1.Intracranial Hemodynamic Changes During Adult Moyamoya Disease Progression.
Hyun Jeong KWAG ; Dong Wook JEONG ; Suk Hoon LEE ; Dae Hyun KIM ; Jei KIM
Journal of Clinical Neurology 2008;4(2):67-74
Background and purpose: This study evaluated the changes in blood flow velocity in the anterior and posterior intracranial circulations according to the progression of moyamoya disease in adult patients. Methods: We evaluated Suzuki's angiographic stage and mean blood flow velocity (MBFV) changes in intracranial vessels from both sides in 19 adult moyamoya patients. We then analyzed the linearity of MBFV changes from early to late moyamoya stages in each intracranial vessel using piecewise linear regression models. Results: The MBFV in the middle cerebral artery, terminal internal carotid artery, and anterior cerebral artery increased non linearly until stage III, and then decreased progressively up to stage VI. The ophthalmic artery also showed nonlinear velocity changes, with an increase in MBFV up to stage IV, followed by a decrease in MBFV up to stage VI. The MBFV of the basilar artery increased linearly from a normal velocity at an early moyamoya stage to a stenotic velocity at a late stage. There was no statistically significant regression model for the relationship between the MBFV in the posterior cerebral artery and moyamoya stage. Conclusions: The nonlinear and/or linear MBFV changes associated with variable intracranial vessels might be useful in initial and follow-up evaluations of different stages of moyamoya disease.
Adult
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Anterior Cerebral Artery
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Basilar Artery
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Blood Flow Velocity
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Carotid Artery, Internal
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Glycosaminoglycans
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Hemodynamics
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Humans
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Linear Models
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Middle Cerebral Artery
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Moyamoya Disease
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Ophthalmic Artery
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Posterior Cerebral Artery
2.A Case Report of Lung Cancer in a Horse Trainer Caused by Exposure to Respirable Crystalline Silica: An Exposure Assessment.
Jin Ha YOON ; Boowook KIM ; Byung Soon CHOI ; So Young PARK ; Hyun Suk KWAG ; In Ah KIM ; Ji Yeon JEONG
Safety and Health at Work 2013;4(1):71-74
Here, we present a case of lung cancer in a 48-year-old male horse trainer. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first such case report to include an exposure assessment of respirable crystalline silica (RCS) as a quartz. The trainer had no family history of lung cancer. Although he had a 15 pack/year cigarette-smoking history, he had stopped smoking 12 years prior to his diagnosis. For the past 23 years, he had performed longeing, and trained 7-12 horses per day on longeing arena surfaces covered by recycled sands, the same surfaces used in race tracks. We investigated his workplace RCS exposure, and found it to be the likely cause of his lung cancer. The 8-hour time weight average range of RCS was 0.020 to 0.086 mg/m3 in the longeing arena. Horse trainers are exposed to RCS from the sand in longeing arenas, and the exposure level is high enough to have epidemiological ramifications for the occupational risk of lung cancer.
Continental Population Groups
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Crystallins
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Horses
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Humans
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Lung
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Lung Neoplasms
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Male
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Quartz
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Risk Assessment
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Silicon Dioxide
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Smoke
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Smoking
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Track and Field
3.Relationships between Endogenous Estrogen and the Risk Factors for Vascular Disease.
Jee Yeon KIM ; Hyun Jeong KWAG ; Hye Seon JEONG ; Hee Jung SONG ; Jieun SHIN ; Suk Hoon LEE ; Jong Sung KIM ; Jei KIM
Korean Journal of Stroke 2011;13(1):20-26
BACKGROUND: This study evaluated the relationships between endogenous estrogen levels and vascular risk factors in healthy men and women. METHODS: Demographics and laboratory data were collected from normotensive subjects (123 men and 154 women) in their thirties, forties and fifties who had normal laboratory profiles and no cardiovascular risk factors. Initially, estradiol, low-density lipoprotein (LDL)-cholesterol, triglyceride, and high-density lipoprotein (HDL)-cholesterol, systolic and diastolic blood pressure (SBP and DBP), NO2/NO3, homocysteine, and body mass index (BMI) were measured. Then, the relationships between estradiol and the evaluated items were analyzed with comparison of means and correlation, and stepwise multiple regression analysis based on genders and age-groups. RESULTS: Estradiol levels decreased with aging in women. Lower LDL and triglyceride, higher HDL levels, and lower SBP and DBP observed in women were correlated with decreasing age as well as increasing estradiol level. On the multivariate analysis, however, estradiol levels were negatively correlated with the changes in SBP, DBP, and triglyceride among the lipid variables. BMI was positively related with the increase of SBP and DBP and the estradiol levels. Although higher NO2/NO3 and lower homocysteine levels were observed in women than men, the NO2/NO3 and homocysteine levels had no significant correlation with estradiol changes. CONCLUSION: The study observed the beneficial relationships between endogenous estrogen, and blood pressures and lipids in healthy women. The estrogen-related benefits observed in this study were lower TG levels, SBP, and DBP in young women than those in older women or in men.
Aging
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Blood Pressure
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Body Mass Index
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Cholesterol
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Demography
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Estradiol
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Estrogens
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Female
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Homocysteine
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Humans
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Lipoproteins
;
Male
;
Multivariate Analysis
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Nitric Oxide
;
Risk Factors
;
Vascular Diseases