang Gao, Sahlas, Demetrios J., Lanctot, Krista L., Streiner, David L., and Black, Sandra E.
- Abstract
Objective: To investigate changes in cognition, function, and behavior after 1 year in patients with Alzheimer disease being treated with cholinesterase inhibitors, in relation to the presence or absence of subcortical hyperintensities involving the cholinergic pathways. Design: One-year prospective cohort study. Setting: Memory Clinic, Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre, University of Toronto. Patients: Ninety patients with possible/probable Alzheimer disease who were being treated with cholinesterase inhibitors at baseline. Interventions: Yearly standardized neuropsychological testing and brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). The Cholinergic Pathways Hyperintensities Scale (CHIPS) was applied to baseline MRIs to rate the severity of subcortical hyperintensities in cholinergic pathways. The consensus-derived Age-Related White Matter Changes (ARWMC) Rating Scale was used as a general measure of white matter disease burden. Main Outcome Measures: Tests of global cognition, function, and behavior and specific cognitive and functional domains. Main Outcome Measures: Tests of global cognition, function, and behavior and specific cognitive and functional domains. Conclusion: Cerebrovascular compromise of the cholinergic pathways may be a factor that contributes more selectively than does total white matter lesion burden to response to cholinergic therapy in Alzheimer disease, particularly on frontal/executive tasks. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
346. In Vivo Characterization of Traumatic Brain Injury Neuropathology with Structural and Functional Neuroimaging.
- Author
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Brian Levine, Esther Fujiwara, Charlene O'connor, Nadine Richard, Natasa Kovacevic, Marina Mandic, Adriana Restagno, Craig Easdon, Ian H. Robertson, Simon J. Graham, Gordon Cheung, Fuqiang Gao, Michael L. Schwartz, and Sandra E. Black
- Published
- 2006
347. RESPONSE TO THE LETTER: An Updated Meta-analysis Comparing Artificial Cervical Disc Arthroplasty (CDA) Versus Anterior Cervical Discectomy and Fusion (ACDF) for the Treatment of Cervical Degenerative Disc Disease (CDDD).
- Author
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Fuqiang Gao, Tianli Mao, Wei Sun, and Zirong Li
- Subjects
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SPINAL cord injuries , *HERNIA - Abstract
A response from the author of the article " Microstructural changes in compressed nerve roots are consistent with clinical symptoms and symptom duration in patients with lumbar disc herniation" in the previous issue is presented.
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- 2017
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348. Combined Control Design and Energy Saving Benefit Analysis of Air Compression Station.
- Author
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Junfei He, Zeqiong Xie, Fuqiang Gao, Yousheng Lin, Jiayu Huang, and Zhenqian Xiao
- Published
- 2019
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349. Effectiveness of Focused Shockwave Therapy versus Radial Shockwave Therapy for Noncalcific Rotator Cuff Tendinopathies: A Randomized Clinical Trial.
- Author
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Chengxin Li, Zhizhuo Li, Lijun Shi, Peixu Wang, Fuqiang Gao, and Wei Sun
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TENDINITIS treatment , *SHOULDER physiology , *PATIENT aftercare , *LITHOTRIPSY , *STATISTICAL sampling , *ROTATOR cuff injuries , *TENDINOPATHY , *DISEASE management , *PAIN measurement , *RANDOMIZED controlled trials , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *FUNCTIONAL assessment , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Background. The superiority of focused shockwave therapy (F-SWT) versus radial shockwave therapy (R-SWT) for treating noncalcific rotator cuff tendinopathies remains controversial. This study is aimed at comparing the effectiveness of F-SWT versus R-SWT for the management of noncalcific rotator cuff tendinopathies. Methods. A total of 46 patients affected by noncalcific rotator cuff tendinopathies were randomly divided into 2 groups of 23 individuals. Patients in group A received 4 sessions of F-SWT, while patients in group B were treated by 4 sessions of R-SWT. In each session, mean energy flux density (EFD) for F-SW 3000 shots was 0:09 ± 0:018 mJ/mm² with 5:1 ± 0:5 Hz, while average pressure for R-SW 3000 shots was 4:0 ± 0:35 bar with 3:2 ± 0:0 Hz. Pain level and shoulder function were assessed with the numerical rating scale (NRS) and Constant-Murley Scale (CMS). The primary endpoint was the change in the mean NRS pain score from baseline to 24 weeks after the intervention. Secondary endpoints were changes in the mean NRS pain scores at all other follow-up points, changes in the mean CMS scores, and radiographic findings. Results. There were no significant differences between the two groups regarding NRS pain score and CMS score within 24 weeks after intervention (all p > 0:05). However, F-SWT resulted in significantly lower NRS compared with R-SWT at 24 weeks and 48 weeks after treatment (2:7 ± 1:0 vs. 4:5 ± 1:2 and 1:4 ± 1:0 vs. 3:0 ± 0:8, respectively, all p < 0:001). Similar results were found in CMS changes and radiographic findings. Conclusions. Both F-SWT and R-SWT are effective in patients with noncalcific rotator cuff tendinopathy. F-SWT proved to be significantly superior to R-SWT at longterm follow-up (more than 24 weeks). This trial is registered with ChiCTR1900022932. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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