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海南医科大学学报(英文版)
海南医科大学学报(英文版)

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海南医科大学学报(英文版)/Journal Journal of Hainan Medical University
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    Research progress and comparison of the establishment of animal models of radiotherapy or chemotherapy-induced oral mucositis

    Chen ChenRan YuDong-Mei ChenChao Deng...
    59-63页
    查看更多>>摘要:The mechanism of radiotherapy or chemotherapy-induced oral mucositis is not yet clear.And model establishment is needed in further study.In order to summarize the methods of model establishment and make a comparison,literature databases including Web of Science、Pubmed and CNKI were searched for related researches from January 2015 to January 2021. Hamsters, mice, rats,guinea pigs and miniature pigs were chosen to be modeling animals and modeling methods could be classified into: chemotherapy, chemotherapy combined with superficial mucosal irritation, radiotherapy, radiotherapy combined with superficial mucosal irritation and chemoradiotherapy. Advantages and disadvantages had been analyzed in this study to provide reference for following studies.

    Research progress of autophagy in acute lung injury induced by multiple factors

    Qiu-Cheng LiQi LiPan-Hong JiaShao-Ning Li...
    64-70页
    查看更多>>摘要:Autophagy is a highly conserved catabolic process, involving the degradation of cellular components, including damaged organelles, denatured proteins and various pathogens. It is a defense and stress mechanism for maintaining cell and tissue homeostasis. More and more evidences show that autophagy is closely related to many diseases. Acute lung injury is caused by intrapulmonary or extrapulmonary factors, with hypoxia and low lung compliance as the main manifestations. At present, its pathogenesis is not clear. It is known that the imbalance of inflammatory response and oxidative stress mechanism are the important mechanisms of its occurrence. The inflammatory response caused by acute lung injury has been reported to involve a series of changes in autophagy expression. Autophagy may be protective or harmful in acute lung injury. This article will summarize the respective roles of autophagy in acute lung injury caused by infectious factors (such as pathogen infection, lipopolysaccharide, sepsis) and non-infectious factors (acute pancreatitis, chlorine poisoning), so as to provide new ideas and strategies for better prevention of acute lung injury.