Abstract
The current research was designed to investigate the impact of whole-process high-quality nursing on acute pancreatitis (AP) patients' quality of life as well as the mechanism of miR-126-5p/HOXC8 axis promoting AP progression. One hundred AP patients admitted to our hospital were chosen and separated into control group (CG, n=50) and study group (SG, n=50). The CG took the routine nursing, while the SG adopted the whole-process high-quality nursing. Besides, cerulein (CE) was treated in AR42J cells to establish an experimental model of AP. The proliferation, apoptosis along with inflammation of CE-treated AR42J cells were assessed. The outcomes manifested that in contrast to the CG, the recovery time of bowel sound, the improvement time of abdominal distension, the improvement time of abdominal pain, the exhaust time and the defecation time in the SG presented shorter, the anxiety and depression scores in the SG presented lower, the WHOQOL-100 scores of patients in the SG presented higher in the fields of physiology, psychology, environment and social relations, the total incidence of complications of the SG presented lower, and the total nursing satisfaction of the SG was better. Besides, miR-126-5p presented upregulation in CE-stimulated AR42J cells, and miR-126-5p inhibition increased the proliferation along with repressed the apoptosis and inflammation in CE-stimulated AR42J cells. Moreover, HOXC8 could be the target mRNA of miR-126-5p, and HOXC8 elevation promoted the proliferation along with repressed the apoptosis and inflammation in CE-stimulated AR42J cells. In addition, rescue assays further validated that HOXC8 silence offset the protective impact of miR-126-5p repression on AP cell damage. In conclusion, our study indicated that whole-process high-quality nursing could promote the quality of life of AP patients, and revealed that miR-126-5p inhibition relieved CE-stimulated AR42J cells injury caused by AP via targeting HOXC8. Our study might offer novel insights for AP treatment and nursing.
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More From: Cellular and molecular biology (Noisy-le-Grand, France)
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