403 results on '"Wang, C. B."'
Search Results
152. Interaction of Tetrachloroethylene with Pd(100) Studied by High-Resolution X-ray Photoemission Spectroscopy
- Author
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Park, K. T., Klier, K., Wang, C. B., and Zhang, W. X.
- Abstract
Adsorption and reaction of tetrachloroethylene (C
2 Cl4 ) on a clean Pd(100) surface have been investigated at room and cryogenic temperatures. The 300 K saturation of Pd(100) with C2 Cl4 gas gave rise to a well-ordered p(2 × 2) overlayer structure. High-resolution X-ray photoemission spectroscopy established that the C−Cl bonds in the p(2 × 2)C2 Cl4 overlayer were dissociated while retaining the stoichiometry 2C: 4Cl, and the amounts of carbon and chlorine on the surface were 0.125 and 0.25 monolayer (ML), respectively. At 131 K, the exposure of the clean Pd(100) surface to C2 Cl4 resulted in predominantly molecular adsorption, evidenced by the binding energies (BEs) of the Cl 2p and C 1s core levels. A detailed core level scan in the Cl 2p region revealed two satellite Cl peaks: one shifted from the molecular C2 Cl4 peak by ΔBE = −2.7 eV and the other by ΔBE = −1.4 eV, corresponding to atomic Cl and partially dissociated C2 Cl4 species, respectively. As the temperature increased, the partially dissociated C2 Cl4 gradually converted to adsorbed Cl atoms until T = 291 K, at which temperature all Cl on the surface formed atomic Cl of 0.25 ML. The carbon species, while present in stoichiometric amounts, did not give rise to additional structural features, but they indirectly affected the Cl ordering in forcing the p(2 × 2) structure, which does not form upon dissociative adsorption of elemental chlorine.- Published
- 1997
153. Stationary Phase 5. Evaluation of Stationary Phases for HPLC of Explosives.
- Author
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Den, T. G., Ho, K. C., Lee, C. H., Wang, C. B., Chang, T. C., and Chen, Y. Z.
- Published
- 1987
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
154. Monitoring water potential and relative water content in eucalyptus camaldulensis using near infrared spectroscopy
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Yan Lin, Lu, W. H., Lin, Y., Luo, J. Z., Wang, C. B., Meder, R., Warburton, P., and Arnold, R. J.
155. Removal of gas-phase As2O3 in dry process by metal oxide adsorbents
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Yue Zhang, Wang, C. -B, Liu, H. -M, Sun, Z., Li, W. -H, Zhang, Y. -S, and Pan, W. -P
156. A guided memetic algorithm with probabilistic models
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Chen, S. -H, Chang, P. -C, Qingfu Zhang, and Wang, C. -B
157. Solvent and structural effects on picosecond electron transfer reactions in diporphyrin models of the photosystem II reaction center of green plants
- Author
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Fujita, I., primary, Fajer, J., additional, Chang, C. K., additional, Wang, C. B., additional, Bergkamp, M. A., additional, and Netzel, T. L., additional
- Published
- 1982
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158. ChemInform Abstract: A CONVENIENT SYNTHESIS OF PYRROLE PRECURSORS FOR OCTAALKYLPORPHYRINS
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WANG, C.‐B., primary and CHANG, C. K., additional
- Published
- 1979
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159. ChemInform Abstract: NONBONDING STERIC EFFECT ON CARBON MONOXIDE AND OXYGEN BINDING TO HEMES. KINETICS OF LIGAND BINDING IN IRON-COPPER COFACIAL DIPORPHYRINS AND STRAPPED HEMES
- Author
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WARD, B., primary, WANG, C.-B., additional, and CHANG, C. K., additional
- Published
- 1981
- Full Text
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160. Identification of a Sex Pheromone of the Female Brown Dog Tick, Rhipicephalus sanguineus1
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Chow, Y. S., primary, Wang, C. B., additional, and Lin, L. C, additional
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- 1975
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161. ChemInform Abstract: SOLVENT AND STRUCTURAL EFFECTS ON PICOSECOND ELECTRON TRANSFER REACTIONS IN DIPORPHYRIN MODELS OF THE PHOTOSYSTEM II REACTION CENTER OF GREEN PLANTS
- Author
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FUJITA, I., primary, FAJER, J., additional, CHANG, C.‐K., additional, WANG, C.‐B., additional, BERGKAMP, M. A., additional, and NETZEL, T. L., additional
- Published
- 1982
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
162. ChemInform Abstract: STACKED DOUBLE-MACROCYCLIC LIGANDS. II. SYNTHESIS OF COFACIAL DIPORPHYRINS
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CHANG, C. K., primary, KUO, M. S., additional, and WANG, C. B., additional
- Published
- 1978
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- View/download PDF
163. Dependence of electrocatalysis for oxygen reduction by adsorbed dicobalt cofacial porphyrins upon catalyst structure
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Liu, H.Y., primary, Weaver, Michael J., additional, Wang, C.-B., additional, and Chang, C.K., additional
- Published
- 1983
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164. 4,4′-Di-tert-butyl TunePhos Ligand in Asymmetric Hydrogenation.
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Wang, C.-J., Wang, C.-B., Chen, D., Yang, G., Wu, Z., and Zhang, X.
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- 2009
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165. MONITORING WATER POTENTIAL AND RELATIVE WATER CONTENT IN EUCALYPTUS CAMALDULENSIS USING NEAR INFRARED SPECTROSCOPY.
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Yang, G. L., Lu, W. H., Lin, Y., Luo, J. Z., Wang, C. B., Meder, R., Warburton, P., and Arnold, R. J.
- Subjects
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SEEDLINGS , *EUCALYPTUS camaldulensis , *NEAR infrared spectroscopy , *IRRIGATION , *CALIBRATION - Abstract
A genetically diverse cohort of Eucalyptus camaldulensis seedlings were grown under a range of irrigation treatments to impose a range of states of water stress. Near infrared (NIR) spectra obtained from leaf surfaces of these seedlings were calibrated against physiological measurements commonly associated with plant water stress, i.e. relative water content and midday leaf water potential. Spectral data were obtained from upper (adaxial) leaf surfaces of upper and lower leaves on the stem. A strong coefficient of determination of R² P = 0.78 was obtained for the validation set using the calibration developed for midday leaf water potential from the seedling leaf data. However, that for relative water content was relatively low: R² P = 0.41. These results indicated that portable NIR has the potential to provide for rapid, non-destructive assessment of the leaf water potential in E. camaldulensis seedlings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
166. Development of Indirect ELISAs for Differential Serodiagnosis of Classical and Highly Pathogenic Porcine Reproductive and Respiratory Syndrome Virus.
- Author
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Xiao, Y. H., Wang, T. T., Zhao, Q., Wang, C. B., Lv, J. H., Nie, L., Gao, J. M., Ma, X. C., Hsu, W. H., and Zhou, E. M.
- Subjects
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PORCINE reproductive & respiratory syndrome , *SERODIAGNOSIS , *DIFFERENTIAL diagnosis , *VIRAL antibodies , *ENZYME-linked immunosorbent assay , *VIRAL vaccines , *SERUM , *DIAGNOSIS - Abstract
The objective of this study was to develop two indirect enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays ( iELISAs) for detection of serum antibodies against classical vaccine strain of porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome virus ( PRRSV) and highly pathogenic PRRSV ( HP- PRRSV). To detect the common antibodies against classical and HP- PRRSV, the coating antigen used in the iELISA (designated iELISA-180) was the antigen of Nsp2-180, the 180aa at amino terminal of Nsp2. To detect the different antibodies against classical and HP- PRRSV, the coating antigen in the second iELISA (designated iELISA- D29) was Nsp2- D29, the deleted 29aa in Nsp2 of HP-PRRSV. The antigen concentration and serum dilutions were optimized using a draughtboard titration. The cut-off values of 0.361 at OD450nm for the iELISA-180 and 0.27 at OD450nm for the iELISA- D29 were determined by testing a panel of 120 classical PRRSV positive and 198 PRRSV negative pig serum samples, which generated the specificity of 97.1% and 96.7%, the sensitivity of 96.9% and 96.3% for iELISA-180 and iELISA- D29, respectively. The agreements between the Western blot and iELISA-180 and iELISA- D29 were 98%, 96.7%, respectively. The developed iELISAs can be used to differentiate serologically HP- PRRSV from the vaccinated or classical PRRSV in clinical serum samples. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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167. Timing of xenon-induced delayed postconditioning to protect against spinal cord ischaemia-reperfusion injury in rats.
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Yang, Y W, Cheng, W P, Lu, J K, Dong, X H, Wang, C B, Zhang, J, Zhao, L Y, and Gao, Z F
- Abstract
Background: This study was designed to assess the neuroprotective effect of xenon-induced delayed postconditioning on spinal cord ischaemia-reperfusion injury (IRI) and to determine the time of administration for best neuroprotection in a rat model of spinal cord IRI.Methods: Fifty male rats were randomly divided equally into a sham group, control group, and three xenon postconditioning groups (n=10 per group). The control group underwent spinal cord IRI and immediately inhaled 50% nitrogen/50% oxygen for 3 h at the initiation of reperfusion. The three xenon postconditioning groups underwent the same surgical procedure and immediately inhaled 50% xenon/50% oxygen for 3 h at the initiation of reperfusion or 1 and 2 h after reperfusion. The sham operation group underwent the same surgical procedure without aortic occlusion, and inhaled 50% nitrogen/50% oxygen. Neurological function was assessed using the Basso, Beattie, and Bresnahan score at 4, 24, and 48 h of reperfusion. Histological examination was performed using Nissl staining and immunohistochemistry, and apoptosis was detected by terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated deoxyuridine triphosphate nick end-labelling staining.Results: Compared with the control group, the three xenon postconditioning groups showed improvements in neurological outcomes, and had more morphologically normal neurones at 48 h of reperfusion. Apoptotic cell death was reduced and the ratio of Bcl-2/Bax immunoreactivity increased in xenon-treated rats compared with controls.Conclusions: Xenon postconditioning up to 2 h after reperfusion provided protection against spinal cord IRI in rats, but the greatest neuroprotection occurred with administration of xenon for 1 h at reperfusion. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
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168. Molecular, serological, and biochemical diagnosis and monitoring of COVID-19: IFCC taskforce evaluation of the latest evidence
- Author
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Maurizio Ferrari, David Koch, Mary Kathryn Bohn, Giuseppe Lippi, Nicasio Mancini, Andrea R. Horvath, Khosrow Adeli, Sunil Sethi, Cheng Bin Wang, Shannon Steele, Bohn, M. K., Lippi, G., Horvath, A., Sethi, S., Koch, D., Ferrari, M., Wang, C. -B., Mancini, N., Steele, S., and Adeli, K.
- Subjects
biochemical monitoring ,COVID-19 ,molecular testing ,SARS-CoV-2 ,serology testing ,Betacoronavirus ,Biomarkers ,Clinical Laboratory Services ,Clinical Laboratory Techniques ,Coronavirus ,Coronavirus Infections ,Humans ,Laboratories ,Pandemics ,Pneumonia ,Viral ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,0301 basic medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Pneumonia, Viral ,Medical laboratory ,Biochemical diagnosis ,Disease ,Serology ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Epidemiology ,Pandemic ,medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Intensive care medicine ,business.industry ,Biochemistry (medical) ,General Medicine ,030104 developmental biology ,business - Abstract
The global coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) has presented major challenges for clinical laboratories, from initial diagnosis to patient monitoring and treatment. Initial response to this pandemic involved the development, production, and distribution of diagnostic molecular assays at an unprecedented rate, leading to minimal validation requirements and concerns regarding their diagnostic accuracy in clinical settings. In addition to molecular testing, serological assays to detect antibodies against severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) are now becoming available from numerous diagnostic manufacturers. In both cases, the lack of peer-reviewed data and regulatory oversight, combined with general misconceptions regarding their appropriate use, have highlighted the importance of laboratory professionals in robustly validating and evaluating these assays for appropriate clinical use. The International Federation of Clinical Chemistry and Laboratory Medicine (IFCC) Task Force on COVID-19 has been established to synthesize up-to-date information on the epidemiology, pathogenesis, and laboratory diagnosis and monitoring of COVID-19, as well as to develop practical recommendations on the use of molecular, serological, and biochemical tests in disease diagnosis and management. This review summarizes the latest evidence and status of molecular, serological, and biochemical testing in COVID-19 and highlights some key considerations for clinical laboratories operating to support the global fight against this ongoing pandemic. Confidently this consolidated information provides a useful resource to laboratories and a reminder of the laboratory’s critical role as the world battles this unprecedented crisis.
- Published
- 2020
169. Operational considerations and challenges of biochemistry laboratories during the COVID-19 outbreak: an IFCC global survey
- Author
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Tze Ping Loh, Khosrow Adeli, Maurizio Ferrari, Nicasio Mancini, Sunil Sethi, Cheng Bin Wang, David Koch, Giuseppe Lippi, Andrea R. Horvath, Robert C. Hawkins, Loh, T. P., Horvath, A. R., Wang, C. -B., Koch, D., Adeli, K., Mancini, N., Ferrari, M., Hawkins, R., Sethi, S., and Lippi, G.
- Subjects
Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,Monitoring ,biohazard ,biosafety ,COVID-19 ,laboratory management ,SARS-CoV-2 ,Body Temperature ,Containment of Biohazards ,Coronavirus Infections ,Disease Outbreaks ,Disinfection ,Health Workforce ,Humans ,Laboratories ,Hospital ,Physiologic ,Pandemics ,Personal Protective Equipment ,Pneumonia ,Viral ,Risk Management ,Betacoronavirus ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Pneumonia, Viral ,Medical laboratory ,COVID-19, SARS-CoV-2, biohazard, biosafety, laboratory management ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Biosafety ,0302 clinical medicine ,Pandemic ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Personal protective equipment ,Point of care ,Monitoring, Physiologic ,business.industry ,Biochemistry (medical) ,General Medicine ,Laboratories, Hospital ,Test (assessment) ,Biochemistry ,Software deployment ,business - Abstract
Objectives The International Federation of Clinical Chemistry and Laboratory Medicine (IFCC) Task Force on COVID-19 conducted a global survey to understand how biochemistry laboratories manage the operational challenges during the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic. Materials and methods An electronic survey was distributed globally to record the operational considerations to mitigate biosafety risks in the laboratory. Additionally, the laboratories were asked to indicate the operational challenges they faced. Results A total of 1210 valid submissions were included in this analysis. Most of the survey participants worked in hospital laboratories. Around 15% of laboratories restricted certain tests on patients with clinically suspected or confirmed COVID-19 over biosafety concerns. Just over 10% of the laboratories had to restrict their test menu or services due to resource constraints. Approximately a third of laboratories performed temperature monitoring, while two thirds of laboratories increased the frequency of disinfection. Just less than 50% of the laboratories split their teams. The greatest reported challenge faced by laboratories during the COVID-19 pandemic is securing sufficient supplies of personal protective equipment (PPE), analytical equipment, including those used at the point of care, as well as reagents, consumables and other laboratory materials. This was followed by having inadequate staff, managing their morale, anxiety and deployment. Conclusions The restriction of tests and services may have undesirable clinical consequences as clinicians are deprived of important information to deliver appropriate care to their patients. Staff rostering and biosafety concerns require longer-term solutions as they are crucial for the continued operation of the laboratory during what may well be a prolonged pandemic.
- Published
- 2020
170. Laboratory practices to mitigate biohazard risks during the COVID-19 outbreak: an IFCC global survey
- Author
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David Koch, Robert C. Hawkins, Maurizio Ferrari, Andrea R. Horvath, Sunil Sethi, Tze Ping Loh, Khosrow Adeli, Giuseppe Lippi, Cheng Bin Wang, Nicasio Mancini, Loh, T. P., Horvath, A. R., Wang, C. -B., Koch, D., Lippi, G., Mancini, N., Ferrari, M., Hawkins, R., Sethi, S., and Adeli, K.
- Subjects
030213 general clinical medicine ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Pneumonia, Viral ,Sample (statistics) ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Disease Outbreaks ,Specimen Handling ,Hospital ,03 medical and health sciences ,Biosafety ,Betacoronavirus ,0302 clinical medicine ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Medicine ,Humans ,BioHazard ,Viral ,Personal protective equipment ,Pandemics ,Personal Protective Equipment ,Infection Control ,Risk Management ,Task force ,business.industry ,SARS-CoV-2 ,Biochemistry (medical) ,biohazard ,biosafety ,COVID-19 ,Containment of Biohazards ,Coronavirus Infections ,Laboratories ,Pneumonia ,Outbreak ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Laboratories, Hospital ,COVID-19, SARS-CoV-2, biohazard, biosafety ,Pneumatic tube ,Medical emergency ,business - Abstract
Objectives A global survey was conducted by the IFCC Task Force on COVID-19 to better understand how general biochemistry laboratories manage the pre-analytical, analytical and post-analytical processes to mitigate biohazard risks during the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic. Methods An electronic survey was developed to record the general characteristics of the laboratory, as well as the pre-analytical, analytical, post-analytical and operational practices of biochemistry laboratories that are managing clinical samples of patients with COVID-19. Results A total of 1210 submissions were included in the analysis. The majority of responses came from hospital central/core laboratories that serve hospital patient groups and handle moderate daily sample volumes. There has been a decrease in the use of pneumatic tube transport, increase in hand delivery and increase in number of layers of plastic bags for samples of patients with clinically suspected or confirmed COVID-19. Surgical face masks and gloves are the most commonly used personal protective equipment (PPE). Just >50% of the laboratories did not perform an additional decontamination step on the instrument after analysis of samples from patients with clinically suspected or confirmed COVID-19. A fifth of laboratories disallowed add-on testing on these samples. Less than a quarter of laboratories autoclaved their samples prior to disposal. Conclusions The survey responses showed wide variation in pre-analytical, analytical and post-analytical practices in terms of PPE adoption and biosafety processes. It is likely that many of the suboptimal biosafety practices are related to practical local factors, such as limited PPE availability and lack of automated instrumentation.
- Published
- 2020
171. Post-conditioning by xenon reduces ischaemia-reperfusion injury of the spinal cord in rats.
- Author
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YANG, Y. W., LU, J. K., QING, E. M., DONG, X. H., WANG, C. B., ZHANG, J., ZHAO, L. Y., GAO, Z. F., and CHENG, W. P.
- Subjects
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XENON , *ISCHEMIA treatment , *REPERFUSION injury , *SPINAL cord injuries , *LABORATORY rats , *THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
Background The neuroprotective effects of xenon post-conditioning following spinal cord injury remain unknown. We monitored the effect of xenon post-conditioning on the spinal cord following ischaemia-reperfusion injury and determined its mechanism of action. Methods Spinal cord ischaemia was induced following balloon occlusion of the thoracic aorta in male Sprague- Dawley rats. Rats were divided into three groups ( n = 30 in each group). The control group underwent ischaemia-reperfusion injury and immediately inhaled 50% (v/v) nitrogen at the time of reperfusion for 60 min continuously. The xenon-post-conditioning group underwent the same surgical procedure and immediately inhaled 50% (v/v) xenon at the time of reperfusion for 60 min continuously. The sham operation group underwent the same surgical procedure without aortic catheter occlusion and inhaled the same gas as that in control rats. Neurologic function was assessed using the Basso, Beattie, and Bresnahan score at 4, 24, and 48 h after reperfusion. Histological changes were observed using Nissl staining, the ultrastructure of the spinal cord was examined using transmission electron microscopy, and apoptosis was monitored using terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated deoxyuridine triphosphate nick-end labelling. Results Compared with the control group, the xenon-post-conditioning group showed improved neurologic outcomes (11.3 ± 1.6 vs. 15.7 ± 3.1, respectively) and had more morphologically normal neurons (6 ± 2 vs. 12 ± 3) at 48 h after reperfusion. Moreover, apoptotic cell death in xenon-treated rats was reduced when compared with control rats (18.29 ± 3.06 vs. 27.34 ± 3.63, P < 0.05, respectively). Conclusions Xenon post-conditioning exerts a neuroprotective effect on the spinal cord following ischaemia-reperfusion injury via its anti-apoptotic role. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
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172. Stringent Tests of Lorentz Invariance Violation from LHAASO Observations of GRB 221009A.
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Cao Z, Aharonian F, Axikegu, Bai YX, Bao YW, Bastieri D, Bi XJ, Bi YJ, Bian W, Bukevich AV, Cao Q, Cao WY, Cao Z, Chang J, Chang JF, Chen AM, Chen ES, Chen HX, Chen L, Chen L, Chen L, Chen MJ, Chen ML, Chen QH, Chen S, Chen SH, Chen SZ, Chen TL, Chen Y, Cheng N, Cheng YD, Cui MY, Cui SW, Cui XH, Cui YD, Dai BZ, Dai HL, Dai ZG, Danzengluobu, Dong XQ, Duan KK, Fan JH, Fan YZ, Fang J, Fang JH, Fang K, Feng CF, Feng H, Feng L, Feng SH, Feng XT, Feng Y, Feng YL, Gabici S, Gao B, Gao CD, Gao Q, Gao W, Gao WK, Ge MM, Geng LS, Giacinti G, Gong GH, Gou QB, Gu MH, Guo FL, Guo XL, Guo YQ, Guo YY, Han YA, Hasan M, He HH, He HN, He JY, He Y, Hor YK, Hou BW, Hou C, Hou X, Hu HB, Hu Q, Hu SC, Huang DH, Huang TQ, Huang WJ, Huang XT, Huang XY, Huang Y, Ji XL, Jia HY, Jia K, Jiang K, Jiang XW, Jiang ZJ, Jin M, Kang MM, Karpikov I, Kuleshov D, Kurinov K, Li BB, Li CM, Li C, Li C, Li D, Li F, Li HB, Li HC, Li J, Li J, Li K, Li SD, Li WL, Li WL, Li XR, Li X, Li YZ, Li Z, Li Z, Liang EW, Liang YF, Lin SJ, Liu B, Liu C, Liu D, Liu DB, Liu H, Liu HD, Liu J, Liu JL, Liu MY, Liu RY, Liu SM, Liu W, Liu Y, Liu YN, Luo Q, Luo Y, Lv HK, Ma BQ, Ma LL, Ma XH, Mao JR, Min Z, Mitthumsiri W, Mu HJ, Nan YC, Neronov A, Ou LJ, Pattarakijwanich P, Pei ZY, Qi JC, Qi MY, Qiao BQ, Qin JJ, Raza A, Ruffolo D, Sáiz A, Saeed M, Semikoz D, Shao L, Shchegolev O, Sheng XD, Shu FW, Song HC, Stenkin YV, Stepanov V, Su Y, Sun DX, Sun QN, Sun XN, Sun ZB, Takata J, Tam PHT, Tang QW, Tang R, Tang ZB, Tian WW, Wang C, Wang CB, Wang GW, Wang HG, Wang HH, Wang JC, Wang K, Wang K, Wang LP, Wang LY, Wang PH, Wang R, Wang W, Wang XG, Wang XY, Wang Y, Wang YD, Wang YJ, Wang ZH, Wang ZX, Wang Z, Wang Z, Wei DM, Wei JJ, Wei YJ, Wen T, Wu CY, Wu HR, Wu QW, Wu S, Wu XF, Wu YS, Xi SQ, Xia J, Xiang GM, Xiao DX, Xiao G, Xin YL, Xing Y, Xiong DR, Xiong Z, Xu DL, Xu RF, Xu RX, Xu WL, Xue L, Yan DH, Yan JZ, Yan T, Yang CW, Yang CY, Yang F, Yang FF, Yang LL, Yang MJ, Yang RZ, Yang WX, Yao YH, Yao ZG, Yin LQ, Yin N, You XH, You ZY, Yu YH, Yuan Q, Yue H, Zeng HD, Zeng TX, Zeng W, Zha M, Zhang BB, Zhang F, Zhang H, Zhang HM, Zhang HY, Zhang JL, Zhang L, Zhang PF, Zhang PP, Zhang R, Zhang SB, Zhang SR, Zhang SS, Zhang X, Zhang XP, Zhang YF, Zhang Y, Zhang Y, Zhao B, Zhao J, Zhao L, Zhao LZ, Zhao SP, Zhao XH, Zheng F, Zhong WJ, Zhou B, Zhou H, Zhou JN, Zhou M, Zhou P, Zhou R, Zhou XX, Zhou XX, Zhu BY, Zhu CG, Zhu FR, Zhu H, Zhu KJ, Zou YC, and Zuo X
- Abstract
On 9 October 2022, the Large High Altitude Air Shower Observatory (LHAASO) reported the observation of the very early TeV afterglow of the brightest-of-all-time gamma-ray burst 221009A, recording the highest photon statistics in the TeV band ever obtained from a gamma-ray burst. We use this unique observation to place stringent constraints on the energy dependence of the speed of light in vacuum, a manifestation of Lorentz invariance violation (LIV) predicted by some quantum gravity (QG) theories. Our results show that the 95% confidence level lower limits on the QG energy scales are E_{QG,1}>10 times the Planck energy E_{Pl} for the linear LIV effect, and E_{QG,2}>6×10^{-8}E_{Pl} for the quadratic LIV effect. Our limits on the quadratic LIV case improve previous best bounds by factors of 5-7.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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173. Constraints on Ultraheavy Dark Matter Properties from Dwarf Spheroidal Galaxies with LHAASO Observations.
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Cao Z, Aharonian F, An Q, Axikegu, Bai YX, Bao YW, Bastieri D, Bi XJ, Bi YJ, Cai JT, Cao Q, Cao WY, Cao Z, Chang J, Chang JF, Chen AM, Chen ES, Chen L, Chen L, Chen L, Chen MJ, Chen ML, Chen QH, Chen SH, Chen SZ, Chen TL, Chen Y, Cheng N, Cheng YD, Cui MY, Cui SW, Cui XH, Cui YD, Dai BZ, Dai HL, Dai ZG, Danzengluobu, Della Volpe D, Dong XQ, Duan KK, Fan JH, Fan YZ, Fang J, Fang K, Feng CF, Feng L, Feng SH, Feng XT, Feng YL, Gabici S, Gao B, Gao CD, Gao LQ, Gao Q, Gao W, Gao WK, Ge MM, Geng LS, Giacinti G, Gong GH, Gou QB, Gu MH, Guo FL, Guo XL, Guo YQ, Guo YY, Han YA, He HH, He HN, He JY, He XB, He Y, Heller M, Hor YK, Hou BW, Hou C, Hou X, Hu HB, Hu Q, Hu SC, Huang DH, Huang TQ, Huang WJ, Huang XT, Huang XY, Huang Y, Huang ZC, Ji XL, Jia HY, Jia K, Jiang K, Jiang XW, Jiang ZJ, Jin M, Kang MM, Ke T, Kuleshov D, Kurinov K, Li BB, Li C, Li C, Li D, Li F, Li HB, Li HC, Li HY, Li J, Li J, Li J, Li K, Li WL, Li WL, Li XR, Li X, Li YZ, Li Z, Li Z, Liang EW, Liang YF, Lin SJ, Liu B, Liu C, Liu D, Liu H, Liu HD, Liu J, Liu JL, Liu JY, Liu MY, Liu RY, Liu SM, Liu W, Liu Y, Liu YN, Lu R, Luo Q, Lv HK, Ma BQ, Ma LL, Ma XH, Mao JR, Min Z, Mitthumsiri W, Mu HJ, Nan YC, Neronov A, Ou ZW, Pang BY, Pattarakijwanich P, Pei ZY, Qi MY, Qi YQ, Qiao BQ, Qin JJ, Ruffolo D, Sáiz A, Semikoz D, Shao CY, Shao L, Shchegolev O, Sheng XD, Shu FW, Song HC, Stenkin YV, Stepanov V, Su Y, Sun QN, Sun XN, Sun ZB, Tam PHT, Tang QW, Tang ZB, Tian WW, Wang C, Wang CB, Wang GW, Wang HG, Wang HH, Wang JC, Wang K, Wang LP, Wang LY, Wang PH, Wang R, Wang W, Wang XG, Wang XY, Wang Y, Wang YD, Wang YJ, Wang ZH, Wang ZX, Wang Z, Wang Z, Wei DM, Wei JJ, Wei YJ, Wen T, Wu CY, Wu HR, Wu S, Wu XF, Wu YS, Xi SQ, Xia J, Xia JJ, Xiang GM, Xiao DX, Xiao G, Xin GG, Xin YL, Xing Y, Xiong Z, Xu DL, Xu RF, Xu RX, Xu WL, Xue L, Yan DH, Yan JZ, Yan T, Yang CW, Yang F, Yang FF, Yang HW, Yang JY, Yang LL, Yang MJ, Yang RZ, Yang SB, Yao YH, Yao ZG, Ye YM, Yin LQ, Yin N, You XH, You ZY, Yu YH, Yuan Q, Yue H, Zeng HD, Zeng TX, Zeng W, Zha M, Zhang BB, Zhang F, Zhang HM, Zhang HY, Zhang JL, Zhang LX, Zhang L, Zhang PF, Zhang PP, Zhang R, Zhang SB, Zhang SR, Zhang SS, Zhang X, Zhang XP, Zhang YF, Zhang Y, Zhang Y, Zhao B, Zhao J, Zhao L, Zhao LZ, Zhao SP, Zheng F, Zhou B, Zhou H, Zhou JN, Zhou M, Zhou P, Zhou R, Zhou XX, Zhu CG, Zhu FR, Zhu H, Zhu KJ, and Zuo X
- Abstract
In this Letter we try to search for signals generated by ultraheavy dark matter at the Large High Altitude Air Shower Observatory (LHAASO) data. We look for possible γ rays by dark matter annihilation or decay from 16 dwarf spheroidal galaxies in the field of view of the LHAASO. Dwarf spheroidal galaxies are among the most promising targets for indirect detection of dark matter that have low fluxes of astrophysical γ-ray background while having large amount of dark matter. By analyzing more than 700 days of observational data at LHAASO, no significant dark matter signal from 1 TeV to 1 EeV is detected. Accordingly we derive the most stringent constraints on the ultraheavy dark matter annihilation cross section up to EeV. The constraints on the lifetime of dark matter in decay mode are also derived.
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- 2024
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- View/download PDF
174. Brain targeting efficacy of novel drug delivery system in the treatment of Alzheimer's disease.
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Duan LH, Li LI, Wang CB, Liu QQ, Zhang X, and Wu ZZ
- Subjects
- Animals, Humans, Rats, Male, Nanoparticle Drug Delivery System chemistry, Alzheimer Disease drug therapy, Chitosan chemistry, Administration, Intranasal, Brain metabolism, Brain drug effects, Drug Delivery Systems, Galantamine administration & dosage, Galantamine pharmacokinetics, Cholinesterase Inhibitors administration & dosage
- Abstract
Objective: Alzheimer's disease (AD), a common degenerative disease of the central nervous system in the elderly, has become the third largest health killer after cardiovascular and cerebrovascular diseases and tumors. Based on the fact that Alzheimer's disease is a disease with multiple etiologies and complex pathology, a single target is bound to have a limited curative effect, and the synergy of multiple links and multiple targets is expected to achieve a better curative effect. The aim of this study is to investigate the brain targeting of a drug modified by chitosan, based on the new nanodrug delivery system for treating Alzheimer's disease developed by the research group., Materials and Methods: Chitosan with good biocompatibility, biosorption, and degradation products that can protect and promote the regeneration of nerve cells was selected to combine with galantamine, a natural representative cholinesterase inhibitor, to develop a new nano drug delivery system for nasal delivery of anti-Alzheimer's disease with a multi-target synergistic effect. Synchronous analysis was conducted on the blood and brain tissue drug concentrations after intravenous and nasal administration of the original drug solution and system solution. The brain targeting index (DTI) is used to evaluate the brain targeting effect of the nano-drug delivery system after intranasal administration., Results: The blood concentration of galantamine original drug solution and galantamine system solution after intravenous injection and nasal show that in the two administration methods of intravenous injection and nasal administration, under the same administration method, the time point of the system reaching the highest blood drug concentration is much higher than that of the original drug. The content of galantamine in plasma samples and tissue samples indicate that after intravenous administration and intranasal administration of the galantamine system, at the same time point, the drug concentration in brain tissue was far greater than that of the original drug of galantamine, and the duration was also longer. The concentration of drugs in brain tissue decreased gradually in the order of olfactory bulb, olfactory tract, brain, and cerebellum. In the brain tissues of the olfactory bulb, olfactory tract, cerebrum, and cerebellum, the drug concentration of the galantamine system after intravenous injection is lower than that after nasal administration., Conclusions: This study concludes that compared with the original drug solution, the nano drug delivery system has significant brain targeting for nasal administration, and intravenous injection also has brain targeting. In the olfactory bulb, olfactory tract, brain, and cerebellum, the brain targeting index at the olfactory bulb is the highest, and the targeting is the best.
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- 2024
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175. Measurements of All-Particle Energy Spectrum and Mean Logarithmic Mass of Cosmic Rays from 0.3 to 30 PeV with LHAASO-KM2A.
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Cao Z, Aharonian F, Axikegu, Bai YX, Bao YW, Bastieri D, Bi XJ, Bi YJ, Bian W, Bukevich AV, Cao Q, Cao WY, Cao Z, Chang J, Chang JF, Chen AM, Chen ES, Chen HX, Chen L, Chen L, Chen L, Chen MJ, Chen ML, Chen QH, Chen S, Chen SH, Chen SZ, Chen TL, Chen Y, Cheng N, Cheng YD, Cui MY, Cui SW, Cui XH, Cui YD, Dai BZ, Dai HL, Dai ZG, Danzengluobu, Dong XQ, Duan KK, Fan JH, Fan YZ, Fang J, Fang JH, Fang K, Feng CF, Feng H, Feng L, Feng SH, Feng XT, Feng Y, Feng YL, Gabici S, Gao B, Gao CD, Gao Q, Gao W, Gao WK, Ge MM, Geng LS, Giacinti G, Gong GH, Gou QB, Gu MH, Guo FL, Guo XL, Guo YQ, Guo YY, Han YA, Hasan M, He HH, He HN, He JY, He Y, Hor YK, Hou BW, Hou C, Hou X, Hu HB, Hu Q, Hu SC, Huang DH, Huang TQ, Huang WJ, Huang XT, Huang XY, Huang Y, Ji XL, Jia HY, Jia K, Jiang K, Jiang XW, Jiang ZJ, Jin M, Kang MM, Karpikov I, Kuleshov D, Kurinov K, Li BB, Li CM, Li C, Li C, Li D, Li F, Li HB, Li HC, Li J, Li J, Li K, Li SD, Li WL, Li WL, Li XR, Li X, Li YZ, Li Z, Li Z, Liang EW, Liang YF, Lin SJ, Liu B, Liu C, Liu D, Liu DB, Liu H, Liu HD, Liu J, Liu JL, Liu MY, Liu RY, Liu SM, Liu W, Liu Y, Liu YN, Luo Q, Luo Y, Lv HK, Ma BQ, Ma LL, Ma XH, Mao JR, Min Z, Mitthumsiri W, Mu HJ, Nan YC, Neronov A, Ou LJ, Pattarakijwanich P, Pei ZY, Qi JC, Qi MY, Qiao BQ, Qin JJ, Raza A, Ruffolo D, Sáiz A, Saeed M, Semikoz D, Shao L, Shchegolev O, Sheng XD, Shu FW, Song HC, Stenkin YV, Stepanov V, Su Y, Sun DX, Sun QN, Sun XN, Sun ZB, Takata J, Tam PHT, Tang QW, Tang R, Tang ZB, Tian WW, Wang C, Wang CB, Wang GW, Wang HG, Wang HH, Wang JC, Wang K, Wang K, Wang LP, Wang LY, Wang PH, Wang R, Wang W, Wang XG, Wang XY, Wang Y, Wang YD, Wang YJ, Wang ZH, Wang ZX, Wang Z, Wang Z, Wei DM, Wei JJ, Wei YJ, Wen T, Wu CY, Wu HR, Wu QW, Wu S, Wu XF, Wu YS, Xi SQ, Xia J, Xiang GM, Xiao DX, Xiao G, Xin YL, Xing Y, Xiong DR, Xiong Z, Xu DL, Xu RF, Xu RX, Xu WL, Xue L, Yan DH, Yan JZ, Yan T, Yang CW, Yang CY, Yang F, Yang FF, Yang LL, Yang MJ, Yang RZ, Yang WX, Yao YH, Yao ZG, Yin LQ, Yin N, You XH, You ZY, Yu YH, Yuan Q, Yue H, Zeng HD, Zeng TX, Zeng W, Zha M, Zhang BB, Zhang F, Zhang H, Zhang HM, Zhang HY, Zhang JL, Zhang L, Zhang PF, Zhang PP, Zhang R, Zhang SB, Zhang SR, Zhang SS, Zhang X, Zhang XP, Zhang YF, Zhang Y, Zhang Y, Zhao B, Zhao J, Zhao L, Zhao LZ, Zhao SP, Zhao XH, Zheng F, Zhong WJ, Zhou B, Zhou H, Zhou JN, Zhou M, Zhou P, Zhou R, Zhou XX, Zhou XX, Zhu BY, Zhu CG, Zhu FR, Zhu H, Zhu KJ, Zou YC, and Zuo X
- Abstract
We present the measurements of all-particle energy spectrum and mean logarithmic mass of cosmic rays in the energy range of 0.3-30 PeV using data collected from LHAASO-KM2A between September 2021 and December 2022, which is based on a nearly composition-independent energy reconstruction method, achieving unprecedented accuracy. Our analysis reveals the position of the knee at 3.67±0.05±0.15 PeV. Below the knee, the spectral index is found to be -2.7413±0.0004±0.0050, while above the knee, it is -3.128±0.005±0.027, with the sharpness of the transition measured with a statistical error of 2%. The mean logarithmic mass of cosmic rays is almost heavier than helium in the whole measured energy range. It decreases from 1.7 at 0.3 PeV to 1.3 at 3 PeV, representing a 24% decline following a power law with an index of -0.1200±0.0003±0.0341. This is equivalent to an increase in abundance of light components. Above the knee, the mean logarithmic mass exhibits a power law trend towards heavier components, which is reversal to the behavior observed in the all-particle energy spectrum. Additionally, the knee position and the change in power-law index are approximately the same. These findings suggest that the knee observed in the all-particle spectrum corresponds to the knee of the light component, rather than the medium-heavy components.
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- 2024
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176. Measurement of Ultra-High-Energy Diffuse Gamma-Ray Emission of the Galactic Plane from 10 TeV to 1 PeV with LHAASO-KM2A.
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Cao Z, Aharonian F, An Q, Axikegu, Bai YX, Bao YW, Bastieri D, Bi XJ, Bi YJ, Cai JT, Cao Q, Cao WY, Cao Z, Chang J, Chang JF, Chen AM, Chen ES, Chen L, Chen L, Chen L, Chen MJ, Chen ML, Chen QH, Chen SH, Chen SZ, Chen TL, Chen Y, Cheng N, Cheng YD, Cui MY, Cui SW, Cui XH, Cui YD, Dai BZ, Dai HL, Dai ZG, Danzengluobu, Della Volpe D, Dong XQ, Duan KK, Fan JH, Fan YZ, Fang J, Fang K, Feng CF, Feng L, Feng SH, Feng XT, Feng YL, Gabici S, Gao B, Gao CD, Gao LQ, Gao Q, Gao W, Gao WK, Ge MM, Geng LS, Giacinti G, Gong GH, Gou QB, Gu MH, Guo FL, Guo XL, Guo YQ, Guo YY, Han YA, He HH, He HN, He JY, He XB, He Y, Heller M, Hor YK, Hou BW, Hou C, Hou X, Hu HB, Hu Q, Hu SC, Huang DH, Huang TQ, Huang WJ, Huang XT, Huang XY, Huang Y, Huang ZC, Ji XL, Jia HY, Jia K, Jiang K, Jiang XW, Jiang ZJ, Jin M, Kang MM, Ke T, Kuleshov D, Kurinov K, Li BB, Li C, Li C, Li D, Li F, Li HB, Li HC, Li HY, Li J, Li J, Li J, Li K, Li WL, Li WL, Li XR, Li X, Li YZ, Li Z, Li Z, Liang EW, Liang YF, Lin SJ, Liu B, Liu C, Liu D, Liu H, Liu HD, Liu J, Liu JL, Liu JY, Liu MY, Liu RY, Liu SM, Liu W, Liu Y, Liu YN, Lu R, Luo Q, Lv HK, Ma BQ, Ma LL, Ma XH, Mao JR, Min Z, Mitthumsiri W, Mu HJ, Nan YC, Neronov A, Ou ZW, Pang BY, Pattarakijwanich P, Pei ZY, Qi MY, Qi YQ, Qiao BQ, Qin JJ, Ruffolo D, Sáiz A, Semikoz D, Shao CY, Shao L, Shchegolev O, Sheng XD, Shu FW, Song HC, Stenkin YV, Stepanov V, Su Y, Sun QN, Sun XN, Sun ZB, Tam PHT, Tang QW, Tang ZB, Tian WW, Wang C, Wang CB, Wang GW, Wang HG, Wang HH, Wang JC, Wang K, Wang LP, Wang LY, Wang PH, Wang R, Wang W, Wang XG, Wang XY, Wang Y, Wang YD, Wang YJ, Wang ZH, Wang ZX, Wang Z, Wang Z, Wei DM, Wei JJ, Wei YJ, Wen T, Wu CY, Wu HR, Wu S, Wu XF, Wu YS, Xi SQ, Xia J, Xia JJ, Xiang GM, Xiao DX, Xiao G, Xin GG, Xin YL, Xing Y, Xiong Z, Xu DL, Xu RF, Xu RX, Xu WL, Xue L, Yan DH, Yan JZ, Yan T, Yang CW, Yang F, Yang FF, Yang HW, Yang JY, Yang LL, Yang MJ, Yang RZ, Yang SB, Yao YH, Yao ZG, Ye YM, Yin LQ, Yin N, You XH, You ZY, Yu YH, Yuan Q, Yue H, Zeng HD, Zeng TX, Zeng W, Zha M, Zhang BB, Zhang F, Zhang HM, Zhang HY, Zhang JL, Zhang LX, Zhang L, Zhang PF, Zhang PP, Zhang R, Zhang SB, Zhang SR, Zhang SS, Zhang X, Zhang XP, Zhang YF, Zhang Y, Zhang Y, Zhao B, Zhao J, Zhao L, Zhao LZ, Zhao SP, Zheng F, Zhou B, Zhou H, Zhou JN, Zhou M, Zhou P, Zhou R, Zhou XX, Zhu CG, Zhu FR, Zhu H, Zhu KJ, and Zuo X
- Abstract
The diffuse Galactic γ-ray emission, mainly produced via interactions between cosmic rays and the interstellar medium and/or radiation field, is a very important probe of the distribution, propagation, and interaction of cosmic rays in the Milky Way. In this Letter, we report the measurements of diffuse γ rays from the Galactic plane between 10 TeV and 1 PeV energies, with the square kilometer array of the Large High Altitude Air Shower Observatory (LHAASO). Diffuse emissions from the inner (15°
10 TeV). The energy spectrum in the inner Galaxy regions can be described by a power-law function with an index of -2.99±0.04, which is different from the curved spectrum as expected from hadronic interactions between locally measured cosmic rays and the line-of-sight integrated gas content. Furthermore, the measured flux is higher by a factor of ∼3 than the prediction. A similar spectrum with an index of -2.99±0.07 is found in the outer Galaxy region, and the absolute flux for 10≲E≲60 TeV is again higher than the prediction for hadronic cosmic ray interactions. The latitude distributions of the diffuse emission are consistent with the gas distribution, while the longitude distributions show clear deviation from the gas distribution. The LHAASO measurements imply that either additional emission sources exist or cosmic ray intensities have spatial variations. - Published
- 2023
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177. A tera-electron volt afterglow from a narrow jet in an extremely bright gamma-ray burst.
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Cao Z, Aharonian F, An Q, Axikegu, Bai LX, Bai YX, Bao YW, Bastieri D, Bi XJ, Bi YJ, Cai JT, Cao Q, Cao WY, Cao Z, Chang J, Chang JF, Chen ES, Chen L, Chen L, Chen L, Chen MJ, Chen ML, Chen QH, Chen SH, Chen SZ, Chen TL, Chen Y, Cheng HL, Cheng N, Cheng YD, Cui SW, Cui XH, Cui YD, Dai BZ, Dai HL, Dai ZG, Danzengluobu, Della Volpe D, Dong XQ, Duan KK, Fan JH, Fan YZ, Fang J, Fang K, Feng CF, Feng L, Feng SH, Feng XT, Feng YL, Gao B, Gao CD, Gao LQ, Gao Q, Gao W, Gao WK, Ge MM, Geng LS, Gong GH, Gou QB, Gu MH, Guo FL, Guo XL, Guo YQ, Guo YY, Han YA, He HH, He HN, He JY, He XB, He Y, Heller M, Hor YK, Hou BW, Hou C, Hou X, Hu HB, Hu Q, Hu SC, Huang DH, Huang TQ, Huang WJ, Huang XT, Huang XY, Huang Y, Huang ZC, Ji XL, Jia HY, Jia K, Jiang K, Jiang XW, Jiang ZJ, Jin M, Kang MM, Ke T, Kuleshov D, Kurinov K, Li BB, Li C, Li C, Li D, Li F, Li HB, Li HC, Li HY, Li J, Li J, Li J, Li K, Li WL, Li WL, Li XR, Li X, Li YZ, Li Z, Li Z, Liang EW, Liang YF, Lin SJ, Liu B, Liu C, Liu D, Liu H, Liu HD, Liu J, Liu JL, Liu JL, Liu JS, Liu JY, Liu MY, Liu RY, Liu SM, Liu W, Liu Y, Liu YN, Long WJ, Lu R, Luo Q, Lv HK, Ma BQ, Ma LL, Ma XH, Mao JR, Min Z, Mitthumsiri W, Nan YC, Ou ZW, Pang BY, Pattarakijwanich P, Pei ZY, Qi MY, Qi YQ, Qiao BQ, Qin JJ, Ruffolo D, Sáiz A, Shao CY, Shao L, Shchegolev O, Sheng XD, Song HC, Stenkin YV, Stepanov V, Su Y, Sun QN, Sun XN, Sun ZB, Tam PHT, Tang ZB, Tian WW, Wang C, Wang CB, Wang GW, Wang HG, Wang HH, Wang JC, Wang JS, Wang K, Wang LP, Wang LY, Wang PH, Wang R, Wang W, Wang XG, Wang XY, Wang Y, Wang YD, Wang YJ, Wang ZH, Wang ZX, Wang Z, Wang Z, Wei DM, Wei JJ, Wei YJ, Wen T, Wu CY, Wu HR, Wu S, Wu XF, Wu YS, Xi SQ, Xia J, Xia JJ, Xiang GM, Xiao DX, Xiao G, Xin GG, Xin YL, Xing Y, Xiong Z, Xu DL, Xu RF, Xu RX, Xue L, Yan DH, Yan JZ, Yan T, Yang CW, Yang F, Yang FF, Yang HW, Yang JY, Yang LL, Yang MJ, Yang RZ, Yang SB, Yao YH, Yao ZG, Ye YM, Yin LQ, Yin N, You XH, You ZY, Yu YH, Yuan Q, Yue H, Zeng HD, Zeng TX, Zeng W, Zeng ZK, Zha M, Zhang B, Zhang BB, Zhang F, Zhang HM, Zhang HY, Zhang JL, Zhang LX, Zhang L, Zhang PF, Zhang PP, Zhang R, Zhang SB, Zhang SR, Zhang SS, Zhang X, Zhang XP, Zhang YF, Zhang Y, Zhang Y, Zhao B, Zhao J, Zhao L, Zhao LZ, Zhao SP, Zheng F, Zheng JH, Zhou B, Zhou H, Zhou JN, Zhou P, Zhou R, Zhou XX, Zhu CG, Zhu FR, Zhu H, Zhu KJ, and Zuo X
- Abstract
Some gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) have a tera-electron volt (TeV) afterglow, but the early onset of this has not been observed. We report observations with the Large High Altitude Air Shower Observatory (LHAASO) of the bright GRB 221009A, which serendipitously occurred within the instrument's field of view. More than 64,000 photons >0.2 TeV were detected within the first 3000 seconds. The TeV flux began several minutes after the GRB trigger and then rose to a peak ~10 seconds later. This was followed by a decay phase, which became more rapid ~650 seconds after the peak. We interpret the emission using a model of a relativistic jet with half-opening angle of ~0.8°. This is consistent with the core of a structured jet and could explain the high isotropic energy of this GRB.
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- 2023
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178. Phyllosticta rizhaoensis sp. nov . causing leaf blight of Ophiopogon japonicus in China.
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Wang CB, Wang TT, Ma CY, Xue H, Li Y, Piao CG, and Jiang N
- Abstract
Ophiopogon japonicus ( Asparagaceae ) is a perennial grass species which can be cultivated as an ornamental and medicinal plant. From April 2021 to September 2022, a serious leaf blight disease of O. japonicus was discovered in Rizhao City, Shandong Province, China. The initial disease symptoms were small yellow spots, finally developing as tip blight, often associated with many small, black, semi-immersed pycnidial conidiomata formed in lesions. To obtain isolates of the causal agent for this disease, samples were randomly collected from O. japonicus diseased leaves in Rizhao City. In total 97 Phyllosticta isolates were obtained from samples, and studied using morphological features and multi-locus phylogenetic analyses of a combined dataset using the internal transcribed spacers (ITS), the 28S large subunit of ribosomal RNA (LSU), and partial translation elongation factor 1-alpha ( tef ), actin ( act ) and glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase ( gapdh ) loci. Phylogenetically, these Phyllosticta isolates formed a clade in the P. concentrica species complex, and clustered with P. pilospora and P. spinarum . Morphologically, isolates in this clade differed from P. pilospora and P. spinarum by the size of conidiogenous cells and conidia, and the absence of an apical conidial appendage. As a result, these isolates were described as a novel species Phyllosticta rizhaoensis . Pathogenicity was confirmed using Koch's postulates, which showed that P. rizhaoensis could induce leaf blight symptoms on O. japonicus in China. Citation: Wang C-B, Wang T-T, Ma C-Y, Xue H, Li Y, Piao C-G, Jiang N (2023). Phyllosticta rizhaoensis sp. nov . causing leaf blight of Ophiopogon japonicus in China. Fungal Systematics and Evolution 11 : 43-50. doi: 10.3114/fuse.2023.11.03., Competing Interests: Conflict of interest: The authors declare that there is no conflict of interest., (© 2023 Westerdijk Fungal Biodiversity Institute.)
- Published
- 2023
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179. [Application of high-throughput next-generation sequencing technology in clinical laboratory diagnosis of infectious diseases].
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Wang CB
- Subjects
- Humans, Clinical Laboratory Techniques, High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing methods, Technology, Laboratories, Clinical, Communicable Diseases diagnosis
- Abstract
With advances in sequencing technologies, high-throughput next-generation sequencing (NGS) has triggered increased attention on its application in clinical laboratories and facilitates the molecular diagnosis and treatment of infectious diseases. Compared with conventional microbiology laboratory methods, NGS has greatly increased the sensitivity and accuracy of diagnosis, and reduced detection time for infectious pathogens, especially for diagnosis of complex and mixed infections. However, there are still some problems that hamper the NGS application in infections diagnosis, including lack of standardization, cost, and variation in data interpretation, etc. In recent years, with the developing of policies and legislation, and guidance and supports from Chinese government, the sequencing industry has gained continuously healthy development and sequencing application market gradually becomes mature. Meanwhile, worldwide microbiology experts are striving to develop the standards and reach the consensus, there are more and more clinical laboratories equipped with sequencing instruments and personnel with expertise. All of these measures would certainly promote the clinical application of NGS, and making full use of high-throughput NGS could contribute to the accurate clinical diagnosis and appropriate treatment. The current article describes the application of high-throughput next-generation sequencing technology in the laboratory diagnosis of clinical microbial infectious diseases, as well as the policy system support and development direction.
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- 2023
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180. Correlation research of serum substance P, CCK-8, and 5-HT values with depression levels in stroke survivors.
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Zhang X, Wang CB, Duan LH, Long JJ, Xiao P, Wang YL, Zhang XH, and Liu QQ
- Subjects
- Humans, Serotonin, Sincalide, Cholecystokinin, Survivors, Substance P, Stroke
- Abstract
Objective: This study aimed to investigate the correlation of serum octapeptide cholecystokinin-8 (CCK-8), substance P (SP), and 5-hydroxytryptryptamine (5-HT) values with depression levels in patients with post-stroke depression (PSD). It also aimed to explore the potential approach for the early diagnosis of PSD., Patients and Methods: A correlation research between patients' biochemical indicators and depression levels was performed among 70 stroke patients during hospitalization from June 2021 to February 2022. The 70 stroke patients were selected and divided into post-stroke depression and non-depression groups according to the Hamilton Depression Scale (HAMD) score. The concentrations of CCK-8, SP, and 5-HT in both groups were measured, and the relationship between the values of CCK-8, SP, 5-HT and the depression levels was analyzed., Results: Among the 70 stroke survivors, 35 were in the depression group and 35 were in the non-depression group. Significant differences were observed in the concentration of CCK-8, SP, and 5-HT between the patients in the depression and non-depression group (p < 0.05). Accompanied by an increase in the depression level, the SP value gradually increased, but the CCK-8 and 5-HT values gradually decreased. Spearman correlation analysis indicated that the order of the correlation between CCK-8, 5-HT, SP, and the depression levels was CCK-8 > SP > 5-HT., Conclusions: All the CCK-8, SP and 5-HT values were correlated with the depression levels in stroke survivors. Furthermore, the correlation between CCK-8, SP, and post-stroke depression levels was higher than that of 5-HT, suggesting that the early diagnosis of PSD may be reflected more precisely through the detection of CCK-8, and SP values, thus providing potential priority for biochemical detection in the diagnosis of PSD.
- Published
- 2023
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181. [Establishment and application of quantitative immunoassay method based on stable element labeling and inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry].
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Tang HR, Jiang WC, Sun GW, Men SS, Lou JL, Wang WJ, and Wang CB
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- Streptavidin, Immunoassay methods, Mass Spectrometry, Antibodies chemistry
- Abstract
Objective: To establish a quantitative immunoassay method based on stable element labeling and inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS) for the detection of serum amyloid A (SAA) and evaluate its performance. Methods: An immunoassay system based on sandwich method was established with magnetic bead as carrier and holmium (Ho) as element tags. The binding ratio of hydrophilic streptavidin magnetic beads and biotinylated antibody, the amount of elemental antibody, and the reaction time were optimized to choose the optimal reaction conditions. According to the documents of Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute (CLSI), the analytical performance was evaluated, including the limit of blank (LOB), linearity, accuracy, specificity, imprecision and interference test. Finally, 82 SAA plasma samples were collected after the turbidimetric inhibition immunoassay, and the newly established method was used for detection. Moreover, the detection results of the two methods were analyzed by Pearson correlation analysis. Results: The optimal binding ratio of hydrophilic streptavidin and biotinylated antibody was 1∶0.15, the amount of Ho-labeled antibody was 3 μl and the incubation time of the two reaction steps was 40 min and 30 min, respectively. The LOB was 0.6 ng/ml. The linearity was good within the range of 0-1 200 μg/L ( R
2 <0.001). The inter-batch precision of high-value samples and low-value samples was 9.42% and 7.95%, respectively, and the intra-batch precision was 14.56% and 13.56%, respectively. The recovery was 96.01%-104.76%. The cross-reaction rates with procalcitonin (PCT) and C-reactive protein (CRP) were 0.45% and 0.015%, respectively. When the concentration of triglyceride≤35.5 mg/L, bilirubin≤0.52 mg/L and hemoglobin≤2.4 g/L, the interference bias was less than 10%. The results of 82 SAA plasma samples were 12.65 (4.45, 59.03) mg/L by ICP-MS immunoassay and 18.23 (9.33, 68.72) mg/L by turbidimetric inhibition immunoassay, respectively. The newly established system was well correlated with turbidimetric inhibition immunoassay ( P <0.001). The inter-batch precision of high-value samples and low-value samples was 9.42% and 7.95%, respectively, and the intra-batch precision was 14.56% and 13.56%, respectively. The recovery was 96.01%-104.76%. The cross-reaction rates with procalcitonin (PCT) and C-reactive protein (CRP) were 0.45% and 0.015%, respectively. When the concentration of triglyceride≤35.5 mg/L, bilirubin≤0.52 mg/L and hemoglobin≤2.4 g/L, the interference bias was less than 10%. The results of 82 SAA plasma samples were 12.65 (4.45, 59.03) mg/L by ICP-MS immunoassay and 18.23 (9.33, 68.72) mg/L by turbidimetric inhibition immunoassay, respectively. The newly established system was well correlated with turbidimetric inhibition immunoassay ( R2 =0.983, P <0.001). Conclusion: The quantitative immunoassay for SAA with Ho as marker established in this study has high precision, good accuracy, high specificity, and wide linear range, which can meet the clinical testing requirements.- Published
- 2023
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182. [Clinical features, risk factors and prognosis of idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy complicated by ischemic stroke].
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Fan ZX, Wang CB, Fang LL, Cai B, Yuan P, Niu TT, Ma L, Yuan GB, and Liu GZ
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- Humans, Retrospective Studies, Risk Factors, Ischemic Stroke, Cardiomyopathy, Dilated, Stroke, Lacunar, Heart Failure, Hypertension
- Abstract
Objective: To analyze the clinical features, risk factors and prognosis of idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) complicated with ischemic stroke (IS) (DCM-IS). Methods: The clinical data of patients with idiopathic DCM ( n =613) in Beijing Anzhen Hospital, Liangxiang Hospital and Fuxing Hospital from January 2016 to December 2020 were retrospectively collected, and among them, 123 cases were DCM-IS. Clinical features of patients with DCM-IS were summarized and multivariate logistic regression model was utilized to analyze the independent risk factors of DCM-IS. Furthermore, 1-year follow-up was conducted and Kaplan-Meier curve was adopted to analyze the prognosis of DCM, using all-cause death and heart transplantation as adverse outcomes. Results: Among the 70 patients with DCM-IS, 6 patients (8.6%, 6/70) were in accordance with the subtype of large artery atherosclerosis, and 47 patients (67.1%, 47/70) were in line with the subtype of cardiogenic embolism, and small artery occlusion subtype (ie, lacunar infarction) were detected in 17 cases (24.3%, 17/70). Hypertension [odds ratio ( OR )=1.617, 95% confidence interval ( CI ): 1.049-2.491, P =0.029], hyperlipidemia ( OR =1.918, 95% CI : 1.198-3.073, P =0.007), atrial fibrillation (AF) ( OR =1.617, 95% CI : 1.016-2.572, P =0.043), lower estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) ( OR =0.986, 95% CI : 0.977-0.996, P =0.005) and a higher incidence of intracardiac thrombus ( OR =6.127, 95% CI : 3.174-11.827, P <0.001) were risk factors for DCM-IS. The overall 1-year survival rate was lower in DCM-IS patients (70.7%) than DCM patients without stroke (83.6%, P =0.004), and the main causes of death included obstinate heart failure (3 cases of DCM-IS, and 5 cases of non-DCM-IS) and malignant arrhythmia (DCM-IS) (22 cases of DCM-IS, and 18 cases of non-DCM-IS). Conclusions: Among IS patients with idiopathic DCM, cardioembolism is the most common, followed by lacunar infarction, and the large-artery atherosclerotic subtype is the least common.Hypertension, hyperlipidemia, AF, lower eGFR value and higher incidence of intracardiac thrombus are risk factors for DCM-IS. DCM patients complicated with IS have poor short-term prognosis, and obstinate heart failure and malignant arrhythmia are their main causes of death.
- Published
- 2022
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183. Characteristics of abnormal subjects in screening of tumor markers among middle-aged and elderly people in Weihai area.
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Gao HG, Bi KX, Liang XL, Tang XD, Du LL, and Wang CB
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- Middle Aged, Humans, Aged, Carcinoembryonic Antigen, Early Detection of Cancer, China, Biomarkers, Tumor, Lung Neoplasms diagnosis
- Abstract
Objective: Based on the Huimin policy of Weihai Social Security Bureau, this project aims to investigate feasibility of screening through screening of serum tumor markers (TM) in the middle-aged and elderly population in Weihai area. According to the joint mode of examination institution and clinical department (oncology), we provide dynamic follow-up for subjects for early intervention of abnormal tumor screening and high-risk population, through which we can cut off pathogenic pathway of cancer and improve early diagnosis of cancer and enhance the cure rate., Patients and Methods: We continued to track subjects whose TM was not reduced to normal until it was normal or diagnosed, collecting the blood samples of eligible patients that we removed high-risk factors from the subjects so that TM could be lowered to normal., Results: A total of 83,049 blood samples were detected in our hospital, and 89 patients were diagnosed with newly diagnosed tumor. The positive expression rate of CEA in lung cancer patients was 91.4%., Conclusions: The diagnosis of tumor relies not only on TM, but also on observation of clinical symptoms, continuous observation of TM dynamic changes and individualized comprehensive analysis. The main purpose of this policy is not only to find patients with "early tumor", but also to cut off the pathogenic pathway of cancer, achieve purpose of tertiary prevention and significantly save medical costs. The examination mechanism and the clinical-related departments are connected, and the pattern of screening, tracking and analysis of abnormal results in large samples is in line with the present situation of China and is worthy of clinical promotion.
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- 2022
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184. [Analysis of the diagnostic efficiency of combining multiple laboratory hematological indicators in alpha-fetoprotein-negative hepatocellular carcinoma].
- Author
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Wang H, Dong J, Bao JF, Wang CB, and Lyu JX
- Subjects
- CA-19-9 Antigen, Female, Hepatitis B virus, Humans, Liver Cirrhosis, Male, Middle Aged, alpha-Fetoproteins analysis, Carcinoma, Hepatocellular, Hemangioma, Hepatitis B diagnosis, Liver Neoplasms pathology
- Abstract
Objective: To establish a diagnostic model for alpha-fetoprotein-negative hepatocellular carcinoma (AFP-NHCC) by combining multiple laboratory hematological indicators and explore its clinical diagnostic efficiency. Methods: A total of 124 inpatients, including 110 males and 14 females, aged 57 (51, 66) years, who were first diagnosed with AFP-NHCC in the PLA General Hospital were included from December 2011 to June 2017. Meanwhile, 331 cases of non-HCC were enrolled as the control group, including 279 males and 52 females, aged 58 (51, 63) years old, with 47 cases of hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection, 40 cases of liver cirrhosis, 64 cases of hepatic hemangioma or cysts, 7 cases of liver nodules, 8 cases of fatty liver, 146 cases of non-liver disease and 19 health controls. Subjects in the AFP-NHCC group and the control group were divided into a training group and a validation group. A total of 196 subjects were involved in the training group, including 103 AFP-NHCC patients and 93 non-HCC patients (19 healthy controls, 25 patients with HBV infection, 22 patients with liver cirrhosis, 23 patients with hepatic hemangioma or cyst, and 4 patients with liver nodules). The differences in laboratory parameters were analyzed, and a diagnostic model of AFP-NHCC under different AFP levels was established. Likewise, 259 subjects, including 113 patients with liver disease, were involved in the validation group to verify the diagnostic efficiency of the model for AFP-NHCC. The receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve was used to analyze the sensitivity and specificity of different models, and the area under the curve (AUC) was calculated to evaluate the diagnostic performance of different models. Results: In the training group, the indicators of AFP-NHCC diagnostic model included platelet (PLT), prothrombin activity (PTA), serum albumin (ALB), prothrombin time (PT) and carbohydrate antigen 19-9 (CA19-9), and the AUC of the model was 0.848 (95% CI : 0.786-0.911) when AFP≤5 μg/L. Similarly, the indicators of AFP-NHCC diagnostic model included PLT, PTA, ALB, PT and hematocrit (HCT), and the AUC of the model was 0.839 (95% CI : 0.780-0.897) when AFP≤10 μg/L. When AFP≤20 μg/L, the indicators of AFP-NHCC diagnostic model contained PLT, PTA, ALB, PT, HCT and AFP, and the AUC of the model was 0.866 (95% CI : 0.815-0.917). The AUC values of these three models were higher than those of AFP and CA19-9 alone for the diagnosis of AFP-NHCC [0.634 (95% CI : 0.560-0.709), 0.691 (95% CI :0.620-0.761), all P <0.05]. The indicators screened by these three models were combined to establish the final diagnostic model, and the AUC of the model was 0.873 (95% CI : 0.824-0.923), with the sensitivity of 78.6% (81/103) and the specificity of 81.7% (76/93). In the validation group, the predictive AUC of the final model in liver disease patients was 0.892 (95% CI : 0.832-0.951), with the sensitivity of 100% (21/21) and the specificity of 71.7% (66/92), while in the total validation population, the predictive AUC was 0.931 (95% CI : 0.890-0.972), with the sensitivity of 100.0% (21/21) and the specificity of 75.6% (180/238). Conclusion: The final diagnostic model includes PLT, PTA, ALB, PT, HCT, CA19-9 and AFP, which has higher sensitivity and specificity, and has good diagnostic efficiency for the clinical diagnosis of AFP-NHCC.
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- 2022
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185. [Progress in treatment of PD-1/PD-L1 inhibitors for bladder cancer].
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Zhang F, Li YY, Shi ZZ, Wang CB, and Dong ZL
- Subjects
- Humans, Immune Checkpoint Inhibitors, Immunotherapy, Programmed Cell Death 1 Receptor, Urinary Bladder Neoplasms drug therapy
- Abstract
Because of the limited effect of traditional treatment methods such as surgical treatment, radiotherapy and chemotherapy,the emergence of immunotherapy has brought new hope for the treatment of patients with bladder cancer. As an immune checkpoint inhibitor, programmed death receptor 1/programmed death receptor-ligand 1 (PD-1/PD-L1) inhibitor has shown good anti-tumor activity and safety in the treatment of advanced bladder cancer, and has been recommended for advanced bladder cancer as second-line treatment by NCCN guidelines. PD-1/PD-L1 inhibitor for the treatment of bladder cancer has covered the first-line and second-line treatment, as well as maintenance therapy after first-line chemotherapy of locally advanced or metastatic bladder cancer, adjuvant and neoadjuvant therapy of muscle-invasive bladder cancer, treatment of high-risk non-muscle invasive bladder cancer failed by Bacille Calmette-Guérin vaccine perfusion, and bladder preservation therapy of muscle-invasive bladder cancer. Some of related studies have achieved certain results, and some are in progress, both of which need to be further examined. Maybe it can provide new guidance and ideas for clinical treatment of bladder cancer.
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- 2021
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186. [Prevalence and correlates of HIV infection among cross-border families in Dehong Dai and Jingpo Autonomous Prefecture].
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Yang YC, Li ZH, Li L, Ye RH, Hou Y, Wang CB, Xu SJ, Wang JJ, Liu Y, Wang JB, Yao ST, Ding YY, He N, and Duan S
- Subjects
- Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Humans, Male, Prevalence, Sexual Behavior, Spouses, HIV Infections epidemiology
- Abstract
Objective: To study the prevalence and correlations of HIV infection among cross-border couples in the Dehong prefecture. Methods: A cross-sectional mass screening study with questionnaire interview and HIV testing was conducted among 17 594 registered cross-border couples from May 2017 through June 2018. Results: Among 32 400 participants, the overall prevalence of HIV infection was 2.27% (736/32 400), 2.44% (375/15 372) for Chinese citizens, and 2.12% (361/17 028) for foreign spouses. Among all the 13 853 couples with both spouses receiving HIV testing, 13 415(96.84%) were seroconcordant-negative couples, 142(1.03%) were serocondordant-positive couples, and 296(2.13%) were serodiscordant couples, including 167(1.20%) couples with positive husband and negative wife and 129(0.93%) couples with positive wife and negative husband. Multiple logistic regression analyses indicated that HIV infection was associated with drug use and risky sexual behaviors for male spouses. In contrast, HIV infection was associated with risky sexual behaviors for female spouses. Conclusion: The prevalence of HIV among cross-border couples in Dehong prefecture is high, underscoring the urgent need to scale up HIV testing, prevention, and behavioral intervention.
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- 2021
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187. [Prognosis analysis of local recurrence after excision of breast phyllodes tumors].
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Peng Y, Zhang YY, Wang SC, Wu JB, Tong FZ, Liu P, Cao YM, Zhou B, Cheng L, Liu M, Liu HJ, Guo JJ, Xie F, Yang HP, Wang SY, Wang CB, and Wang S
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Humans, Mastectomy, Middle Aged, Prognosis, Retrospective Studies, Breast Neoplasms surgery, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local diagnosis, Phyllodes Tumor surgery
- Abstract
Objective: To examine treatment outcomes of breast phyllodes tumors and the prognosis factors of local recurrence. Methods: This retrospective cohort study included 276 patients who underwent surgical resection at Breast Center, Peking University People's Hospital from January 2011 to December 2019. Tumor subtype and histopathological features were determined from pathology reports, and the deadline of follow-up was September 30
th , 2020. All 276 patients underwent open surgery, including 17 patients of mastectomy, and 259 patients of lumpectomy. The enrolled patients were all female, with age of (41.5±11.3) years (rang: 11 to 76 years), and tumor diameter of 35(28) mm ( M ( QR )). The Kaplan-Meier method and Log-rank test were used for survival analysis. The multivariate analysis was implemented using the Cox proportional hazard model. Results: According the pathologic test, there were 191 patients of benign phyllodes tumor, 67 patients of borderline tumor and 18 patients of malignant tumor. There were 249 patients with a follow-up of more than 6 months, and 14.1% (35/249) had local recurrence. The time-to-recurrence was (28.6±22.2) months (range: 2 to 96 months), (29.1±18.1) months (range: 2 to 80 months), (32.1±30.1) months (range: 5 to 96 months) and (12.0±6.9) months (range: 8 to 20 months) for benign, borderline and malignant phyllodes tumors. Tumor diameter (≥100 mm vs. <50 mm, HR =3.968, 95%CI: 1.550 to 10.158, P =0.004) and malignant heterologous element (yes vs. no, HR =26.933, 95%CI: 3.105 to 233.600, P =0.003) were prognosis factors of local recurrence. One death from malignant phyllodes occurred after distant metastasis. The 3-year disease-free survival rates of benign, borderline and malignant phyllodes tumor were 88.2%, 81.7% and 81.4% ( P =0.300). Conclusion: Phyllodes tumors have a considerable local recurrence rate, which may be associated with tumor diameter and malignant heterologous element.- Published
- 2021
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188. [Pathological studies of chronic neutrophilic leukaemia involving skin].
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Wang K, Shao QY, Cao PL, Wang CB, and Wang HY
- Subjects
- Humans, Skin, Leukemia, Neutrophilic, Chronic
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- 2020
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189. [Establishment of mouse model and preliminary screening of serum biomarkers for Candidemia].
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Cui JY, Ma YT, Yang C, Chen XM, Wang C, Yang JY, and Wang CB
- Subjects
- Animals, Biomarkers, Male, Mice, Mice, Inbred ICR, Spectrometry, Mass, Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption-Ionization, Candidemia
- Abstract
Objective: To establish mouse models of Candidemia, and investigates statistically significant polypeptide peaks to provide auxiliary diagnosis of this disease. Methods: A total of 170 specific pathogen free adult male ICR mice with body mass of 27-30 g were completely randomly divided into Candida albicans infection group ( n= 80), Candida parapsilosis infection group ( n= 80) and the normal control group ( n= 10), and the two kinds of Candidemia mouse models were established via tail vein injection. The serum samples were analyzed by Matrix-assisted laser desorption-ionization time of flight mass spectrometry and relevant software, and the polypeptide peaks with significant differences were screened to establish diagnostic models. Results: A total of 65 differential polypeptide peaks were obtained compared with the Candida albicans infection group and the normal control group. Combined with m/z 1 100.4, 1 581.0, 3 808.0 as differential polypeptide peaks to established the diagnostic model, the sensitivity was 95.24%(40/42), the specificity was 90.63%(29/32), the accuracy rate was 93.24%(69/74), and the AUC value of the ROC curve was 0.972(95 %CI : 0.941-1.000). A total of 73 differential polypeptide peaks were obtained compared with Candida parapsilosis infection group and the normal control group. Combined with m/z 1 433.2, 1 148.5, 4 093.5, 4 522.2, 8 140.9, 8 234.6 as differential polypeptide peaks to established the diagnostic model, the sensitivity was 95%(38/40), the specificity was 81.25%(26/32), the accuracy rate was 88.89%(64/72), and the AUC value of the ROC curve was 0.953(95 %CI : 0.903-1.000). A total of 78 differential polypeptide peaks were obtained compared with Candida albicans infection group and Candida parapsilosis infection group. Combined with m/z 2 736.9, 8 091.5, 8 153.7 as differential polypeptide peaks to established the diagnostic model, the accuracy of distinguishing C. albicans infection from C. parapsilosis infection was 98.78%(81/82). Conclusions: Successfully screened the differential polypeptides and established the related diagnostic models. Which is helpful to find serum biomarkers for the auxiliary diagnosis of Candidemia, and provides a basis for the early diagnosis and the rational use of drugs.
- Published
- 2020
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190. [Analysis of low positive rate of nucleic acid detection method used for diagnosis of novel coronavirus pneumonia].
- Author
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Wang CB
- Subjects
- Betacoronavirus, COVID-19, COVID-19 Testing, Clinical Laboratory Techniques, Humans, Pandemics, SARS-CoV-2, Coronavirus Infections diagnosis, Pneumonia, Viral diagnosis, RNA, Viral isolation & purification
- Published
- 2020
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191. [Clinical factors of pathological complete response after neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy in rectal cancer].
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Sha YJ, Wu HT, Wen XY, and Wang CB
- Subjects
- Humans, Neoplasm Staging, Retrospective Studies, Treatment Outcome, Chemoradiotherapy, Neoadjuvant Therapy, Rectal Neoplasms therapy
- Abstract
Objective: To explore the feasibility of clinical factors to predict the pathological complete response after neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy in rectal cancer. Methods: A retrospective analysis was performed on clinical factors of 162 patients with rectal cancer, who underwent neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy in the General Hospital of People's Liberation Army from January 2011 to December 2018.According to the postoperative pathological results, the patients were divided into pathological complete response (pCR) group and non-pathological complete response group (non-pCR group) to check the predictive clinical factors for pCR. Results: Twenty-eight cases achieved pCR after neoadjuvant chemoradiation (17.3%, 28/162). Univariate analysis showed that patients with higher differentiation ( P= 0.024), tumor occupation of the bowel lume n ≤1/2 ( P= 0.006), earlier clinical T stage ( P= 0.013), earlier clinical N stage ( P= 0.009), the time interval between neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy and surgery>49 days ( P= 0.006), and maximum tumor diamete r ≤5 cm ( P= 0.019) were more likely to obtain pCR, and the differences werestatistically significant. Multivariate analysis showed that tumor occupation of the bowel lume n ≤1/2 ( P= 0.01), maximum tumor diamete r ≤5 cm ( P= 0.035), and the interval>49 days ( P= 0.009) were independent factors in predicting pCR after neoadjuvant therapy. Conclusion: Tumor occupation of the bowel lumen, maximum tumor diameter, and the time interval between neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy and surgery can predict the pCR in rectal cancer.
- Published
- 2020
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192. Postconditioning Protection Against Myocardiocyte Anoxia/Reoxygenation Injury From Penehyclidine Hydrochloride.
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Ren JY, Lin DM, Wang CB, Yang YL, Wang ZQ, Cui BQ, and Ma J
- Subjects
- Apoptosis drug effects, Cell Line, Humans, Hypoxia metabolism, Hypoxia pathology, Myocardial Reperfusion Injury metabolism, Myocardial Reperfusion Injury pathology, Myocytes, Cardiac metabolism, Myocytes, Cardiac pathology, Protective Agents administration & dosage, Quinuclidines administration & dosage, Hypoxia drug therapy, Myocardial Reperfusion Injury drug therapy, Myocytes, Cardiac drug effects, Protective Agents pharmacology, Quinuclidines pharmacology
- Abstract
Background/aims: To investigate the postconditioning protective effect of penehyclidine hydrochloride (PHC) against anoxia/reoxygenation (A/R) injury in H9c2 cells along with the involved mechanism and timing effect., Methods: We divided H9c2 cells into 7 groups: control group, A/R group and PHC+A/R groups at 0 min, 5 mins, 10 mins, 20 mins, 30 mins, respectively (treated with 0.1 μm/L PHC at 0 min, 5 mins, 10 mins, 20 mins, 30 mins after the reoxygenation procedure began). Cell apoptosis, oxidative stress, intracellular Ca
2+ concentration, mitochondrial membrane potential and mitochondrial permeability transition pore (MPTP) opening were explored. Bcl-2, Bax, Cyt C, caspase-3 and caspase-9 levels were measured., Results: A/R significantly increased both cell injury and cell apoptosis. PHC showed postconditioning protective effect by attenuating superoxide production, decreasing Ca2+ overload, restraining MPTP activities, restoring mitochondrial membrane potential, regulating cell apoptosis proteins and modulation of mitochondrial pathway. Earlier administration of PHC offered greater postconditioning protective effect., Conclusion: H9c2 cells were protected by PHC from A/R injury regardless of timing of PHC administration (0 min, 5 mins, 10 mins, 20 mins, 30 mins). However, earlier administration of PHC resulted in better PHC postconditioning protection., Competing Interests: The authors report no conflicts of interest in this work., (© 2019 Ren et al.)- Published
- 2019
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193. [Adult Langerhans cell histiocytosis treated by cladribine: a case report].
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Wang XP, Wu T, Guo M, Xi R, Pan YZ, Wang CB, and Bai H
- Subjects
- Adult, Humans, Cladribine therapeutic use, Histiocytosis, Langerhans-Cell drug therapy
- Published
- 2019
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194. [Influence of low dose perfluorooctanoate acid exposure to the cell proliferation, migration and invasion of the human muscle rhabdomyosarcoma cell line].
- Author
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Wang JN, Zhang Q, Li RB, Sha YJ, and Wang CB
- Subjects
- Caprylates, Cell Line, Tumor, Cell Movement, Cell Proliferation, Fluorocarbons, Humans, Rhabdomyosarcoma
- Abstract
Objective: This study aimed to explore the effect of perfluorooctanoate acid (PFOA) on the proliferation, migration and invasion of the human muscle rhabdomyosarcoma RD cell line and its related mechanisms. Methods: RD cells were cultured and exposed to PFOA of different concentrations with 6-72 hours. The cell viability was assessed by cell counting kit-8 (CCK-8) assay. Wound healing and transwell filter assay were used to evaluated the migration and invasion ability of the RD cells respectively. The cell cycles were detected by Flow cytometry. Quantitative real-time PCR and Western blot were used to quantify the mRNA and protein expression difference of related genes, respectively. Results: CCK-8 assay showed that, after treated the RD cell with different dose of PFOA for 72 h, low dose PFOA (1,10,50, 100 μmol/L) promotes the proliferation of RD cells while high dose PFOA (250, 500 mol/L) inhibits the proliferation ( P< 0.001). Flow cytometry showed that compared with the control group, there was no significant difference in G0/G1 phase, while cells in S phase deceased and G2/M phase cells increased after treated with PFOA (50 μmol/L) for 72 h. The relative proportions of S and G2/M were significantly different between the two groups ( P< 0.01). The results of qPCR showed that the mRNA relative expression of CDK2 of the control group and the PFOA (50 μmol/L) group were 0.97±0.07 and 2.64±0.11 respectively, and there was a significant difference ( t= 12.60, P< 0.001); The mRNA relative expression of cyclin E2 of the control group and the PFOA (50 μmol/L) group were 1.33±0.17 and 3.35±0.22 respectively, and there was a significant difference ( t= 7.42, P< 0.001); The results of Western blot showed that the protein relative expression of CDK2 of the control group and the PFOA (50 μmol/L) group were 0.35±0.01 and 0.84±0.03 respectively, and there was a significant difference ( t= 14.60, P< 0.001); The protein relative expression of cyclin E2 of the control group and the PFOA (50 μmol/L) group were 0.67±0.04 and 0.86±0.01 respectively, and there was a significant difference ( t= 4.88, P< 0.01); There was no significant difference in the mRNA and protein expression of p21 and p53 between the PFOA and control group ( P> 0.05). The wound healing rate of the PFOA (50 μmol/L) group was faster than that of the control group, and the relative migration area of the PFOA group was larger accordingly ( P< 0.001). After PFOA (50 μmol/L) treated, the number of the cell through the membranes was much more than the control group ( t= 54.40, P< 0.001), which means PFOA significantly stimulated the invasion ability of the RD cells. The results of qPCR showed that the mRNA relative expression of vimentin of the control group and the PFOA (50 μmol/L) group were 0.71±0.03 and 2.53±0.16 respectively, and there was a significant difference ( t= 11.00, P< 0.001); The mRNA relative expression of MMP2 of the control group and the PFOA (50 μmol/L) group were 1.09±0.04 and 10.73±1.20 respectively, and there was a significant difference ( t= 8.04, P< 0.001). The results of Western blot showed that the protein relative expression of vimentin of the control group and the PFOA (50 μmol/L) group were 0.55±0.06 and 0.81±0.01 respectively, and there was a significant difference ( t= 4.50, P< 0.05). The protein relative expression of cyclin E2 of the control group and the PFOA (50 μmol/L) group were 0.64±0.04 and 1.03±0.13 respectively, and there was a significant difference ( t= 2.94, P< 0.05). Conclusions: Low dose PFOA (50 μmol/L) exposure promotes cell proliferation, migration and invasion in the human muscle rhabdomyosarcoma cell line through inducing the expressions of MMP2, vimentin and cell cycle related genes.
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- 2019
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195. [Clinical features and prognosis of infection related to allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation in patients with blood diseases].
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Guo M, Wu T, Bai H, Xi R, Wang CB, Pan YZ, Cai YG, Feng QS, and Lei M
- Published
- 2019
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196. [Analysis of clinicopathological characteristics of papillary thyroid carcinoma and BRAF V600E gene mutation].
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Zhao Y, Wang HY, Wang CB, Niu M, Wang YY, and Li XF
- Abstract
Objective: To study the correlation between the BRAF V600E mutation and the clinicopathological features of papillary thyroid carcinoma(PTC), and to explore the application value of BRAF V600E mutation in PTC. Method: The BRAF V600E gene mutation was detected in 108 PTC cases and 30 control cases by qPCR. The results were statistically analyzed by using SPSS 21.0 software. Result: The BRAF V600E mutation was absent in the control group. The BRAF V600E mutation rate was 72.20% in 108 PTC cases. Compared with patients with wild type,the mean age of patients with the mutant BRAF V600E was significantly older( P <0.05). BRAF V600E mutations were associated with PTC tissue subtypes and central area lymph node metastasis( P <0.05). BRAF V600E mutations were not correlated with tumor diameter, patient gender, multifocality, tumor site, concomitant disease, lymph node metastasis in side region of neck, capsule invasion, and TNM staging( P >0.05). Conclusion: The value of BRAF V600E mutation in the prognosis of PTC remains to be studied. BRAF V600E mutation is of value for pathological diagnosis of PTC., Competing Interests: The authors of this article and the planning committee members and staff have no relevant financial relationships with commercial interests to disclose., (Copyright© by the Editorial Department of Journal of Clinical Otorhinolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery.)
- Published
- 2018
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197. Serum hepatitis B surface antigen correlates with fibrosis and necroinflammation: A multicentre perspective in China.
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Zhang P, Du HB, Tong GD, Li XK, Sun XH, Chi XL, Xing YF, Zhou ZH, Li Q, Chen B, Wang H, Wang L, Jin H, Mao DW, Wang XB, Wu QK, Li FP, Hu XY, Lu BJ, Yang ZY, Zhang MX, Shi WB, He Q, Li Y, Jiang KP, Xue JD, Li XD, Jiang JM, Lu W, Tian GJ, Hu ZB, Guo JC, Li CZ, Deng X, Luo XL, Li FY, Zhang XW, Zheng YJ, Zhao G, Wang LC, Wu JH, Guo H, Mi YQ, Gong ZJ, Wang CB, Jiang F, Guo P, Yang XZ, Shi WQ, Yang HZ, Zhou Y, Sun NN, Jiao YT, Gao YQ, Zhou DQ, and Ye YA
- Subjects
- Adult, Alanine Transaminase blood, China, DNA, Viral blood, Female, Hepatitis B e Antigens blood, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Young Adult, Hepatitis B Surface Antigens blood, Hepatitis B, Chronic complications, Hepatitis B, Chronic pathology, Liver Cirrhosis pathology, Serum chemistry
- Abstract
The kinetics of serum hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) during the natural history of hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection has been studied, but the factors affecting them remain unclear. We aimed to investigate the factors affecting HBsAg titres, using data from multicentre, large-sized clinical trials in China. The baseline data of 1795 patients in 3 multicentre trials were studied, and the patients were classified into 3 groups: hepatitis B early antigen (HBeAg)-positive chronic HBV infection (n = 588), HBeAg-positive chronic hepatitis B (n = 596), and HBeAg-negative chronic hepatitis B (n = 611). HBsAg titres in the different phases were compared, and multiple linear progression analyses were performed to investigate the implicated factors. HBsAg titres varied significantly in different phases (P = .000), with the highest (4.60 log10 IU/mL [10%-90% confidence interval: 3.52 log10 IU/mL-4.99 log10 IU/mL]) in patients with HBeAg-positive chronic HBV infection. In all phases, age and HBV DNA were correlated with serum HBsAg level. In HBeAg-positive chronic hepatitis B patients, a negative correlation between HBsAg titres and fibrosis stage was observed. Alanine amonitransferase or necroinflammatory activity was also correlated with HBsAg titres in HBeAg-negative chronic hepatitis B patients. In conclusion, decreased HBsAg titres may be associated with advancing fibrosis in HBeAg-positive chronic hepatitis B patients or increased necroinflammation in those with HBeAg-negative chronic hepatitis B. Our findings may help clinicians better understand the kinetics of HBsAg and provide useful insights into the management of this disease., (© 2018 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
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- 2018
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198. [Haploidentical allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation for blastic plasmacytoid dendritic cell neoplasm: a case report and literatures review].
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Cao HG, Wu T, Guo M, Xi R, Liu TT, Xue F, Wang CB, and Bai H
- Published
- 2018
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199. [Response and prognosis of neoadjuvant dose-dense or standard schedule chemotherapy with anthracyclines and taxanes for Luminal B breast cancer].
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Qiu AF, Miao ZL, Ge GK, Wang CB, Bian J, Ma HY, and Xu Q
- Subjects
- Chemotherapy, Adjuvant, Disease-Free Survival, Female, Humans, Prognosis, Anthracyclines therapeutic use, Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols therapeutic use, Breast Neoplasms drug therapy, Neoadjuvant Therapy, Taxoids therapeutic use
- Abstract
Objective: To evaluate the efficacy and safety of neoadjuvant dose-dense or standard schedule chemotherapy with anthracyclines and taxanes for Luminal B (HER2-)Breast Cancer. Methods: From January 2010 to December 2014, 168 Luminal B (HER2-) breast cancer patients with stageⅡA-ⅢC confirmed by pathology were randomly assigned to receive one of the following regimens: (group A) concurrent TEC× 4 every 3 weeks, ( group B ) sequential EC× 4-T × 4 every 3 weeks, (group C ) dose-dense TEC× 4 every 2 weeks with G-CSF, (group D) sequential EC× 4(dose-dense)-T × 4 with dose-dense every 2 weeks . Results: A total of 168 patients completed the neoadjuvant chemotherapy as planned. The pathologic complete response (pCR) was 16.8% in the 4 groups.The pCR were 30.9% and 26.1% in the group C and group D respectively, significantly higher than patients with group A and group B(9.5%and 7.1%) ( P <0.05). Median follow-up was 43 months (IQR 3-63). The 3-year disease free survival (DFS) rate was 64.7%, 55.5%, 87.8% and 92.1% and the 3-year overall survival(OS)rate was 79.4%, 77.7%, 95.1%, 97.3% in the 4 groups respectively. Patients in the dose-dense group had better 3-year DFS and 3-year OS than those with the regular group.The side-effects could be evaluated in 154 patients.The incidence of neutropenia was 29.2% and 21.9% in the group C and group D versus 65.7%and 51.3% in the regular group( P <0.05), the incidence of nervous toxicity was 54.2%, 18.9%, 60.0%, 26.8% in the 4 groups respectively. The incidence of nervous toxicity in the dose-dense group was lower than that in the regular regimen group( P <0.05). Conclusion: Neoadjuvant dose-dense chemotherapy with anthracyclines and taxanes for Luminal B (HER2-)Breast Cancer was effective and can improve the pCR, DFS and OS.Comparing the two dose dense regimens, sequentially with anthracyclines and taxanes, the incidence of nervous toxicity were lower.
- Published
- 2017
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200. [Distribution and drug resistance of pathogens at hematology department of Jiangsu Province from 2014 to 2015: results from a multicenter, retrospective study].
- Author
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Wan YK, Sang W, Chen B, Yang YG, Zhang LQ, Sun AN, Liu YJ, Xu Y, Cai YP, Wang CB, Shen YF, Jiang YW, Zhang XY, Xu W, Hong M, Chen T, Xu RR, Li F, Xu YL, Xue Y, Lu YL, He ZM, Dong WM, Chen Z, Ji MH, Yang YY, Zhai LJ, Zhao Y, Wu GQ, Ding JH, Cheng J, Cai WB, Sun YM, and Ouyang J
- Subjects
- Anti-Bacterial Agents, Gram-Negative Bacteria, Humans, Microbial Sensitivity Tests, Retrospective Studies, Drug Resistance, Bacterial
- Abstract
Objective: To describe the distribution and drug resistance of pathogens at hematology department of Jiangsu Province from 2014 to 2015 to provide reference for empirical anti-infection treatment. Methods: Pathogens were from hematology department of 26 tertiary hospitals in Jiangsu Province from 2014 to 2015. Antimicrobial susceptibility testing was carried out according to a unified protocol using Kirby-Bauer method or agar dilution method. Collection of drug susceptibility results and corresponding patient data were analyzed. Results: The separated pathogens amounted to 4 306. Gram-negative bacteria accounted for 64.26%, while the proportions of gram-positive bacteria and funguses were 26.99% and 8.75% respectively. Common gram-negative bacteria were Escherichia coli (20.48%) , Klebsiella pneumonia (15.40%) , Pseudomonas aeruginosa (8.50%) , Acinetobacter baumannii (5.04%) and Stenotropho-monas maltophilia (3.41%) respectively. CRE amounted to 123 (6.68%) . Common gram-positive bacteria were Staphylococcus aureus (4.92%) , Staphylococcus hominis (4.88%) and Staphylococcus epidermidis (4.71%) respectively. Candida albicans were the main fungus which accounted for 5.43%. The rates of Escherichia coli and Klebsiella pneumonia resistant to carbapenems were 3.5%-6.1% and 5.0%-6.3% respectively. The rates of Pseudomonas aeruginosa resistant to tobramycin and amikacin were 3.2% and 3.3% respectively. The resistant rates of Acinetobacter baumannii towards tobramycin and cefoperazone/sulbactam were both 19.2%. The rates of Stenotrophomonas maltophilia resistant to minocycline and sulfamethoxazole were 3.5% and 9.3% respectively. The rates of Staphylococcus aureus, Enterococcus faecium and Enterococcus faecalis resistant wards vancomycin were 0, 6.4% and 1.4% respectively; also, the rates of them resistant to linezolid were 1.2%, 0 and 1.6% respectively; in addition, the rates of them resistant to teicoplanin were 2.8%, 14.3% and 8.0% respectively. Furthermore, MRSA accounted for 39.15% (83/212) . Conclusions: Pathogens were mainly gram-negative bacteria. CRE accounted for 6.68%. The rates of Escherichia coli and Klebsiella pneumonia resistant to carbapenems were lower compared with other antibacterial agents. The rates of gram-positive bacteria resistant to vancomycin, linezolid and teicoplanin were still low. MRSA accounted for 39.15%.
- Published
- 2017
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