Junlin Li
Southern Medical University
11 Papers
Junlin Li is an academic researcher from Southern Medical University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Internal medicine. The author has an hindex of 1, co-authored 1 publications.
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Papers
Histological and molecular glioblastoma, IDH-wildtype: a real-world landscape using the 2021 WHO classification of central nervous system tumors
Xiaopeng Guo,Lingui Gu,Yilin Li,Zhiyao Zheng,Wenlin Chen,Hao Xing,Yixin Shi,Delin Liu,Tianrui Yang,Yu Xia,Junlin Li,Jiaming Wu,Kun Zhang,Tingyu Liang,Hai Wang,Qianshuo Liu,S. A. Jin,T. Qu,Siying Guo,Huanzhang Li,Wenbin Ma +20 more
TL;DR: In this paper , the clinical, radiological, molecular, and survival features of Glioblastoma (GBM) under the current classification scheme and explore survival determinants were investigated.
Clinical updates on gliomas and implications of the 5th edition of the WHO classification of central nervous system tumors
Xiaopeng Guo,Yixin Shi,Delin Liu,Yilin Li,Wenlin Chen,Yaning Wang,Yuekun Wang,Hao Xing,Yu Xia,Junlin Li,Jiaming Wu,Tingyu Liang,Hai Feng Wang,Qianshuo Liu,S. A. Jin,T. Qu,Siying Guo,Huanzhang Li,Tianrui Yang,Kun Zhang,Yu Wang,Wenbin Ma +21 more
TL;DR: The 5th edition of the World Health Organization (WHO) classification of central nervous system tumors incorporated specific molecular alterations into the categorization of gliomas and the major revision of the classification scheme effectuates significant changes in the diagnosis and management of Glioma as mentioned in this paper .
Radiomics-based infarct features on CT predict hemorrhagic transformation in patients with acute ischemic stroke
TL;DR: This model, which was based on CT radiomics features, could help to predict HT in the setting of acute ischemic stroke for any infarct size and provide guiding suggestions for clinical treatment and prognosis evaluation.
Imaging-based assessment of body composition in patients with Crohn’s disease: a systematic review
TL;DR: Altered body composition can be a significant predictor of poor outcomes for CD patients, and the body composition of CD patients may serve as a potential therapeutic target to help optimize disease management strategies in clinical practice.
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A controlled study on the anatomy of cervical extraforaminal ligaments and three-dimensional fast-imaging employing a steady-state acquisition sequence.
TL;DR: In the 3D-FIESTA sequence scans that the radiologist believed to indicate the presence of a cervical TFL, the probability that the TFL existed was approximately 93%.
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