18 results on '"Chen, Zexin"'
Search Results
2. Targeting pro-inflammatory T cells as a novel therapeutic approach to potentially resolve atherosclerosis in humans
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Fan, Lin, Liu, Junwei, Hu, Wei, Chen, Zexin, Lan, Jie, Zhang, Tongtong, Zhang, Yang, Wu, Xianpeng, Zhong, Zhiwei, Zhang, Danyang, Zhang, Jinlong, Qin, Rui, Chen, Hui, Zong, Yunfeng, Zhang, Jianmin, Chen, Bing, Jiang, Jun, Cheng, Jifang, Zhou, Jingyi, Gao, Zhiwei, Liu, Zhenjie, Chai, Ying, Fan, Junqiang, Wu, Pin, Chen, Yinxuan, Zhu, Yuefeng, Wang, Kai, Yuan, Ying, Huang, Pintong, Zhang, Ying, Feng, Huiqin, Song, Kaichen, Zeng, Xun, Zhu, Wei, Hu, Xinyang, Yin, Weiwei, Chen, Wei, and Wang, Jian’an
- Abstract
Atherosclerosis (AS), a leading cause of cardio-cerebrovascular disease worldwide, is driven by the accumulation of lipid contents and chronic inflammation. Traditional strategies primarily focus on lipid reduction to control AS progression, leaving residual inflammatory risks for major adverse cardiovascular events (MACEs). While anti-inflammatory therapies targeting innate immunity have reduced MACEs, many patients continue to face significant risks. Another key component in AS progression is adaptive immunity, but its potential role in preventing AS remains unclear. To investigate this, we conducted a retrospective cohort study on tumor patients with AS plaques. We found that anti-programmed cell death protein 1 (PD-1) monoclonal antibody (mAb) significantly reduces AS plaque size. With multi-omics single-cell analyses, we comprehensively characterized AS plaque-specific PD-1+T cells, which are activated and pro-inflammatory. We demonstrated that anti-PD-1 mAb, when captured by myeloid-expressed Fc gamma receptors (FcγRs), interacts with PD-1 expressed on T cells. This interaction turns the anti-PD-1 mAb into a substitute PD-1 ligand, suppressing T-cell functions in the PD-1 ligands-deficient context of AS plaques. Further, we conducted a prospective cohort study on tumor patients treated with anti-PD-1 mAb with or without FcγR-binding capability. Our analysis shows that anti-PD-1 mAb with FcγR-binding capability effectively reduces AS plaque size, while anti-PD-1 mAb without FcγR-binding capability does not. Our work suggests that T cell-targeting immunotherapy can be an effective strategy to resolve AS in humans.
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- 2024
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3. Swine acute diarrhea syndrome coronavirus Nsp1 suppresses IFN-λ1 production by degrading IRF1 via ubiquitin–proteasome pathway.
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Zhong, Chunhui, She, Gaoli, Zhao, Yukun, Liu, Yufang, Li, Jingmin, Wei, Xiaona, Chen, Zexin, Zhao, Keyu, Zhao, Zhiqing, Xu, Zhichao, Zhang, Hao, Cao, Yongchang, and Xue, Chunyi
- Abstract
Swine acute diarrhea syndrome coronavirus (SADS-CoV) is a novel porcine enteric coronavirus that causes acute watery diarrhea, vomiting, and dehydration in newborn piglets. The type III interferon (IFN-λ) response serves as the primary defense against viruses that replicate in intestinal epithelial cells. However, there is currently no information available on how SADS-CoV modulates the production of IFN-λ. In this study, we utilized IPI-FX cells (a cell line of porcine ileum epithelium) as an in vitro model to investigate the potential immune evasion strategies employed by SADS-CoV against the IFN-λ response. Our results showed that SADS-CoV infection suppressed the production of IFN-λ1 induced by poly(I:C). Through screening SADS-CoV-encoded proteins, nsp1, nsp5, nsp10, nsp12, nsp16, E, S1, and S2 were identified as antagonists of IFN-λ1 production. Specifically, SADS-CoV nsp1 impeded the activation of the IFN-λ1 promoter mediated by MAVS, TBK1, IKKε, and IRF1. Both SADS-CoV and nsp1 obstructed poly(I:C)-induced nuclear translocation of IRF1. Moreover, SADS-CoV nsp1 degraded IRF1 via the ubiquitin-mediated proteasome pathway without interacting with it. Overall, our study provides the first evidence that SADS-CoV inhibits the type III IFN response, shedding light on the molecular mechanisms employed by SADS-CoV to evade the host immune response. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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4. Unleashing 100-km Multi-Channel PDM Self-Homodyne Coherent Transmission by SOAs and All-Optical Nonlinear Distortion Mitigations
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Li, Weihao, Chen, Yizhao, Zeng, Yifan, Zhou, Ziwen, Zhang, Mingming, Chen, Junda, Cheng, Chen, Chen, Zexin, Hu, Zihe, and Tang, Ming
- Abstract
Cost-efficient coherent-lite solutions are highly desired in short-reach datacenter networks (DCNs). Self-homodyne coherent (SHC) scheme holds promise due to its compatibility with legacy coherent infrastructure and substantially reduced cost and power dissipation. Unfortunately, the inherent loss, resulting from the signal modulation and the propagations of both the signal and remote local oscillator (LO), poses a significant limitation on its link budget and hinders its application in metro-DCNs. In this paper, we propose to unleash the application of multi-channel polarization-division-multiplexed (PDM) SHC transmission in metro-DCNs by semiconductor optical amplifiers (SOAs) and two all-optical nonlinear distortion mitigation techniques. We show that by employing multi-wavelength remote LOs for multi-wavelength gain clamping (MW-GC), SOA-induced nonlinear amplitude and phase distortions can be significantly reduced. Additionally, it is demonstrated that SOA-induced nonlinear phase distortion on the signal can be compensated by the experienced nonlinear phase of orthogonally polarized remote LO after PDM-SHC detection (PDM-SHCD). Using these proposed techniques, we successfully demonstrate a 4-channel 50-GBd 16QAM PDM-SHC transmission over 100-km standard single-mode fibers and achieve a remarkable link loss budget of 25 dB, where only 9.8-dBm transmitter laser power is required per lane. Besides, we assess the impact of four-wave mixing-induced inter-channel interference in the multi-wavelength gain-clamped SOA and prove it to be negligible on the system performance when using a 200-GHz channel grid.
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- 2024
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5. Sex Differences in Fractional Flow Reserve– or Intravascular Ultrasound–Guided Percutaneous Coronary Intervention.
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Zhang, Jinlong, Jiang, Jun, Hu, Xinyang, Sun, Yong, Li, Changling, Zhu, Lingjun, Gao, Feng, Dong, Liang, Liu, Yabin, Shen, Jian, Ni, Cheng, Wang, Kan, Chen, Zexin, Chen, Haibo, Li, Shiqiang, Yang, Seokhun, Kang, Jeehoon, Hwang, Doyeon, Hahn, Joo-Yong, and Nam, Chang-Wook
- Abstract
A recent randomized trial reported fractional flow reserve (FFR)-guided percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) strategy was noninferior to the intracoronary ultrasound (IVUS)-guided PCI strategy with respect to clinical outcomes with fewer revascularizations. This study sought to investigate the sex differences in treatment and clinical outcomes according to physiology- or imaging-guided PCI strategies. In this secondary analysis of the FLAVOUR (Fractional Flow Reserve or Intravascular Ultrasonography to Guide PCI) trial, the impact of sex on procedural characteristics, PCI rate, and outcomes according to different strategies and treatment types (PCI vs deferral of PCI) was analyzed. The primary outcome was target vessel failure (TVF) at 24 months, defined as a composite of cardiac death, target vessel myocardial infarction, and target vessel revascularization. Of 1,619 patients, 30% were women. Compared with men, women had a smaller minimal lumen area, smaller plaque burden, and higher FFR. They had a lower PCI rate (40.8% vs 47.9%; P = 0.008), which was mainly contributed by FFR guidance. Overall, women showed a lower TVF rate (2.4% vs 4.5%). According to the treatment type, the cumulative incidence of TVF was lower in women than in men among those with the deferral of PCI (1.7% vs 5.2%). However, this trend was not observed in patients who underwent PCI. In both women and men, there were no differences in clinical outcomes between the FFR- and IVUS-guided strategies. In cases of intermediate stenosis, despite receiving fewer interventions, women had more favorable outcomes than men. The use of FFR led to a lower PCI rate but had a similar prognostic value compared with IVUS in both women and men. [Display omitted] [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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6. Study on the inactivation effect and mechanism of EGCG disinfectant on Bacillus subtilis.
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Feng, Cuimin, Li, Jing, Yang, Weiqi, and Chen, Zexin
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BACILLUS subtilis ,ENERGY metabolism ,BACILLUS (Bacteria) ,TRANSMISSION electron microscopy ,EPIGALLOCATECHIN gallate ,WATER disinfection - Abstract
The widespread use of chlorine-based disinfectants in drinking water treatment has led to the proliferation of chlorine-resistant bacteria and the risk of disinfection byproducts (DBPs), posing a serious threat to public health. This study aims to explore the effectiveness and potential applications of epigallocatechin gallate (EGCG) against chlorine-resistant Bacillus and its spores in water, providing new insights for the control of chlorine-resistant bacteria and improving the biological stability of distribution systems. The inactivation effects of EGCG on Bacillus subtilis (B. subtilis) and its spores were investigated using transmission electron microscopy, ATP measurement, and transcriptome sequencing analysis to determine changes in surface structure, energy metabolism, and gene expression levels, thereby elucidating the inactivation mechanism. The results demonstrate the potential application of EGCG in continuously inhibiting chlorine-resistant B. subtilis in water, effectively improving the biological stability of the distribution system. However, EGCG is not suitable for treating raw water with high spore content and is more suitable as a supplementary disinfectant for processes with strong spore removal capabilities, such as ozone, ultraviolet, or ultrafiltration. EGCG exhibits a disruptive effect on the morphological structure and energy metabolism of B. subtilis and suppresses the synthesis of substances, energy metabolism, and normal operation of the antioxidant system by inhibiting the expression of multiple genes, thereby achieving the inactivation of B. subtilis. [Display omitted] • EGCG counters chlorine-resistant Bacillus subtilis , enhancing water stability. • EGCG disrupts Bacillus subtilis structure and metabolism, leading to inactivation. • EGCG inhibits gene expression, suppressing synthesis and antioxidant properties. • EGCG is a suitable auxiliary disinfectant for processes with strong spore removal. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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7. Patient-Derived Tumor Organoids Can Predict the Progression-Free Survival of Patients With Stage IV Colorectal Cancer After Surgery
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Wang, Ting, Tang, Yuting, Pan, Wenjun, Yan, Botao, Hao, Yifan, Zeng, Yunli, Chen, Zexin, Lan, Jianqiang, Zhao, Shuhan, Deng, Chuxia, Zheng, Hang, and Yan, Jun
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- 2023
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8. Transmitter Optimization for PS-QAM Signal in High Spectral Efficiency Metro-Transmission
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Chen, Zexin, He, Zonglong, Mirani, Ali, Schroder, Jochen, Andrekson, Peter, Karlsson, Magnus, Xiang, Meng, Yu, Yu, Tang, Ming, Qin, Yuwen, and Fu, Songnian
- Abstract
Probabilistic constellation shaping (PCS) brings unprecedented flexibility to future optical networks. However, PCS combined with higher-order modulation formats and higher symbol rates puts more demands on the transmitter. For metro-transmission with high spectral efficiency (SE), transmitter impairments are responsible for a major portion of the system constraints. To address this issue, in this work we study the impact of transmitter impairments on probabilistically shaped quadrature amplitude modulation (PS-QAM) signals. First, we investigate the impact of transmitter impairments and radio frequency (RF) amplifier noise on the optimum shaping factor and the modulation depth within a fiber link. Then, we explore how generalized mutual information (GMI) and the shaping factor are affected by the noise from the transmitter. Next, we first jointly optimize the arcsine swing and the clipping ratio, in order to mitigate the transmitter impairments for the PS-QAM signal, when the modulation depth, the noise from the transmitter, the noise from the fiber optical channel, and the shaping factor are fixed. Then, we verify its validity for various configurations of transmission system. The optimized parameters primarily depend on the noise from the transmitter and turn out to be insensitive to the noise from the fiber optical link and the shaping factor. Finally, we experimentally verify the optimization strategy with PS-256QAM in back-to-back (B2B) transmission.
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- 2023
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9. Author Correction: Targeting pro-inflammatory T cells as a novel therapeutic approach to potentially resolve atherosclerosis in humans
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Fan, Lin, Liu, Junwei, Hu, Wei, Chen, Zexin, Lan, Jie, Zhang, Tongtong, Zhang, Yang, Wu, Xianpeng, Zhong, Zhiwei, Zhang, Danyang, Zhang, Jinlong, Qin, Rui, Chen, Hui, Zong, Yunfeng, Zhang, Jianmin, Chen, Bing, Jiang, Jun, Cheng, Jifang, Zhou, Jingyi, Gao, Zhiwei, Liu, Zhenjie, Chai, Ying, Fan, Junqiang, Wu, Pin, Chen, Yinxuan, Zhu, Yuefeng, Wang, Kai, Yuan, Ying, Huang, Pintong, Zhang, Ying, Feng, Huiqin, Song, Kaichen, Zeng, Xun, Zhu, Wei, Hu, Xinyang, Yin, Weiwei, Chen, Wei, and Wang, Jian’an
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- 2024
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10. Cortical ensembles orchestrate social competition through hypothalamic outputs
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Padilla-Coreano, Nancy, Batra, Kanha, Patarino, Makenzie, Chen, Zexin, Rock, Rachel R., Zhang, Ruihan, Hausmann, Sébastien B., Weddington, Javier C., Patel, Reesha, Zhang, Yu E., Fang, Hao-Shu, Mishra, Srishti, LeDuke, Deryn O., Revanna, Jasmin, Li, Hao, Borio, Matilde, Pamintuan, Rachelle, Bal, Aneesh, Keyes, Laurel R., Libster, Avraham, Wichmann, Romy, Mills, Fergil, Taschbach, Felix H., Matthews, Gillian A., Curley, James P., Fiete, Ila R., Lu, Cewu, and Tye, Kay M.
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Most social species self-organize into dominance hierarchies1,2, which decreases aggression and conserves energy3,4, but it is not clear how individuals know their social rank. We have only begun to learn how the brain represents social rank5–9and guides behaviour on the basis of this representation. The medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) is involved in social dominance in rodents7,8and humans10,11. Yet, precisely how the mPFC encodes relative social rank and which circuits mediate this computation is not known. We developed a social competition assay in which mice compete for rewards, as well as a computer vision tool (AlphaTracker) to track multiple, unmarked animals. A hidden Markov model combined with generalized linear models was able to decode social competition behaviour from mPFC ensemble activity. Population dynamics in the mPFC predicted social rank and competitive success. Finally, we demonstrate that mPFC cells that project to the lateral hypothalamus promote dominance behaviour during reward competition. Thus, we reveal a cortico-hypothalamic circuit by which the mPFC exerts top-down modulation of social dominance.
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- 2022
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11. The interaction between prepregnancy BMI and gestational vitamin D deficiency on the risk of gestational diabetes mellitus subtypes with elevated fasting blood glucose.
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Shao, Bule, Mo, Minjia, Xin, Xing, Jiang, Wen, Wu, Jinhua, Huang, Manxian, Wang, Shuojia, Muyiduli, Xiamusiye, Si, Shuting, Shen, Yu, Chen, Zexin, and Yu, Yunxian
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To investigate the association of VitD with GDM, and examine the potential modifying effect of prepregnancy BMI in Chinese pregnant women. 3318 pregnant women underwent oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) were selected from Zhoushan Pregnant Women Cohort. Plasma VitD levels were measured in the first (T1) and/or second trimester (T2). Multiple linear and logistic regression models were used for evaluating the association of VitD with GDM. Prepregnancy BMI was positively associated with all three time-point glucose of OGTT. 25(OH)D level in T1 (β = −0.003) and T2 (β = −0.004), and its change from T1 to T2 (β = −0.004) were significantly and inversely associated with fasting blood glucose (FBG) of OGTT, but not 1-h and 2-h postload blood glucose of OGTT, respectively. The negative associations of VitD and FBG were stronger among overweight/obese women. VitD deficiency (25(OH)D < 20 ng/ml) in T2 was associated with an increased risk of GDM with increased FBG, GDM subtype 1 (OR: 2.10) and subtype 3 (OR: 2.19). Moreover, prepregnancy BMI modified this effect on GDM subtype 1 (BMI < 24: OR = 1.42; BMI ≥ 24: OR = 9.61, P for interaction = 0.002). Lower VitD increment from T1 to T2 was associated with a higher risk for GDM among overweight/obese women. Additionally, GDM prevalence fluctuated with the season, i.e. lower in summer/fall and higher in winter/spring. Maternal VitD deficiency was associated with a higher risk of GDM subtype with increased FBG, and the risk is much greater among overweight/obesity women. The lower the VitD increment during pregnancy, the greater the risk of GDM, especially in overweight/obesity women. Furthermore, seasonal variation of GDM may be exhibited as a critical confounder in the association of VitD and GDM. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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12. Vitamin D nutrient status during pregnancy and its influencing factors.
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Shen, Yu, Pu, Liuyue, Si, Shuting, Xin, Xing, Mo, Minjia, Shao, Bule, Wu, Jinhua, Huang, Manxian, Wang, Shuojia, Muyiduli, Xiamusiye, Chen, Zexin, Jiang, Wen, and Yu, Yunxian
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Little is known about variation of vitamin D (VD) status during pregnancy among Chinese women. This study is to assess the change of VD status during pregnancy and its influencing factors among Chinese women. A running cohort study has being conducted in southeast China. The pregnant women were interviewed and the peripheral blood samples were collected at the first (T1), second (T2) and third trimester (T3), respectively. 25(OH)D 2 and 25(OH)D 3 were measured by liquid chromatography tandem-mass spectrometry. Multiple linear and logistic regression models were applied to explore the associations of VD supplement with 25(OH)D concentration and VD deficiency, respectively. There were 4368 pregnant women enrolled in the current study. The 25(OH)D concentration increased notably with gestational week. The average plasma 25(OH)D concentration in T1, T2 and T3 was 18.94 ± 8.74, 23.05 ± 11.15, and 24.65 ± 11.59 ng/mL, respectively. Correspondingly, VD deficiency (25(OH)D < 20 ng/mL) rate was 65.26%, 33.56% and 32.12%. In T1 phase, higher pre-pregnancy BMI, more parity, sampling in summer/autumn were related to higher 25(OH)D level, and similar patterns were observed in T2 and T3 phase. There was positive dose–response effect between VD supplement frequency and 25(OH)D concentration during pregnancy, adjusting for potential confounders (T1: β(SE) = 3.907 (0.319), P < 0.001; T2: β(SE) = 2.780 (0.805), P < 0.001; T3: β(SE) = 3.640 (1.057), P = 0.006). Not surprisingly, supplementing VD > 3 times/week reduced the risk of VD deficiency during pregnancy significantly, compared to without VD supplement (T1: OR = 0.30, 95% CI: 0.24–0.37; T2: 0.56, 0.38–0.82; T3: 0.67, 0.44–0.96). VD level increased with gestational week among Chinese pregnant women. High frequency of VD supplement during pregnancy is an effective way to reduce risk of VD deficiency, especially among the pregnant women with younger age, low prepregnancy BMI and primipara, and during winter and spring season. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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13. Risk factors for anterior shoulder instability: a matched case-control study.
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Hong, Jianqiao, Huang, Yiting, Ma, Chiyuan, Qu, Guoxin, Meng, Jiahong, Wu, Haobo, Shi, Mingmin, Wang, Yangxin, Zhou, Chenhe, Chen, Zexin, Yan, Shigui, and Wang, Wei
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Anatomic skeletal features of the shoulder play important roles in anterior shoulder dislocation. However, studies on the effect of the humeral structure are few. This case-control study aimed to analyze the risk factors of anterior shoulder instability, including glenoid and humeral factors. Anterior shoulder instability was found in 64 of 10,035 individuals who underwent magnetic resonance imaging. Propensity score matching was used to select controls matched for age, sex, height, and weight. We analyzed the glenoid and humeral structural data using conditional logistic regression analysis and identified cutoff points using receiver operating characteristic curve analysis. Significant differences were found between the control and dislocation groups in the depth-to-width ratio (0.119 ± 0.034 vs. 0.105 ± 0.037, P =.021), height-to-width ratio (1.51 ± 0.13 vs. 1.67 ± 0.16, P <.001), humeral head diameter-to-glenoid fossa diameter ratio (1.56 ± 0.11 vs. 1.64 ± 0.20, P <.001), and humeral containing angle (67.3° ± 5.9° vs. 60.4° ± 5.9°, P <.001). The humeral containing angle (odds ratio, 0.95; P =.024) and the glenoid height-to-width ratio (odds ratio, 7.88; P =.002), adjusted for the depth-to-width ratio and diameter ratio, were associated with anterior shoulder instability. The cutoff point for the humeral containing angle was 64° and for the height-to-width ratio was 1.60. This study revealed significant risk factors for shoulder instability in the Chinese Han population. The humeral containing angle and the glenoid height-to-width ratio were risk factors for anterior shoulder instability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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14. A systematic review and meta-analysis of the response of serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D concentration to vitamin D supplementation from RCTs from around the globe
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Mo, Minjia, Wang, Shijie, Chen, Zun, Muyiduli, Xiamusiye, Wang, Shuojia, Shen, Yu, Shao, Bule, Li, Minchao, Chen, Danqing, Chen, Zexin, and Yu, Yunxian
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Background/Objectives: Optimal doses of vitamin D (VitD) supplement in different populations are unclear. We aim to evaluate the relationship between VitD supplementation and post-intervention serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D [25(OH)D] concentration, to provide a recommended dosage of VitD for achieving an optimal 25(OH)D concentration for different populations. Subjects/Methods: Literature search was conducted in Embase, etc. Randomized controlled trials about VitD supplemental intakes and their effect on 25(OH)D concentration were enrolled. The effect on 25(OH)D concentration between different supplementation doses in each population group was compared by meta-analysis. Multivariate meta-regression model is utilized to establish reference intake dosage of VitD. Results: A total of 136 articles were included about children (3–17 years), adults (18–64 years), postmenopausal women, the elderly ( >64 years), pregnant, or lactating women. Overall, intervention groups obtained higher 25(OH)D concentration than controls and there was obvious dose–response effect between intake dose and 25(OH)D concentration. Baseline 25(OH)D concentration and age were significant indicators for 25(OH)D concentration. To reach sufficient 25(OH)D concentration (75 nmol/L), the recommended VitD supplemental intakes was 1340 and 2250 IU/day for children and pregnant women, 2519 and 797 IU/day for European adults aged 18–64 and 65–85 years, 729, 2026, and 1229 IU/day for adults in North America, Asia and Middle East and Africa, respectively. Conclusions: Regional- and age-specific recommended dosages of VitD supplements for population to achieve optimal 25(OH)D concentrations have been suggested.
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- 2019
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15. Simulating orientation and polarization characteristics of dense fibrous tissue by electrostatic spinning of polymeric fibers
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Shen, Shuwei, Wang, Haili, Qu, Yingjie, Huang, Kuiming, Liu, Guangli, Chen, Zexin, Ma, Canzhen, Shao, Pengfei, Hong, Jin, Lemaillet, Paul, Dong, Erbao, and Xu, Ronald X.
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Phantoms simulating polarization characteristics of soft tissue play an important role in the development, calibration, and validation of diagnostic polarized imaging devices and of therapeutic strategy, in both laboratory and clinical settings. We propose to fabricate optical phantoms that simulate polarization characteristics of dense fibrous tissues by bonding electrospun polylactic acid (PLA) fibers between polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) substrate with a groove. Increasing the rotational speed of an electrospinning collector helps improve the orientation of the electrospun fibers. The phantoms simulate the polarization characteristics of dense fibrous tissue of collagenous fibroma and healthy skin with high fidelity. Our experiments demonstrate the technical potential of using such phantoms for validation and calibration of polarimetric medical devices.
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- 2019
16. High dimensional time series anomaly detection based on generated adversarial network and spatial correlation
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Ba, Shuhong, Zhou, Fan, Pan, Junru, Liang, Ying, and Chen, Zexin
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- 2023
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17. Association Between Mental Stress and Gestational HypertensionPreeclampsia
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Zhang, Shanchun, Ding, Zheyuan, Liu, Hui, Chen, Zexin, Wu, Jinhua, Zhang, Youding, and Yu, Yunxian
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Hypertensive disorders of pregnant women are one of the important causes of maternal and perinatal morbidity and mortality. Evidence showed mental stress might be a risk factor of gestational hypertensive disorders.
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- 2013
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18. Zero-valent manganese nanoparticles coupled with different strong oxidants for thallium removal from wastewater
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Li, Keke, Li, Huosheng, Xiao, Tangfu, Zhang, Gaosheng, Liang, Aiping, Zhang, Ping, Lin, Lianhua, Chen, Zexin, Cao, Xinyu, and Long, Jianyou
- Abstract
Nano zero-valent manganese (nZVMn, Mn0) was prepared through a borohydride reduction method and coupled with different oxidants (persulfate (S2O82−), hypochlorite (ClO−), or hydrogen peroxide (H2O2)) to remove thallium (Tl) from wastewater. The surface of Mn0was readily oxidized to form a core-shell composite (MnOx@Mn0), which consists of Mn0as the inner core and MnOx(MnO, Mn2O3, and Mn3O4) as the outer layer. When Mn0was added alone, effective Tl(I) removal was achieved at high pH levels (>12). The Mn0-H2O2system was only effective in Tl(I) removal at high pH (>12), while the Mn0-S2O82−or Mn0-ClO-system had excellent Tl(I) removal (>96%) over a broad pH range (4–12). The Mn0-S2O82−oxidation system provided the best resistance to interference from an external organic matrix. The isotherm of Tl(I) removal through the Mn0-S2O82−system followed the Freundlich model. The Mn0nanomaterials can activate persulfate to produce sulfate radicals and hydroxyl radicals. Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy suggested that oxidation-induced precipitation, surface adsorption, and electrostatic attraction are the main mechanisms for Tl(I) removal resulting from the combination of Mn0and oxidants. Mn0coupled with S2O82−/ClO−is a novel and effective technique for Tl(I) removal, and its application in other fields is worthy of further investigation.
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- 2020
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