1.Feasibility of Rehabilitation Training With a Newly Developed, Portable, Gait Assistive Robot for Balance Function in Hemiplegic Patients.
Junhyun SUNG ; Sehoon CHOI ; Hyunbae KIM ; Gyuhan LEE ; Changsoo HAN ; Younghoon JI ; Dongbin SHIN ; Seunghoon HWANG ; Deokwon YUN ; Hyeyoun JANG ; Mi Jung KIM
Annals of Rehabilitation Medicine 2017;41(2):178-187
OBJECTIVE: To investigate the clinical feasibility of a newly developed, portable, gait assistive robot (WA-H, ‘walking assist for hemiplegia’) for improving the balance function of patients with stroke-induced hemiplegia. METHODS: Thirteen patients underwent 12 weeks of gait training on the treadmill while wearing WA-H for 30 minutes per day, 4 days a week. Patients' balance function was evaluated by the Berg Balance Scale (BBS), Fugl-Meyer Assessment Scale (FMAS), Timed Up and Go Test (TUGT), and Short Physical Performance Battery (SPPB) before and after 6 and 12 weeks of training. RESULTS: There were no serious complications or clinical difficulties during gait training with WA-H. In three categories of BBS, TUGT, and the balance scale of SPPB, there was a statistically significant improvement at the 6th week and 12th week of gait training with WA-H. In the subscale of balance function of FMAS, there was statistically significant improvement only at the 12th week. CONCLUSION: Gait training using WA-H demonstrated a beneficial effect on balance function in patients with hemiplegia without a safety issue.
Gait*
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Hemiplegia
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Humans
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Rehabilitation*
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Robotics
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Stroke
2.Structural and Resting-State Brain Alterations in Trauma-Exposed Firefighters: Preliminary Results
Yae Won PARK ; Suhnyoung JUN ; Juwhan NOH ; Seok Jong CHUNG ; Sanghoon HAN ; Phil Hyu LEE ; Changsoo KIM ; Seung-Koo LEE
Journal of the Korean Radiological Society 2020;81(3):676-687
Purpose:
To analyze the altered brain regions and intrinsic brain activity patterns in trauma-exposed firefighters without posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD).
Materials and Methods:
Resting-state functional MRI (rsfMRI) was performed for all subjects. Thirty-one firefighters over 40 years of age without PTSD (31 men; mean age, 49.8 ± 4.7 years) were included. Twenty-six non-traumatized healthy controls (HCs) (26 men; mean age, 65.3 ± 7.84 years) were also included. Voxel-based morphometry was performed to investigate focal differences in the brain anatomy. Seed-based functional connectivity analysis was performed to investigate differences in spontaneous brain characteristics.
Results:
The mean z-scores of the Seoul Verbal Learning Test for immediate and delayed recall, Controlled Oral Word Association Test (COWAT) score for animals, and COWAT phonemic fluency were significantly lower in the firefighter group than in the HCs, indicating decreased neurocognitive function. Compared to HCs, firefighters showed reduced gray matter volume in the left superior parietal gyrus and left inferior temporal gyrus. Further, in contrast to HCs, firefighters showed alterations in rsfMRI values in multiple regions, including the fusiform gyrus and cerebellum.
Conclusion
Structural and resting-state functional abnormalities in the brain may be useful imaging biomarkers for identifying alterations in trauma-exposed firefighters without PTSD.
3.Electroconvulsive Therapy for CRPS.
Jong Ha LEE ; Young Hoon KO ; Jong Yeun YANG ; Yong Ku KIM ; Changsoo HAN ; Hyun Chul YOUN
Journal of the Korean Society of Biological Psychiatry 2011;18(3):163-167
Complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS) is a disease that causes chronic spontaneous pain and hyperesthesia of one or more parts of legs and arms, which is accompanied with problems of the automatic nervous system or the motor nervous system. However, up to date, it is unclear what causes the syndrome and how to diagnose and treat it. Although several treatments including medication and sympathetic nerve block are performed against CRPS, the therapeutic effect of the treatments is limited. The electroconvulsive therapy (ECT), of which the mechanism is not clarified, is a treatment used for treatment-resistant depression. ECT is also reported to be effective against pain. Therefore, we performed the ECT for a 24-year-old female patient who has been diagnosed as CRPS. Her pain had not been much improved by medications and interventional procedures. At admission to a psychiatric ward for ECT, she complained of over 8 points of pain on visual analogue scale and the constrained movement around the painful part. Eight ECTs-three times a week-were performed for three weeks in hospital and then the ECT once a week was performed after her leaving the hospital. During the ECTs, pain had been reduced and the range of movement in the constrained parts had increased. Further systematic research is needed to confirm the effect of electroconvulsive therapy against CRPS.
Arm
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Autonomic Nerve Block
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Depression
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Electroconvulsive Therapy
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Female
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Humans
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Hyperesthesia
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Leg
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Nervous System
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Neuralgia
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Young Adult
4.Characteristics of symptom burden in atrial fibrillation with concomitant heart failure
Ran HEO ; Myung‑Jin CHA ; Tae‑Hoon KIM ; Jung Myung LEE ; Junbeom PARK ; Hyung Wook PARK ; Ki‑Woon KANG ; Jaemin SHIM ; Jae‑Sun UHM ; Jun KIM ; Jin‑Bae KIM ; Changsoo KIM ; Young Soo LEE ; Eue‑Keun CHOI ; Boyoung JOUNG ; Jin‑Kyu PARK
International Journal of Arrhythmia 2020;21(1):e1-
Background:
Symptom burden is an important factor in determining the treatment of atrial fibrillation (AF). AF is frequently accompanied by heart failure (HF). This study investigated the characteristics of AF symptoms with concomitant HF.
Methods:
A total of 4885 patients with AF were consecutively enrolled through a prospective observational registry (the Comparison Study of Drugs for Symptom Control and Complication Prevention of Atrial Fibrillation [CODE-AF] registry). Clinically diagnosed HF was divided into three categories (preserved, mid-range, and reduced ejection fraction [EF]). Symptom severity was assessed using the European Heart Rhythm Association (EHRA) classification.
Results:
The presence of AF-related symptoms was comparable irrespective of concomitant HF. Patients with HF with reduced EF demonstrated severe (EHRA classes 3 and 4) and atypical symptoms. HF with preserved EF was also associated with atypical symptoms. Female sex and AF type were associated with the presence of symptoms in AF without HF, and non-maintenance of sinus rhythm and increased left atrial pressure (E/e′ ≥ 15) were factors related to the presence of symptoms in AF with HF.
Conclusion
AF with concomitant HF presented with more severe and atypical symptoms than AF without HF. Maintaining the sinus rhythm and reducing the E/e’ ratio are important factors for reducing symptoms in AF with concomitant HF.