1.With High hopes for Reverse of the JKMA.
Journal of the Korean Medical Association 2003;46(1):4-5
No abstract available.
Hope*
2.The Last Fifty Years of Western Medicine in Korea: Korean Radiological Society.
Journal of the Korean Medical Association 1997;40(8):1055-1069
No abstract available.
Korea*
3.Computed tomography of pituitary apoplexy: report of 2 cases
Journal of the Korean Radiological Society 1982;18(1):45-48
Pituitary apoplexy, the sudden infarction, necrosis or hemorrhage into a pituitary adenoma may be threatening life and is difficult to diagnose. With an advent of CT, early diagnosis of hemorrhage into the pituitary adenomais possible if one has familiarity with its characteristic CT changes. Two cases of pituitary apoplexy are reported with brief review of the literatures. One case had a history of radiation therapy for pituitary adenoma 7 years ago, and the other had no symptoms or sings of pituitary tumor prior to onset of disease.
Early Diagnosis
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Hemorrhage
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Infarction
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Necrosis
;
Pituitary Apoplexy
;
Pituitary Neoplasms
;
Recognition (Psychology)
4.Computed tomography of pediatric head trauma
Kyoung Hee SHIN ; Bum Shin CHO ; Chang Kok HAHM
Journal of the Korean Radiological Society 1982;18(2):225-237
The development of CT scanning has revolutionized the role of radiology in the management of the pediatric head trauma. The procedure is safe and can be repeated to reassess a changing neurologic picture, thereby correlation the clinical and pathologic changes. This study included evaluation of CT of 178 infants and children with head trauma during the period of 31 months from Feb. 1979 to Aug. 1981 in the department of radiology, College of Medicine, Hanyang University. 1. Age distribution of the total 178 pediatric patients was ranging from one month to 16 years. The pediatric patient population was comprised of 128 males and 50 females, and its male to female ratio was about 2.5:1. The incidence of age occurring in 3 to 6 years was 38.2% and 7 to 10 years was29.2%. Therefore the distribution of age between 3 to 6 years and 7 to 10 years was occurred in two-thirds of allpediatric patients. 2. Of all cases of injuries, traffic accidents were 60.1% and falls were 34.8%. 3. Skull fractures were roentgenographically detected in 61 (34.3%). However, the incidence of fractures in pretoddler group (0-2 years) was 61.1% and 7 to 10 years was 37.8%, 3 to 6 years was 36.8%. Most common site of skull fracture was occipital bone, next parietal bone. 4. 54.8% of pediatric head trauma due to a fall had a skull fracture, as did25.2% of those who were injured in traffic accident. 5. Cerebral CT of the total 178 pediatric patients were revealed as following study; Normal was 74.2%, epidural hematoma was 8.9%, subdural hematoma was 5.1%, Cerebral contusion was 4.5%, intracerebral hematoma was 2.2% etc. 6. Of 25 cases of the epidural and subdural hematoma, Supratentorial area was 15 cases, infratentorial area was 10 cases. 7. Most of the epidural hematoma was demonstrated a clear mental state. 8. However, intracerebral hematoma and cerebral contusion were occurred almost impairment of mental state.
Accidental Falls
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Accidents, Traffic
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Age Distribution
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Child
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Contusions
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Craniocerebral Trauma
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Female
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Head
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Hematoma
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Hematoma, Subdural
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Humans
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Incidence
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Infant
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Male
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Occipital Bone
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Parietal Bone
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Skull Fractures
;
Tomography, X-Ray Computed
5.Computed tomography of intraventricular hemorrhage
Bum Shin CHO ; Kyoung Hee SHIN ; Chang Kok HAHM
Journal of the Korean Radiological Society 1982;18(2):212-224
CT is a new non-invasive diagnostic imaging method, which has ability to differentiate D.S.F., hematoma, and even edematous brain from normal brain tissue. Prior to the introduction of the CT, the diagnosis of the intraventricular hemorrhage in living patients was difficult and was confirmed by surgery or autopsy. Intracranial hemorrhages are visible on the CT with density higher than brain tissue in acute phase. CT is an accurate method for detecting of intraventricular hemorrhage including detection of nature, location, amount, and associated changes. CT is also useful as a surgical guidance and in the evaluation of fate of the hematomas by easily performable follow up studies. The causes of the intraventricular hemorrhages are hypertension, rupture of aneurysm, arteriovenous malformation, head trauma, brain tumor, and others. This study included evaluation of CT of 69 patients who show the high density in cerebral ventricular system during the period of 31 months fromFeb.1979 to Aug. 1981 in the department of radiology, college of medicine, Hanyang University. The results were as follows. 1. Age distribution of the total 69 patients was broad ranging from 1 month to 80 years. 28% of patients were in the 6th decade. The male to female ratio was 2:1. 2. The consciousness of patients at CT study: Those were conscious in 11 cases, stuporous in 41 cases and unconscious in 17 cases. 3. The causes of intraventricular hemorrhages were hypertension in 28 cases, head trauma in 12 cases, aneurysm in 4 cases, tumor in 2 cases and others in 23 cases. 4. 9 cases showed intraventricular hematomas only, other 60 cases showed associated intracranial hematomas: Those were intracerebral hematomas in 53 cases including 30 cases of basal ganglial & thalamic hematomas, subarachnoid hemorrhages in 17 cases, epidural hematomas in 3 cases, and subdural hematomas in2 cases. 5. All cases of the intraventricular hematomas except one showed hematoma in the lateral ventricles, hematomas in the 3rd ventricle in 35 cases, and hematomas in the 4th ventricle in 29 cases. 6. 28 out of 69 cases showed dilatation of the lateral ventricles. 7. Only 8 out of 69 cases were improved remarkably, 11 cases were slightly improved, and 48 cases were expired. The overall mortality was 70%. 8. The consciousness of the patient at the CT study and possibly the associated intracerbral hematoma play an important role in mortality. The age of the patients, causes of hemorrhages, presence of ventricular dilatation, and methods of treatment did not affect the mortality.
Age Distribution
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Aneurysm
;
Arteriovenous Fistula
;
Autopsy
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Brain
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Brain Neoplasms
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Cerebral Ventricles
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Consciousness
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Craniocerebral Trauma
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Diagnosis
;
Diagnostic Imaging
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Dilatation
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Female
;
Follow-Up Studies
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Fourth Ventricle
;
Hematoma
;
Hematoma, Subdural
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Hemorrhage
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Humans
;
Hypertension
;
Intracranial Hemorrhages
;
Lateral Ventricles
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Male
;
Methods
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Mortality
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Rupture
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Stupor
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Subarachnoid Hemorrhage
;
Third Ventricle
6.Hepatocellular carcinomas with cavernous transformation of the portal vein
Heung Suk SEO ; Seung Ro LEE ; Chang Kok HAHM
Journal of the Korean Radiological Society 1985;21(5):772-776
Twenty cases of hepatocelluar carcinoma were examined by selective celiac and superior mesentericarteriography. Obstruction of the main portal vein due to tumor thrombus was revealed in 7 cases and 3 of thesecases had carvenous transformation of the protal vein(CTPV). The authors intended in this study to evaluate CTPVgroup and non-CTPV group clinically and radiologically. The results obtained are as follows; 1. The duration ofillness was shorter in CTPV group than non-CTPV group. 2. There was no significant difference in tumor sizebetween two groups, and main portion of tumor was located in the right lobe in both groups. 3. Arterioportal shuntwas present in 2 of 4 cases in non-CTPV group, but was no present at all in CTPV group. 4. Hepatofugal collateralsof portal vein were developed in all but one in both groups. 5. There was no significant difference in bloodchemistry between two groups. 6. CTPV may play an important role maintain the hepatic blood flow.
Carcinoma, Hepatocellular
;
Portal Vein
;
Thrombosis
7.MRI of Intracranial Meningiomas: Correlations with T2 Signal Intensity and Histopathologic Findings.
Eun Kyung HONG ; Chang Soo KIM ; Chang Kok HAHM ; Oh Keun BAE ; Seung Ro LEE
Journal of the Korean Radiological Society 1995;32(5):695-701
PURPOSE: To correlate histologic subtypes with MR signal intensity in meniagioma and to find etiologic factors responsible for the signal characteristics of T2WI. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We. reviewed MRIs and histopathologic studies in 35 cases of meningioma. MR signal intenisty was measured with respect to cerebral cortex(gray matter) as hypointense, isointense, or hyperintense. Pathologically, meningioma was classified into subtypes, acording to the new WHO classification of brain tumors. The degree of cellularity, collagen, and vascularity was graded from 1 to 3, and presence or absence of psammoma bodies, microcysts, micronecrosis and microhemorrhage was obeserved. Multiple linear regression analysis was done to find relationship between the pathologic findings and MR signal intensity of T2WI. RESULTS: Even in the same subtype, cellularity, collagen and vascularty of the tumor were different. T1WI was not useful in discriminating pathologic subtype because most tumors were isointense or hypointense to the cortex regardless of histologic type. Most tumors showed various signal intensity on T2WI, but T2WI were not useful, either. Exceptionally, all five cases of microcystic meningiomas were hyperintense on T2W1. In analysing the relationship between MR signal intensity and pathologic factor, increased collagen content produced decreased signal intensity(P<0.01) and the existence of microcyst resulted in high signal intensity(P<0.01). Cellularity, vascularity, microcalcification, micronecrosis and microhemorrhage had no relationship with signal intensity on T2WI. CONCLUSION: Except for the five microcystic meningiomas with hyperintenty on T2WI there was no relationship between MR signal intensity and subtype of meningiomas. Pathologic factors influencing T2 signal intensity were microcyst and collagen. Even in the same subtypes of meningiomas, the T2 signal intensity was different. This may be due to different ratio of microcyst and collagen.
Brain Neoplasms
;
Classification
;
Collagen
;
Linear Models
;
Magnetic Resonance Imaging*
;
Meningioma*
8.Ethical Issues of Multiple Publication.
Journal of the Korean Medical Association 2007;50(4):375-381
Duplicate publication is publishing of an article that is identical to or overlaps considerable parts with one that has been already published elsewhere. If one or more authors retain common authorship in two separate papers with the same context, the papers are considered to be duplicated, but not plagiarized. The corresponding author was usually the case, but the first author is changed frequently. The characteristics of duplicate publication in Korea are republication of paper in journals indexed in SCI database after publishing in Korean journal one or two years before. In almost all cases they are not cross referenced. In Korean cases of duplicate publication, duplicate submissions are not rare. Generally the title is modified, and the list of authors and the sample size undergo a minor change with trivial methodological changes. Multiple publications in Korean journals usually consist of fragmentation (salami slicing) publications and overlapping (imalas) publications. Duplicate publication is an unethical behavior because of the waste of resources such as valuable time of busy reviewers, editorial work and pages, space of indexing database, and delaying the publication time of other researcher's paper. Duplicate publication is a violation of international copyright law as well. Sometimes it can distort or overemphasize the results in meta-analysis studies because of overlapping of samples. To prevent duplicate publication, the editor should provide instructions regarding the journal's policy toward duplicate publication and should make authors to read the instruction in detail. Educational programs for the reviewers will reduce the incidence by letting them know why and how to detect duplicate publication.
Abstracting and Indexing as Topic
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Authorship
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Copyright
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Ethics*
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Incidence
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Jurisprudence
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Korea
;
Linear Energy Transfer
;
Publications*
;
Sample Size
9.Treatment of Tracheobronchial Stenosis with a Self-Expandable Metallic Stents.
Yo Won CHOI ; Yong Soo KIM ; Seok Chol JEON ; Chang Kok HAHM ; Chul Seung CHOI
Journal of the Korean Radiological Society 1994;31(1):35-41
PURPOSE: We analysed the role of modified Gianturco self-expandable stents in the treatment of tracheobronchial stenosis in 13 patients. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We inserted modified Gianturco self-expandable stents under the fluoroscopic and bronchoscopic guidance. There were stenosis in the trachea(n--2), the right main bronchus(n=2), and the left main bronchus(n=9). The causes of the stenosis were endobronchial tuberculosis(n=10), intubation granuloma (n=l), restenosis after surgical reconstruction(n=2). RESULTS: Dyspnea or wheezing was improved within 1 or 2 days following the procedure. There were 32% and 22% respective increase in average FEV1 and FVC. Lung perfusion scan showed 9.6% increase of perfusion in the involved lung. No complications related to the procedure were encountered. During follow-up period of up to 31 months, 2 patients showed tracheal or bronchial restenosis, at 3 and 6 months, retrospectively. There was a distal migration of the stents in one case. CONCLUSION: During the follow up period after stent insertion, improvement of the obstructive changes and dyspnea persisted in 10 out of 13 patients. The modified Gianturco self-expandable metallic stents may be a good choice for the treatment of tracheobronchial stenosis, either as a primary treatment, or when the reconstruction failed.
Constriction, Pathologic*
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Dyspnea
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Follow-Up Studies
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Granuloma
;
Humans
;
Intubation
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Lung
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Perfusion
;
Respiratory Sounds
;
Retrospective Studies
;
Stents*
10.Fine Needle Aspiration Biopsy of the Lung in Children with Diffuse Pulmonary Lesions Suggesting Pneurnocystis carinii Pneumonia.
Yo Won CHOI ; Yong Soo KIM ; Seok Chol JEON ; Chang Kok HAHM ; Chul Seung CHOI
Journal of the Korean Radiological Society 1994;30(6):1147-1150
PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to determine the following:the safety of fine needle aspiration biopsy in immunocompromized children with radiographic features of Pneumocystis car/nil pneumonia, its diagnostic rate in those groups and the appropriate radiographic stage for fine needle aspiration biopsy to prove the etiologic agent. METHODS AND MATERIALS: We retrospectively reviewed the patient records of 16 children with immune compromizing diseases who had undergone fine needle aspiration biopsy of the lung. They showed the infectious sign of the lung along with the radiographic pattern of diffuse pulmonary disease, suggesting Pneumocystis carlnil pneumonia. All patients had underlying lymphoreticular malignancies including 14 acute lymphocytic leukemia and 2 non Hodgkin's lymphoma. According to the radiographic pattern of biopsy site, parenchymal disease was categorized as fine reticulonodular density(n=4), ground-glass opacity(n=9) and compact consolidation(n=3). We assessed the diagnostic rate of Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia and complications in each of the three groups. RESULTS: A diagnosis of Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia was established by fine needle aspiration biopsy in 9 patients(56%) including 2 of 4 patients with fine reticulonodular density, 4 of 9 patients with ground-glass opacity, and all 3 patients with compact consolidation. Four patients(25%) developed pneumothorax, and three of them required tube insertion. There was no patient who developed hemoptysis. CONCLUSION: Fine needle aspiration biopsy is a safe and easy method that can yield Pneumocystis carinii organism at a relatively high rate in immunocompromized children with diffuse pulmonary lesions suopicions of Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia. We recommend performing fine needle aspiration biopsy regardlesss of radiographic patterns when Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia is suggested.
Biopsy*
;
Biopsy, Fine-Needle*
;
Child*
;
Diagnosis
;
Hemoptysis
;
Humans
;
Lung Diseases
;
Lung*
;
Lymphoma, Non-Hodgkin
;
Pneumocystis
;
Pneumocystis carinii
;
Pneumonia*
;
Pneumonia, Pneumocystis
;
Pneumothorax
;
Precursor Cell Lymphoblastic Leukemia-Lymphoma
;
Retrospective Studies