1.The Effect of Preoperative Warming On Reducing Rectal Temperature Drop in Surgical Patients.
Seung Hwa LIM ; Moon Su CHO ; Kyung Sook CHOI
Journal of Korean Academy of Adult Nursing 1997;9(1):55-69
Although there are many peri-operative measures to reduce core temperature loss during operation, rapid drop has been experienced in the first sixty minutes following induction of general anesthesia. Recently, preoperative warming has been emphasized to prevent inadvertant hypothermia during operation. The purpose of this study is to find the effect of preoperative warming on reducing rectal temperature drop in surgical patients. With informed consent, 46 female adult patients, scheduled for total abdominal hysterectomy or salpingo-oophorectomy in the Seoul National University Hospital from September 3, 1996 to September 19, 1996 were divided into two groups. The variables of age and body surface were matched between the two groups as possible. Among them, 24 patients were preparatively covered up to the shoulders with a forced-air warming blanket(WARM TOUCHTM). set between 36-40degrees C for prewarming, and the other 22 patients(control group)were not before the induction of anesthesia. Rectal temperature was measured by mercury thermometer for rectum after admission to the operating room and by rectal probe which was inserted in the rectum just before the induction during the operation. The rectal temperature was monitored and recorded at every fifteen minutes for the first sixty minutes after the induction and each step during the surgery(intubation, surgical draping, peritoneum opening, one hour and the end of the operation) Collected data were analyzed by means of t-test, Repeated Measures Analysis of Variance with PC-SAS. The results of this study are as following. (1) There was no significant difference between the two groups in age, weight, height, room temperature, basal rectal temperature, operation time. (2) Temperature gradient of the rectal temperature in the warming group was less steeper than that in the control roup during the first sixty minutes after general anesthesia. (3) The rectal temperature measured at every fifteen minutes for the first sixty minutes and the end of surgery after the general anesthesia showed the difference between the two groups during surgery. (4) There was no rectal temperature difference during the intubation, however there was significant temperature difference between the two groups from draping to the end of surgery. In conclusion, prewarming of the surgical patient before induction resulted in increased the skin temperature and heat content, which relieved the dangerous core temperature drop which is potential to be provoked within one hour after induction of the surgical patients and kept the rectal temperature higher than that of the control group during surgery. The suggestions from this study shown below : First, further study is needed to find the preventive effect of the core temperature drop in the first sixth minutes after anesthetic induction by preoperative warming for gastrorectal, thoracic surgery patients who man have the core temperature drop during the operation. Second, in other to keep patient normothermia during the surgery, it needs to study whether using pre-and peri-operative warming can prevent hypothermia or not. Finally, the study of the peroperative warming effect on surgical patients' relaxation and thermal discomfort before the operation is needed because most patients in the case group said to have felt thermal comfort ; 'comfortable' and 'good'.
Adult
;
Anesthesia
;
Anesthesia, General
;
Female
;
Hot Temperature
;
Humans
;
Hypothermia
;
Hysterectomy
;
Informed Consent
;
Intubation
;
Operating Rooms
;
Peritoneum
;
Rectum
;
Relaxation
;
Seoul
;
Shoulder
;
Skin Temperature
;
Thermometers
;
Thoracic Surgery
2.Solitary Neurofibroma on the Palm.
Byeong Su KIM ; Yeon Woong KIM ; Jin Hwa CHOI ; Dong Hoon SHIN ; Jong Soo CHOI
Korean Journal of Dermatology 2015;53(9):745-746
No abstract available.
Neurofibroma*
3.A Case of Bullous Dermatomyositis.
Yeon Woong KIM ; Byeong Su KIM ; Jin Hwa CHOI ; Seung Hyun SOHNG ; Dong Hoon SHIN ; Jong Soo CHOI
Korean Journal of Dermatology 2015;53(6):485-487
No abstract available.
Dermatomyositis*
4.Chancre Presenting as Nipple Eczema.
Seung Hyun SOHNG ; Byeong Su KIM ; Jin Hwa CHOI ; Hyo Jin LEE ; Dong Hoon SHIN ; Jong Soo CHOI
Korean Journal of Dermatology 2013;51(12):993-994
5.A Case of Leclercia adecarboxylata Infection Following Wood Stick Injury.
Joon Goon KIM ; Yeon Woong KIM ; Byeong Su KIM ; Jin Hwa CHOI ; Dong Hoon SHIN ; Jong Soo CHOI
Korean Journal of Dermatology 2016;54(6):493-494
No abstract available.
Abscess
;
Enterobacteriaceae*
;
Wood*
6.A Case of Leclercia adecarboxylata Infection Following Wood Stick Injury.
Joon Goon KIM ; Yeon Woong KIM ; Byeong Su KIM ; Jin Hwa CHOI ; Dong Hoon SHIN ; Jong Soo CHOI
Korean Journal of Dermatology 2016;54(6):493-494
No abstract available.
Abscess
;
Enterobacteriaceae*
;
Wood*
7.The Effect of Suffering Experience, Empathy Ability, Caring Behaviors on Terminal Care Performance of Clinical Nurses.
Kae Hwa JO ; Ae Ran PARK ; Jin Ju LEE ; Su Jung CHOI
Korean Journal of Hospice and Palliative Care 2015;18(4):276-284
PURPOSE: This study was performed to identify factors affecting terminal care performance of clinical nurses. METHODS: The participants in this study were 175 nurses working in hospitals in Daegu and North Gyeongsang Province. Data were collected using a self-reported questionnaire and were analyzed with the IBM SPSS WIN 19.0 program. RESULTS: Nurses' terminal care performance was significantly related with suffering experience, empathy ability and caring behaviors. Significant predictors for terminal care performance were their department, empathy ability and caring behaviors. These factors explained 43.52% of the variance in terminal care performance of clinical nurses. CONCLUSION: Our study results suggest that terminal care performance of clinical nurses can be strengthened by improving empathy ability and caring behaviors.
Daegu
;
Empathy*
;
Nursing Care
;
Terminal Care*
8.Development and Evaluation of an Integrative Palliative Care Scale for Cancer Patients.
Kae Hwa JO ; Ae Ran PARK ; Su Jung CHOI ; Eun Young YOO
Journal of Korean Academic Society of Nursing Education 2017;23(2):165-174
PURPOSE: This study was done to develop and to evaluate an integrative palliative care scale for cancer patients. METHODS: The process included construction of a conceptual framework, generation of initial items, verification of content validity, selection of secondary items, preliminary study, and extraction of final items. The participants were 173 cancer patients in Daegu and Gyeongbuk. Item analysis, factor analysis, criterion related validity, and internal consistency were used to analyze the data. RESULTS: Eighteen items were selected for the final scale, and categorized into 3 factors explaining 58.3% of total variance. The factors were labeled as social/environmental palliative care (9 items), psychological palliative care (4 items), and physical palliative care (3 items), and spiritually palliative care (2 items). The scores for the scale were significantly correlated with the quality of life of cancer patients. Cronbach's alpha coefficient for the 18 items was .88. CONCLUSION: The above findings indicate that the integrative palliative care scale has good validity and reliability when used for cancer patients.
Daegu
;
Gyeongsangbuk-do
;
Humans
;
Palliative Care*
;
Quality of Life
;
Reproducibility of Results
9.Effects of CAPD on Cardiac Function in Patients with End-Stage Renal Disease: in Comparison with Hemodialysis.
Jae Hwa RYU ; Kwang Su CHOI ; Won Sik LEE ; Man Hong JOUNG ; Jae Woo LEE ; Si Rhae LEE
Korean Circulation Journal 1985;15(2):225-232
To investigate long term effects of CAPD on the left ventricular function in end-stage renal disease patients, M-mode echocardiographic studies and measurement o fsystolic time intervals were performed in 20 CAPD cases, 28 hemodialysis cases and 29 uremic controls. Compared to the uremic control grup, the patients on CAPD treatment revealed significant improvement of ventricular contractility and reduction of volume. On the other hand in hemodialysis group, even though there was improvement of ventricular contractility, volume control was not adequate. In the systolic time interval measurement, it is postulated that increase of PEP/LVET ratio in CAPD group probably results from reduction of volume(preload) rather than from deranged ventricular function.
Echocardiography
;
Hand
;
Humans
;
Kidney Failure, Chronic*
;
Peritoneal Dialysis, Continuous Ambulatory*
;
Renal Dialysis*
;
Systole
;
Ventricular Function
;
Ventricular Function, Left
10.Partial Purification and Characterization of 41 kDa Serine Proteinase from Culture Filtrate of Trichophyton tonsurans.
Jae Il YOO ; Yeong Seon LEE ; Yeon Hwa CHOI ; Hyung Yeul JOO ; Bong Su KIM ; Soon Bong SUH
Journal of the Korean Society for Microbiology 1999;34(3):303-310
Dermatophytes infect the human hair, skin, nail and cause the dermatophytosis. The extracellular and intracellular proteinases of the dermatophytes commonly occur in the genus Trichophyton like T. rubrum, T. mentagrophytes, and T. granulosum. These enzymes play a prominent role in growth, multiplication and infection of the host tissue. Extracellular proteinases have been purified from the species of Trichophyton and Microsporum. We purified the proteinase partially from the culture filtrate of the Trichophyton tonsurans through Mono-Q and Superose 12 column and investigated its biochemical and enzymatic characters. The molecular size of the proteinase was estimated to be 41 kDa by SDS-PAGE. And pI was 3.2. The optimal temperature and pH for an enzymatic activity were 27C and 7.5, respectively. The purified porteinase degraded the keratin, bovine serum albumin, hemoglobin. The serine proteinase inhibitor like PMSF and DFP inhibited the proteolytic activity of the purified enzyme whereas the cysteinase inhibitor did not. These results demonstrated that the purified proteinase is a serine proteinase and can contribute the tissue invasion.
Arthrodermataceae
;
Electrophoresis, Polyacrylamide Gel
;
Hair
;
Humans
;
Hydrogen-Ion Concentration
;
Isoflurophate
;
Microsporum
;
Peptide Hydrolases
;
Serine Proteases*
;
Serine*
;
Serum Albumin, Bovine
;
Skin
;
Tinea
;
Trichophyton*