121 research outputs found
Collaborative Diabetes Management in China: A Digital Empowerment Perspective
With the widespread of information and communication technologies (ICT) tools, home-based diabetes management (HDM) emerges as a widely approved paradigm. While extant studies focus on the enabling outcomes of ICT tools and patients’ activities, this work complements extant work with the enabling mechanisms and collaborative activities among patient, doctors, and relatives. By interpreting a successful HDM project in China from the digital empowerment perspective, this work finds that all actors benefit from (1)structural empowerment since HDM bridges critical actors by building channels for blood glucose data transmission and easy communication, (2) resource empowerment since patients and relatives get more knowledge and information about diabetes management, doctors get more financial incentives, and (3) psychological empowerment since HDM strengthens critical actors’ confidence, trust, and willingness to collaborate on diabetes management. The findings reveal the underlying mechanisms through which ICT tools enable HDM
Application of BERT in Wind Power Forecasting-Teletraan's Solution in Baidu KDD Cup 2022
Nowadays, wind energy has drawn increasing attention as its important role in
carbon neutrality and sustainable development. When wind power is integrated
into the power grid, precise forecasting is necessary for the sustainability
and security of the system. However, the unpredictable nature and long sequence
prediction make it especially challenging. In this technical report, we
introduce the BERT model applied for Baidu KDD Cup 2022, and the daily
fluctuation is added by post-processing to make the predicted results in line
with daily periodicity. Our solution achieves 3rd place of 2490 teams. The code
is released athttps://github.com/LongxingTan/KDD2022-Baid
Airborne dispersion of droplets during coughing: a physical model of viral transmission
The Covid-19 pandemic has focused attention on airborne transmission of
viruses. Using realistic air flow simulation, we model droplet dispersion from
coughing and study the transmission risk related to SARS-CoV-2. Although most
airborne droplets are 8-16 m in diameter, the droplets with the highest
transmission potential are, in fact, 32-40 m. Use of face masks is
therefore recommended for both personal and social protection. We found social
distancing effective at reducing transmission potential across all droplet
sizes. However, the presence of a human body 1 m away modifies the aerodynamics
so that downstream droplet dispersion is enhanced, which has implications on
safe distancing in queues. Based on median viral load, we found that an average
of 0.55 viral copies is inhaled at 1 m distance per cough. Droplet evaporation
results in significant reduction in droplet counts, but airborne transmission
remains possible even under low humidity conditions
Chemokines in Type 1 Diabetes Mellitus.
BACKGROUND: Previous studies suggested that chemokines may play an important role in the formation and mediation of immune microenvironments of patients affected by Type 1 Diabetes Mellitus (T1DM). The aim of this study was to summarise available evidence on the associations of different chemokines with T1DM. METHODS: Following PRISMA guidelines, we systematically searched in PubMed, Web of Science, Embase and Cochrane Library databases for studies on the associations of different chemokines with T1DM. The effect size of the associations were the standardized mean differences (SMDs) with corresponding 95% confidence intervals (CIs) of the chemokines concentrations, calculated as group differences between the T1DM patients and the controls. These were summarized using network meta-analysis, which was also used to rank the chemokines by surface under cumulative ranking curve (SUCRA) probabilities. RESULTS: A total of 32 original studies on the association of different chemokines with T1DM were identified. Fifteen different chemokine nodes were compared between 15,683 T1DM patients and 15,128 controls, and 6 different chemokine receptor nodes were compared between 463 T1DM patients and 460 controls. Circulating samples (blood, serum, and plasma) showed that concentrations of CCL5 and CXCL1 were significantly higher in the T1DM patients than in the controls (SMD of 3.13 and 1.50, respectively). On the other hand, no significant difference in chemokine receptors between T1DM and controls was observed. SUCRA probabilities showed that circulating CCL5 had the highest rank in T1DM among all the chemokines investigated. CONCLUSION: The results suggest that circulating CCL5 and CXCL1 may be promising novel biomarkers of T1DM. Future research should attempt to replicate these findings in longitudinal studies and explore potential mechanisms underlying this association
Impaired colonic motility in high-glycemic diet-induced diabetic mice is associated with disrupted gut microbiota and neuromuscular function
Background: Similar to the high-fat diet (HFD), the high-glycemic diet (HGD) contributes to the development and progression of type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM). However, the effect of HGD on gastrointestinal motility in T2DM and its u nderlying mechanisms remain unclear.
Methods: Thirty C57BL/6J mice were randomly designated into the normal-feeding diet (NFD) group, HFD group, and HGD group. The plasma glucose, plasma insulin, and gastrointestinal motility were examined. Meanwhile, the tension of isolated colonic smooth muscle rings was calculated, and the gut microbiota was analyzed by 16s rDNA high-throughput sequencing.
Result: After 16 weeks of HGD feeding, obesity, hyperglycemia, insulin resistance, and constipation were observed in HGD mice. Autonomic contraction frequency of the colonic neuromuscular system and electrical field stimulation-induced contractions were reduced in HGD mice. On the contrary, neuronal nitric oxide synthase activity and neuromuscular relaxation were found to be enhanced. Finally, gut microbiota analysis revealed that Rhodospirillaceae abundance significantly increased at the family level in HGD mice. At the genus level, the abundance of Insolitispirillum increased remarkably, whereas Turicibacter abundance decreased significantly in HGD mice.
Conclusion: HGD induced constipation in obese diabetic mice, which we speculated that it may be related to neuromuscular dysmotility and intestinal microbiota dysbiosis
Patchouli alcohol improved diarrhea-predominant irritable bowel syndrome by regulating excitatory neurotransmission in the myenteric plexus of rats
Background and Purpose: Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) is usually associated with chronic gastrointestinal disorders. Its most common subtype is accompanied with diarrhea (IBS-D). The enteric nervous system (ENS) modulates major gastrointestinal motility and functions whose aberration may induce IBS-D. The enteric neurons are susceptible to long-term neurotransmitter level alterations. The patchouli alcohol (PA), extracted from Pogostemonis Herba, has been reported to regulate neurotransmitter release in the ENS, while its effectiveness against IBS-D and the underlying mechanism remain unknown.Experimental Approach: In this study, we established an IBS-D model in rats through chronic restraint stress. We administered the rats with 5, 10, and 20 mg/kg of PA for intestinal and visceral examinations. The longitudinal muscle myenteric plexus (LMMP) neurons were further immunohistochemically stained for quantitative, morphological, and neurotransmitters analyses.Key Results: We found that PA decreased visceral sensitivity, diarrhea symptoms and intestinal transit in the IBS-D rats. Meanwhile, 10 and 20 mg/kg of PA significantly reduced the proportion of excitatory LMMP neurons in the distal colon, decreased the number of acetylcholine (Ach)- and substance P (SP)-positive neurons in the distal colon and restored the levels of Ach and SP in the IBS-D rats.Conclusion and Implications: These findings indicated that PA modulated LMMP excitatory neuron activities, improved intestinal motility and alleviated IBS-induced diarrheal symptoms, suggesting the potential therapeutic efficacy of PA against IBS-D
CBLUE: A Chinese Biomedical Language Understanding Evaluation Benchmark
Artificial Intelligence (AI), along with the recent progress in biomedical
language understanding, is gradually changing medical practice. With the
development of biomedical language understanding benchmarks, AI applications
are widely used in the medical field. However, most benchmarks are limited to
English, which makes it challenging to replicate many of the successes in
English for other languages. To facilitate research in this direction, we
collect real-world biomedical data and present the first Chinese Biomedical
Language Understanding Evaluation (CBLUE) benchmark: a collection of natural
language understanding tasks including named entity recognition, information
extraction, clinical diagnosis normalization, single-sentence/sentence-pair
classification, and an associated online platform for model evaluation,
comparison, and analysis. To establish evaluation on these tasks, we report
empirical results with the current 11 pre-trained Chinese models, and
experimental results show that state-of-the-art neural models perform by far
worse than the human ceiling. Our benchmark is released at
\url{https://tianchi.aliyun.com/dataset/dataDetail?dataId=95414&lang=en-us}
Genome Sequencing of the Sweetpotato Whitefly \u3cem\u3eBemisia tabaci\u3c/em\u3e MED/Q
The sweetpotato whitefly Bemisia tabaci is a highly destructive agricultural and ornamental crop pest. It damages host plants through both phloem feeding and vectoring plant pathogens. Introductions of B. tabaci are difficult to quarantine and eradicate because of its high reproductive rates, broad host plant range, and insecticide resistance. A total of 791 Gb of raw DNA sequence from whole genome shotgun sequencing, and 13 BAC pooling libraries were generated by Illumina sequencing using different combinations of mate-pair and pair-end libraries. Assembly gave a final genome with a scaffold N50 of 437 kb, and a total length of 658 Mb. Annotation of repetitive elements and coding regions resulted in 265.0 Mb TEs (40.3%) and 20 786 protein-coding genes with putative gene family expansions, respectively. Phylogenetic analysis based on orthologs across 14 arthropod taxa suggested that MED/Q is clustered into a hemipteran clade containing A. pisum and is a sister lineage to a clade containing both R. prolixus and N. lugens. Genome completeness, as estimated using the CEGMA and Benchmarking Universal Single-Copy Orthologs pipelines, reached 96% and 79%. These MED/Q genomic resources lay a foundation for future \u27pan-genomic\u27 comparisons of invasive vs. noninvasive, invasive vs. invasive, and native vs. exotic Bemisia, which, in return, will open up new avenues of investigation into whitefly biology, evolution, and management
Thyroid cancer complicating familial adenomatous polyposis: mutation spectrum of at-risk individuals
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