1.Medical Technology of North Korea: with Special Reference to the Content Analysis of Medical Textbooks.
Seok Goo LEE ; Hyeong Ryeol YOON ; Gi Hyo LEE ; Ok Ryun MOON
Korean Journal of Preventive Medicine 1990;23(4):416-427
Unfortunately, we have poor knowledge of medical technology in North Korea. This study has thus attempted to identify the level and status of medical technology development through analyzing the contents of medical textbooks currently in use. This study has assumed that three factors are influencing the level and status of medical technology in a society ; the level of socio-economic development in general, the level of scientific technology revolution and health policy. Forty textbooks are collected for this purpose. The main findings are summarized as follows: 1) North Korea has strengths in that (1) its herb drugs, which are in a broad use, are cheaper, more safe and more attainable than bio-equivalent chemical ones, and (2) the development of its medical technology was carried out with emphasis on the practical and basic health needs. 2) North Korea has weaknesses in that (1) its medical diagnostic method largely depends on manual procedures, (2) the R & D investment in the development of chemical drugs, especially antibiotics, is very small, (3) the amount of medical equipments is in a absolute shortage, and (4) the medical technology is destitute of specialty, caused mainly by the overemphasis on Juche-Uihak or herb medicine. 3) Medical technology has two faces, positive and negative so that it cannot be successfully evaluated by one. It eventually acts a positive function for public health through developments of drug, equipment and new medical treatment method. But it is also true that it has negative effects such as the dehumanization of high cost medical technology, cost hike due to over-investments in expensive equipments, and the absence of wholistic care from overspecialization. 4) We have to consider economic status and the social needs of medical care in order to evaluate the medical technology of a society. It is also the ease with North Korea. A whole picture of the North Korean medical technology could be understood only if further comprehensive studies of medical technology are to be carried out for North Korea.
Anti-Bacterial Agents
;
Dehumanization
;
Democratic People's Republic of Korea*
;
Health Policy
;
Herbal Medicine
;
Investments
;
Public Health
2.Effect of Spinal Adrenergic and Cholinergic Antagonists for Antinociception of Intrathecal Gabapentin.
Myung Ha YOON ; Sung Su CHUNG ; Hyeong Seok KIM
Korean Journal of Anesthesiology 2002;42(5):677-684
BACKGROUND: Intrathecal gabapentin is effective on nociceptive states evoked by tissue injury. In addition, gabapentin interacts synergistically with clonidine at the spinal level, suggesting that a mechanism of gabapentin may be related to spinal adrenoceptors. However, it has not been established whether this drug is associated with cholinergic receptors. The aim of this study was to examine the role of spinal adrenergic and cholinergic receptors on the antinociceptive action of intrathecal gabapentin. METHODS: Rats were implanted with lumbar intrathecal catheters. For a nociceptive test, 50nl of 5% formalin solution was injected into the hindpaw. The effect of intrathecal gabapentin, administered 10 min before the formalin injection, was assessed. Next, antagonistic effects of intrathecal prazosin, yohimbine, atropine and mecamylamine for the action of intrathecal gabapentin were evaluated. RESULTS: Formalin injection caused a biphasic incidence of flinching of the injected paw. Intrathecal gabapentin produced a dose-dependent suppression of only the phase 2 flinching response in the formalin test. Intrathecal atropine, but not prazosin, yohimbine nor mecamylamine, reversed the antinociception of intrathecal gabapentin. CONCLUSIONS: The antinociceptive effect of intrathecal gabapentin on facilitated states may be mediated through the muscarinic receptor but by neither the nicotinic receptor nor the adrenergic receptor at the spinal level.
Animals
;
Atropine
;
Catheters
;
Cholinergic Antagonists*
;
Clonidine
;
Formaldehyde
;
Incidence
;
Mecamylamine
;
Nociception
;
Pain Measurement
;
Prazosin
;
Rats
;
Receptors, Adrenergic
;
Receptors, Cholinergic
;
Receptors, Muscarinic
;
Receptors, Nicotinic
;
Spinal Cord
;
Yohimbine
3.Performance of a mixture model by the degree of a missing categorical covariate when estimating clearance in NONMEM
SeokKyu YOON ; Hyeong Seok LIM
Translational and Clinical Pharmacology 2019;27(4):141-148
The accuracy and predictability of mixture models in NONMEM® may change depending on the relative size of inter-individual differences and the size of the differences in the parameters between subpopulations. This study explored the accuracy of mixture models when dealing with missing a categorical covariate under various situations that may occur in reality. We generated simulation data under various scenarios where genotypes representing extensive metabolizers (EM) and poor metabolizers (PM) of drug-metabolizing enzymes affect the clearance of a drug by different degrees, and the inter-individual variations in clearance are different for each scenario. From each simulated datum, a specific proportion of the covariate (genotype information) was randomly removed. Based on these simulation data, the proportion of each individual subpopulation and the clearance were estimated using a mixture model. Overall, the clearance estimate was more accurate when the difference in clearance between subpopulations was large, and the inter-individual variations were small. In some scenarios that showed higher ETA or epsilon shrinkage, the clearance estimates were significantly biased. The mixture model made better predictions for individuals in the EM subpopulation than for individuals in the PM subpopulation. However, the estimated values were not significantly affected by the tested ratio, if the sample size was secured to some extent. The current simulation study suggests that when the coefficient of variation of inter-individual variations of clearance exceeds 40%, the mixture model should be used carefully, and it should be taken into account that shrinkage can bias the results.
Bias (Epidemiology)
;
Genotype
;
Sample Size
4.A case of acute undifferentiated leukemia diagnosed by flow-cytomet- ry.
Tong Kyu JHIN ; Chang Soo KIM ; Joon SEOK ; Jae Yoon CHO ; Hyeong Ho LEE ; Kye Cheol KWON
Korean Journal of Hematology 1991;26(2):419-423
No abstract available.
Leukemia*
5.The Effect of the Cost Exemption Policy for Hospitalized Children under 6 Years Old on the Medical Utilization in Korea.
Kyeong Su JEON ; Seok Jun YOON ; Hyeong Sik AHN ; Hyun Woong SHIN ; Young Hye YOON ; Se Min HWANG ; Min Ho KYUNG
Journal of Preventive Medicine and Public Health 2008;41(5):295-299
OBJECTIVES: The Korean government in January 2006 instigated an exemption policy for hospitalized children under the age of six years old. This study examines how this policy affected the utilization of medical care in Korea. METHODS: A total of 1,513,797 claim records from the Health Insurance Review Agency were analyzed by complete enumeration methods. The changes of medical utilization were compared from 2005 to 2006. In addition, the changes of medical utilization between 2004 and 2005 were compared as a pseudocontrol group. RESULTS: The admission rate increased 1.14-fold from 15.20% in 2004 to 17.32% in 2005, and this further increased 1.08-fold to 18.65% in 2006. The increase of patients with a common cold (1.2-fold) was higher than that of both the general patients (1.08-fold) and the patients with the top 10 fatal diseases (0.91-fold). The average length of stay per case for clinics showed the highest increase rates (1.06-fold). The rates of patients with the common cold showed a higher increase (1.05-fold) than that of the general patients. The average medical expense per case was increased by 1.10-fold from 2005 to 2006, which was higher than that from 2004 to 2005 (1.04-fold). The increase rate for patients with the common cold was higher at 1.18-fold than that of the general patients. CONCLUSIONS: The cost exemption policy has especially led to an increase in the utilization of clinics and the utilization by patients with a common cold.
Child, Preschool
;
Cost Sharing/*legislation & jurisprudence
;
*Health Policy
;
Health Services/*utilization
;
Hospitalization
;
Humans
;
Insurance Claim Review
;
Korea
;
Length of Stay
6.Change of Hepatic Volume after Selective Bile Duct Ligation: An Experimental Study in the Rabbit.
Hye Won LEE ; Yup YOON ; Young Tae KO ; Woo Suk CHOI ; Joo Won LIM ; Joo Hyeong OH ; Hyeong Teck RIM ; Youn Wha KIM ; Seok Hwan LEE
Journal of the Korean Radiological Society 1998;39(6):1091-1100
PURPOSE: To evaluate the role of bile duct obstuction in the development of atrophy of the liver, using ananimal model. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Seven rabbits were divided into two groups : group 1(n=5), in which therewas selective bile duct ligation, and group 2(n=2), which underwent a sham operation. Each group was evaluated using CT for changes in hepatic volume after selective bile duct ligation or a sham operation. In group I, the diameter of dilated bile duct was measured 2, 4, 8, 12 and 16 weeks after bile duct ligation, while gross andhistologic change were evaluated in all cases. RESULTS: In group 1, bile duct dilatation was seen on CT two weeks after selective bile duct ligation, and did not change significantly during follow-up. In four of five cases, CT revealed no evidence of significant atrophy of the involved segment. Pathologic specimens, however, revealed dilatation of the bile duct, periductal fibrosis, infiltration of chronic inflammatory cells, and periportalfibrosis. One of five cases showed segmental liver atrophy after selective bile duct ligation. In addion to the above pathologic findings, there was obstruction of the portal vein by foreign body reaction. In group 2, no evidence of dilated bile duct or liver atrophy was revealed by CT or pathologic specimen after a sham operation. CONCLUSION: During long-term follow-up of 16 weeks, obstruction of the bile duct did not play a major role in the development of lobar atrophy in the rabbit.
Animals
;
Atrophy
;
Bile Ducts*
;
Bile*
;
Dilatation
;
Fibrosis
;
Follow-Up Studies
;
Foreign-Body Reaction
;
Ligation*
;
Liver
;
Portal Vein
;
Rabbits
7.Clinical Effects of Intracameral Voriconazole Injection in Patients with Fungal Keratitis Refractory to Conventional Treatment.
Se Hyeong JEONG ; Hyo Seok LEE ; Jae Kap CHO ; Kyung Chul YOON
Journal of the Korean Ophthalmological Society 2013;54(5):696-703
PURPOSE: To evaluate clinical effects of intracameral voriconazole injection in fungal keratitis refractory to conventional therapy. METHODS: Thirty-eight eyes of 38 patients with fungal keratitis were included in this study. The patients were divided into 3 groups: 13 patients with intracameral voriconazole injection (50 microg/0.1 ml; group A), 11 patients with intracameral amphotericin B injection (10 microg/0.1 ml; group B), and 14 patients with conventional therapy only (group C). Clinical factors including treatment success rate and time to successful treatment were evaluated. RESULTS: Treatment success was accomplished in 12 eyes in group A (92.3%), 10 eyes in group B (90.9%), and 12 eyes in group C (85.7%). Time to treatment success in group A, B, and C was 36.1 +/- 10.4 days (p = 0.04), 34.2 +/- 7.8 days (p = 0.03), and 49.5 +/- 16.7 days, respectively. Patients who had received intracameral voriconazole injection or amphotericin B showed faster fungal keratitis improvement than patients who received conventional treatment. Time to re-epithelialization and time to disappearance of hypopyon showed a similar clinical course. CONCLUSIONS: Intracameral voriconazole injection, which has a similar therapeutic effect as intracameral amphotericin B injection in the management of fungal keratitis, can be helpful in the treatment of intractable fungal keratitis.
Amphotericin B
;
Eye
;
Humans
;
Keratitis
;
Pyrimidines
;
Re-Epithelialization
;
Time-to-Treatment
;
Triazoles
8.Usefulness of Chest Radiographs for Scoliosis Screening: A Comparison with Thoraco-Lumbar Standing Radiographs.
Chang Hyun OH ; Chan Gyu KIM ; Myoung Seok LEE ; Seung Hwan YOON ; Hyeong Chun PARK ; Chong Oon PARK
Yonsei Medical Journal 2012;53(6):1183-1189
PURPOSE: The purposes of this study were to evaluate the usefulness and limitations of chest radiographs in scoliosis screening and to compare these results with those of thoraco-lumbar standing radiographs (TLSR). MATERIALS AND METHODS: During Korean conscription, 419 males were retrospectively examined using both chest radiographs and TLSR to confirm the scoliosis and Cobb angle at the Regional Military Manpower. We compared the types of spinal curves and Cobb angles as measured from different radiographs. RESULTS: In the pattern of spinal curves, the overall matching rate of chest radiographs using TLSR was about 58.2% (244 of 419 cases). Cobb angle differences between chest radiographs and TLSR with meaningful difference was observed in 156 cases (37.2%); a relatively high proportion (9.5%) of Cobb angle differences more than 10 degrees was also observed. The matching rate of both spinal curve types and Cobb angle accuracy between chest radiographs and TLSR was 27.9% (117 among 419 cases). Chest radiographs for scoliosis screening were observed with 93.94% of sensitivity and 61.67% of specificity in thoracic curves; however, less than 40% of sensitivity (38.27%, 20.00%, and 25.80%) and more than 95% of specificity (97.34%, 99.69%, and 98.45%) were observed in thoraco-lumbar, lumbar, and double major curves, respectively. CONCLUSION: The accuracy of chest radiographs for scoliosis screening was low. The incidence of thoracic curve scoliosis was overestimated and lumbar curve scoliosis was easily missed by chest radiography. Scoliosis screening using chest radiography has limited values, nevertheless, it is useful method for detecting thoracic curve scoliosis.
Adult
;
Humans
;
Male
;
Radiography, Thoracic/methods
;
Retrospective Studies
;
Scoliosis/*diagnosis/*radiography
;
Young Adult
9.The Psychopathological Influence of Adolescent Idiopathic Scoliosis in Korean Male : An Analysis of Multiphasic Personal Inventory Test Results.
Chang Hyun OH ; Yu Shik SHIM ; Seung Hwan YOON ; Hyeong Chun PARK ; Chong Oon PARK ; Myoung Seok LEE
Journal of Korean Neurosurgical Society 2013;53(1):13-18
OBJECTIVE: There are few published studies which have documented psychopathological abnormalities in patients with of adolescent idiopathic scoliosis (AIS) The aim of this study was to evaluate the psychopathological influence of AIS in Korean 19-year-old males. METHODS: The authors compared the Korean military multiphasic personal inventory (KMPI) military profiles of 105 AIS cases (more than 10 degrees of Cobb's angle without surgical treatment) with the KMPI profiles of 108 normal controls. The AIS group was split depending on Cobb's angle to further evaluate this relation by the severity of AIS. RESULTS: A significantly decreased result on the faking-good response scale and an significantly increased result on the faking-bad response were observed in the AIS group compared to the control (p<0.012). The neurosis scale results, including anxiety, depression and somatization symptoms, were significantly increased in the AIS group compared to the control (p<0.010). The severity level of personality disorder and schizophrenia were also significantly increased in the AIS group (p<0.010). Differences in KMPI scale scores were not related to the severity of AIS. CONCLUSION: Young males with AIS tend to have abnormal results on the multiphasic personal inventory test compared to normal volunteers, suggesting that AIS may be related to psychopathology in the young male group in Korea. Although these psychopathology in AIS were differently observed compared to normal controls, but not interfered with military life. Clinicians are recommended to pay attention the psychopathological traits of patients with AIS.
Adolescent
;
Anxiety
;
Depression
;
Humans
;
Korea
;
Male
;
Military Personnel
;
Personality Disorders
;
Psychopathology
;
Schizophrenia
;
Scoliosis
10.Clinical Characteristics and Treatment Results of Nasopharyngeal Cancer.
Hyeong Seok KIM ; Bong Jae LEE ; Sang Yoon KIM
Korean Journal of Otolaryngology - Head and Neck Surgery 1998;41(2):251-256
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Nasopharyngeal cancer (NPC) is a rare cancer with relatively poor prognosis because they tend to be diagnosed in the far advanced stage. Radiotherapy had been the treatment of choice; however, chemotherapy combined with radiotherapy has also been used to improve the treatment outcomes. The authors attempted to investigate the clinical characteristics and the prognostic factors, and also to evaluate the efficacy of combined chemotherapy. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We analyzed 65 patients who were diagnosed with NPC and treated at Asan Medical Center. The cumulative survival rates according to various clinical factors were computed and compared using the Kaplan-Meier method and the Log-rank test. RESULTS: The most common complaint was neck mass (43.1%), followed by hearing loss (15.4%), nasal obstruction (12.3%), epistaxis (10.8%), and headache (9.2%) in order of frequency. One fifth of patients had single or multiple cranial nerve defects at the time of diagnosis. The cumulative survival rates for 3-year period and 5-year period were 63.0%, and 53.6% respectively. The location of neck metastasis, distant metastasis, cranial nerve involvement, and the response to the initial treatment were significantly related with the survival rate. T and N stages proposed by AJCC (1988) did not affect the survival rates. There was no difference in the survival rates between radiotherapy and combined chemotherapy. CONCLUSION: These results suggest that the TNM stagings proposed by AJCC (1988) might not be a good indicator in predicting the prognosis of NPC. The newer staging system which includes the location of neck metastasis should be preferred to predict the prognosis. The combination chemotherapy was not a superior method to radiotherapy in our cases, although a prospective controlled study is needed.
Chungcheongnam-do
;
Cranial Nerves
;
Diagnosis
;
Drug Therapy
;
Drug Therapy, Combination
;
Epistaxis
;
Headache
;
Hearing Loss
;
Humans
;
Nasal Obstruction
;
Nasopharyngeal Neoplasms*
;
Neck
;
Neoplasm Metastasis
;
Prognosis
;
Radiotherapy
;
Survival Rate