1.A Study on Left Ventricular Mass in Patients with Hypertension.
Im Jak HONG ; Suk Young PARK ; Hyun Jo MIN ; Kyong Saeng LEE ; Young Woo LEE ; Chang Sup SONG
Korean Circulation Journal 1991;21(4):706-714
Hypertension is a well known causative factor of congestive heart failure and other cardiovascular disease, and usually induce myocardial hypertrophy. Recent study shows that some antihypertensive drugs may reduce the hypertrophied cardiac mass reversibly. And over the past some decades, increasing attention was focused on these drugs. These drugs include methyldopa, angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor, calcium channel inhibitor, beta-adrenergic blocker, but diuretics and vasodilators were known not to reduce the hypertrophied ventricular mass. In this study, 46 hypertensive patients were managed by captopril, atenolol, or hydrochlorothiazide monotherapy. And wer estimated and follow up LV mass by echocardiography during 3 months. Captopril and atenolol group showed LV mass reduced, but hydrochlorothiazide group did not. LV mass was reduced more in captopril group than in atenolo group. In conclusion, we have been impressed by this study that diuretics monotherapy for hypertension shoud be reconsidered. And we concluded that drugs which can reduce myocardial mass shoud be chosen to control hypertension as a monotherapeutic drug or a additive drug.
Antihypertensive Agents
;
Atenolol
;
Calcium Channels
;
Captopril
;
Cardiovascular Diseases
;
Diuretics
;
Echocardiography
;
Follow-Up Studies
;
Heart Failure
;
Humans
;
Hydrochlorothiazide
;
Hypertension*
;
Hypertrophy
;
Methyldopa
;
Peptidyl-Dipeptidase A
;
Vasodilator Agents
2.Comparing Various Short-Form Geriatric Depression Scales in Elderly Patients.
Hyun Seok PARK ; Young Jak DEUNG JUNG ; Cha Im LEE ; Jeong Eun OH ; Sung Ho HONG ; Choo Yon CHO
Journal of the Korean Academy of Family Medicine 2006;27(5):364-369
BACKGROUND: A 15-item GDS form is now widely used to screen for depressive symptoms in elderly patients, but even the 15-item version seems fairly long for routine use in busy outpatient settings. This study was conducted to determine which of the three short-form GDS tools with four or five questions extracted from the 15-item GDS tool could be a valid alternative to the 15-item GDS. METHODS: This study was performed using a questionnaire survey of 102 elderly patients over sixty-five, who had either visited or had been admitted in either one of the two universities hospitals in Seoul or ChungCheong district from October 1999 to June 2004. Questionnaire contained demographic and statistical characteristics, items related to health behavior, 15-item GDS, Mini-Mental State Examination Korean (MMSE-K) and activities of daily living. Three scales, namely, D'Ath GDS-4, Van Marwijk GDS-4, and Hoyl GDS-5 were compared to the 15-item GDS. Sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value and the area under the ROC curves were calculated for each short-form GDS scales. RESULTS: The mean 15-item GDS score was 7.4+/-3.3 and 69.6% of the subjects were to have suggested depression. Hoyl GDS-5 instrument had the highest sensitivity of 87.3%, specificity of 80.6%, and positive predictive value of 91.1% among the three short-form alternatives. The 5-item Hoyl GDS version had the highest area under the curve (0.84), compared to 0.76 for the 4-item Van Marwijk and 0.66 for the 4-item D'Ath GDS version. CONCLUSION: The 5-item Hoyl GDS had superior validity over the D'Ath GDS-4 and Van Marwijk GDS-4. The GDS5/15 may be an effective alternative screening tool.
Activities of Daily Living
;
Aged*
;
Depression*
;
Health Behavior
;
Humans
;
Mass Screening
;
Outpatients
;
ROC Curve
;
Sensitivity and Specificity
;
Seoul
;
Weights and Measures*
;
Surveys and Questionnaires