Publications by authors named "Wenqing Bu"

Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates the impact of orthodontic treatment on 3D facial recognition, crucial for personal identification in forensic medicine.
  • It involved 68 orthodontic patients (30 with tooth extractions, 38 without) and a control group of 30 individuals, with facial models acquired before and after treatment.
  • Results indicated that orthodontic treatment does not significantly affect 3D-3D facial recognition, with an average root mean square value showing high accuracy in identifying matches versus mismatches among individuals.
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Objectives: Periodontitis is a prevalent oral disease that can significantly impact patients' life quality and systemic health. However, non-surgical subgingival scaling is largely compromised due to poor patient compliance, leading to a high recurrence rate of periodontitis. Therefore, this research aims to explore new approaches to enhance the effectiveness of existing local drug administration therapies.

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Brain tumors such as glioblastomas are resistant to immune checkpoint blockade therapy, largely due to limited T cell infiltration in the tumors. Here, we show that mice bearing intracranial tumors exhibit systemic immunosuppression and T cell sequestration in bone marrow, leading to reduced T cell infiltration in brain tumors. Elevated plasma corticosterone drives the T cell sequestration via glucocorticoid receptors in tumor-bearing mice.

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  • The study aims to evaluate the effectiveness of combining Demirjian's method with machine learning algorithms for estimating dental age in northern Chinese Han youth.
  • A dataset of over 10,000 panoramic images of Han individuals aged 5 to 24 was analyzed using various machine learning techniques, revealing that support vector regression (SVR) and gradient boosting regression (GBR) performed best for females and males, respectively.
  • The findings indicated that the optimal machine learning model achieved a mean absolute error of around 1.25 years, showing good estimation accuracy for individuals under 18, although it struggled with adult age estimations.
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Article Synopsis
  • RAD51 is a protein important for fixing DNA and is necessary for proper liver development and function after birth.
  • Researchers created special mice that lack RAD51 in their liver cells to study how it affects liver growth and healing.
  • They found that without RAD51, the mice had problems with liver cell growth and developed serious liver issues, but they seemed to handle certain liver injuries better.
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Background: Sex estimate is a key stage in forensic science for identifying individuals. Some anatomical structures may be useful for sex estimation since they retain their integrity even after highly severe events. However, few studies are focusing on the Chinese population.

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Sex estimation based on teeth could help to narrow the scope for individual identification. According to the different teeth morphology among both genders, we plan to establish a sex estimation method for the northern Chinese population through mesiodistal diameter and teeth volume measurements and compare the accuracy of the two methods. In this study, measurements were taken from cone-beam computed tomography images collected from 142 males and 140 females aged 21-59 years.

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Bone age, as a measure of biological age (BA), plays an important role in a variety of fields, including forensics, orthodontics, sports, and immigration. Despite its significance, accurate estimation of BA remains a challenge due to the uncertainty error between BA and chronological age (CA) caused by individual diversity and the difficult integration of multiple factors, such as sex, and identified or measured anatomical structures, into the estimation process. To address problems, we propose an uncertainty-aware and sex-prior guided biological age estimation from orthopantomogram images (OPGs), named UASP-BAE, which models uncertainty errors while setting sex dimorphism as tractive features to enhance age-related specific features, aiming to improve the accuracy of BA estimation.

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Sex estimation is very important in forensic applications as part of individual identification. Morphological sex estimation methods predominantly focus on anatomical measurements. Based on the close relationship between sex chromosome genes and facial characterization, craniofacial hard tissues morphology shows sex dimorphism.

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Objectives: To investigate hyoid bone position and airway volume in subjects with adenoid hypertrophy, tonsillar hypertrophy, and adenotonsillar hypertrophy compared to subjects with nonobstructive adenoids or tonsils and to assess the correlation between hyoid bone and airway parameters.

Materials And Methods: A total of 121 subjects were grouped based on adenoid or tonsillar hypertrophy into four groups, as follows: (1) control group (C-group), (2) adenoid hypertrophy group (AH-group), (3) adenotonsillar hypertrophy group (ATH-group), and (4) tonsillar hypertrophy group (TH-group). Hyoid bone position and airway volumes were measured.

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Background: Mouth breathing (MB) can affect morphological changes in the craniofacial structures, electromyography is widely used for quantitative analysis of muscle function.

Objective: The aim was to evaluate the electromyographic (EMG) activities of the anterior temporalis (TA), masseter muscle (MM), orbicularis oris superior (OOS) and mentalis muscle (MT) in children with different vertical skeletal patterns and breathing modes during rest and various functional mandibular movements.

Methods: BioEMG III was used to measure the variations in EMG activities of TA, MM, OOS, and MT in 185 subjects aged 6-12 years during continuous clenching, rest, maximal intercuspation, lips closed lightly and swallowing.

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Objectives: This study aimed to examine the clinical effects of myofunctional treatment on children with functional mouth breathing by cephalometric radiographs and study models.

Methods: A total of 224 children (6-10 years old; 114 males and 110 females; SNA°: 82.24 ± 1.

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Objective: This study aimed to investigate whether the subjects with mouth breathing (MB) or nasal breathing (NB) with different sagittal skeletal patterns showed different maxillary arch and pharyngeal airway characteristics.

Methods: Cone-beam computed tomography scans from 70 children aged 10 to 12 years with sagittal skeletal Classes I and II were used to measure the pharyngeal airway, maxillary width, palatal area, and height. The independent t-test and the Mann-Whitney U test were used for the intragroup analysis of pharyngeal airway and maxillary arch parameters.

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Introduction: This study aimed to compare the predicted maxillary molar distalization with the achieved clinical outcome using the palatal rugae area for registration and superimposition of digital models. Understanding Invisalign efficiency may assist clinicians in predicting changes, thus applying specific measures to minimize the chance of midcourse correction later.

Methods: The study sample included 38 patients with a mean age of 25.

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Reactive oxygen species (ROS) serve as critical signals in various cellular processes. Excessive ROS cause cell death or senescence and mediates the therapeutic effect of many cancer drugs. Recent studies showed that ROS increasingly accumulate during G2/M arrest, the underlying mechanism, however, has not been fully elucidated.

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Autophagy has been well documented to play an important role in maintaining genomic stability. However, in addition to directly engulfing and digesting the damaged organelles and chromatin fragments, autophagy can affect many cellular processes including DNA damage response, regulation of redox homeostasis, and cell division; it remains to be determined to what extent each of those processes contributes to the maintenance of genomic stability. We here examined the role of autophagy-dependent redox regulation in the maintenance of genomic stability in two cancer cell lines (HT1080 and U2OS) and mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) using micronuclei MN, also referred to as cytoplasmic chromatin fragments, as a marker.

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