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Featured researches published by Gui Jin.


Biosensors and Bioelectronics | 2014

A new method for detecting cerebral hemorrhage in rabbits by magnetic inductive phase shift

Gui Jin; Jian Sun; Mingxin Qin; Qinghua Tang; Lin Xu; Xu Ning; Jia Xu; Xianjie Pu; Mingsheng Chen

Cerebral hemorrhage, which is an important clinical problem, is often monitored and studied using expensive devices, such as magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and positron emission tomography (PET) that are unavailable in economically underdeveloped regions. Magnetic induction tomography (MIT) is a new type of non-contact, non-invasive, and low-cost detection technology, and exhibits prospects for wide application, especially for the detection of brain diseases. However, the previous studies on MIT have focused on laboratory models and rarely on in vivo applications because the induced signals produced by biological tissues are notably weak. Based on the symmetry between the two brain hemispheres and the fact that a local brain hemorrhage will not affect the contra-lateral hemisphere, a symmetric cancellation-type sensor detection system, which is characterized by one excitation coil and two receiving coils, was designed to improve the detection sensitivity of MIT. This method was subsequently used to detect the occurrence of cerebral hematomas in rabbits. The average phase drift induced by a 3-ml injection of autologous blood was 1.885°, which is a fivefold improvement compared with the traditional single excitation coil and single receiving coil method. The results indicate that this system has high sensitivity and anti-interference ability and high practical value.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Detection of Cerebral Hemorrhage in Rabbits by Time-Difference Magnetic Inductive Phase Shift Spectroscopy

Wencai Pan; Qingguang Yan; Mingxin Qin; Gui Jin; Jian Sun; Xu Ning; Wei Zhuang; Bin Peng; Gen Li

Cerebral hemorrhage, a difficult issue in clinical practice, is often detected and studied with computed tomography (CT), magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), and positron emission tomography (PET). However, these expensive devices are not readily available in economically underdeveloped regions, and hence are unable to provide bedside and emergency on-site monitoring. The magnetic inductive phase shift (MIPS) is an emerging technology that may become a new tool to detect cerebral hemorrhage and to serve as an inexpensive partial substitute to medical imaging. In order to study a wider band of cerebral hemorrhage MIPS and to provide more useful information for measuring cerebral hemorrhage, we established a cerebral hemorrhage magnetic induction phase shift spectroscopy (MIPSS) detection system. Thirteen rabbits with five cerebral hemorrhage states were studied using a single coil-coil within a 1 MHz-200 MHz frequency range in linear sweep. A feature band (FB) with the highest detection sensitivity and the greatest stability was selected for further analysis and processing. In addition, a maximum conductivity cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) MRI was performed to verify and interpret the MIPSS result. The average phase shift change induced by a 3 ml injection of autologous blood under FB was -7.7503° ± 1.4204°, which was considerably larger than our previous work. Data analysis with a non-parametric statistical Friedman M test showed that in the FB, MIPSS could distinguish the five states of cerebral hemorrhage in rabbits, with a statistical significance of p<0.05. A B-F distribution profile was designed according to the MIPSS under FB that can provide instantaneous diagnostic information about the cerebral hemorrhage severity from a single set of measurements. The results illustrate that the MIPSS detection method is able to provide a new possibility for real-time monitoring and diagnosis of the severity of cerebral hemorrhage.


Brazilian Journal of Medical and Biological Research | 2014

Detection of acute cerebral hemorrhage in rabbits by magnetic induction

Jian Sun; Gui Jin; Mingxin Qin; Z.B. Wan; J.B. Wang; Chao Wang; Wanyou Guo; Lin Xu; Xu Ning; Jia Xu; Xianjie Pu; Mingsheng Chen; H.M. Zhao

Acute cerebral hemorrhage (ACH) is an important clinical problem that is often monitored and studied with expensive devices such as computed tomography, magnetic resonance imaging, and positron emission tomography. These devices are not readily available in economically underdeveloped regions of the world, emergency departments, and emergency zones. We have developed a less expensive tool for non-contact monitoring of ACH. The system measures the magnetic induction phase shift (MIPS) between the electromagnetic signals on two coils. ACH was induced in 6 experimental rabbits and edema was induced in 4 control rabbits by stereotactic methods, and their intracranial pressure and heart rate were monitored for 1 h. Signals were continuously monitored for up to 1 h at an exciting frequency of 10.7 MHz. Autologous blood was administered to the experimental group, and saline to the control group (1 to 3 mL) by injection of 1-mL every 5 min. The results showed a significant increase in MIPS as a function of the injection volume, but the heart rate was stable. In the experimental (ACH) group, there was a statistically significant positive correlation of the intracranial pressure and MIPS. The change of MIPS was greater in the ACH group than in the control group. This high-sensitivity system could detect a 1-mL change in blood volume. The MIPS was significantly related to the intracranial pressure. This observation suggests that the method could be valuable for detecting early warning signs in emergency medicine and critical care units.


PLOS ONE | 2014

A special phase detector for magnetic inductive measurement of cerebral hemorrhage.

Gui Jin; Jian Sun; Mingxin Qin; Chao Wang; Wanyou Guo; Qingguang Yan; Bin Peng; Wencai Pan

Cerebral hemorrhage is an important clinical problem that is often monitored and studied with expensive techniques, such as computed tomography (CT), magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), and positron emission tomography (PET). These devices are not readily available in economically underdeveloped regions of the world and in emergency departments and emergency zones. The magnetic inductive method is an emerging technology that may become a new tool to detect cerebral hemorrhage. In this study, a special phase detector (PD) was developed and used for cerebral hemorrhage detection with the magnetic inductive method. The performance indicated that the PD can achieve phase noise as low as 6 m° and a 4-hour phase drift as low as 30 m° at 21.4 MHz. The noise and drift decreased as the frequency decreased. The performance at 10.7 MHz was slightly better than that of other recently developed phase detection systems. To test the practicality of the system, the PD was used to detect the volume change in a self-made physical model of the brain. The measured phase shift was approximately proportional to the volume change of physiological saline inside the model. The change of the phase shift increased as the volume change and frequency increased. The results are in agreement with those from previous reports. To verify the feasibility of in vivo detection, an autologous blood injection model was established in rabbit brain. The results from the injection group showed a similar trend of increasing phase shift change with increasing injection volume. The average phase shift change induced by a 3-ml injection of blood was 0.502°±0.119°, which was much larger than that of the control group. The measurement system can distinguish a minimal cerebral hemorrhage volume of approximately 0.5 ml. All of the results demonstrated that the PD used with this method can detect cerebral hemorrhage.


international congress on image and signal processing | 2011

Study of PSSMI for cerebral hemorrhage detection: An experimental simulation

Lin Xu; Mingxin Qin; Gui Jin; Xu Ning; Jia Xu; Chao Wang; Wanyou Guo

Based on PSSMI we developed a new cerebral hemorrhage model and a new system for cerebral hemorrhage detection. This study evaluated experimentally the performance of our system through the simulation of phase shift measurements. Some phase shifts were measured at three operation frequencies. The phase resolution was up to 0.005° and the gain was −10∼35dB in the detection system. Different cerebral hemorrhage levels were simulated from 0 to 100 ml by volumes of saline solutions. The results of the experimental simulation show the phase shift is proportional to the volume, conductivity of the solution and the operation frequency. The experimental study provides obvious evidence that the PSSMI method has the potential to become a simple method for cerebral hemorrhage detection.


Journal of Physics: Conference Series | 2012

The detection of chronic cerebral hemorrhage in rabbits with magnetic induction

Jian Sun; Gui Jin; Mingxin Qin; Zibing Wan; Jinbao Wang; Wanyou Guo; Lin Xu; Xu Ning; Jia Xu; Xianjie Pu; Mingsheng Chen; Hongmei Zhao

Chronic cerebral hemorrhage (CCH) in the brain is an important clinical problem that is often monitored and studied with expensive devices such as MRI and PET, which are not readily available in low economical resource parts of the world. We have developed a less expensive tool for non-contact monitoring of CCH in the brain. The system measures the phase shift between the electromagnetic signals on the two coils. CCH was induced in the brain of rabbits by stereotactic method. Intracranial pressure (ICP) and Electrocardiograph (ECG) of subjects were monitored for 1.5h. Signals were continuously monitored up to t=1.5h at exciting frequency 10.7MHz. From 0.8 to 2.4 ml of autologous blood was injected (each injection quantity of 0.8 ml, the interval time for 30 minutes). The results show significant phase shifts increase as a function of injection volume. ICP and phase shift were directly proportional to the related, while HRV were stable around 200beats*min-1. Our system has high sensitivity that even 0.8 ml can also be detected. In this study, the curves of inductive phase shift are significantly related to ICP. This observation suggests that the method could be valuable, in addition to continuous monitoring, also for early warning in emergency medicine and critical care units.


Chinese Journal of Medical Physics | 2011

Experimental Study on Simulated Cerebral Edema Detection with PSSMI

Gui Jin; Mingxin Qin; Chao Wang; Wanyou Guo; Lin Xu; Xu Ning; Jia Xu; Dandan Gao

Based on PSSMI method, one new detection system and the physical model of cerebral edema, the experimental study of simulated detection of cerebral edema was carried out. We applied three kinds of excitation signals with different frequencies. Three kinds of NaCl solutions were used to simulate the brain tissue, cerebral edema and calibration solution, whose conductivities were 0.133s/m, 0.194s/m and 3.6s/m respectively. To simulate the volume change of cerebral edema, the solutions were increased from 5 to 100 ml with an infusion pump. The phase resolution was up to 0.005° and the range of the gain was -10~35dB in the detection system. The experimental results show that the phase shift is directly proportional to volume, conductivity and frequency. The experimental study suggests that the PSSMI method has the potential of being a simple method for cerebral edema detection.


Sensors | 2017

Twenty-Four-Hour Real-Time Continuous Monitoring of Cerebral Edema in Rabbits Based on a Noninvasive and Noncontact System of Magnetic Induction

Gen Li; Ke Ma; Jian Sun; Gui Jin; Mingxin Qin; Hua Feng

Cerebral edema is a common disease, secondary to craniocerebral injury, and real-time continuous monitoring of cerebral edema is crucial for treating patients after traumatic brain injury. This work established a noninvasive and noncontact system by monitoring the magnetic induction phase shift (MIPS) which is associated with brain tissue conductivity. Sixteen rabbits (experimental group n = 10, control group, n = 6) were used to perform a 24 h MIPS and intracranial pressure (ICP) simultaneously monitored experimental study. For the experimental group, after the establishment of epidural freeze-induced cerebral edema models, the MIPS presented a downward trend within 24 h, with a change magnitude of −13.1121 ± 2.3953°; the ICP presented an upward trend within 24 h, with a change magnitude of 12–41 mmHg. The ICP was negatively correlated with the MIPS. In the control group, the MIPS change amplitude was −0.87795 ± 1.5146 without obvious changes; the ICP fluctuated only slightly at the initial value of 12 mmHg. MIPS had a more sensitive performance than ICP in the early stage of cerebral edema. These results showed that this system is basically capable of monitoring gradual increases in the cerebral edema solution volume. To some extent, the MIPS has the potential to reflect the ICP changes.


Scientific Reports | 2017

Construction of a Cerebral Hemorrhage Test System Operated in Real-time.

Gen Li; Jian Sun; Ke Ma; Qingguang Yan; Xiaolin Zheng; Mingxin Qin; Gui Jin; Xu Ning; Wei Zhuang; Hua Feng; Shiyuwei Huang

The real-time monitoring and evaluation of the severity and progression of cerebral hemorrhage is essential to its intensive care and its successful emergency treatment. Based on magnetic induction phase shift technology combined with a PCI data acquisition system and LabVIEW software, this study established a real-time monitoring system for cerebral hemorrhage. To test and evaluate the performance of the system, the authors performed resolution conductivity experiments, salted water simulation experiments and cerebral hemorrhage experiments in rabbits and found that when the conductivity difference was 0.73 S/m, the phase difference was 13.196°. The phase difference change value was positively proportional to the volume of saline water, and the conductivity value was positively related to the phase difference of liquid under the same volume conditions. After injecting 3 mL blood into six rabbits, the average change in the blood phase difference was −2.03783 ± 0.22505°, and it was positively proportional to the volume of blood, which was consistent with the theoretical results. The results show that the system can monitor the progressive development of cerebral hemorrhage in real-time and has the advantages of low cost, small size, high phase accuracy, and good clinical application potentiality.


Biomedizinische Technik | 2017

Experimental study on the detection of rabbit intracranial hemorrhage using four coil structures based on magnetic induction phase shift.

Qingguang Yan; Gui Jin; Mingxin Qin; Jun Zhao; Jian Wang; Jian Sun

Abstract Intracranial hemorrhage (ICH) is the bleeding induced by parenchyma vascular rupture. In this paper, four novel coils (a contralateral hemisphere cancellation coil, a coaxial coil, a double-end exciting coil, and a Helmholtz coil) were developed to detect the volume change of ICH with the magnetic induction phase shift (MIPS) technique. Both numerical studies on an ICH model and animal experiments on rabbits’ hemorrhage model were performed with four coils. Twenty rabbits were measured for each coil. The animal results were consistent with the simulation and the theoretical analysis for each coil. The MIPS first declined and then increased with increasing injection volume, indicating the existence of a turning point. The MRI images showed that the average CSF decreased in the heads of five rabbits after blood injection was approximately equal to the average injection volume corresponding to the turning point of all animals. Thus, we concluded that when the MIPS turning point occurs, the CSF is already exhausted and the compensatory stage has ended. The results show that the MIPS technique has the potential to detect ICH growth and MIPS changes with increasing blood in a regular way. The turning point is expected to provide an early warning for ICH growth.

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Mingxin Qin

Third Military Medical University

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Jian Sun

Third Military Medical University

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Xu Ning

Third Military Medical University

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Gen Li

Chongqing University

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Jia Xu

Third Military Medical University

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Qingguang Yan

Third Military Medical University

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Ke Ma

Third Military Medical University

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Lin Xu

Third Military Medical University

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