1.Correlation Between Muscle Amounts and Grasp Power in the Elderly People, Jejudo.
Hojun LEE ; Minsung PARK ; Yeoju GO ; Yeong Ja YANG ; Jong Myon BAE
Korean Journal of Epidemiology 2006;28(2):182-188
OBJECTIVES: This study was conducted to examine the relationships between muscle mass and hand strength in elderly people. METHODS: The study subjects were 659 volunteers aged older than 65 in Jejudo, south Korea. The anthropometric information such as weight, body mass index (BMI) and muscular mass was collected by the body composition analyzer. The hand strength was obtained by the digital grip dynamometer. The fasting blood sugar index called as potential diabetes mellitus (DM) was defined as the condition over 120 mg/dL of the blood sugar. The BMI was classified into under 23, 23-25 and over 25 to analyze the relationships of BMI and muscle mass, hand strength. RESULTS: The factors affecting muscle mass were sex (p<0.001), age (p<0.001) and BMI (p<0.001). The factors affecting hand strength were sex (p<0.001), age (p<0.001) and BMI (p=0.003). And there was a weak association between muscle mass and hand strength after controlling with the affected factors (r2=0.15, p<0.001). CONCLUSIONS: The hand strength is weekly correlated with the muscle mass. So we recommend to use digital grip dynamometer combining with other measurements for diagnosis the sarcopenia in epidemiologic study.
Aged*
;
Blood Glucose
;
Body Composition
;
Body Weight
;
Diabetes Mellitus
;
Diagnosis
;
Epidemiologic Studies
;
Fasting
;
Hand Strength*
;
Humans
;
Jeju-do*
;
Korea
;
Muscle, Skeletal
;
Sarcopenia
;
Statistics as Topic
;
Volunteers
2.Exploring Parents' Participation Decisions on School-Based Health Screenings in Mountainous Regions
Emily JONES ; Hojun LEE ; Kibum CHO
Korean Journal of Family Medicine 2019;40(4):220-226
BACKGROUND: Increasing the participation rate in health screenings is a major challenge. In West Virginia, USA, where a statewide, state-funded school-based health screening program has been offered to fifth-grade students and their parents/guardians for nearly 20 years, more than 50% of eligible participants consistently opt-out. Consequently, the purpose of this investigation is to determine a parent/guardian's reasons for deciding whether to participate in a school-based health screening. METHODS: A cross-sectional study design was used and a total of 216 parents/guardians of fourth-grade students from 10 elementary schools in the northeast region of West Virginia participated in the study. The survey, based on the theory of planned behavior (TPB), was used to explore a parent/guardian's intentions when opting in or out of a school-based health screening for their child, and included items that represented direct determinants, indirect determinants, and behavioral intentions. Multiple regression analyses were conducted to measure the questionnaire's potential to predict intentions and identify the predictive strength of each direct determinant. RESULTS: Results show that attitude, subjective norms, and perceived behavioral control in the TPB (43%) provided strong evidence for predicting participation intentions. Specifically, attitude (β=0.73, P<0.001) was the strongest predictor of intention, followed by subjective norms (β=−0.17, P<0.01). CONCLUSION: This study suggests that strategies to facilitate positive attitudes and increase parental awareness of health screening initiatives may influence participation rates within community- and school-based programming.
Child
;
Cross-Sectional Studies
;
Humans
;
Intention
;
Mass Screening
;
Parents
;
West Virginia
3.The Association Between Neurodegenerative Diseases and Development of Type 2 Diabetes
Sang-Woo KOO ; Hojun LEE ; Yang-Tae KIM ; Hee-Cheol KIM
Korean Journal of Psychosomatic Medicine 2022;30(2):155-164
Objectives:
:A growing body of evidence links type 2 diabetes (T2D) with a neurodegenerative disease (ND) such as Alzheimer’s disease and Parkinson’s disease. The purpose of this study is to investigate the relationship between NDs and the development of T2D by comparing the incidence of T2D in a group of various NDs (ND group) and control group.
Methods:
:A population-based 10-year follow-up study was conducted using the Korean National Health Information Database for 2002-2015. We used a retrospective cohort study design to investigate the association of ND with T2D occurrence. The study population included ND (n=8,814) and control (n=37,970) groups, all aged 60 years or over. The Kaplan-Meier method was used to estimate the risk of developing T2D as a function of time. Cox proportional hazards regression models were used to evaluate the relationship between ND and T2D.
Results:
:T2D was developed in a significantly higher percentage of patients in the ND group (53.6%) than in the control group (44.7%). The ND group increased the risk of T2D (HR, 1.43; 95% CI, 1.38-1.47). About onethird of patients in both groups were additionally diagnosed with another ND before the occurrence of T2D during a 10-year follow-up period. When compared to those who did not have another ND during the follow-up period, the incidence of T2D in those who were additionally diagnosed with another ND was higher in both the ND and control groups.
Conclusions
:The ND group had about 1.4 times higher risk of developing T2D than the control group. Our results showed a positive association between ND and T2D.
4.Fruits and the Risk of Type 2 Diabetes: The Korean Genome and Epidemiology Study Cohort
Hojun YU ; Cheol Min LEE ; Seung-Won OH
Korean Journal of Family Medicine 2024;45(1):44-50
Background:
To determine the association between type 2 diabetes mellitus and the consumption of various fruits.
Methods:
The Korean Genome And Epidemiology Study is an ongoing prospective longitudinal cohort study of community dwellers and participants (men and women, aged 40–69 years) recruited from the national health examinee registry of Korea. Their individual consumption habits for 12 different fruit types were recorded using food frequency questionnaires. The fruits were then divided into three groups according to their glycemic indexes and glycemic loads. Participants with extreme caloric intakes, pre-existing type 2 diabetes mellitus, chronic kidney diseases, chronic liver diseases, and ongoing cancer treatments were excluded. The incidence of type 2 diabetes in the cohort was identified through self-reporting and supplemented by glycated hemoglobin and fasting blood glucose levels.
Results:
A total of 2,549 cases of type 2 diabetes were documented during 283,033.8 person-years of follow-up. After adjusting for personal, lifestyle, and dietary risk factors for diabetes, the pooled hazard ratio of type 2 diabetes for every serving per week of total whole fruit consumption was 1.02 (95% confidence interval [CI], 0.99–1.06; P=0.2). With mutual adjustment of individual fruits, the pooled hazard ratios of type 2 diabetes for every serving per week were 0.94 (95% CI, 0.88–1.00; P=0.039) for bananas, and 0.90 (95% CI, 0.84–0.96; P<0.001) for grapes.
Conclusion
Our findings suggest associations between the consumption of certain fruits and the risk of developing type 2 diabetes. A greater consumption of grapes was significantly associated with a lower risk of type 2 diabetes in our cohort, but the total amount of fruit consumption was not associated with a reduced risk.
5.Rare Imaging of Fat Embolism Seen on Computed Tomography in the Common Iliac Vein after Polytrauma
Hojun LEE ; Jonghwan MOON ; Junsik KWON ; John Cook Jong LEE
Journal of the Korean Society of Traumatology 2018;31(2):103-106
Fat embolism refers to the presence of fat droplets within the peripheral and lung microcirculation with or without clinical sequelae. However, early diagnosis of fat embolism is very difficult because the embolism usually does not show at the computed tomography as a large fat complex within vessels. Forty-eight-year-old male with pedestrian traffic accident ransferred from a local hospital by helicopter to the regional trauma center by two flight surgeons on board. At the rendezvous point, he had suffered with dyspnea without any airway obstruction sign with 90% of oxygen saturation from pulse oximetry with giving 15 L of oxygen by a reserve bag mask. The patient was intubated at the rendezvous point. The secondary survey of the patient revealed multiple pelvic bone fracture with sacrum fracture, right femur shaft fracture and right tibia head fracture. Abdominal computed tomography was performed in 191 minutes after the injury and fat embolism with Hounsfield unit of −86 in his right common iliac vein was identified. Here is a very rare case that mass of fat embolism was shown within common iliac vein detected in computed tomography. Early detection of the fat embolus and early stabilization of the fractures are essential to the prevention of sequelae such as cerebral fat embolism.
6.Splenic Autotransplantation after Blunt Spleen Injury in Children
Hojun LEE ; Byung Hee KANG ; Junsik KWON ; John Cook Jong LEE
Journal of the Korean Society of Traumatology 2018;31(2):87-90
Non-operative management has been preferred in blunt spleen injury. Moreover children are more susceptible to post-splenectomy infection, spleen should be preserved if possible. However, splenectomy is inevitable to patients with severe splenic injury. Therefore splenic autotransplantation could be the last chance for preserving splenic function in these patients although efficacy has not proven. Here we reported four cases of children who were underwent splenic autotransplantation successfully after blunt trauma.
7.The effect of fibroblast growth factor receptor inhibition on resistance exercise training-induced adaptation of bone and muscle quality in mice
Suhan CHO ; Hojun LEE ; Ho-Young LEE ; Sung Joon KIM ; Wook SONG
The Korean Journal of Physiology and Pharmacology 2022;26(3):207-218
Aging in mammals, including humans, is accompanied by loss of bone and muscular function and mass, characterized by osteoporosis and sarcopenia.Although resistance exercise training (RET) is considered an effective intervention, its effect is blunted in some elderly individuals. Fibroblast growth factor (FGF) and its receptor, FGFR, can modulate bone and muscle quality during aging and physical performance. To elucidate this possibility, the FGFR inhibitor NVP-BGJ398 was administrated to C57BL/6n mice for 8 weeks with or without RET. Treatment with NVPBGJ398 decreased grip strength, muscular endurance, running capacity and bone quality in the mice. FGFR inhibition elevated bone resorption and relevant gene expression, indicating altered bone formation and resorption. RET attenuated tibial bone resorption, accompanied by changes in the expression of relevant genes. However, RET did not overcome the detrimental effect of NVP-BGJ398 on muscular function. Taken together, these findings provide evidence that FGFR signaling may have a potential role in the maintenance of physical performance and quality of bone and muscles.
8.Neuromyelitis Optica Masquerading as Lumbosacral Radiculopathy: A Case Report.
Seungyeon KIM ; Bumsun KWON ; Jinwoo PARK ; Hojun LEE ; Hyojun KIM ; Dayun PARK ; Kiyeun NAM
Annals of Rehabilitation Medicine 2016;40(5):943-948
Neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorders (NMOSD) is a demyelinating syndrome of the central nervous system. This case report describes a 31-year-old woman whose electromyography revealed radiculopathy in the left L5-S1 spinal segment without anatomical abnormalities on lumbosacral magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). She was diagnosed with NMOSD based on gadolinium contrast whole spine and brain MRI and anti-aquaporin-4 antibody findings. Her peripheral nervous system might have been damaged during the early course of NMOSD. Therefore, it is necessary to consider NMOSD for patients who have radiculopathy in electromyography if lumbosacral MRI shows no abnormalities.
Adult
;
Brain
;
Central Nervous System
;
Electromyography
;
Female
;
Gadolinium
;
Humans
;
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
;
Neuromyelitis Optica*
;
Peripheral Nervous System
;
Peripheral Nervous System Diseases
;
Radiculopathy*
;
Spine
9.Eosinophilic Colitis that Presented with Subepithelial Tumor-like Lesions
Jeonghui YUN ; Sanggyu PARK ; Hojun PARK ; Won LIM ; Taeyeong LEE ; Chulsoo SONG
The Korean Journal of Gastroenterology 2021;77(6):300-304
Eosinophilic colitis is a rare disease that is characterized by eosinophilic infiltration in the colon wall in symptomatic patients. Thus far, the epidemiology and pathophysiology of eosinophilic colitis have not been well defined, but the hypersensitivity response is likely to play a role in its pathogenesis. The clinical presentation of eosinophilic colitis is usually nonspecific and depends on the layer of the intestinal wall affected by the eosinophilic infiltrate. Eosinophilic colitis is diagnosed generally by exclusion, i.e., after all other causes of eosinophilic infiltration have been excluded. Although there is no consensus over its diagnostic criteria, the laboratory results and radiology and endoscopy findings can provide important diagnostic evidence. This paper reports a case of eosinophilic colitis presenting as subepithelial tumor-like lesions in a 41-year-old man with the chief complaints of abdominal pain and loose stools. The patient had no diseases and no food or drug allergies in his medical history. In general, the endoscopic findings of eosinophilic colitis can vary from a normal mucosa to frank ulcerations. In this case, however, endoscopy revealed subepithelial tumor-like lesions. The colon biopsy showed eosinophilic infiltration in the lamina propria. The patient was treated with steroids, and his symptoms regressed with no signs of relapse.
10.Clinical Factors Related to Change of Depression Severity in Major Depressive Disorder Through Index Electroconvulsive Therapy
Jae-Won YANG ; Yang Tae KIM ; Hee Cheol KIM ; Sung-Won JUNG ; Hojun LEE
Journal of the Korean Society of Biological Therapies in Psychiatry 2022;28(3):98-108
Objectives:
:The aim of this study was to investigate the factors associated with changes in depression severity in index electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) for major depressive disorder.
Methods:
:A retrospective analysis was performed on 80 patients with major depressive disorder who received index ECT. The severity of depression was assessed using the Hamilton depression rating scale-17 (HDRS-17). Multiple linear regression analysis and logistic regression analysis were performed to identify the factors associated with the change of depression severity and the predictors of the 50% or greater reduction rate of HDRS-17.
Results
:55 (68.8%) patients were HDRS-17 score change ≥50% group, and 25 (31.2%) patients were HDRS-17 score change <50% group. HDRS-17 score change ≥50% group had a shorter episode duration before ECT (11.91±8.63 vs 17.68±11.15 weeks, p=0.027) and more ECT sessions (8.60±2.91 vs 6.80±3.34 sessions, p=0.017). The higher baseline score of anxiety (B=0.937, β=0.374, p<0.001), depression (B=0.846, β=0,324, p=0.001), and somatic symptom (B=0.995, β=0.210, p=0.031) dimensions was associated with the change of HDRS-17 score from baseline. The longer episode duration until the start of ECT was associated with lower likelihood of HDRS-17 score change ≥50% (Wald χ2 =7.74, OR=1.08, 95% CI: 1.02-1.14, p=0.005). The greater number of ECT sessions predicted the HDRS-17 score change ≥50% (Wald χ2 =7.85, OR=0.75, 95% CI=0.62-0.92, p=0.005) Conclusions:In higher baseline anxiety, depression, and somatic symptoms severity, implementing sufficient sessions of ECT in pharmacological treatment phase of relatively shorter duration of major depressive episode may help reduce HDRS-17 score.