west china medical publishers
Author
  • Title
  • Author
  • Keyword
  • Abstract
Advance search
Advance search

Search

find Author "AI Cong" 2 results
  • The incidence of post-myocardial infarction depression among acute myocardial infarction patients in China during the 2000s: a meta-analysis

    Objective To estimate the incidence of post-myocardial infarction depression among Chinese acute myocardial infarction (AMI) patients by meta-analysis and to provide references for the management of AMI patients. Methods We searched databases including PubMed, The Cochrane Library (Issue 6, 2016), CNKI, CBM, WanFang Data and VIP from January 2000 to July 2016, to collect literature regarding the incidence of post-myocardial infarction depression among patients with AMI. Two reviewers independently screened literature, extracted data and evaluated the methodological quality of the included studies. Then meta-analysis was performed by using Comprehensive Meta Analysis (CMA) 2.0 software. Results Totally, 22 cross-sectional studies were included, involving 2 986 AMI patients, of which1 239 were post-myocardial infarction depression patients. The overall incidence of post-myocardial infarction depression among the AMI patients was 42.7% (95%CI 36.3% to 49.4%). There was no statistical differences observed when the studies were stratified by sex, regions, scales and years (allP values>0.05). Conclusion In China, the incidence of post-myocardial infarction depression is high and rising year by year roughly among AMI patients. The status should be paid more attention.

    Release date:2017-01-18 07:50 Export PDF Favorites Scan
  • Cadmium exposure and the risk of hypertension: a meta-analysis

    ObjectivesTo systematically review the relationship between cadmium exposure and the risk of hypertension.MethodsPubMed, EMbase, The Cochrane Library, CBM, WanFang Data, VIP and CNKI databases were searched online to collect studies of cadmium exposure and hypertension from inception to March 2018. Two reviewers independently screened literature, extracted data and assessed the risk of bias of included studies. Meta-analysis was then performed by Stata 12.0 software.ResultsA total of 9 studies were included, of which 19 841 cases were patients of hypertension, and 27 578 cases were in the control group. The results of meta-analysis showed that blood cadmium was associated with risk of hypertension (OR=1.23, 95%CI 1.17 to 1.30, P<0.001). However, no significant association was found between urinary cadmium and the risk of hypertension (OR=0.77, 95%CI 0.55 to 1.07,P=0.61). The results of subgroup analysis showed non-smokers (OR=1.19, 95%CI 1.09 to 1.31, P<0.001), males (OR=1.19, 95%CI 1.11 to 1.28,P<0.001), females (OR=1.28, 95%CI 1.18 to 1.40,P<0.001), yellow race (OR=1.26, 95%CI 1.19 to 1.34,P<0.001), and the literatures published after 2010 (OR=1.24, 95%CI 1.17 to 1.31,P<0.001) were associated with risk of hypertension in blood cadmium. The current smokers (OR=0.72, 95%CI 0.56 to 0.93,P=0.013), yellow race (OR=0.65, 95%CI 0.50 to 0.83, P=0.001), and the literatures published before 2010(OR=0.61, 95%CI 0.50 to 0.75, P<0.001) were associated with risk of hypertension in urinary cadmium.ConclusionsBlood cadmium is associated with risk of hypertension and high level of blood cadmium is a risk factor for hypertension. The levels of blood cadmium of non-smokers, males, females, yellow race are associated with risk of hypertension in blood cadmium. Urinary cadmium was not significantly associated with the risk of hypertension. The above conclusions are required to be verified by more high quality studies.

    Release date:2018-10-19 01:55 Export PDF Favorites Scan
1 pages Previous 1 Next

Format

Content