Publications by authors named "Suyang Cui"

Postoperative gastrointestinal disorder (POGD) was a common complication after surgery under anesthesia. Strategies in combination with Traditional Chinese Medicine and Western medicine showed some distinct effects but standardized clinical practice guidelines were not available. Thus, a multidisciplinary expert team from various professional bodies including the Perioperative and Anesthesia Professional Committees of the Chinese Association of Integrative Medicine (CAIM), jointly with Gansu Province Clinical Research Center of Integrative Anesthesiology/Anesthesia and Pain Medical Center of Gansu Provincial Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine and WHO Collaborating Center for Guideline Implementation and Knowledge Translation/Chinese Grading of Recommendations, Assessment, Development, and Evaluation (GRADE) Center/Gansu Provincial Center for Medical Guideline Industry Technology/Evidence-based Medicine Center of Lanzhou University, was established to develop evidence-based guidelines.

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This study is aimed at investigating the association between the electroacupuncture (EA) pretreatment-induced protective effect against early cerebral ischemic injury and autophagy. EA pretreatment can protect cerebral ischemic and reperfusion injuries, but whether the attenuation of early cerebral ischemic injury by EA pretreatment was associated with autophagy is not yet clear. This study used the middle cerebral artery occlusion model to monitor the process of ischemic injury.

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Cardiac dysfunction is a critical event during sepsis/septic shock. Tanshinone IIA (TIIA), a compound extracted from herb medicine Danshen, has been shown possessing anti-inflammatory and anti-oxidative properties. It is possible, therefore, that treatment with TIIA may attenuate cardiac dysfunction during sepsis/septic shock through inhibition of inflammation.

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Disruption of the blood-brain barrier (BBB) and subsequent brain edema are major contributors to the pathogenesis of ischemic stroke, however, current clinical therapeutic methods remains unsatisfactory. Electroacupuncture (EA) pretreatment has a protective effect against cerebral ischemia/reperfusion (I/R). However, the underlying mechanisms remain to be fully elucidated.

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Electroacupuncture (EA) pretreatment has been reported to induce tolerance against cerebral ischemia/reperfusion (I/R) injury; however, the mechanisms underlying the beneficial effects of EA remain to be elucidated. Increasing evidence has suggested that excess activation of autophagy is important in I/R injury. The present study aimed to investigate the hypothesis that EA pretreatment‑induced tolerance to cerebral I/R injury was mediated by inhibition of the autophagy pathway.

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Aim. This study investigated the effect of P6 EA on droperidol-induced QTc interval prolongation and Cx43 expression in ventricular muscle of rats. Methods.

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Sufentanil is a new kind of opioid analgesic and acts on μ opioid receptor. In this study, we aim to investigate the effects of sufentanil on gastric cancer cell line SGC-7901, after being exposed to different concentrations of sufentanil. Gastric cancer cells were exposed to sufentanil for a predetermined time at concentrations of 0, 0.

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Objective: To observe the effects of electroacupuncture (EA) of different intensities on lactate dehydrogernase (LDH), succinate dehydrogenase (SDH) and ATPase in brain tissue of rats with cerebral ischemia-reperfusion injury (CI/R).

Methods: Forty male SD rats were uniformly randomized into sham operation group (group A), CI/R group (group B), CI/R+5 mA EA (group C), CI/R+3 mA EA (group D) and CI/R+1 mA EA (group E) groups with eight rats in each group. Transient general brain ischemia was induced by four-vessel occlusion and reperfusion.

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Objective: To evaluate the protective effects of sodium aescinate (SA) preconditioning on the tourniquet-induced ischemia-reperfusion (I/R) injury after limbs operation.

Methods: Seventy-five patients with grade I-II issued by American Society of Anesthesiology undergoing lower limb operation were randomly assigned to 3 groups: the control group, low-dose SA-treated group and high-dose SA-treated group; each group enrolled 25 patients. The patients were treated with 5 mg and 10 mg SA 30 min before tourniquet inflation in the two treatment groups separately, while the patients in the control group received normal saline.

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Objective: To improve the treatment of severe hypoxaemia in patients with pulmonary alveolar proteinosis (PAP).

Methods: The clinical data of a patient with pathologically proven PAP treated with whole-lung lavage utilizing extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) were described and the literature was reviewed.

Results: This 57-year-old man was admitted because of cough and progressive dyspnea for 12 months.

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