Yuan Li’s research while affiliated with The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston and other places

What is this page?


This page lists works of an author who doesn't have a ResearchGate profile or hasn't added the works to their profile yet. It is automatically generated from public (personal) data to further our legitimate goal of comprehensive and accurate scientific recordkeeping. If you are this author and want this page removed, please let us know.

Publications (5)


Reduced Health-Related Quality of Life in Patients With Systemic Sclerosis: A Cross-Sectional Analysis of PROMIS Global Health Data From the International COVAD-2 e-Survey
  • Article

February 2025

·

57 Reads

International Journal of Rheumatic Diseases

Keina Yomono

·

Yuan Li

·

Vahed Maroufy

·

[...]

·

COVAD Study Group

Prevalence of Four Types of Social Support and Their Relation to Mental Health among low-income U.S. Veterans: Implications for Community Health
  • Article
  • Publisher preview available

July 2024

·

19 Reads

·

2 Citations

Community Mental Health Journal

To provide a comprehensive examination of different types of social support and associations with mental health among U.S. military veterans, a group vulnerable to psychosocial dysfunction. Using a nationally representative sample of 1,004 low-income U.S. veterans, this study examined the prevalence and mental health correlates of emotional, informational/tangible, positive social interaction, and affectionate social support. In the sample, 49–60% of participants perceived the four types of social support “most of the time” with the lowest prevalence being positive social interaction and the highest being affectionate support. Multivariable analyses found higher levels of all four types of social support were significantly associated with being married and greater mental health functioning. Some types of social support were uniquely associated with income level and positive screens for specific psychiatric disorders. Low social support is common among low-income U.S. veterans, and there is a need for community health interventions that target different types of social support to improve mental health and community integration.

View access options

Impaired health-related quality of life in idiopathic inflammatory myopathies: a cross-sectional analysis from the COVAD-2 e-survey

March 2024

·

129 Reads

·

3 Citations

Rheumatology Advances in Practice

Objectives To investigate health-related quality of life in patients with idiopathic inflammatory myopathies (IIMs) compared with those with non-IIM autoimmune rheumatic diseases (AIRDs), non-rheumatic autoimmune diseases (nrAIDs), and without autoimmune diseases (controls), using Patient-Reported Outcome Measurement Information System (PROMIS) instrument data obtained from the second COVID-19 vaccination in autoimmune disease (COVAD-2) e-survey database. Methods Demographics, diagnosis, comorbidities, disease activity, treatments, and PROMIS instrument data were analysed. Primary outcomes were PROMIS Global Physical Health (GPH) and Global Mental Health (GMH) scores. Factors affecting GPH and GMH scores in IIMs were identified using multivariable regression analysis. Results We analysed responses from 1582 IIMs, 4700 non-IIM AIRDs, 545 nrAIDs, and 3675 controls gathered until May 23, 2022. GPH median (IQR) scores were the lowest in IIMs and non-IIM AIRDs (13 [10–15] IIMs vs.s 13 [11–15] non-IIM AIRDs vs.s 15 [13–17] nrAIDs vs.s 17 [15–18] controls, p < 0.001). GMH median (IQR) scores in IIMs were also significantly lower compared with those without autoimmune diseases (13 [10–15] IIMs vs.s 15 [13–17] controls, p < 0.001). Inclusion body myositis, comorbidities, active disease, and glucocorticoid use were the determinants of lower GPH scores, whereas overlap myositis, interstitial lung disease, depression, active disease, lower PROMIS Physical Function-10a, and higher PROMIS Fatigue-4a scores were associated with lower GMH scores in IIMs. Conclusion Both physical and mental health are significantly impaired in IIMs, particularly in those with comorbidities and increased fatigue, emphasizing the importance of patient-reported experiences and optimized multidisciplinary care to enhance well-being in people with IIMs.


Summarize the patient’s cohort in this serial image analysis study
Temporal changes in the hematomal tissues and corticospinal tracts (CST) in a representative patient are shown. A significant (p < 0.01) reduction in the hematoma volume between visit-1 (A) and visit-2 (B) is shown on a coronal view of a fluid-attenuated inversion recovery. The temporal change in the CST is illustrated by DTI color-coded maps at visit-1 (C) and visit-2 (D). Using principal component analysis, an overall change in the ipsilesional and contralesional CST shape is depicted in (E) using color code landmarks. At visit-1, the ipsilesional CST (red) shape was significantly (p < 0.0001) different in shape than the reference mirrored contralesional (green) shape. At visit − 2 (blue), the ipsilesional CST exhibited no significant difference as compared to the reference CST shape
Illustrates the temporal changes in ipsilesional CST shape variance in the first three principal components (P1, PC2, and PC3). Using Kendall’s shape space, after principal components analysis, the Procrustes coordinate landmarks are represented as a single point in a multidimensional space. The distance between any given point represents the magnitude of the difference in shape. A illustrates the change in ipsilesional CST shape variance in the PC1, PC2, and PC3 at visit-1 (red) and visit-2 (blue) as compared to the reference shape (green). Fig-A illustrates the change in ipsilesional CST shape variance in the PC1, PC2, and PC3 at visit-1 (red) and visit-2 (blue), as compared to the reference shape (green). The ipsilesional CST shape variance was 58.3% among the first three principal components’ scores variance. As compared to the reference shape, the baseline shape exhibits significant differences, which were restored at the follow-up imaging. The box plots in B are a quantitative summary of shape variance in the first three PCs with significant (p < 0.001) differences in PC1 at the baseline variance shape variance in PC1
Longitudinal Morphometric Changes in the Corticospinal Tract Shape After Hemorrhagic Stroke

Translational Stroke Research

Deep intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) exerts a direct force on corticospinal tracts (CST) causing shape deformation. Using serial MRI, Generalized Procrustes Analysis (GPA), and Principal Components Analysis (PCA), we temporally evaluated the change in CST shape. Thirty-five deep ICH patients with ipsilesional-CST deformation were serially imaged on a 3T-MRI with a median imaging time of day-2 and 84 of onset. Anatomical and diffusion tensor images (DTI) were acquired. Using DTI color-coded maps, 15 landmarks were drawn on each CST and the centroids were computed in 3 dimensions. The contralesional-CST landmarks were used as a reference. The GPA outlined the shape coordinates and we superimposed the ipsilesional-CST shape at the two-time points. A multivariate PCA was applied to identify eigenvectors associated with the highest percentile of change. The first three principal components representing CST deformation along the left-right (PC1), anterior-posterior (PC2), and superior-inferior (PC3) respectively were responsible for 57.9% of shape variance. The PC1 (36.1%, p < 0.0001) and PC3 (9.58%, p < 0.01) showed a significant deformation between the two-time points. Compared to the contralesional-CST, the ipsilesional PC scores were significantly (p < 0.0001) different only at the first-timepoint. A significant positive association between the ipsilesional-CST deformation and hematoma volume was observed. We present a novel method to quantify CST deformation caused by ICH. Deformation most often occurs in left-right axis (PC1) and superior-inferior (PC3) directions. As compared to the reference, the significant temporal difference at the first time point suggests CST restoration over time.


POS1231 IMPAIRED HEALTH-RELATED QUALITY OF LIFE IN PATIENTS WITH IDIOPATHIC INFLAMMATORY MYOPATHIES: A CROSS-SECTIONAL ANALYSIS FROM AN INTERNATIONAL E-SURVEY

June 2023

·

74 Reads

·

1 Citation

Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases

Background Comprehensive and large-scale assessment of health-related quality of life in patients with idiopathic inflammatory myopathies (IIMs) worldwide is lacking. The second COVID-19 vaccination in autoimmune disease (COVAD-2) study [1] is an international, multicentre, self-reported e-survey assessing several aspects of COVID-19 infection and vaccination as well as validated patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) to outline patient experience in various autoimmune diseases (AIDs), with a particular focus on IIMs. Objectives To investigate physical and mental health in a global cohort of IIM patients compared to those with non-IIM autoimmune inflammatory rheumatic diseases (AIRDs), non-rheumatic AIDs (NRAIDs), and those without AIDs (controls), using Patient-Reported Outcome Measurement Information System (PROMIS) global health data obtained from the COVAD-2 survey. Methods Demographics, AID diagnoses, comorbidities, disease activity, treatments, and PROMs were extracted from the COVAD-2 database. The primary outcomes were PROMIS Global Physical Health (GPH) and Global Mental Health (GMH) scores. Secondary outcomes included PROMIS physical function short form-10a (PROMIS PF-10a), pain visual analogue scale (VAS), and PROMIS Fatigue-4a scores. Each outcome was compared between IIMs, non-IIM AIRDs, NRAIDs, and controls. Factors affecting GPH and GMH scores in IIMs were identified using multivariable regression analysis. Results A total of 10,502 complete responses from 1582 IIMs, 4700 non-IIM AIRDs, 545 NRAIDs, and 3675 controls, which accrued as of May 2022, were analysed. Patients with IIMs were older [59±14 (IIMs) vs. 48±14 (non-IIM AIRDs) vs. 45±14 (NRAIDs) vs. 40±14 (controls) years, p<0.001] and more likely to be Caucasian [82.7% (IIMs) vs. 53.2% (non-IIM AIRDs) vs. 62.4% (NRAIDs) vs. 34.5% (controls), p<0.001]. Among IIMs, dermatomyositis (DM) and juvenile DM were the most common (31.4%), followed by inclusion body myositis (IBM) (24.9%). Patients with IIMs were more likely to have comorbidities [68.1% (IIMs) vs. 45.7% (non-IIM AIRDs) vs. 45.1% (NRAIDs) vs. 26.3% (controls), p<0.001] including mental disorders [33.4% (IIMs) vs. 28.2% (non-IIM AIRDs) vs. 28.4% (NRAIDs) vs. 17.9% (controls), p<0.001]. GPH median scores were lower in IIMs compared to NRAIDs or controls [13 (interquartile range 10–15) IIMs vs. 13 (11–15) non-IIM AIRDs vs. 15 (13–17) NRAIDs vs. 17 (15–18) controls, p<0.001] and PROMIS PF-10a median scores were the lowest in IIMs [34 (25–43) IIMs vs. 40 (34–46) non-IIM AIRDs vs. 47 (40–50) NRAIDs vs. 49 (45–50) controls, p<0.001]. GMH median scores were lower in AIDs including IIMs compared to controls [13 (10–15) IIMs vs. 13 (10–15) non-IIM AIRDs vs. 13 (11–16) NRAIDs vs. 15 (13–17) controls, p<0.001]. Pain VAS median scores were higher in AIDs compared to controls [3 (1–5) IIMs vs. 4 (2–6) non-IIM AIRDs vs. 2 (0–4) NRAIDs vs. 0 (0–2) controls, p<0.001]. Of note, PROMIS Fatigue-4a median scores were the highest in IIMs [11 (8–14) IIMs vs. 8 (10–14) non-IIM AIRDs vs. 9 (7–13) NRAIDs vs. 7 (4–10) controls, p<0.001]. Multivariable regression analysis in IIMs identified older age, male sex, IBM, comorbidities including hypertension and diabetes, active disease, glucocorticoid use, increased pain and fatigue as the independent factors for lower GPH scores, whereas coexistence of interstitial lung disease, mental disorders including anxiety disorder and depression, active disease, increased pain and fatigue were the independent factors for lower GMH scores. Conclusion Both physical and mental health are significantly impaired in patients with IIMs compared to those with non-IIM AIDs or those without AIDs. Our results call for greater attention to patient-reported experience and comorbidities including mental disorders to provide targeted approaches and optimise global well-being in patients with IIMs. Reference [1]Fazal ZZ, Sen P, Joshi M, et al. COVAD survey 2 long-term outcomes: unmet need and protocol. Rheumatol Int. 2022;42:2151–58.

Citations (2)


... The influence of interpersonal relationships and social interactions on physical [15][16][17][18] and mental health [19][20][21] is well documented in the literature. ...

Reference:

Social Support and Postpartum Depressive Symptoms in Portuguese Women: The Mediating Role of Emotion Regulation Difficulties
Prevalence of Four Types of Social Support and Their Relation to Mental Health among low-income U.S. Veterans: Implications for Community Health

Community Mental Health Journal

... Dear Editor, We thank Finsterer J for the comments on our article [1], in which we investigated health-related quality of life (HRQoL) in patients with idiopathic inflammatory myopathies (IIMs) using Patient-Reported Outcome Measurement Information System (PROMIS) instrument data obtained from the second COVID-19 vaccination in autoimmune disease (COVAD-2) e-survey database [2]. ...

Impaired health-related quality of life in idiopathic inflammatory myopathies: a cross-sectional analysis from the COVAD-2 e-survey

Rheumatology Advances in Practice