47 results on '"Ye RZ"'
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2. Distribution and diversity of ticks determined by environmental factors in Ningxia, China.
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Tian D, Cui XM, Ye RZ, Li YY, Wang N, Gao WY, Wang BH, Lin ZT, Zhu WJ, Wang QS, Liu YT, Wei H, Wang YF, Sun Y, Shi XY, Jia N, Jiang JF, Cao WC, and Liu ZH
- Abstract
Ticks are important vectors of zoonotic pathogens, and represent an increasing threat for human and animal health. Considering the complex natural environments of Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region, China, we expect the diverse tick species in this region. Here, we conduct a field survey on parasitic and host-seeking ticks. A total of 10,419 ticks were collected, which belonged to nine species of four genera. There were significant differences in terms of vegetation index, altitude, and seven climatic factors among the four tick genera - Hyalomma, Dermacentor , Haemaphysalis, and Ixodes , except between Haemaphysalis and Ixodes , where no significant differences were observed in these factors. The ecological niche modelling revealed that the suitable habitats for Hyalomma asiaticum was in the northwest Ningxia, with annual ground surface temperature as the most important factor. The suitable area for Dermacentor nuttalli was in the southwest and eastern regions of Ningxia with elevation as the highest contribution. D. silvarum was best suited to the southern Ningxia also with elevation as the most important factor. The four tick species including Haemaphysalis longicornis , Hae. qinghaiensis , Hae. japonica , and Ixodes persulcatus were best suited to the southernmost Ningxia with annual precipitation as the main factors for Hae. longicornis and elevation for the other three ticks. The results of predicted potential distribution of different tick species provide a scientific basis for the prevention and control of ticks and tick-borne diseases in the region. Furthermore, the subsequent impacts of the Greening Program to regain forests and grasslands from former agricultural lands in Ningxia on tick population dynamics deserve further investigation., Competing Interests: The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (© 2024 The Authors.)
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- 2024
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3. Genomic characterization of an emerging Rickettsia barbariae isolated from tick eggs in northwestern China.
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Wang N, Yu HJ, Han XY, Li C, Ye RZ, Du LF, Liu YT, Zhang MZ, Shi XY, Zhu DY, Shi W, Jia N, Jiang JF, Sun Y, Zhao L, Cui XM, and Cao WC
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- Animals, China, Rhipicephalus microbiology, Humans, Rickettsia Infections microbiology, Virulence Factors genetics, Genomics, High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing, Whole Genome Sequencing, Ovum microbiology, Rickettsia genetics, Rickettsia isolation & purification, Rickettsia classification, Phylogeny, Genome, Bacterial
- Abstract
The continual emergence of tick-borne rickettsioses has garnered widespread global attention. Candidatus Rickettsia barbariae ( Candidatus R. barbariae), which emerged in Italy in 2008, has been detected in humans from northwestern China. However, the lack of Candidatus R. barbariae genome and isolated strains limits the understanding of its biological characteristics and genomic features. Here, we isolated the Rickettsia for the first time from eggs of Rhipicephalus turanicus in northwestern China, and assembled its whole genome after next-generation sequencing, so we modified the proposed name to Rickettsia barbariae ( R. barbariae ) to conform to the International Code of Nomenclature of Prokaryotes. Phylogenetic analysis based on the whole genome revealed that it was most closely related to the pathogenic Rickettsia parkeri and Rickettsia africae . All virulence factors, present in the pathogenic spotted fever group rickettsiae, were identified in the R. barbariae isolate. These findings highlight the pathogenic potential of R. barbariae and the necessity for enhanced surveillance of the emerging Rickettsia in the human population.
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- 2024
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4. Genomic characters of Anaplasma bovis and genetic diversity in China.
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Han XY, Du LF, Lin ZT, Li C, Xiong T, Zhu WJ, Ye RZ, Wang N, Wang YF, Gao WY, Zhao L, Cui XM, and Cao WC
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- Humans, Animals, Phylogeny, RNA, Ribosomal, 16S genetics, China epidemiology, Goats, Genetic Variation, Genomics, Anaplasma genetics
- Abstract
The emergence of Anaplasma bovis or A. bovis -like infection in humans from China and the United States of America has raised concern about the public health importance of this pathogen. Although A. bovis has been detected in a wide range of ticks and mammals in the world, no genome of the pathogen is available up to now, which has prohibited us from better understanding the genetic basis for its pathogenicity. Here we describe an A. bovis genome from metagenomic sequencing of an infected goat in China. Anaplasma bovis had the smallest genome of the genus Anaplasma , and relatively lower GC content. Phylogenetic analysis of single-copy orthologue sequence showed that A. bovis was closely related to A. platys and A. phagocytophilum , but relatively far from intraerythrocytic Anaplasma species. Anaplasma bovis had 116 unique orthogroups and lacked 51 orthogroups in comparison to other Anaplasma species. The virulence factors of A. bovis were significantly less than those of A. phagocytophilum , suggesting less pathogenicity of A. bovis . When tested by specific PCR assays, A. bovis was detected in 23 of 29 goats, with an infection rate up to 79.3% (95% CI: 64.6% ∼94.1%). The phylogenetic analyses based on partial 16S rRNA, gltA and groEL genes indicated that A. bovis had high genetic diversity. The findings of this study lay a foundation for further understanding of the biological characteristics and genetic diversity of A. bovis , and will facilitate the formulation of prevention and control strategies.
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- 2024
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5. Automatic ARDS surveillance with chest X-ray recognition using convolutional neural networks.
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Ye RZ, Lipatov K, Diedrich D, Bhattacharyya A, Erickson BJ, Pickering BW, and Herasevich V
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- Humans, Deep Learning, Intensive Care Units, Male, Female, Pneumonia diagnostic imaging, Sensitivity and Specificity, Middle Aged, Adult, Respiratory Distress Syndrome diagnostic imaging, Neural Networks, Computer, Radiography, Thoracic
- Abstract
Objective: This study aims to design, validate and assess the accuracy a deep learning model capable of differentiation Chest X-Rays between pneumonia, acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) and normal lungs., Materials and Methods: A diagnostic performance study was conducted using Chest X-Ray images from adult patients admitted to a medical intensive care unit between January 2003 and November 2014. X-ray images from 15,899 patients were assigned one of three prespecified categories: "ARDS", "Pneumonia", or "Normal"., Results: A two-step convolutional neural network (CNN) pipeline was developed and tested to distinguish between the three patterns with sensitivity ranging from 91.8% to 97.8% and specificity ranging from 96.6% to 98.8%. The CNN model was validated with a sensitivity of 96.3% and specificity of 96.6% using a previous dataset of patients with Acute Lung Injury (ALI)/ARDS., Discussion: The results suggest that a deep learning model based on chest x-ray pattern recognition can be a useful tool in distinguishing patients with ARDS from patients with normal lungs, providing faster results than digital surveillance tools based on text reports., Conclusion: A CNN-based deep learning model showed clinically significant performance, providing potential for faster ARDS identification. Future research should prospectively evaluate these tools in a clinical setting., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare no conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2024 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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6. Characterization of a pangolin SARS-CoV-2-related virus isolate that uses the human ACE2 receptor.
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Xia LY, Wang XF, Cui XM, Zhang YM, Wang ZF, Li ET, Fan CF, Song K, Li YG, Ye RZ, Li FX, Zhu DY, Zhang J, Shi ZZ, Zhang MZ, Li LJ, Shen SJ, Jin S, Zhang YW, Fu WG, Zhao L, Wang WH, Wang TC, Wang YC, Jiang JF, Hu YL, Jia N, Gao YW, and Cao WC
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- Animals, Humans, Mice, Chlorocebus aethiops, Lung virology, Lung pathology, Mice, Transgenic, SARS-CoV-2 pathogenicity, SARS-CoV-2 genetics, Vero Cells, Virus Replication, Angiotensin-Converting Enzyme 2 metabolism, Betacoronavirus metabolism, Betacoronavirus pathogenicity, Pangolins virology
- Abstract
Various SARS-CoV-2-related coronaviruses have been increasingly identified in pangolins, showing a potential threat to humans. Here we report the infectivity and pathogenicity of the SARS-CoV-2-related virus, PCoV-GX/P2V, which was isolated from a Malayan pangolin (Manis javanica). PCoV-GX/P2V could grow in human hepatoma, colorectal adenocarcinoma cells, and human primary nasal epithelial cells. It replicated more efficiently in cells expressing human angiotensin-converting enzyme 2 (hACE2) as SARS-CoV-2 did. After intranasal inoculation to the hACE2-transgenic mice, PCoV-GX/P2V not only replicated in nasal turbinate and lungs, but also caused interstitial pneumonia, characterized by infiltration of mixed inflammatory cells and multifocal alveolar hemorrhage. Existing population immunity established by SARS-CoV-2 infection and vaccination may not protect people from PCoV-GX/P2V infection. These findings further verify the hACE2 utility of PCoV-GX/P2V by in vivo experiments using authentic viruses and highlight the importance for intensive surveillance to prevent possible cross-species transmission., (© 2024. Science China Press.)
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- 2024
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7. A Prognostic Model Based on Nutritional Indexes for Patients With Pan-Cancer: A Real-World Cohort Study.
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Zheng L, Yu QQ, Ruan WB, Chen J, Deng QH, Zhang K, Jiang XL, Jiang WJ, Cai DN, He CJ, Wang YF, Jiang SL, Ye RZ, You GX, Ying RB, and Zhou ZR
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- Humans, Female, Male, Prognosis, Middle Aged, Aged, Proportional Hazards Models, Cohort Studies, Retrospective Studies, Adult, Survival Rate, Nomograms, Neoplasms mortality, Nutrition Assessment, Nutritional Status
- Abstract
Background: The aim was to identify the nutritional indexes, construct a prognostic model, and develop a nomogram for predicting individual survival probability in pan-cancers., Methods: Nutritional indicators, clinicopathological characteristics, and previous major treatment details of the patients were collected. The enrolled patients were randomly divided into training and validation cohorts. Least absolute shrinkage and selection operator (Lasso) regression cross-validation was used to determine the variables to include in the cox regression model. The training cohort was used to build the prediction model, and the validation cohort was used to further verify the discrimination, calibration, and clinical effectiveness of the model., Results: A total of 2020 patients were included. The median OS was 56.50 months (95% CI, 50.36-62.65 months). In the training cohort of 1425 patients, through Lasso regression cross-validation, 13 characteristics were included in the model. Cox proportional hazards model was developed and visualized as a nomogram. The C-indexes of the model for predicting 1-, 3-, 5-, and 10-year OS were 0.848, 0.826, 0.814, and 0.799 in the training cohort and 0.851, 0.819, 0.814, and 0.801 in the validation cohort. The model showed great calibration in the two cohorts. Patients with a score of less than 274.29 had a better prognosis (training cohort: HR, 6.932; 95% CI, 5.723-8.397; log-rank p < 0.001; validation cohort: HR, 8.429; 95% CI, 6.180-11.497; log-rank p < 0.001)., Conclusion: The prognostic model based on the nutritional indexes of pan-cancer can divide patients into different survival risk groups and performed well in the validation cohort., (© 2024 The Author(s). Cancer Reports published by Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
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- 2024
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8. A Statovirus-like virus from respiratory tracts of patients, China.
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Song K, Ye RZ, Li YY, Gong C, Xia LY, Gao WY, Wang ZF, Wang N, Cheng N, Zhang MZ, Du YD, Xie H, Zhu DY, Shi W, Li MZ, Zhao L, Jia N, Jiang JF, Cui XM, Huang F, and Cao WC
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- Humans, China epidemiology, Male, Female, Retrospective Studies, Respiratory System virology, Child, Preschool, Adult, Child, RNA, Viral genetics, Middle Aged, Phylogeny, Genome, Viral genetics, Respiratory Tract Infections virology, Respiratory Tract Infections epidemiology
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The emerging evidence of human infections with emerging viruses suggests their potential public health importance. A novel taxon of viruses named Statoviruses (for stool-associated Tombus-like viruses) was recently identified in the gastrointestinal tracts of multiple mammals. Here we report the discovery of respiratory Statovirus-like viruses (provisionally named Restviruses) from the respiratory tracts of five patients experiencing acute respiratory disease with Human coronavirus OC43 infection through the retrospective analysis of meta-transcriptomic data. Restviruses shared 53.1%-98.8% identities of genomic sequences with each other and 39.9%-44.3% identities with Statoviruses. The phylogenetic analysis revealed that Restviruses together with a Stato-like virus from nasal-throat swabs of Vietnamese patients with acute respiratory disease, formed a well-supported clade distinct from the taxon of Statoviruses. However, the consistent genome characteristics of Restviruses and Statoviruses suggested that they might share similar evolutionary trajectories. These findings warrant further studies to elucidate the etiological and epidemiological significance of the emerging Restviruses., (© 2024 Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
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- 2024
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9. An integrated data analysis reveals distribution, hosts, and pathogen diversity of Haemaphysalis concinna.
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Liu J, Han XY, Ye RZ, Xu Q, Wang XY, Li ZH, Sun Y, Song K, Wang BY, Wang SS, Liu JY, Zhao L, and Cao WC
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- Animals, Europe, Ixodidae microbiology, Phylogeny, Babesia, Ixodes, Ticks microbiology
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Background: Haemaphysalis concinna, carrying multiple pathogens, has attracted increasing attention because of its expanded geographical range and significant role in disease transmission. This study aimed to identify the potential public health risks posed by H. concinna and H. concinna-associated pathogens., Methods: A comprehensive database integrating a field survey, literature review, reference book, and relevant websites was developed. The geographical distribution of H. concinna and its associated pathogens was illustrated using ArcGIS. Meta-analysis was performed to estimate the prevalence of H. concinna-associated microbes. Phylogenetic and geographical methods were used to investigate the role of birds in the transmission of H. concinna-associated microbes. The potential global distribution of H. concinna was predicted by ecological niche modeling., Results: Haemaphysalis concinna was distributed in 34 countries across the Eurasian continent, predominantly in China, Russia, and Central Europe. The tick species carried at least 40 human pathogens, including six species in the Anaplasmataceae family, five species of Babesia, four genospecies in the complex Borrelia burgdorferi sensu lato, ten species of spotted fever group rickettsiae, ten species of viruses, as well as Francisella, Coxiella, and other bacteria. Haemaphysalis concinna could parasitize 119 host species, with nearly half of them being birds, which played a crucial role in the long-distance transmission of tick-borne microbes. Our predictive modeling suggested that H. concinna could potentially survive in regions where the tick has never been previously recorded such as central North America, southern South America, southeast Oceania, and southern Africa., Conclusions: Our study revealed the wide distribution, broad host range, and pathogen diversity of H. concinna. Authorities, healthcare professionals, and the entire community should address the growing threat of H. concinna and associated pathogens. Tick monitoring and control, pathogen identification, diagnostic tools, and continuous research should be enhanced., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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10. Virome diversity shaped by genetic evolution and ecological landscape of Haemaphysalis longicornis.
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Ye RZ, Li YY, Xu DL, Wang BH, Wang XY, Zhang MZ, Wang N, Gao WY, Li C, Han XY, Du LF, Xia LY, Song K, Xu Q, Liu J, Cheng N, Li ZH, Du YD, Yu HJ, Shi XY, Jiang JF, Sun Y, Cui XM, Ding SJ, Zhao L, and Cao WC
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- Animals, Humans, Haemaphysalis longicornis, Virome genetics, Phylogeny, Ixodidae genetics, Phlebovirus genetics, Ticks
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Background: Haemaphysalis longicornis is drawing attentions for its geographic invasion, extending population, and emerging disease threat. However, there are still substantial gaps in our knowledge of viral composition in relation to genetic diversity of H. longicornis and ecological factors, which are important for us to understand interactions between virus and vector, as well as between vector and ecological elements., Results: We conducted the meta-transcriptomic sequencing of 136 pools of H. longicornis and identified 508 RNA viruses of 48 viral species, 22 of which have never been reported. Phylogenetic analysis of mitochondrion sequences divided the ticks into two genetic clades, each of which was geographically clustered and significantly associated with ecological factors, including altitude, precipitation, and normalized difference vegetation index. The two clades showed significant difference in virome diversity and shared about one fifth number of viral species that might have evolved to "generalists." Notably, Bandavirus dabieense, the pathogen of severe fever with thrombocytopenia syndrome was only detected in ticks of clade 1, and half number of clade 2-specific viruses were aquatic-animal-associated., Conclusions: These findings highlight that the virome diversity is shaped by internal genetic evolution and external ecological landscape of H. longicornis and provide the new foundation for promoting the studies on virus-vector-ecology interaction and eventually for evaluating the risk of H. longicornis for transmitting the viruses to humans and animals. Video Abstract., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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11. Isolation and characterization of a pangolin-borne HKU4-related coronavirus that potentially infects human-DPP4-transgenic mice.
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Xia LY, Wang ZF, Cui XM, Li YG, Ye RZ, Zhu DY, Li FX, Zhang J, Wang WH, Zhang MZ, Gao WY, Li LF, Que TC, Wang TC, Jia N, Jiang JF, Gao YW, and Cao WC
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- Animals, Female, Humans, Mice, China, Chiroptera, Cytokines, Dipeptidyl Peptidase 4 genetics, Dipeptidyl Peptidase 4 metabolism, Mice, Transgenic, Coronavirus, Coronavirus Infections, Pangolins virology
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We recently detected a HKU4-related coronavirus in subgenus Merbecovirus (named pangolin-CoV-HKU4-P251T) from a Malayan pangolin
1 . Here we report isolation and characterization of pangolin-CoV-HKU4-P251T, the genome sequence of which is closest to that of a coronavirus from the greater bamboo bat (Tylonycteris robustula) in Yunnan Province, China, with a 94.3% nucleotide identity. Pangolin-CoV-HKU4-P251T is able to infect human cell lines, and replicates more efficiently in cells that express human-dipeptidyl-peptidase-4 (hDPP4)-expressing and pangolin-DPP4-expressing cells than in bat-DPP4-expressing cells. After intranasal inoculation with pangolin-CoV-HKU4-P251, hDPP4-transgenic female mice are likely infected, showing persistent viral RNA copy numbers in the lungs. Progressive interstitial pneumonia developed in the infected mice, characterized by the accumulation of macrophages, and increase of antiviral cytokines, proinflammatory cytokines, and chemokines in lung tissues. These findings suggest that the pangolin-borne HKU4-related coronavirus has a potential for emerging as a human pathogen by using hDPP4., (© 2024. The Author(s).)- Published
- 2024
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12. Epidemiological behaviour and interventions of malaria in Niger, 2010-2019: a time-series analysis of national surveillance data.
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Tchole AIM, Ye RZ, Xu Q, Li ZW, Liu JY, Wang SS, Liu J, Wang XY, Bachir AM, Zhao L, and Cao WC
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- Humans, Child, Adolescent, Young Adult, Adult, Niger epidemiology, Research Design, Incidence, Malaria epidemiology, Malaria prevention & control, Insecticide-Treated Bednets
- Abstract
Background: Malaria remains a significant public health concern in Niger, with the number of cases increasing from 592,334 in 2000 to 3,138,696 in 2010. In response, a concerted campaign against the disease has been initiated. However, the implementation of these malaria interventions and their association with epidemiological behaviour remains unclear., Methods: A time-series study was conducted in Niger from 2010 to 2019. Multiple data sources concerning malaria were integrated, encompassing national surveillance data, Statistic Yearbook, targeted malaria control interventions, and meteorological data. Incidence rate, mortality rate, and case fatality ratio (CFR) by different regions and age groups were analysed. Joinpoint regression models were used to estimate annual changes in malaria. The changes in coverage of malaria interventions were evaluated., Results: Between 2010 to 2019, the incidence rate of malaria decreased from 249.43 to 187.00 cases per 1,000 population in Niger. Niamey had a high annual mean incidence rate and the lowest CFR, while Agadez was on the contrary. Joinpoint regression analysis revealed a declining trend in malaria incidence for all age groups except the 10-24 years group, and the mortality rate and the CFR initially decreased followed by an increase in all age groups. Niger has implemented a series of malaria interventions, with the major ones being scaled up to larger populations during the study period., Conclusions: The scale-up of multi-interventions in Niger has significantly reduced malaria incidence, but the rise in mortality rate and CFR addresses the challenges in malaria control and elimination. Malaria endemic countries should enhance surveillance of malaria cases and drug resistance in Plasmodium, improve diagnosis and treatment, expand the population coverage of insecticide-treated bed nets and seasonal malaria chemoprevention, and strengthen the management of severe malaria cases., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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13. Adipocyte hypertrophy associates with in vivo postprandial fatty acid metabolism and adipose single-cell transcriptional dynamics.
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Ye RZ, Montastier E, Frisch F, Noll C, Allard-Chamard H, Gévry N, Tchernof A, and Carpentier AC
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Adipocyte hypertrophy is associated with metabolic complications independent of obesity. We aimed to determine: 1) the association between adipocyte size and postprandial fatty acid metabolism; 2) the potential mechanisms driving the obesity-independent, hypertrophy-associated dysmetabolism in vivo and at a single-cell resolution. Tracers with positron emission tomography were used to measure fatty acid metabolism in 40 men and women with normal or impaired glucose tolerance (NCT02808182), and single nuclei RNA-sequencing (snRNA-seq) to determine transcriptional dynamics of subcutaneous adipose tissue (AT) between individuals with AT hypertrophy vs. hyperplasia matched for sex, ethnicity, glucose-tolerance status, BMI, total and percent body fat, and waist circumference. Adipocyte size was associated with high postprandial total cardiac fatty acid uptake and higher visceral AT dietary fatty acid uptake, but lower lean tissue dietary fatty acid uptake. We found major shifts in cell transcriptomal dynamics with AT hypertrophy that were consistent with in vivo metabolic changes., Competing Interests: A. C. Carpentier received funding by Eli Lilly, HLS Therapeutics, Janssen Inc., Novartis Pharmaceuticals Canada Inc., and Novo Nordisk Canada Inc. as a consultant. A. Tchernof receives research funding from Johnson & Johnson Medical Companies, Medtronic, and GI Windows for studies on bariatric surgery and acted as consultant for Novo Nordisk, Bausch Health and Biotwin. None of these commercial relationships are relevant to the present study., (© 2023 The Author(s).)
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- 2023
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14. Epidemiological and phylogenetic characteristics of emerging Anaplasma capra: A systematic review with modeling analysis.
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Lin ZT, Ye RZ, Liu JY, Wang XY, Zhu WJ, Li YY, Cui XM, and Cao WC
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- Humans, Animals, Cattle, Sheep, Phylogeny, Anaplasma genetics, Ruminants, Goats, Anaplasmosis epidemiology, Rhipicephalus
- Abstract
Anaplasma capra, an emerging tick-borne pathogen, has caused a lot of concern since initially recognized in goats and patients in China in 2015, and has been reported in a wide range of domestic and wild animals as well as ticks worldwide, posing a threat to public health. In this systematic review, we established a comprehensive database to acquire the distribution and prevalence status of this pathogen, and collected all sequences of A. capra to summarize the details of genetic diversity by phylogenetic analysis. We also predicted the possible global distribution of A. capra by using ecological niche model. A. capra has been known to distribute in 18 countries across Asia, Europe and Africa. A total of 19 species of mammals from seven families have been reported as hosts, and domestic ruminants including goats, sheep and cattle were the major hosts. At least 8 tick species of 4 genera have been reported to carry A. capra, and Haemaphysalis longicornis was most commonly infected. Sheep and Rhipicephalus microplus had the highest positive rates among animals and ticks. Phylogenetic analysis based on gltA and groEL genes revealed that A. capra could primarily be divided into two clusters related to geographic location and animal hosts. The predictive model showed that the most suitable habitats for presence of A. capra were mainly located in Asia and eastern Europe. These cumulative data regarding A. capra of our study lay a foundation for the subsequent exploration of this emerging tick-borne pathogen., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author (s)., (Copyright © 2023. Published by Elsevier B.V.)
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- 2023
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15. Systematic review and integrated data analysis reveal diverse pangolin-associated microbes with infection potential.
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Ye RZ, Wang XY, Li YY, Wang BY, Song K, Wang YF, Liu J, Wang BH, Wang SS, Xu Q, Li ZH, Du YD, Liu JY, Zheng JJ, Du LF, Shi W, Jia N, Jiang JF, Cui XM, Zhao L, and Cao WC
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- Animals, Humans, Phylogeny, Asia, Africa, North America, Pangolins
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There has been increasing global concern about the spillover transmission of pangolin-associated microbes. To assess the risk of these microbes for emergence as human pathogens, we integrated data from multiple sources to describe the distribution and spectrum of microbes harbored by pangolins. Wild and trafficked pangolins have been mainly recorded in Asia and Africa, while captive pangolins have been reported in European and North American countries. A total of 128 microbes, including 92 viruses, 25 bacteria, eight protists, and three uncharacterized microbes, have been identified in five pangolin species. Out of 128 pangolin-associated microbes, 31 (including 13 viruses, 15 bacteria, and three protists) have been reported in humans, and 54 are animal-associated viruses. The phylogenetic analysis of human-associated viruses carried by pangolins reveals that they are genetically close to those naturally circulating among human populations in the world. Pangolins harbor diverse microbes, many of which have been previously reported in humans and animals. Abundant viruses initially detected in pangolins might exhibit risks for spillover transmission., (© 2023. Springer Nature Limited.)
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- 2023
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16. Tele-Mentored Handheld Ultrasound System for General Practitioners: A Prospective, Descriptive Study in Remote and Rural Communities.
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Zhou YJ, Guo LH, Bo XW, Sun LP, Zhang YF, Chai HH, Ye RZ, Peng CZ, Qin C, and Xu HX
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Background: Rural general practitioners (GPs) have insufficient diagnostic information to deal with complex clinical scenarios due to the inequality in medical imaging resources in rural and remote communities. The objective of this study is to explore the value of a tele-mentored handheld ultrasound (tele-HHUS) system, allowing GPs to provide ultrasound (US) services in rural and remote communities., Methods: Overall, 708 patients underwent tele-HHUS examination between March and October 2021 and March and April 2022 across thirteen primary hospitals and two tertiary-care general hospitals. All US examinations were guided and supervised remotely in real time by US experts more than 300 km away using the tele-HHUS system. The following details were recorded: location of tele-HHUS scanning, primary complaints, clinical diagnosis, and US findings. The recommendations (referral or follow-up) based on clinical experience alone were compared with those based on clinical experience with tele-HHUS information., Results: Tele-HHUS examinations were performed both in hospital settings (90.6%, 642/708) and out of hospital settings (9.4%, 66/708). Leaving aside routine physical examinations, flank pain (14.2%, 91/642) was the most common complaint in inpatients, while chest distress (12.1%, 8/66) and flank discomfort (12.1%, 8/66) were the most common complaints in out-of-hospital settings. Additionally, the referral rate increased from 5.9% to 8.3% (kappa = 0.202; p = 0.000)., Conclusions: The tele-HHUS system can help rural GPs perform HHUS successfully in remote and rural communities. This novel mobile telemedicine model is valuable in resource-limited areas.
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- 2023
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17. Genomic Characteristics of Emerging Intraerythrocytic Anaplasma capra and High Prevalence in Goats, China.
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Lin ZT, Du LF, Zhang MZ, Han XY, Wang BH, Meng J, Yu FX, Zhou XQ, Wang N, Li C, Wang XY, Liu J, Gao WY, Ye RZ, Xia LY, Sun Y, Jia N, Jiang JF, Zhao L, Cui XM, Zhan L, and Cao WC
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- Animals, Humans, Prevalence, Phylogeny, Anaplasma genetics, China epidemiology, Goats, Genomics
- Abstract
Anaplasma capra is an emerging tickborne human pathogen initially recognized in China in 2015; it has been reported in ticks and in a wide range of domestic and wild animals worldwide. We describe whole-genome sequences of 2 A. capra strains from metagenomic sequencing of purified erythrocytes from infected goats in China. The genome of A. capra was the smallest among members of the genus Anaplasma. The genomes of the 2 A. capra strains contained comparable G+C content and numbers of pseudogenes with intraerythrocytic Anaplasma species. The 2 A. capra strains had 54 unique genes. The prevalence of A. capra was high among goats in the 2 endemic areas. Phylogenetic analyses revealed that the A. capra strains detected in this study were basically classified into 2 subclusters with those previously detected in Asia. Our findings clarify details of the genomic characteristics of A. capra and shed light on its genetic diversity.
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- 2023
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18. Genomic Characterization of Theileria luwenshuni Strain Cheeloo.
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Wang BH, Du LF, Zhang MZ, Xia LY, Li C, Lin ZT, Wang N, Gao WY, Ye RZ, Liu JY, Han XY, Shi WQ, Shi XY, Jiang JF, Jia N, Cui XM, Zhao L, and Cao WC
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- Animals, Cattle, Phylogeny, Goats, Genomics, Theileria genetics, Theileriasis
- Abstract
Theileria , a tick-borne intracellular protozoan, can cause infections of various livestock and wildlife around the world, posing a threat to veterinary health. Although more and more Theileria species have been identified, genomes have been available only from four Theileria species to date. Here, we assembled a whole genome of Theileria luwenshuni , an emerging Theileria , through next-generation sequencing of purified erythrocytes from the blood of a naturally infected goat. We designated it T. luwenshuni str. Cheeloo because its genome was assembled by the researchers at Cheeloo College of Medicine, Shandong University, China. The genome of T. lunwenshuni str. Cheeloo was the smallest in comparison with the other four Theileria species. T. luwenshuni str. Cheeloo possessed the fewest gene gains and gene family expansion. The protein count of each category was always comparable between T. luwenshuni str. Cheeloo and T. orientalis str. Shintoku in the Eukaryote Orthologs annotation, though there were remarkable differences in genome size. T. luwenshuni str. Cheeloo had lower counts than the other four Theileria species in most categories at level 3 of Gene Ontology annotation. Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes annotation revealed a loss of the c-Myb in T. luwenshuni str. Cheeloo. The infection rate of T. luwenshuni str. Cheeloo was up to 81.5% in a total of 54 goats from three flocks. The phylogenetic analyses based on both 18S rRNA and cox1 genes indicated that T. luwenshuni had relatively low diversity. The first characterization of the T. luwenshuni genome will promote better understanding of the emerging Theileria . IMPORTANCE Theileria has led to substantial economic losses in animal husbandry. Whole-genome sequencing data of the genus Theileria are currently limited, which has prohibited us from further understanding their molecular features. This work depicted whole-genome sequences of T. luwenshuni str. Cheeloo, an emerging Theileria species, and reported a high prevalence of T. luwenshuni str. Cheeloo infection in goats. The first assembly and characterization of T. luwenshuni genome will benefit exploring the infective and pathogenic mechanisms of the emerging Theileria to provide scientific basis for future control strategies of theileriosis., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflict of interest.
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- 2023
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19. Emergence of a Novel Genotype of Pigeon Deltacoronavirus Closely Related to Porcine Deltacoronavirus HKU15 and Sparrow Deltacoronavirus HKU17 in a Live Poultry Market in Shandong Province, China.
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Wang GL, Li LB, Chen JJ, Wang QC, Ye RZ, Li LM, Zhu KL, Jiang WG, Tian S, and Fang LQ
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- Swine, Animals, Deltacoronavirus, Columbidae, Poultry, China, Genotype, Phylogeny, Sparrows, Coronavirus Infections veterinary, Swine Diseases
- Abstract
Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflict of interest.
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- 2023
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20. Continuous evolution and emerging lineage of seasonal human coronaviruses: A multicenter surveillance study.
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Ye RZ, Gong C, Cui XM, Liu JY, Fan H, Xie H, Wang Q, Ren ZY, Zhang YW, Xia LY, Zhang MZ, Li YY, Li ZH, Du LF, Zhang J, Cheng N, Shi W, Li MZ, Zhao L, Jiang JF, Jia N, Huang F, and Cao WC
- Subjects
- Humans, Seasons, Betacoronavirus, China, Coronavirus 229E, Human, Coronavirus NL63, Human, Coronavirus OC43, Human genetics
- Abstract
The seasonal human coronaviruses (HCoVs) have zoonotic origins, repeated infections, and global transmission. The objectives of this study are to elaborate the epidemiological and evolutionary characteristics of HCoVs from patients with acute respiratory illness. We conducted a multicenter surveillance at 36 sentinel hospitals of Beijing Metropolis, China, during 2016-2019. Patients with influenza-like illness (ILI) and severe acute respiratory infection (SARI) were included, and submitted respiratory samples for screening HCoVs by multiplex real-time reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction assays. All the positive samples were used for metatranscriptomic sequencing to get whole genomes of HCoVs for genetical and evolutionary analyses. Totally, 321 of 15 677 patients with ILI or SARI were found to be positive for HCoVs, with an infection rate of 2.0% (95% confidence interval, 1.8%-2.3%). HCoV-229E, HCoV-NL63, HCoV-OC43, and HCoV-HKU1 infections accounted for 18.7%, 38.3%, 40.5%, and 2.5%, respectively. In comparison to ILI cases, SARI cases were significantly older, more likely caused by HCoV-229E and HCoV-OC43, and more often co-infected with other respiratory pathogens. A total of 179 full genome sequences of HCoVs were obtained from 321 positive patients. The phylogenetical analyses revealed that HCoV-229E, HCoV-NL63 and HCoV-OC43 continuously yielded novel lineages, respectively. The nonsynonymous to synonymous ratio of all key genes in each HCoV was less than one, indicating that all four HCoVs were under negative selection pressure. Multiple substitution modes were observed in spike glycoprotein among the four HCoVs. Our findings highlight the importance of enhancing surveillance on HCoVs, and imply that more variants might occur in the future., (© 2023 The Authors. Journal of Medical Virology published by Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
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- 2023
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21. Metavirome of 31 tick species provides a compendium of 1,801 RNA virus genomes.
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Ni XB, Cui XM, Liu JY, Ye RZ, Wu YQ, Jiang JF, Sun Y, Wang Q, Shum MH, Chang QC, Zhao L, Han XH, Ma K, Shen SJ, Zhang MZ, Guo WB, Zhu JG, Zhan L, Li LJ, Ding SJ, Zhu DY, Zhang J, Xia LY, Oong XY, Ruan XD, Shao HZ, Que TC, Liu GY, Du CH, Huang EJ, Wang X, Du LF, Wang CC, Shi WQ, Pan YS, Zhou YH, Qu JL, Ma J, Gong CW, Chen QQ, Qin Q, Lam TT, Jia N, and Cao WC
- Subjects
- Animals, Genome, Viral genetics, RNA, Ticks, RNA Viruses genetics, Viruses
- Abstract
The increasing prevalence and expanding distribution of tick-borne viruses globally have raised health concerns, but the full repertoire of the tick virome has not been assessed. We sequenced the meta-transcriptomes of 31 different tick species in the Ixodidae and Argasidae families from across mainland China, and identified 724 RNA viruses with distinctive virome compositions among genera. A total of 1,801 assembled and complete or nearly complete viral genomes revealed an extensive diversity of genome architectures of tick-associated viruses, highlighting ticks as a reservoir of RNA viruses. We examined the phylogenies of different virus families to investigate virome evolution and found that the most diverse tick-associated viruses are positive-strand RNA virus families that demonstrate more ancient divergence than other arboviruses. Tick-specific viruses are often associated with only a few tick species, whereas virus clades that can infect vertebrates are found in a wider range of tick species. We hypothesize that tick viruses can exhibit both 'specialist' and 'generalist' evolutionary trends. We hope that our virome dataset will enable much-needed research on vertebrate-pathogenic tick-associated viruses., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
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- 2023
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22. Effects of Image Quality on the Accuracy Human Pose Estimation and Detection of Eye Lid Opening/Closing Using Openpose and DLib.
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Ye RZ, Subramanian A, Diedrich D, Lindroth H, Pickering B, and Herasevich V
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Objective: The application of computer models in continuous patient activity monitoring using video cameras is complicated by the capture of images of varying qualities due to poor lighting conditions and lower image resolutions. Insufficient literature has assessed the effects of image resolution, color depth, noise level, and low light on the inference of eye opening and closing and body landmarks from digital images., Method: This study systematically assessed the effects of varying image resolutions (from 100 × 100 pixels to 20 × 20 pixels at an interval of 10 pixels), lighting conditions (from 42 to 2 lux with an interval of 2 lux), color-depths (from 16.7 M colors to 8 M, 1 M, 512 K, 216 K, 64 K, 8 K, 1 K, 729, 512, 343, 216, 125, 64, 27, and 8 colors), and noise levels on the accuracy and model performance in eye dimension estimation and body keypoint localization using the Dlib library and OpenPose with images from the Closed Eyes in the Wild and the COCO datasets, as well as photographs of the face captured at different light intensities., Results: The model accuracy and rate of model failure remained acceptable at an image resolution of 60 × 60 pixels, a color depth of 343 colors, a light intensity of 14 lux, and a Gaussian noise level of 4% (i.e., 4% of pixels replaced by Gaussian noise)., Conclusions: The Dlib and OpenPose models failed to detect eye dimensions and body keypoints only at low image resolutions, lighting conditions, and color depths., Clinical Impact: Our established baseline threshold values will be useful for future work in the application of computer vision in continuous patient monitoring.
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- 2022
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23. Coinfection of Two Rickettsia Species in a Single Tick Species Provides New Insight into Rickettsia - Rickettsia and Rickettsia -Vector Interactions.
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Pan YS, Cui XM, Du LF, Xia LY, Du CH, Bell-Sakyi L, Zhang MZ, Zhu DY, Dong Y, Wei W, Zhao L, Sun Y, Lv QY, Ye RZ, He ZH, Wang Q, Li LJ, Yao MG, Xiong T, Jiang JF, Cao WC, and Jia N
- Subjects
- Animals, Humans, Actins, Ticks microbiology, Coinfection, Rickettsia genetics, Ixodidae microbiology
- Abstract
Rickettsiae are obligate intracellular bacteria that can cause life-threatening illnesses. There is an ongoing debate as to whether established infections by one Rickettsia species preclude the maintenance of the second species in ticks. Here, we identified two Rickettsia species in inoculum from Haemaphysalis montgomeryi ticks and subsequently obtained pure isolates of each species by plaque selection. The two isolates were classified as a transitional group and spotted fever group rickettsiae and named Rickettsia hoogstraalii str CS and Rickettsia rhipicephalii str EH, respectively. The coinfection of these two Rickettsia species was detected in 25.6% of individual field-collected H. montgomeryi. In cell culture infection models, R. hoogstraalii str CS overwhelmed R. rhipicephalii str EH with more obvious cytopathic effects, faster plaque formation, and increased cellular growth when cocultured, and R. hoogstraalii str CS seemed to polymerize actin tails differently from R. rhipicephalii str EH in vitro . This work provides a model to investigate the mechanisms of both Rickettsia - Rickettsia and Rickettsia -vector interactions. IMPORTANCE The rickettsiae are a group of obligate intracellular Gram-negative bacteria that include human pathogens causing an array of clinical symptoms and even death. There is an important question in the field, that is whether one infection can block the superinfection of other rickettsiae. This work demonstrated the coinfection of two Rickettsia species in individual ticks and further highlighted that testing the rickettsial competitive exclusion hypothesis will undoubtedly be a promising area as methods for bioengineering and pathogen biocontrol become amenable for rickettsiae.
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- 2022
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24. Total Postprandial Hepatic Nonesterified and Dietary Fatty Acid Uptake Is Increased and Insufficiently Curbed by Adipose Tissue Fatty Acid Trapping in Prediabetes With Overweight.
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Ye RZ, Montastier É, Noll C, Frisch F, Fortin M, Bouffard L, Phoenix S, Guérin B, Turcotte ÉE, and Carpentier AC
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- Adipose Tissue, Blood Glucose, Fatty Acids, Fatty Acids, Nonesterified, Glucose, Humans, Insulin, Overweight, Positron Emission Tomography Computed Tomography, Glucose Intolerance, Prediabetic State
- Abstract
Excessive lean tissue uptake of fatty acids (FAs) is important in the development of insulin resistance and may be caused by impaired dietary FA (DFA) storage and/or increased nonesterified FA (NEFA) flux from adipose tissue intracellular lipolysis. Cardiac and hepatic total postprandial FA uptake of NEFA+DFA has, however, never been reported in prediabetes with overweight. In this study, 20 individuals with impaired glucose tolerance (IGT) and 19 participants with normal glucose tolerance (NGT) and normal fasting glucose underwent postprandial studies with whole-body positron emission tomography/computed tomography (PET/CT) with oral [18F]fluoro-thia-heptadecanoic acid and dynamic PET/CT with intravenous [11C]palmitate. Hepatic (97 [range 36-215] mmol/6 h vs. 68 [23-132] mmol/6 h, P = 0.03) but not cardiac (11 [range 4-24] mmol/6 h vs. 8 [3-20] mmol/6 h, P = 0.09) uptake of most sources of postprandial FA (NEFA + DFA uptake) integrated over 6 h was higher in IGT versus NGT. DFA accounted for lower fractions of total cardiac (21% [5-47] vs. 25% [9-39], P = 0.08) and hepatic (19% [6-52] vs. 28% [14-50], P = 0.04) uptake in IGT versus NGT. Increased adipose tissue DFA trapping predicted lower hepatic DFA uptake and was associated with higher total cardiac FA uptake. Hence, enhanced adipose tissue DFA trapping in the face of increased postprandial NEFA flux is insufficient to fully curb increased postprandial lean organ FA uptake in prediabetes with overweight (ClinicalTrials.gov; NCT02808182)., (© 2022 by the American Diabetes Association.)
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- 2022
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25. Trafficked Malayan pangolins contain viral pathogens of humans.
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Shi W, Shi M, Que TC, Cui XM, Ye RZ, Xia LY, Hou X, Zheng JJ, Jia N, Xie X, Wu WC, He MH, Wang HF, Wei YJ, Wu AQ, Zhang SF, Pan YS, Chen PY, Wang Q, Li SS, Zhong YL, Li YJ, Tan LH, Zhao L, Jiang JF, Hu YL, and Cao WC
- Subjects
- Animals, Humans, Mammals, Pangolins, SARS-CoV-2 genetics, COVID-19, Chiroptera
- Abstract
Pangolins are the most trafficked wild animal in the world according to the World Wildlife Fund. The discovery of SARS-CoV-2-related coronaviruses in Malayan pangolins has piqued interest in the viromes of these wild, scaly-skinned mammals. We sequenced the viromes of 161 pangolins that were smuggled into China and assembled 28 vertebrate-associated viruses, 21 of which have not been previously reported in vertebrates. We named 16 members of Hunnivirus, Pestivirus and Copiparvovirus pangolin-associated viruses. We report that the L-protein has been lost from all hunniviruses identified in pangolins. Sequences of four human-associated viruses were detected in pangolin viromes, including respiratory syncytial virus, Orthopneumovirus, Rotavirus A and Mammalian orthoreovirus. The genomic sequences of five mammal-associated and three tick-associated viruses were also present. Notably, a coronavirus related to HKU4-CoV, which was originally found in bats, was identified. The presence of these viruses in smuggled pangolins identifies these mammals as a potential source of emergent pathogenic viruses., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
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- 2022
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26. Successful Use of a 5G-Based Robot-Assisted Remote Ultrasound System in a Care Center for Disabled Patients in Rural China.
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Chai HH, Ye RZ, Xiong LF, Xu ZN, Chen X, Xu LJ, Hu X, Jiang LF, and Peng CZ
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- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, China, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Rural Population, Ultrasonography methods, Disabled Persons, Robotics methods
- Abstract
Background: Disability has become a global population health challenge. Due to difficulties in self-care or independent living, patients with disability mainly live in community-based care centers or institutions for long-term care. Nonetheless, these settings often lack basic medical resources, such as ultrasonography. Thus, remote ultrasonic robot technology for clinical applications across wide regions is imperative. To date, few experiences of remote diagnostic systems in rural care centers have been reported., Objective: To assess the feasibility of a fifth-generation cellular technology (5G)-based robot-assisted remote ultrasound system in a care center for disabled patients in rural China., Methods: Patients underwent remote robot-assisted and bedside ultrasound examinations of the liver, gallbladder, spleen, and kidneys. We compared the diagnostic consistency and differences between the two modalities and evaluated the examination duration, image quality, and safety., Results: Forty-nine patients were included (21 men; mean age: 61.0 ± 19.0 [range: 19-91] years). Thirty-nine and ten had positive and negative results, respectively; 67 lesions were detected. Comparing the methods, 41 and 8 patients had consistent and inconsistent diagnoses, respectively. The McNemar and kappa values were 0.727 and 0.601, respectively. The mean duration of remote and bedside examinations was 12.2 ± 4.5 (range: 5-26) min and 7.5 ± 1.8 (range: 5-13) min ( p < 0.001), respectively. The median image score for original images on the patient side and transmitted images on the doctor side was 5 points (interquartile range: [IQR]: 4.7-5.0) and 4.7 points (IQR: 4.5-5.0) ( p = 0.176), respectively. No obvious complications from the examination were reported., Conclusions: A 5G-based robot-assisted remote ultrasound system is feasible and has comparable diagnostic efficiency to traditional bedside ultrasound. This system may provide a unique solution for basic ultrasound diagnostic services in primary healthcare settings., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2022 Chai, Ye, Xiong, Xu, Chen, Xu, Hu, Jiang and Peng.)
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- 2022
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27. Efficacy and Safety of Ultrasound-Guided Radiofrequency Ablation for Primary Hyperparathyroidism: A Prospective Study.
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Chai HH, Zhao Y, Zeng Z, Ye RZ, Hu QH, He HF, Baek JH, and Peng CZ
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- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Parathyroid Hormone, Prospective Studies, Retrospective Studies, Treatment Outcome, Ultrasonography, Interventional, Young Adult, Hyperparathyroidism, Primary diagnostic imaging, Hyperparathyroidism, Primary surgery, Radiofrequency Ablation methods
- Abstract
Objective: To assess the efficacy and safety of ultrasound (US)-guided radiofrequency ablation (RFA) in patients with primary hyperparathyroidism (PHPT)., Materials and Methods: This prospective study enrolled 39 participants (14 male, 25 female; mean age, 59.5 ± 15.3 [range, 18-87] years) between September 1, 2018, and January 31, 2021. All participants had parathyroid lesions causing PHPT, proven biochemically and through imaging. The imaging features of the PHPT nodules, including the shape, margin, size, composition, and location, were evaluated before treatment. Serum intact parathyroid hormone, calcium, and phosphorus levels; parathyroid nodule volume; and PHPT-related symptoms were recorded before and after treatment. We calculated the technical success, biochemical cure, and clinical cure rates for these patients. Complications were evaluated during and after the ablation., Results: Complete ablation was achieved in 38 of the 39 nodules in the 39 enrolled participants. All the patients were treated in one session. The technical success rate was 97.4% (38/39). The mean follow-up duration was 13.2 ± 4.6 (range, 6.0-24.9) months. At 6 and 12 months post-RFA, the biochemical cure rates were 82.1% (32/39) and 84.4% (27/32), respectively, and the clinical cure rates were 100% (39/39) and 96.9% (31/32), respectively. Only 2.6% (1/39) of the patients had recurrent PHPT. At 1, 3, 6, and 12 months after technically successful RFA, 44.7% (17/38), 34.3% (12/35), 15.8% (6/38), and 12.5% (4/32) of participants, respectively, had elevated eucalcemic parathyroid hormone levels. Recurrent laryngeal nerve paralysis occurred in 5.1% (2/39) of the patients, who recovered spontaneously within 1-3 months., Conclusion: US-guided RFA was effective and safe for PHPT patients. RFA may be an alternative treatment tool for patients who cannot tolerate or refuse to undergo surgery., Competing Interests: Jung Hwan Baek who is on the editorial board of the Korean Journal of Radiology was not involved in the editorial evaluation or decision to publish this article. All remaining authors have declared no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2022 The Korean Society of Radiology.)
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- 2022
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28. Natural infection of pangolins with human respiratory syncytial viruses.
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Ye RZ, Que TC, Xia LY, Cui XM, Zhang YW, Jiang JF, Wang QH, Wang Q, He MH, Li LF, Shi W, Du LF, Wei YJ, Fan H, Wu YQ, Liu JY, Zheng JJ, Pan YS, Wei W, Hu YL, Cao WC, and Jia N
- Subjects
- Aged, Animals, Ferrets, Genotype, Humans, Infant, Mice, Pangolins, Phylogeny, Respiratory Syncytial Virus Infections veterinary, Respiratory Syncytial Virus, Human genetics
- Abstract
Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is an enveloped non-segmented negative sense RNA virus that belongs to Orthopneumovirus genus of the Pneumoviridae family in the order Mononegavirales. The virus is the leading cause of severe respiratory disease in children under two years of age and is responsible for substantial disease burden in infants and elder people in both developed and developing countries
1 , 2 . RSV is only known to circulate among humans, though it was first isolated from chimpanzees3 . The virus can experimentally infect mice, rats, cotton rats, ferrets, and hamsters, but does not naturally circulate in these animal populations4 . We found that Malayan pangolins (Manis javanica) were naturally infected with RSVs that have 99.4-99.8% genomic identity with strains circulating in humans. Phylogenetic analyses revealed that five RSVs in pangolins were RSV-A ON1 and seven were RSV-B BA genotypes, both of which are currently prevalent in humans worldwide. These findings suggest that humans might transmit their viruses to endangered wildlife., Competing Interests: Declaration of interests The authors declare no competing interests., (Copyright © 2022 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2022
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29. Profile and dynamics of infectious diseases: a population-based observational study using multi-source big data.
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Zhao L, Wang HT, Ye RZ, Li ZW, Wang WJ, Wei JT, Du WY, Yin CN, Wang SS, Liu JY, Ji XK, Wang YC, Cui XM, Liu XY, Li CY, Qi C, Liu LL, Li XJ, Xue FZ, and Cao WC
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Big Data, Child, China epidemiology, Female, Humans, Incidence, Middle Aged, Young Adult, Communicable Diseases epidemiology, Syphilis
- Abstract
Background: The current surveillance system only focuses on notifiable infectious diseases in China. The arrival of the big-data era provides us a chance to elaborate on the full spectrum of infectious diseases., Methods: In this population-based observational study, we used multiple health-related data extracted from the Shandong Multi-Center Healthcare Big Data Platform from January 2013 to June 2017 to estimate the incidence density and describe the epidemiological characteristics and dynamics of various infectious diseases in a population of 3,987,573 individuals in Shandong province, China., Results: In total, 106,289 cases of 130 infectious diseases were diagnosed among the population, with an incidence density (ID) of 694.86 per 100,000 person-years. Besides 73,801 cases of 35 notifiable infectious diseases, 32,488 cases of 95 non-notifiable infectious diseases were identified. The overall ID continuously increased from 364.81 per 100,000 person-years in 2013 to 1071.80 per 100,000 person-years in 2017 (χ
2 test for trend, P < 0.0001). Urban areas had a significantly higher ID than rural areas, with a relative risk of 1.25 (95% CI 1.23-1.27). Adolescents aged 10-19 years had the highest ID of varicella, women aged 20-39 years had significantly higher IDs of syphilis and trichomoniasis, and people aged ≥ 60 years had significantly higher IDs of zoster and viral conjunctivitis (all P < 0.05)., Conclusions: Infectious diseases remain a substantial public health problem, and non-notifiable diseases should not be neglected. Multi-source-based big data are beneficial to better understand the profile and dynamics of infectious diseases., (© 2022. The Author(s).)- Published
- 2022
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30. Persistent SARS-CoV-2 infection in asymptomatic young adults.
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Ma MJ, Qiu SF, Cui XM, Ni M, Liu HJ, Ye RZ, Yao L, Liu HB, Cao WC, and Song HB
- Subjects
- Carrier State virology, Female, Humans, Male, COVID-19 metabolism, Carrier State metabolism, SARS-CoV-2 metabolism
- Published
- 2022
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31. DeepImageTranslator: A free, user-friendly graphical interface for image translation using deep-learning and its applications in 3D CT image analysis.
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Ye RZ, Noll C, Richard G, Lepage M, Turcotte ÉE, and Carpentier AC
- Subjects
- Image Processing, Computer-Assisted methods, Neural Networks, Computer, Software, Tomography, X-Ray Computed, Deep Learning
- Abstract
The advent of deep-learning has set new standards in an array of image translation applications. At present, the use of these methods often requires computer programming experience. Non-commercial programs with graphical interface usually do not allow users to fully customize their deep-learning pipeline. Therefore, our primary objective is to provide a simple graphical interface that allows researchers with no programming experience to easily create, train, and evaluate custom deep-learning models for image translation. We also aimed to test the applicability of our tool in CT image semantic segmentation and noise reduction. DeepImageTranslator was implemented using the Tkinter library, the standard Python interface to the Tk graphical user interface toolkit; backend computations were implemented using data augmentation packages such as Pillow, Numpy, OpenCV, Augmentor, Tensorflow, and Keras libraries. Convolutional neural networks (CNNs) were trained using DeepImageTranslator. The effects of data augmentation, deep-supervision, and sample size on model accuracy were also systematically assessed. The DeepImageTranslator a simple tool that allows users to customize all aspects of their deep-learning pipeline, including the CNN, training optimizer, loss function, and the types of training image augmentation scheme. We showed that DeepImageTranslator can be used to achieve state-of-the-art accuracy and generalizability in semantic segmentation and noise reduction. Highly accurate 3D segmentation models for body composition can be obtained using training sample sizes as small as 17 images. In conclusion, an open-source deep-learning tool for accurate image translation with a user-friendly graphical interface was presented and evaluated. This standalone software can be downloaded at: https://sourceforge.net/projects/deepimagetranslator/., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare no competing interests, (Copyright © 2021 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2022
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32. Fat Cell Size: Measurement Methods, Pathophysiological Origins, and Relationships With Metabolic Dysregulations.
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Ye RZ, Richard G, Gévry N, Tchernof A, and Carpentier AC
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- Adipocytes, Cell Size, Humans, Hypertrophy complications, Lipids, Obesity complications, Cardiovascular Diseases etiology, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 complications, Insulin Resistance
- Abstract
The obesity pandemic increasingly causes morbidity and mortality from type 2 diabetes, cardiovascular diseases and many other chronic diseases. Fat cell size (FCS) predicts numerous obesity-related complications such as lipid dysmetabolism, ectopic fat accumulation, insulin resistance, and cardiovascular disorders. Nevertheless, the scarcity of systematic literature reviews on this subject is compounded by the use of different methods by which FCS measurements are determined and reported. In this paper, we provide a systematic review of the current literature on the relationship between adipocyte hypertrophy and obesity-related glucose and lipid dysmetabolism, ectopic fat accumulation, and cardiovascular disorders. We also review the numerous mechanistic origins of adipocyte hypertrophy and its relationship with metabolic dysregulation, including changes in adipogenesis, cell senescence, collagen deposition, systemic inflammation, adipokine secretion, and energy balance. To quantify the effect of different FCS measurement methods, we performed statistical analyses across published data while controlling for body mass index, age, and sex., (© The Author(s) 2021. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Endocrine Society.)
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- 2022
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33. Increased postprandial nonesterified fatty acid efflux from adipose tissue in prediabetes is offset by enhanced dietary fatty acid adipose trapping.
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Montastier É, Ye RZ, Noll C, Bouffard L, Fortin M, Frisch F, Phoenix S, Guérin B, Turcotte ÉE, Lewis GF, and Carpentier AC
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Fatty Acids pharmacokinetics, Female, Glucose Intolerance metabolism, Humans, Insulin Resistance physiology, Lipolysis physiology, Male, Middle Aged, Adipose Tissue metabolism, Dietary Fats pharmacokinetics, Fatty Acids, Nonesterified metabolism, Postprandial Period physiology, Prediabetic State metabolism
- Abstract
The mechanism of increased postprandial nonesterified fatty acid (NEFA) appearance in the circulation in impaired glucose tolerance (IGT) is due to increased adipose tissue lipolysis but could also be contributed to by reduced adipose tissue (AT) dietary fatty acid (DFA) trapping and increased "spillover" into the circulation. Thirty-one subjects with IGT (14 women, 17 men) and 29 with normal glucose tolerance (NGT, 15 women, 14 men) underwent a meal test with oral and intravenous palmitate tracers and the oral [
18 F]-fluoro-thia-heptadecanoic acid positron emission tomography method. Postprandial palmitate appearance (Rapalmitate ) was higher in IGT versus NGT ( P < 0.001), driven exclusively by Rapalmitate from obesity-associated increase in intracellular lipolysis ( P = 0.01), as Rapalmitate from DFA spillover was not different between the groups ( P = 0.19) and visceral AT DFA trapping was even higher in IGT versus NGT ( P = 0.02). Plasma glycerol appearance was lower in IGT ( P = 0.01), driven down by insulin resistance and increased insulin secretion. Thus, we found higher AT DFA trapping, limiting spillover to lean organs and in part offsetting the increase in Rapalmitate from intracellular lipolysis. Whether similar findings occur in frank diabetes, a condition also characterized by insulin resistance but relative insulin deficiency, requires further investigation (Clinicaltrials.gov: NCT04088344, NCT02808182). NEW & NOTEWORTHY We found higher adipose tissue dietary fatty acid trapping, limiting spillover to lean organs, that in part offsets the increase in appearance rate of palmitate from intracellular lipolysis in prediabetes. These results point to the adaptive nature of adipose tissue trapping and dietary fatty acid spillover as a protective mechanism against excess obesity-related palmitate appearance rate from intracellular adipose tissue lipolysis.- Published
- 2021
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34. Detection of Novel Spotted Fever Group Rickettsiae (Rickettsiales: Rickettsiaceae) in Ticks (Acari: Ixodidae) in Southwestern China.
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Wang Q, Guo WB, Pan YS, Jiang BG, Du CH, Que TC, Zhan L, Wu JH, Yu MH, Cui XM, Zhao L, Xu DL, Xia LY, Ye RZ, Li J, Li LF, Wei W, Zhou YH, Jiang JF, Jia N, and Cao WC
- Subjects
- Animals, Animals, Domestic parasitology, Animals, Wild parasitology, China, Female, Male, Nymph growth & development, Nymph microbiology, Rhipicephalus microbiology, Spotted Fever Group Rickettsiosis transmission, Ixodidae microbiology, Rickettsia isolation & purification
- Abstract
Spotted fever group rickettsiae, mainly maintained and transmitted by ticks, are important etiological agents of (re)emerging zoonotic diseases worldwide. It is of great significance to investigate spotted fever group rickettsiae in ticks in different areas for the prevention and control of rickettsioses. In this study, a total of 305 ticks were collected from wild and domestic animals in Chongqing, Guizhou, Yunnan, and Guangxi provinces of southwestern China during 2017-2019 and examined for the presence of spotted fever group rickettsiae by PCR with primers targeting the partial gltA, ompA, rrs, and htrA genes. Results showed that two spotted fever group rickettsiae species, including the pathogenic Candidatus Rickettsia jingxinensis (Rickettsiales: Rickettsiaceae) and a potential novel species Rickettsia sp. sw (Rickettsiales: Rickettsiaceae), were identified. The Ca. R. jingxinensis sequences were recovered from Rhipicephalus microplus (Ixodida: Ixodidae) and Haemaphysalis longicornis (Ixodida: Ixodidae) ticks and phylogenetically clustered with previous Ca. R. jingxinensis, Ca. R. longicornii (Rickettsiales: Rickettsiaceae), and Rickettsia sp. XY118 (Rickettsiales: Rickettsiaceae) strains. Rickettsia sp. sw was detected in Amblyomma geoemydae (Ixodida: Ixodidae) and Rh. microplus. Interestingly, as far as we know, this was the first report of Rickettsia (Rickettsiales: Rickettsiaceae) in A. geoemydae. Phylogenetic analyses indicated that this potential novel species was closely related to R. aeschlimannii (Rickettsiales: Rickettsiaceae) with gltA and ompA genes and grouped in a cluster composed of R. montanensis (Rickettsiales: Rickettsiaceae), R. raoultii (Rickettsiales: Rickettsiaceae), R. aeschlimannii, R. massiliae (Rickettsiales: Rickettsiaceae), and R. rhipicephali (Rickettsiales: Rickettsiaceae) with htrA, while formed a separate clade with rrs. The pathogenicity of Rickettsia sp. sw should be further confirmed. These results expand the knowledge of the geographical distribution and vector distribution of spotted fever group rickettsiae in China and are useful for assessing the potential public health risk., (© The Author(s) 2021. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Entomological Society of America. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
- Published
- 2021
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35. Prevalence of Multiple Tick-Borne Pathogens in Various Tick Vectors in Northeastern China.
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Wang Q, Pan YS, Jiang BG, Ye RZ, Chang QC, Shao HZ, Cui XM, Xu DL, Li LF, Wei W, Xia LY, Li J, Zhao L, Guo WB, Zhou YH, Jiang JF, Jia N, and Cao WC
- Subjects
- Animals, China epidemiology, Phylogeny, Prevalence, Ixodes, Rickettsia genetics, Tick-Borne Diseases epidemiology, Tick-Borne Diseases veterinary
- Abstract
Background: Tick-borne bacteria and protozoa can cause a variety of human and animal diseases in China. It is of great importance to monitor the prevalence and dynamic variation of these pathogens in ticks in ever-changing natural and social environment. Materials and Methods: Ticks were collected from Heilongjiang and Jilin provinces of northeastern China during 2018-2019 followed by morphological identification. The presence of Rickettsia spp., Anaplasma spp., Ehrlichia spp., Borrelia spp., Babesia spp., and Theileria spp. was examined by PCR and Sanger sequencing. The obtained sequences were subjected to phylogenetic analysis through Mega 7.0. Statistical analysis was performed using SPSS 24.0. Results: A total of 250 ticks from 5 species of 3 genera were collected. Ixodes and Haemaphysalis ticks carried more species of pathogens than Dermacentor , and the pathogens detected in Haemaphysalis japonica varied significantly among different sampling sites. The infection rates of Rickettsia spp., Anaplasma spp., Ehrlichia spp., Borrelia spp., Babesia spp., and Theileria spp. were 41.2%, 0, 2.0%, 7.2%, 1.2%, and 7.2%, respectively. Twelve pathogens were identified, among which Rickettsia raoultii (29.6%), Candidatus Rickettsia tarasevichiae (9.2%), and Theileria equi (4.4%) were the three most common ones. Rickettsia had its dominant vector, that is, R. raoultii had high infection rates in Dermacentor nuttalli and Dermacentor silvarum , Ca. R. tarasevichiae in Ixodes persulcatus , and Rickettsia heilongjiangensis in H. japonica . Interestingly, unclassified species were observed, including a Rickettsia sp., an Ehrlichia sp., a Borrelia sp., and a Babesia sp. Coinfections with different pathogens were identified in 9.2% of all tested ticks, with I. persulcatus most likely to be coinfected (23.8%) and Rickettsia spp. and Borrelia spp. as the most common combination (16.7%). Conclusions: The results of this study reflect high diversity and complexity of pathogens in ticks, which are useful for designing more targeted and effective control measures for tick-borne diseases in China.
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- 2021
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36. Haemaphysalis longicornis.
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Jia N, Wang J, Shi W, Du L, Ye RZ, Zhao F, and Cao WC
- Subjects
- Animals, China, Humans, Ixodidae classification, Ixodidae pathogenicity, Molecular Sequence Annotation, New Zealand, Rickettsia rickettsii genetics, Rickettsia rickettsii pathogenicity, Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever genetics, Genome, Insect genetics, Ixodidae genetics, Phylogeography, Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever transmission
- Published
- 2021
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37. An Optimal Nucleic Acid Testing Strategy for COVID-19 during the Spring Festival Travel Rush in Mainland China: A Modelling Study.
- Author
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Zhou YH, Ma K, Xiao P, Ye RZ, Zhao L, Cui XM, and Cao WC
- Subjects
- COVID-19 transmission, China epidemiology, Computer Simulation, Humans, Seasons, COVID-19 diagnosis, COVID-19 Nucleic Acid Testing, Holidays, Travel
- Abstract
Western countries are experiencing surges in COVID-19 cases and deaths due to increasing public transportation during holiday seasons. This study aimed to explore whether mainland China will face an epidemic rebound during the Spring Festival holiday, when millions of Chinese people travel across the country, and investigate which nucleic acid testing (NAT) strategy is optimal to contain the epidemic. A microsimulation model was used to simulate SARS-CoV-2 transmission among railway travelers and evaluated the effects of various NAT strategies. An extended susceptible-exposed-infectious-recovered (SEIR) model was built to forecast local transmission during the Spring Festival period under different scenarios of testing strategies. The total number of infections, testing burden, and medical expenditure were calculated to devise an optimal strategy during the Spring Festival travel rush. Assuming the daily incidence of 20 per 10 million persons, our model simulated that there would be 97 active infections on the day of travel among 10 million railway passengers without NAT and symptom screening. Pre-travel testing could reduce the number of active infections. Compared with no NAT, testing passengers from risk tier 2-4 regions 3 days before travelling could significantly reduce the risk of transmission, and it is more economical and efficient than testing for all passengers.
- Published
- 2021
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38. Age-dependent Gender Differences in COVID-19 in Mainland China: Comparative Study.
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Qian J, Zhao L, Ye RZ, Li XJ, and Liu YL
- Subjects
- Adult, Age Distribution, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, China epidemiology, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Sex Distribution, Age Factors, COVID-19 epidemiology, Population Surveillance, SARS-CoV-2, Sex Factors
- Abstract
Background: The ongoing pandemic of novel coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) is challenging the global public health system. Sex differences in infectious diseases are a common but neglected problem., Methods: We used the national surveillance database of COVID-19 in mainland China to compare gender differences in attack rate (AR), proportion of severe and critical cases (PSCC), and case fatality rate (CFR) in relation to age, affected province, and onset-to-diagnosis interval., Results: The overall AR was significantly higher in females than in males (63.9 vs 60.5 per 1 million persons; P ˂ .001). In contrast, PSCC and CFR were significantly lower among females (16.9% and 4.0%) than among males (19.5% and 7.2%), with odds ratios of 0.87 and 0.57, respectively (both P ˂ .001). The female-to-male differences were age dependent, and were significant among people aged 50-69 years for AR and in patients aged 30 years or older for both PSCC and CFR (all P ≤ .001). The AR, PSCC, and CFR varied greatly from province to province. However, female-to-male differences in AR, PSCC, and CFR were significant in the epicenter, Hubei province, where 82.2% confirmed cases and 97.4% deaths occurred. After adjusting for age, affected province, and onset-to-diagnosis interval, the female-to-male difference in AR, PSCC, and CFR remained significant in multivariate logistic regression analyses., Conclusions: We elucidate an age-dependent gender dimorphism for COVID-19, in which females have higher susceptibility but lower severity and fatality. Further epidemiological and biological investigations are required to better understand the sex-specific differences for effective interventions., (© The Author(s) 2020. Published by Oxford University Press for the Infectious Diseases Society of America. All rights reserved. For permissions, e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
- Published
- 2020
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39. Epidemic and control of COVID-19 in Niger: quantitative analyses in a least developed country.
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Tchole AIM, Li ZW, Wei JT, Ye RZ, Wang WJ, Du WY, Wang HT, Yin CN, Ji XK, Xue FZ, Bachir AM, Zhao L, and Cao WC
- Subjects
- Adult, Developing Countries, Female, Health Personnel, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Niger epidemiology, Pandemics, SARS-CoV-2, Socioeconomic Factors, COVID-19 epidemiology, COVID-19 prevention & control, Communicable Disease Control organization & administration
- Abstract
Background: The COVID-19 pandemic is challenging the public health response system worldwide, especially in poverty-stricken, war-torn, and least developed countries (LDCs)., Methods: We characterized the epidemiological features and spread dynamics of COVID-19 in Niger, quantified the effective reproduction number ( R
t ), evaluated the impact of public health control measures, and estimated the disease burden., Results: As of 4 July 2020, COVID-19 has affected 29 communes of Niger with 1093 confirmed cases, among whom 741 (67.8%) were males. Of them 89 cases died, resulting in a case fatality rate (CFR) of 8.1%. Both attack rates and CFRs were increased with age ( P < 0.0001). Health care workers accounted for 12.8% cases. Among the reported cases, 39.3% were isolated and treated at home, and 42.3% were asymptomatic. 74.6% cases were clustered in Niamey, the capital of Niger. The Rt fluctuated in correlation to control measures at different outbreak stages. After the authorities initiated the national response and implemented the strictest control measures, Rt quickly dropped to below the epidemic threshold (<1), and maintained low level afterward. The national disability-adjusted life years attributable to COVID-19 was 1267.38 years in total, of which years of life lost accounted for over 99.1%., Conclusions: Classic public health control measures such as prohibition of public gatherings, travelling ban, contact tracing, and isolation and quarantine at home, are proved to be effective to contain the outbreak in Niger, and provide guidance for controlling the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic in LDCs., Competing Interests: Competing interests: The authors completed the ICMJE Unified Competing Interest form (available upon request from the corresponding author), and declare no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2020 by the Journal of Global Health. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2020
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40. Outbreak of COVID-19 and SARS in mainland China: a comparative study based on national surveillance data.
- Author
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Zhao L, Feng D, Ye RZ, Wang HT, Zhou YH, Wei JT, de Vlas SJ, Cui XM, Jia N, Yin CN, Li SX, Wang ZQ, and Cao WC
- Subjects
- Adult, COVID-19, China epidemiology, Disease Outbreaks, Female, Humans, Incidence, Male, Middle Aged, SARS-CoV-2, Survival Rate trends, Young Adult, Betacoronavirus, Coronavirus Infections epidemiology, Pandemics, Pneumonia, Viral epidemiology, Population Surveillance methods
- Abstract
Objective: To compare the epidemiological characteristics and transmission dynamics in relation to interventions against the COVID-19 and severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) outbreak in mainland China., Design: Comparative study based on a unique data set of COVID-19 and SARS., Setting: Outbreak in mainland China., Participants: The final database included 82 858 confirmed cases of COVID-19 and 5327 cases of SARS., Methods: We brought together all existing data sources and integrated them into a comprehensive data set. Individual information on age, sex, occupation, residence location, date of illness onset, date of diagnosis and clinical outcome was extracted. Control measures deployed in mainland China were collected. We compared the epidemiological and spatial characteristics of COVID-19 and SARS. We estimated the effective reproduction number to explore differences in transmission dynamics and intervention effects., Results: Compared with SARS, COVID-19 affected more extensive areas (1668 vs 230 counties) within a shorter time (101 vs 193 days) and had higher attack rate (61.8 vs 4.0 per million persons). The COVID-19 outbreak had only one epidemic peak and one epicentre (Hubei Province), while the SARS outbreak resulted in two peaks and two epicentres (Guangdong Province and Beijing). SARS-CoV-2 was more likely to infect older people (median age of 52 years), while SARS-CoV tended to infect young adults (median age of 34 years). The case fatality rate (CFR) of either disease increased with age, but the CFR of COVID-19 was significantly lower than that of SARS (5.6% vs 6.4%). The trajectory of effective reproduction number dynamically changed in relation to interventions, which fell below 1 within 2 months for COVID-19 and within 5.5 months for SARS., Conclusions: China has taken more prompt and effective responses to combat COVID-19 by learning lessons from SARS, providing us with some epidemiological clues to control the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic worldwide., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2020. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
- Published
- 2020
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41. Large-Scale Comparative Analyses of Tick Genomes Elucidate Their Genetic Diversity and Vector Capacities.
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Jia N, Wang J, Shi W, Du L, Sun Y, Zhan W, Jiang JF, Wang Q, Zhang B, Ji P, Bell-Sakyi L, Cui XM, Yuan TT, Jiang BG, Yang WF, Lam TT, Chang QC, Ding SJ, Wang XJ, Zhu JG, Ruan XD, Zhao L, Wei JT, Ye RZ, Que TC, Du CH, Zhou YH, Cheng JX, Dai PF, Guo WB, Han XH, Huang EJ, Li LF, Wei W, Gao YC, Liu JZ, Shao HZ, Wang X, Wang CC, Yang TC, Huo QB, Li W, Chen HY, Chen SE, Zhou LG, Ni XB, Tian JH, Sheng Y, Liu T, Pan YS, Xia LY, Li J, Zhao F, and Cao WC
- Subjects
- Animals, Cell Line, Disease Vectors, Host Specificity genetics, Genetic Variation genetics, Tick-Borne Diseases microbiology, Ticks genetics
- Abstract
Among arthropod vectors, ticks transmit the most diverse human and animal pathogens, leading to an increasing number of new challenges worldwide. Here we sequenced and assembled high-quality genomes of six ixodid tick species and further resequenced 678 tick specimens to understand three key aspects of ticks: genetic diversity, population structure, and pathogen distribution. We explored the genetic basis common to ticks, including heme and hemoglobin digestion, iron metabolism, and reactive oxygen species, and unveiled for the first time that genetic structure and pathogen composition in different tick species are mainly shaped by ecological and geographic factors. We further identified species-specific determinants associated with different host ranges, life cycles, and distributions. The findings of this study are an invaluable resource for research and control of ticks and tick-borne diseases., Competing Interests: Declaration of Interests The authors declare no competing interests., (Copyright © 2020 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2020
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42. Impacts of transportation and meteorological factors on the transmission of COVID-19.
- Author
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Wei JT, Liu YX, Zhu YC, Qian J, Ye RZ, Li CY, Ji XK, Li HK, Qi C, Wang Y, Yang F, Zhou YH, Yan R, Cui XM, Liu YL, Jia N, Li SX, Li XJ, Xue FZ, Zhao L, and Cao WC
- Subjects
- Humans, Meteorological Concepts, Pandemics, SARS-CoV-2, Temperature, COVID-19
- Abstract
The ongoing pandemic of 2019 novel coronavirus disease (COVID-19) is challenging global public health response system. We aim to identify the risk factors for the transmission of COVID-19 using data on mainland China. We estimated attack rate (AR) at county level. Logistic regression was used to explore the role of transportation in the nationwide spread. Generalized additive model and stratified linear mixed-effects model were developed to identify the effects of multiple meteorological factors on local transmission. The ARs in affected counties ranged from 0.6 to 9750.4 per million persons, with a median of 8.8. The counties being intersected by railways, freeways, national highways or having airports had significantly higher risk for COVID-19 with adjusted odds ratios (ORs) of 1.40 (p = 0.001), 2.07 (p < 0.001), 1.31 (p = 0.04), and 1.70 (p < 0.001), respectively. The higher AR of COVID-19 was significantly associated with lower average temperature, moderate cumulative precipitation and higher wind speed. Significant pairwise interactions were found among above three meteorological factors with higher risk of COVID-19 under low temperature and moderate precipitation. Warm areas can also be in higher risk of the disease with the increasing wind speed. In conclusion, transportation and meteorological factors may play important roles in the transmission of COVID-19 in mainland China, and could be integrated in consideration by public health alarm systems to better prevent the disease., (Copyright © 2020 Elsevier GmbH. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2020
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43. Role of 5G-powered remote robotic ultrasound during the COVID-19 outbreak: insights from two cases.
- Author
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Yu RZ, Li YQ, Peng CZ, Ye RZ, and He Q
- Subjects
- Adult, Betacoronavirus genetics, Betacoronavirus isolation & purification, COVID-19, Coronavirus Infections complications, Coronavirus Infections virology, Female, Humans, Lung diagnostic imaging, Male, Middle Aged, Pandemics, Pneumonia diagnosis, Pneumonia etiology, Pneumonia, Viral complications, Pneumonia, Viral virology, RNA, Viral metabolism, Remote Sensing Technology, SARS-CoV-2, Coronavirus Infections pathology, Pneumonia, Viral pathology, Robotics, Ultrasonography methods
- Abstract
The 2019 Novel Coronavirus disease (COVID-19) broke out in Wuhan, China in December 2019 and spread throughout the world. Early screening and early diagnosis play key roles in prevention and management of the epidemic. Attention should also be paid to the infection of health workers and shortage of medical resources in high-risk areas. Here, we report two cases of patients diagnosed with COVID-19 and evaluated by robotic ultrasound based on 5G-powered technology 700 km east of Wuhan. We here show the advantages of this kind of remote ultrasound scan, which could become a method for the diagnosis and assessment of COVID-19.
- Published
- 2020
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44. Prevention of systemic inflammation and neuroprotective effects of Qingda granules against angiotensin II-mediated hypertension.
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Zhang L, Cai QY, Lin S, Jia BB, Ye RZ, Wang H, Bao LY, Chen YQ, Chu JF, and Peng J
- Subjects
- Animals, Apoptosis drug effects, Astrocytes drug effects, Astrocytes physiology, Brain pathology, Hypertension pathology, Male, Mice, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Angiotensin II pharmacology, Drugs, Chinese Herbal pharmacology, Hypertension drug therapy, Inflammation prevention & control, Neuroprotective Agents pharmacology
- Abstract
Qingxuan Jiangya Decoction (QXJYD), prescribed by academician Ke-ji Chen, has long been used as a Traditional Chinese Medicine formula in blood pressure control and has achieved good clinical outcomes in hypertensive patients. Qingda granules (QDGs), which is a formula simplified from QXJYD, might serve as a novel anti-hypertensive pharmaceutical. However, the functional mechanism of QDGs remains unclear. This study aimed to evaluate the effect of QDGs against the elevation of blood pressure, systemic inflammation and brain injury in Ang II-mediated hypertensive mice. Ang II-mediated hypertensive mice were treated with 28.63mg QDG of per mouse every day. The blood pressure of all mice was measured on days 0, 1, 3, 5, 7, 14 and 28 by using the tail-cuff plethysmograph method. Following 28 days of treatment, the mice were sacrificed and their whole blood and brain tissues were used for analysis. The results showed that QDGs significantly decreased elevated systolic and diastolic blood pressure in Ang II-mediated hypertensive mice while body weight did not change, which demonstrated anti-hypertensive activities of QDGs without obvious toxicity. QDGs significantly attenuated the level of serum cytokines (IL-6, TNF-a) and chemokines (MCP-1, MIP-1a, RANTES) in the Ang II-mediated hypertensive mice. Moreover, pathological staining showed that QDGs significantly ameliorated cerebral histopathology changes, reduced the loss of neurons and activations of astrocytes. Additionally, QDGs inhibited neuronal apoptosis by down-regulation of Bax expression and up-regulation of Bcl-2 expression. These results suggested that QDGs exhibited excellent anti-hypertensive properties by preventing systemic inflammation and providing neuroprotective effects against Ang II-mediated hypertension.
- Published
- 2020
45. [Preliminary application value of ultrasound contrast agent with enteral nutritional suspension as mixed medium in locating indwelling nasointestinal tube in critically ill patients].
- Author
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Ye RZ, Peng CZ, Sun RH, Liu JQ, Yang XH, Du LP, and Wu WH
- Subjects
- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Female, Humans, Intensive Care Units, Intestine, Small, Intubation, Gastrointestinal, Male, Middle Aged, Ultrasonography, Critical Illness, Enteral Nutrition
- Abstract
Objective: To evaluate the value of ultrasound contrast agent with enteral nutrition suspension as mixed medium in locating indwelling nasointestinal tube in critically ill patients. Methods: Total of 45 critically ill patients had nasointestinal tube indwelled were collected from June 1,2018 to April 1,2019 in the Intensive Care Unit of Zhejiang Provincial People's Hospital, including 30 males and 15 females, with an average age of (63±17) years.Enteral nutritional suspension Peptisorb Liquid was used as research medium,with the ultrasonic imaging performance of it confirmed by in vitro and in vivo experiments.The optimal mixing ratio of microbubble ultrasound contrast agent and Peptisorb Liquid was confirmed by in vitro experiment, then the mixture was quietly placed and its stability was dynamically observed. The nasointestinal tube was confirmed in the digestive tract by conventional ultrasound and then the ultrasound contrast mode turned on. Ultrasound contrast agent with Peptisorb Liquid as mixed medium was injected into the nasointestinal tube and the tube direction and end position were observed and recorded in real time. Abdominal X-ray examination or CT was used as the gold standard for verifying the location of the nasointestinal tube and the same result represented successful positioning. Results: The in vitro and in vivo experiments showed that Peptisorb Liquid had good ultrasound imaging uniformity and penetrating power, which could clearly show the range and boundary of the filling intestine cavity; the in vitro experiment showed that the ultrasound contrast agent prepared with the microbubble ultrasound contrast agent and Peptisorb Liquid by the ratio of 1∶1 000 and 1∶500 which had the best imaging effect and the best distribution uniformity, with the best stability within 10 minutes after quietly placed. Nasointestinal tubes were successfully located by using ultrasound contrast agent with enteral nutritional suspension as mixed medium in 95.6%(43/45) of the patients collected in this study,including success at one attempt in 39 cases, the operating time was (1.6±0.5) minutes and 4 cases were successfully located after multiple operations with (5.1±0.5) minutes, the tube bent in the stomach in one case and flexed back into the stomach from the descending duodenum in another. The operation failed in 2 cases (4.4%). No significant complications occurred during the examination. Conclusion: The ultrasound contrast agent with enteral nutritional suspension as mixed medium has the advantages of both, which can conveniently, safely and effectively locate the direction and end position of nasointestinal tube in critically ill patients.
- Published
- 2019
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46. [Quick confirmation of nasointestinal tube placed below pylorus in critically ill patients by duodenal bulb ultrasonic anatomy locating method].
- Author
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Ye RZ, Fan XM, Sun RH, Zhang F, Wang LG, Zeng Z, Liu Y, Hu BC, and Tu YX
- Subjects
- Critical Care, Enteral Nutrition, Humans, Pylorus diagnostic imaging, Ultrasonography, Critical Illness, Intubation, Gastrointestinal, Pylorus anatomy & histology
- Abstract
Objective: To investigate the value of duodenal bulb ultrasonic anatomy locating method quickly confirm nasointestinal tube placed below pylorus in critically ill patients. Methods: A total of 56 critically ill patients with nasointestinal tube posting surgery by blindly inserting method were collected from March 1 st, 2016 to August 1 st, 2016 in the Department of Critical Care Medicine of Zhejiang Provincial People's Hospital.In these patients, the duodenal bulbs were rapidly detected and located by ultrasonic anatomy locating method and at the same time observed whether nasointestinal tube echogram were in them or not. If nasointestinal tube echogram was observed in duodenal bulbs that meant nasointestinal tube placed below pylorus successfully. If disturbed by ultrasound artifacts or other reasons, injected gas into the nasointestinal tube could help to confirm when hyperechoic strip emerged. Gastrointestinal decompression or gastrointestinal motion promoting drug could help to reduce the interference of abdominal cavity or bowel gas if necessary. The results were compared with the abdominal X examination to vertify the accuracy of this method, and at the same time recorded its total time-consuming and its related complications. Results: The duodenal bulbs were rapidly located by ultrasonic anatomy locating method in 53 cases(94.6%) time-consuming(42±23)s. Nasointestinal tubes observed in duodenal bulb were confirmed to be placed below pylorus successfully in 52 cases(92.9%)time-consuming(140±94)s.There were no obvious complications in all patients. Conclusion: Duodenal bulb ultrasonic anatomy locating method is a safe, simple and convenient method with high accuracy that can quickly confirm whether nasointestinal tube placed below pylorus in critically ill patients or not.
- Published
- 2017
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47. Noniterative calculation of complex propagation constants in planar waveguides.
- Author
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Ye RZ and Yevick DO
- Abstract
We adapt an efficient finite-difference procedure for determining complex propagation constants to the analysis of modes in planar waveguides. The method requires solving a single rather than multiple eigenvalue equations and does not require prior knowledge of either the nature of the solutions or the position of the modal eigenvalues in the complex plane.
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
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