160 results on '"Luo, XX"'
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2. Poster session 1: Wednesday 3 December 2014, 09: 00–16: 00Location: Poster area
- Author
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Luo, XX, Fang, F, Lee, APW, Shang, Q, and Yu, CM
- Published
- 2014
3. Club 35 Poster Session Wednesday 11 December: 11/12/2013, 09: 30–16: 00Location: Poster area
- Author
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Luo, XX, Fang, F, Lee, PW, Zhang, ZH, Lam, YY, Sanderson, JE, Kwong, J SW, and Yu, CM
- Published
- 2013
4. Club 35 Poster session Friday 7 December: Dobutamine stress echo
- Author
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Luo, XX, Fang, F, Lee, A PW, Lam, YY, Sanderson, J E, Kwong, J SW, and Yu, CM
- Published
- 2012
5. Poster session: Dobutamine stress echo
- Author
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Wang, S, Lam, YY, Liu, M, Fang, F, Shang, Q, Luo, XX, Wang, J, Sun, JP, Sanderson, JE, and Yu, CM
- Published
- 2012
6. P384Three-dimensional endocardial strain: a novel parameter for assessment of left ventricular systolic function in heart failure
- Author
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Luo, XX, Fang, F, Sun, JP, Xie, JM, Lee, APW, Zhang, Q, and Yu, CM
- Published
- 2011
7. Echocardiography update for primary care physicians: a review
- Author
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Chan, Jeffrey SK, primary, Tse, Gary, additional, Zhao, H, additional, Luo, XX, additional, Jin, CN, additional, Kam, Kevin, additional, Fan, YT, additional, and Lee, Alex PW, additional
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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8. Data Processing Approaches for the Measurements of Steam Pipe Networks in Iron and Steel Enterprises
- Author
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Yuan MZ(苑明哲), Wang H(王宏), Luo XX(罗先喜), and Li YZ(李跃忠)
- Subjects
Pipe network analysis ,Engineering ,Data processing ,Licensee ,Work (electrical) ,business.industry ,Forensic engineering ,Creative commons ,business ,Process engineering ,License - Abstract
© 2012 Xianxi et al., licensee InTech. This is an open access chapter distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. Data Processing Approaches for the Measurements of Steam Pipe Networks in Iron and Steel Enterprises
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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9. HIT Poster session 1P154Preclinical diastolic dysfunction is related to impaired endothelial function in patients with chronic kidney diseaseP155Early detection of left atrial and left ventricular abnormalities in hypertensive and obese womenP156Right ventricle preserved systolic function irrespective of right ventricular hypertrophy and disease severity in anderson fabry diseaseP157Left atrial volume and function in patients undergoing percutaneous mitral valve repairP158Impact of left ventricular dysfunction on outcomes of patients undergoing direct TAVI with a self-expanding bioprosthesisP159Anatomic Doppler spectrum – retrospective spectral tissue Doppler from ultra high frame rate tissue Doppler imaging for evaluation of tissue deformationP160Phasic dynamics of ischaemic mitral regurgitation after primary coronary intervention in acute myocardial infarction: serial echocardiographic assessment from emergency room to long-term follow-upP161Reproducibility of 3DE RV volumes - novel insights at a regional levelP162Pulmonary vascular capacitance as assessed by echocardiography in pulmonary arterial hypertensionP163Three-dimensional endocardial area strain: a novel parameter for quantitative assessment of global left ventricular systolic functionP164Role of exercise hemodynamics assessed by echocardiography on symptom reduction after MitraClipP165Early identification of ventricular dysfunction in patients with juvenile systemic sclerosisP166Heart failure with and without preserved ejection fraction - the role of biomarkers in the aspect of global longitudinal strainP167Complex systolic deformation of aortic root: insights from two dimensional speckle tracking imageP168Volumetric and deformational imaging usind 2d strain and 3d echocardiography in patients with pulmonary hypertensionP169Influence of pressure load and right ventricular morphology and function on tricuspid regurgitation in pulmonary arterial hypertensionP170Left ventricular myocardial diastolic deformation analysis by 2D speckle tracking echocardiography and relationship with conventional diastolic parameters in chronic aortic regurgitationP171Extracellular volume, and not native T1 time, distinguishes diffuse fibrosis in dilated or hypertrophic cardiomyopathy at 3TP172Left atrial strain is significantly reduced in arterial hypertensionP173Symptomatic severe secondary mitral regurgitation: LV enddiastolic diameter (LVEDD) as preferable parameter for risk stratificationP174Left ventricular mechanics in isolated left bundle branch block at rest and when exercising: exploration of the concept of conductive cardiomyopathyP175Assessment of myocardial scar by 2D contrast echocardiographyP176Chronic pericarditis - expression of a rare disease: Erdheim Chester diseaseP177Aortic arch mechanics with two-dimensional speckle tracking echocardiography to estimate the left ventricular remodelling in hypertensive patientsP178Strain analysis by tissue doppler imaging: comparison of conventional manual measurement with a semi-automated approachP179Distribution of extravascular lung water in heart failure patients assessed by lung ultrasoudP180Surrogate markers for obstructive coronary artery diseaseP181LA deformation and LV longitudinal strain by two-dimensional speckle tracking echocardiography as predictors of postoperative AF development after aortic valve replacement in ASP182Left ventricular diastolic dysfunction in type 2 diabetic patients with non alcoholic fatty liver diseaseP183Myocardial strain by speckle-tracking and evaluation of 3D ejection fraction in drug-induced cardiotoxicity's approach in breast cancer
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Gevaert, AB, primary, Borizanova, A, primary, Graziani, F, primary, Galuszka, O M, primary, Stathogiannis, K, primary, Lervik Nilsen, L C, primary, Nishino, S, primary, Willis, J, primary, Venner, C, primary, Luo, XX, primary, Van De Heyning, C M, primary, Castaldi, B, primary, Michalski, BW, primary, Wang, TL, primary, Aktemur, T, primary, Dorlet, S, primary, Verseckaite, R, primary, Amzulescu, MS, primary, Brecht, A, primary, Brand, M, primary, Galli, E, primary, Murzilli, R, primary, Bica, R, primary, Teixeira, R, primary, Schmid, J, primary, Miglioranza, MH, primary, Cherneva, ZH, primary, Gheghici, S, primary, Pernigo, M, primary, Rafael, D, primary, Van Craenenbroeck, AH, additional, Shivalkar, B, additional, Lemmens, K, additional, Vrints, CJ, additional, Van Craenenbroeck, EM, additional, Somleva, D, additional, Zlatareva- Gronkova, N, additional, Kinova, E, additional, Goudev, A, additional, Camporeale, A, additional, Pieroni, M, additional, Pedicino, D, additional, Laurito, MP, additional, Verrecchia, E, additional, Lanza, GA, additional, Manna, R, additional, Crea, F, additional, Reinthaler, M, additional, Rutschow, S, additional, Gross, M, additional, Landmesser, U, additional, Kasner, M, additional, Toutouzas, K, additional, Drakopoulou, M, additional, Latsios, G, additional, Synetos, A, additional, Kaitozis, O, additional, Trantalis, G, additional, Mastrokostopoulos, A, additional, Kotronias, R, additional, Tousoulis, D, additional, Brekke, BB, additional, Aase, SA, additional, Lonnebakken, MT, additional, Stensvag, D, additional, Amundsen, B, additional, Torp, H, additional, Stoylen, A, additional, Watanabe, N, additional, Kimura, T, additional, Nakama, T, additional, Furugen, M, additional, Koiwaya, H, additional, Ashikaga, K, additional, Kuriyama, N, additional, Shibata, Y, additional, Augustine, DX, additional, Knight, D, additional, Sparey, J, additional, Coghlan, G, additional, Easaw, J, additional, Huttin, O, additional, Voilliot, D, additional, Mercy, M, additional, Villemin, T, additional, Olivier, A, additional, Mandry, D, additional, Chaouat, A, additional, Juilliere, Y, additional, Selton-Suty, C, additional, Fang, F, additional, Li, S, additional, Zhang, ZH, additional, Yu, CM, additional, Bertrand, PB, additional, De Maeyer, C, additional, De Bock, D, additional, Paelinck, BP, additional, Claeys, MJ, additional, Reffo, E, additional, Balzarin, M, additional, Zulian, F, additional, Milanesi, O, additional, Miskowiec, D, additional, Kupczynska, K, additional, Peczek, L, additional, Nawrot, B, additional, Lipiec, P, additional, Kasprzak, JD, additional, Li, H, additional, Jin, XY, additional, Poci, N, additional, Kaymaz, C, additional, Venner, C, additional, Manenti, V, additional, Carillo, S, additional, Chabot, F, additional, Mizariene, V, additional, Rimkeviciute, D, additional, Bieseviciene, M, additional, Jonkaitiene, R, additional, Jurkevicius, R, additional, Roy, C, additional, Slimani, A, additional, Boileau, L, additional, De Meester, C, additional, Vancraeynest, D, additional, Pasquet, A, additional, Vanoverschelde, JL, additional, Pouleur, AC, additional, Gerber, BL, additional, Oertelt-Prigione, S, additional, Seeland, U, additional, Ruecke, M, additional, Regitz-Zagrosek, V, additional, Stangl, V, additional, Knebel, F, additional, Laux, D, additional, Roeing, J, additional, Butz, T, additional, Christ, M, additional, Grett, M, additional, Wennemann, R, additional, Trappe, H- J, additional, Fournet, M, additional, Leclercq, C, additional, Samset, E, additional, Daubert, J-C, additional, Donal, E, additional, Leo, LA, additional, Pasotti, E, additional, Klersy, C, additional, Moccetti, T, additional, Faletra, FF, additional, Dobre, D, additional, Darmon, S, additional, Dumitrescu, S, additional, Calistru, P, additional, Monteiro, R, additional, Ribeiro, M, additional, Garcia, J, additional, Cardim, N, additional, Goncalves, L, additional, Kaufmann, R, additional, Grubler, MR, additional, Verheyen, N, additional, Weidemann, F, additional, Binder, JS, additional, Santanna, RT, additional, Rover, MM, additional, Leiria, T, additional, Kalil, R, additional, Picano, E, additional, Gargani, L, additional, Kuneva, ZK, additional, Vasilev, DV, additional, Ianula, R, additional, Dasoveanu, M, additional, Calin, C, additional, Homentcovsci, C, additional, Siliste, R, additional, Bergamini, C, additional, Mantovani, A, additional, Bonapace, S, additional, Lipari, P, additional, Barbieri, E, additional, Bonora, E, additional, Targher, G, additional, Camarozano, AC, additional, Pereira Da Cunha, CL, additional, Padilha, SL, additional, Souza, AM, additional, and Freitas, AKE, additional
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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10. Effect of qiming granule on retinal blood circulation of diabetic retinopathy: a multicenter clinical trial.
- Author
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Luo XX, Duan JG, Liao PZ, Wu L, Yu YG, Qiu B, Wang YL, Li YM, Yin ZQ, Liu XL, and Yao K
- Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To objectively assess the effect of Qiming Granule in the treatment of diabetic retinopathy (DR) by fluorescence fundus angiography (FFA). METHODS: In a multi-center, randomized, parallel controlled clinical trial, patients with DR were randomly assigned to the control group (calcium dobesilate capsule) and the test group (Qiming Granule). Changes in the retinal blood circulation time were recorded by FFA after 3 months of medication. RESULTS: Significant reduction was observed in the retinal arterio-venous circulation time (AVCT) in both groups (P<0.01), the value was 7.635+/-3.149 s before treatment and 5.165 +/-3.382 s after treatment in the treated group, and 7.737+/-3.413 s and 5.313+/-3.472 s in the control group respectively. Qiming Granule also reduced the arm-to-retinal circulation time (ARCT, P<0.05). The value was 17.867+/-3.872 s before treatment and 15.643+/-4.648 s after treatment in the treated group, and 17.217+/-3.833 s and 16.312+/-3.613 s in the control group (P>0.05) respectively. The ARCT in the tested group was reduced, with a statistically significant difference post-medication (P<0.01). CONCLUSION: As a Chinese medicine complex prescription, Qiming Granule may alleviate retinal hypoxia and ischemia by increasing retinal blood flow and improving the blood circulation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2009
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11. HIT Poster session 1
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Gevaert, AB, Van Craenenbroeck, AH, Shivalkar, B, Lemmens, K, Vrints, CJ, Van Craenenbroeck, EM, Borizanova, A, Somleva, D, Zlatareva- Gronkova, N, Kinova, E, Goudev, A, Graziani, F, Camporeale, A, Pieroni, M, Pedicino, D, Laurito, MP, Verrecchia, E, Lanza, GA, Manna, R, Crea, F, Galuszka, O M, Reinthaler, M, Rutschow, S, Gross, M, Landmesser, U, Kasner, M, Stathogiannis, K, Toutouzas, K, Drakopoulou, M, Latsios, G, Synetos, A, Kaitozis, O, Trantalis, G, Mastrokostopoulos, A, Kotronias, R, Tousoulis, D, Lervik Nilsen, L C, Brekke, BB, Aase, SA, Lonnebakken, MT, Stensvag, D, Amundsen, B, Torp, H, Stoylen, A, Nishino, S, Watanabe, N, Kimura, T, Nakama, T, Furugen, M, Koiwaya, H, Ashikaga, K, Kuriyama, N, Shibata, Y, Willis, J, Augustine, DX, Knight, D, Sparey, J, Coghlan, G, Easaw, J, Venner, C, Huttin, O, Voilliot, D, Mercy, M, Villemin, T, Olivier, A, Mandry, D, Chaouat, A, Juilliere, Y, Selton-Suty, C, Luo, XX, Fang, F, Li, S, Zhang, ZH, Yu, CM, Van De Heyning, C M, Bertrand, PB, De Maeyer, C, De Bock, D, Paelinck, BP, Vrints, CJ, Claeys, MJ, Castaldi, B, Reffo, E, Balzarin, M, Zulian, F, Milanesi, O, Michalski, BW, Miskowiec, D, Kupczynska, K, Peczek, L, Nawrot, B, Lipiec, P, Kasprzak, JD, Wang, TL, Li, H, Jin, XY, Aktemur, T, Poci, N, Kaymaz, C, Dorlet, S, Huttin, O, Voilliot, D, Venner, C, Villemin, T, Manenti, V, Carillo, S, Chabot, F, Juilliere, Y, Selton-Suty, C, Verseckaite, R, Mizariene, V, Rimkeviciute, D, Bieseviciene, M, Jonkaitiene, R, Jurkevicius, R, Amzulescu, MS, Roy, C, Slimani, A, Boileau, L, De Meester, C, Vancraeynest, D, Pasquet, A, Vanoverschelde, JL, Pouleur, AC, Gerber, BL, Brecht, A, Oertelt-Prigione, S, Seeland, U, Ruecke, M, Regitz-Zagrosek, V, Stangl, V, Knebel, F, Brand, M, Laux, D, Roeing, J, Butz, T, Christ, M, Grett, M, Wennemann, R, Trappe, H- J, Galli, E, Fournet, M, Leclercq, C, Samset, E, Daubert, J-C, Donal, E, Murzilli, R, Leo, LA, Pasotti, E, Klersy, C, Moccetti, T, Faletra, FF, Bica, R, Dobre, D, Darmon, S, Dumitrescu, S, Calistru, P, Teixeira, R, Monteiro, R, Ribeiro, M, Garcia, J, Cardim, N, Goncalves, L, Schmid, J, Kaufmann, R, Grubler, MR, Verheyen, N, Weidemann, F, Binder, JS, Miglioranza, MH, Santanna, RT, Rover, MM, Leiria, T, Kalil, R, Picano, E, Gargani, L, Cherneva, ZH, Kuneva, ZK, Vasilev, DV, Gheghici, S, Ianula, R, Dasoveanu, M, Calin, C, Homentcovsci, C, Siliste, R, Pernigo, M, Bergamini, C, Mantovani, A, Bonapace, S, Lipari, P, Barbieri, E, Bonora, E, Targher, G, Rafael, D, Camarozano, AC, Pereira Da Cunha, CL, Padilha, SL, Souza, AM, and Freitas, AKE
- Abstract
Background: Preclinical diastolic dysfunction is highly prevalent in the aging population, but mechanisms for progression into heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF) are still obscure. Recently, microvascular endothelial inflammation and endothelial dysfunction (ED) were advocated as primum movens in the development of HFpEF. Purpose: We aimed to evaluate whether ED and arterial stiffness relate to diastolic and other structural and functional cardiac parameters. This was studied in patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD), known to be prone to diastolic dysfunction and left ventricular hypertrophy. Methods: Consecutive CKD patients, without concomitant cardiovascular disease, were included. Diastolic parameters were assessed by cardiac ultrasound using E/
e ´ ratio and left atrial volume index (LAVi). Also, left ventricular mass index (LVMi) and interventricular septum thickness (IVSd) were included. Endothelial function was evaluated by flow-mediated dilation (FMD) of the brachial artery induced by hyperaemia. Arterial stiffness was assessed by measuring carotid-femoral pulsed wave velocity (PWV). Results: After exclusion of patients with normal diastolic function (n=11), 52 patients (age 53.9 ± 12.8 years, 53.2% male) were assessed, of whom 36 underwent a second analysis after 3 months (total measurements 88). Mean creatinin clearance (eGFR) was 42.9 ± 23.2 ml/min/1.73m2. Comorbidities included arterial hypertension (90.4%) and diabetes mellitus (9.6%). Mean Framingham Heart score was 18.9% ± 18.7. Endothelial function was impaired (FMD 4.64% ± 2.61), and patients showed increased arterial stiffness (PWV 8.96 m/s ± 2.18). Ratio of E/e ´ was elevated (>12) in 36.4% of measurements. LVMi was raised in 28.4%, and LAVi was elevated in 45.1%. Patients with E/e ´ >12 had impaired FMD (p=0.005) and elevated PWV (p=0.047). In bivariate correlation analysis, FMD correlated with E/e ´ (r=-0.289, p=0.010) and with IVSd (r=-0.315, p=0.005). PWV did not show a relation with any of the diastolic indices (all p>0.05). In a multiple linear regression model, accounting for age, sex, smoking, eGFR, and PWV, FMD remained independently associated to E/e ´ (ß=-0.279, p=0.011) and IVSd (ß=-0.232, p=0.026). Conclusions: In CKD patients with preclinical diastolic dysfunction, impaired endothelial function correlates with higher filling pressures and structural cardiac changes. This observation supports the paradigm that ED plays a role in the pathophysiology of diastolic dysfunction, even in an asymptomatic stage.- Published
- 2015
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12. Poster session 4
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Parisi, V, Ferro, G, Bevilacqua, A, Caruso, A, Grimaldi, G, Rengo, G, Leosco, D, Ferrara, N, Yan, B P Y, Lai, KH, Chan, MYT, Lam, DYY, Fong, KNY, Chau, C, Fok, MHL, Kam, K, Tam, GM, Lee, PW, Takeuchi, H, Angelis, A, Aggeli, K, Ioakeimidis, N, Felekos, I, Abdelrasoul, M, Aznaouridis, K, Rokas, K, Vlachopoulos, C, Tousoulis, D, Cano Carrizal, R, Casanova Rodriguez, C, Prieto Moriche, E, Iglesias Del Valle, D, Cadenas Chamorro, R, De Juan Baguda, J, Martin-Penato Molina, A, Paredes Gonzalez, B, Garcia Garcia, A, Plaza Perez, I, Caiani, EG, Arbeille, P, Massabuau, P, Colombo, F, Ferri, G, Kasswat, C, Medvedofsky, D, Lang, RM, Vaida, P, Kuznetsov, VA, Yaroslavskaya, EI, Krinochkin, DV, Pushkarev, GS, Gorbatenko, EA, Bruno, RM, Bianchini, E, Di Lascio, N, Stea, F, Ujka, K, Marabotti, A, Dangelo, GS, Ghiadoni, L, Pratali, L, Zemedkun, M, Wang, Z, Asch, FM, Niki, K, Sugawara, M, Yauchi, S, Inoue, K, Yagawa, M, Takamisawa, I, Umemura, J, Yoshikawa, T, Sumiyoshi, T, Tomoike, H, Christov, G, Saundankar, J, Perdreau, E, Mukasa, T, Shah, V, Klein, N, Brogan, P, Marek, J, Batalli, A, Ibrahimi, P, Ahmeti, A, Haliti, E, Bytyci, I, Poniku, A, Henein, MY, Bajraktari, G, Luo, XX, Fang, F, Gan, SF, Ma, Z, Yu, CM, Gonella, A, Conte, E, Morena, L, Riva, L, Civelli, D, Losardo, L, Canepari, ME, Castellino, C, Grasso, M, Margaria, F, Massoure, P L, Camus, O, Gabaudan, C, Desmots, F, Fourcade, L, Jacquier, A, Divchev, D, Weippert, M, Schmidt, P, Gettel, H, Neugebauer, A, Behrens, K, Braumann, K-M, Wolfarth, B, Nienaber, CA, Rodriguez Gonzalez, E, Monivas Palomero, V, Mingo Santos, S, Restrepo Cordoba, MA, Goirigolzarri Artaza, J, Gomez Bueno, M, Garcia Izquierdo, E, Serrano Fiz, S, Gonzalez Roman, A, Segovia Cubero, J, Pila-On, SASTRA, Atmadikoesoemah, C, Soesanto, A, Andriantoro, H, Kowallick, J T, Morton, G, Lamata, P, Jogiya, R, Kutty, S, Lotz, J, Hasenfuss, G, Nagel, E, Chiribiri, A, Schuster, A, Jung, IH, Moon, JG, Byun, YS, Kim, TH, Park, SH, Seo, HS, Wellnhofer, E, Kriatselis, C, Gerds-Li, JH, Kropf, M, Pieske, B, Graefe, M, Eldeep, M, Marghany, K, Mokarrab, M, Albaz, M, Marcos-Alberca Moreno, P, Perez-Isla, L, Palacios, J, Gomez De Diego, JJ, De Agustin, JA, Luaces, M, Mahia, P, Arrazola, J, Garcia-Fernandez, MA, Macaya, C, Attenhofer Jost, C H, Mueller, P, Naegeli, B, Levis, P, Amann, FW, Seifert, B, Maurer, D, Bertel, O, Caspar, T, Samet, H, Jesel, L, Petit-Eisenmann, H, Trinh, A, Talha, S, Morel, O, Ohlmann, P, Leao, S, Cordeiro, F, Magalhaes, P, Moz, M, Trigo, J, Mateus, P, Fontes, P, Moreira, I, Sharif, D, Matanis, W, Sharif-Rasslan, A, Sharif, Y, Rosenschein, U, Faustino, M, Bravo Baptista, S, Freitas, A, Bicho Augusto, J, Leal, P, Nedio, M, Antunes, C, Farto E Abreu, P, Gil, V, Morais, C, Nguyen, VT, Cimadevilla, C, Arangalage, D, Dehoux, M, Dreyfus, J, Codogno, I, Duval, X, Huart, V, Vahanian, A, Messika-Zeitoun, D, Cakmak, HA, Aslan, S, Erturk, M, Ornek, V, Tosu, AR, Kalkan, AK, Ozturk, D, Tasbulak, O, Avci, Y, Gul, M, Cioffi, G, Mazzone, C, Di Nora, C, Barbati, G, Ognibene, F, Nistri, S, Tarantini, L, Pulignano, G, Di Lenarda, A, Faggiano, P, Nishimura, S, Izumi, C, Amano, M, Miyake, M, Tamura, T, Kondo, H, Kaitani, K, Nakagawa, Y, Rosa, I, Ancona, F, Stella, S, Marini, C, Spartera, M, Barletta, M, Pavon, AG, Margonato, A, Agricola, E, Arangalage, D, Nguyen, V, Robert, T, Melissopoulou, M, Mathieu, T, Codogno, I, Cimadevilla, C, Dehoux, M, Vahanian, A, Messika-Zeitoun, D, Rahman, MT, Zito, C, Longobardo, L, Cusma Piccione, M, Zucco, M, D'angelo, M, Rivetti, L, Carerj, ML, Boretti, I, Calabro, MP, Carerj, S, Lozano Granero, VC, Rodriguez Munoz, D, Carbonell San Roman, A, Moya Mur, JL, Hinojar, R, Gonzalez, A, Casas, E, Jimenez Nacher, JJ, Fernandez-Golfin, C, Zamorano Gomez, JL, Gripari, P, Tamborini, G, Muratori, M, Ghulam Ali, S, Fusini, L, Alamanni, F, Pepi, M, Keramida, K, Bellamy, M, Dawson, D, Nihoyannopoulos, P, Solowjowa, N, Musayeva, L, Hrytsyna, Y, Knosalla, CH, Falk, V, Muraru, D, Maddalozzo, A, Jenei, C, Dequal, D, Veronesi, F, Aruta, P, Romeo, G, Iliceto, S, Badano, L, Gursoy, MO, Kalcik, M, Ozkan, M, Astarcioglu, MA, Gokdeniz, T, Yesin, M, Karakoyun, S, Gunduz, S, Tuncer, MA, Koksal, C, Cresti, A, Chiavarelli, M, Guerrini, F, D'aiello, N, Albano, A, De Sensi, F, Picchi, A, Cesareo, F, Severi, S, Braga, M, Nascimento, H, Flores, L, Ribeiro, V, Melao, F, Dias, P, Maciel, MJ, Bettencourt, P, Ferreiro Quero, C, Delgado Ortega, M, Puentes Chiachio, M, Mesa Rubio, M D, Ruiz Ortiz, M, Duran Jimenez, E, Sanchez Fernandez, J, Morenate Navio, C, Pan, M, Suarez De Lezo, J, Jansen, R, Agostoni, P, Stella, PR, Nijhoff, F, Ramjankhan, FZ, Suyker, WJ, Chamuleau, SAJ, Scislo, P, Huczek, Z, Kochman, J, Rymuza, B, Kochanowski, J, Scisbisz, A, Piatkowski, R, Opolski, G, Ray, R, Knott, K, Smith, D, Rodriguez, A, Finocchiaro, G, Sharma, R, Veiga, C, Calvo Iglesias, F, Paredes-Galan, E, Pazos, Pablo, Romo, Andres Iniguez, Ageing, Disease, Cardiovascular, Krejci, J, Hude, P, Ozabalova, E, Zampachova, V, Mlejnek, D, Sochorova, D, Spinarova, L, Wess, G, Klueser, L, Holler, PJ, Simak, J, Kuechenhoff, H, Vago, H, Czimbalmos, CS, Toth, A, Csecs, I, Kecskes, K, Suhai, F, Kiss, O, Simor, T, Becker, D, Merkely, B, Hinojar, R, Fernandez-Golfin, C, Portugal, JC, Esteban, A, Megias, A, Ruiz Leria, S, Rincon, LM, Jimenez-Nacher, JJ, Zamorano, JL, Dejgaard, LA, Haland, T, Lie, OH, Massey, R, Edvardsen, T, Haugaa, KH, Pavlyukova, EN, Evtushenko, VA, Smushlyaev, KA, Karpov, RS, Zaroui, A, Asmi, MONIA, Ben Said, RYM, Zidi, WIEM, Wali, SANA, Feki, M, Mourali, MS, Kaabachi, NEZIHZ, Mechmeche, RACHID, Labarre, Q, Garcia, R, Degand, B, Christiaens, L, Coisne, D, Csecs, I, Czimbalmos, CS, Toth, A, Suhai, F I, Pozsonyi, Z, Becker, D, Simor, T, Merkely, B, Vago, H, Maceira Gonzalez, A M, Tuset, L, Ripoll, C, Cosin-Sales, J, Igual, B, Salazar, J, Belloch, V, Coisne, D, Viera, F, Labarre, Q, Garcia, R, Degand, B, Christiaens, L, Rodriguez Gonzalez, E, Monivas Palomero, V, Mingo Santos, S, Restrepo Cordoba, MA, Goirigolzarri Artaza, J, Gomez Bueno, M, Serrano Fiz, S, Gonzalez Roman, A, Garcia Izquierdo Jaen, E, Segovia Cubero, J, Rojek, A, Chrostowska, M, Dudziak, M, Narkiewicz, K, Grapsa, J, Tan, TC, Dawson, D, Nihoyannopoulos, P, Methia, N, Cioffi, G, Viapiana, O, Ognibeni, F, Dalbeni, A, Gatti, D, Di Nora, C, Mazzone, C, Faganello, G, Di Lenarda, A, Rossini, M, Styczynski, G, Milewska, A, Marczewska, M, Sobieraj, P, Sobczynska, M, Dabrowski, M, Kuch-Wocial, A, Szmigielski, C A, Czimbalmos, C, Vago, H, Csecs, I, Toth, A, Suhai, F I, Kiss, O, Sydo, N, Becker, D, Simor, T, Merkely, B, Konopka, M, Burkhard-Jagodzinska, K, Krol, W, Jakubiak, A, Aniol-Strzyzewska, K, Sitkowski, D, Dluzniewski, M, Braksator, W, Sturmberger, T, Eder, V, Ebner, C, Winter, S, Martinek, M, Puererfellner, H, Aichinger, J, Sormani, P, Rusconi, C, Zancanella, M, Peritore, A, De Chiara, B, Spano, F, Vallerio, P, Cairoli, R, Giannattasio, C, Moreo, A, Siliste, RN, Chitroceanu, A, Ianula, R, Spataru, D, Isacoff, D, Rodrigues, AC, Monaco, C, Guimaraes, L, Cordovil, R, Piveta, R, Franca, L, Fischer, CH, Vieira, M, Lira, E, Morhy, S, Antonielli, E, Pizzuti, A, Dogliani, S, Mabritto, B, Bassignana, A, Pancaldo, D, Doronzo, B, Evdoridis, C, Papasaikas, D, Sergi, E, Papadimitriou, D, Tolios, P, Papagiannis, G, Tzamou, V, Trikas, A, Scali, MC, Bombardini, T, Picano, E, Scali, MC, Bombardini, T, Salvadori, S, Costantino, MF, Picano, E, Scali, MC, Bombardini, T, Salvadori, S, Picano, E, Generati, G, Bandera, F, Pellegrino, M, Labate, V, Carbone, F, Alfonzetti, E, Guazzi, M, Rivetti, L, Cusma Piccione, M, Zito, C, D'angelo, M, Manganaro, R, Pizzino, F, Terrizzi, A, Quattrocchi, S, Ioppolo, A, Carerj, S, Giga, V, Boskovic, N, Stepanovic, J, Beleslin, B, Nedeljkovic, I, Dobric, M, Djordjevic-Dikic, A, Popovic, D, Petrovic, I, Banovic, M, Lasica, R, Pesic, V, Plecas - Solarovic, B, Vidojevic, D, Djordjevic, T, Orovic, M, Vujisic - Tesic, B, Bordonaro, V, Buccheri, S, Bottari, VE, Romano, C, Atanasio, FA, Tamburino, C, Monte, I P, Korchi, F, Kassongo, A, Meimoun, P, De Zuttere, D, Lardoux, HERVE, Zoppellaro, G, Venneri, L, Khattar, RS, Li, W, Senior, R, Casanova Rodriguez, C, Cano Carrizal, R, Cadenas Chamorro, R, Iglesias Del Valle, D, Prieto Moriche, E, Garcia Garcia, A, Martin Penato Molina, A, De Juan Baguda, J, Paredes Gonzalez, B, Plaza Perez, I, Sreekumar, P, Manjunath, CN, Ravindranath, KS, Dhanalakshmi, CD, Ranjbar, S, Karvandi, M, Ranjbar, F, Ghaffaripour Jahromi, M, Hassantash, SA, Foroughi, M, Maurea, N, Coppola, C, Piscopo, G, Galletta, F, Maurea, C, Esposito, E, Barbieri, A, Riccio, G, De Laurentiis, M, De Lorenzo, C, Strachinaru, M, De Jong, N, Geleijnse, ML, Van Dalen, BM, Vos, HJ, Keramida, K, Kouris, N, Dawson, D, Olympios, CD, Nihoyannopoulos, P, Rodriguez Munoz, D, Carbonell San Roman, A, Lozano Granero, C, Moya Mur, JL, Fernandez-Golfin, C, Moreno Planas, J, Casas Rojo, E, Fernandez Santos, S, Hernandez-Madrid, A, Zamorano Gomez, JL, D'auria, F, Leone, R, Itri, F, Del Negro, G, Colombino, M, Masiello, P, Longobardi, A, Rosapepe, F, Iesu, S, Di Benedetto, G, Capotosto, L, D'orazio, S, Ashurov, R, Continanza, G, Mangieri, E, Terzano, C, Vitarelli, A, Seo, J, Cho, IJ, Chang, HJ, Hong, GR, Ha, JW, Chung, NS, Shim, CY, Bianco, F, Cicchitti, V, Radico, F, Conti, M, Bucciarelli, V, Marchetti, M, Tonti, G, De Caterina, R, Di Girolamo, E, Gallina, S, Plokhova, EV, Akasheva, D, Tkacheva, O, Strazhesko, I, Dudinskaya, E, Pokshubina, I, Pykhtina, V, Kruglikova, A, Brailova, N, Boytsov, S, Weng, K-P, Lin, CC, Wahba Hassanein, M, Ashour, Z A, Bakhoum, S W G, Abdel Wahab, A M A, Hussein, EKHLAS, Saad, ZIZI, Malik, RAUOOF, Almasswary, ADEL, Elrawy, M, Lo Iudice, F, Lembo, M, Muscariello, R, Carlomagno, F, Pivonello, R, Colao, A, Trimarco, B, Galderisi, M, Purwowiyoto, S L, Santoso, A, Soesanto, A M, Indonesia), PERKI (Perhimpunan Dokter Spesialis Kardiovaskular, Segura De La Cal, T, Moya Mur, JL, Garcia Martin, A, Carbonell, S, Fraile Sanz, C, Rincon, LM, Rodriguez Munoz, DA, Jimenez Nacher, JJ, Fernandez-Golfin, C, Zamorano, JL, Ongun, A, Habibova, U, Gerede, DM, Dincer, I, Kilickap, M, Erol, C, Nouhravesh, N, Andersen, HU, Jensen, JS, Rossing, P, Jensen, MT, Gasior, Z, Dabek, J, Balys, M, Glogowska-Rygus, J, and Pysz, P
- Abstract
Purpose: Epicardial adipose tissue (EAT) thickness, measured by echocardiography, is associated to the presence of coronary artery disease (CAD) and severe aortic stenosis (AS). EAT thickness is commonly referred as the diameter of the echo-free space between the right ventricular wall and the visceral layer of the pericardium in parasternal long axis view, using the aortic annulus as an anatomic landmark (EAT-1). We aimed to demonstrate that the direct measurement of the adipose tissue thickness visualized in the space between the ascending aorta and the right ventricle (EAT-2) might be considered an alternative method. Methods: We measured EAT-1 and EAT-2 in 130 pts with severe cardiac disease referred for cardiac surgery: 53 pts with isolated AS, 49 pts with severe CAD, and 28 pts with both severe AS and CAD (AS+CAD); and in 50 control subjects matched for age, sex and BMI. The two measurements were obtained at end-systole in 3 cardiac cycles (figure). Results. Both EAT-1 and EAT-2 measurements had an excellent reproducibility. With respect to controls pts had significantly increased EAT-1 (2,4 ± 0,5mm vs 6 ± 2mm; p<0,05) and EAT-2 (3 ± 1,2mm vs 12 ± 3mm; p<0,05). EAT-1 and EAT-2 were not statistically different in controls. EAT-2 was significantly higher than EAT-1 in CAD, AS, and AS+CAD pts (p<0,05). Interestingly, EAT-2, but not EAT-1, was significantly increased in AS+CAD pts with respect to EAT-2 of pts with isolated AS and isolated CAD. Conclusions: Our data demonstrate that EAT-2, as well as EAT-1, is a valuable method to measure EAT thickness. Further, EAT-2 seems to better recognize EAT increase, in pts with AS+CAD. Comprehensively, EAT-2 is greater than EAT-1. The larger space between ascending aorta and right ventricle, allowing EAT expansion, could justify our observation.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Poster session 1: Wednesday 3 December 2014, 09:00-16:00 * Location: Poster area
- Author
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Tong, L, Huang, C, Ramalli, A, Tortoli, P, Luo, J, D'hooge, J, Tzemos, N, Mordi, I, Bishay, T, Bishay, T, Negishi, T, Hristova, K, Kurosawa, K, Bansal, M, Thavendiranathan, P, Yuda, S, Popescu, BA, Vinereanu, D, Penicka, M, Marwick, TH, study, SUCCOUR, Hamed, W, Kamel, MKA, Yaseen, RIY, El-Barbary, HSE, Nemes, A, Kis, O, Gavaller, H, Kanyo, E, Forster, T, Angelis, A, Vlachopoulos, C, Ioakimidis, N, Felekos, I, Chrysohoou, C, Aznaouridis, K, Abdelrasoul, M, Terentes, D, Ageli, K, Stefanadis, C, Kurnicka, K, Domienik-Karlowicz, J, Lichodziejewska, B, Goliszek, S, Grudzka, K, Krupa, M, Dzikowska-Diduch, O, Ciurzynski, M, Pruszczyk, P, Gual Capllonch, F, Lopez Ayerbe, J, Teis, A, Ferrer, E, Vallejo, N, Junca, G, Pla, R, Bayes-Genis, A, Schwaiger, JP, Knight, DS, Gallimore, A, Schreiber, BE, Handler, C, Coghlan, JG, Bruno, R M, Giardini, G, Malacrida, S, Catuzzo, B, Armenia, S, Brustia, R, Ghiadoni, L, Cauchy, E, Pratali, L, Kim, KH, Lee, KJ, Cho, JY, Yoon, HJ, Ahn, Y, Jeong, MH, Cho, JG, Park, JC, Cho, SK, Nastase, O, Enache, R, Mateescu, AD, Botezatu, D, Popescu, BA, Ginghina, C, Gu, H, Sinha, MD, Simpson, JM, Chowienczyk, PJ, Fazlinezhad, A, Tashakori Behesthi, AHMAD, Homaei, FATEME, Mostafavi, H, Hosseini, G, Bakaeiyan, M, Boutsikou, M, Petrou, E, Dimopoulos, A, Dritsas, A, Leontiadis, E, Karatasakis, G, Sahin, S T, Yurdakul, S, Yilmaz, N, Cengiz, B, Cagatay, Y, Aytekin, S, Yavuz, S, Karlsen, S, Dahlslett, T, Grenne, B, Sjoli, B, Smiseth, OA, Edvardsen, T, Brunvand, H, Nasr, G, Nasr, A, Eleraki, A, Elrefai, S, Mordi, I, Sonecki, P, Tzemos, N, Gustafsson, U, Naar, J, Stahlberg, M, Cerne, A, Capotosto, L, Rosato, E, D'angeli, I, Azzano, A, Truscelli, G, De Maio, M, Salsano, F, Terzano, C, Mangieri, E, Vitarelli, A, Renard, S, Najih, H, Mancini, J, Jacquier, A, Haentjens, J, Gaubert, JY, Habib, G, Caminiti, G, D'antoni, V, D'antoni, V, Cardaci, V, Cardaci, V, Conti, V, Conti, V, Volterrani, M, Volterrani, M, Ahn, J, Kim, DH, Lee, HO, Iliuta, L, Kim, SY, Ryu, S, Ko, CW, Pyun, YS, Yoon, SJ, Lo Iudice, F, Esposito, R, Lembo, M, Santoro, C, Ballo, PC, Mondillo, S, De Simone, G, Galderisi, M, Hwang, YM, Kim, JH, Kim, JH, Moon, KW, Yoo, KD, Kim, CM, Tagliamonte, E, Rigo, F, Cirillo, T, Caruso, A, Astarita, C, Cice, G, Quaranta, G, Romano, C, Capuano, N, Calabro', R, Zagatina, A, Zhuravskaya, N, Guseva, O, Huttin, O, Benichou, M, Voilliot, D, Venner, C, Micard, E, Girerd, N, Sadoul, N, Moulin, F, Juilliere, Y, Selton-Suty, C, Baron, T, Christersson, C, Johansson, K, Flachskampf, FA, Lee, S, Lee, J, Hur, S, Park, J, Yun, JY, Song, SK, Kim, WH, Ko, JK, Nyktari, E, Bilal, S, Ali, SA, Izgi, C, Prasad, SK, Aly, MFA, Kleijn, SAK, Kandil, HIK, Kamp, OK, Beladan, CC, Calin, A, Rosca, M, Craciun, AM, Gurzun, MM, Calin, C, Enache, R, Mateescu, A, Ginghina, C, Popescu, BA, Mornos, C, Mornos, A, Ionac, A, Cozma, D, Crisan, S, Popescu, I, Ionescu, G, Petrescu, L, Camacho, S, Gamaza Chulian, S, Carmona, R, Diaz, E, Giraldez, A, Gutierrez, A, Toro, R, Benezet, J, Antonini-Canterin, F, Vriz, O, La Carrubba, S, Poli, S, Leiballi, E, Zito, C, Careri, S, Caruso, R, Pellegrinet, M, Nicolosi, GL, Kong, W, Kyu, K, Wong, R, Tay, E, Yip, J, Yeo, TC, Poh, KK, Correia, M, Delgado, A, Marmelo, B, Correia, E, Abreu, L, Cabral, C, Gama, P, Santos, O, Rahman, MT, Borges, I P, Peixoto, ECS, Peixoto, RTS, Peixoto, RTS, Marcolla, VF, Okura, H, Kanai, M, Murata, E, Kataoka, T, Stoebe, S, Tarr, A, Pfeiffer, D, Hagendorff, A, Generati, G, Bandera, F, Pellegrino, M, Alfonzetti, E, Labate, V, Guazzi, M, Kuznetsov, VA, Yaroslavskaya, EI, Pushkarev, GS, Krinochkin, DV, Zyrianov, IP, Carigi, S, Baldazzi, F, Bologna, F, Amati, S, Venturi, P, Grosseto, D, Biagetti, C, Fabbri, E, Arlotti, M, Piovaccari, G, Rahbi, H, Bin Abdulhaq, A, Tleyjeh, I, Santoro, C, Galderisi, M, Costantino, MF, Tarsia, G, Innelli, P, Dores, E, Esposito, G, Matera, A, De Simone, G, Trimarco, B, Capotosto, L, Azzano, A, Mukred, K, Ashurov, R, Tanzilli, G, Mangieri, E, Vitarelli, A, Merlo, M, Gigli, M, Stolfo, D, Pinamonti, B, Antonini Canterin, F, Muca, M, D'angelo, GA, Scapol, S, Di Nucci, M, Sinagra, G, Behaghel, A, Feneon, D, Fournet, M, Thebault, C, Martins, RP, Mabo, P, Leclercq, C, Daubert, C, Donal, E, Davinder Pal, SINGH, Prakash Chand, NEGI, Sanjeev, ASOTRA, Rajeev, MERWAH, Ankur, DWIVED, Ram Gopal, SOOD, Mzoughi, K, Zairi, I, Jabeur, M, Ben Moussa, F, Ben Chaabene, A, Kamoun, S, Mrabet, K, Fennira, S, Zargouni, A, Kraiem, S, Demkina, AE, Hashieva, FM, Krylova, NS, Kovalevskaya, EA, Potehkina, NG, Zaroui, A, Ben Said, R, Smaali, S, Rekik, B, Ben Hlima, M, Mizouni, H, Mechmeche, R, Mourali, MS, Malhotra, A, Sheikh, N, Dhutia, H, Siva, A, Narain, R, Merghani, A, Millar, L, Walker, M, Sharma, S, Papadakis, M, Siam-Tsieu, V, Mansencal, N, Arslan, M, Deblaise, J, Dubourg, O, Zaroui, A, Rekik, B, Ben Said, R, Boudiche, S, Larbi, N, Tababi, N, Hannachi, S, Mechmeche, R, Mourali, MS, Mechmeche, R, Zaroui, A, Chalbia, T, Ben Halima, M, Rekik, B, Boussada, R, Mourali, MS, Chistyakova, M V, Govorin, AV, Radaeva, EV, Lipari, P, Bonapace, S, Valbusa, F, Rossi, A, Zenari, L, Lanzoni, L, Targher, G, Canali, G, Molon, G, Barbieri, E, Novo, G, Giambanco, S, Sutera, MR, Bonomo, V, Giambanco, F, Rotolo, A, Evola, S, Assennato, P, Novo, S, Budnik, M, Piatkowski, R, Kochanowski, J, Opolski, G, Chatzistamatiou, E, Mpampatseva Vagena, I, Manakos, K, Moustakas, G, Konstantinidis, D, Memo, G, Mitsakis, O, Kasakogias, A, Syros, P, Kallikazaros, I, Park, SM, Kim, SA, Kim, MN, Shim, WJ, Marketou, M, Parthenakis, F, Kalyva, N, Pontikoglou, CH, Maragkoudakis, S, Zacharis, E, Patrianakos, A, Maragoudakis, F, Papadaki, H, Vardas, P, Rodrigues, AC, Perandini, LA, Souza, TR, Sa-Pinto, AL, Borba, E, Arruda, AL, Furtado, M, Carvalho, F, Bonfa, E, Andrade, JL, Hlubocka, Z, Malinova, V, Palecek, T, Danzig, V, Kuchynka, P, Dostalova, G, Zeman, J, Linhart, A, Chatzistamatiou, E, Konstantinidis, D, Memo, G, Mpampatzeva Vagena, I, Moustakas, G, Manakos, K, Trachanas, K, Vergi, N, Feretou, A, Kallikazaros, I, Corut, H, Sade, LE, Ozin, B, Atar, I, Turgay, O, Muderrisoglu, H, Ledakowicz-Polak, A, Polak, L, Krauza, G, Zielinska, M, Szulik, M, Streb, W, Wozniak, A, Lenarczyk, R, Sliwinska, A, Kalarus, Z, Kukulski, T, Nogueira, MA, Branco, LM, Agapito, A, Galrinho, A, Borba, A, Teixeira, PP, Monteiro, AV, Ramos, R, Cacela, D, Cruz Ferreira, R, Guala, A, Camporeale, C, Tosello, F, Canuto, C, Ridolfi, L, Chatzistamatiou, E, Moustakas, G, Memo, G, Konstantinidis, D, Mpampatzeva Vagena, I, Manakos, K, Traxanas, K, Vergi, N, Feretou, A, Kallikazaros, I, Hristova, K, Marinov, R, Stamenov, G, Mihova, M, Persenska, S, Racheva, A, Plaskota, KJ, Trojnarska, O, Bartczak, A, Grajek, S, Ramush Bejiqi, RA, Retkoceri, R, Bejiqi, H, Beha, A, Surdulli, SH, Seya, M, Sasaoka, T, Hirasawa, K, Yoshikawa, S, Maejima, Y, Ashikaga, T, Hirao, K, Isobe, M, none, Dreyfus, J, Durand-Viel, G, Cimadevilla, C, Brochet, E, Vahanian, A, Messika-Zeitoun, D, Jin, CN, Fang, F, Meng, FX, Kam, K, Sun, JP, Tsui, GK, Wong, KK, Wan, S, Yu, CM, Lee, AP, Cho, I J, Chung, HM, Heo, R, Ha, SJ, Hong, GR, Shim, CY, Chang, HJ, Ha, JW, Chung, N, Moral, S, Gruosso, D, Galuppo, V, Teixido, G, Rodriguez-Palomares, JF, Gutierrez, L, Evangelista, A, Moral, S, Gruosso, D, Galuppo, V, Teixido, G, Rodriguez-Palomares, JF, Gutierrez, L, Evangelista, A, Moral, S, Gruosso, D, Galuppo, V, Teixido, G, Rodriguez-Palomares, JF, Gutierrez, L, Evangelista, A, Alexopoulos, Alexan, Dawson, David, Nihoyannopoulos, Petros, Zainal Abidin, H A, Ismail, JOHAN, Arshad, KAMAL, Ibrahim, ZUBIN, Lim, CW, Abd Rahman, E, Kasim, SAZZLI, Peteiro, J, Barrio, A, Escudero, A, Bouzas-Mosquera, A, Yanez, J, Martinez, D, Castro-Beiras, A, Scali, MC, Simioniuc, A, Mandoli, GE, Lombardo, A, Massaro, F, Di Bello, V, Marzilli, M, Dini, FL, Adachi, H, Tomono, J, Oshima, S, Merchan Ortega, G, Bravo Bustos, D, Lazaro Garcia, R, Sanchez Espino, AD, Macancela Quinones, JJ, Ikuta, I, Ruiz Lopez, MF, Valencia Serrano, FM, Bonaque Gonzalez, JC, Gomez Recio, M, Romano, G, D'ancona, G, Pilato, G, Di Gesaro, G, Clemenza, F, Raffa, G, Scardulla, C, Sciacca, S, Lancellotti, P, Pilato, M, Addetia, K, Takeuchi, M, Maffessanti, F, Weinert, L, Hamilton, J, Mor-Avi, V, Lang, RM, Sugano, A, Seo, Y, Watabe, H, Kakefuda, Y, Aihara, H, Nishina, H, Ishizu, T, Fumikura, Y, Noguchi, Y, Aonuma, K, Luo, XX, Fang, F, Lee, APW, Shang, Q, Yu, CM, Sammut, E C, Chabinok, R, Jackson, T, Siarkos, M, Lee, L, Carr-White, G, Rajani, R, Kapetanakis, S, Byrne, D, Walsh, JP, Ellis, L, Mckiernan, S, Norris, S, King, G, Murphy, RT, Hristova, K, Katova, TZ, Simova, I, Kostova, V, Shuie, I, Ferferieva, V, Bogdanova, V, Castelon, X, Nemes, A, Sasi, V, Domsik, P, Kalapos, A, Lengyel, C, Orosz, A, Forster, T, Grapsa, J, Demir, O, Dawson, D, Sharma, R, Senior, R, Nihoyannopoulos, P, Pilichowska, E, Zaborska, B, Baran, J, Stec, S, Kulakowski, P, Budaj, A, Herrera, J E, Palacios, I F, Mendoza, I, Marquez, J A, Herrera, J A, Octavio, J A, Dempaire, G, Rotolo, M, Kosmala, W, Kaye, G, Saito, M, Negishi, K, Marwick, TH, Maceira Gonzalez, A M, Ripoll, C, Cosin-Sales, J, Igual, B, Salazar, J, Belloch, V, Dulai, R S, Taylor, A, and Gupta, S
- Abstract
Purpose: We have previously demonstrated that multi-line transmit (MLT) beam forming can provide high quality full field-of-view (90° sector) B-mode images at very high frame rates, i.e. up to 500 fps. The purpose of this study was to test the feasibility of this technique in imaging the mechanical intraventricular waves such as the one associated with activation of the left ventricle. Methods: A dedicated pulse sequence using MLT was implemented on the ULA-OP research scanner equipped with a 2.0 MHz phased array to obtain 90° sector images at a frame rate of 436 fps. The left ventricle of a healthy volunteer was imaged from the apical 4 chamber view and the RF data was acquired. Subsequently, the strain rate was extracted from the RF data using a normalized cross-correlation method. Results: As expected, during the early filling phase, myocardium lengthening (positive strain rate) was observed propagating from the base of the septum to the apex and back (Figure a). A similar wave was detected in the lateral wall, although a brief shortening (negative strain rate) was detected in the mid-wall which could be the result of reverberations (Figure b). During isovolumetric contraction, the septal wall shortened before the lateral wall (as expected) - moreover - there seemed to be an intra-wall base-apex shortening gradient (Figure c and d). Conclusions: Our preliminary results show that visualization of the cardiac mechanical activation could be feasible using MLT based high frame rate imaging. Further research is required to examine this in depth, which is the topic of on-going work.
Figure Curved M-mode of strain rate - Published
- 2014
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14. Poster session 3: Thursday 4 December 2014, 14:00-18:00 * Location: Poster area
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Shahgaldi, K, Hegner, T, Da Silva, C, Fukuyama, A, Takeuchi, M, Uema, A, Kado, Y, Nagata, Y, Hayashi, A, Otani, K, Fukuda, S, Yoshitani, H, Otsuji, Y, Morhy, S, Lianza, AC, Afonso, TR, Oliveira, WA, Tavares, GP, Rodrigues, AC, Vieira, MC, Warth, AN, Deutsch, AD, Fischer, CH, Tezynska-Oniszk, I, Turska-Kmiec, A, Kawalec, W, Dangel, J, Maruszewski, B, Bokiniec, R, Burczynski, P, Borszewska-Kornacka, K, Ziolkowska, L, Zuk, M, Mazowsza, eSUM Dzieciaki, Troshina, A, Dzhalilova, DA, Poteshkina, NG, Hamitov, FF, Warita, S, Kawasaki, M, Tanaka, R, Yagasaki, H, Minatoguchi, S, Wanatabe, T, Ono, K, Noda, T, Wanatabe, S, Minatoguchi, S, Angelis, A, Ageli, K, Vlachopoulos, C, Felekos, I, Ioakimidis, N, Aznaouridis, K, Vaina, S, Abdelrasoul, M, Tsiamis, E, Stefanadis, C, Cameli, M, Sparla, S, D'ascenzi, F, Fineschi, M, Favilli, R, Pierli, C, Henein, M, Mondillo, S, Lindqvist, P, Tossavainen, E, Gonzalez, M, Soderberg, S, Henein, M, Holmgren, A, Strachinaru, M, Catez, E, Jousten, I, Pavel, O, Janssen, C, Morissens, M, Chatzistamatiou, E, Moustakas, G, Memo, G, Konstantinidis, D, Mpampatzeva Vagena, I, Manakos, K, Traxanas, K, Vergi, N, Feretou, A, Kallikazaros, I, Tsai, W-C, Sun, Y-T, Lee, W-H, Yang, L-T, Liu, Y-W, Lee, C-H, Li, W-T, Mizariene, V, Bieseviciene, M, Karaliute, R, Verseckaite, R, Vaskelyte, J, Lesauskaite, V, Chatzistamatiou, E, Mpampatseva Vagena, I, Manakos, K, Moustakas, G, Konstantinidis, D, Memo, G, Mitsakis, O, Kasakogias, A, Syros, P, Kallikazaros, I, Hristova, K, Cornelissen, G, Singh, RB, Shiue, I, Coisne, D, Madjalian, A-M, Tchepkou, C, Raud Raynier, P, Degand, B, Christiaens, L, Baldenhofer, G, Spethmann, S, Dreger, H, Sanad, W, Baumann, G, Stangl, K, Stangl, V, Knebel, F, Azzaz, S, Kacem, S, Ouali, S, Risos, L, Dedobbeleer, C, Unger, P, Sinem Cakal, SC, Elif Eroglu, EE, Baydar, O, Beytullah Cakal, BC, Mehmet Vefik Yazicioglu, MVY, Mustafa Bulut, MB, Cihan Dundar, CD, Kursat Tigen, KT, Birol Ozkan, BO, Ali Metin Esen, AME, Tournoux, F, Chequer, R, Sroussi, M, Hyafil, F, Rouzet, F, Leguludec, D, Baum, P, Stoebe, S, Pfeiffer, D, Hagendorff, A, Fang, F, Lau, M, Zhang, Q, Luo, XX, Wang, XY, Chen, L, Yu, CM, -CRT, Predict, Zaborska, B, Smarz, K, Makowska, E, Kulakowski, P, Budaj, A, Bengrid, T M, Zhao, Y, Henein, M Y, Caminiti, G, D'antoni, V, Cardaci, V, Conti, V, Volterrani, M, Warita, S, Kawasaki, M, Yagasaki, H, Minatoguchi, S, Nagaya, M, Ono, K, Noda, T, Watanabe, S, Houle, H, Minatoguchi, S, Gillebert, T C, Chirinos, J A, Claessens, T C, Raja, M W, De Buyzere, M L, Segers, P, Rietzschel, E R, Investigators, The Asklepios, Kim, KH, Cha, JJ, Chung, HM, Kim, JY, Yoon, YW, Lee, BK, Hong, BK, Rim, SJ, Kwon, HM, Choi, EY, Pyankov, V, Aljaroudi, W, Matta, S, Al-Shaar, L, Habib, R, Gharzuddin, W, Arnaout, S, Skouri, H, Jaber, W, Abchee, A, Bouzas Mosquera, A, Peteiro, J, Broullon, FJ, Constanso Conde, IP, Bescos Galego, H, Martinez Ruiz, D, Yanez Wonenburger, JC, Vazquez Rodriguez, JM, Alvarez Garcia, N, Castro Beiras, A, Gunyeli, E, Oliveira Da Silva, C, Shahgaldi, K, Manouras, A, Winter, R, Meimoun, P, Abouth, S, Martis, S, Boulanger, J, Elmkies, F, Zemir, H, Detienne, JP, Luycx-Bore, A, Clerc, J, Rodriguez Palomares, J F, Gutierrez, LG, Maldonado, GM, Garcia, GG, Galuppo, VG, Gruosso, DG, Teixido, GT, Gonzalez Alujas, MTGA, Evangelista, AE, Garcia Dorado, DGD, Rechcinski, T, Wierzbowska-Drabik, K, Wejner-Mik, P, Szymanska, B, Jerczynska, H, Lipiec, P, Kasprzak, JD, El-Touny, K, El-Fawal, S, Loutfi, M, El-Sharkawy, E, Ashour, S, Boniotti, C, Carminati, MC, Fusini, L, Andreini, D, Pontone, G, Pepi, M, Caiani, EG, Oryshchyn, N, Kramer, B, Hermann, S, Liu, D, Hu, K, Ertl, G, Weidemann, F, Ancona, F, Miyazaki, S, Slavich, M, Figini, F, Latib, A, Chieffo, A, Montorfano, M, Alfieri, O, Colombo, A, Agricola, E, Nogueira, MA, Branco, LM, Rosa, SA, Portugal, G, Galrinho, A, Abreu, J, Cacela, D, Patricio, L, Fragata, J, Cruz Ferreira, R, Igual Munoz, B, Erdociain Perales, MEP, Maceira Gonzalez, AMG, Estornell Erill Jordi, JEE, Donate Bertolin, LDB, Vazquez Sanchez Alejandro, AVS, Miro Palau Vicente, VMP, Cervera Zamora, ACZ, Piquer Gil, MPG, Montero Argudo, AMA, Girgis, H Y A, Illatopa, V, Cordova, F, Espinoza, D, Ortega, J, Khan, US, Islam, AKMM, Majumder, AAS, Girgis, H Y A, Bayat, F, Naghshbandi, E, Naghshbandi, E, Samiei, N, Samiei, N, Malev, E, Omelchenko, M, Vasina, L, Zemtsovsky, E, Piatkowski, R, Kochanowski, J, Budnik, M, Scislo, P, Opolski, G, Kochanowski, J, Piatkowski, R, Scislo, P, Budnik, M, Marchel, M, Opolski, G, Abid, L, Ben Kahla, S, Abid, D, Charfeddine, S, Maaloul, I, Ben Jmaa, M, Kammoun, S, Hashimoto, G, Suzuki, M, Yoshikawa, H, Otsuka, T, Isekame, Y, Yamashita, H, Kawase, I, Ozaki, S, Nakamura, M, Sugi, K, Benvenuto, E, Leggio, S, Buccheri, S, Bonura, S, Deste, W, Tamburino, C, Monte, I P, Gripari, P, Fusini, L, Muratori, M, Tamborini, G, Ghulam Ali, S, Bottari, V, Cefalu', C, Bartorelli, A, Agrifoglio, M, Pepi, M, Zambon, E, Iorio, A, Di Nora, C, Abate, E, Lo Giudice, F, Di Lenarda, A, Agostoni, P, Sinagra, G, Timoteo, A T, Galrinho, A, Moura Branco, L, Rio, P, Aguiar Rosa, S, Oliveira, M, Silva Cunha, P, Leal, A, Cruz Ferreira, R, Zemanek, D, Tomasov, P, Belehrad, M, Kostalova, J, Kara, T, Veselka, J, Hassanein, M, El Tahan, S, El Sharkawy, E, Shehata, H, Yoon, YE, Choi, HM, Seo, HY, Lee, SP, Kim, HK, Youn, TJ, Kim, YJ, Sohn, DW, Choi, GY, Mielczarek, M, Huttin, O, Voilliot, D, Sellal, JM, Manenti, V, Carillo, S, Olivier, A, Venner, C, Juilliere, Y, Selton-Suty, C, Butz, T, Faber, L, Brand, M, Piper, C, Wiemer, M, Noelke, J, Sasko, B, Langer, C, Horstkotte, D, Trappe, HJ, Maysou, LA, Tessonnier, L, Jacquier, A, Serratrice, J, Copel, C, Stoppa, AM, Seguier, J, Saby, L, Verschueren, A, Habib, G, Petroni, R, Bencivenga, S, Di Mauro, M, Acitelli, A, Cicconetti, M, Romano, S, Petroni, A, Penco, M, Maceira Gonzalez, A M, Cosin-Sales, J, Igual, B, Sancho-Tello, R, Ruvira, J, Mayans, J, Choi, JH, Kim, SWK, Almeida, A, Azevedo, O, Amado, J, Picarra, B, Lima, R, Cruz, I, Pereira, V, Marques, N, Biering-Sorensen, T, Mogelvang, R, Schnohr, P, Jensen, JS, Chatzistamatiou, E, Konstantinidis, D, Manakos, K, Mpampatseva Vagena, I, Moustakas, G, Memo, G, Mitsakis, O, Kasakogias, A, Syros, P, Kallikazaros, I, Cho, EJ, Kim, JJ, Hwang, BH, Kim, DB, Jang, SW, Jeon, HK, Cho, JS, Chatzistamatiou, E, Konstantinidis, D, Memo, G, Mpapatzeva Vagena, I, Moustakas, G, Manakos, K, Traxanas, K, Vergi, N, Feretou, A, Kallikazaros, I, Jedrzejewska, I, Konopka, M, Krol, W, Swiatowiec, A, Dluzniewski, M, Braksator, W, Sefri Noventi, S, Sugiri, S, Uddin, I, Herminingsih, S, Arif Nugroho, M, Boedijitno, S, Caro Codon, J, Blazquez Bermejo, Z, Valbuena Lopez, S C, Lopez Fernandez, T, Rodriguez Fraga, O, Torrente Regidor, M, Pena Conde, L, Moreno Yanguela, M, Buno Soto, A, Lopez-Sendon, J L, Stevanovic, A, Dekleva, M, Kim, MN, Kim, SA, Kim, YH, Shim, JM, Park, SM, Park, SW, Kim, YH, Shim, WJ, Kozakova, M, Muscelli, E, Morizzo, C, Casolaro, A, Paterni, M, Palombo, C, Bayat, F, Nazmdeh, M, Naghshbandi, E, Nateghi, S, Tomaszewski, A, Kutarski, A, Brzozowski, W, Tomaszewski, M, Nakano, E, Harada, T, Takagi, Y, Yamada, M, Takano, M, Furukawa, T, Akashi, Y, Lindqvist, G, Henein, MY, Backman, C, Gustafsson, S, Morner, S, Marinov, R, Hristova, K, Geirgiev, S, Pechilkov, D, Kaneva, A, Katova, TZ, Pilosoff, V, Pena Pena, ML, Mesa Rubio, D, Ruiz Ortin, M, Delgado Ortega, M, Romo Penas, E, Pardo Gonzalez, L, Rodriguez Diego, S, Hidalgo Lesmes, F, Pan Alvarez-Ossorio, M, Suarez De Lezo Cruz-Conde, J, Gospodinova, M, Sarafov, S, Guergelcheva, V, Vladimirova, L, Tournev, I, Denchev, S, Mozenska, O, Segiet, A, Rabczenko, D, Kosior, DA, Gao, SA, Eliasson, M, Polte, CL, Lagerstrand, K, Bech-Hanssen, O, Morosin, M, Piazza, R, Leonelli, V, Leiballi, E, Pecoraro, R, Cinello, M, Dell' Angela, L, Cassin, M, Sinagra, G, Nicolosi, GL, Savu, O, Carstea, N, Stoica, E, Macarie, C, Moldovan, H, Iliescu, V, Chioncel, O, Moral, S, Gruosso, D, Galuppo, V, Teixido, G, Rodriguez-Palomares, JF, Gutierrez, L, Evangelista, A, Jansen Klomp, W W, Peelen, LM, Spanjersberg, AJ, Brandon Bravo Bruinsma, GJ, Van 'T Hof, AWJ, Laveau, F, Hammoudi, N, Helft, G, Barthelemy, O, Michel, PL, Petroni, T, Djebbar, M, Boubrit, L, Le Feuvre, C, Isnard, R, Cho, EJ, Park, S-J, Kim, CH, Song, JE, Kim, SH, Chang, S-A, Lee, S-C, Park, SW, Bandera, F, Generati, G, Pellegrino, M, Alfonzetti, E, Labate, V, Villani, S, Gaeta, M, Guazzi, M, Gabriels, C, Lancellotti, P, Van De Bruaene, A, Voilliot, D, De Meester, P, Buys, R, Delcroix, M, Budts, W, Cruz, I, Stuart, B, Caldeira, D, Morgado, G, Almeida, AR, Lopes, LR, Fazendas, P, Joao, I, Cotrim, C, Pereira, H, Weissler Snir, A, Greenberg, G, Shapira, Y, Weisenberg, D, Monakier, D, Nevzorov, R, Sagie, A, Vaturi, M, Bando, M, Yamada, H, Saijo, Y, Takagawa, Y, Sawada, N, Hotchi, J, Hayashi, S, Hirata, Y, Nishio, S, Sata, M, Jackson, TA, Sammut, E, Siarkos, M, Lee, L, Carr-White, G, Rajani, R, Kapetanakis, S, Ciobotaru, V, Yagasaki, H, Kawasaki, M, Tanaka, R, Minatoguchi, S, Sato, N, Amano, K, Warita, S, Ono, K, Noda, T, Minatoguchi, S, Breithardt, O-A, Razavi, H, Nabutovsky, Y, Ryu, K, Gaspar, T, Kosiuk, J, John, S, Prinzen, F, Hindricks, G, Piorkowski, C, Nemchyna, O, Tovstukha, V, Chikovani, A, Golikova, I, Lutai, M, Nemes, A, Kalapos, A, Domsik, P, Lengyel, C, Orosz, A, Forster, T, Nordenfur, T, Babic, A, Giesecke, A, Bulatovic, I, Ripsweden, J, Samset, E, Winter, R, Larsson, M, Blazquez Bermejo, Z, Lopez Fernandez, T, Caro Codon, J, Valbuena, SC, Caro Codon, J, Mori Junco, R, Moreno Yanguela, M, Lopez-Sendon, JL, MEdicamentos, Grupo de Estudio de CArdiotoxicidad por, Pinto-Teixeira, P, Branco, L, Galrinho, A, Oliveira, M, Cunha, P, Silva, T, Rio, P, Feliciano, J, Nogueira-Silva, M, Ferreira, R, Shkolnik, E, Vasyuk, Y, Nesvetov, V, Shkolnik, L, Varlan, G, Bajraktari, G, Ronn, F, Ibrahimi, P, Jashari, F, Jensen, SM, Henein, MY, Kang, M-K, Mun, H-S, Choi, S, Cho, J-R, Han, SW, Lee, N, Cho, I J, Heo, R, Chang, HJ, Shin, S, Shim, CY, Hong, GR, and Chung, N
- Abstract
Objective: We aimed to investigate the reproducibility of vena contracta (VC) in mitral regurgitation (MR) of different etiology between an inexperienced and an experienced echocardiographer. Background: MR is the second most common valvular heart disease in Europe that requires surgery. Echocardiography is the principal modality of investigation when MR is suspected. In European and American guidelines VC is described as one of the most feasible echocardiographic measurements in the assessment of MR. There is a lack of publications regarding intra-observer variability and studies comparing inexperienced and experienced echocardiographers for the assessment of VC. Method/Material: VC of 55 recorded 2D echocardiograms with known MR of different degree and etiology were analyzed from parasternal long axis view, 4- and 3 chamber view. The mean value of the different plane measurements of each exam was used for statistical analysis. Analyses were made by an inexperienced (A) fellow echocardiographer (<100 studies) and a level 3 experienced (B) echocardiographer. Measurements of VC by the 2 echocardiographers were performed blinded to clinical data. Measurements were performed with at least 2 weeks apart, blinded to the first measurement. Results: Three exams were excluded (feasibility 95%) from statistical analysis because adequate color Doppler images from all tree planes was not available. The inter class correlation (ICC) between the first and second analysis was (r=0.75; 95% CI -1.1 to 1.7mm) for A and (r=0.94; 95% CI -0.76 to 0.84mm) for B. There was good ICC between the 2 echocardiographers (r=0.78; 95% CI -1.5 to 1.3mm). The intra observer variability was 11.1% for A and 6.1% for B. The inter observer variability was 11.7% (p>0.05 for all). Conclusion: Measurement of vena contracta in mitral regurgitation is a feasible semi-quantitative parameter. Good correlation and narrow limits of agreement between a novice and an experienced echocardiographer was demonstrated in our study.
- Published
- 2014
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15. Club 35 Poster Session Wednesday 11 December: 11/12/2013, 09:30-16:00 * Location: Poster area
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Montoro Lopez, M, Pons De Antonio, I, Itziar Soto, C, Florez Gomez, R, Alonso Ladreda, A, Rios Blanco, JJ, Refoyo Salicio, E, Moreno Yanguela, M, Lopez Sendon, JL, Guzman Martinez, G, Van De Heyning, C M, Magne, J, Pierard, LA, Bruyere, PJ, Davin, L, De Maeyer, C, Paelinck, BP, Vrints, CJ, Lancellotti, P, Michalski, BW, Krzeminska-Pakula, M, Lipiec, P, Szymczyk, E, Chrzanowski, L, Kasprzak, JD, Leao, R N, Florencio, A F, Oliveira, A R, Bento, B, Lopes, S, Calaca, J, Palma Reis, R, Krestjyaninov, MV, Gimaev, RH, Razin, VA, Arangalage, D, Chiampan, A, Cimadevilla, C, Touati, A, Himbert, D, Brochet, E, Iung, B, Nataf, P, Vahanian, A, Messika-Zeitoun, D, Guvenc, TS, Karacimen, D, Erer, HB, Ilhan, E, Sayar, N, Karakus, G, Eren, M, Iriart, X, Tafer, N, Roubertie, F, Mauriat, P, Thambo, JB, Wang, J, Fang, F, Yip, G WK, Sanderson, J, Feng, W, Yu, CM, Lam, YY, Assabiny, A, Apor, A, Nagy, A, Vago, H, Toth, A, Merkely, B, Kovacs, A, Castaldi, B, Vida, VL, Guariento, A, Padalino, M, Cerutti, A, Maschietto, N, Biffanti, R, Reffo, E, Stellin, G, Milanesi, O, Baronaite-Dudoniene, K, Urbaite, L, Smalinskas, V, Veisaite, R, Vasylius, T, Vaskelyte, J, Puodziukynas, A, Wieczorek, J, Rybicka-Musialik, A, Berger-Kucza, A, Hoffmann, A, Wnuk-Wojnar, A, Mizia-Stec, K, Melao, F, Ribeiro, V, Amorim, S, Araujo, C, Torres, JP, Cardoso, JS, Pinho, P, Maciel, MJ, Storsten, P, Eriksen, M, Boe, E, Estensen, ME, Erikssen, G, Smiseth, OA, Skulstad, H, Miglioranza, MH, Gargani, L, Sant`Anna, RT, Rover, M, Martins, VM, Mantovanni, A, Kalil, RK, Leiria, TL, Luo, XX, Fang, F, Lee, PW, Zhang, ZH, Lam, YY, Sanderson, JE, Kwong, J SW, Yu, CM, Borowiec, A, Dabrowski, R, Wozniak, J, Jasek, S, Chwyczko, T, Kowalik, I, Janas, J, Musiej-Nowakowska, E, Szwed, H, Palinsky, M, Petrovicova, J, Pirscova, M, Baricevic, Z, Lovric, D, Cikes, M, Skoric, B, Ljubas Macek, J, Reskovic Luksic, V, Separovic Hanzevacki, J, Milicic, D, Elmissiri, AM, El Shahid, GS, Abdal-Wahhab, S, Vural, M G, Yilmaz, M, Cetin, S, Akdemir, R, Yoldas, T K, Yeter, E, Karamanou, AG, Hamodraka, ES, Lekakis, IA, Paraskevaidis, IA, Kremastinos, DT, Appiah-Dwomoh, E K, Wang, VC, Otto, C, Mayar, F, Bonaventura, K, Sunman, H, Canpolat, U, Kuyumcu, M, Yorgun, H, Sahiner, L, and Ozer, N
- Abstract
Purpose: It is known the higher prevalence of structural heart disease in HIV patients, mostly diastolic dysfunction and pulmonary hypertension. In spite of that, there are few data about predisposing factors. Our objective was to evaluate whether HIV stage or detectable blood viral load correlate with the degree of heart disease. Methods: We conducted a prospective cohort study with HIV patients monitored by the internal medicine unit of our institution. We selected symptomatic patients with functional class ≥ II of NYHA scale. Viral blood load and CD4 count were systematically determined in order to obtain the HIV stage. Patients underwent a transthoracic echocardiogram to assess ventricular hypertrophy, systolic and diastolic dysfunction and pulmonary hypertension, according to the limits set by ESC guidelines. Results: Data were obtained from 65 HIV patients with dyspnea (63% male) with a mean age of 48 years. 50% were in NYHA grade II, 32.3% III and 17.7% IV. 46.7% of patients had some data of structural heart disease (figure). Belong to AIDS group (65.3%) did not correlate with the degree of heart disease. However, patients with positive blood viral load had a significantly higher incidence of structural heart disease than those with undetectable load (75% vs. 43% p <0.04), independent of their cardiovascular risk profile or type of antiretroviral therapy (Table). Conclusion: In our experience, half of HIV patients with dyspnea show echocardiographic data of structural heart disease. Detectable viral load in blood doubles the prevalence of heart disease, so that HIV itself may be an independent causal agent. These data should be taken into account in the screening of structural heart disease in these patients.
Figure Prevalence of structural heart disease - Published
- 2013
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16. Carbon dots derived from organic drug molecules with improved therapeutic effects and new functions.
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Wu ZF, Luo XX, Shi XF, Wang BJ, Sun HW, Sun ZN, Mao YQ, and Xiong HM
- Abstract
Carbon dots (CDs) are new types of fluorescent nanomaterials with particle diameters of 1∼10 nm and have excellent photoluminescence (PL) properties, good biocompatibility, simple preparation methods and numerous raw materials; consequently, they are promising in the biomedical field. In recent years, to overcome drug resistance and toxic side effects of traditional organic drugs, the synthesis of CDs from drug molecules has become an effective strategy, which produces CDs with the same therapeutic effects as the raw drugs and even possessing new properties. At present, many CDs derived from organic drugs have been developed, which can be classified according to their sources such as antibiotics, anti-inflammatory drugs, and guanidine drugs. This article focuses on the progress of the above-mentioned drug-derived CDs compared with their drug precursors in terms of therapeutic efficacy, enhanced performance and new additional functions, with special attention to the structure-activity relationship between the drug precursors and the CD-based therapeutic agents. It demonstrates the feasibility of designing new drug-derived CDs for clinical applications, summarizes the shortcomings and research gaps of the existing work, and provides a reference for related work in the future.
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- 2025
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17. Identification of three novel species and one new record of Kirschsteiniothelia (Kirschsteiniotheliaceae, Kirschsteiniotheliales) from Jiangxi, China.
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Luo XX, Liao MG, Hu YF, Zhang XG, Xu ZH, and Ma J
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Fungal diversity is rapidly expanding, with numerous species being discovered worldwide. While plant debris is a habitat favoring the survival and multiplication of various microbial species. In this study, several kirschsteiniothelia-like isolates were collected from dead branches of unidentified perennial dicotyledonous plants. Based on morphological examination and phylogenetic analyses of combined ITS, LSU, and SSU sequences data using maximum-likelihood and Bayesian inference, three new species of Kirschsteiniothelia , namely K.ganzhouensis , K.jiangxiensis , and K.jiulianshanensis , were introduced, and one known species, K.inthanonensis , was recorded for the first time from China. To improve our comprehensive knowledge of the species diversity of Kirschsteiniothelia , all accepted Kirschsteiniothelia species with morphological characteristics, sequence data, asexual morphs, habitat, host, and locality are listed., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist., (Xing-Xing Luo, Ming-Gen Liao, Ya-Fen Hu, Xiu-Guo Zhang, Zhao-Huan Xu, Jian Ma.)
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- 2025
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18. Two new strains of Streptomyces with metabolic potential for biological control of pear black spot disease.
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Chen YH, Zhang JX, Min Y, Liu Y, Wang JM, Bai LQ, and Luo XX
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- Phylogeny, Biological Control Agents, Fruit microbiology, Multigene Family, Plant Diseases microbiology, Plant Diseases prevention & control, Pyrus microbiology, Streptomyces genetics, Streptomyces metabolism, Streptomyces isolation & purification, Streptomyces classification, Alternaria genetics, Alternaria metabolism, Alternaria growth & development, RNA, Ribosomal, 16S genetics
- Abstract
Background: Pear black spot is caused by Alternaria tenuissima. It is one of the diseases of concern limiting pear production worldwide. Existing cultivation methods and fungicides are not sufficient to control early blight. Therefore, the aim of this study was to isolate and characterize two strains of Streptomyces and evaluate their potential for biological control of crop diseases caused by Alternaria tenuissima while promoting plant growth. It enriches the resources of biocontrol strains., Methods: In this study, the genetic background of the strain was elucidated through 16S rRNA gene analysis and multiphase taxonomic identification methods. The metabolic potential of the strain was assessed using a variety of approaches, including antiSMASH, COG, and KEGG databases, RGI tools, as well as the scanning of CAZY and plant-promoting genes. The biocontrol potential of the strain was further substantiated through a combination of plate experiments, gene cluster biopathway resolution and mass spectrometry validation of metabolites. Finally, the biocontrol efficacy of the strain was confirmed through fruit control experiments., Results: The study identified the potential new species status of the strains. Strain TRM 76130 exhibited a gene size of 5.94 Mbp and a G + C content of 73.65%, while strain TRM 76172 had a gene size of 8.30 Mbp and a G + C content of 71.38%. Both strains contained genes related to amino acid transport and metabolism, along with several CAZY genes and 19 plant growth factors. The resistance genes of strain TRM 76172 were classified as macrolides, and genomic prediction revealed the biosynthetic pathway of the active compound Candidin. Mass spectrometry analysis indicated that strains TRM 76172 and TRM 76130 contained the active compounds amphotericin A and daptomycin, respectively. The pear assays demonstrated that both strains of Streptomyces were capable of reducing the symptoms of pear black spot., Conclusion: The present study concludes that strains TRM76172 and TRM76130 possess significant potential to control Alternaria tenuissima and promote plant growth, thereby enriching the biocontrol fungal library., Competing Interests: Declarations. Ethics approval and consent to participate: Not applicable. Consent for publication: Not applicable. Competing interests: The authors declare no competing interests., (© 2025. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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19. Veno-venous extracorporeal membrane oxygenation as a bridge in central airway obstruction: experience from a high-volume center.
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Luo XX, Li JJ, Yang FX, Lei Y, Zeng F, Lan YP, Pan C, Huang XB, Liu RA, and Luo JC
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- Humans, Male, Female, Retrospective Studies, Middle Aged, Aged, Adult, Hospitals, High-Volume statistics & numerical data, Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation methods, Airway Obstruction therapy, Airway Obstruction etiology
- Abstract
Background: Perioperative airway management and oxygenation maintenance during central airway obstruction (CAO) treatment pose great challenges. While veno-venous extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (V-V ECMO) shows promise as a bridge therapy, optimal implementation and management strategies remain lacking. We present our experience with V-V ECMO in CAO management from a high-volume center., Methods: We retrospectively analyzed 29 consecutive patients who received V-V ECMO support for CAO between 2015 and 2023. Patient demographics, clinical characteristics, ECMO cannulation and operation parameters, interventional procedures, complications, and outcomes were reviewed., Results: Among patients with median airway diameter of 4.5 mm (IQR 2-5 mm), etiologies included primary tumors (n = 17), metastases (n = 7), and post-intubation/tracheostomy stenosis (n = 5). Treatment comprised bronchoscopic interventions (n = 9) and surgical procedures (thoracic = 15, head/neck = 5). Using predominantly femoral-jugular cannulation (n = 27), we implemented a minimal anticoagulation protocol (catheter flush with 5U/mL heparin only). All patients survived through 6-month follow-up with minimal ECMO-related complications., Conclusion: The application of V-V ECMO with minimal anticoagulation demonstrates safety and efficacy as a bridging support in the therapeutic approach to CAO., Competing Interests: Declarations. Competing interests: The authors declare no competing interests., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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20. Vertically Fluorinated Graphene Encapsulated SiO x Anode for Enhanced Li + Transport and Interfacial Stability in High-Energy-Density Lithium Batteries.
- Author
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Huang LB, Zhao L, Ma ZF, Zhang X, Zhang XS, Lu ZY, Li G, Luo XX, Wen R, Xin S, Meng Q, and Guo YG
- Abstract
Achieving high energy density has always been the goal of lithium-ion batteries (LIBs). SiO
x has emerged as a compelling candidate for use as a negative electrode material due to its remarkable capacity. However, the huge volume expansion and the unstable electrode interface during (de)lithiation, hinder its further development. Herein, we report a facile strategy for the synthesis of surface fluorinated SiOx (SiOx @vG-F), and investigate their influences on battery performance. Systematic experiments investigations indicate that the reaction between Li+ and fluorine groups promotes the in situ formation of stable LiF-rich solid electrolyte interface (SEI) on the surface of SiOx @vG-F anode, which effectively suppresses the pulverization of microsized SiOx particles during the charge and discharge cycle. As a result, the SiOx @vG-F enabled a higher capacity retention of 86.4 % over 200 cycles at 1.0 C in the SiOx @vG-F||LiNi0.8 Co0.1 Mn0.1 O2 full cell. This approach will provide insights for the advancement of alternative electrode materials in diverse energy conversion and storage systems., (© 2024 Wiley-VCH GmbH.)- Published
- 2024
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21. Morphological and phylogenetic analyses reveal eight novel species of Pestalotiopsis (Sporocadaceae, Amphisphaeriales) from southern China.
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Luo XX, Liao MG, Zhang K, Castañeda-Ruíz RF, Ma J, and Xu ZH
- Abstract
Plants play an important role in maintaining the ecological balance of the biosphere, but often suffer from pathogenic fungi during growth. During our continuing mycological surveys of plant pathogens from terrestrial plants in Jiangxi and Yunnan provinces, China, 24 strains of Pestalotiopsis isolated from diseased and healthy tissues of plant leaves represented eight new species, viz. P.alpinicola , P.camelliicola , P.cyclosora , P.eriobotryae , P.gardeniae , P.hederae , P.machiliana and P.mangifericola . Multi-locus (ITS, tef1-α and tub2 ) phylogenetic analyses were performed using maximum-likelihood and Bayesian inference to reveal their taxonomic placement within Pestalotiopsis . Both molecular phylogenetic analyses and morphological comparisons supported them as eight independent taxa within Pestalotiopsis . Illustrations and descriptions of these eight taxa were provided, in conjunction with comparisons with closely related taxa in the genus. This work highlights the large potential for new fungal species associated with diseased plant leaves., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist., (Xing-Xing Luo, Ming-Gen Liao, Kai Zhang, Rafael F. Castañeda-Ruíz, Jian Ma, Zhao-Huan Xu.)
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- 2024
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22. Aquaporin-1 Facilitates Macrophage M1 Polarization by Enhancing Glycolysis Through the Activation of HIF1α in Lipopolysaccharide-Induced Acute Kidney Injury.
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Diao RX, Lv WY, Wang YC, Shen QL, Tang KH, Luo XX, and Jin YY
- Abstract
This study aimed to investigate how aquaporin 1 (AQP1) modulates hypoxia-inducible factor-1α (HIF1α) to promote glycolysis and drive the M1 polarization of macrophages. Within 12 h post-treatment with LPS to induce acute kidney injury in rats, a significant upregulation of AQP1 and HIF1α protein levels was noted in serum and kidney tissues. This elevation corresponded with a decrease in blood glucose concentrations and an enhancement of glycolytic activity relative to the control group. Furthermore, there was a pronounced reduction in the circulating levels of the anti-inflammatory cytokine IL-10, accompanied by an upregulation in the levels of the pro-inflammatory cytokines IL-6 and TNF-α. The administration of an HIF1α inhibitor reversed these effects, which did not affect the production of AQP1 protein. In cellular assays, AQP1 knockdown mitigated the increase in HIF1α expression induced by LPS. Furthermore, the suppression of HIF1α with PX-478 led to decreased expression levels of Hexokinase 2 (HK2) and Lactate Dehydrogenase A (LDHA), indicating that AQP1 regulates glycolysis through HIF1α. M1 polarization of macrophages was reduced by AQP1 knockdown and was further diminished by the addition of an HIF1α inhibitor. Inhibition of the glycolytic process not only weakened M1 polarization but also promoted M2 polarization, thereby reducing the release of inflammatory cytokines. These findings provide a novel perspective for developing therapeutic strategies that target AQP1 and HIF1α, potentially improving the treatment of sepsis-associated AKI., (© 2024. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.)
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- 2024
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23. How health seeking behavior develops in patients with type 2 diabetes: a qualitative study based on health belief model in China.
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Du QH, Zhang ZC, Yang Y, Luo XX, Liu L, and Jia HH
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- Humans, Male, Female, Middle Aged, China, Adult, Aged, Health Behavior, Interviews as Topic, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 psychology, Qualitative Research, Patient Acceptance of Health Care statistics & numerical data, Patient Acceptance of Health Care psychology, Health Belief Model
- Abstract
Background: Type 2 diabetes(T2DM) is a global health problem which is accompanied with multi-systemic complications, and associated with long-term health burden and economic burden. Effective health seeking behavior (HSB) refers to reasonably utilize health resources, effectively prevent and treat diseases, and maintain health. Effective health seeking behavior (HSB) is vital to mitigate the risk of T2DM complications. However, health seeking behavior for T2DM patients remains sub-optimal worldwide., Objective: The study aimed to explore the internal logic of how health seeking behavior of T2DM patients develops and the influencing factors of health seeking behavior. With a view to provide a reference basis for improving the health seeking behavior situation of T2DM patients., Methods: This study was conducted at an integrated tertiary hospital in China. People who were diagnosed with T2DM, capable of expressing clearly and had no mental illness, were approached based on a purposive sampling. The experience of T2DM and health seeking behavior were collected via in-depth interviews. A theory-driven thematic analysis based on Health Belief Model (HBM) was applied for data analysis. Inductive reasoning was used to identify emerging themes which were not included in HBM., Results: 26 patients with T2DM were included in the current study. Seven themes were identified, including: (1) T2DM diagnosis and severity; (2) T2DM treatment and management; (3) Perceived susceptibility of diabetes progression; (4) Perceived severity of diabetes progression; (5) Perceived benefits of health seeking behavior; (6) Perceived barriers of health seeking behavior; (7) Perception of behavioral cues. Generally, patients with T2DM lacked reliable sources of information, considered T2DM to be slow-progressing and without posing an immediate threat to life. Consequently, they did not fully grasp the long-term risks associated with T2DM or the protective effects of health seeking behavior., Conclusion: This study highlighted the challenges in health seeking behavior for patients with T2DM. It suggested that future interventions and strategies should involve multi-faceted approaches, targeting healthcare providers (HCPs), patients with T2DM, and their support networks. This comprehensive strategy can help patients better understand their condition and the importance of effective health seeking behavior. Ultimately, enhancing their capacity for adopting appropriate health-seeking practices., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2024 Du, Zhang, Yang, Luo, Liu and Jia.)
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- 2024
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24. Astrocyte-derived lactate aggravates brain injury of ischemic stroke in mice by promoting the formation of protein lactylation.
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Xiong XY, Pan XR, Luo XX, Wang YF, Zhang XX, Yang SH, Zhong ZQ, Liu C, Chen Q, Wang PF, Chen XW, Yu SG, and Yang QW
- Subjects
- Animals, Mice, Male, Disease Models, Animal, Mice, Knockout, Brain metabolism, Brain pathology, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Brain Ischemia metabolism, Brain Ischemia pathology, Brain Injuries metabolism, Lactate Dehydrogenase 5 metabolism, Neuroprotective Agents pharmacology, Astrocytes metabolism, Lactic Acid metabolism, Ischemic Stroke metabolism, Ischemic Stroke pathology, Neurons metabolism, Neurons pathology
- Abstract
Aim: Although lactate supplementation at the reperfusion stage of ischemic stroke has been shown to offer neuroprotection, whether the role of accumulated lactate at the ischemia phase is neuroprotection or not remains largely unknown. Thus, in this study, we aimed to investigate the roles and mechanisms of accumulated brain lactate at the ischemia stage in regulating brain injury of ischemic stroke. Methods and Results: Pharmacological inhibition of lactate production by either inhibiting LDHA or glycolysis markedly attenuated the mouse brain injury of ischemic stroke. In contrast, additional lactate supplement further aggravates brain injury, which may be closely related to the induction of neuronal death and A1 astrocytes. The contributing roles of increased lactate at the ischemic stage may be related to the promotive formation of protein lysine lactylation (Kla), while the post-treatment of lactate at the reperfusion stage did not influence the brain protein Kla levels with neuroprotection. Increased protein Kla levels were found mainly in neurons by the HPLC-MS/MS analysis and immunofluorescent staining. Then, pharmacological inhibition of lactate production or blocking the lactate shuttle to neurons showed markedly decreased protein Kla levels in the ischemic brains. Additionally, Ldha specific knockout in astrocytes ( Aldh1l1
CreERT2 ; Ldhafl/fl mice, cKO) mice with MCAO were constructed and the results showed that the protein Kla level was decreased accompanied by a decrease in the volume of cerebral infarction in cKO mice compared to the control groups. Furthermore, blocking the protein Kla formation by inhibiting the writer p300 with its antagonist A-485 significantly alleviates neuronal death and glial activation of cerebral ischemia with a reduction in the protein Kla level, resulting in extending reperfusion window and improving functional recovery for ischemic stroke. Conclusion: Collectively, increased brain lactate derived from astrocytes aggravates ischemic brain injury by promoting the protein Kla formation, suggesting that inhibiting lactate production or the formation of protein Kla at the ischemia stage presents new therapeutic targets for the treatment of ischemic stroke., Competing Interests: Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interest exists., (© The author(s).)- Published
- 2024
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25. [Evidence mapping of traditional Chinese medicine intervention in diabetic retinopathy].
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Ling J, Hu M, Wang Y, Zhou J, Xie ZL, Deng HY, and Luo XX
- Subjects
- Humans, Systematic Reviews as Topic, Diabetic Retinopathy drug therapy, Diabetic Retinopathy therapy, Drugs, Chinese Herbal therapeutic use, Medicine, Chinese Traditional
- Abstract
This study aims to assess the quality of evidence for the treatment of diabetic retinopathy with traditional Chinese medicine based on the systematic reviews/Meta-analyses of relevant studies. CNKI, Wanfang, VIP, SinoMed, PubMed, Web of Science, EMbase, and Cochrane Library were searched for the systematic reviews/Meta-analyses of traditional Chinese medicine interventions in diabetic retinopathy published from the inception to November 2023. A Measurement Tool to Assess Systematic Reviews 2(AMSTAR2) scale was used to assess the methodological quality of the included studies. An evidence map was built to present the information on intervention measures, the number of studies included in the systematic reviews/Meta-analyses, research conclusions, and methodological quality assessment results. A total of 51 studies were included. Traditional Chinese medicine interventions accounted for a large proportion of the intervention measures, followed by Chinese patent medicines. The treatment methods mainly included tonifying deficiency, activating blood, and resolving stasis. According to the AMSTAR2 scale assessment results, the descriptions of funding information for included studies, lists of excluded articles, and preliminary research protocols were particularly lacking. The evidence map showed that 48, 2, and 1 studies concluded with beneficial effects, possible beneficial effects, and unclear effects, respectively. On the whole, traditional Chinese medicine demonstrated definite efficacy in the treatment of diabetic retinopathy, while the evidence pre-sents moderate to low quality. It is suggested that higher-quality studies remain to be carried out to provide more evidence.
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- 2024
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26. Cetuximab combined with chemotherapy for simultaneous esophageal squamous cell carcinoma and colon adenocarcinoma: A case report.
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Luo XX, Du YX, Zhang QQ, Zhang L, Zeng SY, Yu ZH, Shen P, and Feng ZQ
- Abstract
Background: Multiple primary carcinomas (MPCs) are defined as two or more independent primary cancers that occur simultaneously or sequentially in the same individual. Synchronous MPCs are rarer than solitary cancers or metachronous MPCs. Accurate diagnoses of synchronous MPCs and the choice of treatment are critical for successful outcomes in these cases., Case Summary: A 64-year-old patient presented with dysphagia, without obvious cause. A diagnosis of synchronous esophageal squamous cell carcinoma and colon adenocarcinoma with liver metastasis was confirmed based on examination and laboratory results. After multi-disciplinary consultations, combination chemotherapy (a 3-wk cycle with oxaliplatin 212 mg administered on day 1 and capecitabine 1.5 g twice daily on days 1-14) and esophageal cancer radiotherapy were initiated. Based on the results of genetic testing, we switched to a regimen of leucovorin + fluorouracil + oxaliplatin and cetuximab regimen for 8 cycles. Subsequently, capecitabine and bevacizumab were administered until the most recent follow-up, at which the tumor remained stable., Conclusion: Successful cetuximab chemotherapy treatment provides a reference for the non-operative and homogeneous treatment of different pathological types of synchronous MCPs., Competing Interests: Conflict-of-interest statement: All authors declare no relevant conflicts of interest for this article., (©The Author(s) 2024. Published by Baishideng Publishing Group Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
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27. Prognostic role of MUCIN family and its relationship with immune characteristics and tumor biology in diffuse-type gastric cancer.
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Luo XX, Li SZ, Wang L, Luo AL, Qiu H, and Yuan XL
- Abstract
The main component of O-glycoproteins, mucin, is known to play important roles in physiological conditions and oncogenic processes, particularly correlated with poor prognosis in different carcinomas. Diffuse-type gastric cancer (DGC) has long been associated with genomic stability and unfavorable clinical outcomes. To investigate further, we obtained clinical information and the RNA-seq data of the TCGA-STAD cohort. Through the use of unsupervised clustering methods and GSEA, we identified two distinct clusters, characterized by higher and lower expression of MUC2 and MUC20, denoted as cluster 1 and cluster 2, respectively. Subsequently, employing CIBERSORT, it was determined that cluster 2 exhibited a higher tumor mutation burden (TMB) and a greater abundance of CD8
+ T cells and activated CD4+ memory T cells, in addition to immune checkpoints (ICPs). On the other hand, cluster 1 showed a lower TIDE score estimation, indicating a higher probability of tumor immune escape. Furthermore, overexpression of MUC15 and MUC20 was confirmed through qPCR and Western blotting, and their specific roles in mediating the epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) process of GC cells (SNU484 and Hs746t) were validated via CCK-8 assay and wound healing assay in vitro. These findings highlight the potential prognostic value of MUC20 and offer insights into the prospects of immunotherapy for DGC by targeting MUC20., Competing Interests: The authors declare the following financial interests/personal relationships which may be considered as potential competing interests:Xiao-Xiao Luo reports financial support was provided by Hubei Provincial Natural Science Foundation of China (grants 2023AFB208). If there are other authors, they declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (© 2024 The Author(s).)- Published
- 2024
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28. Palmar metastasis of hepatocellular carcinoma: An uncommon case report.
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Chu FR, Liang XW, Zhang HF, Luo XX, Chen JC, Chen L, and Wu JC
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- 2024
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29. A Fully Amorphous, Dynamic Cross-Linked Polymer Electrolyte for Lithium-Sulfur Batteries Operating at Subzero-Temperatures.
- Author
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Zhang J, Chou J, Luo XX, Yang YM, Yan MY, Jia D, Zhang CH, Wang YH, Wang WP, Tan SJ, Guo JC, Zhao Y, Wang F, Xin S, Wan LJ, and Guo YG
- Abstract
Solid-state lithium-sulfur batteries have shown prospects as safe, high-energy electrochemical storage technology for powering regional electrified transportation. Owing to limited ion mobility in crystalline polymer electrolytes, the battery is incapable of operating at subzero temperature. Addition of liquid plasticizer into the polymer electrolyte improves the Li-ion conductivity yet sacrifices the mechanical strength and interfacial stability with both electrodes. In this work, we showed that by introducing a spherical hyperbranched solid polymer plasticizer into a Li
+ -conductive linear polymer matrix, an integrated dynamic cross-linked polymer network was built to maintain fully amorphous in a wide temperature range down to subzero. A quasi-solid polymer electrolyte with a solid mass content >90 % was prepared from the cross-linked polymer network, and demonstrated fast Li+ conduction at a low temperature, high mechanical strength, and stable interfacial chemistry. As a result, solid-state lithium-sulfur batteries employing the new electrolyte delivered high reversible capacity and long cycle life at 25 °C, 0 °C and -10 °C to serve energy storage at complex environmental conditions., (© 2023 Wiley-VCH GmbH.)- Published
- 2024
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30. Two new genera ( Vittiblatta gen. nov. and Planiblatta gen. nov.) of Blattinae (Blattodea, Blattidae) from Southwest China and the discovery of chirally dimorphic male genitalia in Vittiblattapunctata sp. nov.
- Author
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Luo XX, Deng WB, Che YL, and Wang ZQ
- Abstract
This study examines Blattinae samples from Southwest China collected in recent years. Based on morphological characters, we establish two genera, Vittiblatta gen. nov. and Planiblatta Luo & Wang, gen. nov. , and describe four new species, Vittiblattapunctata Luo & Wang, sp. nov. , Vittiblattaferruginea Luo & Wang, sp. nov. , Vittiblattaundulata Luo & Wang, sp. nov. , and Planiblattacrassispina Luo & Wang, sp. nov. These two new genera resemble Periplaneta s.s., but are easily distinguished from it and other genera of Blattinae by morphological characters (genital sclerite L4C). Our results indicate that sclerites L4C and R1G of male genitalia might be important in species delimitation of Blattinae. In addition, chiral dimorphism is found in male genitalia of Vittiblattapunctata sp. nov., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist., (Xin-Xing Luo, Wen-Bo Deng, Yan-Li Che, Zong-Qing Wang.)
- Published
- 2023
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31. Streptomyces tamarix sp. nov.: antagonism against Alternaria gaisen producing streptochlorin, isolated from Tamarix root soil.
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Chen YH, Wu YZ, Liu Q, Xia Z, Wang J, and Luo XX
- Abstract
By the end of 2021, the pear yield in Xinjiang reached 1,795,900 tons, accounting for 1/9 of the country. Pear black spot, caused by Alternaria gaisen disease, has had a significant impact on the pear industry. A. gaisen can infect nearly all pear plants, resulting in black spots on the fruit that negatively affect both yield and quality. This study focused on the TRM76323 strain of Streptomyces, which was isolated from the soil of Tamarix chinensis in Xinjiang Province. Through a multiphase classification and identification method, the genetic classification status of the antagonistic strains was determined. The study also identified the antibacterial active components of streptochlorin using modern isolation and purification techniques. The antagonistic activity of Streptomyces against Alternaria was analyzed through in vitro and in vivo experiments. This research not only expanded the resource bank of antagonistic microorganisms in extreme environments in Xinjiang, but also identified active components that could contribute to the development of new drug lead compounds. Additionally, this study presents a novel approach for the prevention and control of pear black spot disease., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2023 Chen, Wu, Liu, Xia, Wang and Luo.)
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- 2023
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32. Laparoscopic extended right hepatectomy for posterior and completely caudate massive liver tumor (with videos).
- Author
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Chen L, Liu LZ, Chen JC, Xu DF, Chen C, Lin SX, Luo XX, and Wu JC
- Subjects
- Humans, Hepatectomy, Liver pathology, Liver Neoplasms surgery, Liver Neoplasms pathology, Laparoscopy
- Abstract
Competing Interests: Competing interest No benefits in any form have been received or will be received from a commercial party related directly or indirectly to the subject of this article.
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- 2023
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33. Research review on the pollution of antibiotic resistance genes in livestock and poultry farming environments.
- Author
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Wang WJ, Yu LM, Shao MY, Jia YT, Liu LQ, Ma XH, Zheng Y, Liu YF, Zhang YZ, Luo XX, Li FM, and Zheng H
- Subjects
- Animals, Humans, Livestock genetics, Genes, Bacterial, Drug Resistance, Microbial genetics, Agriculture, Poultry genetics, Anti-Bacterial Agents pharmacology
- Abstract
Increasingly serious pollution of antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) caused by the abuse of antibiotics in livestock and poultry industry has raised worldwide concerns. ARGs could spread among various farming environmental media through adsorption, desorption, migration, and also could transfer into human gut microbiome by hori-zontal gene transfer (HGT), posing potential threats to public health. However, the comprehensive review on the pollution patterns, environmental behaviors, and control techniques of ARGs in livestock and poultry environments in view of One Health is still inadequate, resulting in the difficulties in effectively assessing ARGs transmission risk and developing the efficient control strategies. Here, we analyzed the pollution characteristics of typical ARGs in various countries, regions, livestock species, and environmental media, reviewed the critical environmental fate and influencing factors, control strategies, and the shortcomings of current researches about ARGs in the livestock and poultry farming industry combined with One Health philosophy. In particular, we addressed the importance and urgency of identifying the distribution characteristics and environmental process mechanisms of ARGs, and developing green and efficient ARG control means in livestock farming environments. We further proposed gaps and prospects for the future research. It would provide theoretical basis for the research on health risk assessment and technology exploitation of alleviating ARG pollution in livestock farming environment.
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- 2023
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34. "Pore-Hopping" Ion Transport in Cellulose-Based Separator Towards High-Performance Sodium-Ion Batteries.
- Author
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Yang JL, Zhao XX, Zhang W, Ren K, Luo XX, Cao JM, Zheng SH, Li WL, and Wu XL
- Abstract
Sodium-ion batteries (SIBs) have great potential for large-scale energy storage. Cellulose is an attractive material for sustainable separators, but some key issues still exist affecting its application. Herein, a cellulose-based composite separator (CP@PPC) was prepared by immersion curing of cellulose-based separators (CP) with poly(propylene carbonate) (PPC). With the assistance of PPC, the CP@PPC separator is able to operate the cell stably at high voltages (up to 4.95 V). The "pore-hopping" ion transport mechanism in CP@PPC opens up extra Na
+ migration paths, resulting in a high Na+ transference number (0.613). The separator can also tolerate folding, bending and extreme temperature under certain circumstances. Full cells with CP@PPC reveal one-up capacity retention (96.97 %) at 2C after 500 cycles compared to cells with CP. The mechanism highlights the merits of electrolyte analogs in separator modification, making a rational design for durable devices in advanced energy storage systems., (© 2023 Wiley-VCH GmbH.)- Published
- 2023
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35. Redescription of Periplanetaarabica (Bey-Bienko, 1938) (Blattodea, Blattidae), with a comparative analysis of three species of Periplaneta Burmeister, 1838 ( sensu stricto ).
- Author
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Luo XX, Li QQ, Zamani A, Che YL, and Wang ZQ
- Abstract
The blattid cockroach Periplanetaarabica (Bey-Bienko, 1938) has been poorly understood since its original description. In this study, male and female (including nymph) of P.arabica are paired using DNA barcoding, and their morphological characters (including both external characteristics and genitalia) are described. A detailed comparative morphological study of this species and the closely related Periplanetaamericana (Linnaeus, 1758) and Periplanetalateralis Walker, 1868 was carried out to explore phylogenetically relevant characters., (Xin-Xing Luo, Qian-Qian Li, Alireza Zamani, Yan-Li Che, Zong-Qing Wang.)
- Published
- 2023
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36. Advanced Covalent Organic Frameworks for Multi-Valent Metal Ion Batteries.
- Author
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Luo XX, Wang XT, Ang EH, Zhang KY, Zhao XX, Lü HY, and Wu XL
- Abstract
Covalent organic frameworks (COFs) have received increased interest in recent years as an advanced class of materials. By virtue of the available monomers, multiple conformations and various linkages, COFs offer a wide range of opportunities for complex structural design and specific functional development of materials, which has facilitated the widespread application in many fields, including multi-valent metal ion batteries (MVMIBs), described as the attractive candidate replacing lithium-ion batteries (LIBs). With their robust skeletons, diverse pores, flexible structures and abundant functional groups, COFs are expected to help realize a high performance MVMIBs. In this review, we present an overview of COFs, describe advances in topology design and synthetic reactions, and study the application of COFs in MVMIBs, as well as discuss challenges and solutions in the preparation of COFs electrodes, in the hope of providing constructive insights into the future direction of COFs., (© 2022 Wiley-VCH GmbH.)
- Published
- 2023
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37. [Research progress in targeting autophagy of traditional Chinese medicine and natural compounds to regulate atherosclerosis].
- Author
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Zhou ML, Yu YF, Zhao YZ, Luo XX, Zhu JL, Hu YL, and Jian WX
- Subjects
- Humans, Endothelial Cells metabolism, Medicine, Chinese Traditional, Lipoproteins, LDL metabolism, Endothelium, Vascular, Autophagy, Cardiovascular Diseases, Atherosclerosis drug therapy, Atherosclerosis prevention & control, Plaque, Atherosclerotic
- Abstract
Atherosclerosis(AS) is the common pathological basis of many ischemic cardiovascular diseases, and its formation process involves various aspects such as vascular endothelial injury and platelet activation. Vascular endothelial injury is the initiating factor of AS plaque. Monocytes are recruited to differentiate into macrophages at the damaged endothelial cells, which absorb oxidized low-density lipoprotein(ox-LDL) and slowly transform into foam cells. Smooth muscle cells(SMCs) proliferate and migrate continuously. As the only cell producing interstitial collagen fibers in the fibrous cap, SMCs largely determine whether the plaque ruptured or not. The amplifying inflammatory response during the formation of AS recruits platelets to adhere to the damaged area of vascular endothelium and stimulates excessive platelet aggregation. Autophagy activity is associated with vascular lesions and abnormal platelet activation, and excessive autophagy is considered to be a negative factor for plaque stability. Therefore, precise regulation of different types of vascular autophagy and platelet autophagy to treat AS may provide a new therapeutic perspective for the prevention and treatment of atherosclerotic ischemic cardiovascular disease. Currently, treatment strategies for AS still focus on lowering lipid levels with high-intensity statins, which often cause significant side effects. Therefore, the development of safer and more effective drugs and treatment modes is the focus of current research. Traditional Chinese medicine and natural compounds have the potential to treat AS by targeted autophagy, and have been playing an increasingly important role in the prevention and treatment of cardiovascular diseases in China. This paper summarizes the experimental studies on different vascular cell types and platelet autophagy in AS, and sums up the published research results on targeted autophagy of traditional Chinese medicine and natural plant compounds to regulate AS, providing new ideas for further research.
- Published
- 2023
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38. Metabolomics Analysis of Electroacupuncture Pretreatment Induced Neuroprotection on Mice with Ischemic Stroke.
- Author
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Yang SH, Zhang XX, Zhong ZQ, Luo XX, Wang YF, Xiao XP, Huang ZQ, Yu SY, Sun JY, Liu MJ, and Xiong XY
- Subjects
- Mice, Animals, Neuroprotection, Metabolomics, Electroacupuncture methods, Ischemic Stroke, Brain Ischemia metabolism, Brain Injuries, Reperfusion Injury prevention & control, Stroke etiology, Stroke prevention & control
- Abstract
The brain metabolic changes caused by the interruption of blood supply are the initial factors of brain injury in ischemic stroke. Electroacupuncture (EA) pretreatment has been shown to protect against ischemic stroke, but whether its neuroprotective mechanism involves metabolic regulation remains unclear. Based on our finding that EA pretreatment significantly alleviated ischemic brain injury in mice by reducing neuronal injury and death, we performed a gas chromatography-time of flight mass spectrometry (GC-TOF/MS) to investigate the metabolic changes in the ischemic brain and whether EA pretreatment influenced these changes. First, we found that some glycolytic metabolites in the normal brain tissues were reduced by EA pretreatment, which may lay the foundation of neuroprotection for EA pretreatment against ischemic stroke. Then, 6[Formula: see text]h of cerebral ischemia-induced brain metabolic changes, especially the enhanced glycolysis, were partially reversed by EA pretreatment, which was manifested by the brain levels of 11 of 35 up-regulated metabolites and 18 of 27 down-regulated metabolites caused by cerebral ischemia significantly decreasing and increasing, respectively, due to EA pretreatment. A further pathway analysis showed that these 11 and 18 markedly changed metabolites were mainly involved in starch and sucrose metabolism, purine metabolism, aspartate metabolism, and the citric acid cycle. Additionally, we found that EA pretreatment raised the levels of neuroprotective metabolites in both normal and ischemic brain tissues. In conclusion, our study revealed that EA pretreatment may attenuate the ischemic brain injury by inhibiting glycolysis and increasing the levels of some neuroprotective metabolites.
- Published
- 2023
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39. PRC1 plays an important role in lung adenocarcinoma and is potentially targeted by fostamatinib.
- Author
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Zhu P, Cui N, Song ZY, Yong WX, Luo XX, Wang GC, Wang X, Wu YN, Xu Q, Zhang LM, Hao GX, Liu Y, and Zhang ZM
- Subjects
- Humans, Aneuploidy, Hypoxia, Molecular Docking Simulation, Pyridines pharmacology, Pyridines therapeutic use, Adenocarcinoma of Lung drug therapy, Adenocarcinoma of Lung metabolism, Cell Cycle Proteins, Lung Neoplasms drug therapy
- Abstract
Objective: Lung adenocarcinoma (LUAD) is one of the most common cancers in the world. Protein regulator of cytokinesis 1 (PRC1) plays a role in the tumorigenesis and development of several cancers, including LUAD. The aim of the present study is to assess the characteristics of PRC1 in LUAD in order to find a potential drug that targets PRC1., Materials and Methods: We investigated the prognostic value of PRC1 in patients with LUAD using Cox analysis of the RNA sequencing data from The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) portal. A link between PRC1 and LUAD progression, cigarette smoking mutation count, aneuploidy, and hypoxia scores was assessed. The relationship between PRC1 and tumor-infiltrating immune cells in LUAD was analyzed and Gene Set Enrichment Analysis (GSEA) was used to study the PRC1-related biological process and signal pathways. Potential drugs targeting PRC1 were identified using DrugBank database and molecular docking., Results: PRC1 expression was significantly increased in LUAD. PRC1 could be, therefore, a prognostic biomarker for predicting overall survival in LUAD. PRC1 expression was also related to cancer stage and patient's smoking history. PRC1 positively correlated with mutation count, aneuploidy and hypoxia scores. It was also significantly related to tumor-infiltrating immune cells, especially the activated mast cells. GSEA revealed that PRC1 might be correlated with cell cycle, cytokinesis and p53 signaling pathway. Additionally, fostamatinib was found to be a potential drug targeting PRC1., Conclusions: PRC1 may have a prognostic value for patients with LUAD, and be correlated with the mutation count, aneuploidy, hypoxia and tumor-infiltrating immune cells. Fostamatinib was found to be a potential drug targeting PRC1 in LUAD.
- Published
- 2022
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40. Multifunctional Carbon Modification Enhancement for Vanadium-Based Phosphates as an Advanced Cathode of Zinc-Ion Batteries.
- Author
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Liu YH, Li WH, Lü HY, Luo XX, Huang ZX, Gu ZY, Zhao XX, and Wu XL
- Abstract
In recent years, rechargeable aqueous zinc-ion batteries (ZIBs) have shown extraordinary potential due to their safety, nontoxicity, sustainable zinc resources, and low price. However, the lack of suitable cathode materials hinders the development of ZIBs. Recently, layered phosphates have been widely used as cathode materials. As one typical phosphate cathode, vanadium oxyphosphate (VOPO
4 ) has inherently low electronic conductivity and structural dissolution in electrochemical reactions, limiting its development. To solve these problems, VOPO4 /C is prepared by combining multifunctional carbon material with a VOPO4 interlayer and an external surface, which not only improves the electronic conductivity of the composite material but also effectively inhibits the dissolution of VOPO4 in the electrolyte. As a result, the prepared VOPO4 /C could deliver a reversible capacity of 140 mA h g-1 at a current density of 100 mA g-1 . Furthermore, the rate performance of the VOPO4 /C composite has also been improved significantly. In the process of charging and discharging, zinc ions in the composite show perfect intercalate and deintercalate performance.- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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41. Application of digital positioning guide plates for the surgical extraction of multiple impacted supernumerary teeth: A case report and review of literature.
- Author
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Wang Z, Zhao SY, He WS, Yu F, Shi SJ, Xia XL, Luo XX, and Xiao YH
- Abstract
Background: An extra tooth in the normal tooth sequence in any region of the dental arch is regarded as a supernumerary tooth (SNT). Due to the large variation in location and morphology, the extraction of impacted SNTs is an extensive and complex procedure with high risks of several complications. This report presents a rare case of seven impacted SNTs in the bilateral upper and lower arch that were successfully extracted with the use of digital positioning guide plates., Case Summary: In January 2022, a 21-year-old male was referred to our department with a chief complaint of pain in relation to tooth #36. Clinical examination showed a deep carious lesion with pulpal involvement in tooth #36 and lingual swelling of the bilateral mandibular posterior area. Radiographic examination revealed seven deeply impacted SNTs in the bilateral posterior area and bilateral impacted mandibular third molars. Based on these findings, the patient was diagnosed with bilateral, multiple impacted SNTs and tooth #36 chronic pulpitis. A root canal treatment and an all-ceramic crown restoration for tooth #36 were performed. An individualized digital positioning guide plate was designed by computer-aided design/computer-aided manufacturing technology and cone-beam computed tomography for extraction of the impacted SNTs. During the operation, the digital positioning guide plate allowed rapid positioning and exposure of the SNTs while avoiding adjacent important anatomical structures. At 3-month follow-up, regeneration of bone and soft tissues was visible., Conclusion: The application of digital positioning guide plates is useful for the individualized and minimalized extraction of impacted supernumerary teeth., Competing Interests: Conflict-of-interest statement: All authors declare that they have no conflicts of interest., (©The Author(s) 2022. Published by Baishideng Publishing Group Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2022
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42. [Initiation timing of veno-arterial extracorporeal membrane oxygenation].
- Author
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Li JJ, Luo XX, and Huang XB
- Subjects
- Humans, Retrospective Studies, Shock, Cardiogenic therapy, COVID-19, Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation, Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation adverse effects, Pulmonary Embolism
- Abstract
Veno-arterial extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (VA-ECMO) is a salvage therapy for critical patients with refractory cardiogenic shock caused by various reasons. It can temporarily replace cardiopulmonary function, and rapidly improve hypoxemia, increase systemic oxygen content and remove carbon dioxide. Although the Extracorporeal Life Support Organization (ELSO) guideline proposed clear indication for VA-ECMO, the heterogeneity of cardiac pathogeny is large, so the clear timing of ECMO initiation is still vague. We discuss the timing of ECMO initiation for external cardiopulmonary resuscitation (ECPR) and cardiogenic shock which is caused by fulminant myocarditis, acute myocardial infarction, acute pulmonary embolism, acute right heart failure related to lung transplantation, corona virus disease 2019 (COVID-19)-associated cardiovascular collapse. Also, we look forward to making more suggestions for clinicians' judgment and choice for VA-ECMO.
- Published
- 2022
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43. Regulating the Li Nucleation/Growth Behavior via Cu 2 O Nanowire Array and Artificial Solid Electrolyte Interphase toward Highly Stable Li Metal Anode.
- Author
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Liu XF, Xie D, Tao FY, Diao WY, Yang JL, Luo XX, Li WL, and Wu XL
- Abstract
Lithium (Li) metal has been considered to be the most promising anode material for next-generation rechargeable batteries. Unfortunately, the hazards induced by dendrite growth and volume fluctuation hinder its commercialized application. Here, a three-dimensional (3D) current collector composed of a vertically aligned Cu
2 O nanowire that is tightly coated with a polydopamine protective layer is developed to solve the encountered issues of lithium metal batteries (LMBs). The Cu2 O nanowire arrays (Cu2 O NWAs) provide abundant lithiophilic sites for inducing Li nucleation selectively to form a thin Li layer around the nanowires and direct subsequent Li deposition. The well-defined nanochannel works well in confining the Li growth spatially and buffering the volume change during the repeated cycling. The PDA coatings adhered onto the outline of the Cu2 O NWAs serve as the artificial solid electrolyte interface to isolate the electrode and electrolyte and retain the interfacial stability. Moreover, the increased specific area of copper foam (CF) can dissipate the local current density and further suppress the growth of Li dendrites. As a result, CF@Cu2 O NWAs@PDA realizes a dendrite-free morphology and the assembled symmetrical batteries can work stably for over 1000 h at 3 mA cm-2 . When CF@Cu2 O NWAs@PDA is coupled with a LiFePO4 cathode, the full cells exhibit improved cycle stability and rate performance.- Published
- 2022
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44. Streptomyces griseicoloratus sp. nov., isolated from soil in cotton fields in Xinjiang, China.
- Author
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Xing L, Xia YY, Zhang QY, Xia ZF, Wan CX, Zhang LL, and Luo XX
- Subjects
- DNA, Bacterial genetics, Fatty Acids chemistry, Gossypium, Phospholipids chemistry, Phylogeny, RNA, Ribosomal, 16S genetics, Sequence Analysis, DNA, Soil Microbiology, Soil, Streptomyces
- Abstract
A novel bacterium of the genus Streptomyces, designated TRM S81-3
T , was isolated from soil in cotton fields of Xinjiang, China. Comparative 16S rRNA gene sequence analysis indicated that strain TRM S81-3T is most closely related to Streptomyces viridiviolaceus NBRC 13359T (98.9% sequence similarity); however, the average nucleotide identity (ANI) between strains TRM S81-3T and S. viridiviolaceus NBRC 13359T is relatively low (91.6%). Strain TRM S81-3T possesses LL-diaminopimelic acid as the diagnostic cell-wall diamino acid, MK-9(H4 ), MK-9(H6 ), and MK-9(H10 ) as the major menaquinones, and polar lipids including diphosphatidylglycerol (DPG), phosphatidylcholine (PC), phosphatidylethanolamine (PE), phosphatidylmethyl ethanolamine (PME), phosphotidylinositolone (PI), phospholipid of unknown structure containing glucosamine (NPG), and two unidentified phospholipids (PLs).The major fatty acids are iso-C16:0 , anteiso-C15:0 , anteiso-C17:1 ω9c, anteiso-C17:0 , iso-C15:0 , and C14:0 . The genomic DNA G + C content is 72.1%. Based on the evidence from this polyphasic study, strain TRM S81-3T represents a novel species of Streptomyces, for which the name Streptomyces grisecoloratus is proposed. The type strain is TRM S81-3T (= CCTCC AA 2020002T = LMG 31942T )., (© 2022. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature.)- Published
- 2022
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45. Effectiveness and Economic Evaluation of Polyene Phosphatidyl Choline in Patients With Liver Diseases Based on Real-World Research.
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Fan JG, Li Y, Yu Z, Luo XX, Zheng P, Hao X, Wang ZY, Gao F, Zhang GQ, and Feng WY
- Abstract
Aims: Liver disease has high prevalence, number, and disease burden in China, and polyene phosphatidyl choline (PPC) is a widely used liver protective drug. We aim to explore the effectiveness and economy of PPC in patients with liver diseases based on real-world research and compare with other hepatoprotective drugs. Methods: This is a "three-phase" study from three medical centers, including descriptive study of patients using PPC injection, self-control case study of patients using PPC injection, and specific-disease cohort study of patients using PPC injection or control drugs. The major measurements of liver function for effectiveness analysis were the alanine transaminase (ALT) level changes and recovery rate. The main statistical methods were Wilcoxon signed rank test, χ
2 test, and Mann-Whitney U test. Propensity score matching was applied to reduce bias. Cost-effectiveness analysis, cost minimization analysis, and sensitivity analysis were used for economic evaluation. Results: PPC alone or in combination with glutathione and magnesium isoglycyrrhizinate shows less total hospitalization cost ( p < 0.05) and smaller cost-effectiveness ratio and was effective in protecting liver function, especially in patients with liver transplantation or postoperation of nontumor liver disease (ALT decreased significantly after PPC treatment; p < 0.05). Glutathione and magnesium isoglycyrrhizinate combined with PPC could enhance the protective function of liver. Conclusion: PPC was an effective and economic liver protective drug in patients with specific liver diseases, and PPC could enhance the liver protective function of glutathione and magnesium isoglycyrrhizinate., Competing Interests: Author ZY, Z-YW, and FG are employed by Beijing Medicinovo Technology Co. Ltd., China. Author XH is employed by Dalian Medicinovo Technology Co. Ltd., China. The remaining authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2022 Fan, Li, Yu, Luo, Zheng, Hao, Wang, Gao, Zhang and Feng.)- Published
- 2022
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46. Covalent Organic Framework with Highly Accessible Carbonyls and π-Cation Effect for Advanced Potassium-Ion Batteries.
- Author
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Luo XX, Li WH, Liang HJ, Zhang HX, Du KD, Wang XT, Liu XF, Zhang JP, and Wu XL
- Abstract
Covalent organic frameworks (COF) possess a robust and porous crystalline structure, making them an appealing candidate for energy storage. Herein, we report an exfoliated polyimide COF composite (P-COF@SWCNT) prepared by an in situ condensation of anhydride and amine on the single-walled carbon nanotubes as advanced anode for potassium-ion batteries (PIBs). Numerous active sites exposed on the exfoliated frameworks and the various open pathways promote the highly efficient ion diffusion in the P-COF@SWCNT while preventing irreversible dissolution in the electrolyte. During the charging/discharging process, K
+ is engaged in the carbonyls of imide group and naphthalene rings through the enolization and π-K+ effect, which is demonstrated by the DFT calculation and XPS, ex-situ FTIR, Raman. As a result, the prepared P-COF@SWCNT anode enables an incredibly high reversible specific capacity of 438 mA h g-1 at 0.05 A g-1 and extended stability. The structural advantage of P-COF@SWCNT enables more insights into the design and versatility of COF as an electrode., (© 2022 Wiley-VCH GmbH.)- Published
- 2022
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47. [Analysis on migration of HIV/AIDS cases and related factors in Liangshan Yi Autonomous Prefecture in Sichuan province, 2020].
- Author
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Shama MBD, Yu B, Yang SJ, Wuniumo AR, Luo XX, Sun ZT, Feng ZH, Wang GAJ, Nengge TL, Li ZG, Wang J, Wang XY, Feng G, Yu KCN, and Jike C
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Child, Child, Preschool, China epidemiology, Ethnicity, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Logistic Models, Marriage, Young Adult, Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome epidemiology, HIV Infections epidemiology
- Abstract
Objective: To analyze the migration of the HIV/AIDS cases and related factors in Liangshan Yi autonomous prefecture (Liangshan). Methods: According to HIV/AIDS Comprehensive Response Information Management System of China Information System for Disease Control and Prevention, a total of 28 772 HIV/AIDS cases who had follow-up records in Liangshan in 2020 were included in the survey. The migration of the HIV/AIDS cases was described and the related factors were analyzed using multiple logistic regression models, and the migration destinations of the HIV/AIDS cases were mapped. Results: Among the 28 772 HIV/AIDS cases, 20.89% (6 010/28 772) had migration in 2020. Multivariate logistic regression analysis showed that among the HIV/AIDS cases, the migration related factors included being aged 15-24 years (compared with being aged 0-14 years, OR =2.74, 95% CI :2.04-3.69) and ethnic group (compared with Han ethnic group, OR =2.44, 95% CI :2.19-2.72), having education level of junior high school (compared with having education level of primary school or below, OR =1.25, 95% CI :1.14-1.38), being unmarried (compared with being married, OR =1.29, 95% CI :1.20-1.39), being engaged in business services (compared with being engaged in farming, OR =1.96, 95% CI :1.31-2.92), receiving antiviral treatment <1 year (compared with receiving antiviral treatment >3 years, OR =1.42, 95% CI :1.26-1.61), having recent CD4
+ T lymphocytes (CD4) counts >500 cells/μl (compared with having recent CD4 counts <200 cells/μl, OR =1.15, 95% CI :1.03-1.29). The geographical distribution maps showed that among all cities in Sichuan, Xichang (13.26%, 797/6 010) and Chengdu (10.12%,608/6 010) were the main migration destinations of the HIV/AIDS cases, and the provinces outside Sichuan where the HIV/AIDS cases would like to migrate to were mainly Guangdong (18.19%, 1 093/6 010) and Zhejiang provinces (7.67%, 461/6 010) in 2020. The HIV/AIDS cases who migrated where Liangshan, within Sichuan province, and to other provinces accounted for 27.67% (1 663/6 010), 15.34% (922/6 010) and 56.99% (3 425/6 010), respectively. Conclusions: More attention should be paid to the mobility characteristics and the classification management of HIV/AIDS cases according to their characteristics in Liangshan. Timely access to information on changes in the place of work and residence of HIV/AIDS cases should be warranted when they have migration. Good referrals and management for mobility of HIV/AIDS cases in different places should be made to reduce loss to follow-up and improving interventions.- Published
- 2022
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48. Lymphatic Endothelial Markers and Tumor Lymphangiogenesis Assessment in Human Breast Cancer.
- Author
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Chen JM, Luo B, Ma R, Luo XX, Chen YS, and Li Y
- Abstract
Metastasis via lymphatic vessels or blood vessels is the leading cause of death for breast cancer, and lymphangiogenesis and angiogenesis are critical prerequisites for the tumor invasion-metastasis cascade. The research progress for tumor lymphangiogenesis has tended to lag behind that for angiogenesis due to the lack of specific markers. With the discovery of lymphatic endothelial cell (LEC) markers, growing evidence demonstrates that the LEC plays an active role in lymphatic formation and remodeling, tumor cell growth, invasion and intravasation, tumor-microenvironment remodeling, and antitumor immunity. However, some studies have drawn controversial conclusions due to the variation in the LEC markers and lymphangiogenesis assessments used. In this study, we review recent findings on tumor lymphangiogenesis, the most commonly used LEC markers, and parameters for lymphangiogenesis assessments, such as the lymphatic vessel density and lymphatic vessel invasion in human breast cancer. An in-depth understanding of tumor lymphangiogenesis and LEC markers can help to illustrate the mechanisms and distinct roles of lymphangiogenesis in breast cancer progression, which will help in exploring novel potential predictive biomarkers and therapeutic targets for breast cancer.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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49. [Co 3 (μ 3 -O)]-Based Metal-Organic Frameworks as Advanced Anode Materials in K- and Na-Ion Batteries.
- Author
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Yang GP, Luo XX, Liu YF, Li K, and Wu XL
- Abstract
A new metal-organic framework {(Me
2 NH2 )2 [Co3 (μ3 -O)(btb)2 (py)(H2 O)]·(DMF)2 (H2 O)2 }n ( Cobtbpy ) was solvothermal synthesized (H3 btb = 1,3,5-tri(4-carboxylphenyl)benzene, py = pyridine, DMF = N,N-dimethylformamide). Cobtbpy shows a (3,6)-connected rtl 3D network with a point symbol of (4·62 )2 (42 ·610 ·83 ) based on the [Co3 (μ3 -O)] clusters. The obtained Cobtbpy has stable, accessible, dense active sites and can be applied in the potassium- and sodium-ion batteries. Through mixing with single-walled carbon nanotubes, the prepared composite anode material Cobtbpy -0.9 achieved a high reversible capability, delivering 416 mAh/g in the potassium-ion batteries and 379 mAh/g in the sodium-ion batteries at 0.05 A/g. The outstanding properties of Cobtbpy -0.9 in the batteries demonstrated that this MOFs-based carbon composite is a highly desirable electrode material candidate for high-performance potassium- and sodium-ion batteries.- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Microbacterium karelineae sp. nov. isolated from a halophyte plant in the Taklamakan desert.
- Author
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Zhu QH, Yang CL, Luo XX, Zhang LL, and Xia ZF
- Subjects
- Bacterial Typing Techniques, Base Composition, China, DNA, Bacterial genetics, Fatty Acids chemistry, Glycolipids chemistry, Microbacterium isolation & purification, Nucleic Acid Hybridization, Peptidoglycan chemistry, Phospholipids chemistry, RNA, Ribosomal, 16S genetics, Sequence Analysis, DNA, Vitamin K 2 chemistry, Desert Climate, Microbacterium classification, Phylogeny, Salt-Tolerant Plants microbiology
- Abstract
A bacterial strain, designated TRM 80801
T , was isolated from the Karelinea in Taklamakan desert, Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, north-west China. Cells were Gram-stain-positive, aerobic, non-motile, short rods. Strain TRM 80801T grew at 4-50 °C, with optimum growth at 28 °C, and grew at pH 6.0-11.0 and 1-15 % (w/v) NaCl. Phylogenetic analyses of the 16S rRNA gene sequences placed strain TRM 80801T within the genus Microbacterium with the highest similarities to Microbacterium suaedae YZYP 306T (98.97 %) and Microbacterium indicum BBH6T (98.17 %), respectively. The DNA G+C content of TRM 80801T is 69.38 mol%. The cell-wall peptidoglycan contained the amino acids ornithine, glutamic acid, glycine and alanine, the diagnostic diamino acid was ornithine. The acyl type of the peptidoglycan was glycolyl. Whole-cell sugars were ribose, mannose, glucose, rhamnose and galactose. The major cellular fatty acids were anteiso -C15 : 0 , anteiso -C17 : 0 and iso -C16 : 0 . The predominant menaquinones were MK-10, MK-11 and MK-12. The polar lipids were diphosphatidylglycerol, phosphatidylglycerol. The whole-genome average nucleotide identity (ANI) value between strain TRM 80801T and Microbacterium suaedae YZYP 306T is 70.2 %. On the basis of the evidence presented in this study, strain TRM 80801T is representative of a novel species in the genus Microbacterium , for which the name Microbacterium karelineae sp. nov. is proposed. The type strain is TRM 80801T (=CCTCC AB 2019248T =KCTC 49357T ).- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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