scispace - formally typeset
Y

Yang Yang

Researcher at Northwest University (China)

Publications -  5
Citations -  293

Yang Yang is an academic researcher from Northwest University (China). The author has contributed to research in topics: Reperfusion injury & Oxidative stress. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 5 publications receiving 236 citations. Previous affiliations of Yang Yang include Nanjing University & Fourth Military Medical University.

Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Melatonin protects diabetic heart against ischemia-reperfusion injury, role of membrane receptor-dependent cGMP-PKG activation

TL;DR: Melatonin ameliorated diabetic MI/R injury by modulating Nrf-2-HO-1 and MAPK signaling, thus reducing myocardial apoptosis and oxidative stress and preserving cardiac function, and melatonin membrane receptors (especially MT2 receptor)-dependent cGMP-PKGIα signaling played a critical role in this process.
Journal ArticleDOI

Melatonin rescues cardiac thioredoxin system during ischemia-reperfusion injury in acute hyperglycemic state by restoring Notch1/Hes1/Akt signaling in a membrane receptor-dependent manner.

TL;DR: Melatonin treatment effectively ameliorated MI/R injury by reducing infarct size, myocardial apoptosis, and oxidative stress and its role as a prophylactic/therapeutic drug deserves further clinical study.
Journal ArticleDOI

Polydatin Protects Diabetic Heart against Ischemia-Reperfusion Injury via Notch1/Hes1-Mediated Activation of Pten/Akt Signaling.

TL;DR: Polydatin effectively reduced MI/R injury and improved left ventricular functional recovery under diabetic condition by ameliorating oxidative/nitrative stress damage.
Journal ArticleDOI

Diallyl trisulfide exerts cardioprotection against myocardial ischemia-reperfusion injury in diabetic state, role of AMPK-mediated AKT/GSK-3β/HIF-1α activation

TL;DR: Data showed that DATS protected against MI/R injury in diabetic state by attenuating cellular apoptosis via AMPK-mediated AKT/GSK-3β/HIF-1α signaling and its cardioprotective effect deserves further study.