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1.
Chinese journal of integrative medicine ; (12): 258-267, 2023.
Artigo em Inglês | WPRIM | ID: wpr-971319

RESUMO

OBJECTIVE@#To identify topics attracting growing research attention as well as frontier trends of acupuncture-neuroimaging research over the past two decades.@*METHODS@#This paper reviewed data in the published literature on acupuncture neuroimaging from 2000 to 2020, which was retrieved from the Web of Science database. CiteSpace was used to analyze the publication years, countries, institutions, authors, keywords, co-citation of authors, journals, and references.@*RESULTS@#A total of 981 publications were included in the final review. The number of publications has increased in the recent 20 years accompanied by some fluctuations. Notably, the most productive country was China, while Harvard University ranked first among institutions in this field. The most productive author was Tian J with the highest number of articles (50), whereas the most co-cited author was Hui KKS (325). Evidence-Based Complementary and Alternative Medicine (92) was the most prolific journal, while Neuroimage was the most co-cited journal (538). An article written by Hui KKS (2005) exhibited the highest co-citation number (112). The keywords "acupuncture" (475) and "electroacupuncture" (0.10) had the highest frequency and centrality, respectively. Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) ranked first with the highest citation burst (6.76).@*CONCLUSION@#The most active research topics in the field of acupuncture-neuroimaging over the past two decades included research type, acupoint specificity, neuroimaging methods, brain regions, acupuncture modality, acupoint specificity, diseases and symptoms treated, and research type. Whilst research frontier topics were "nerve regeneration", "functional connectivity", "neural regeneration", "brain network", "fMRI" and "manual acupuncture".


Assuntos
Humanos , Acupuntura , Terapia por Acupuntura , Bibliometria , Imageamento por Ressonância Magnética , Neuroimagem
2.
Journal of Medical Postgraduates ; (12): 732-736, 2020.
Artigo em Chinês | WPRIM | ID: wpr-822592

RESUMO

ObjectiveTo explore the value of MSCT for differentiating the hypovascular pancreatic neuroendocrine tumors (Hypo-PNETs) from mass-forming pancreatitis.Methods21 patients with histological-confirmed MPFs and 19 patients with Hypo-PNETs who underwent preoperative dynamic contrast-enhanced CT were included. The CT images were analyzed including tumor size,density, border, CT values in each phase, dilatation of pancreatic duct and bile duct and metastases. The clinical data included age, sex and clinical symptoms.ResultsMFPs often occurred in male patient compared with Hypo-PNETs (85.7% vs 52.6%, P<0.05), and the difference is statistically significant; Metastases only occurred in Hypo-PNETs (P<0.05), and the difference is drastically significant. The well-defined margin often occurred in Hypo-PNETs (52.4% vs 47.6%, P=0.032). Solid tumor more happened in MFPs(95.2% vs 47.4%, P<0.05). The CT values in the portal of MFPs were higher than Hypo-PNETs(P<0.05). The combined features showed accepted diagnostic performance for differentiating Hypo-PNETs from MFPs (89.5% of sensitivity and 95.2% of specificity).ConclusionMFPs often occurred in male patient, and CT values of portal phase, density, border and metastases may be valuable for differentiating Hypo-PNETs from MFPs.

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