Publications by authors named "Juhua Liang"

Objectives: This study was implemented to reveal the expression and the clinical correlation of matrix metalloproteinases (MPSs) with connective tissue disease (CTD) complicated with interstitial lung disease (ILD).

Patients And Methods: This clinical study was conducted with 260 patients (151 males, 109 females; mean age: 47.3±12.

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In this paper, we investigate the effects of vanadium on the strength and ductility of medium-manganese steels by analyzing the microstructural evolution and strain hardening rates and performing quantitative calculations. Two significantly different contents of vanadium, 0.05 and 0.

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Ubiquitin D (UBD), a member of the ubiquitin‑like modifier family, has been reported to be highly expressed in various types of cancer and its overexpression is positively associated with tumor progression. However, the role and mechanism of UBD in rheumatoid arthritis (RA) remain elusive. In the present study, the gene expression profiles of GSE55457 were downloaded from the Gene Expression Omnibus database to assess differentially expressed genes and perform functional enrichment analyses.

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Article Synopsis
  • * The research identified specific rates of α-thalassemia (17.52%), β-thalassemia (6.92%), and concurrent types (2.32%), along with multiple associated gene mutations and genotypes.
  • * Findings suggest that a significant proportion of couples are at risk of having children with severe forms of thalassemia, highlighting the need for effective genetic counseling and preventive strategies.
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In this paper, we developed a novel resistant equation of pest to pesticide with external~induced resistance and genetic resistance, and then the analytical formula of this equation under different level of dominance of resistance allele is given. Further, we proposed the new methods of modelling pest populations with discrete generations and impulsive chemical control and developed a multi-scale system combining descriptions of pest populations and their genetic evolution. The threshold condition~of pest eradication solution was investigated in more detail, which allows us to address the optimal time when different types of pesticides should be switched.

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Objective: To analyze the incidence, genotype and hematological feature of hemoglobin H (HbH) disease in West Guangxi region.

Methods: A total of 1246 patients diagnosed with HbH disease from January 2013 to December 2018 in our hospital were enrolled. Red blood cell parameters, hemoglobin electrophoresis, Gap-polymerase china reaction (Gap-PCR) and polymerase chain reaction-reverse dot blot (PCR-RDB) techniques were used to detect the 6 common α-thalassemia mutations and 17 common β-thalassemia mutations.

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Objectives: Since January 23, 2020, stringent measures for controlling the novel coronavirus epidemic have been gradually enforced and strengthened in mainland China. The detection and diagnosis have been improved, as well. However, the daily reported cases remaining at a high level make the epidemic trend prediction difficult.

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Objectives: Since January 23rd 2020, stringent measures for controlling the novel coronavirus epidemics have been gradually enforced and strengthened in mainland China. The detection and diagnosis have been improved as well. However, the daily reported cases staying in a high level make the epidemics trend prediction difficult.

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Hormesis, a phenomenon whereby exposure to high levels of stressors is inhibitory but low (mild, sublethal and subtoxic) doses are stimulatory, challenges decision-making in the management of cancer, neurodegenerative diseases, nutrition and ecotoxicology. In the latter, increasing amounts of a pesticide may lead to upsurges rather than declines of pests, ecological paradoxes that are difficult to predict. Using a novel re-formulation of the Ricker population equation, we show how interactions between intervention strengths and dose timings, dose-response functions and intrinsic factors can model such paradoxes and hormesis.

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The development of pesticide resistance significantly affects the outcomes of pest control. A quantitative depiction of the effects of pesticide resistance development on integrated pest management (IPM) strategies and pest control outcomes is challenging. To address this problem, a discrete host-parasitoid model with pesticide resistance development and IPM strategies is proposed and analyzed.

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Endosymbiotic Wolbachia bacteria are widely applied for the control of dengue fever by manipulating the reproductive mechanism of mosquitoes, including maternal inheritance and cytoplasmic incompatibility (CI). CI means that the offsprings from the matings between Wolbachia infected males and uninfected females can not be hatched. At present, CI effect is assumed as a constant in most of dynamic systems for the spread of Wolbachia.

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Integrated pest management options such as combining chemical and biological control are optimal for combating pesticide resistance, but pose questions if a pest is to be controlled to extinction. These questions include (i) what is the relationship between the evolution of pesticide resistance and the number of natural enemies released? (ii) How does the cumulative number of natural enemies dying affect the number of natural enemies to be released? To address these questions, we developed two novel pest-natural enemy interaction models incorporating the evolution of pesticide resistance. We investigated the number of natural enemies to be released when threshold conditions for the extinction of the pest population in two different control tactics are reached.

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After a pest develops resistance to a pesticide, switching between different unrelated pesticides is a common management option, but this raises the following questions: (1) What is the optimal frequency of pesticide use? (2) How do the frequencies of pesticide applications affect the evolution of pesticide resistance? (3) How can the time when the pest population reaches the economic injury level (EIL) be estimated and (4) how can the most efficient frequency of pesticide applications be determined? To address these questions, we have developed a novel pest population growth model incorporating the evolution of pesticide resistance and pulse spraying of pesticides. Moreover, three pesticide switching methods, threshold condition-guided, density-guided and EIL-guided, are modelled, to determine the best choice under different conditions with the overall aim of eradicating the pest or maintaining its population density below the EIL. Furthermore, the pest control outcomes based on those three pesticide switching methods are discussed.

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Impulsive differential equations (hybrid dynamical systems) can provide a natural description of pulse-like actions such as when a pesticide kills a pest instantly. However, pesticides may have long-term residual effects, with some remaining active against pests for several weeks, months or years. Therefore, a more realistic method for modelling chemical control in such cases is to use continuous or piecewise-continuous periodic functions which affect growth rates.

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