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1.
Lin Chuang Er Bi Yan Hou Tou Jing Wai Ke Za Zhi ; 31(17): 1347-1351, 2017 Sep 05.
Article in Chinese | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29798229

ABSTRACT

Objective:To study the effect of early administration exogenous BDNF on the morphology and function of conditional knockout Cx26 mice cochlea.Method:Conditional knockout Cx26 mice was chosen as animal model, early after birth (P0-P2) exogenous BDNF (rAAV mediated BDNF plasmid, AAV-BDNF) was injected through scala media. Expression of BDNF in the cochlea was observed by western-blot, the growth promoting effect of nerve fibers was detected by IHC; 2 m after injection, the protective effect of BDNF on corti and spiral ganglion cells were detected by resin section; animal hearing were tested by ABR.Result:①Exogenous BDNF could be well expressed in the inner ear; ②Exogenous BDNF has a good effect on the growth of cochlea nerve fiber; ③Exogenous BDNF could protect the morphology of organ of corti; to count the number of spiral ganglion cells, using the density value of top-turn in non-injected ear as the standard unit, the values of middle and basal turn in injected ear were 0.81±0.02, 0.65±0.02, compared with non-injected ears, both statistically significant difference could be found, indicates that exogenous BDNF can effectively improve the number of spiral ganglion cells. ④By calculating the ABR threshold of different frequencies of the injected and non-injected ear, there was no statistical difference between them. Indicates that exogenous BDNF has no effect on improving the function of cochlea.Conclusion:The protective effect of early administration exogenous BDNF was effective in the cochlea and spiral ganglion cells of conditional knockout Cx26 mice, but no protective effect for auditory function.


Subject(s)
Brain-Derived Neurotrophic Factor/pharmacology , Cochlea/pathology , Deafness/genetics , Hearing Loss, Sensorineural/drug therapy , Spiral Ganglion/drug effects , Animals , Cochlea/metabolism , Disease Models, Animal , Hearing Loss, Sensorineural/chemically induced , Hearing Loss, Sensorineural/pathology , Spiral Ganglion/pathology
2.
J Seismol ; 20(1): 361-373, 2016.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28190963

ABSTRACT

The 2014 Ms 6.5 (Mw6.1) Ludian earthquake occurred in the eastern Sichuan-Yunnan border region of western China. This earthquake caused much more severe engineering damage than the usual earthquakes with the same magnitude in China. The National Strong Motion Network obtained large set of ground motion recordings during the earthquake. To investigate the engineering interested characteristics of ground motion from Ludian earthquake and compare it with the Mw 7.9 Wenchuan and the Mw 6.6 Lushan earthquakes in western China, studies on the ground motion field, attenuation relationship, distance dependence of significant duration, and site amplification were carried out. Some conclusion is drawn. Specifically, the ground motion field reveals a directional feature, and the distribution characteristics of the two horizontal components are similar. The attenuation relationship for Ludian earthquake is basically consistent with the ground motion prediction equation (GMPE) for western China, except the slight smaller than the GMPE predicted at short periods. The distance dependences of ground motion duration are different in Sichuan and Yunnan regions due to the local physical dispersion and Q value. The site amplification factors are dominated by linear site response for lower reference ground motion, but the nonlinearity becomes notable for higher reference ground motion. This feature is basically consistent with the empirical model for western China. All the results indicate that the spatial distribution of ground motion, the attenuation characteristics, and the site amplification effect should be considered in characterization of near-field ground motion.

3.
J Hum Hypertens ; 17(9): 591-608, 2003 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-13679950

ABSTRACT

Blood pressure (BP) above optimal (< or =120/< or =80 mmHg) is established as a major cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk factor. Prevalence of adverse BP is high in most adult populations; until recently research has been sparse on reasons for this. Since the 1980s, epidemiologic studies confirmed that salt, alcohol intake, and body mass relate directly to BP; dietary potassium, inversely. Several other nutrients also probably influence BP. The DASH feeding trials demonstrated that with the multiple modifications in the DASH combination diet, SBP/DBP (SBP: systolic blood pressure, DBP: diastolic blood pressure) was sizably reduced, independent of calorie balance, alcohol intake, and BP reduction with decreased dietary salt. A key challenge for research is to elucidate specific nutrients accounting for this effect. The general aim of the study was to clarify influences of multiple nutrients on SBP/DBP of individuals over and above effects of Na, K, alcohol, and body mass. Specific aims were, in a cross-sectional epidemiologic study of 4680 men and women aged 40-59 years from 17 diverse population samples in China, Japan, UK, and USA, test 10 prior hypotheses on relations of macronutrients to SBP/DBP and on role of dietary factors in inverse associations of education with BP; test four related subgroup hypotheses; explore associations with SBP/DBP of multiple other nutrients, urinary metabolites, and foods. For these purposes, for all 4680 participants, with standardized high-quality methods, assess individual intake of 76 nutrients from four 24-h dietary recalls/person; measure in two timed 24-h urine collections/person 24-h excretion of Na, K, Ca, Mg, creatinine, amino acids; microalbuminuria; multiple nutrients and metabolites by nuclear magnetic resonance and high-pressure liquid chromatography. Based on eight SBP/DBP measurements/person, and data on multiple possible confounders, utilize mainly multiple linear regression and quantile analyses to test prior hypotheses and explore relations of multiple dietary and urinary variables to SBP/DBP of individuals. The 4680 INTERMAP participants are equally divided across four age/gender strata: diverse in ethnicity, education, occupation, physical activity; use of cigarettes, alcohol; diagnosed high BP, CVD, diabetes; CVD family history; women vary in parity, use of contraceptive medication and hormone replacement therapy.


Subject(s)
Blood Pressure/physiology , Micronutrients , Cholesterol/blood , Coronary Disease/blood , Coronary Disease/epidemiology , Coronary Disease/physiopathology , Diastole/physiology , Humans , Hypertension/blood , Hypertension/epidemiology , Hypertension/physiopathology , Prevalence , Risk Factors , Systole/physiology
4.
J Hum Hypertens ; 17(9): 623-30, 2003 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-13679952

ABSTRACT

The purpose of the study was to compare nutrient intakes among Chinese, Japanese, UK, and US INTERMAP samples, and assess possible relationships of dietary patterns to differential patterns of cardiovascular diseases between East Asian and Western countries. Based on a common Protocol and Manuals of Operations, high-quality dietary data were collected by four standardized 24-h dietary recalls and two 24-h urine collections from 17 population samples in China (three samples), Japan (four samples), UK (two samples), and USA (eight samples). There were about 260 men and women aged 40-59 years per sample--total N=4680. Quality of dietary interview and data entry were monitored and enhanced by extensive systematic ongoing quality control procedures at local, country, and international level. Four databases on nutrient composition of foods from the four countries were updated and enhanced (76 nutrients for all four countries) by the Nutrition Coordinating Center, University of Minnesota, in cooperation with Country Nutritionists. The mean body mass index was much higher for Western than East Asian samples. Macronutrient intakes differed markedly across these samples, with Western diet higher in total fat, saturated and trans fatty acids, and Keys dietary lipid score, lower in total carbohydrate and starch, higher in sugars. Based on extensive published data, it is a reasonable inference that this pattern relates to higher average levels of serum total cholesterol and higher mortality from coronary heart disease in Western than East Asian populations. The rural Chinese diet was lower in protein, especially animal protein, in calcium, phosphorus, selenium, and vitamin A. Dietary sodium was higher, potassium lower, hence Na/K ratio was higher in the Asian diet, especially for Chinese samples. This pattern is known to relate to risks of adverse blood pressure level and stroke. At the end of the 20th century, East Asian and Western diets remain significantly different in macro- and micronutrient composition. Both dietary patterns have aspects that can be regarded, respectively, as adverse and protective in relation to the major adult cardiovascular diseases. In both Asian and Western countries, public efforts should be targeted at overcoming adverse aspects and maintaining protective patterns for prevention and control of cardiovascular diseases.


Subject(s)
Blood Pressure/physiology , Micronutrients , Adult , Biomarkers/urine , China/epidemiology , Cholesterol, Dietary/administration & dosage , Dietary Fiber/administration & dosage , Eating/physiology , Energy Intake/physiology , Female , Humans , Japan/epidemiology , Male , Micronutrients/metabolism , Middle Aged , Minerals/administration & dosage , Minerals/urine , United Kingdom/epidemiology , United States/epidemiology , Vitamins/administration & dosage , Vitamins/urine
5.
J Hum Hypertens ; 17(9): 609-22, 2003 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-13679951

ABSTRACT

The aim of this report is to describe INTERMAP standardized procedures for assessing dietary intake of 4680 individuals from 17 population samples in China, Japan, UK and USA: Based on a common Protocol and Manuals of Operations, standardized collection by centrally trained certified staff of four 24 h dietary recalls, two timed 24-h urines, two 7-day histories of daily alcohol intake per participant; tape recording of all dietary interviews, and use of multiple methods for ongoing quality control of dietary data collection and processing (local, national, and international); one central laboratory for urine analyses; review, update, expansion of available databases for four countries to produce comparable data on 76 nutrients for all reported foods; use of these databases at international coordinating centres to compute nutrient composition. Chinese participants reported 2257 foods; Japanese, 2931; and UK, 3963. In US, use was made of 17,000 food items in the online automated Nutrition Data System. Average time/recall ranged from 22 min for China to 31 min for UK. Among indicators of dietary data quality, coding error rates (from recoding 10% random samples of recalls) were 2.3% for China, 1.4% for Japan, and UK; an analogous US procedure (re-entry of recalls into computer from tape recordings) also yielded low discrepancy rates. Average scores on assessment of taped dietary interviews were high, 40.4 (Japan) to 45.3 (China) (highest possible score: 48); correlations between urinary and dietary nutrient values--similar for men and women--were, for all 4680 participants, 0.51 for total protein, range across countries 0.40-0.52; 0.55 for potassium, range 0.30-0.58; 0.42 for sodium, range 0.33-0.46. The updated dietary databases are valuable international resources. Dietary quality control procedures yielded data generally indicative of high quality performance in the four countries. These procedures were time consuming. Ongoing recoding of random samples of recalls is deemed essential. Use of tape recorded dietary interviews contributed to quality control, despite feasibility problems, deemed remediable by protocol modification. For quality assessment, use of correlation data on dietary and urinary nutrient values yielded meaningful findings, including evidence of special difficulties in assessing sodium intake by dietary methods.


Subject(s)
Blood Pressure/physiology , Micronutrients , Adult , Biomarkers/urine , China/epidemiology , Circadian Rhythm/physiology , Data Collection , Diet Records , Dietary Proteins/urine , Eating/physiology , Energy Intake/physiology , Female , Humans , Japan/epidemiology , Male , Mental Recall/physiology , Micronutrients/metabolism , Middle Aged , Natriuresis/physiology , Potassium, Dietary/urine , Quality Control , Statistics as Topic , United Kingdom/epidemiology , United States/epidemiology
6.
J Hum Hypertens ; 17(9): 641-54, 2003 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-13679954

ABSTRACT

This report examines dietary intakes in smokers, ex-smokers, and never smokers in INTERMAP. The 4680 participants aged 40-59 years-from 17 population samples in four countries (China, Japan, UK, USA)-provided four 24-h recalls to assess nutrient intakes and two 24-h urine collections to assess excretion of urea, sodium (Na), potassium (K), etc. Compared to never smokers, current smokers generally consumed more energy from alcohol and saturated fats (SFA), less energy from vegetable protein and carbohydrates, less dietary fibre, vitamin E, beta carotene, vitamin C, thiamine, riboflavin, folate, vitamin B6, calcium, iron, phosphorus, magnesium (Mg), and K per 1000 kcal, excreted less K and urea (marker of dietary protein), had a lower ratio of polyunsaturated fat (PFA) to SFA intake, higher Keys dietary lipid score, and higher dietary and urinary Na/K. There were few differences between smokers and never smokers for total energy intake, energy from total and animal protein, monounsaturated fats, PFA, omega 3 and omega 6 PFA, dietary cholesterol, total vitamin A, retinol, vitamin D, vitamin B12, and urinary and dietary Na. Compared to ex-smokers, smokers generally consumed less energy from vegetable protein, omega 3 PFA, carbohydrates, less dietary fibre, beta carotene, vitamin E, vitamin C, thiamine, riboflavin, folate, vitamin B6, iron, phosphorus, Mg, had lower PFA/SFA, and excreted less urea and K. In conclusion, INTERMAP results are consistent with other reports indicating that smokers have less healthful diets than nonsmokers. Public health interventions in smokers should focus not only on helping them to quit smoking but also on improving their diets to further reduce cancer and cardiovascular disease risks.


Subject(s)
Eating/physiology , Smoking Cessation , Smoking/epidemiology , Adult , Alcohol Drinking , Biomarkers/urine , Body Mass Index , China/epidemiology , Dietary Fats/administration & dosage , Dietary Proteins/administration & dosage , Feeding Behavior , Female , Humans , Japan/epidemiology , Male , Micronutrients/administration & dosage , Micronutrients/urine , Middle Aged , Minerals/administration & dosage , Minerals/urine , Smoking/urine , Statistics as Topic , United Kingdom/epidemiology , United States/epidemiology , Vitamins/administration & dosage , Vitamins/urine
7.
Chin Med J (Engl) ; 102(4): 257-61, 1989 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2507238

ABSTRACT

An epidemiological comparative study on dietary patterns and population means of blood pressure was undertaken in 10 groups (3 of workers, 6 of farmers, 1 of fishermen) of adult males and females of northeast, north, south, middle and east China. Standardized methods and record forms were used for blood pressure measurements and 24-hr dietary recall interviews. Simple correlation and linear regression, multiple regression (adjusted for age, sex and body mass index) and ridge regression were used to analyze the relationship of dietary electrolytes and animal protein to blood pressure. The results show a significant negative association of mean daily intake of Ca and animal protein with population mean blood pressure. Excluding the fishermen's group, mean daily intake of Na showed significant positive association with both systolic and diastolic blood pressure. The Chinese diet should probably be improved, increasing Ca and animal protein and cutting salt to a much lower level.


Subject(s)
Blood Pressure , Diet Surveys , Nutrition Surveys , Adult , Calcium/metabolism , China , Dietary Proteins/administration & dosage , Female , Humans , Male , Multicenter Studies as Topic , Sodium, Dietary/administration & dosage
8.
Int J Epidemiol ; 18(3 Suppl 1): S159-63, 1989.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2807697

ABSTRACT

Mortality data obtained from the Health Statistics Office of the Ministry of Health, People's Republic of China (PRC), were compared to data for other countries taken from the World Health Statistics Annual. The crude death rate for coronary heart disease (CHD) in China in 1984 is estimated to be about one-tenth of that for North America and Australia. However, a high stroke to CHD ratio of about 5.0 was observed in China. The age-standardized CHD mortality rates were significantly higher for Beijing in north China than for Shanghai and Guangzhou in the south, and for urban than rural populations in all years from 1976 to 1986. Data on hospital admissions and autopsy material provide evidence for an increase in CHD incidence and prevalence in the last three to four decades. A low mean serum total cholesterol, related to a low habitual dietary intake of fat and cholesterol, is considered to be the main cause underlying low CHD mortality rates in China.


Subject(s)
Coronary Disease/mortality , Adult , Aged , China/epidemiology , Cholesterol/blood , Coronary Disease/epidemiology , Diet , Female , Hospitalization , Humans , Hypertension/epidemiology , Male , Middle Aged , Rural Population , Smoking/epidemiology , Urban Population
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