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Title: The Analysis of Constitutions of Traditional Chinese Medicine in Relation to Cerebral Infarction in a Chinese Sample. Author: Liu J, Xu F, Mohammadtursun N, Lv Y, Tang Z, Dong J. Journal: J Altern Complement Med; 2018 May; 24(5):458-462. PubMed ID: 28820606. Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To investigate the relationships between the constitutions of Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) and patients with cerebral infarction (CI) in a Chinese sample. METHODS: A total of 3748 participants with complete data were available for data analysis. All study subjects underwent complete clinical baseline characteristics' evaluation, including a physical examination and response to a structured, nurse-assisted, self-administrated questionnaire. A population of 2010 neutral participants were used as the control group. Multiple variable regression (MLR) were employed to estimate the relationship between constitutions of TCM and the outcome. DESIGN: A cross-sectional study was conducted to evaluate the association of body constitution of TCM and CI. SETTINGS/LOCATION: Communications and healthcare centers in Shanghai. SUBJECTS: A total of 3748 participants with complete data were available for data analysis. OUTCOME MEASURES: All study subjects underwent complete clinical baseline characteristics' evaluation, including a physical examination and response to a structured, nurse-assisted, self-administrated questionnaire. A population of 2010 neutral participants were used as the control group. MLR were employed to estimate the relationship between constitutions of TCM and the outcome. RESULT: The prevalence of CI was 2.84% and 4.66% in neutral participants and yang-deficient participants (p = 0.012), respectively. Univariate analysis demonstrated a positive correlation between yang deficiency and CI. After adjustment for relevant potential confounding factors, the MLR detected significant associations between yang deficiency and CI (odds ratio = 1.44, p = 0.093). CONCLUSION: A yang-deficient constitution was significantly and independently associated with CI. A higher prevalence of CI was found in yang-deficient participants as compared with neutral participants.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]