Publications by authors named "W T Yeung"

Background: The prevalence of age-related eye disorders is increasing with the aging of the global population. Community-based visual health education for the elderly has become a crucial intervention. With the advancement of technology, the application of extended reality (XR), such as virtual reality (VR) and augmented reality (AR), in health education has become more popular.

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Understanding human endometrial dynamics in the establishment of endometrial receptivity remains a challenge, which limits early diagnosis and treatment of endometrial-factor infertility. Here, we decode the endometrial dynamics of fertile women across the window of implantation and characterize the endometrial deficiency in women with recurrent implantation failure. A computational model capable of both temporal prediction and pattern discovery is used to analyze single-cell transcriptomic data from over 220,000 endometrial cells.

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Stress is a key factor in psychotic relapse, and mindfulness offers stress resilience and well-being benefits. This study examined the effects of mindfulness-based intervention for psychosis (MBI-p) in preventing relapse at 1 year among patients with remitted psychosis in Hong Kong. MBI-p is a newly developed manual-based mindfulness protocol and was tested to have improved well-being and clinical outcomes in a pilot study with remitted psychosis patients.

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Article Synopsis
  • Levonorgestrel (LNG) is primarily used as an emergency contraceptive by delaying ovulation, and this study aimed to explore its effects on the human Fallopian tube's ciliary movement and muscle contractions.
  • In an experimental setup using tissue samples from women, the researchers tested LNG at various concentrations to see any changes in ciliary beat frequency and muscular contractions.
  • Results showed that while LNG did not significantly affect ciliary movement or muscle tone, the highest concentration (100 ng/ml) did reduce muscular contractions, indicating that the Fallopian tube is not likely a target for LNG's contraceptive effects at typical emergency contraception doses.
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Postoperative cognitive dysfunction (POCD) is a common complication that affects memory, executive function, and processing speed postoperatively. The pathogenesis of POCD is linked to excessive neuroinflammation and pre-existing Alzheimer's disease (AD) pathology. Previous studies have shown that acupuncture improves cognition in the early phase of POCD.

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