Tianchi Yang
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
5 Papers
32 Citations
Tianchi Yang is an academic researcher from Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. 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
A case–control study of risk factors for severe hand–foot–mouth disease among children in Ningbo, China, 2010–2011
TL;DR: Clinicians should pay increased attention to children diagnosed as HFMD with the independent risk factors above, and an increased risk of severity was significantly associated with the presence of, e.g., a high fever of over 39°C for more than 3 days.
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Effectiveness of Prophylactic Use of Hepatoprotectants for Tuberculosis Drug-Induced Liver Injury: A Population-Based Cohort Analysis Involving 6,743 Chinese Patients
Qin Chen,Airong Hu,Aixia Ma,Feng Jiang,Yue Xiao,Yanfei Chen,R. Huang,Tianchi Yang,Ji-fang Zhou +8 more
TL;DR: Evaluating the patterns of prophylactic therapies in real-world settings and risks of DILI among adult TB patients without known risk factors found a non-trivial number of adult patients received chemopreventive agents for TB-DILI received hepatoprotective agents.
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Evaluation of whole-genome sequence to predict drug resistance of nine anti-tuberculosis drugs and characterize resistance genes in clinical rifampicin-resistant Mycobacterium tuberculosis isolates from Ningbo, China
TL;DR: WGS is a reliable method for predicting resistance to INH, RIF, EMB, SM, AM, CAP, LFX, PTO, and PAS with high consistency, sensitivity, and specificity and there was no transmission that occurred among the patients with RR-TB in Ningbo, China.
Long-term vaccine efficacy of a 2-dose varicella vaccine in China from 2011 to 2021: A retrospective observational study
TL;DR: Wang et al. as mentioned in this paper assessed the long-term vaccine efficacy of the two-dose varicella vaccine and analysis of its influencing factors, and found that the vaccination age of the second dose and the interval between 2 doses were both associated with VE.
Risk of peripheral facial palsy following parenteral inactivated influenza vaccination in the elderly Chinese population
Tianchi Yang,Rui Ma,Lixia Ye,Qi-Yuan Mei,Jianmei Wang,Yueyi Feng,Shao-ying Zhou,Xing-Yang Pan,Danbiao Hu,Dan Zhang +9 more
TL;DR: Wang et al. as mentioned in this paper evaluated the risk of peripheral facial palsy following inactivated influenza vaccine in the elderly using a large linked database in Ningbo, China, and found that influenza vaccination does not increase PFP risk.