Publications by authors named "Dongsheng Ye"

Article Synopsis
  • Recent trials indicate that patients with large ischemic cores benefit more from endovascular thrombectomy (EVT) than standard medical treatment (SMT), prompting a study on how this benefit varies by occlusion location.
  • The study analyzed 745 patients with acute large vessel occlusions, assessing outcomes using the modified Rankin Scale and focusing on symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage as a safety measure.
  • Results showed better outcomes for patients with internal carotid artery and M1 segment occlusions after EVT, while the benefit for M2 segment occlusions was unclear and there was a higher risk of hemorrhage with EVT across all groups.
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Background: Clinical evidence of the potential influence of stress hyperglycemia ratio (SHR) for patients with large ischemic stroke whether or not receiving endovascular therapy is not clear.

Methods: This study was a subanalysis of a prospective, multicenter registry, and included 745 patients with large ischemic stroke across 38 centers in China. A total of 427 patients were included in this study, with 285 received endovascular therapy (EVT) and 142 received standard medical therapy (SMT).

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Adversarial examples present a severe threat to deep neural networks' application in safetycritical domains such as autonomous driving. Although there are numerous defensive solutions, they all have some flaws, such as the fact that they can only defend against adversarial attacks with a limited range of adversarial intensities. Therefore, there is a need for a detection method that can distinguish the adversarial intensity in a fine-grained manner so that subsequent tasks can perform different defense processing against perturbations of various intensities.

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(KARI) catalyzes the conversion of ()-2-acetolactate or ()-2-aceto-2-hydroxybutyrate to 2,3-dihydroxy-3-alkylbutyrate, the second step in the biosynthesis of branched chain amino acids (BCAAs). Because the BCAA biosynthetic pathway is present in bacteria, plants, and fungi, but absent in animals, it is an excellent target for the development of new-generation antibiotics and herbicides. Nevertheless, the mechanism of the KARI-catalyzed reaction has not yet been fully solved.

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