172 research outputs found

    Clinical analysis of vulvar cancer

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    Background: The purpose of this study is to understand the incidence, related factors, and the prognosis factors in order to avoid risk, proper method of diagnosis and treatment and reduce complications and provide the basis.Methods: 85 Vulvar cancer (VC) patients treated in our hospital from 2002.10 to 2012.10 were collected and analyzed by retrospective comparative methods. SPSS19.0 application software was used for the statistical analysis. The clinical data are analyzed by chi-square and F test statistic methods. P < 0.05 was a significant difference between the judgment standard.Results: During 10 years, we treated 3391 cases of the primary malignant tumors including 85 VC cases; VC was 2.89% (85/3391). The age was between 24ļ½ž88 years old, mean was 57.09Ā±12.93 yrs. old, variable age of the VC had been juvenescence trend (F=6. 013ļ¼ŒP=0.016ļ¼œ0.05ļ¼). The differences between the urban and rural residential area have some influence to the onset of VC. Rural patients are more than urban patients. By statistical analysis, region distribution in these two groups was remarkably different=4.16ļ¼ŒP=0.045ļ¼œ0.05, but the urban proportion of patients in different years has no differenceļ¼ˆĻ‡2=0.080, P=0.777ļ¼‰.Conclusion: The number of cases increased progressively in young age. VC patients were more in rural area than urban. History of malignant tumor and obesity has the positive correlation with VC. High-risk groups should be alert to the possibility of VC. Preoperative diagnosis should be Colposcopic, biopsy in order to improve the accuracy of earlier diagnosis. Vulvar resects have an effect on the healing of the incision. Follow-up rate is low; It is difficult to say statistically survival rate is 5 years

    Garnierite mineralization from a serpentinite-derived lateritic regolith, Sulawesi Island, Indonesia: Mineralogy, geochemistry and link to hydrologic flow regime

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    Garnierite represents a significant nickel ore in many lateritic Ni deposits worldwide. To gain a better understanding of its nature and origin, a well-developed garnierite-hosting transect from the Kolonodale area of East Sulawesi, Indonesia, has been investigated using field geology, mineralogy and geochemical data. Garnierite occurs mainly in veins in the lower saprolite of a serpentinite-derived regolith. Mineralogically, it can be determined as an intimate mixture of Ni-rich serpentine-like (lizardite-Nepouite) and talc-like (kerolite-pimelite) phases. Results of EMP analyses indicate that Ni is preferentially enriched in the talc-like phases rather than the serpentine-like phases. A sequential precipitation of mineral phases progressively enriched in Ni and Si to form garnierite during weathering is suggested. The Ni-lizardite (2.63-8.49 wt% Ni) with elevated Fe (4.02-6.44 wt %) may have been inherited from saprolite in a first instance and enriched in Ni by cation exchange processes. Newly precipitated minerals are kerolite-pimelite (7.84-23.54 wt% Ni) and then followed by Ni-free quartz. Minor amount of Nepouite (23.47-28.51 wt% Ni) occur in laths along shrinkage cracks of previously formed minerals, indicating a late stage paragenetic sequence. With emphasis on a hydrologic consideration, indicators of a preferential flow regime are identified in the garnierite-hosting regolith, including: (i) non-uniform pattern of the garnierite field occurrence, (ii) syn-weathering active nature of the garnierite-hosting structures, (iii) close relationship between the garnierite occurrence and vertical FeeMn oxides pipes as well as FeeMn oxides patched areas, and (iv) specific physico-chemical property of the garnierite location with higher organic matter concentrations but lower pH values compared to surroundings. It is proposed that the origin of garnierite is closely linked to a preferential flow of oversaturated solutions through accessible conduits in the regolith. Garnierite features as colloidal nature, high organic matter and low pH are key-parameters in metal transport and deposition

    NH2+ implantations induced superior hemocompatibility of carbon nanotubes

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    NH(2)(+) implantation was performed on multiwalled carbon nanotubes (MWCNTs) prepared by chemical vapor deposition. The hemocompatibility of MWCNTs and NH(2)(+)-implanted MWCNTs was evaluated based on in vitro hemolysis, platelet adhesion, and kinetic-clotting tests. Compared with MWCNTs, NH(2)(+)-implanted MWCNTs displayed more perfect platelets and red blood cells in morphology, lower platelet adhesion rate, lower hemolytic rate, and longer kinetic blood-clotting time. NH(2)(+)-implanted MWCNTs with higher fluency of 1 Ɨ 10(16) ions/cm(2) led to the best thromboresistance, hence desired hemocompatibility. Fourier transfer infrared and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy analyses showed that NH(2)(+) implantation caused the cleavage of some pendants and the formation of some new N-containing functional groups. These results were responsible for the enhanced hemocompatibility of NH(2)(+)-implanted MWCNTs

    Roles of Phosphorus Sources in Microbial Community Assembly for the Removal of Organic Matters and Ammonia in Activated Sludge

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    Various phosphorus sources are utilized by microbes in WWTPs, eventually affecting microbial assembly and functions. This study identified the effects of phosphorus source on microbial communities and functions in the activated sludge. By cultivation with 59 phosphorus sources, including inorganic phosphates (IP), nucleoside-monophosphates (NMP), cyclic-nucleoside-monophosphates (cNMP), and other organophosphates (OP), we evaluated the change in removal efficiencies of total organic carbon (TOC) and ammonia, microbial biomass, alkaline phosphatase (AKP) activity, microbial community structure, and AKP-associated genes. TOC and ammonia removal efficiency was highest in IP (64.8%) and cNMP (52.3%) treatments. Microbial community structure changed significantly across phosphorus sources that IP and cNMP encouraged Enterobacter and Aeromonas, respectively. The abundance of phoA and phoU genes was higher in IP treatments, whereas phoD and phoX genes dominated OP treatments. Our findings suggested that the performance of WWTPs was dependent on phosphorus sources and provided new insights into effective WWTP management

    SIRT5 promotes IDH2 desuccinylation and G6PD deglutarylation to enhance cellular antioxidant defense

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    Abstract Excess in mitochondrial reactive oxygen species (ROS) is considered as a major cause of cellular oxidative stress. NADPH, the main intracellular reductant, has a key role in keeping glutathione in its reduced form GSH, which scavenges ROS and thus protects the cell from oxidative damage. Here, we report that SIRT5 desuccinylates and deglutarylates isocitrate dehydrogenase 2 (IDH2) and glucoseā€6ā€phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD), respectively, and thus activates both NADPHā€producing enzymes. Moreover, we show that knockdown or knockout of SIRT5 leads to high levels of cellular ROS. SIRT5 inactivation leads to the inhibition of IDH2 and G6PD, thereby decreasing NADPH production, lowering GSH, impairing the ability to scavenge ROS, and increasing cellular susceptibility to oxidative stress. Our study uncovers a SIRT5ā€dependent mechanism that regulates cellular NADPH homeostasis and redox potential by promoting IDH2 desuccinylation and G6PD deglutarylation

    DDX60 Is Associated With Glioma Malignancy and Serves as a Potential Immunotherapy Biomarker

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    DDX60, an interferon (IFN)-inducible gene, plays a promotional role in many tumors. However, its function in glioma remains unknown. In this study, bioinformatic analysis (TCGA, CGGA, Rembrandt) illustrated the upregulation and prognostic value of DDX60 in gliomas. Immunohistochemical staining of clinical samples (n = 49) validated the DDX60 expression is higher in gliomas than in normal tissue (n = 20, P &lt; 0.0001). It also could be included in nomogram as a parameter to predict the 3- and 5-year survival risk (C-index = 0.86). The biological process of DDX60 in glioma was mainly enriched in the inflammatory and immune response by GSEA and GO analysis. DDX60 expression had a positive association with most inflammatory-related functions, such as hematopoietic cell kinase (HCK) (R = 0.31), interferon (R = 0.72), STAT1 (R = 54), and a negative correlation with IgG (R = āˆ’0.24). Furthermore, DDX60 expression tends to be positively related to multiple infiltrating immune cells, while negatively related to CD56 dim nature killer cell in glioma. Some important immune checkpoints, like CTLA-4, PD-L1, EGF, CD96, and CD226, were all positively related with DDX60 (all Pearson correlation R &gt; 0.26). The expression and correlation between DDX60, EGF, and PD-L1 were confirmed by western blot in clinical samples (n = 14, P &lt; 0.0001) and GBM cells. These results indicated that DDX60 might have important clinical significance in glioma and could serve as a potential immune therapeutic target

    Efficacy of intra-arterial chemotherapy with sequential anti-PD-1 antibody in unresectable gastric cancer: A retrospective real-world study

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    BackgroundThe prognosis of unresectable gastric cancer is poor, while the efficacy of anti-PD antibodies has not been evaluated.MethodsPatients with unresectable gastric cancer who received intra-arterial chemotherapy (IAC) with sequential anti-PD-1 antibody as induction therapy in Jinling Hospital were retrospectively analyzed. The primary outcome is R0 resection rate. The secondary outcomes include safety, conversion surgery rate, overall survival (OS) and progression free survival (PFS) after postoperative IAC and anti-PD-1 treatments. Meanwhile, Tumor immunity in the microenvironment (TIME) before and after IAC was comprehensively dissected with multiplex immunofluorescence in order to detect possible mechanisms favoring anti-PD-1 treatment response.ResultsBetween May 2019 and October 2020, 36 patients received at least one cycle of IAC with sequential anti-PD-1 antibody in our institution. The objective response was achieved in 28 patients (77.8%). Thirty patients (83.3%) successfully underwent conversion surgery, among which R0 resection was managed in 25/30 patients, and 23.3% (7/30) was assessed as pathological complete remission. During the median follow-up period of 19.7 months, patients who underwent R0 resection displayed superior OS (HR 0.14 [95% CI 0.04-0.50], P &lt; 0.0001) and PFS (HR 0.11 [0.03-0.44], P &lt; 0.0001) than those who did not. Grade 3 adverse events (AEs) were only encountered in 19.4% patients, no grade 4 AEs observed. In TIME analysis, the number of tertiary lymphoid structures (TLSs) (P = 0.004) were greatly induced by IAC, as well as CD8+ T cells (P = 0.011) and PD-1+ cells (P = 0.025). Meanwhile, Tumor associated macrophages shifted towards anti-tumor M1-like subtypes, with CD68+CD163+ M2-like subpopulation significantly decreased (P = 0.04).ConclusionPreoperative IAC with sequential anti-PD-1 antibody exhibited promising clinical benefit for unresectable gastric cancer with remarkable conversion rate and R0 resection rate, and also prolonged survival as postoperative regimen. TIME transformation induced by ICA might mediate the additive effect with the immune checkpoint inhibitor

    Altitudinal Patterns in Adaptive Evolution of Genome Size and Inter-Genome Hybridization Between Three Elymus Species From the Qinghaiā€“Tibetan Plateau

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    Genome size variation and hybridization occur frequently within or between plant species under diverse environmental conditions, which enrich species diversification and drive the evolutionary process. Elymus L. is the largest genus in Triticeae with five recognized basic genomes (St, H, P, W, and Y). However, the data on population cytogenetics of Elymus species are sparse, especially whether genome hybridization and chromosomal structure can be affected by altitude are still unknown. In order to explore the relationship between genome sizes, we studied interspecific hybridization and altitude of Elymus species at population genetic and cytological levels. Twenty-seven populations at nine different altitudes (2,800ā€“4,300 m) of three Elymus species, namely, hexaploid E. nutans (StHY, 2n = 6x = 42), tetraploid E. burchan-buddae (StY, 2n = 4x = 28), and E. sibiricus (StH, 2n = 4x = 28), were sampled from the Qinghaiā€“Tibetan Plateau (QTP) to estimate whether intraspecific variation could affect the genomic relationships by genomic in situ hybridization (GISH), and quantify the genome size of Elymus among different altitude ecological groups by flow cytometry. The genome size of E. nutans, E. burchan-buddae, and E. sibiricus varied from 12.38 to 22.33, 8.81 to 18.93, and 11.46 to 20.96 pg/2C with the averages of 19.59, 12.39, and 16.85 pg/2C, respectively. The curve regression analysis revealed a strong correlation between altitude and nuclear DNA content in three Elymus species. In addition, the chromosomes of the St and Y genomes demonstrated higher polymorphism than that of the H genome. Larger genome size variations occurred in the mid-altitude populations (3,900ā€“4,300 m) compared with other-altitude populations, suggesting a notable altitudinal pattern in genome size variation, which shaped genome evolution by altitude. This result supports our former hypothesis that genetic richness center at medium altitude is useful and valuable for species adaptation to highland environmental conditions, germplasm utilization, and conservation

    Development and validation of risk prediction model for premenstrual syndrome in nurses: results from the nurses-based the TARGET cohort study

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    ObjectivePremenstrual syndrome (PMS) stands as a significant concern within the realm gynecological disorders, profoundly impacting women of childbearing age in China. However, the elusive nature of its risk factors necessitates investigation. This study, therefore, is dedicated to unraveling the intricacies of PMS by focusing on nurses, a cohort with unique occupational stressors, to develop and validate a predictive model for assessing the risk of PMS.MethodsThis investigation employed a multi-center cross-sectional analysis drawing upon data from the TARGET Nursesā€™ health cohort. Utilizing online survey versions of the Premenstrual Syndrome Scale (PMSS), a comprehensive dataset encompassing physiological, social, psychological, occupational, and behavioral variables was collected from 18,645 participants. A stepwise multivariate logistic regression analysis was conducted to identify independent risk factors for PMS. Furthermore, a refined variable selection process was executed, combining the Least Absolute Shrinkage and Selection Operator (LASSO) method with 10-fold cross-validation. The visualization of the risk prediction model was achieved through a nomogram, and its performance was evaluated using the C index, receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves, and the calibration curves.ResultsAmong the diverse variables explored, this study identified several noteworthy predictors of PMS in nurses, including tea or coffee consumption, sleep quality, menstrual cycle regularity, intermenstrual bleeding episodes, dysmenorrhea severity, experiences of workplace bullying, trait coping style, anxiety, depression and perceived stress levels. The prediction model exhibited robust discriminatory power, with an area under the curve of 0.765 for the training set and 0.769 for the test set. Furthermore, the calibration curve underscored the modelā€™s high degree of alignment with observed outcomes.ConclusionThe developed model showcases exceptional accuracy in identifying nurses at risk of PMS. This early alert system holds potential to significantly enhance nursesā€™ well-being and underscore the importance of professional support

    Prevalence and influencing factors of lower urinary tract symptoms in female nurses: a cross-sectional study based on TARGET

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    BackgroundEven though occupational women have a high incidence of lower urinary tract symptoms (LUTS), which seriously affect their daily work life, few large scale sample studies have provided empirical evidence to support this phenomenon among female nurses in China. Consequently, this article investigated female nurses who was presupposed to have a high prevalence of LUTS, which adversely exposes their health and patient safety to these risks. Additionally, it is considered important to explore the factors associated with LUTS in female nurses for patient care safety and nurse bladder health practice.ObjectivesThe purpose of this study was to assess the incidence of LUTS and symptoms-related risk factors among female nurses, to provide evidence for the prevention and control of LUTS.MethodsAn online survey recruiting 23,066 participants was carried out in a multicenter cross-sectional study in 42 hospitals from December 2020 to November 2022. Stepwise multivariate logistic regression analysis and nomogram were used to identify the factors associated with lower urinary tract symptoms. Besides, SPSS version 26.0, R version 4.2.2, and GraphPad Prism Version 8.3 software packages were used for statistical analysis.ResultsBased on the completion rate of the questionnaire which was 84.1% (nā€‰=ā€‰19,393), it was found that among 19,393 female nurses, the prevalence of LUTS was 67.71% and this rate was influenced by age, Body Mass Index (BMI), marital status, years of working, menstrual status, mode of delivery, history of breastfeeding, history of miscarriage, history of alcohol and coffee or tea consumption (pā€‰&lt;ā€‰0.05). Interestingly, we also find that in addition to the above mentioned factors, anxiety, depression, and perceived stress were also related to LUTS in female nurses (pā€‰&lt;ā€‰0.05).ConclusionGiven the high prevalence of LUTS among female nurses and their potential influencing factors, female nurses should focus on their reproductive health and develop good lifestyle habits. Thus, nursing managers should provide a warm and harmonious work environment and sensitize female nurses to increase their awareness about the importance of drinking clean water and urinating during work in a hygienic environment
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