ObjectiveTo assess the association of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) gene-460C/T and-634C/G polymorphism with diabetic retinopathy (DR) among patients in Asia and European by meta-analysis. MethodsA systematic search of electronic databases (PubMed, Cochrane Library, EMBASE, VIP, Wanfang technological, CNKI, etc.) was carried out until Jun, 2014. Case-control studies on the relationship between genetic polymorphism of VEGF-460C/T and VEGF-634C/G with diabetic retinopathy were included in this analysis. The data were quantitatively analyzed by RevMan 5.0 software after assessing the quality of included studies. The pooled odds ratios (OR) and their corresponding 95% confidence intervals (CI) were used to assess the strength of the association. ResultsVEGF-460C/T (7 studies:899 cases and 786 controls) and VEGF-634C/G (10 studies:1615 cases and 1861 controls) were inclued in this meta-analysis. Significant association was found for-460C/T polymorphism in Aisa (C versus T:OR=1.52, 95%CI was, Z=3.72, P=0.0002; CC versus CT+TT:OR=1.61, 95%CI was[1.22, 1.90], Z=3.05, P=0.002; TT versus CT+CC:OR=0.64, 95%CI was[1.19, 2.19], Z=2.07, P=0.04), and VEGF-634CC gene type was associated with DR in European (OR=1.56, 95%CI[1.08, 2.25], Z=2.37, P=0.02). No significant publication bias was found. ConclusionsThe meta-analysis demonstrated that DR was associated with VEGF-460C/T polymorphism in Asia, and C alleles and CC gene type was the risk polymorphism; VEGF-634C/G polymorphism was not associated with DR, but its CC genotype maybe the risk factor in European. Further case-control studies based on larger sample size are still needed, especially for-634C/G polymorphism.
ObjectiveTo observe the frequency and severity of carotid atherosclerotic stenosis in senior chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) patients and explore the related risk factors in order to provide a theoretical basis for the effective prevention of cardiovascular comorbidity in COPD. MethodsStable COPD out-patients followed up in Sichuan Provincial People's Hospital were prospectively enrolled between August 2012 and August 2015, who had carotid atherosclerosis confirmed by cervical vascular color ultrasonic inspection within 3 months. All the patients were divided into a carotid stenosis group and a non-carotid stenosis group. Demographic and laboratory data were extracted and compared between two groups. Pearson correlation and Logistic regression analysis were performed to analyze the risk factors related to carotid stenosis. ResultsOf 380 consecutive senior patients with COPD and carotid atherosclerosis, 199 (52.37%) had carotid stenosis. Compared with those without carotid stenosis, the patients in the carotid stenosis group had significantly higher levels of hypersensitive C reactive protein (hs-CRP), uric acid (UA), brain natriuretic peptide (BNP) and smoking index (P < 0.05). Lower levels of forced expiratory volume in one second (FEV1%) and body mass index (BMI) were also observed in the carotid stenosis group (P < 0.05). Pearson correlation and logistic regression analysis showed that hs-CRP (OR 1.040, 95%CI 1.011-3.070), UA (OR 1.003, 95%CI 1.000-2.006), FEV1 (OR 0.899, 95%CI 0.200-5.722), smoking index (OR 1.002, 95%CI 1.001-2.904) and BMI (OR 0.955, 95%CI 0.312-4.866) were associated with carotid stenosis. ConclusionsCarotid atherosclerotic stenosis is common in senior COPD patients. Higher levels of hs-CRP, UA and smoking index and lower levels of FEV1 and BMI may be independent risk factors for carotid stenosis in COPD.