525 results on '"Wenyi Li"'
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2. EphrinB2-mediated CDK5/ISL1 pathway enhances cardiac lymphangiogenesis and alleviates ischemic injury by resolving post-MI inflammation
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Yingnan Bai, Liming Chen, Fanghao Guo, Jinghong Zhang, Jinlin Hu, Xuefei Tao, Qing Lu, Wenyi Li, Xueying Chen, Ting Gong, Nan Qiu, Yawei Jin, Lifan Yang, Yu Lei, Chengchao Ruan, Qing Jing, John P. Cooke, Shijun Wang, Yunzeng Zou, and Junbo Ge
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Medicine ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Abstract EphrinB2 (erythropoietin-producing hepatoma interactor B2) is a key Eph/ephrin family member, promoting angiogenesis, vasculogenesis, and lymphangiogenesis during embryonic development. However, the role of EphrinB2 in cardiac lymphangiogenesis following myocardial infarction (MI) and the potential molecular mechanism remains to be demonstrated. This study revealed that EphrinB2 prevented ischemic heart post-MI from remodeling and dysfunction by activating the cardiac lymphangiogenesis signaling pathway. Deletion of EphrinB2 impaired cardiac lymphangiogenesis and aggravated adverse cardiac remodeling and ventricular dysfunction post-MI. At the same time, overexpression of EphrinB2 stimulated cardiac lymphangiogenesis which facilitated cardiac infiltrating macrophage drainage and reduced inflammation in the ischemic heart. The beneficial effects of EphrinB2 on improving clearance of inflammatory response and cardiac function were abolished in Lyve1 knockout mice. Mechanistically, EphrinB2 accelerated cell cycling and lymphatic endothelial cell proliferation and migration by activating CDK5 and CDK5-dependent ISL1 nuclear translocation. EphrinB2 enhanced the transcriptional activity of ISL1 at the VEGFR3 (FLT4) promoter, and VEGFR3 inhibitor MAZ51 significantly diminished the EphrinB2-mediated lymphangiogenesis and deteriorated the ischemic cardiac function. We uncovered a novel mechanism of EphrinB2-driven cardiac lymphangiogenesis in improving myocardial remodeling and function after MI.
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- 2024
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3. Resilience enhancement by line hardening for communication routing considering renewable energy sources in cyber‐physical power systems
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Xiaolong Li, Wenyi Li, Nana Wang, Le Li, and Xuan Gong
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communication routing ,renewable energy sources ,resilience ,cyber‐physical systems ,power transmission planning ,Renewable energy sources ,TJ807-830 - Abstract
Abstract Communication routing of cyber‐physical power systems (CPPS) with the high penetration of renewable energy sources (RES) plays an important role in the resilience enhancement against disasters, natural and man‐made alike. Therefore, a trilevel optimization model is proposed for the CPPS resilience enhancement with the RES against extreme events. The upper‐level model identifies optimal hardening lines of both the transmission and communication networks with consideration of the communication routing constraints. The middle‐level model identifies the attacked lines to maximize load shedding of the power system. The effects of RES uncertainty and communication routings on resilience enhancement are analysed. The lower‐level model attains an optimal allocation strategy of power generation to minimize load shedding. The model is solved by the column‐and‐constraint generation algorithm. Case studies are conducted on the IEEE 14‐bus, RTS 24‐bus, and 118‐bus system. The results show that the proposed hardening strategy can effectively ensure the adaptiveness of the transmission network and communication routing to improve the resilience of CPPS to extreme events. Moreover, it is observed that the load loss and total investment cost are heavily affected without and with RES.
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- 2024
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4. Development and validation of a nutrition-related genetic–clinical–radiological nomogram associated with behavioral and psychological symptoms in Alzheimer’s disease
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Jiwei Jiang, Yaou Liu, Anxin Wang, Zhizheng Zhuo, Hanping Shi, Xiaoli Zhang, Wenyi Li, Mengfan Sun, Shirui Jiang, Yanli Wang, Xinying Zou, Yuan Zhang, Ziyan Jia, Jun Xu, Ting Gao, and Xiuyuan Hao
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Medicine - Abstract
Abstract. Background:. Few evidence is available in the early prediction models of behavioral and psychological symptoms of dementia (BPSD) in Alzheimer’s disease (AD). This study aimed to develop and validate a novel genetic–clinical–radiological nomogram for evaluating BPSD in patients with AD and explore its underlying nutritional mechanism. Methods:. This retrospective study included 165 patients with AD from the Chinese Imaging, Biomarkers, and Lifestyle (CIBL) cohort between June 1, 2021, and March 31, 2022. Data on demographics, neuropsychological assessments, single-nucleotide polymorphisms of AD risk genes, and regional brain volumes were collected. A multivariate logistic regression model identified BPSD-associated factors, for subsequently constructing a diagnostic nomogram. This nomogram was internally validated through 1000-bootstrap resampling and externally validated using a time-series split based on the CIBL cohort data between June 1, 2022, and February 1, 2023. Area under receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves, calibration curves, and decision curve analysis (DCA) were used to assess the discrimination, calibration, and clinical applicability of the nomogram. Results:. Factors independently associated with BPSD were: CETP rs1800775 (odds ratio [OR] = 4.137, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.276–13.415, P = 0.018), decreased Mini Nutritional Assessment score (OR = 0.187, 95% CI: 0.086–0.405, P
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- 2024
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5. Undergraduate Students' Profiles of Cognitive Load in Augmented Reality-Assisted Science Learning and Their Relation to Science Learning Self-Efficacy and Behavior Patterns
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Xiao-Fan Lin, Seng Yue Wong, Wei Zhou, Weipeng Shen, Wenyi Li, and Chin-Chung Tsai
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Research evidence indicated that a specific type of augmented reality-assisted (AR-assisted) science learning design or support might not suit or be effective for all students because students' cognitive load might differ according to their experiences and individual characteristics. Thus, this study aimed to identify undergraduate students' profiles of cognitive load in AR-assisted science learning and to examine the role of their distinct profiles in self-efficacy together with associated behavior patterns in science learning. After ensuring the validity and reliability of each measure, a latent profile analysis confirmed that 365 Chinese undergraduates carried diverse dimensions of cognitive load simultaneously. The latent profile analysis findings revealed four fundamental profiles: Low Engagement, Immersive, Dabbling, and Organized, characterized as carrying various respective cognitive loads. The multivariate analysis of variance findings revealed different levels of the six AR science learning self-efficacy dimensions across profiles. Low Engagement students displayed the lowest self-efficacy among all dimensions. Organized students recorded better conceptual understanding and higher-order cognitive skills than Dabbling ones. Students with the Immersive profile had the highest science learning self-efficacy. The lag sequential analysis results showed significant differences in behavior patterns among profiles. Among them, profiles with social interaction, test, and reviewing feedback behavior had a significantly higher score for self-efficacy than those patterns mainly based on test learning and resource visits. This finding provides a unified consideration of students' diverse profiles and can inform interventions for effective design of AR-assisted science learning to match appropriate strategies to facilitate the science learning effect.
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- 2024
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6. Addressing challenges in pediatric thrombosis: a comprehensive guideline development
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Yin Wang, Qinan Yin, Jiangting Liao, Na Wang, Li Li, Siyan Li, Qingxia Zhang, Feifei Yu, Jianchun Luo, Hongmei Wang, Die Hu, Wenyi Li, Biao Li, Jingjing Chen, Limei Dong, Min Luo, Yu Yan, Lie Dong, Zheng Ding, Xi Wei, Jiadan Yang, Shenglan Tan, Lian Li, Xi Zheng, Liuyun Wu, Yong Yang, Linan Zeng, Jinqi Li, Lizhu Han, and Yuan Bian
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pediatric thrombosis ,rational drug use ,thrombosis prevention and treatment ,pharmaceutical practice guideline ,anticoagulation ,Pediatrics ,RJ1-570 - Abstract
BackgroundPediatric thrombosis is a relatively rare but severe condition in the field of pediatrics, with far-reaching consequences. Recent studies have indicated a rising incidence of this disease in children over the years. Additionally, the pharmacological treatment of thrombotic diseases in children faces numerous challenges. Due to significant physiological differences between children and adults, guidelines for the prevention and treatment of thrombotic diseases in adults cannot be directly applied to pediatric patients.PurposeA systematic review of the existing evidence-based medical literature should be conducted to propose pharmacological prevention and treatment recommendations for pediatric thrombotic diseases. Developing a comprehensive and practical pharmacotherapy guideline for the prevention and treatment of pediatric thrombotic diseases is essential to enhancing the rational use of medications in managing these conditions in children.MethodsThe guideline development followed the World Health Organization's (WHO) Handbook for Guideline Development. This involves systematically searching and extensively collecting data on common medication issues in the prevention and treatment of pediatric thrombosis nationwide. The Delphi method was used to survey experts and identify the clinical issues to be included. Subsequently, a systematic literature review was conducted to evaluate existing primary studies, systematic reviews, and guidelines or consensus statements from professional organizations. The quality of the evidence was assessed using the Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation (GRADE) approach. The Delphi method was employed again to reach a consensus on the recommendations and evidence levels. This process was culminated in the development of the Guideline for Pharmacological Management of Thrombotic Diseases in Children.ResultsDuring the guideline development process, a total of 29 clinical issues were collected and evaluated by 78 experts in clinical pharmacy and clinical medicine. Through two rounds of surveys, 13 clinical issues were selected. Under the supervision of two methodologists, 13 clinical pharmacotherapy recommendations were formulated.ConclusionBy conducting a comprehensive assessment of the feasibility and safety of clinical practices, the guideline provides specific anticoagulant medication recommendations for pediatric healthcare professionals. This will help enhance the prevention and treatment of pediatric thrombosis, promoting more standardized and effective medical practices.
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- 2025
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7. Cortical thickness correlated with peripheral inflammatory cytokines in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis
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Jing Yang, Wenyi Li, Mei Tian, Lei Zhang, Fengping Du, Xin Li, Qi Liu, Rui Li, Zhenzhong Li, Hui Dong, and Yaling Liu
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amyotrophic lateral sclerosis ,cortical thickness ,disease progression ,inflammatory cytokines ,MRI ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
IntroductionAmyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a rare, devastating neurodegenerative disease that affects upper and lower motor neurons, resulting in muscle atrophy, spasticity, hyperreflexia, and paralysis. Inflammation plays an important role in the development of ALS, and associated with rapid disease progression. Current observational studies indicate the thinning of cortical thickness in patients with ALS is associated with rapid disease progression and cognitive changes. However, the effects of inflammatory cytokines on cortical thickness in patients with ALS are unclear. Here, we investigated the relationship between inflammatory cytokines and cortical thickness in patients with ALS.MethodsWe evaluated 51 patients with ALS for inflammatory cytokines including interleukin (IL)-4, interferon (IFN)-α, IL-1β, IL-2, IL-5, IL-12, tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-α, IL-6, IL-10, IL-8, IL-17, and IFN-γ and analyzed the correlation between these indicators and the ALS functional rating scale-revised (ALSFRS-R) score or disease progression rate (ΔFS score). Twenty-six patients with ALS and 26 controls were studied using whole-cortex analysis, and post-hoc analyses were performed to examine the correlation between brain cortical thickness and ALSFRS-R or ΔFS scores.ResultsIL-4, IFN-α, IL-1β, and IL-2 levels were significantly correlated with ALSFRS-R scores, and the IL-2 level was significantly correlated with ΔFS scores. After controlling for age and sex, the ALS group had thinner cortexes in multiple clusters across the brain than the control group. Further analyses revealed that cortical thickness in the right superior temporal and lingual gyrus regions was inversely correlated with ΔFS scores. There was a significant positive correlation between the clusters in the right lingual cortex and IL-2 level.ConclusionThese results suggest cortical thickness was reduced in patients with ALS in motor and non-motor cortical areas. Inflammatory factors (especially IL-2) were correlated with cortical thickness, and both were related to the disease progression rate, suggesting IL-2 plays an important role in ALS.
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- 2025
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8. Mechanism of luteolin against non-small-cell lung cancer: a study based on network pharmacology, molecular docking, molecular dynamics simulation, and in vitro experiments
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Jihang Zhang, Changling Li, Wenyi Li, Zhenpeng Shi, Zhenguo Liu, Junyu Zhou, Jing Tang, Zixuan Ren, Yun Qiao, and Deshan Liu
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luteolin ,network pharmacology ,non-small-cell lung cancer ,Akt/MDM2/p53 signaling pathway ,in vitro experiments ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
IntroductionLuteolin, a naturally occurring flavonoid compound, demonstrates promising anti-cancer properties. However, its mechanism against non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) remains unknown. This study employed network pharmacology, molecular docking, molecular dynamics simulation (MDS), and in vitro experiments to investigate the potential mechanisms by which luteolin against NSCLC.MethodsInitially, the potential targets of luteolin and NSCLC-related targets were identified from public databases such as TCMSP, GeneCards, OMIM, DrugBank, and TTD. Subsequently, the protein-protein interaction (PPI) network screening and Gene Ontology (GO) and Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes (KEGG) enrichment analyses were conducted. The binding affinity and stability of luteolin with the core targets were assessed using molecular docking and MDS. Finally, the results were validated by in vitro experiments.ResultsA total of 56 luteolin targets and 2145 NSCLC-related targets were identified. Six core targets, TP53, EGFR, AKT1, TNF, JUN, and CASP3, were screened via the PPI network. The GO and KEGG analyses indicated that luteolin’s activity against NSCLC potentially involves PI3K-Akt, NF-kappa B, and other signaling pathways. Molecular docking revealed that luteolin had high binding affinity with the core targets. MDS confirmed the stable interaction between luteolin and key proteins TP53 and AKT1. in vitro, luteolin significantly inhibited the proliferation and migration of A549 cells, while also inducing apoptosis. In addition, luteolin downregulated the expression of p-Akt (Ser473), MDM2, and Bcl-2 but upregulated the expression of p53 and Bax, which was consistent with the effect of LY294002.ConclusionLuteolin had a good anti-NSCLC effect, and the apoptosis-inducing effect might be related to the Akt/MDM2/p53 signaling pathway.
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- 2024
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9. Choroid plexus volume as a novel candidate neuroimaging marker of the Alzheimer’s continuum
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Jiwei Jiang, Zhizheng Zhuo, Anxin Wang, Wenyi Li, Shirui Jiang, Yunyun Duan, Qiwei Ren, Min Zhao, Linlin Wang, Shiyi Yang, Maher Un Nisa Awan, Yaou Liu, and Jun Xu
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Choroid plexus ,Alzheimer’s disease ,Mediation analysis ,ROC curve ,Amyloid-beta ,Longitudinal studies ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Abstract
Abstract Background Enlarged choroid plexus (ChP) volume has been reported in patients with Alzheimer’s disease (AD) and inversely correlated with cognitive performance. However, its clinical diagnostic and predictive value, and mechanisms by which ChP impacts the AD continuum remain unclear. Methods This prospective cohort study enrolled 607 participants [healthy control (HC): 110, mild cognitive impairment (MCI): 269, AD dementia: 228] from the Chinese Imaging, Biomarkers, and Lifestyle study between January 1, 2021, and December 31, 2022. Of the 497 patients on the AD continuum, 138 underwent lumbar puncture for cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) hallmark testing. The relationships between ChP volume and CSF pathological hallmarks (Aβ42, Aβ40, Aβ42/40, tTau, and pTau181), neuropsychological tests [Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE), Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA), Neuropsychiatric Inventory (NPI), and Activities of Daily Living (ADL) scores], and multimodal neuroimaging measures [gray matter volume, cortical thickness, and corrected cerebral blood flow (cCBF)] were analyzed using partial Spearman’s correlation. The mediating effects of four neuroimaging measures [ChP volume, hippocampal volume, lateral ventricular volume (LVV), and entorhinal cortical thickness (ECT)] on the relationship between CSF hallmarks and neuropsychological tests were examined. The ability of the four neuroimaging measures to identify cerebral Aβ42 changes or differentiate among patients with AD dementia, MCI and HCs was determined using receiver operating characteristic analysis, and their associations with neuropsychological test scores at baseline were evaluated by linear regression. Longitudinal associations between the rate of change in the four neuroimaging measures and neuropsychological tests scores were evaluated on the AD continuum using generalized linear mixed-effects models. Results The participants’ mean age was 65.99 ± 8.79 years. Patients with AD dementia exhibited the largest baseline ChP volume than the other groups (P
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- 2024
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10. Effects of acute aerobic exercise on resting state functional connectivity of motor cortex in college students
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Wenyi Li, Bingyang Wang, Haoteng Yuan, Jun Chen, Gonghe Chen, Yue Wang, and Shilin Wen
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Acute aerobic exercise ,Resting state functional connectivity ,Motor cortex ,Exercise intensity ,Fitness level ,Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract This study intends to inspect the effects of acute aerobic exercise (AE) on resting state functional connectivity (RSFC) in motor cortex of college students and the moderating effect of fitness level. Methods: 20 high fitness level college students and 20 ordinary college students were recruited in public. Subjects completed 25 min of moderate- and high-intensity acute aerobic exercise respectively by a bicycle ergometer, and the motor cortex’s blood oxygen signals in resting state were monitored by functional Near Infrared Spectroscopy (fNIRS, the Shimadzu portable Light NIRS, Japan) in pre- and post-test. Results: At the moderate intensity level, the total mean value of RSFC pre- and post-test was significantly different in the high fitness level group (pre-test 0.62 ± 0.18, post-test 0.51 ± 0.17, t (19) = 2.61, p = 0.02, d = 0.58), but no significant change was found in the low fitness level group. At the high-intensity level, there was no significant difference in the difference of total RSFC between pre- and post-test in the high and low fitness group. According to and change trend of 190 “edges”: at the moderate-intensity level, the number of difference edges in the high fitness group (d = 0.58, 23) were significantly higher than those in the low fitness group (d = 0.32, 15), while at high-intensity level, there was a reverse trend between the high fitness group (d = 0.25, 18) and the low fitness group (d = 0.39, 23). Conclusions: moderate-intensity AE can cause significant changes of RSFC in the motor cortex of college students with high fitness, while high fitness has a moderating effect on the relationship between exercise intensity and RSFC. RSFC of people with high fitness is more likely to be affected by AE and show a wider range of changes.
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- 2024
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11. Aging-related inflammatory and metabolic disorder in the novel mutation of colony-stimulating factor-1 receptor (csf1r)P853T/+ in CSF1R-microglial encephalopathy
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Xiaohong Wang, Yanli Wang, Tianlin Jiang, Jiwei Jiang, Linlin Wang, Shiyi Yang, Mengfan Sun, Yuan Zhang, Ziyan Jia, Wenyi Li, Qiwei Ren, Cuicui Zhang, Jianjian Liu, Yinwei Zhu, Min Zhao, Shirui Jiang, Huiying Zhang, Jinglong Chen, and Jun Xu
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Medicine (General) ,R5-920 ,Genetics ,QH426-470 - Published
- 2025
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12. Training-Free Model Merging for Multi-target Domain Adaptation.
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Wenyi Li, Huan-ang Gao, Mingju Gao, Beiwen Tian, Rong Zhi, and Hao Zhao 0002
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- 2024
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13. SCP-Diff: Spatial-Categorical Joint Prior for Diffusion Based Semantic Image Synthesis.
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Huan-ang Gao, Mingju Gao, Jiaju Li, Wenyi Li, Rong Zhi, Hao Tang, and Hao Zhao 0002
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- 2024
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14. FairDiff: Fair Segmentation with Point-Image Diffusion.
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Wenyi Li, Haoran Xu, Guiyu Zhang, Huan-ang Gao, Mingju Gao, Mengyu Wang, and Hao Zhao 0002
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- 2024
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15. Design of Communication Countermeasure Simulation Model and Data Interaction Interface for Battlefield Network Based on QualNet.
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Wenyi Li, Peng Gong 0001, Weidong Wang, Yu Liu, Jianfeng Li, and Xiang Gao 0018
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- 2024
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16. Dimerization and lysine substitution of melittin have differing effects on bacteria
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Tamara Matthyssen, Wenyi Li, James A. Holden, Jason C. Lenzo, Sara Hadjigol, and Neil M. O’Brien-Simpson
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peptide ,antimicrobial activity ,melittin ,melittin analog ,toxicity ,Therapeutics. Pharmacology ,RM1-950 - Abstract
IntroductionMelittin is a potent antimicrobial peptide from bee venom that is effective against both Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria. However, it is extremely toxic to mammalian cells and, as yet, has no clinical use. Modifications to its amino acid sequence, cyclization, truncation, and dimerization have been attempted in order to reduce its toxicity whilst maintaining its antimicrobial activity.MethodsIn this study, we targeted the three lysine residues present in melittin and substituted them with lysine homologs containing shorter side chains (ornithine, Orn, diaminobutyric acid, Dab, and diaminopropanoic acid, Dap) and made both parallel and antiparallel melittin dimers to observe how lysine substitution and dimerization affects its activity and toxicity. The antibacterial activity of melittin and its analogs was tested against S. aureus (Gram-positive bacteria) and E. coli (Gram-negative bacteria), and cytotoxicity was tested against the mammalian cell lines HEK293 and H4IIE.ResultsOverall, dimerization and lysine substitution exhibited improved antimicrobial activity toward E. coli and limited improvement toward S. aureus. However, mammalian cell toxicity was only marginally reduced compared to native melittin. Interestingly, the parallel dimer was found to be marginally more active than the antiparallel dimer, indicating orientation maybe important for activity, although both dimers were less effective than the native and Lys-analog peptides toward S. aureus. Of the Lys substitutions, Dab and Dap improved melittin’s activity toward E. coli.DiscussionDimerization and Lys substitution of melittin improved the antimicrobial activity toward Gram-negative bacteria but did not significantly improve its activity toward Gram-positive bacteria. Some analogs also displayed reduced toxicity toward HEK293 and H4IIE cells but overall remained toxic at bactericidal concentrations. Our data indicates that although highly antibacterial, melittin’s toxicity is the major drawback in its potential use.
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- 2024
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17. Lumbar osteopathic manipulative treatment can improve KOA symptoms: short-term efficacy observation and mechanism analysis
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Peiyu Du, Xi Li, Shilin Yin, Wenyi Li, Xilong Sun, Zekun Zhang, Jianyong Zhao, Gao Shijun, Shuangqing Du, and Di Zhang
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osteopathic manipulative treatment ,manual therapy ,knee osteoarthritis ,mechanism analysis ,spine-pelvis-lower limbs ,Biotechnology ,TP248.13-248.65 - Abstract
BackgroundManipulative treatment can effectively improve knee pain and function, but no previous studies have shown that lumbar osteopathic manipulative treatment can improve knee symptoms. To explore the influence of lumbar manipulation on KOA and analyze its principlerelationship between coronal position of lumbar spine and KOA.MethodsPatients were divided into OMT group and DT group according to treatment. WOMAC scores were compared between the two groups, and X-ray examinations before and after treatment were performed in OMT group to analyze the imaging changes.ResultsBoth OMT group and DT group showed significant improvement in WOMAC score after treatment, and the improvement in OMT group was better than that in DT group. After OMT treatment, cTMI(P = 0.034), mL-SOD (P < 0.001), mΔL-KOD (P = 0.001), LL (P = 0.036), and FTA(P = 0.026) were significantly changed.ConclusionCompared with drug therapy, lumbar manipulation can better improve WOMAC scores in KOA patients. It relives symptoms by loosening muscles and correcting small joint disorders to improve local knee alignment.
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- 2024
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18. Molecular Dynamics Simulation Study on Adsorption Behavior of Three Anionic Collectors on Wulfenite Surface
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Ya ZHU, Xishan ZHANG, Baoxu SONG, Lixin YAN, and Wenyi LI
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mineral processing engineering ,wulfenite ,molecular dynamics ,sodium oleate ,sodiumdodecyl sulfonate ,benzohydroxamic acid ,Mining engineering. Metallurgy ,TN1-997 - Abstract
This is an article in the field of mineral processing engineering. The adsorption kinetics of sodium oleate (SODI), sodium dodecyl sulfonate (SDS) and benzohydroxamic acid (BHA) on the surface of wulfenite were taken as the research subject.Firstly, flotation tests of pure wulfenite were conducted to study the effects of pH value and collectortype on wulfenite flotation behavior, then, the frontier orbital theory analysis and molecular dynamics simulation on adsorption behavior of these three collectors was studied by using Dmol3 module and Forcite module in Materials Studio respectively. The flotation tests resultsindicate that SODI and SDS show better collecting property than BHAin their respectiveappropriate pH range. Computational simulation study results also shows that thesethreecollectors all have strong adsorption on wulfenite {112} surface, and the molybdenumatomsonthe surface show stronger adsorption activity than other atoms due to the breakage of theoriginal Mo-O bonds, and together with the single bond oxygen atoms in polar group of collectors, arethe active particles of the adsorption process. According to the effective mass and the adsorptioninteraction energy, the adsorption ability of these there collectors could be listed as follows:SODI>SDS>BHA, which are consistent with the flotation tests.
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- 2024
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19. Reliability Evaluation of Electric Vehicle Sharing Considering Charging Load Transfer in a Distribution Network Containing Microgrids.
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Xiaolong Li, Wenyi Li, Dianyi Deng, Zhiying Zhang, and Huaisheng Sun
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- 2024
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20. UViT: Efficient and lightweight U-shaped hybrid vision transformer for human pose estimation.
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Biao Li, Shoufeng Tang, and Wenyi Li
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- 2024
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21. Effects of a Contextualised Reflective Mechanism-Based Augmented Reality Learning Model on Students' Scientific Inquiry Learning Performances, Behavioural Patterns, and Higher Order Thinking
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Xiao-Fan Lin, Gwo-Jen Hwang, Jing Wang, Yue Zhou, Wenyi Li, Jiachun Liu, and Zhong-Mei Liang
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Augmented reality (AR) can represent a contextualised scientific inquiry environment in which students may explore the real world and develop science process skills via interacting with rich information from virtual systems. However, it remains a challenge for most students to complete scientific inquiry tasks without proper support. Research evidence has suggested the potential of reflective scaffolding when applying scientific inquiry. Accordingly, we designed a contextualised reflective mechanism-based AR learning model to assist students in completing scientific inquiry tasks. Guided by the proposed model, we designed four stages of scientific inquiry learning: conceptual understanding, reflective cognition, in-depth inquiry, and knowledge building. A quasi-experiment and lag sequential analysis were conducted by recruiting 81 sixth-grade students to examine the effects of the proposed model on their scientific inquiry learning performances, higher order thinking, and behavioural patterns. The experimental results reveal that the proposed approach improved students' inquiry learning performances and higher order thinking tendency (problem-solving tendency and metacognitive awareness). Moreover, the evidence from this study also suggests that the students who learned with the proposed approach exhibited more observation, comparison, exploration, and reflection behavioural patterns in the field trip than those who learned without the contextualised reflective mechanism. Implications are discussed.
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- 2023
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22. Mitigating the Urban-Rural Digital Divide: A Dual Scaffolding-Embedded Mobile Augmented Reality Learning Approach in the Post COVID-19 Pandemic
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Xiao-Fan Lin, Juan Jiang, Guoyu Luo, Xiyu Huang, Wenyi Li, Jiayan Zou, Zhaoyang Wang, and Qintai Hu
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Mitigating the digital divide is essential for the sustainable development of education. To provide distance access which ensures equality in education for both urban and rural students, online learning has been emphasized in the post COVID-19 period. However, some challenges to total online learning have been described, such as isolation and the lack of in-time interaction due to the separation between teachers and students. The mobile augmented reality (AR) learning approach has the potential to combine real-world and online objects to promote interaction in total online learning. However, researchers have found that teachers and students might feel frustrated while handling too much information to deal with complex tasks in AR learning without appropriate scaffolding, which might reinforce the digital divide. Therefore, there is a need to propose a dual scaffolding-embedded AR learning approach to mitigate the urban-rural digital divide rather than a single form of scaffolding for either teachers or students. A quasi-experiment was conducted by recruiting 173 sixth-grade students from four classes of urban and rural schools in southern China. The longitudinal results showed that the proposed approach effectively improved both urban and rural students' learning achievement, higher-order cognition, and self-efficacy. The comparison of the students' learning outcomes indicated that it was helpful to mitigate the digital divide between rural and urban students through the proposed approach. These findings provide insights for school administrators to provide relational and suitable scaffolding-embedded mobile AR learning to support total online education for mitigating the urban and rural digital divide in the post COVID-19 period.
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- 2023
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23. microRNA-622 upregulates cell cycle process by targeting FOLR2 to promote CRC proliferation
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Yuehong Chen, Feng Liu, Xinhua Chen, Wenyi Li, Kejun Li, Hailang Cai, Shunyi Wang, Honglei Wang, Ke Xu, Chenxi Zhang, Shengzhi Ye, Yunhao Shen, Tingyu Mou, Shumin Cai, Jianwei Zhou, and Jiang Yu
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Colorectal cancer ,miR-622 ,FOLR2 ,Proliferation ,Cell cycle ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Abstract Background Epigenetic alterations contribute greatly to the development and progression of colorectal cancer, and effect of aberrant miR-622 expression is still controversial. This study aimed to discover miR-622 regulation in CRC proliferation. Methods miR-622 expression and prognosis were analyzed in clinical CRC samples from Nanfang Hospital. miR-622 regulation on cell cycle and tumor proliferation was discovered, and FOLR2 was screened as functional target of miR-622 using bioinformatics analysis, which was validated via dual luciferase assay and gain-of-function and loss-of-function experiments both in vitro and in vivo. Results miR-622 overexpression in CRC indicated unfavorable prognosis and it regulated cell cycle to promote tumor growth both in vitro and in vivo. FOLR2 is a specific, functional target of miR-622, which negatively correlates with signature genes in cell cycle process to promote CRC proliferation. Conclusions miR-622 upregulates cell cycle process by targeting FOLR2 to promote CRC proliferation, proposing a novel mechanism and treatment target in CRC epigenetic regulation of miR-622.
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- 2024
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24. Prognostic and clinical value of circPRKCI expression in diverse human cancers
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Zhongyue Liu, Xiaolei Ren, Zhimin Yang, Lin Mei, Wenyi Li, Chao Tu, Zhihong Li, Rongman Jia, and Xiuyuan Hao
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Medicine - Abstract
Abstract. Background:. Highly expressed in various human cancers, circular RNA Protein Kinase C Iota (circPRKCI) has been reported to play an important role in cancer development and progression. Herein, we sought to reveal the prognostic and clinical value of circPRKCI expression in diverse human cancers. Methods:. We searched the Pubmed, Web of Science, and the Cochrane Library databases from inception until May 16, 2021. The relationship between circPRKCI expression and cancer patients' survival, including overall survival (OS) and disease-free survival (DFS), was assessed by pooled hazard ratios (HR) with corresponding 95% confidence interval (CI). The correlation between circPRKCI expression and clinical outcomes was evaluated using odds ratios (OR) with corresponding 95% CI. The data were analyzed by STATA software (version 12.0) or Review Manager (RevMan 5.3). Results:. A total of 15 studies with 1109 patients were incorporated into our meta-analysis. The results demonstrated that high circPRKCI expression was significantly related to poor OS (HR = 1.96, 95% CI: 1.61, 2.39, P
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- 2024
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25. A radiomics model enables prediction venous sinus invasion in meningioma
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Limei Wang, Yuntai Cao, Guojin Zhang, Dandan Sun, Wusheng Zhou, Wenyi Li, Junlin Zhou, Kuntao Chen, and Jing Zhang
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Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Abstract
Abstract Objective Preoperative prediction of meningioma venous sinus invasion would facilitate the selection of surgical approaches and predicting the prognosis. To predict venous sinus invasion in meningiomas, we used radiomic signatures to construct a model based on preoperative contrast‐enhanced T1‐weighted (T1C) and T2‐weighted (T2) magnetic resonance imaging. Methods In total, 599 patients with pathologically confirmed meningioma were retrospectively enrolled. For each patient enrolled in this study, 1595 radiomic signatures were extracted from T1C and T2 image sequences. Pearson correlation analysis and recursive feature elimination were used to select the most relevant signatures extracted from different image sequences, and logistic regression algorithms were used to build a radiomic model for risk prediction of meningioma sinus invasion. Furthermore, a nomogram was built by incorporating clinical characteristics and radiomic signatures, and a decision curve analysis was used to evaluate the clinical utility of the nomogram. Results Twenty radiomic signatures that were significantly related to venous sinus invasion were screened from 3190 radiomic signatures. Venous sinus invasion was associated with tumor position, and the clinicoradiomic model that incorporated the above characteristics (20 radiomic signatures and tumor position) had the best discriminating ability. The areas under the curve for the training and validation cohorts were 0.857 (95% confidence interval [CI], 0.824–0.890) and 0.824 (95% CI, 0.752–0.8976), respectively. Interpretation The clinicoradiomic model had good predictive performance for venous sinus invasion in meningioma, which can aid in devising surgical strategies and predicting prognosis.
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- 2023
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26. Concept definition and scale development of miners’ safety commitment
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CHEN Tiehua, HU Wenyi, LI Hongxia, TIAN Fangyuan
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coal miner ,safety commitment ,concept definition ,scale development ,prototype analysis ,safety management ,Mining engineering. Metallurgy ,TN1-997 - Abstract
Scientific measurement of miners’ safety commitment level contributes to controlling miners’ unsafe behavior. But the existing studies have directly adopted other relevant and well-established scales to capture safety commitment, lacking the exploration of essential connotation of safety commitment. Aiming at these problems, based on the prototype theory, the in-depth interview method and critical incident method were applied to define the connotation of miners’ safety commitment. Following the scale development process, the miners’ safety commitment scale containing 20 items was developed through exploratory factor analysis, confirmatory factor analysis, reliability and validity tests. The results showed that miners’ safety commitment consists of five dimensions, which are affective commitment, normative commitment, relationship commitment, involvement commitment, and promotion commitment. Among them, the largest explanatory contribution is affective commitment, and the smallest explanatory contribution is promotion commitment. The development of the miners’ safety commitment scale enriches the commitment research system and provides theoretical basis and a measurement tool for further exploration of safety commitment.
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- 2023
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27. Clinical and neuroimaging association between neuropsychiatric symptoms and nutritional status across the Alzheimer's disease continuum: a longitudinal cohort study
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Jiwei Jiang, Anxin Wang, Hanping Shi, Shirui Jiang, Wenyi Li, Tianlin Jiang, Linlin Wang, Xiaoli Zhang, Mengfan Sun, Min Zhao, Xinying Zou, and Jun Xu
- Subjects
Alzheimer’s disease ,Neuropsychiatric symptoms ,Malnutrition ,Affective symptoms ,Feeding and eating disorders ,Putamen ,Internal medicine ,RC31-1245 - Abstract
Objectives: To investigate the association between neuropsychiatric symptoms (NPS) and nutritional status, and explore their shared regulatory brain regions on the Alzheimer’s disease (AD) continuum. Design: A longitudinal, observational cohort study. Setting: Data were collected from the Chinese Imaging, Biomarkers, and Lifestyle study between June 1, 2021 and December 31, 2022. Participants: Overall, 432 patients on the AD continuum, including amnestic mild cognitive impairment and AD dementia, were assessed at baseline, and only 165 patients completed the (10.37 ± 6.08) months’ follow-up. Measurements: The Mini-Nutritional Assessment (MNA) and Neuropsychiatric Inventory (NPI) were used to evaluate nutritional status and NPS, respectively. The corrected cerebral blood flow (cCBF) measured by pseudo-continuous arterial spin labeling of the dietary nutrition-related brain regions was analyzed. The association between the NPS at baseline and subsequent change in nutritional status and the association between the changes in the severity of NPS and nutritional status were examined using generalized linear mixed models. Results: Increased cCBF in the left putamen was associated with malnutrition, general NPS, affective symptoms, and hyperactivity (P < 0.05). The presence of general NPS (β = −1.317, P = 0.003), affective symptoms (β = −1.887, P < 0.001), and appetite/eating disorders (β = −1.714, P < 0.001) at baseline were associated with a decline in the MNA scores during follow-up. The higher scores of general NPI (β = −0.048), affective symptoms (β = −0.181), and appetite/eating disorders (β = −0.416; all P < 0.001) were longitudinally associated with lower MNA scores after adjusting for confounding factors. Conclusions: We found that baseline NPS were predictors of a decline in nutritional status on the AD continuum. The worse the severity of affective symptoms and appetite/eating disorders, the poorer the nutritional status. Furthermore, abnormal perfusion of the putamen may regulate the association between malnutrition and NPS, which suggests their potentially common neural regulatory basis.
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- 2024
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28. Integration of ToB Service and ToC Service for 5G-Advanced Networks.
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Shuangyue Liu, Jun Yin, Xuexin Li, Wenyi Li, and Peirong Xie
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- 2023
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29. SCP-Diff: Photo-Realistic Semantic Image Synthesis with Spatial-Categorical Joint Prior.
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Huan-ang Gao, Mingju Gao, Jiaju Li, Wenyi Li, Rong Zhi, Hao Tang, and Hao Zhao 0002
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- 2024
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30. Assessing and Understanding Creativity in Large Language Models.
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Yunpu Zhao, Rui Zhang 0040, Wenyi Li, Di Huang, Jiaming Guo, Shaohui Peng, Yifan Hao, Yuanbo Wen, Xing Hu 0001, Zidong Du, Qi Guo 0001, Ling Li 0001, and Yunji Chen
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- 2024
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31. Synergistic Leaching of Titanium, Aluminum, and Magnesium Components during Dilute Acid Pressure Treatment of High-Titanium Blast Furnace Slag
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Ke Yuan, Siqi He, Bo Yu, Shiyi Qian, Xueyu Wu, Wenyi Li, and Chunmeng Zhao
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high-titanium blast furnace slag ,dilute sulfuric acid ,pressure ,acid digestion ,filtration ,Organic chemistry ,QD241-441 - Abstract
This study focuses on an improved leaching process through the combination of pressurized conditions and direct filtration of acid leaching slurry, which is conductive to improving the filterability of acid leaching systems and the extraction rates of Ti, Al, and Mg components. The effects of sulfuric acid concentration, reaction temperature, particle size of materials, acid–slag ratio, and reaction time on the leaching efficiency were systematically investigated. The results showed that pressurization significantly enhances the filtration efficiency of the reaction slurry. Under the same filtration time, the filtration efficiency increased from 46% under ordinary pressure to 78% under pressurized conditions. Moreover, under the optimal reaction conditions, the extraction rates of Ti, Al, and Mg components were more than 88.21%, 97.8%, and 96.31%, respectively. Additionally, XRD and FTIR showed that titanium oxide sulfate hydrate crystals were produced in the acid-leached residues when the reaction temperature exceeded 190 °C, thereby reducing the extraction rate of Ti component. And the XRD pattern shows that when the reaction temperature is maintained at 190 °C and the reaction time is extended to 150 min, titanium oxide sulfate hydrate crystals will be formed to reduce the extraction rate of the Ti component. In summary, this study not only provides important theoretical support for the resource utilization of high-titanium blast furnace slag but also offers a feasible solution for efficient extraction and convenient filtration, thus holding significant academic and practical implications.
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- 2024
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32. Multiple cutaneous carcinoma arising from arsenic-containing traditional Chinese medicine in a patient with psoriasis: A case report
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Wenyi Li, Xue Li, Chuanjie Xu, Songjia Sun, and Chunli Yao
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Arsenic exposure ,Psoriasis ,Cutaneous carcinoma ,Keratosis ,Case report ,Science (General) ,Q1-390 ,Social sciences (General) ,H1-99 - Abstract
Background: Arsenic exposure is closely related to keratosis and cutaneous carcinoma, but a few studies have focused on patients with psoriasis presenting carcinoma after long-term medication of arsenic-containing traditional Chinese medicine (TCM). Case description: We presented a psoriasis patient showing multiple cutaneous carcinoma arising from arsenic containing TCM. A 60-year-old gentleman with psoriasis for nearly 30 years presented to our department with severe keratosis in hands, trunk and feet. He received oral administration of realgar (with As4S4 as the major component) for at least 15 years. There were keratotic plaques, ulcer and exudate in the middle finger and forefinger of left hand, and middle finger, forefinger and ring finger of the right hand. Moreover, brown papule was seen in right sole, together with keratotic plaques and ulcer in the left heel. Pathological analysis revealed basal cell carcinoma (BCC) in the anterior chest, right hand and right foot, Bowen disease in left hand and right hand, as well as squamous cell carcinomas (SCC) in right hand. Conclusion: This is a rare arsenic-exposure psoriasis patient showed coexistence of Bowen disease in left hand and right hand, BCC in the thoracic site, right hand and right foot, as well as SCC in right hand.
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- 2023
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33. Effect of a Reflection-Guided Visualized Mindtool Strategy for Improving Students’ Learning Performance and Behaviors in Computational Thinking Development
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Xiao-Fan Lin, Jing Wang, Yingshan Chen, Yue Zhou, Guoyu Luo, Zhaoyang Wang, Zhong-Mei Liang, Xiaoyong Hu, and Wenyi Li
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reflection ,mindtool ,computational thinking ,behavior ,junior high school students ,Education (General) ,L7-991 - Abstract
Computational thinking (CT) is an imperative competency in the 21st century. Mindtools can assist students in understanding concepts and decomposing tasks during CT development through programming. However, students may encounter challenges in complex CT problem-solving tasks due to being confused when using mindtools without proper guidance. Research evidence shows the potential of reflection in complex CT problem-solving by regulating cognitive activities. Accordingly, this study designed a reflection-guided visualized mindtool strategy to address CT development challenges. A quasi-experiment and lag sequential analysis were conducted by recruiting 97 junior high school students to examine the effects of the proposed strategy on CT development and to explore students’ behavior patterns. Results revealed that the proposed approach improved students’ CT performance, CT disposition, meta-cognitive awareness, and learning motivation. Students learning with the proposed strategy exhibited more key behaviors of facilitating CT problem-solving (e.g., generalizing the knowledge, re-designing the algorithm scheme, and evaluating the feasibility of their proposed schemes) than students in the control group, revealing the essential process of CT development and enlightening teachers on guiding students to produce such learning processes when cultivating CT.
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- 2023
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34. Disaster stressors and coping with the traumatization of deadliest hurricanes in U.S. Mainland: A follow-up study
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Wenyi Li, Amy L. Ai, and Sabrina L. Dickey
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Posttraumatic stress symptoms and disorders ,Character strengths ,Optimism ,And altruism ,Hurricane stressors ,Peritraumatic positive and negative emotions ,Geology ,QE1-996.5 ,Geophysics. Cosmic physics ,QC801-809 - Abstract
Despite the surging research in the literature on major natural hazards globally, most research to date has been cross-sectional in nature. Also, few studies have addressed human strengths. In response to the call for longitudinal studies, this secondary analysis of a two-wave survey examined the effects of character strengths and coping on Hurricanes Katrina and Rita (H-KR) volunteers, alongside hazard-related factors and peritraumatic emotional responses. Wave-1 and Wave-2 surveys were conducted at three-months and six-months at five public universities in the Gulf Coast affected by the disaster. A total of 542 participants completed Wave-1 and 201 completed Wave 2 questionnaires, because only two universities were able to conduct the follow-up. Multivariate analyses revealed that the finding was partly consistent with a cross-sectional study on Hurricanes Maria and Michael (H-MM); both events are the deadliest storms in the United States (U.S.). This prospective study supported the last damage of peritraumatic negative emotions and hurricane stressors on traumatization. However, the desirable effect of trait optimism was not evident overtime, perhaps partly due to the significantly smaller number in Wave-2 survey. Also, the link between negative coping and trauma symptom was not replicated. Still, the finding may imply that early intervention for emotional responses will be important in future disaster relief.
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- 2023
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35. Effect of Tremella fuciformis polysaccharide on the stalling and flavor of tteok during storage
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Hongxiu Fan, Hongcheng Liu, Wenyi Li, Wenjing Su, Dawei Wang, Shanshan Zhang, Tingting Liu, and Yanrong Zhang
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Anti-staling ,Tremella fuciformis polysaccharide ,Tteok ,Volatile flavor compounds ,Nutrition. Foods and food supply ,TX341-641 - Abstract
The effect of Tremella fuciformis polysaccharide (TFP) on the retrogradation property and aroma profile changes of tteok during storage was investigated. Results indicated that addition of TFP significantly increased the stability to thermal and mechanical shearing of starch, decreased short-term retrogradation, the hardness and the retrogradation enthalpy (ΔH) of tteok during storage, but had no significant effect on the amylopectin chain length of tteok. The possible mechanism for the retarding staling effect of TFP is related to the interaction between TFP and starch chains that interferes with the alignment of starch chains. Electronic nose and gas chromatography-mass spectrum (GC-MS) analysis results showed that the difference in the concentrations of volatile compounds and fatty acids of tteoks at different storage time gradually increased with the advancement of storage period. The addition of TFP to tteok inhibited the development of unpleasant volatile compounds, probably by delaying the oxidation and decomposition of lipids and preserving the antioxidant phenolic compounds in tteok, thus slowing down the flavor deterioration of tteok and contributing to flavor maintainace. Overall, this study could help food manufacturers to choose a high-effective and natural polysaccharide to control the retrogradation rate and flavor loss of tteok.
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- 2023
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36. The effect of tailing lipidation on the bioactivity of antimicrobial peptides and their aggregation tendency
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Bruce Lin, Andrew Hung, William Singleton, Kevion K. Darmawan, Rachael Moses, Bicheng Yao, Hongkang Wu, Anders Barlow, Marc‐Antoine Sani, Alastair J. Sloan, Mohammed Akhter Hossain, John D. Wade, Yuning Hong, Neil M. O'Brien‐Simpson, and Wenyi Li
- Subjects
aggregation ,antimicrobial peptide ,lipidation ,membrane active peptide ,Chemistry ,QD1-999 ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Abstract Antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) are potentially powerful alternatives to conventional antibiotics in combating multidrug resistance, given their broad spectrum of activity. They mainly interact with cell membranes through surface electrostatic potentials and the formation of secondary structures, resulting in permeability and destruction of target microorganism membranes. Our earlier work showed that two leading AMPs, MSI‐78 (4–20) and pardaxin (1–22), had potent antimicrobial activity against a range of bacteria. It is known that the attachment of moderate‐length lipid carbon chains to cationic peptides can further improve the functionality of these peptides through enhanced interactions with the membrane lipid bilayer, inducing membrane curvature, destabilization, and potential leakage. Thus, in this work, we aimed to investigate the antimicrobial activity, oligomerization propensity, and lipid‐membrane binding interactions of a range of N‐terminal lipidated analogs of MSI‐78 (4–20) and pardaxin (1–22). Molecular modeling results suggest that aggregation of the N‐lipidated AMPs may impart greater structural stability to the peptides in solution and a greater depth of lipid bilayer insertion for the N‐lipidated AMPs over the parental peptide. Our experimental and computational findings provide insights into how N‐terminal lipidation of AMPs may alter their conformations, with subsequent effects on their functional properties in regard to their self‐aggregation behavior, membrane interactions, and antimicrobial activity.
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- 2023
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37. A Spiking Neural Network Based on Neural Manifold for Augmenting Intracortical Brain-Computer Interface Data.
- Author
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Shengjie Zheng, Wenyi Li, Lang Qian, Chenggang He, and Xiaojian Li
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- 2022
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38. Prognostic and clinicopathologic significance of circZFR in multiple human cancers
- Author
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Zhongyue Liu, Wenchao Zhang, Chao Tu, Wenyi Li, Lin Qi, Zhiming Zhang, Lu Wan, Zhimin Yang, Xiaolei Ren, and Zhihong Li
- Subjects
CircZFR ,Cancer ,Prognosis ,Clinicopathology ,Meta-analysis ,Surgery ,RD1-811 ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Abstract Background Abnormally expressed in diverse cancers, circZFR has been correlated with clinical outcomes of cancer patients. Aim of this meta-analysis was to elucidate the prognostic role of circZFR in multiple human malignancies. Methods Literature retrieval was conducted by systematically searching on Pubmed, Web of Science, and the Cochrane Library up to December 2nd, 2021. Hazard ratios (HRs) or odds ratios (ORs) with 95% confidence intervals (CIs) were pooled to evaluate the association between circZFR expression and overall survival (OS). The reliability of the pooled results was assessed through sensitivity analysis and the publication bias was measured by Begg’s and Egger’s test. Results A total of seventeen studies comprising 1098 Chinese patients were enrolled in this meta-analysis. Results demonstrated that high circZFR expression was correlated with an unfavorable OS (HR = 2.14, 95% CI 1.74, 2.64). High circZFR expression predicted larger tumor size (OR = 2.79, 95% CI 1.52, 5.12), advanced clinical stage (OR = 3.38, 95% CI 1.49, 7.65), tendentiousness of lymph node metastasis (LNM) (OR = 3.08, 95% CI 2.01, 4.71), and malignant grade (OR = 3.18, 95% CI 1.09, 9.30), but not related to age, gender, and distant metastasis (DM). Conclusions High circZFR expression was associated with unfavorable OS and clinicopathologic parameters including tumor size, clinical stage, LNM, and histology grade, implicating a promising prognostic factor in cancers.
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- 2022
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39. LMFormer: Lightweight and multi-feature perspective via transformer for human pose estimation.
- Author
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Biao Li, Shoufeng Tang, and Wenyi Li
- Published
- 2024
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40. Characteristics of resting state functional connectivity of motor cortex of high fitness level college students: Experimental evidence from functional near infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS)
- Author
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Wenyi Li, Qi Zhang, Rui Yang, Bin Liu, Gonghe Chen, Bingyang Wang, Taiyu Xu, Jun Chen, Xuxue Zhou, and Shilin Wen
- Subjects
fitness level ,fNIRS ,motor cortex ,resting state functional connectivity ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
Abstract Objective This study inspects difference of resting state functional connectivity (RSFC) of motor cortex between athletes and ordinary college students and the test‐retest reliability of RSFC. Methods Twenty high fitness level college students (high fitness group) and 20 ordinary college students (control group) were recruited. The motor cortical blood oxygen signals in resting states were monitored by functional near infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS). RSFCs of brain signals were preprocessed and calculated by FC‐NIRS software. RSFC results of test‐retest reliability were evaluated by intra‐class correlation coefficient (ICC). Results Total RSFC (HbO signal) was significantly different between high fitness group (0.62 ± 0.04) and low fitness group (0.81 ± 0.04) (p
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- 2023
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41. The overview of antimicrobial peptide‐coated implants against oral bacterial infections
- Author
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Zhe Sun, Li Ma, Xiaodong Sun, Alastair J. Sloan, Neil M. O'Brien‐Simpson, and Wenyi Li
- Subjects
antimicrobial coating ,antimicrobial peptides ,dental implants ,implant‐associated infection ,peptide release ,peri‐implant disease ,Chemistry ,QD1-999 ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Abstract Dental implants are the most common therapeutic approach for resolving tooth loss and damage. Despite technical advances in treatment, implant failure rates can be as high as 23% with the major cause of peri‐implantitis: a multi‐species bacterial infection. With an annual growth rate in implant placements of 8.78% per annum, implant failure caused by bacterial infection is a significant oral and general health issue. The rise in antibiotic resistance in oral bacteria further adds pressure to implant failure; thus, there is a need for adjunctive therapy to improve implant outcomes. Due to the broad spectrum of activity and a low risk of inducing bacterial resistance, peptide antibiotics are emerging as a promising implant coating material to reduce/prevent peri‐implantitis and improve dental implant success rates. In this review, we summarised the current strategies of coating antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) onto dental implant material surfaces with multi‐functional properties to enhance osteoblast growth and prevent bacterial infections. This review compared the recent reported literature on dental implant coating with AMPs, which will provide an overview of the current dental implant coating strategies using AMPs and insights for future clinical applications.
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- 2023
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42. The brain-inspired decoder for natural visual image reconstruction
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Wenyi Li, Shengjie Zheng, Yufan Liao, Rongqi Hong, Chenggang He, Weiliang Chen, Chunshan Deng, and Xiaojian Li
- Subjects
neural decoder ,image reconstitution ,brain-inspired ANNs ,loss functions ,autoencoder ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
The visual system provides a valuable model for studying the working mechanisms of sensory processing and high-level consciousness. A significant challenge in this field is the reconstruction of images from decoded neural activity, which could not only test the accuracy of our understanding of the visual system but also provide a practical tool for solving real-world problems. Although recent advances in deep learning have improved the decoding of neural spike trains, little attention has been paid to the underlying mechanisms of the visual system. To address this issue, we propose a deep learning neural network architecture that incorporates the biological properties of the visual system, such as receptive fields, to reconstruct visual images from spike trains. Our model outperforms current models and has been evaluated on different datasets from both retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) and the primary visual cortex (V1) neural spikes. Our model demonstrated the great potential of brain-inspired algorithms to solve a challenge that our brain solves.
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- 2023
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43. Blockchain technology, social media sentiment and stock price.
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Wenyi, Li, Jun, Ni, and Mengjie, Rong
- Subjects
ABNORMAL returns ,STOCK prices ,BLOCKCHAINS ,MARKET sentiment ,PUBLIC opinion - Abstract
We investigate the impact of the announcements by firms to adopt blockchain technology on stock prices and the different characteristics of stock prices under different types of blockchain technologies. Simultaneously, we propose two impact mechanisms: one is investor sentiment, and the other is the firm's governance of social media. We find that the firm's stock price has shown an increasing trend since the release of the announcement of the adoption of blockchain technology. At the same time, firms engaged in blockchain research, development and investment, and that simultaneously deploy other financial technologies, as well as firms that deploy blockchain technology for non‐speculative purposes, have better stock prices. In addition, the layout of a firm's blockchain may affect its stock price by influencing investor sentiment and public opinion. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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44. 'I know you are, but what am I?' Profiling cyberbullying based on charged language.
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Shuyuan Mary Ho and Wenyi Li
- Published
- 2022
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45. Error propagation model and optimal control method for the quality of remanufacturing assembly.
- Author
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Wenyi Li, Cuixia Zhang, Conghu Liu, and Xiao Liu
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- 2022
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46. Effects of contextual interactive healthcare training on caregivers of patients with suspected COVID-19 infection: Anxiety, learning achievements, perceived support and self-efficacies during quarantine.
- Author
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Xiao-Fan Lin 0001, Zhong-Mei Liang, Kan Kan Chan, Wenyi Li, and Xiaolan Ling
- Published
- 2022
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47. Cavβ1 regulates T cell expansion and apoptosis independently of voltage-gated Ca2+ channel function
- Author
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Serap Erdogmus, Axel R. Concepcion, Megumi Yamashita, Ikjot Sidhu, Anthony Y. Tao, Wenyi Li, Pedro P. Rocha, Bonnie Huang, Ralph Garippa, Boram Lee, Amy Lee, Johannes W. Hell, Richard S. Lewis, Murali Prakriya, and Stefan Feske
- Subjects
Science - Abstract
The function of voltage-gated calcium channels in T cells is not well understood and controversial. Here the authors report that a regulatory beta subunit of voltage-gated calcium channels regulates T cell function despite no evidence that these channels were functional within T cells during activation.
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- 2022
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48. Risks of postoperative respiratory failure in elderly patients after hip surgery: a retrospective study
- Author
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Jia Chen, Zhi Tian, Huaxing Zhang, Lifang Shi, Wenjuan Bao, Teng Huang, Jinshuai Zhai, Nan Gao, and Wenyi Li
- Subjects
Elderly ,Hip fracture ,Postoperative respiratory failure ,Retrospect ,Risk factors ,Orthopedic surgery ,RD701-811 ,Diseases of the musculoskeletal system ,RC925-935 - Abstract
Abstract Background The purpose of this retrospective study was to investigate the determinants of postoperative respiratory failure in elderly patients with hip fracture. Methods The subjects of this study were 663 elderly patients who had hip fracture and had been treated with total hip arthroplasty at our hospital from January 2014 to May 2020. According to the occurrence of postoperative respiratory failure, 626 patients with no respiratory failure were retrospectively included in the control group, and 37 cases combined with respiratory failure were enrolled in the PRF group. The clinical and surgical data of the two groups were collected and analyzed to evaluate the determinants of respiratory failure by logistic regression analysis. Results There were no significant differences in the demographics and baseline variables including age, gender, fracture type and location between the groups (P > 0.05). All patients received hip surgery including total hip arthroplasty (THA), hemiarthroplasty (HA) and internal fixation with PFNA (proximal femoral nail anti-rotation). There were no significant differences in operative time and intraoperative blood loss between the groups (P > 0.05). However, close associations were found between pulmonary hypertension (univariate analysis: OR = 3.792, 95% CI = 1.421–10.203; multivariate analysis: OR = 1.132, 95% CI = 1.003–1.251), obstructive pulmonary disease (OR = 1.119, 95% CI = 1.009–1.238; multivariate analysis: OR = 13.298, 95% CI = 4.021–43.298), bronchiectasis and emphysema (OR = 4.949, 95% CI = 1.919–9.873; multivariate analysis: OR = 11.231, 95% CI = 187.87), and history of respiratory failure (OR = 6.098, 95% CI = 2.012–12.198; multivariate analysis: OR = 8.389, 95% CI = 2.391–21.982) with postoperative respiratory failure (P
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- 2022
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49. The efficacy and safety of Chinese herbal medicine in the treatment of painful diabetic neuropathy: A systematic review and meta-analysis
- Author
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Min Song, Baogeng Huai, Zhenpeng Shi, Wenyi Li, Yutan Xi, Zhenguo Liu, Jihang Zhang, Junyu Zhou, Yun Qiao, and Deshan Liu
- Subjects
painful diabetic neuropathy ,Chinese herbal medicine ,efficacy ,safety ,systematic review ,meta-analysis ,Therapeutics. Pharmacology ,RM1-950 - Abstract
Objective: The objective of this systematic review and meta-analysis is to assess the effectiveness and security of Chinese herbal medicine (CHM) in the therapy of painful diabetic neuropathy (PDN).Methods: We searched databases for randomized controlled trials (RCTs) of CHM in the treatment of PDN. Outcome indicators included nerve conduction velocity, clinical efficiency, pain score, TCM syndrome score, and adverse events. Stata 16.0 was used to carry out the Meta-analysis.Results: A total of 21 RCTs with 1,737 participants were included. This meta-analysis found that using CHM as adjuvant treatment or as monotherapy for PDN can improve SCV of median nerve [mean difference (MD) = 3.56, 95% Confidence interval (CI) (2.19, 4.92) ], MCV of median nerve [ MD = 3.82, 95% CI (2.51, 5.12) ], SCV of common peroneal nerve [ MD = 4.16, 95% CI (1.62, 6.70) ], MCV of common peroneal nerve [ MD = 4.37, 95% CI (1.82, 6.93) ], SCV of gastrocnemius nerve [ MD = 4.95, 95% CI (3.52, 6.37) ], SCV of tibial nerve [ MD = 3.17, 95% CI (−2.64, 8.99) ], MCV of tibial nerve [MD = 6.30, 95%CI (5.00, 7.60)] and clinical effective rate [ odds ratio (OR) = 4.00, 95% CI (2.89, 5.52) ] and reduce pain score [standardized mean difference (SMD) = -2.23, 95% CI (-3.04, -1.41) ], TCM syndrome score [ MD = -4.70, 95% CI (-6.61, -2.80) ]. In addition, compared to the control group, adverse events of Chinese medicine intervention occurred less.Conclusion: CHM as adjuvant therapy or single treatment has a good curative effect and is safe for patients with PDN, which is worthy of clinical promotion and use, however; higher quality clinical studies are still needed to prove.Systematic Review Registration:https://www.crd.york.ac.uk/, identifier CRD42022327967
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- 2023
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50. Enhanced Bat Algorithm for Resource Allocation in Wireless Heterogeneous Networks.
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Liwei Yang, Furong Zhu, Xinlai Liu, Wencong Lai, Wenyi Li, and Shusheng Lyu
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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