1.Evidence Based Dietary Supplements for Fatigue and Sexual Function.
Journal of the Korean Academy of Family Medicine 2003;24(9):786-799
No abstract available.
Dietary Supplements*
;
Fatigue*
2.Common Dietary Supplements for Weight Loss.
Journal of the Korean Academy of Family Medicine 2007;28(12):895-901
No abstract available.
Dietary Supplements*
;
Weight Loss*
3.Nutritional Counseling for Pregnant Women.
Journal of the Korean Academy of Family Medicine 2002;23(6):688-705
No abstract available.
Counseling*
;
Female
;
Humans
;
Pregnant Women*
4.Screening Rates of Major Cancers after a Cancer Diagnosis in Adults in Korea.
Korean Journal of Health Promotion 2012;12(2):67-74
BACKGROUND: With the number of cancer survivors increasing, follow-up care to deal with problems related to their original cancer is needed. One of these is screening for a second primary cancer as cancer survivors are one of the high-risk groups for cancer occurrence. The purpose of this study was to assess the screening rates of major cancers in patients with a history of cancer in Korea. METHODS: Our data were from the 4th Korea National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey. We narrowed the data to include 11,169 adults aged 40 and 80 years. Participants were grouped according to their history of cancer and the time since cancer diagnosis into no cancer group (no cancer diagnosis), cancer survivor group (cancer diagnosis > or =5 years ago), and cancer follow-up group (cancer diagnosis <5 years ago). We estimated the screening acceptance rates of major cancers according to the cancer history and assessed the relationships between them. RESULTS: The cancer screening rates of stomach, breast, cervix, and colon were 42.4+/-4.9%, 45.5+/-5.6%, 42.1+/-6.4%, and 24.1+/-3.8% for the cancer survivor group and 45.6+/-5.2%, 61.9+/-6.2%, 48.8+/-7.0%, and 20.8+/-4.3% for the cancer follow-up group. A history of cancer diagnosis was not related to the acceptance rate of stomach and cervical cancer screening. Breast cancer screening (odd ratio [OR], 1.783; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.044-3.048) increased only in the cancer follow-up group. At 5 years after a cancer diagnosis, only the screening rate for colon cancer (OR, 1.701; 95% CI, 1.119-2.588) persistently increased compared to individuals without a history of cancer. CONCLUSIONS: The screening for breast cancer was the only screening examination whose rate increased in the cancer follow-up group, with the significance disappearing in the cancer survivor group. Our results demonstrate that the screening rate for secondary cancers is below optimal in cancer patients in Korea.
Adult*
;
Breast
;
Breast Neoplasms
;
Cervix Uteri
;
Colon
;
Colonic Neoplasms
;
Diagnosis*
;
Early Detection of Cancer
;
Female
;
Follow-Up Studies
;
Humans
;
Korea*
;
Mass Screening*
;
Neoplasms, Second Primary
;
Nutrition Surveys
;
Stomach
;
Survivors
;
Uterine Cervical Neoplasms
5.Body Lateropulsion as an Isolated or Predominant Symptom of a Pontine Infarction .
Hyun Ah KIM ; Hyung LEE ; Byung Rim PARK
Journal of the Korean Balance Society 2006;5(2):224-228
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Body lateropulsion with falling to one side is a well-known clinical feature of stroke in the posterior circulation. Body lateropulsion as an isolated or predominant manifestation of a pontine stroke has not previously been reported. To elucidate the possible mechanisms of patients presenting with body lateropulsion as an isolated or predominant symptom of isolated pontine infarction. MATERIALS AND METHOD: Between May 2004 and February 2006, out of 134 admitted patients with an isolated pontine stroke we identified 8 consecutive patients (6.0%) in the Keimyung University Stroke Registry who had body lateropulsion as the main presenting symptom. RESULTS: All lesions were localized to the paramedian tegmentum just ventral to the 4th ventricle. All except 1showed a uniform pattern of body lateropulsion, in which the direction of falling was away from the side of infarct. In 2 patients, body lateropulsion was the sole clinical manifestation, whereas the other patients had other neurological signs. All but 1 had contraversive tilting of the subjective visual vertical (SVV). In all cases, the direction of SVV tilt corresponded to the direction of body lateropulsion. The mean net tilt angle was 6.1 CONCLUSION: Based on the known anatomy of ascending vestibular pathways, the SVV tilting, and MRI findings, body lateropulsion probably results from damage to the graviceptive pathway ascending through paramedian pontine tegmentum.
Humans
;
Infarction*
;
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
;
Pons
;
Stroke
6.Unilateral Peripheral Vestibulopathy associated with Cerebral Venous Infarction .
Hyun Ah KIM ; Hyung LEE ; Byung Rim PARK
Journal of the Korean Balance Society 2006;5(2):285-287
Cerebral venous infarction is associated with a wide variety of clinical symptoms and signs, which may often delay appropriate diagnosis. Unilateral vestibular deficit as a presenting sign of cerebral venous infarction has rarely been reported. We report a patient with cerebral venous infarction who had severe prolonged vertigo, vomiting, occipital headache, positive head thrust testing, and unilateral caloric weakness as main clinical features. Although the patient had occipital headache, overall symptoms and signs closely mimicked those of acute peripheral vestibulopathy.
Diagnosis
;
Head Impulse Test
;
Headache
;
Humans
;
Infarction*
;
Vertigo
;
Vestibular Neuronitis
;
Vomiting
7.Vestibular Neuritis of Vascular Cause .
Hyun Ah KIM ; Hyung LEE ; Byung Rim PARK
Journal of the Korean Balance Society 2006;5(2):277-280
Vestibular neuritis (VN) is an idiopathic peripheral vestibular syndrome characterized by acute isolated prolonged vertigo. In most cases, it results from inflammation of the vestibular nerve presumably of viral origin. There has been no previous report of VN associated with a vascular cause. We here report a patient with VN of vascular origin who presented with acute onset of prolonged isolated vertigo, a unilateral decreased caloric response, and simultaneously with acute infarcts on brain MRI that were unrelated to patient's vertigo.
Brain
;
Humans
;
Inflammation
;
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
;
Vertigo
;
Vestibular Nerve
;
Vestibular Neuronitis*
8.Stomach cancer screening.
Hyun Ah PARK ; Young Sook YUN ; Young Sik KIM
Journal of the Korean Academy of Family Medicine 2000;21(6):707-718
No abstract available.
Mass Screening*
;
Stomach Neoplasms*
;
Stomach*
9.A Case of Dyskeratosis Congenita.
Dai Ho KIM ; Hyun Ah KANG ; Hyun Jeong PARK ; Chung Won KIM ; Hyung Ok KIM
Annals of Dermatology 2000;12(1):56-59
Dyskeratosis congenita is a rare genodermatosis of ectodermal dysplasia, which is characterized by the diagnostic triad consisting of reticulated hyperpigmentation, dystrophic nails, and leukoplakia. There is a predisposition to malignancy, particularly at sites of leukoplakia. Bone marrow failure can occur in about a half of the cases. A 16-year-old boy was presented with asymptomatic reticulated pigmentation of the neck and nail dystrophy. The patient also had leukoplakia on the tongue, nasolacrimal duct obstruction and cataract. The histopathological findings taken from the reticulated lesion were consistent with poikiloderma atrophicans vasculare. These clinical and histopathological findings were typical features of dyskeratosis congenita.
Adolescent
;
Bone Marrow
;
Cataract
;
Dyskeratosis Congenita*
;
Ectodermal Dysplasia
;
Humans
;
Hyperpigmentation
;
Leukoplakia
;
Male
;
Nasolacrimal Duct
;
Neck
;
Pigmentation
;
Tongue
10.Two cases of doxorubicin-induced dilated cardiomyopathy.
Jin Won PARK ; Kyeong Ah LEE ; Yong Woon PAIK ; Hyun Kee CHUNG ; Jae Sun PARK
Journal of the Korean Pediatric Society 1992;35(6):822-828
No abstract available.
Cardiomyopathy, Dilated*
;
Doxorubicin