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1.
Chinese Journal of Behavioral Medicine and Brain Science ; (12): 570-576, 2023.
Artigo em Chinês | WPRIM | ID: wpr-992135

RESUMO

Subjective tinnitus refers to the subjective sound perception of patients in the absence of an external sound stimulus.Tinnitus patients are often accompanied by emotional disorders, such as depression and anxiety, which seriously affect the quality of life of patients.Therefore, understanding the mechanism underlying the occurrence of tinnitus emotional disorders can help relieve the pain of tinnitus.Tinnitus was considered a simple ear disease in the early stages, but with the progress of neuroimaging technology and the development of animal models, increasing attention has been given to the changes in the neural structure and function of tinnitus patients.As a powerful technique for in vivo investigation of neural activity in the brain, multimodal magnetic resonance has been widely used in the study of subjective tinnitus.By observing the changes of brain structure in subjective tinnitus patients, the neural mechanism of the occurrence and development of tinnitus has been explored.This article reviewed recent multimodal magnetic resonance imaging studies on the neuroimaging mechanisms of tinnitus with mood disorders, compared the differences in neural activity between subjective tinnitus patients and healthy people, and found that the limbic system, default mode network and other neural network abnormalities were closely related to the mood disorders of tinnitus.The application and development of multimodal magnetic resonance techniques in subjective tinnitus were also discussed to elucidate the neural mechanism of subjective tinnitus accompanied by mood disorders with the help of multimodal magnetic resonance techniques.

2.
Chinese Journal of Blood Transfusion ; (12): 311-314, 2022.
Artigo em Chinês | WPRIM | ID: wpr-1004373

RESUMO

【Objective】 To compare and study the characteristics of blood donors with and without adverse reactions to apheresis platelet donation(ARAPD), and to study the influencing factors of blood donors participating in blood donation again, so as to provide basis for putting forward scientific and reasonable countermeasures and retaining blood donors to the greatest extent. 【Methods】 157 679 platelet donors from Tianjin Blood Center from December 26, 2015 to December 25, 2020 were selected and divided into ARAPD group(n=168) and non-ARAPD group (n=157 511). Such characteristics as sex, age, height, weight, blood type, educational background, first-time donation or not, platelet count, hematocrit, phlebotomy time, circulating blood volume and anticoagulant dosage of the two groups were analyzed. Chi-square test was used to identify the high-risk population with poor blood donation response. Multivariate binary logistic regression was used to study the influencing factors of blood donors returning. 【Results】 The age, height and weight of ARAPD group were lower than those of the non-ARAPD group, and the proportion of first-time blood donors, the proportion of women and phlebotomy time were higher than those of non-ARAPD group. There was little difference between the two groups in circulating blood volume, anticoagulant dosage, pre- and post-donation platelet count and hematocrit. Logistic regression analysis showed that the influencing factors of ARAPD were age, educational background, first-time donation or not and phlebotomy time, among which age and first-time donation or not were positively correlated, education and phlebotomy time were negatively correlated (P<0.05). 【Conclusion】 Female, low age, low height and weight, and less blood donation are the basic characteristics of high-risk people with ARAPD. Low age, high education, first-time blood donation and long phlebotomy time are the influencing factors that lead to donor lapsing. Therefore, countermeasures are put forward based on the above results.

3.
Chinese Journal of Behavioral Medicine and Brain Science ; (12): 577-582, 2022.
Artigo em Chinês | WPRIM | ID: wpr-956127

RESUMO

Objective:To investigate the local consistency of inferior colliculus and ventrolateral orbital cortex by resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) in rats with noise induced deafness and its relationship with anxiety- and depression-like behavior.Methods:Twenty-four clean grade male four-weeks old SD rats were randomly divided into noise group and control group with 12 rats in each group.Rats in the noise group were exposed to 122 dB broadband strong noise for 2 hours to induce severe bilateral hearing loss, while rats in the control group were placed in a quiet environment. Hearing thresholds were assessed by auditory brainstem response (ABR) test. The open field test (OFT) was conducted to examine anxiety-depression related behavior, and the local consistency in the rat brain was evaluated by fMRI.SPM12 software was used to process fMRI data, and Pearson correlation analysis was conducted by SPSS 22.0 software to calculate the correlation between fMRI data and behavior.Results:The results of ABR showed that the full band hearing threshold of rats in the noise group was higher than that of rats in the control group ((85.417±6.463) dB, (20.083±8.853) dB, t=46.168, P<0.001). And compared with control group, the rats in the noise group showed obvious anxiety-depression-like behavior in the open field test, that was, low activity level.The results of OFT showed that the total distance ((39.912±5.696) m, (47.993±10.820)m, t=-2.289, P=0.032), average moving speed ((13.306±1.900)cm/s, (15.998±3.607)cm/s, t=-2.290, P=0.032) and standing times ((13.333±5.960), (23.500±7.323), t=-3.730, P=0.001) of the rats in the noise group were all lower than those in the control group. Compared with the control group, the local consistency of hypothalamus in the noise group was significantly enhanced, while the local consistency of ventrolateral orbital cortex was significantly reduced, and the abnormal neural activity was lateralized. The correlation analysis showed that the neural activity of the inferior colliculus was negatively correlated with the total distance of rats in the noise group moving in the open field( r=-0.691, P=0.013), while the neural activity of the ventrolateral orbital cortex was not significantly correlated with the anxiety-depression-like behavior in the open field. Conclusions:The neural activity of inferior colliculus is closely related to anxious-depression behavior in rats with noise-induced deafness, while the ventrolateral orbital cortex may be related with other behaviors.

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