Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Yehong Yang is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Yehong Yang.


Endocrine | 2008

Berberine inhibits the expression of TNFα, MCP-1, and IL-6 in AcLDL-stimulated macrophages through PPARγ pathway

F. L. Chen; Zhen Yang; Y. Liu; Li Li; W. C. Liang; X. C. Wang; W. B. Zhou; Yehong Yang; Renming Hu

Macrophages are the main source of cytokines in atherosclerotic plaques. Modified low-density lipoproteins may stimulate macrophages to produce large quantities of proinflammatory cytokines that promote atherosclerosis. Berberine is the main component of the traditional Chinese medicine umbellatine, which has a widespread effect and was used to treat many diseases clinically. Our previous study found that berberine could increase adipophilin expression in macrophages, which is a target gene of PPARγ. PPARγ agonist could decrease proinflammatory cytokines in macrophage. In this study, we investigated the effects and the mechanism of action of berberine on the expression and secretion of TNFα, MCP-1, and IL-6 in vitro to identify new pharmacological actions of berberine. The results of RT-PCR and ELISA shows that berberine may inhibit the expression and secretion of the tumor necrosis factor α (TNFα), monocyte chemoattractant protein 1 (MCP-1), and interleukin-6 (IL-6) in macrophages stimulated by acetylated low-density lipoprotein (AcLDL), whereas the peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor γ (PPARγ) inhibitor GW9662 could attenuate this effect of berberine. This study demonstrates that berberine may inhibit the expression and production of TNF-α, MCP-1, and IL-6 in AcLDL-stimulated macrophages. This effect might be partially mediated through PPARγ activity.


Journal of Diabetes and Its Complications | 2008

High prevalence of chronic kidney disease in population-based patients diagnosed with type 2 diabetes in downtown Shanghai

Bin Lu; Xiaoyan Song; Xuehong Dong; Yehong Yang; Zhaoyun Zhang; Jie Wen; Yiming Li; Linuo Zhou; Naiqing Zhao; Xixing Zhu; Renming Hu

OBJECTIVE This study aimed to evaluate the prevalence of chronic kidney disease (CKD) and the risk factors associated with CKD among Chinese patients diagnosed with type 2 diabetes aged over 30 in downtown Shanghai and to assess the relationship between CKD and diabetic retinopathy (DR). METHODS We investigated 1039 Chinese patients diagnosed with type 2 diabetes aged over 30 by randomized cluster sampling in downtown Shanghai, and 1009 patients in this study were analyzed based on data integrity. Body measurements including height, weight, waist circumference and hip circumference, resting blood pressure, fasting blood measures, and urinary albumin-to-creatinine ratio (ACR), as well as the digitally stored fundus images, were investigated. Glomerular filtration rate (GFR) was estimated using the Cockcroft-Gault equation. The prevalence of CKD was calculated, and the risk factors associated with CKD were evaluated using stepwise logistic regression. The relationship between CKD and DR was evaluated using Spearman correlation and the chi-square test. RESULTS The following were the results found in this study: (a) The prevalence rate of CKD (Stages 1-5) was 63.9% in Chinese patients diagnosed with type 2 diabetes, 8.8% in those with CKD Stage 1, 22.3% in those with CKD Stage 2, and 32.8% in those with CKD Stages 3-5 (GFR<60 ml/min/1.73 m(2)). The prevalence of CKD increased with age. (b) CKD patients were older and had higher duration of diabetes, systolic blood pressure, urea nitrogen, uric acid, creatinine, and ACR of the first urine than those without CKD. (c) Male patients had a higher percentage of CKD Stages 3-5, and female patients had a higher percentage of CKD Stages 1-2. (d) CKD was significantly associated with duration of diabetes, older age, systolic blood pressure, and serum urea nitrogen based on logistic regression analysis. (e) Of the patients without CKD, 15.6% had DR, and of those with CKD, 27.6% had DR. The decrease in GFR was significantly correlated with DR after controlling for sex, age, and albuminuria staging. CONCLUSION The high prevalence of CKD observed in Chinese patients diagnosed with type 2 diabetes aged over 30 in downtown Shanghai was similar to that in Western patients, and the cause of CKD is likely to be any of the following: type 2 diabetes, IgA nephropathy, hypertension, or any combination of these. The screening program for GFR in type 2 diabetic patients should be performed even on those with normoalbuminuria. The decrease in GFR might predict the occurrence of DR among patients diagnosed with type 2 diabetes.


Diabetes Research and Clinical Practice | 2010

High prevalence of diabetic neuropathy in population-based patients diagnosed with type 2 diabetes in the Shanghai downtown

Bin Lu; Zhihong Yang; Mei Wang; Zhen Yang; Wei Gong; Yehong Yang; Jie Wen; Zhaoyun Zhang; Naiqing Zhao; Xixing Zhu; Renming Hu

AIMS To determine the prevalence of diabetic peripheral neuropathy (DPN) and risk factors associated with DPN in type 2 diabetic patients. METHODS 435 diabetic patients were evaluated on complete foot examination. Body mass measurements, resting blood pressure, fasting blood measures, urinary albumin-to-creatinine ratio (ACR) and the digitally stored fundus images were investigated. RESULTS (1) The prevalence of DPN was 61.8% among the Chinese patients diagnosed with type 2 diabetes aged over 30 in the Shanghai downtown, 59.1% with vibration perception threshold > or =25 V and 13.8% with inability to feel the monofilament. (2) DPN was significantly associated with age (beta: 0.068, S.E.: 0.013, OR: 1.070, CI: 1.043-1.098, P<0.001) and HbA1c (beta: 0.224, S.E.: 0.081, OR: 1.251, CI: 1.067-1.466, P=0.006) by a logistic regression analysis. (3) The percentage of diabetic retinopathy (DR) in the DPN group (26.5%) was significantly higher than that in the non-DPN group (15.2%). (4) The percentage of macroalbuminuria in the DPN group (9.0%) was significantly higher than that in the non-DPN group (1.8%). CONCLUSIONS The prevalence of DPN observed in the Chinese patients diagnosed with type 2 diabetes aged over 30 in the Shanghai downtown reached up to 61.8% though the observations in our study might be representative of the diabetic patients of the Shanghai downtown.


Cardiovascular Diabetology | 2010

Insulin resistance in Chinese patients with type 2 diabetes is associated with C-reactive protein independent of abdominal obesity

Bin Lu; Yehong Yang; Zhihong Yang; Xiaocheng Feng; Xuanchun Wang; Zhaoyun Zhang; Renming Hu

BackgroundThere is debate as to whether the association between C-reactive protein (CRP) and insulin resistance is independent of body fatness, particularly central obesity. Therefore, the association among CRP, insulin resistance and obesity was analyzed in Chinese patients with type 2 diabetes.MethodsThe study included 520 Chinese patients diagnosed with type 2 diabetes with CRP levels not exceeding 10 mg/L. The degree of insulin resistance was determined with the homeostasis model assessment of insulin resistance (HOMA-IR). The CRP levels were categorized into quartiles from the lowest to the highest concentrations (Q1-Q4).ResultsBody mass index (BMI) and waist circumference (WC) were both higher in Q4, Q3 and Q2 than those in Q1. HOMA-IR was higher in Q2, Q3 and Q4 than that in Q1 (Q1 vs Q4, P < 0.001; Q1 vs Q3, P < 0.001; Q1 vs Q2, P = 0.028). Log CRP was significantly correlated with log HOMA-IR (correlation coefficient: 0.230, P < 0.001) and BMI (correlation coefficient: 0.305, P < 0.001) and WC (correlation coefficient: 0.240, P < 0.001) by Spearman correlation analysis. Multiple linear regression analysis adjusting for age, gender and components of metabolic syndrome, log CRP was also independently associated with log HOMA-IR (β coefficient, 0.168; P < 0.001) and WC (β coefficient, 0.131; P = 0.006).ConclusionThese findings showed that insulin resistance was associated with CRP levels independent of abdominal obesity in Chinese patients with type 2 diabetes, suggesting that abdominal obesity could only partly explain the link between subclinical inflammation and insulin resistance.


Diabetes Research and Clinical Practice | 2013

Serum Angptl2 levels are independently associated with albuminuria in type 2 diabetes

Qin Li; Wei Gong; Zhihong Yang; Bin Lu; Yehong Yang; Weiwei Zhao; Renming Hu

BACKGROUND Elevated serum Angptl2 levels are positively associated with the development of type 2 diabetes. We investigated whether serum Angptl2 levels are associated with diabetic nephropathy in patients with type 2 diabetes. METHODS Two hundred and thirty patients with type 2 diabetes and 63 healthy controls participated in this cross-sectional study. Subjects with type 2 diabetes were divided into three groups using urinary albumin-to-creatinine ratio (ACR): a normoalbuminuric group (n=57), a microalbuminuric group (n=130) and a macroalbuminuria group (n=43). Serum Angptl2 concentrations were measured by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. RESULTS Median serum (interquartile range) Angptl2 levels in control subjects and patients with type 2 diabetes with normoalbuminuria, microalbuminuria and macroalbuminuria were 24.03 (16.3-33.45), 36.14 (27.91-43.07), 44.6 (37.47-49.92), 50.19 (45.95-60.13)ng/ml (p<0.01) respectively. Angptl2 levels correlated with urinary ACR in participants with type 2 diabetes (r=0.38, p<0.01). Significant intercorrelations of Angptl2 were found with age, duration of diabetes, and fasting plasma glucose. After adjustment for significant covariates, albuminuria was still significantly associated with Angptl2 levels in type 2 diabetes (r=0.31, p<0.01). CONCLUSIONS Angptl2 levels are elevated in patients with type 2 diabetes with an independent association between increasing Angptl2 levels and increasing levels of albuminuria. This suggests a possible role of Angptl2 in progressive nephropathy in patients with type 2 diabetes.


Acta Cardiologica | 2011

Autonomic nervous function and baroreflex sensitivity in hypertensive diabetic patients

Wei Ding; Linuo Zhou; Yuanyuan Bao; Lixue Zhou; Yehong Yang; Bing Lu; Xi Wu; Renming Hu

Objective Little is known about how the cardiac autonomic nervous function (CAN) changes with gradually increasing systolic blood pressure (SBP). This study investigated cardiac autonomic nervous function in diabetic patients and controls with different grades of SBP. Methods and results We measured heart rate variability (HRV) and spontaneous baroreflex sensitivity (BRS) by power spectral analysis in 118 Chinese type-2 diabetic patients and 137 age-matched controls. Subjects were further subdivided into 4 SBP groups. Results showed total HRV and BRS values were significantly lower in several diabetic SBP groups. Total HRV and BRS decreased with increasing SBP, with significant differences in the 140-159 mm Hg or 160-179 mm Hg groups compared with other groups of diabetic and control subjects. Conclusions We found that HRV and BRS can reflect cardiovascular autonomic dysfunction of diabetes when accompanied by hypertension. In our selected Chinese diabetic and control subjects, HRV and BRS parameters were influenced by gradually increasing SBP.


Advances in Parasitology | 2016

Epidemiological Features and Effectiveness of Schistosomiasis Control Programme in Mountainous and Hilly Region of The People's Republic of China

Ying Liu; Y.-B. Zhou; R.-Z. Li; J.-J. Wan; Yehong Yang; Dongchuan Qiu; B. Zhong

Schistosomiasis is a parasitic disease that affects over 200million people worldwide in at least 76 countries, ranking second only after malaria in terms of its socio-economic and public health importance in tropical and subtropical areas of the world. Chinese surveillance data since the mid-1950s have shown that endemic areas are divided into three types based on geographical, ecological and epidemiological factors, such as marshland and lake region, plain region with waterway networks and hilly and mountainous region. As confirmed by numerous epidemiological investigations, schistosomiasis endemic areas of the mountainous type are distributed in 178 counties in 11 provinces of The Peoples Republic of China. Over the past several decades great success in transmission control has been achieved by implementation of control strategies that were suitable for the mountainous and hilly endemic region.


Medicine | 2015

Successful diagnosis of hypothalamitis using stereotactic biopsy and treatment: a case report.

Shuo Zhang; Hongying Ye; Zhaoyun Zhang; Bin Lu; Yehong Yang; Min He; Hanfeng Wu; Linuo Zhou; Yin Wang; Li Pan; Yiming Li; Renming Hu

AbstractExisting methods could not discriminate between inflammation and other diseases, which might occur in hypothalamus, such as neurogliocytoma, germinoma, lymphoma, and so on. Given its location in the brain, it was not practical to obtain tissue using standard surgical methods.We reported the first case of a patient with hypothalamus lesion, who was diagnosed as hypothalamitis by stereotactic biopsy. This precise diagnosis allowed proper medical treatments.We reported a case of a patient with hypothalamus lesion. To confirm the diagnosis, with informed consent from the family, a successful stereotactic hypothalamic biopsy was performed by neurosurgeons.Immunohistochemical results of biopsy specimens from the hypothalamus lesion revealed inflammatory infiltrates, which were composed mainly of lymphocytes, plasma cells, and histiocytes, and were stained with leucocyte common antigen (LCA), &kgr; 1, and cluster of differentiation 18. Final pathological diagnosis was lymphoplasmacytic proliferative, granuloma-like inflammatory pseudotumor, with immunoglobulin G deposition. Based on the pathological diagnosis, we treated the patient with glucocorticoid and azathioprine. Remarkable improvements were observed in both magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and patients symptoms.Stereotactic biopsy for intracranial lesions was a reliable and relatively safe procedure, even for hypothalamus. It was an effective method with high diagnostic yield. With correct diagnosis, it was much easier to choose correct treatment.


Medicine | 2015

Serum Phosphorylated Neurofilament-Heavy Chain, a Potential Biomarker, is Associated With Peripheral Neuropathy in Patients With Type 2 Diabetes.

Xiaona Qiao; Shuo Zhang; Weiwei Zhao; Hongying Ye; Yehong Yang; Zhaoyun Zhang; Qing Miao; Renming Hu; Yiming Li; Bin Lu

AbstractNeurofilament (NF), one of the major axonal cytoskeletal proteins, plays a critical role in degenerative diseases in both the central and the peripheral nervous systems. The aim of this study is to explore the relationship between serum phosphorylated neurofilament-heavy chain (pNF-H) and diabetic peripheral neuropathy (DPN) in patients with type 2 diabetes.Serum pNF-H concentrations were measured by ELISA in hospitalized patients with and without DPN (n = 118). DPN was assessed by clinical symptoms, signs, and electromyography.Compared with the non-DPN group (311.98 [189.59–634.12] pg/mL), the confirmed group (605.99 [281.17–1332.78] pg/mL) patients had the higher serum pNF-H levels (P = 0.007). DPN was significantly correlated with C-peptide (r = −0.269), total cholesterol (TC) (r = 0.185), and pNF-H (r = 0.258). Serum pNF-H levels were independently associated with DPN (P = 0.004), even after adjusting for age, sex, duration of diabetes, fasting plasma glucose, glycosylated hemoglobin A1c, TC, C-peptide, urinary albuminto/creatinine ratio, and estimated glomerular filtration rate. Compared with pNF-H quartile 1 (referent), patients in quartile 3 (odds ratio [OR], 3.977; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.243–12.728; P = 0.021) and quartile 4 (OR, 10.488; 95% CI, 3.020–34.429; P = 0.000) had the higher risk of DPN after adjusting for the confounders.Serum pNF-H levels might be associated with the DPN, and the correlationship between serum pNF-H and DPN should be further studied.


International Journal of Endocrinology | 2015

Gender-Specific Differences in Clinical Profile and Biochemical Parameters in Patients with Cushing's Disease: A Single Center Experience.

Xiaoxia Liu; Xiaoming Zhu; Meifang Zeng; Yan Zhuang; Yiting Zhou; Zhaoyun Zhang; Yehong Yang; Yongfei Wang; Hongying Ye; Yiming Li

Cushings disease (CD) is remarkably prevalent among females; however, more severe clinical presentation and adverse outcomes have been found in males. The purpose of this study was to investigate the overall clinical profile and biochemical parameters in patients with CD to identify the gender differences. Here we describe our series of CD patients referred to our medical center during 2012-2013. Among 73 cases, females presented a marked preponderance compared to males. Males had significantly higher ACTH, BMI, HbA1c, systolic blood pressure, and hemoglobin than females. For the first time, the incidence of fatty liver and hepatic function was also shown to be elevated in males. Multiple linear regression analysis was performed to further investigate the correlation of risk factors with hypokalemia, HbA1c, and systolic blood pressure. Gender and serum cortisol were associated with hypokalemia. Age, gender, and serum cortisol were significantly associated with HbA1c. Additionally, only gender was significantly associated with systolic blood pressure. Regarding clinical presentation, purple striae seemed to occur more frequently in males than in females. Thus, more severe clinical presentation, biochemical parameters, and complications were found in males than in females. Clinical professionals should pay more attention to the diagnosis and management of males with CD.

Collaboration


Dive into the Yehong Yang's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge