2.Raeder's Syndrome.
Kab Jin KIM ; Jae Woo KIM ; Ki Jong CHOI ; Sang Gun LEE
Journal of the Korean Neurological Association 1995;13(2):403-408
Raeder's syndrome, or Raeder's paratrigeminal syndrome, is a painful Horner's syndrome characterized by unilateral head pain, oculosympathetic paralysis (miosis, ptosis) and anhydrosis over the forehead with otherwise normal facial sweating. We report two cases of Raeder's syndrome whose cause had not been found despite of intensive investigation and one case associated with nasopharyngeal tumor. The first case had a headache, miosis, ptosis but had not cranial nerve palsy. The second case had a unilateral facial headache, oculosympathetic paralysis, aoydrosis of forehead and sensory change in the ipsilateral ophthalmic division of the trigeminal nerve. The third case had a headache, miosis, ptosis, anhydrosis of forehead and sensory change in the whole territory of the trigeminal nerve.
Cranial Nerve Diseases
;
Forehead
;
Headache
;
Horner Syndrome
;
Miosis
;
Paralysis
;
Sweat
;
Sweating
;
Trigeminal Nerve
3.A Case Report of Neurilemmoma of the Chest Wall.
Tae Yeong LEE ; Jae Suk PARK ; Young Ran SUNG ; Wan Su KIM ; Jae Kyung LEE ; Mi Kyung PARK ; Do Sub KIM ; Kab Do HUR
Tuberculosis and Respiratory Diseases 1997;44(3):649-654
Benign solitary schwannoma of the chest wall is a rare disease of nerve sheath origin A 43-year-old female patient was admitted to our hospital for right upper quandrant pain Chest X-ray shows nonspecific finding, ultrasonography & CT scan revealed a solid tumor on the right lateral chest wall. On aspiration needle biopsy, this mass was turned out to be a schwannoma of the right lateral chest wall. This mass was excised surgically in an encapsulated state by right lateral thoracotomy. Histological section revealed a typical schwannoma, which is characterized by Antoni A and Antoni B tissues of high & low cellularity.
Adult
;
Biopsy, Needle
;
Female
;
Humans
;
Neurilemmoma*
;
Rare Diseases
;
Thoracic Wall*
;
Thoracotomy
;
Thorax*
;
Tomography, X-Ray Computed
;
Ultrasonography
4.Pulsatile GnRH therapy in male patients with hypogonadotropic hypogonadism.
Ki Hyun PARK ; Yong Seok JEE ; Byung Seok LEE ; Dong Jae CHO ; Chan Ho SONG ; Moo Sang LEE ; Hyung Ki CHOI ; Hyun Chul LEE ; Kab Beom HEO
Korean Journal of Fertility and Sterility 1992;19(1):81-85
No abstract available.
Gonadotropin-Releasing Hormone*
;
Humans
;
Hypogonadism*
;
Male*
5.A Case of Recurrent Peritonitis Associated with Colon Cancer in a Continuous Ambulatory Peritoneal Dialysis Patient.
Byeong Kab YOON ; Sun Young LEE ; Gun Ho PARK ; Seoung Woo LEE ; Joon Ho SONG ; Moon Jae KIM
Korean Journal of Nephrology 2004;23(4):666-670
Recurrent peritonitis is the major complication of continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis (CAPD) and a common reason for discontinuation of this form of therapy. Polymicrobial peritonitis by gram- negative organisms suggests intraabdominal pathology not directly associated with CAPD, necessitating early removal of catheter and/or abdominal exploration. The source of infection may still be gastrointestinal, especially in light of the polymicrobial gram-negative peritonitis and rarely be gastrointestinal malignancy. We recently experienced a case of 64-year-old woman with recurrent CAPD peritonitis by polymicrobial gram-negative organisms, originated from colon cancer. Colon cancer was confirmed by barium enema, abdominal CT and colonoscopic biopsy. She underwent right hemicolectomy and removal of catheter simultaneously. The biopsy revealed a moderately to poorly differentiated adenocarcinoma with abundant mucin production.
Adenocarcinoma
;
Barium
;
Biopsy
;
Catheters
;
Colon*
;
Colonic Neoplasms*
;
Enema
;
Female
;
Humans
;
Middle Aged
;
Mucins
;
Pathology
;
Peritoneal Dialysis, Continuous Ambulatory*
;
Peritonitis*
;
Tomography, X-Ray Computed
6.The use of buccal fat pad as a pedicled graft for the reconstruction of oral mucosal defect
Dong Soo LEE ; Chin Soo KIM ; Sang Han LEE ; Hyun Jung JANG ; Jae Kab CHOI ; Woo Cheon KI
Journal of the Korean Association of Maxillofacial Plastic and Reconstructive Surgeons 1998;20(3):185-190
Adipose Tissue
;
Cheek
;
Cicatrix
;
Humans
;
Mouth
;
Oroantral Fistula
;
Skin
;
Subcutaneous Fat
;
Tissue Donors
;
Tongue
;
Transplants
7.A Clinico-Radiological Analysis of the Lacunar Infarction.
Ji Wook PARK ; Jae Woo KIM ; Sang Kun LEE ; Kab Jin KIM ; Kyung Min HA ; Sun Seob CHOI
Journal of the Korean Neurological Association 1994;12(3):466-473
Lacune is small infarct located in the deeper part of the brain and developed by occlusion of small branch of the large cerebral arteries. It occupies 10-30% of infarction in western countries but 53.1% in our study. We investigated 181 cases of lacunar infarction confirmed by clinical features and neuroimaging study. We analyzed lacunar stroke into 13 groups of symdrome based on the clinical features. The frequent lacunar syndromes were pure motor stroke (35.4%), sensori-motor stroke (26.5%), ataxic hemiparesis (11.6%), and pure sensory stroke (6.1%). The frequent sites for lacune were pons (25.4%), corona radiata (24.9%), and thalamus (18.2%). The major contributing risk factors were hypertension (65.8%) and diabetes (19.3%). The incidence of multiple lacune was 67.4%. The determining factor for clinical presentation of lacune was not the size of lesion but the location of lesion.
Brain
;
Cerebral Arteries
;
Hypertension
;
Incidence
;
Infarction
;
Neuroimaging
;
Paresis
;
Pons
;
Risk Factors
;
Stroke
;
Stroke, Lacunar*
;
Thalamus
8.Clinical Profile and Localization of Ataxic Hemiparesis as a Lacunar Syndrome.
Kyung Min HA ; Sang Kun LEE ; Jae Woo KIM ; Kab Jin KIM ; Ji Wook PARK
Journal of the Korean Neurological Association 1994;12(3):458-465
Ataxic hemiparesis is a stroke syndrome in which the main features are unusual combination of weakness and cerebellar-like ataxia involving the limb on the same side. We describe an analysis of 17 patients with ataxic hemiparesis who underwent magnetic resonance imaging or computed tomography. Ten patients had lacunar infarction in the contralateral pons. In six, lesions were found in the contralateral thalamus and the posterior limb of internal capsule. In one patient, infarct was located in the contralateral midbrain, They showed different clinical manifestations depending on the sites of lesion. This study may suggest that variable sites of lesion can cause ataxic hemiparesis and different clinical manifestations.
Ataxia
;
Extremities
;
Humans
;
Internal Capsule
;
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
;
Mesencephalon
;
Paresis*
;
Pons
;
Stroke
;
Stroke, Lacunar*
;
Thalamus
9.The primary mediastinal liposarcoma with effusion.
Gu Tae WON ; Jin Hyun PARK ; Uk Kyun HONG ; Jae Kab LEE ; Suk Joong YONG ; Kye Chul SHIN ; So Young JIN ; Soon Hee JUNG
Tuberculosis and Respiratory Diseases 1991;38(1):65-69
No abstract available.
Liposarcoma*
10.The Effect of Carbamazepine-Controlled Release on the Congnitive Function.
Kab Jin KIM ; Jae Woo KIM ; Sang Ho KIM ; Kyung Min HA ; Sang Kun LEE
Journal of the Korean Neurological Association 1995;13(2):224-232
We evaluated the effect of carbamazepine-controlled release (CR) on the cognitive function. By using monotherapy study, we investigated the effects of carbamazepine on cognitive function in 10 epileptic patients and 17 normal controls. The evaluations were conducted before and one and six months after therapy using neuropsychological batteries(BUSCHKE SELECTIVE REMINDING TEST BSRT, REY OSTERRIETH COMPLEX FIGURE TEST ROCFT, CONCENTRATION ENDURANCE TEST d2 test, REY VISUAL DESIGN LEARNING TEST RVDLT, FINGER TAPPING TEST). In the patients treated with carbamazepine-CR monotherapy, follow up studies were made in one and six months later, respectively. It was found that the cognitive function determined in the three tests(consistent long-term retrieval : one item of BSRT, d2 test, and ROCFT : P 0.05). The mean anticonvulsant blood levels on the day of cognitive function tests were 6.48mg/ml (SD=l. 87) and 6.53mg /ml (SD=l.97) in one and six months respectively. This study showed carbamazepine-CR monotherapy had an adverse effect on the cognitive function.
Carbamazepine
;
Fingers
;
Follow-Up Studies
;
Humans
;
Learning