Institution
Chinese PLA General Hospital
Healthcare•Beijing, China•
About: Chinese PLA General Hospital is a healthcare organization based out in Beijing, China. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Medicine & Population. The organization has 18037 authors who have published 12349 publications receiving 184803 citations. The organization is also known as: 301 Military Hospital.
Topics: Medicine, Population, Cancer, Transplantation, Apoptosis
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: The findings strongly suggest that n-3 PUFA supplementation is a potential angiogenic treatment capable of augmenting brain repair and improving long-term functional recovery after cerebral ischemia.
77 citations
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TL;DR: The age-standardized prevalence of PAD is common in elderly Chinese and the prevalence is higher in women than in men, and smoking cessation substantially reduces the risk.
77 citations
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TL;DR: Linc-ROR confers gemcitabine resistance to pancreatic cancer cells at least partly via inducing autophagy and the underlying involvement of the miR-124/PTBP1/PKM2 axis in this regulation is studied.
Abstract: Purpose
In this study, we investigated the regulation of linc-ROR on autophagy and gemcitabine resistance of pancreatic cancer cells and further studied the underlying involvement of the miR-124/PTBP1/PKM2 axis in this regulation
77 citations
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TL;DR: Wang et al. as mentioned in this paper found that the self-reported stress of Chinese residents related to the COVID-19 pandemic was significantly related to sex, age, employment, resilience and coping styles.
Abstract: About 83,000 COVID-19 patients were confirmed in China up to May 2020. Amid the well-documented threats to physical health, the effects of this public health crisis - and the varied efforts to contain its spread - have altered individuals’ “normal” daily functioning. These impacts on social, psychological, and emotional well-being remain relatively unexplored – in particular, the ways in which Chinese men and women experience and respond to potential behavioral stressors. Our study investigated sex differences in psychological stress, emotional reactions, and behavioral responses to COVID-19 and related threats among Chinese residents. In late February (2020), an anonymous online questionnaire was disseminated via WeChat, a popular social media platform in China. The cross-sectional study utilized a non-probabilistic “snowball” or convenience sampling of residents from various provinces and regions of China. Basic demographic characteristics (e.g., age and gender) – along with residential living arrangements and conditions – were measured along with psychological stress and emotional responses to the COVID-19 pandemic. Three thousand eighty-eight questionnaires were returned: 1749 females (56.6%) and 1339 males (43.4%). The mean stress level,as measured by a visual analog scale, was 3.4 (SD = 2.4) - but differed significantly by sex. Besides sex, factors positively associated with stress included: age (< 45 years), employment (unsteady income, unemployed), risk of infection (exposureto COVID-19, completed medical observation), difficulties encountered (diseases, work/study, financial, mental), and related behaviors (higher desire for COVID-19 knowledge, more time concerning on the COVID-19 outbreak). “Protective” factors included frequent contact with colleagues, calmness of mood comparing with the pre-pandemic, and psychological resilience. Males and females also differed significantly in adapting to current living/working, conditions, responding to run a fever, and needing psychological support services. The self-reported stress of Chinese residents related to the COVID-19 pandemic was significantly related to sex, age, employment, resilience and coping styles. Future responses to such public health threats may wish to provide sex- and/or age-appropriate supports for psychological health and emotional well-being to those at greatest risk of experiencing stress.
77 citations
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TL;DR: This study and the current evidence suggested that Ilizarov methods in the treatment of infected nonunion of tibia and femur acquired satisfied results, suggesting that radical debridement is the key step to control bone infection.
Abstract: The objective of this study was to evaluate the effectiveness of the treatment of infected nonunion of tibia and femur by bone transport. We retrospectively reviewed 110 patients with infected nonunion of tibia and femur treated by bone transport. Our study included 92 males and 18 females with a mean age of 38.90 years. The site of infected nonunion involved 72 tibias and 38 femurs. The mean length of the bone defects after radical debridement was 6.15 cm (range 3–13 cm). The mean follow-up after removal of the apparatus was 23.12 months (14–46 months). Ten patients including seven patients with infected tibia nonunion and three patients with infected femur nonunion were lost to follow-up. All the patients achieved bone union, and no recurrence of infection was observed. The time of bone transport took a mean of 67.50 days (range 33 to 137 days), and the mean external fixation index was 1.48 months/cm (range 1.15–1.71 months/cm). According to Association for the Study and Application of the Method of Ilizarov (ASAMI) classification, bone results were excellent in 68, good in 28, fair in 12, and poor in 2; functional results were excellent in 37, good in 42, fair in 21, and no poor. Our study and the current evidence suggested that Ilizarov methods in the treatment of infected nonunion of tibia and femur acquired satisfied results. Radical debridement is the key step to control bone infection.
77 citations
Authors
Showing all 18235 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
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Jie Zhang | 178 | 4857 | 221720 |
Gregory Y.H. Lip | 169 | 3159 | 171742 |
Chao Zhang | 127 | 3119 | 84711 |
Hong Wang | 110 | 1633 | 51811 |
Shuji Ogino | 106 | 549 | 43073 |
Li Chen | 105 | 1732 | 55996 |
Jing Wang | 97 | 1123 | 53714 |
Wei Wang | 95 | 3544 | 59660 |
Zhiguo Yuan | 93 | 633 | 28645 |
Tai Hing Lam | 93 | 1168 | 51646 |
Christopher P. Crum | 87 | 412 | 32399 |
Guozhen Shen | 84 | 422 | 23992 |
Jing-Feng Li | 81 | 507 | 23434 |
Zongjin Li | 80 | 630 | 22103 |
Wan Yee Lau | 76 | 463 | 21257 |