873 research outputs found

    Studies on the two new stereo-saponins from Morchella conica

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    Inflammatory Links Between High Fat Diets and Diseases

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    In recent years, chronic overnutrition, such as consumption of a high-fat diet (HFD), has been increasingly viewed as a significant modifiable risk factor for diseases such as diabetes and certain types of cancer. However, the mechanisms by which HFDs exert adverse effects on human health remains poorly understood. Here, this paper will review the recent scientific literature about HFD-induced inflammation and subsequent development of diseases and cancer, with an emphasis on mechanisms involved. Given the expanding global epidemic of excessive HFD intake, understanding the impacts of a HFD on these medical conditions, gaining great insights into possible underlying mechanisms, and developing effective therapeutic strategies are of great importance

    Optimization of Flash Extraction Process and Antioxidant Activity of American Ginseng Flower Polysaccharides

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    Objective: To study the optimal process conditions of flash extraction and antioxidant activity of American ginseng flower polysaccharides (AGFPs). Methods: American ginseng flower (AGF) as the raw material, the effects of extraction voltage, liquid-material ratio, and extraction time on the yield of AGFPs were explored. The flash extraction process of AGFPs was improved by response surface methodology. The scavenging effect on DPPH and hydroxy free radicals and total reduction capacity of AGFPs were determined to assess the antioxidant activity of AGFPs. Results: The optimal extraction conditions were determined as 130 V of extraction voltage, 30:1 mL/g of liquid-material ratio, and 100 s of extraction time, resulting in an AGFPs yield of 11.12%±0.23%, which agreed with the model prediction. The AGFPs exhibited significant scavenging effects on DPPH and hydroxyl radicals, with IC50 values of 1.34 mg/mL and 1.42 mg/mL, respectively, and had a certain reducing power. Conclusion: These results suggested that flash extraction was an efficient and rapid method for obtaining AGFPs from AGF, and that AGFPs had promising antioxidant potential for further applications. This study can provide a theoretical basis for the development and application of AGF

    Primary renal myxoid liposarcoma with pancreatic invasion on 18F-FDG PET/CT: first case report and literature review

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    BackgroundMyxoid liposarcoma (MLS) is a rare malignant soft tissue sarcoma that predominantly manifests in the deep soft tissues of the extremities, particularly within the musculature of the thigh. Unlike other types of liposarcoma, MLS demonstrates a propensity for metastasis to atypical sites, including the lung parenchyma, soft tissues, retroperitoneum, mediastinum, breast, liver, thymus, lymph nodes, and bones. The definitive diagnosis primarily relies on histology with HE staining. Imaging modalities such as ultrasound, CT, MRI, and 18F-FDG PET/CT scans serve as valuable tools for tumor identification.Case reportA 57-year-old man presented with symptoms of abdominal distention and vomiting 1 month ago. Contrast-enhancement CT revealed a heterogeneous hypodense mass in the upper-middle part of the left kidney, displaying irregular morphology and protrusion towards the exterior of the kidney, with abundant blood supply and had a maximum dimension of approximately 10.7 cm × 9.0 cm. Additionally, a rounded soft tissue density was identified in the pancreatic body. Multiplanar reconstruction demonstrated a connection between the pancreatic lesion and the kidney mass. 18F-FDG PET/CT was conducted for staging, revealing significant growth of the lesion in the upper-middle part of the left kidney, extending beyond the kidney and infiltrating the pancreatic body. The lesion demonstrated remarkably high 18F-FDG uptake (SUVmax = 10.2, MTV = 136.13 cm3, TLG = 484.62). The postoperative pathological examination confirmed the diagnosis of MLS. On the 10th day post-surgery, the patient presented with tumor recurrence and underwent another surgical resection. Unfortunately, during the operation, the patient experienced a sudden cardiac arrest and died.ConclusionRenal MLS with invasion into the pancreas is very rare in clinical practice. Due to the limited research on the utilization of 18F-FDG PET/CT in this particular context, given the rarity and low incidence of MLS, its role remains largely unexplored. As PET/CT imaging becomes increasingly prevalent, thorough imaging of disease sites becomes indispensable for the development of treatment protocols and the monitoring of treatment response

    Case Report: A rare case of multicentric angiosarcomas of bone mimicking multiple myeloma on 18F-FDG PET/CT

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    BackgroundAngiosarcoma, a rare endothelial-origin tumor, can develop throughout the body, with the head and neck skin being the most commonly affected areas. It can also originate in other sites such as the breast, iliac artery, and visceral organs including the liver, spleen, and kidneys. Angiosarcoma of the bone is remarkably rare, presenting as either unifocal or multifocal bone lesions and often leading to a grim prognosis. Diagnosing bone angiosarcoma poses a significant challenge. 18F-FDG PET/CT serves as a reliable and indispensable imaging modality for evaluating distant metastases and clinically staging angiosarcomas.Case reportA 57-year-old woman presented with a 10-day history of dizziness and headaches. Cranial CT scan revealed bone destruction of the parietal bone, accompanied by soft tissue lesions, protruding into the epidural space. MRI examination demonstrated lesions with slightly elevated signal intensity on T2FLAIR, showing moderate enhancement. Furthermore, multiple foci were observed within the T12, L1-5, and S1-2 vertebrae, as well as in the bilateral iliac bones. For staging, 18F-FDG PET/CT was performed. The MIP PET showed multifocal FDG-avid lesions in the sternum, bilateral clavicles, bilateral scapulae, multiple ribs, and pelvic bones. Heterogeneous FDG uptake was observed in multiple bone lesions, including intracranial (SUVmax = 11.3), right transverse process of the T10 vertebra (SUVmax = 5.8), ilium (SUVmax = 3.3), and pubis (SUVmax = 4.7). The patient underwent surgical resection of the cranial lesion. The pathological diagnosis was made with a highly differentiated angiosarcoma.ConclusionAngiosarcoma of bone on FDG PET/CT scans is characterized by abnormal FDG uptake along with osteolytic destruction. This case highlights that angiosarcoma of bone can manifest as multicentric FDG uptake, resembling the pattern seen in multiple myeloma. FDG PET/CT can be a useful tool for staging this rare malignant tumor, offering the potential to guide biopsy procedures toward the most metabolically active site. And it should be considered in the differential diagnosis of multiple osteolytic lesions, including metastatic carcinoma, multiple myeloma, and lymphoma of bone

    Impacts of solid fuel use versus smoking on life expectancy at age 30 years in the rural and urban Chinese population: a prospective cohort study

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    Background: The impact of solid fuel use on life expectancy (LE) in less-developed countries remains unclear. We aimed to evaluate the potential impact of household solid fuel use on LE in the rural and urban Chinese population, with the effect of smoking as a reference. Methods: We used data from China Kadoorie Biobank (CKB) of 484,915 participants aged 30–79 free of coronary heart disease, stroke, or cancer at baseline. Analyses were performed separately for solid fuel use for cooking, solid fuel use for heating, and smoking, with participants exposed to the other two sources excluded. Solid fuels refer to coal and wood, and clean fuels refer to electricity, gas, and central heating. We used a flexible parametric Royston-Parmar model to estimate hazard ratios of all-cause mortality and predict LE at age 30. Findings: Totally, 185,077, 95,228, and 230,995 participants were included in cooking-, heating-, and smoking-related analyses, respectively. During a median follow-up of approximately 12.1 years, 12,725, 7,531, and 18,878 deaths were recorded in the respective analysis. Compared with clean fuel users who reported cooking with ventilation, participants who used solid fuels with ventilation and without ventilation had a difference in LE (95% confidence interval [CI]) at age 30 of −1.72 (−2.88, −0.57) and −2.62 (−4.16, −1.05) years for men and −1.33 (−1.85, −0.81) and −1.35 (−2.02, −0.67) years for women, respectively. The difference in LE (95% CI) for heating was −2.23 (−3.51, −0.95) years for men and −1.28 (−2.08, −0.48) years for women. In rural men, the LE reduction (95% CI) related to solid fuel use for cooking (−2.55; −4.51, −0.58) or heating (−3.26; −6.09, 0.44) was more than that related to smoking (−1.71; −2.54, −0.89). Conversely, in urban men, the LE reduction (95% CI) related to smoking (−3.06; −3.56, −2.56) was more than that related to solid fuel use for cooking (−1.28; −2.61, 0.05) and heating (−1.90; −3.16, −0.65). Similar results were observed in women but with a smaller magnitude. Interpretation: In this Chinese population, the harm to LE from household use of solid fuels was greater than that from smoking in rural residents. Conversely, the negative impact of smoking was greater than solid fuel use in urban residents. Our findings highlight the complexity and diversity of the factors affecting LE in less-developed populations

    Reliable and stable fundus image registration based on brain-inspired spatially-varying adaptive pyramid context aggregation network

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    The task of fundus image registration aims to find matching keypoints between an image pair. Traditional methods detect the keypoint by hand-designed features, which fail to cope with complex application scenarios. Due to the strong feature learning ability of deep neural network, current image registration methods based on deep learning directly learn to align the geometric transformation between the reference image and test image in an end-to-end manner. Another mainstream of this task aims to learn the displacement vector field between the image pair. In this way, the image registration has achieved significant advances. However, due to the complicated vascular morphology of retinal image, such as texture and shape, current widely used image registration methods based on deep learning fail to achieve reliable and stable keypoint detection and registration results. To this end, in this paper, we aim to bridge this gap. Concretely, since the vessel crossing and branching points can reliably and stably characterize the key components of fundus image, we propose to learn to detect and match all the crossing and branching points of the input images based on a single deep neural network. Moreover, in order to accurately locate the keypoints and learn discriminative feature embedding, a brain-inspired spatially-varying adaptive pyramid context aggregation network is proposed to incorporate the contextual cues under the supervision of structured triplet ranking loss. Experimental results show that the proposed method achieves more accurate registration results with significant speed advantage

    Genetically predicted differences in systolic blood pressure and risk of cardiovascular and noncardiovascular diseases: a Mendelian randomization study in Chinese adults

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    Background: Mendelian randomization studies of systolic blood pressure (SBP) can assess the shape and strength of the associations of genetically predicted differences in SBP with major disease outcomes and are less constrained by biases in observational analyses. This study aimed to compare the associations of usual and genetically predicted SBP with major cardiovascular disease (CVD) outcomes, overall and by levels of SBP, age, and sex. Methods: The China Kadoorie Biobank involved a 12-year follow-up of a prospective study of 489 495 adults aged 40 to 79 years with no prior CVD and 86 060 with genetic data. Outcomes included major vascular events (59 490/23 151 in observational/genetic analyses), and its components (ischemic stroke [n=39 513/12 043], intracerebral hemorrhage [7336/5243], and major coronary events [7871/4187]). Genetically predicted SBP used 460 variants obtained from European ancestry genome-wide studies. Cox regression estimated adjusted hazard ratios for incident CVD outcomes down to usual SBP levels of 120 mm Hg. Results: Both observational and genetic analyses demonstrated log-linear positive associations of SBP with major vascular event and other major CVD types in the range of 120 to 170 mm Hg. Consistent with the observational analyses, the hazard ratios per 10 mm Hg higher genetically predicted SBP were 2-fold greater for intracerebral hemorrhage (1.71 [95% CI, 1.58–1.87]) than for ischemic stroke (1.37 [1.30–1.45]) or major coronary event (1.29 [1.18–1.42]). Genetic analyses also demonstrated 2-fold greater hazard ratios for major vascular event in younger (1.69 [95% CI, 1.54–1.86]) than in older people (1.28 [1.18–1.38]). Conclusions: The findings provide support for initiation of blood pressure-lowering treatment at younger ages and below the conventional cut-offs for hypertension to maximize CVD prevention, albeit the absolute risks of CVD are far greater in older people
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