1.Risk Factors for Work Related Low Back Pain in Civil Airline Flight Attendants.
Korean Journal of Aerospace and Environmental Medicine 2005;15(2):56-63
BACKGROUND: The purpose of this study was to identify risk factors for low back pain in order to provide basic information for intervention programs to prevent low back pain in civil airline flight attendants. METHODS: Cross sectional observation was used by using systematic randomized sampling method. Among 1,764 study population, 398 people were selected. For statistical analysis, 210 completed questionnaires were used. Data was analyzed using SPSS 11.0 for t-test, chi square and regression. RESULTS: 1. Positive low back pain rate was 58.7% in the whole study group. In the highest positive group age ranged between 25 to 29 years, and career duration between 37 to 60 months. 2. According to job position, the risk of low back pain was the highest in economy class senior, cabin sales charge, and economy class junior group. On the contrary, cabin manager was the lowest risk group. 3. According to the average score of job stress, low job control and low supervisory support were each associated with higher positive rate of low back pain. 4. Wide degree of bending, more frequent waist movement and heavy lifting showed high positive rate of low back pain. CONCLUSION: Low back pain prevention program should be developed on the basis of the confirmed risk factors. These data will be helpful to provide prevention strategy and to promote intervention program for low back pain in airline flight attendants.
Commerce
;
Lifting
;
Low Back Pain*
;
Risk Factors*
;
Surveys and Questionnaires
2.Effect of surface contamination on the transverse strength of the relined denture.
Jeong Hyun KIM ; Jung Soo BAE ; Dong Hoo HAN
The Journal of Korean Academy of Prosthodontics 1993;31(1):11-18
No abstract available.
Dentures*
3.Quality assurance for analyzer electrocardiography.
Kwang Hyun CHO ; Keun Jeong SONG ; Han Shick LEE
Journal of the Korean Society of Emergency Medicine 1993;4(1):94-98
No abstract available.
Electrocardiography*
4.Complete Reversal of Diffusion Restriction after Treatment of Traumatic Carotid-Cavernous Fistula.
Korean Journal of Neurotrauma 2017;13(2):171-175
A 15-year-old man presented with stupor following a motorcycle traffic accident. The patient was diagnosed with a traumatic left carotid cavernous fistula (CCF) with pseudoaneurysm of the left internal carotid artery. Brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) showed transiently restricted diffusion in the left centrum semiovale white matter and lower temporo-occipital area extending to the splenium of the corpus callosum, with high signal intensity on diffusion-weighted imaging. On the 35th day of admission, the patient had complete neurological recovery and a follow-up brain MRI revealed complete resolution of the lesions in the left centrum semiovale and splenium of the corpus callosum. These clinical and radiological features are highly suggestive of complete reversal of diffusion restriction after successful embolization of traumatic CCF.
Accidents, Traffic
;
Adolescent
;
Aneurysm, False
;
Brain
;
Carotid Artery, Internal
;
Corpus Callosum
;
Diffusion*
;
Fistula*
;
Follow-Up Studies
;
Humans
;
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
;
Motorcycles
;
Stupor
;
White Matter
5.MR imaging in Moyamoya disease: utility of partial flip angle T2- weighted spin-echo imaging.
Kee Hyun CHANG ; Moon Hee HAN ; Jeong Geun YI ; In One KIM ; Man Chung HAN
Journal of the Korean Radiological Society 1991;27(4):479-484
No abstract available.
Magnetic Resonance Imaging*
;
Moyamoya Disease*
6.Inflight Medical Emergencies in Asiana Airlines.
Korean Journal of Aerospace and Environmental Medicine 2000;10(3):224-226
No abstract available.
Emergencies*
7.HIV - 1 p24 Expression in BCG and the Immunogenicity of Recombinant BCG in Experimental Animals.
Sang Hyun CHO ; Han Jeong MYOUNG ; Hye Rhan JEONG ; Gil Han BAI ; Sang Jae KIM ; Yong Soo BAE
Korean Journal of Immunology 1997;19(2):289-300
HIV-1 p24 was cloned into multiple cloning site of pMV261, extrachromosomal expression vectors carrying BCG replication origin and BCG-specific heat-shock promoter, and then introduced into BCG and E. coli. Western blot experiments showed that the p24 efficiently expressed in recombinant BCG (rBCG), but not in E. coli. Recombinant p24 expression induced by a single heat-shock of rBCG was maintained longer than 3 weeks. Immunoblot experiments with intact rBCG did not show any distinctive positive signal, suggesting that the recombinant protein was not secreted or exposed at the surface of BCG. The guinea pigs immunized with live rBCG showed delayed type hypersensitivity (DTH) by the systemic area as well as an effective humoral immunity, suggesting that tbis rBCG is believed to elicit eKcient immune responses against p24, even though the expression is restricted only in the cytoplasm as reported previously with other antigen. These results demonstrate that BCG can be developed as a live recombinant vaccine vector against a broad spectrum of infectious disease.
Animals*
;
Blotting, Western
;
Clone Cells
;
Cloning, Organism
;
Communicable Diseases
;
Cytoplasm
;
Guinea Pigs
;
HIV*
;
HIV-1
;
Hypersensitivity
;
Immunity, Humoral
;
Mycobacterium bovis*
;
Replication Origin
8.Treatment of bronchopleural distula with muscle flap technique.
Jeong Cheol KIM ; Sang Hyun WOO ; See Ho CHOI ; Han Young RYU ; Sung Sae HAN ; Jung Hyun SEUL
Journal of the Korean Society of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgeons 1991;18(2):306-313
No abstract available.
9.Anger, Problem Behaviors, and Health Status in Adolescent Women.
Young Joo PARK ; Keum Sun HAN ; Hyun Jeong SHIN ; Hyun Chul KANG ; So Hyun MOON
Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing 2004;34(7):1234-1242
PURPOSE: This cross-sectional study was designed to identify anger-expression typesof adolescent women and investigate the relation between the identified anger-expression types and their problem behaviors and health status. METHOD: One hundred ninety nine high school freshmen were recruited from September to November, 2003. Data wasanalyzed using descriptive statistics, cluster analysis, chi-square-test, ANOVA, and Duncan's multiple comparison test. RESULT: Three anger-expression types in adolescent women were found; Anger-out/in, Anger-control/in, and Anger- control type. Adolescent women with frequently using the anger-out/in type and with higher state anger reported more delinquent behaviors, more health risk behaviors, and higher psychosomatic symptoms. However, adolescent women with lower state anger and frequently using the anger-control type reported more depression scores. CONCLUSION: There is a need to further clarify the relationship between anger-expression typesand depression in adolescent women. The findings suggest the necessity of a development of the program for lowering the anger level and controlling the unfavorable anger expression types such as the anger-out in.
Adolescent
;
*Adolescent Behavior
;
*Anger
;
Cross-Sectional Studies
;
*Expressed Emotion
;
Female
;
*Health Status
;
Humans
;
Male
;
Risk-Taking
10.Influences of Free Fatty Acids on Transmembrane Action Potential and ATP-sensitive Potassium Channel Activity in Rat Myocardium.
Jae Ha KIM ; Jeong Min JU ; Jong PARK ; Yung Hong BAIK ; Hyun KOOK ; Han Seong JEONG ; Myung Ho JEONG ; Jeong Gwan CHO ; Jong Chun PARK ; Jung Chaee KANG
Korean Circulation Journal 2000;30(12):1589-1589
BACKGROUND: To evaluate the role of free fatty acids on the ischemic myocardium, influences of various free fatty acids upon transmembrane action potential and ATP-sensitive K+(KATP) channel activity were examined in the ventricular myocardium and single cardiac myocytes. METHODS: KATP channel activities were measured in the enzymatically (collagenase) isolated single rat ventricular cardiac myocytes by the method of the excised inside-out and the cell-attached patch clamp, and transmembrane action potentials were recorded using the conventional 3M-KCl microelectode techniques in the rat ventricular myocardium. RESULTS: Free fatty acids [FFAs; arachidonic acid (AA), linoleic acid (LA) and lysophosphatidylcholine (LPC)] reduced the KATP channel activity in a dose-dependent manner in the inside-out patch, and 50%-inhibition concentrations (IC50) were 88 +/- 11.2, 49 +/- 12.5, and 188 +/- 17.4 M respectively. Both frequency of channel opening and the mean open-burst duration were markedly decreased, but the amplitude of single channel currents were not changed by the FFAs. AA (50 micrometer) and LPC (50 micrometer) did not affect the dinitrophenol (DNP, 50 micrometer)-induced KATP channel activity, whereas LA (50 micrometer) had a tendency to reduce the activity. The channel inhibition effects by 10 micrometer AA in the inside-out patch were significantly augmented by diclofenac (10 micrometer), but was not changed by nordihydroguaiaretic acid. FFAs never stimulated KATP channel activity, even in the inside-out patch where KATP channel activity reduced in the presence of internal ATP (100 micrometer). Time for 90% repolarization (APD90) significantly increased during superfusion of the FFAs, to 22 (50 micrometer AA), 24 (50 micrometer LA), and 18 (50 micrometer LPC) % from those of the contol at the time of 10 min superfusion, but the other action potential characteristics were not changed by the FFAs. AA (10 micrometer) attenuated cromakalim (10 micrometer)-induced APD90 shortening effects. CONCLUSION: It was inferred that FFAs inhibit the KATP channel activity directly by themselves and/or indirectly by their metabolites in the rat ventricular cardiomyocytes, and therefore, duration of action potential lengthens to be a burden over the ischemic myocardium accounting for the injury of myocardium at the late stage of ischemia.
Action Potentials*
;
Adenosine Triphosphate
;
Animals
;
Arachidonic Acid
;
Cromakalim
;
Diclofenac
;
Fatty Acids, Nonesterified*
;
Ischemia
;
Linoleic Acid
;
Lysophosphatidylcholines
;
Masoprocol
;
Myocardium*
;
Myocytes, Cardiac
;
Potassium Channels*
;
Potassium*
;
Rats*