Publications by authors named "Xiao-Zhong Luo"

Article Synopsis
  • - The study investigates how various factors relate to the development of redundant nerve roots (RNRs) in patients with lumbar spinal stenosis, analyzing clinical data from 116 individuals treated between January 2016 and June 2019.
  • - Patients were categorized into two groups based on the presence or absence of RNRs found through MRI scans; the RNRs group comprised 42 patients while the non-RNRs group had 74.
  • - Results showed that 36.2% of patients developed RNRs, with no significant differences in demographics (like age and gender) or preoperative pain levels between the two groups, although there were notable differences in symptom duration.
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Leveraging emerging opportunities in data science to open new frontiers in heart, lung, blood, and sleep research is one of the major strategic objectives of the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI), one of the 27 Institutes/Centers within the National Institutes of Health (NIH). To assess NHLBI's recent funding of research grants in data science and to identify its relative areas of focus within data science, a portfolio analysis from fiscal year 2008 to fiscal year 2017 was performed. In this portfolio analysis, an efficient and reliable methodology was used to identify data science research grants by utilizing several NIH databases and search technologies (iSearch, Query View Reporting system, and IN-SPIRE [Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, Richland, WA]).

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The National Institutes of Health have made substantial investments in genomic studies and technologies to identify DNA sequence variants associated with human disease phenotypes. The National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute has been at the forefront of these commitments to ascertain genetic variation associated with heart, lung, blood, and sleep diseases and related clinical traits. Genome-wide association studies, exome- and genome-sequencing studies, and exome-genotyping studies of the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute-funded epidemiological and clinical case-control studies are identifying large numbers of genetic variants associated with heart, lung, blood, and sleep phenotypes.

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