11 results on '"Wu, Qingyuan"'
Search Results
2. Normal Thoracic Radiographic Appearance of the Cynomolgus Monkey (Macaca fascicularis)
- Author
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Xie, Liang, primary, Zhou, Qinming, additional, Liu, Shigang, additional, Wu, Qingyuan, additional, Ji, Yongjia, additional, Zhang, Lujun, additional, Xu, Fan, additional, Gong, Wei, additional, Melgiri, Narayan D., additional, and Xie, Peng, additional
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Depression-Like Behavioral Phenotypes by Social and Social Plus Visual Isolation in the Adult Female Macaca fascicularis
- Author
-
Li, Xin, primary, Xu, Fan, additional, Xie, Liang, additional, Ji, Yongjia, additional, Cheng, Ke, additional, Zhou, Qinmin, additional, Wang, Tao, additional, Shively, Carol, additional, Wu, Qingyuan, additional, Gong, Wei, additional, Fang, Liang, additional, Zhan, Qunlin, additional, Melgiri, N. D., additional, and Xie, Peng, additional
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Age- and Sex-Based Hematological and Biochemical Parameters for Macaca fascicularis
- Author
-
Xie, Liang, primary, Xu, Fan, additional, Liu, Shigang, additional, Ji, Yongjia, additional, Zhou, Qinming, additional, Wu, Qingyuan, additional, Gong, Wei, additional, Cheng, Ke, additional, Li, Juan, additional, Li, Leilei, additional, Fang, Liang, additional, Zhou, Linke, additional, and Xie, Peng, additional
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. The Mutual Influences between Depressed Macaca fascicularis Mothers and Their Infants.
- Author
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Zhou, Qinming, Xu, Fan, Wu, Qingyuan, Gong, Wei, Xie, Liang, Wang, Tao, Fang, Liang, Yang, Deyu, Melgiri, Narayan D., and Xie, Peng
- Subjects
KRA ,DEPRESSED persons ,CHILD rearing ,SCIENTIFIC observation ,VIDEO recording ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Objective: To assess the influence of infant rearing on the behavior of depressed adult female Macaca fascicularis and the influence of depressed infant-rearing adult female Macaca fascicularis on their infants in a free enclosure environment. Methods: Here, 20 depressed subjects and then 20 healthy subjects were randomly selected from a total population of 1007 adult female Macaca fascicularis subjects. Four depressed subjects and eight healthy subjects were rearing infants. By focal observation, three trained observers video-recorded the selected subjects over a total observational period of 560 hours. The video footage was analyzed by qualified blinded analysts that coded the raw footage into quantitative behavioral data (i.e., durations of 53 pre-defined behavioral items across 12 behavioral categories) for statistical analysis. Results: Between infant-rearing and non-rearing healthy subjects, ten differential behaviors distributed across five behavioral categories were identified. Between infant-rearing and non-rearing depressed subjects, nine behaviors distributed across five behavioral categories were identified. Between infant-rearing healthy and infant-rearing depressed subjects, fifteen behaviors distributed across six behavioral categories were identified. Conclusion: Infant-rearing depressed adult female Macaca fascicularis subjects may have a worse psychological status as compared to non-rearing depressed counterparts. Infant rearing may negatively influence depressed Macaca fascicularis mothers. Infant-rearing depressed subjects were less adequate at raising infants as compared to infant-rearing healthy subjects. Thus, maternal depression in this macaque species may negatively impact infatile development, which is consistent with previous findings in humans. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Normal Thoracic Radiographic Appearance of the Cynomolgus Monkey (Macaca fascicularis).
- Author
-
Xie, Liang, Zhou, Qinming, Liu, Shigang, Wu, Qingyuan, Ji, Yongjia, Zhang, Lujun, Xu, Fan, Gong, Wei, Melgiri, Narayan D., and Xie, Peng
- Subjects
CHEST X rays ,CARDIOVASCULAR diseases ,RESPIRATORY diseases ,MEDICAL research ,COMPARATIVE anatomy ,LABORATORY monkeys ,STATISTICS - Abstract
Background: The cynomolgus monkey (Macaca fascicularis) has been increasingly used as a non-human primate model in biomedical research. As establishing baseline thoracic radiography for the cynomolgus monkey is essential, we tested the hypothesis that age and sex may affect the thoracic radiography parameters of this species. Methods: Here, 697 healthy cynomolgus monkeys were segregated by sex and age (three age groups: 25–36 months, 37–48 months, 49–60 months). The lung length (LL), maximal interior thoracic depth (TD), maximal interior thoracic breadth (TBr), cardiac silhouette breadth (CBr), cardiothoracic ratio (CR), right and left costophrenic angles (RCA and LCA), and right hilar height ratio (R-HHR) were assessed by chest film. Statistical analysis was applied to examine the effect of age, sex, and age × sex interactions. Results: Significant effects by age were shown for LL, TD, TBr, CBr, and CR. Significant effects by sex were found for TD, TBr, CBr, CR, and R-HHR. Significant effects by age × sex were observed for TD, TBr, CBr, and CR. Both TD and TBr increased with age in both sexes, and both were significantly higher in males than in females in the group aged 49–60 months. CBr increased with age and was significantly higher in males than in females across all age groups. CR declined with age and was significantly higher in males than females across all age groups, and CR was similar or slightly higher relative to those previously found in other non-human primate species. As to the other parameters with no significant sex nor age-related differences, the R-HHR was greater than 1.00, and the angulation of bilateral costophrenic angles were sharp. Conclusions: The thoracic radiographic parameters for the healthy cynomolgus monkey presented here should prove useful in veterinary practice, research involving non-human primate models of respiratory or cardiovascular disorders, and morphological studies on cynomolgus monkeys. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Depression-Like Behavioral Phenotypes by Social and Social Plus Visual Isolation in the Adult Female Macaca fascicularis.
- Author
-
Li, Xin, Xu, Fan, Xie, Liang, Ji, Yongjia, Cheng, Ke, Zhou, Qinmin, Wang, Tao, Shively, Carol, Wu, Qingyuan, Gong, Wei, Fang, Liang, Zhan, Qunlin, Melgiri, N. D., and Xie, Peng
- Subjects
MENTAL depression ,THERAPEUTICS ,AFFECTIVE disorders ,PHENOTYPES ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,KRA ,CLINICAL trials ,PATHOLOGICAL physiology - Abstract
Major depressive disorder (MDD) is a debilitating psychiatric mood disorder that affects millions of individuals globally. Our understanding of the biological basis of MDD is poor, and current treatments are ineffective in a significant proportion of cases. This current situation may relate to the dominant rodent animal models of depression, which possess translational limitations due to limited homologies with humans. Therefore, a more homologous primate model of depression is needed to advance investigation into the pathophysiological mechanisms underlying depression and to conduct pre-clinical therapeutic trials. Here, we report two convenient methods – social isolation and social plus visual isolation – which can be applied to construct a non-human primate model of depression in the adult female cynomolgus monkey (Macaca fascicularis). Both social and social plus visual isolation were shown to be effective in inducing depression-like behavior by significantly reducing socially dominant aggressive conflict behavior, communicative behavior, sexual behavior, and parental behavior. The addition of visual isolation produced more profound behavioral changes than social isolation alone by further reducing parental behavior and sexual behavior. Thus, the degree of behavioral pathology may be manipulated by the degree of isolation. These methods can be applied to construct a non-human primate model of depression in order to assess physiological, behavioral, and social phenomena in a controlled laboratory setting. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Age- and Sex-Based Hematological and Biochemical Parameters for Macaca fascicularis.
- Author
-
Xie, Liang, Xu, Fan, Liu, Shigang, Ji, Yongjia, Zhou, Qinming, Wu, Qingyuan, Gong, Wei, Cheng, Ke, Li, Juan, Li, Leilei, Fang, Liang, Zhou, Linke, and Xie, Peng
- Subjects
BIOCHEMISTRY ,HEMATOLOGY ,MEDICAL research ,CELL physiology ,KRA ,BLOOD testing ,VETERINARY medicine - Abstract
Background: The cynomolgus monkey (Macaca fascicularis) has been increasingly used in biomedical research, making knowledge of its blood-based parameters essential to support the selection of healthy subjects and its use in preclinical research. As age and sex affect these blood-based parameters, it is important to establish baseline indices for these parameters on an age and sex basis and determine the effects of age and sex on these indices. Methods: A total of 917 cynomolgus monkeys (374 males and 543 females) were selected and segregated by age (five groups) and sex. A total of 30 hematological and 22 biochemical parameters were measured, and the effects of age and sex were analyzed. Results: Baseline indices for hematological and biochemical parameters were separately established by age and sex. Significant effects by age, sex, and age-sex interaction were observed in a number of blood parameters. In the 49–60 months and 61–72 months age groups, red blood cell count, hemoglobulin, and hematocrit showed significantly lower values (P<0.01) in females than males. Serum alkaline phosphatase varied with age in both sexes (P<0.01) and was significantly higher in females than males (P<0.05) in the groups aged 13–24 months and 25–36 months; however, in the three groups aged over 25–36 months, serum alkaline phosphatase was significantly lower in females than males (P<0.01). Creatinine concentration increased with age (P<0.01) in all age groups; specifically in the groups aged 49–60 months and 61–72 months, creatinine was significantly higher (P<0.01) in males than females. Total protein and globulin both increased with age (P<0.01). Conclusion: The baseline values of hematological and biochemical parameters reported herein establish reference indices of blood-based parameters in the cynomolgus monkey by age and sex, thereby aiding researchers in selecting healthy subjects and evaluating preclinical studies using this species. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Normal Thoracic Radiographic Appearance of the Cynomolgus Monkey (Macaca fascicularis).
- Author
-
Xie, Liang, Zhou, Qinming, Liu, Shigang, Wu, Qingyuan, Ji, Yongjia, Zhang, Lujun, Xu, Fan, Gong, Wei, Melgiri, Narayan D., and Xie, Peng
- Subjects
- *
CHEST X rays , *CARDIOVASCULAR diseases , *RESPIRATORY diseases , *MEDICAL research , *COMPARATIVE anatomy , *LABORATORY monkeys , *STATISTICS - Abstract
Background: The cynomolgus monkey (Macaca fascicularis) has been increasingly used as a non-human primate model in biomedical research. As establishing baseline thoracic radiography for the cynomolgus monkey is essential, we tested the hypothesis that age and sex may affect the thoracic radiography parameters of this species. Methods: Here, 697 healthy cynomolgus monkeys were segregated by sex and age (three age groups: 25–36 months, 37–48 months, 49–60 months). The lung length (LL), maximal interior thoracic depth (TD), maximal interior thoracic breadth (TBr), cardiac silhouette breadth (CBr), cardiothoracic ratio (CR), right and left costophrenic angles (RCA and LCA), and right hilar height ratio (R-HHR) were assessed by chest film. Statistical analysis was applied to examine the effect of age, sex, and age × sex interactions. Results: Significant effects by age were shown for LL, TD, TBr, CBr, and CR. Significant effects by sex were found for TD, TBr, CBr, CR, and R-HHR. Significant effects by age × sex were observed for TD, TBr, CBr, and CR. Both TD and TBr increased with age in both sexes, and both were significantly higher in males than in females in the group aged 49–60 months. CBr increased with age and was significantly higher in males than in females across all age groups. CR declined with age and was significantly higher in males than females across all age groups, and CR was similar or slightly higher relative to those previously found in other non-human primate species. As to the other parameters with no significant sex nor age-related differences, the R-HHR was greater than 1.00, and the angulation of bilateral costophrenic angles were sharp. Conclusions: The thoracic radiographic parameters for the healthy cynomolgus monkey presented here should prove useful in veterinary practice, research involving non-human primate models of respiratory or cardiovascular disorders, and morphological studies on cynomolgus monkeys. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Depression-Like Behavioral Phenotypes by Social and Social Plus Visual Isolation in the Adult Female Macaca fascicularis.
- Author
-
Li, Xin, Xu, Fan, Xie, Liang, Ji, Yongjia, Cheng, Ke, Zhou, Qinmin, Wang, Tao, Shively, Carol, Wu, Qingyuan, Gong, Wei, Fang, Liang, Zhan, Qunlin, Melgiri, N. D., and Xie, Peng
- Subjects
- *
MENTAL depression , *THERAPEUTICS , *AFFECTIVE disorders , *PHENOTYPES , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *KRA , *CLINICAL trials , *PATHOLOGICAL physiology - Abstract
Major depressive disorder (MDD) is a debilitating psychiatric mood disorder that affects millions of individuals globally. Our understanding of the biological basis of MDD is poor, and current treatments are ineffective in a significant proportion of cases. This current situation may relate to the dominant rodent animal models of depression, which possess translational limitations due to limited homologies with humans. Therefore, a more homologous primate model of depression is needed to advance investigation into the pathophysiological mechanisms underlying depression and to conduct pre-clinical therapeutic trials. Here, we report two convenient methods – social isolation and social plus visual isolation – which can be applied to construct a non-human primate model of depression in the adult female cynomolgus monkey (Macaca fascicularis). Both social and social plus visual isolation were shown to be effective in inducing depression-like behavior by significantly reducing socially dominant aggressive conflict behavior, communicative behavior, sexual behavior, and parental behavior. The addition of visual isolation produced more profound behavioral changes than social isolation alone by further reducing parental behavior and sexual behavior. Thus, the degree of behavioral pathology may be manipulated by the degree of isolation. These methods can be applied to construct a non-human primate model of depression in order to assess physiological, behavioral, and social phenomena in a controlled laboratory setting. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Age- and Sex-Based Hematological and Biochemical Parameters for Macaca fascicularis.
- Author
-
Xie, Liang, Xu, Fan, Liu, Shigang, Ji, Yongjia, Zhou, Qinming, Wu, Qingyuan, Gong, Wei, Cheng, Ke, Li, Juan, Li, Leilei, Fang, Liang, Zhou, Linke, and Xie, Peng
- Subjects
- *
BIOCHEMISTRY , *HEMATOLOGY , *MEDICAL research , *CELL physiology , *KRA , *BLOOD testing , *VETERINARY medicine - Abstract
Background: The cynomolgus monkey (Macaca fascicularis) has been increasingly used in biomedical research, making knowledge of its blood-based parameters essential to support the selection of healthy subjects and its use in preclinical research. As age and sex affect these blood-based parameters, it is important to establish baseline indices for these parameters on an age and sex basis and determine the effects of age and sex on these indices. Methods: A total of 917 cynomolgus monkeys (374 males and 543 females) were selected and segregated by age (five groups) and sex. A total of 30 hematological and 22 biochemical parameters were measured, and the effects of age and sex were analyzed. Results: Baseline indices for hematological and biochemical parameters were separately established by age and sex. Significant effects by age, sex, and age-sex interaction were observed in a number of blood parameters. In the 49–60 months and 61–72 months age groups, red blood cell count, hemoglobulin, and hematocrit showed significantly lower values (P<0.01) in females than males. Serum alkaline phosphatase varied with age in both sexes (P<0.01) and was significantly higher in females than males (P<0.05) in the groups aged 13–24 months and 25–36 months; however, in the three groups aged over 25–36 months, serum alkaline phosphatase was significantly lower in females than males (P<0.01). Creatinine concentration increased with age (P<0.01) in all age groups; specifically in the groups aged 49–60 months and 61–72 months, creatinine was significantly higher (P<0.01) in males than females. Total protein and globulin both increased with age (P<0.01). Conclusion: The baseline values of hematological and biochemical parameters reported herein establish reference indices of blood-based parameters in the cynomolgus monkey by age and sex, thereby aiding researchers in selecting healthy subjects and evaluating preclinical studies using this species. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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