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"Pan Tianshu"
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Therapeutic Potential of BMX-001 for Preventing Chemotherapy-Induced Peripheral Neuropathic Pain
2025
Background/Objectives: Chemotherapy-induced neuropathic pain (CINP) represents a critical challenge in oncology, emerging as a common and debilitating side effect of widely used chemotherapeutic agents, such as paclitaxel (PTX). Current therapeutic interventions and preventive strategies for CINP are largely insufficient, as they fail to address the underlying peripheral nerve damage, highlighting an urgent need for the development of new drugs. This study aimed to investigate the dual-function effects on normal cell protection and tumor suppression of BMX-001, a redox-active manganese metalloporphyrin that has demonstrated antioxidant and anti-inflammatory properties, which offers potential in protecting central nervous system tissues and treating CINP. Methods: This study assessed BMX-001’s different roles in protecting normal cells while acting as a pro-oxidant and pro-inflammatory molecule in cancer cells in vitro. We also evaluated its neuroprotective effect in preclinical PTX-induced CINP models in vivo. Results: Our results showed significant reductions in mechanical and cold allodynia, decreased pro-inflammatory cytokine levels, and restored antioxidant capacity in peripheral nerves and dorsal root ganglia (DRGs) following BMX-001 treatment. Conclusions: Overall, our study highlights the therapeutic potential of BMX-001 to mitigate CINP and enhance anticancer efficiency. Its dual-selective mechanism supports the future clinical investigation of BMX-001 as a novel adjunct to chemotherapeutic regimens.
Journal Article
Engineering Neurotoxin-Functionalized Exosomes for Targeted Delivery to the Peripheral Nervous System
2024
The administration of therapeutics to peripheral nerve tissue is challenging due to the complexities of peripheral neuroanatomy and the limitations imposed by the blood–nerve barrier (BNB). Therefore, there is a pressing need to enhance delivery effectiveness and implement targeted delivery methods. Recently, erythrocyte-derived exosomes (Exos) have gained widespread attention as biocompatible vehicles for therapeutics in clinical applications. However, engineering targeted Exos for the peripheral nervous system (PNS) is still challenging. This study aims to develop a targeted Exo delivery system specifically designed for presynaptic terminals of peripheral nerve tissue. The clostridium neurotoxin, tetanus toxin-C fragment (TTC), was tethered to the surface of red blood cell (RBC)-derived Exos via a facile and efficient bio-orthogonal click chemistry method without a catalyst. Additionally, Cyanine5 (Cy5), a reactive fluorescent tag, was also conjugated to track Exo movement in both in vitro and in vivo models. Subsequently, Neuro-2a, a mouse neuronal cell line, was treated with dye-labeled Exos with/without TTC in vitro, and the results indicated that TTC-Exos exhibited more efficient accumulation along the soma and axonal circumference, compared to their unmodified counterparts. Further investigation, using a mouse model, revealed that within 72 h of intramuscular administration, engineered TTC-Exos were successfully transported into the neuromuscular junction and sciatic nerve tissues. These results indicated that TTC played a crucial role in the Exo delivery system, improving the affinity to peripheral nerves. These promising results underscore the potential of using targeted Exo carriers to deliver therapeutics for treating peripheral neuropathies.
Journal Article
Deep China
by
Kleinman, Arthur
,
Yan, Yunxiang
,
Lee, Sing
in
Aufsatzsammlung
,
China -- Moral conditions
,
China -- Social conditions
2011
Deep China investigates the emotional and moral lives of the Chinese people as they adjust to the challenges of modernity. Sharing a medical anthropology and cultural psychiatry perspective, Arthur Kleinman, Yunxiang Yan, Jing Jun, Sing Lee, Everett Zhang, Pan Tianshu, Wu Fei, and Guo Jinhua delve into intimate and sometimes hidden areas of personal life and social practice to observe and narrate the drama of Chinese individualization. The essays explore the remaking of the moral person during China's profound social and economic transformation, unraveling the shifting practices and struggles of contemporary life.
Guan (Care/Control): An Ethnographic Understanding of Care for People with Severe Mental Illness from Shanghai’s Urban Communities
2018
This article investigates how the political culture of Guan (care/control) in China is played out across the platforms of the state, the community and the family through the lens of caring for people with severe mental illness in urban Shanghai. Based on ethnographic data collected from six communities in a district of Shanghai, we provide a nuanced understanding of the roles of family members, street committees and other governmental organizations in their daily practices of caring for people with severe mental illness. We show the complicated and intertwined relationships between local governmental agents and the family. We argue that the political culture of Guan, which permeates the everyday life of Chinese people, tends to objectify its subjects and reflects a long history of patriarchy in Chinese society. Without further changing such political cultural arrangements, respect for the agency of mentally ill patients, the effort of bringing humanistic psychiatric reforms to China, will be in vain.
Journal Article
A Study on Mental Health Service Needs among Older Adults and the Policy Response in China: Experiences in Urban Shanghai
2023
Despite increasing awareness of mental health problems among older adults, limited mental health services are available to meet their needs. The proposed study aimed to evaluate the need for mental health services among older adults in Shanghai, China, and identify gaps in the existing service system to inform policy making. Based on 80 face-to-face interviews amongst several groups of older adults and community officers, doctors and government stakeholders, the study found that (a) the mental health needs of older adults living with family members mainly present as needs for social interaction, sense of belonging, and self-realization; (b) special groups, such as older adults living alone, mainly desire support to address loneliness, older adults with physical disabilities desire social respect, and those with mental disabilities seek social acceptance; and (c) community cadres and other stakeholders have paid little attention to demands related to mental well-being among older people. It is necessary to deliver mental health education to community stakeholders and the public, popularize mental health knowledge, and publicize professional psychological counseling and treatment services. Meanwhile, policy makers should allocate resources to train professional mental health services personnel to meet these growing mental health needs and increase financial support for mental health services for older adults.
Journal Article
Effects of Discontinue Rules on Psychometric Properties of Test Scores
by
Pan, Tianshu
,
von Davier, Matthias
,
Cho, Youngmi
in
Adaptive Testing
,
Assessment
,
Behavioral Science and Psychology
2019
This paper provides results on a form of adaptive testing that is used frequently in intelligence testing. In these tests, items are presented in order of increasing difficulty. The presentation of items is adaptive in the sense that a session is discontinued once a test taker produces a certain number of incorrect responses in sequence, with subsequent (not observed) responses commonly scored as wrong. The Stanford-Binet Intelligence Scales (SB5; Riverside Publishing Company,
2003
) and the Kaufman Assessment Battery for Children (KABC-II; Kaufman and Kaufman,
2004
), the Kaufman Adolescent and Adult Intelligence Test (Kaufman and Kaufman
2014
) and the Universal Nonverbal Intelligence Test (2nd ed.) (Bracken and McCallum
2015
) are some of the many examples using this rule. He and Wolfe (Educ Psychol Meas 72(5):808–826,
2012
.
https://doi.org/10.1177/0013164412441937
) compared different ability estimation methods in a simulation study for this discontinue rule adaptation of test length. However, there has been no study, to our knowledge, of the underlying distributional properties based on analytic arguments drawing on probability theory, of what these authors call stochastic censoring of responses. The study results obtained by He and Wolfe (Educ Psychol Meas 72(5):808–826,
2012
.
https://doi.org/10.1177/0013164412441937
) agree with results presented by DeAyala et al. (J Educ Meas 38:213–234,
2001
) as well as Rose et al. (Modeling non-ignorable missing data with item response theory (IRT; ETS RR-10-11), Educational Testing Service, Princeton,
2010
) and Rose et al. (Psychometrika 82:795–819,
2017
.
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11336-016-9544-7
) in that ability estimates are biased most when scoring the not observed responses as wrong. This scoring is used operationally, so more research is needed in order to improve practice in this field. The paper extends existing research on adaptivity by discontinue rules in intelligence tests in multiple ways: First, an analytical study of the distributional properties of discontinue rule scored items is presented. Second, a simulation is presented that includes additional scoring rules and uses ability estimators that may be suitable to reduce bias for discontinue rule scored intelligence tests.
Journal Article
Deep China
by
Pan Tianshu
,
Guo Jinhua
,
Arthur Kleinman
in
20th century china
,
asia public health
,
asian culture
2011
Deep China investigates the emotional and moral lives of the Chinese people as they adjust to the challenges of modernity. Sharing a medical anthropology and cultural psychiatry perspective, Arthur Kleinman, Yunxiang Yan, Jing Jun, Sing Lee, Everett Zhang, Pan Tianshu, Wu Fei, and Guo Jinhua delve into intimate and sometimes hidden areas of personal life and social practice to observe and narrate the drama of Chinese individualization. The essays explore the remaking of the moral person during China's profound social and economic transformation, unraveling the shifting practices and struggles of contemporary life.
Predicting Performance in the First-Year of Pharmacy School
by
Pan, Tianshu
,
Perez, Christina D.
,
Meagher, Donald G.
in
assessment
,
College Admission Test - statistics & numerical data
,
Data Collection
2011
Objectives. To determine the predictive validity of the Pharmacy College Admission Test (PCAT) scores and other variables for students’ success in the first year of doctor of pharmacy (PharmD) programs.
Methods. PCAT scores, entering grade-point averages (GPAs), demographic characteristics, and GPAs for the first year of pharmacy curriculum were collected from the Pharmacy College Application Service (PharmCAS) and from 22 pharmacy programs.
Results. PCAT scores and entering GPAs were positively correlated with subsequent GPAs after the first year. Regression analyses showed the contribution of PCAT scores and entering GPAs in predicting first-year pharmacy GPAs.
Conclusions. PCAT scores and prepharmacy GPAs both showed moderate predictive validity in indicating candidates likely to succeed in the first year of the pharmacy program. These findings are consistent with those of previous similar studies.
Journal Article
Restructuring the Chinese City
2005,2004
A sea of change has occurred in China since the 1978 economic reforms. Bringing together the work of leading scholars specializing in urban China, this book examines what has happened to the Chinese city undergoing multiple transformations during the reform era, with an emphasis on new processes of urban formation and the consequent reconstituted urban spaces. With arguments against the convergence thesis that sees cities everywhere becoming more Western in form and suggestions that the Chinese city is best seen as a multiplex city, Restructuring the Chinese City is an indispensable text for Chinese specialists, urban scholars and advanced students in urban geography, urban planning and China studies.
Predicting Performance in the First-Year of Pharmacy School
by
Perez, Christina D
,
Meagher, Donald G
,
Pan, Tianshu
in
Admissions policies
,
Core curriculum
,
Grade Point Average
2011
To determine the predictive validity of the Pharmacy College Admission Test (PCAT) scores and other variables for students' success in the first year of doctor of pharmacy (PharmD) programs. PCAT scores, entering grade-point averages (GPAs), demographic characteristics, and GPAs for the first year of pharmacy curriculum were collected from the Pharmacy College Application Service (PharmCAS) and from 22 pharmacy programs. PCAT scores and entering GPAs were positively correlated with subsequent GPAs after the first year. Regression analyses showed the contribution of PCAT scores and entering GPAs in predicting first-year pharmacy GPAs. PCAT scores and prepharmacy GPAs both showed moderate predictive validity in indicating candidates likely to succeed in the first year of the pharmacy program. These findings are consistent with those of previous similar studies.
Journal Article