Publications by authors named "Chang-min Lin"

Article Synopsis
  • * Data was collected from 705 patients in Taiwan, assessing perioperative outcomes and key oncological metrics like survival rates across the different surgical methods.
  • * Findings indicated that minimally invasive surgeries (laparoscopic and robotic) offered better overall and cancer-specific survival rates compared to open surgery, suggesting they are equally effective treatment options for locally advanced UTUC.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Increasing concerns about hair loss affect people's quality of life. Recent studies have found that sympathetic nerves play a positive role in regulating hair follicle stem cell activity to promote hair growth. However, no study has investigated sympathetic innervation of transplanted follicles.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • A study was conducted to examine how Schumann resonance (SR), a type of electromagnetic field, affects nocturia symptoms, quality of life, and sleep in patients with nocturia, alongside traditional medication (oxybutynin).
  • The research involved 35 participants divided into two groups: one received both SR treatment and medication, while the control group received only medication. Various questionnaires were used to assess their sleep quality and symptoms over 12 weeks.
  • Results showed significant improvements in sleep and quality of life in the SR group compared to the control, indicating that SR could be a beneficial treatment for enhancing sleep and alleviating symptoms related to nocturia.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Purpose: This study aimed to compare the oncological outcomes of patients with upper tract urothelial carcinoma (UTUC) without clinical lymph node metastasis (cN0) undergoing lymph node dissection (LND) during radical nephroureterectomy (NU).

Methods: From the updated data of the Taiwan UTUC Collaboration Group, a total of 2726 UTUC patients were identified. We only include patients with ≥ pT2 stage and enrolled 658 patients.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Extracellular signal-regulated kinase 8 (ERK8), proposed as a novel potential therapeutic target for cancer, has been implicated in cell transformation, apoptosis, the protection of genomic integrity, and autophagy. To facilitate ERK8 research, a highly specific anti-ERK8 antibody is needed. In this article, we use the Immune Epitope Database and Analysis Resource online tool to predict B-cell epitopes of human ERK8 protein, and choose a 28 aa-peptide sequence to generate the GST-ERK8(28aa) fusion protein as the antigen for developing polyclonal antibody against ERK8.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Alopecia is an exceedingly prevalent problem that lacks effective therapy. Recently, research has focused on early-passage dermal papilla cells (DPCs), which have hair inducing activity both in vivo and in vitro. Our previous study indicated that factors secreted from early-passage DPCs contribute to hair follicle (HF) regeneration.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Although mammals are notoriously poor at regeneration compared with many lower-order species, the hair follicle, particular to mammals, is capable of regeneration following partial amputation. The detailed internal mechanism of this phenomenon is still unclear. Development and regrowth of the hair follicle depends on dermal-epidermal interaction within the hair follicle.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The rat whisker hair follicle (HF) is a model for studying the reconstruction of the HF or dermal papilla (DP), and involves the Wnt/β-catenin signaling pathway, which is a key pathway in HF development and HF cycling after birth. It has been reported that Wnt/catenin signaling plays an indispensable role in human or rat pelages development and postnatal growth. However, the distribution of some Wnt/β-catenin signaling pathway factors and their relationship with the epithelial stem cell markers in whisker follicles has not been characterized.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Dermal papilla (DP) cells may be the source of dermal-derived signaling molecules involved in hair-follicle development and postnatal hair cycling. Early-passage DP cells can induce hair growth in vivo, but, on further culture, this ability is lost. The cellular mechanisms underlying the hair-follicle induction property of early-passage DP cells are unclear.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objective: To investigate whether the suppression of Wnt10b by siRNA could prevent the development of hair follicle in the cultured rat embryonic skin.

Methods: siRNA-Wnt10b was synthesized by chemosynthesis method. The dorsal skin of SD rat at embryos were cultured in DMEM in the presence of different percentage of interfering RNA targeting Wnt10b.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Effective delivery of therapeutic agents is the most challenging hurdle in the use of RNA interference for research and in the clinic. Here, we assessed whether a short synthetic peptide, ACSSSPSKHCG (TD-1), could be transported through rat footpad (follicle-free) skin and efficiently deliver small interfering RNA (siRNA) to knock down a target gene. Fluorescence microscopy revealed that topical co-administration of FITC-labeled TD-1 and FAM-labeled siRNA distributed uniformly from the epidermis to the subcutaneous tissue of rat footpad skin.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A well-defined, slow-flowing vascular lesion was found incidentally by Doppler abdominal sonography in the left renal hilar region of a 36-year-old Taiwanese woman. Clinically, the physical examination and laboratory screening were unremarkable. A magnetic resonance angiography of the area near the renal hilum showed a saccular mass (3.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A 16-year-old girl came to our emergency department because of severe headache. For the past 3 years, she had presented at several emergency departments with a similar problem. When she was hospitalized for further investigation, she developed severe arterial hypertension for which an unusual cause was found by imaging of the abdomen.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Although doctors try their best to protect transplants during surgery, there remain great challenges for the higher survival rate and less rejection of transplants after organ transplantation. Growing evidence indicates that the stem cells could function after injury rather than aging, implying that suitable injury may activate the stem cells of damaged organs. Furthermore, it has been revealed that stem cells can be used to induce tolerance in transplantation and the ultrasound has great biological effects on organs.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objective: To assess the impact of ketamine abuse on genitourinary tract dysfunction.

Methods: Eleven patients with urinary tract symptoms and a history of ketamine abuse in recent years were studied. Urinalysis, urine culture, renal function tests, abdominal sonography and urodynamic studies were done.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Hair loss affects many people, especially adult males. An effective treatment is hair transplantation which involves harvesting hair grafts from a donor site and relocating them to a bald site. However, this traditional method, equivalent to one-to-one transplantation, simply redistributes hair rather than increases the number of existing hairs.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objective: To induce hair follicle regeneration in rat ear by microencapsulated dermal papillae (DP) cells.

Methods: Intact dermal papillae were obtained from human scalp follicles which were digested with collagenase I. The human hair DP cells were encapsulated with alginate-polylysine-alginate (APA) by a high-voltage electric field droplet generator.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The mammalian brain exhibits diverse types of neural plasticity, including activity-dependent neurogenesis in the adult hippocampus. How transient activation of mature neurons leads to long-lasting modulation of adult neurogenesis is unknown. Here we identify Gadd45b as a neural activity-induced immediate early gene in mature hippocampal neurons.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Dermal papillae (DP) play a pivotal role in hair formation, growth and cycling. However, the number of DP is limited. In this study, we report the production of "reconstructed DP" by enclosing DP cells within an alginate-polylysine-alginate (APA) semipermeable membrane.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The aim of this study was to investigate reactive changes of astrocytes and Müller glial cells in rats subjected to kainate treatment, which leads to neuronal degeneration in the ganglion cell layer and the inner border of the inner nuclear layer as confirmed by labelling with Fluoro-Jade B, a marker for degenerating neurons and fibres. Both the astrocytes and the Müller glial cells reacted vigorously to kainate injection as shown by their up-regulated expression of nestin, glial fibrillary acidic protein and glutamine synthetase. A major finding was the induced expression of nestin together with glial fibrillary acidic protein beginning at 1 day post-injection of kainate.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objective: To induce the hair follicle regeneration in mice ear by microencapsulated dermal papillae cells (DPs) and to investigate the permeability of fluorescein in APA microencapsulation to search the ideal diameter of microencapsulation.

Methods: The DPs were encapsulated with alginate-polylysine-alginate by a high-voltage electric field droplet generator. The microencapsulated dermal papilla cells were xenotransplanted into the mice ears.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The present study was aimed to elucidate how retinal microglia/macrophages would respond to neuronal death after intravitreal kainate injection. An increased expression of the complement receptor type 3 (CR3) and an induction of the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class II and ED-1 antigens were mainly observed in the inner retina after kainate injection. Prominent cell death revealed by Fluoro Jade B (FJB) staining and ultrastructural examination appeared at the inner border of the inner nuclear layer (INL) at 1 day post-injection.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

An increase in incidence and severity of gram-positive infections has emerged in the past decade. In this regard, attention has been focused recently on immune responses of microglial cells in the central nervous system to gram-positive bacteria. The underlying immunological and cellular events in microglial activation induced by specific bacterial toxin of gram-positive bacteria, however, have not yet been clarified fully.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF