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Featured researches published by Shin Han Tsai.


Asia-Pacific Journal of Public Health | 2010

Review Paper: Epidemiology of Traumatic Spinal Cord Injury: Comparisons Between Developed and Developing Countries:

Wai Tat Chiu; Herng-Ching Lin; Charlene Lam; Shu-Fen Chu; Yung-Hsiao Chiang; Shin Han Tsai

A review of global epidemiological studies of traumatic spinal cord injury (TSCI) within 2 decades was undertaken to compare the incidence, mortality rate, patients’ age, gender, causes, and severity of injury between developed countries and developing countries. The incidence rates varied greatly, and there was also a 2-fold difference between the highest mortality rate in developing countries and that in developed countries. Male sex and age from 30 to 50 years are strong risk factors in both these groups. Traffic accidents are the leading cause of injury in developed countries, whereas falls are the leading cause in developing countries. To clarify regional differences, future studies should contain long-term data about TSCI characteristics in a region-based population.


Journal of Clinical Neuroscience | 2007

The impact of time, legislation, and geography on the epidemiology of traumatic brain injury

Wen Ta Chiu; Sheng Jean Huang; Shin Han Tsai; Jia Wei Lin; Ming Da Tsai; Tien Jen Lin; William C W Huang

In 1991, a population-based epidemiologic traumatic brain injury (TBI) study was done in urban and rural areas of Taiwan; this was 5 years before the helmet use law was passed and 8 years before the drink driving law was passed. In order to evaluate the impact of three major determinants (time, geography, and legislation) on the epidemiology of TBI, we conducted a prospective study in 2001 and used the 1991 data to examine the differences in TBI distribution in urban and rural Taiwan a decade after these laws were passed. In 2001, 5754 TBI cases were collected from the urban area of Taipei City, and 1474 TBI cases were collected from the rural area of Hualien County. The TBI incidence rate in Taipei City in 2001 was estimated to be 218/100,000 population (285/100,000 for males and 152/100,000 for females). When compared to the 1991 data, the incidence rate in 2001 had increased by 20%. The TBI incidence rate in Hualien County in 2001 was estimated to be 417/100,000 population (516/100,000 for males and 306/100,000 for females); this was a 37% increase over the 1991 data. Our study found that the distribution of causes and age distribution had shifted significantly over the 10-year period. In 2001, the age group with the highest incidence was 20-29 years, while in 1991 it had been the over 70 years age group. While traffic-related TBI had decreased, falls and assaults had increased in 2001. We also found that legislation, such as the helmet law, affects TBI distribution by decreasing the traffic-related TBI rate, decreasing the admission severity of TBI, and reducing TBI-related mortality. Finally, geography plays a crucial role in the outcome of TBI; over the 10 year period, Taipei had an increase in moderately severe outcomes, while Hualien had an increase in more severe outcomes. Comparative studies of TBI in urban and rural areas have shown that time, legislation, and geography are crucial determinants of TBI epidemiology. Although time and legal interventions seem to have more of an impact, geography does affect TBI outcomes.


Journal of Clinical Neuroscience | 2004

Pediatric traumatic brain injuries in Taiwan: an 8-year study

Wan Chen Tsai; Wen Ta Chiu; Hung Yi Chiou; Cheuk-Sing Choy; Ching Chang Hung; Shin Han Tsai

Background. This study is intended to determine the causes of pediatric traumatic brain injuries (PTBI) in children aged 14 years or less, and to identify various types of craniocerebral damage resulting from different mechanisms of injury.Methods. From July 1, 1993 to June 30, 2001, a survey on PTBI was conducted in Taiwan. The data of patients used in this study were collected from 56 major hospitals among the age group of 0-14 years. The items in the traumatic brain injury survey included sex, age, causes of injuries, severity, and the eventual outcome.Results. A total of 5349 cases were identified. The male-to-female ratio was 1.69: 1. The incidence rate was higher in the age groups of 4-9 years and 10-14 years. The main cause of PTBI was traffic injury, which accounted for 2537 of the cases (47.3%), followed by falls, 2160 (40.3%). Of all traffic injuries, motorcycle-related injury had the highest incidence, followed by the pedestrian and bicycle-related injury. This study also showed that 83.2% of the patients had mild injury, 9.8% had moderate injury, and 7.0%, severe injury.Conclusions. The results of this study suggest that it is important to decrease all the risk factors in the environment of homes and public areas as much as possible. Helmet wearing and the development of public transportation are essential for the prevention of head injury.


Journal of Neurotrauma | 2011

Curcumin Attenuates the Expression and Secretion of RANTES after Spinal Cord Injury In Vivo and Lipopolysaccharide-Induced Astrocyte Reactivation In Vitro

Muh Shi Lin; Yu Yo Sun; Wen Ta Chiu; Chia Chi Hung; Chiu Yun Chang; Feng Shiun Shie; Shin Han Tsai; Jia Wei Lin; Kuo Sheng Hung; Yi-Hsuan Lee

Curcumin has been proposed for treatment of various neuroinflammatory and neurodegenerative conditions, including post-traumatic inflammation during acute spinal cord injury (SCI). In this study, we examined whether curcumin anti-inflammation involves regulation of astrocyte reactivation, with special focus on the injury-induced RANTES (regulated on expression normal T-cell expressed and secreted) from astrocytes in acute SCI. Male Sprague-Dawley (SD) rats were subjected to impact injury of the spinal cord followed by treatment with curcumin (40 mg/kg i.p.). RANTES and inducible nitric oxide synthase expression as well as RANTES-positive astrocytes were all induced by injury accompanied by the elevation of lipid peroxidation, and attenuated by the curcumin treatment. In primary cultured rat astrocytes challenged with lipopolysaccharide (LPS) to mimic astrocyte reactivation following SCI, LPS induces robust increase of RANTES expression and the effect was also reduced by 1 μM curcumin treatment. Furthermore, cortical neurons cultured with astrocyte conditioned medium (ACM) conditioned with both LPS and curcumin (LPS-curcumin/ACM), which characteristically exhibited decreased RANTES expression when compared with ACM from astrocytes treated with LPS alone (LPS/ACM), showed higher level of cell viability and lower level of cell death as assessed by 3-(4,5-dimethylthiazol-2-yl)-2,5-diphenyltetrazolium bromide (MTT) reduction activity assay and lactate dehydrogenase release assay, respectively. Knockdown of RANTES expression by siRNA (siRANTES) shows reduced RANTES expression and release from LPS-reactivated astrocytes, and ACM obtained from this condition (LPS-siRANTES/ACM) becomes less cytotoxic as compared with the LPS-ACM. Therefore, curcumin reduction of robust RANTES production in reactivated astrocytes both in vitro and in vivo may contribute to its neuroprotection and potential application in SCI.


Injury-international Journal of The Care of The Injured | 2011

Correlation between Glasgow coma score components and survival in patients with traumatic brain injury

Woon Man Kung; Shin Han Tsai; Wen Ta Chiu; Kuo Sheng Hung; Shin Ping Wang; Jia Wei Lin; Muh Shi Lin

BACKGROUND The Glasgow coma scale (GCS) score is used in the initial evaluation of patients with traumatic brain injury (TBI); however, the determination of an accurate score is not possible in all clinical situations. Our aim is to determine if the individual components of the GCS score, or combinations of them, are useful in predicting mortality in patients with TBI. METHODS The components of the GCS score and the receiver-operating characteristic (ROC) curves were analyzed from 27,625 cases of TBI in Taiwan. RESULTS The relationship between the survival rate and certain eye (E), motor (M) and verbal (V) score combinations for GCS scores of 6, 11, 12 and 13 were statistically significant. The areas under ROC curve of E+V, M+V and M alone were 0.904, 0.903 and 0.900, respectively, representing the 3 most precise combinations for predicting mortality. The area under the ROC curve for the complete GCS score (E+M+V) was 0.885. Patients with lower E, M and V score respectively, and lower complete GCS scores had higher hazard of death than those with the highest scores. CONCLUSION The results of this study indicate that the 3 fundamental elements comprising the Glasgow coma scale, E, M, and V individually, and in certain combinations are predictive of the survival of TBI patients. This observation is clinically useful when evaluating TBI patients in whom a complete GCS score cannot be obtained.


Progress in Neuro-psychopharmacology & Biological Psychiatry | 2011

Curcumin enhances neuronal survival in N-methyl-d-aspartic acid toxicity by inducing RANTES expression in astrocytes via PI-3K and MAPK signaling pathways.

Muh Shi Lin; Kuo Sheng Hung; Wen Ta Chiu; Yu Yo Sun; Shin Han Tsai; Jia Wei Lin; Yi-Hsuan Lee

OBJECT Neuroinflammation, which is characterized by the overproduction of cytokines and chemokines, plays an important role in neurodegenerative diseases, especially in Alzheimers disease (AD). In the brain, chemokines are predominantly released by astrocytes and microglias. Expression of RANTES, as well as other cytokines, is involved in the inflammatory cascade that contributes to neurodegeneration in AD. Expression of RANTES may also have a neuroprotective effect. We sought to investigate whether curcumin exhibited neuroprotective and antioxidant activity via enhanced RANTES expression by astrocytes in cortical neuron cultures. We evaluated the neuroprotective and anti-neurodegenerative effects of curcumin in NMDA toxicity and in long-term cultures. METHODS Pregnant female Sprague-Dawley (SD) rats were used for primary culture of cortical neurons, and neonatal 0- to 2-day-old SD rats were used for primary culture of astrocytes. Cultured astrocytes were conditioned with curcumin to prepare astrocyte-conditioned medium (ACM). Real-time polymerase chain reaction was performed to assess RANTES and iNOS mRNA expression in astrocytes following curcumin treatment. ELISA was used to detect astrocyte-secreted RANTES protein in ACM with curcumin treatment. JAK/STAT, PI-3K, PKC and MAPK inhibitors were used to ascertain whether the effects of curcumin involved these signaling pathways. To evaluate the effects of curcumin-enhanced astrocytes on neuronal survival, cultured cortical neurons treated or untreated with NMDA were incubated in ACM with or without curcumin treatment. Long-term culture (15days in vitro, DIV) was performed to investigate the effects of curcumin-treated astrocytes on the survival of cultured cortical neurons. Neuronal survival rate was assessed by using 3-(4,5-dimethylthiazol-2-yl)-2,5-diphenyltetrazolium bromide (MTT) reduction activity assay (for cell viability), and the lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) release assay (for cell death). RESULTS We demonstrated that curcumin enhanced RANTES expression in primary cultured astrocytes, and that this effect was related to activation of PI-3K and MAPK signaling pathways. We found that curcumin inhibited iNOS expression in primary cultured astrocytes in non-stressed condition. We also found that neurons exposed to NMDA and cultured with curcumin treated ACM, which characteristically exhibited elevated RANTES expression showed higher level of cell viability and lower level of cell death. Using a small interfering RNA (siRNA) knockdown model, we found evidence that the basal level of RANTES expression in non-stimulated astrocytes provided neuroprotection. CONCLUSION We postulate that the enhanced neuronal survival by curcumin treatment in NMDA toxicity and long-term cultures was in part attributable to elevated astrocyte-derived RANTES expression via activation of PI3K/MAPK signaling pathways.


Injury-international Journal of The Care of The Injured | 2012

Quantitative assessment of impaired postevacuation brain re-expansion in bilateral chronic subdural haematoma: Possible mechanism of the higher recurrence rate

Woon Man Kung; Kuo Sheng Hung; Wen Ta Chiu; Shin Han Tsai; Jia Wei Lin; Yao Chin Wang; Muh Shi Lin

INTRODUCTION Recurrence of chronic subdural haematoma (CSDH) occurs in up to 30% of patients. The rate of recurrence is higher in bilateral versus unilateral CSDH and the reason for this has not been fully elucidated. There are few quantitative studies of temporal changes in brain re-expansion after haematoma evacuation. The aim of this study is to use a simple volumetric image analysis method to quantify temporal changes of postoperative brain re-expansion in unilateral and bilateral CSDH. METHODS We reviewed computed tomography (CT) scans of 20 consecutive patients (16 men, 4 women; median age, 73.5 years) with CSDH (unilateral, n=10; bilateral, n=10) who underwent surgery (burr hole drainage on one or both sides) at our institutions during the period from June 2006 to August 2008. Haematoma volume was quantified preoperatively and on postoperative days 14 and 30 by computer-based image analysis (PACS Web 1000 System) of CT scans. We then calculated the brain re-expansion rate (BRR) for postoperative days 14 and 30. RESULTS Haematoma volume remained significantly higher (p<0.001) in bilateral versus unilateral CSDHs at both postoperative time points, and the BRR was significantly greater (p<0.001) in unilateral versus bilateral CSDH at both time points. CONCLUSION Results of this quantitative analysis provide definitive evidence for a poor BRR in bilateral compared to unilateral CSDH. This impairment may result in shifting of the brain and shearing of blood vessels, resulting in a higher recurrence rate.


Acta Neurochirurgica | 2006

Multiparametric analysis of cerebral substrates and nitric oxide delivery in cerebrospinal fluid in patients with intracerebral haemorrhage: correlation with hemodynamics and outcome

Ming Fu Chiang; Wen Ta Chiu; Fung J. Lin; Peterus Thajeb; Chun Jen Huang; Shin Han Tsai

SummaryBackground. There is no information regarding the possible role of cerebral substrates in the pathogenesis of neuronal injury in intracerebral haemorrhages (ICHs). Purposes of this prospective study were to clarify whether changes in substrates are the consequence of the initial brain damage in ICH and to elucidate the relationship among the biochemical mechanisms and clinical course of patients with ICH. Method. During a period of two years, patients (GCS ≤8) who had ICH secondary to an aneurysm (SAH), stroke (sICH), or trauma (tICH) and underwent ventriculostomy with ICP monitoring and/or underwent cranial surgery were randomly enrolled in this study. Extracellular concentrations of glutamate, aspartate, glycine, GABA, lactate, lactate/pyruvate ratio, and glucose in the CSF were measured by use of high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). The nitric oxide (NO) concentration in the CSF was analyzed by chemiluminescence. Findings. There were 75 patients (38 women and 37 men) with ICH included in this study. Twenty-one patients had SAH, 28 sICH, and 26 tICH. In tICH patients, there was a 30-fold increase in glutamate and a 10-fold in aspartate over reference values. The levels of glutamate, aspirate, GABA, lactate, glucose, and NO differed significantly among the three groups (p<0.001). There were no significant differences in glycine and L/P ratio among the groups. The initial GCS, the mean CPP and outcome six months after the insult were all significantly correlated with the concentration of substrates (p<0.01), both within groups and among the total sample. The CSF levels of glutamate lactate, NO and glucose correlated significantly with outcome (p<0.005). Conclusions. This study confirms the correlation between the level of EAAs and the outcome of ICHs, suggesting that neurochemical monitoring of these substances may have a role in caring for patients.


Acta neurochirurgica | 2006

Idiopathic syringomyelia: case report and review of the literature

Jia-Wei Lin; Muh Shi Lin; Chien-Min Lin; Chang-Ho Tseng; Shin Han Tsai; I. H. Kan; Wen Ta Chiu

Syringomyelia is an uncommon disease that is caused most often by type I Chiari malformation, which develops in the hindbrain, and less frequently by other factors which are not limited to the hindbrain, including trauma, infection, or scoliosis. Idiopathic syringomyelia is rare. We present in this article a patient with idiopathic syringomyelia characterized by hypoesthesia and progressive weakness in the left lower limb. Decompression was attempted by means of laminectomy and a syringoarachnoid shunt. Motor, sensory, and bladder functions were monitored by the change in Japanese Orthopedic Association scores, which increased from 10 points preoperatively to 14 points 30 days postoperatively. This case demonstrates the effectiveness of surgical decompression in a patient with remarkable neurological deficit.


BioMed Research International | 2015

The effect of various types of motorcycle helmets on cervical spine injury in head injury patients: a multicenter study in Taiwan.

Carlos Lam; Mau Roung Lin; Shu Fen Chu; Shin Han Tsai; Chyi Huey Bai; Wen Ta Chiu

Introduction. The relationship between cervical spine injury (CSI) and helmet in head injury (HI) patients following motorcycle crashes is crucial. Controversy still exists; therefore we evaluated the effect of various types of helmets on CSI in HI patients following motorcycle crashes and researched the mechanism of this effect. Patients and Methods. A total of 5225 patients of motorcycle crashes between 2000 and 2009 were extracted from the Head Injury Registry in Taiwan. These patients were divided into case and control groups according to the presence of concomitant CSI. Helmet use and types were separately compared between the two groups and the odds ratio of CSI was obtained by using multiple logistic regression analysis. Results. We observed that 173 (3.3%) of the HI patients were associated with CSI. The HI patients using a helmet (odds ratio (OR) = 0.31, 95% confidence interval (CI) = 0.19−0.49), full-coverage helmet (0.19, 0.10−0.36), and partial-coverage helmet (0.35, 0.21−0.56) exhibited a significantly decreased rate of CSI compared with those without a helmet. Conclusion. Wearing full-coverage and partial-coverage helmets significantly reduced the risk of CSI among HI patients following motorcycle crashes. This effect may be due to the smooth surface and hard padding materials of helmet.

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Wen Ta Chiu

Taipei Medical University

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Hon Ping Ma

Taipei Medical University

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Jia Wei Lin

Taipei Medical University

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Jia-Wei Lin

Taipei Medical University

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Carlos Lam

Taipei Medical University

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Cheuk-Sing Choy

Taipei Medical University Hospital

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Yung Hsiao Chiang

Taipei Medical University Hospital

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Yung-Hsiao Chiang

Taipei Medical University Hospital

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