Exp Ther Med
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Spinal cord injury (SCI) results in inflammation, and TLR4, which is an inflammatory factor, has an important role in the pathological injury that occurs following SCI. Recently, bone marrow stromal cells (BMSCs) have been demonstrated to be a novel treatment in SCI. However, the underlying mechanism of neuroprotection in SCI by BMSCs remains unclear. ⋯ Furthermore, it was demonstrated that BMSCs downregulated the expression of apoptosis factor caspase-12 in the SCI rat model. The present results demonstrated that BMSCs may have incorporated into the spinal cord to improve locomotor function after SCI, partly via the TLR4/NF-κB signaling pathway. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first study to determine that BMSCs prevented secondary injury and enhanced functional recovery in SCI via inhibition of TLR4/NF-κB-mediated inflammation.
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Clinical efficacy of metoprolol combined with irbesartan and hydrochlorothiazide and non-invasive ventilator in the emergency treatment of patients with severe heart failure (HF) was investigated. A retrospective analysis of the medical records of 124 patients with severe HF admitted to Binzhou Medical University Hospital from May 2012 to August 2016 was performed. Among them, 78 patients who were treated with metoprolol combined with irbesartan and hydrochlorothiazide and non-invasive ventilator for emergency treatment were enrolled into the Research Group, while the Control Group consisted of 46 patients treated with routine medical treatment. ⋯ After the emergency treatment, the BNP expression levels in the two groups decreased to different degrees (P<0.05). After a 7-day emergency treatment, the efficiency rate of treatment of the Research Group was higher than that of the Control Group (P<0.05). The method is helpful for the recovery of respiratory function, for relieving symptoms in short time, improving cardiac function and promising high safety, using metoprolol and irbesartan and hydrochlorothiazide combined with non-invasive ventilator had satisfactory clinical efficacy in the emergency treatment of patients with severe heart failure and is thus worthy of clinical promotion.
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The aim of the present study was to investigate the therapeutic efficacy of local hypothermia (beginning 30 min post-injury persisting for 5 h) on tissue preservation along the rostro-caudal axis of the spinal cord (3 cm cranially and caudally from the lesion site), and the prevention of injury-induced functional loss in a newly developed computer-controlled compression model in minipig (force of impact 18N at L3 level), which mimics severe spinal cord injury (SCI). Minipigs underwent SCI with two post-injury modifications (durotomy vs. intact dura mater) followed by hypothermia through a perfusion chamber with cold (epidural t≈15°C) saline, DMEM/F12 or enriched DMEM/F12 (SCI/durotomy group) and with room temperature (t≈24°C) saline (SCI-only group). Minipigs treated with post-SCI durotomy demonstrated slower development of spontaneous neurological improvement at the early postinjury time points, although the outcome at 9 weeks of survival did not differ significantly between the two SCI groups. ⋯ Furthermore, regeneration of neurofilaments in the spinal cord after SCI-durotomy and hypothermic treatments indicated an important role of local saline hypothermia in the functional outcome. Although saline hypothermia (24°C) in the SCI-only group exhibited a profound histological outcome (regarding the gray and white matter integrity and the number of motoneurons) and neurofilament protection in general, none of the tested treatments resulted in significant improvement of neurological status. The findings suggest that clinically-proven medical treatments for SCI combined with early 5 h-long saline hypothermia treatment without opening the dural sac could be more beneficial for tissue preservation and neurological outcome compared with hypothermia applied after durotomy.
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The present prospective, randomized, double-blinded, controlled study aimed to investigate the efficacy and safety of dexmedetomidine (DEX) combined with butorphanol for patient-controlled intravenous analgesia (PCIA) following total laparoscopic hysterectomy. A total of 88 patients undergoing total laparoscopic hysterectomy and receiving postoperative PCIA were divided into two groups following surgery. Patients received DEX 0.5 µg/kg intravenously in the DEX group or 0.9% normal saline in the control (CON) group following anesthesia induction. ⋯ There was no occurrence of serious adverse events, including respiratory depression, hypotension, bradycardia and somnolence. In conclusion, following total laparoscopic hysterectomy, the loading dose of DEX (0.5 µg/kg) followed by a continuous infusion as an adjunct to butorphanol PCIA resulted in effective analgesia, significant butorphanol sparing and less butorphanol-induced nausea and vomiting without excessive sedation or adverse effects. The trial registration number was ChiCTR1800015675 at the Chinese Clinical Trial Registry (chictr.org.cn) and the date of registration was 4th April 2018.
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Effects of minimally invasive plate-screw internal fixation and sacroiliac joint screw fixation in the treatment of posterior pelvic ring fracture were compared. Continuous selection of 20 cases of unstable pelvic posterior ring fractures, according to indications of operation, were divided into a group of 13 cases of plate-screw internal fixation and a group of 7 cases of sacroiliac joint screw fixation, and the operation effect and complications were compared. ⋯ The evaluation of clinical effects (based on the Majeed pelvic functional scoring criteria) and the evaluation of anatomic effects (based on Matta and Tornetta scoring criteria) between the two groups were compared, there was no statistically significant difference (P>0.05). Minimally invasive plate-screw internal fixation and sacroiliac joint screw fixation in the treatment of the posterior pelvic instability fracture both have indications and their therapeutic effects are equally matched.