Publications by authors named "Qingquan Bai"

With the continuous advancements of laparoscopic techniques, many surgeons have enhanced the feasibility and safety of this approach for carefully selected patients. This study aims to offer a comprehensive account of the technical aspects and surgical outcomes associated with laparoscopic anatomical right hepatectomy, explicitly utilizing a four-incision anterior approach. The surgical procedure involved several maneuvers, including blocking the Glissonean pedicle, ligation of the right hepatic artery, right branch of the portal vein, and the right hepatic duct, removal of the liver parenchyma along the ischemic line, and determination of the liver section based on four anatomical landmarks: the right anterior Glissonian pedicle, middle hepatic vein, root of the right hepatic vein, and retrohepatic inferior vena cava.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Exposure to pollutants is a potentially crucial but overlooked driver of population declines in shorebirds along the East Asian-Australasian Flyway. We combined knowledge of moult strategy and life history with a standardised sampling protocol to assess mercury (Hg) contamination in 984 individuals across 33 migratory shorebird species on an intercontinental scale. Over one-third of the samples exceeded toxicity benchmarks.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Introduction: Immune cells play crucial roles in the development of chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection, leading to cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). However, their functions at different disease stages are not fully understood.

Methods: In this study, we used single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq) to characterize the human liver immune microenvironment at different disease stages.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background & Aims: HBV infection is one of the leading causes of liver cirrhosis. However, the immune microenvironment in patients with HBV cirrhosis remains elusive.

Methods: Single-cell RNA sequencing was used to analyse the transcriptomes of 76,210 immune cells in the livers of six healthy individuals and in five patients with HBV cirrhosis.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Deoxyribonuclease (DNase) is an enzyme that catalyzes the cleavage of phosphodiester bonds in the main chain of DNA to degrade DNA. DNase serves a vital role in several immune-related diseases. The present study linked the expression of DNase with overall survival (OS), performed pan-cancer co-expression analysis, and assessed the association between DNase and immune infiltration subtypes, tumor microenvironment and drug sensitivity through pan-cancer studies.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Pyroptosis is a type of programmed cell death that is generally upregulated during atherosclerosis (AS). Magnesium, an important cation in the body, has exhibited an antiatherosclerotic effect. We collected AS model datasets from the Gene Expression Omnibus (GEO) and explored the correlation between pyroptosis and AS through a series of bioinformatics methods.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Emerging evidence is demonstrating that rapid regeneration of remnant liver elicited by associating liver partition and portal vein ligation for staged hepatectomy (ALPPS) may be attenuated in fibrotic livers. However, the molecular mechanisms responsible for this process are largely unknown. It is widely acknowledged that the TGFβ1 signaling axis plays a major role in liver fibrosis.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A further understanding of the molecular mechanism of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is necessary to predict a patient's prognosis and develop new targeted gene drugs. This study aims to identify essential genes related to HCC. We used the Weighted Gene Co-expression Network Analysis (WGCNA) and differential gene expression analysis to analyze the gene expression profile of GSE45114 in the Gene Expression Omnibus (GEO) database and The Cancer Genome Atlas database (TCGA).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Organisms cope with environmental stressors by behavioral, morphological, and physiological adjustments. Documentation of such adjustments in the wild provides information on the response space in nature and the extent to which behavioral and bodily adjustments lead to appropriate performance effects. Here we studied the morphological and digestive adjustments in a staging population of migrating Great Knots in response to stark declines in food abundance and quality at the Yalu Jiang estuarine wetland (northern Yellow Sea, China).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF