1.Telemedical Marit Assistance Service by Fire Safety Headquarter.
Journal of the Korean Society of Emergency Medicine 2014;25(2):159-166
PURPOSE: Telemedical maritime assistance service (TMAS) is performed in several ways when a seafarer falls sick under circumstances where the ship is far away from shore without possibility of medevac. The current methods operating in Korea are described and compared in order to grasp the actual circumstances in terms of importance. METHODS: From June 2012 to July 2013, a total of 523 cases were consulted roughly by means of satellite-phone, e-mail, and website homepage at TMAS center of Busan metropolitan city fire safety headquarters and the final clinical outcomes of these registered cases according to illness or injury after a certain period of time was studied retrospectively. RESULTS: Statistically significant differences in classification of ship company, headquarters of ship company informed, added photos, added drug-list, and final clinical outcome (p<0.001, p<0.001, p<0.001, p<0.001, p=0.027, respectively) according to whether or not homepage-consultation were observed between crossed-analyzed groups; and significant differences in age-group, consult through satellite-phone, added photos, and final clinical outcome according to illness or injury were observed between crossed-analyzed groups (p<0.001, p=0.046, p=0.017, p<0.001, respectively). CONCLUSION: The website designated for TMAS is expected to play a positive role. In addition, education of seafarers should also be implemented at the same time because the off-shore circumstances are quite different from those of onshore.
Busan
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Classification
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Education
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Electronic Mail
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Fires*
;
Hand Strength
;
Korea
;
Retrospective Studies
;
Ships
;
Sorbitol
;
Telemedicine
2.Black rice extract protected HepG2 cells from oxidative stress-induced cell death via ERK1/2 and Akt activation.
Jaemin YOON ; Hyeonmi HAM ; Jeehye SUNG ; Younghwa KIM ; Youngmin CHOI ; Jeom Sig LEE ; Heon Sang JEONG ; Junsoo LEE ; Daeil KIM
Nutrition Research and Practice 2014;8(2):125-131
BACKGROUND/OBJECTIVES: The objective of this study was to evaluate the protective effect of black rice extract (BRE) on tert-butyl hydroperoxide (TBHP)-induced oxidative injury in HepG2 cells. MATERIALS/METHODS: Methanolic extract from black rice was evaluated for the protective effect on TBHP-induced oxidative injury in HepG2 cells. Several biomarkers that modulate cell survival and death including reactive oxygen species (ROS), caspase-3 activity, and related cellular kinases were determined. RESULTS: TBHP induced cell death and apoptosis by a rapid increase in ROS generation and caspase-3 activity. Moreover, TBHP-induced oxidative stress resulted in a transient ERK1/2 activation and a sustained increase of JNK1/2 activation. While, BRE pretreatment protects the cells against oxidative stress by reducing cell death, caspase-3 activity, and ROS generation and also by preventing ERKs deactivation and the prolonged JNKs activation. Moreover, pretreatment of BRE increased the activation of ERKs and Akt which are pro-survival signal proteins. However, this effect was blunted in the presence of ERKs and Akt inhibitors. CONCLUSIONS: These results suggest that activation of ERKs and Akt pathway might be involved in the cytoprotective effect of BRE against oxidative stress. Our findings provide new insights into the cytoprotective effects and its possible mechanism of black rice against oxidative stress.
Apoptosis
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Biomarkers
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Caspase 3
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Cell Death*
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Cell Survival
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Hep G2 Cells*
;
Methanol
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Oxidative Stress
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Phosphotransferases
;
Reactive Oxygen Species
;
tert-Butylhydroperoxide
3.The Changes of Olfactory and Trigeminal Pungency Thresholds in n-Aliphatic Alcohols with Different Carbon Chain in Normal Adults.
Kyung Hun YANG ; Nam Ho HUH ; Tae Hyung KIM ; Seung Ho CHOI ; Yong Sig KWUN ; Seong Ho SONG ; Jeom Keun KIM
Korean Journal of Otolaryngology - Head and Neck Surgery 2002;45(5):483-487
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Using n-aliphatic alcohols whose physical properties change gradually as their length increases, we investigated the changes of olfactory threshold and trigeminal pungency threshold with the increase of carbon chain length. MATERIALS AND METHOD: Olfactory and trigeminal pungency thresholds were measured in ethanol (C2), 1-butanol (C4), 1-hexanol (C6) and 1-octanol (C8) in 40 normal adults using a two-alternative forced-choice modified by the ascending method of limit (CCCRC) test. Plastic bottles with 30 ml of four n-aliphatic alcohols were diluted threefold successively by mineral oil. Plastic bottles containing only mineral oil were used as controls. RESULTS: The olfactory and trigeminal pungency thresholds decreased and the ratio of olfactory threshold/trigeminal pungency threshold increased with the length of carbon chain in n-aliphatic alcohols. The correlation coefficients among olfactory thresholds in each alcohol were higher than those among trigeminal pungency thresholds. CONCLUSION: Alcohol with long carbon chains showed low olfactory and trigeminal pungency thresholds, indicating that high lipid solubility is an important factor in olfaction and trigeminal chemosensitivity.
1-Butanol
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1-Octanol
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Adult*
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Alcohols*
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Carbon*
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Ethanol
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Humans
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Mineral Oil
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Plastics
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Smell
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Solubility
4.Prehospital Notification from the Emergency Medical Service Reduces the Transfer and Intra-Hospital Processing Times for Acute Stroke Patients.
Hyo Jin BAE ; Dae Hyun KIM ; Nam Tae YOO ; Jae Hyung CHOI ; Jae Taeck HUH ; Jae Kwan CHA ; Sung Kwun KIM ; Jeom Sig CHOI ; Jae Woo KIM
Journal of Clinical Neurology 2010;6(3):138-142
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: There is little information available about the effects of Emergency Medical Service (EMS) hospital notification on transfer and intrahospital processing times in cases of acute ischemic stroke. METHODS: This study retrospectively investigated the real transfer and imaging processing times for cases of suspected acute stroke (AS) with EMS notification of a requirement for intravenous (IV) tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA) and for cases without notification. Also we compared the intra-hospital processing times for receiving t-PA between patients with and without EMS prehospital notification. RESULTS: Between December 2008 and August 2009, the EMS transported 102 patients with suspected AS to our stroke center. During the same period, 33 patients received IV t-PA without prehospital notification from the EMS. The mean real transfer time after the EMS call was 56.0+/-32.0 min. Patients with a transfer distance of more than 40 km could not be transported to our center within 60 min. Among the 102 patients, 55 were transferred via the EMS to our emergency room for IV t-PA. The positive predictive value for stroke (90.9% vs. 68.1%, p=0.005) was much higher and the real transfer time was much faster in patients with an EMS t-PA call (47.7+/-23.1 min, p=0.004) than in those without one (56.3+/-32.4 min). The door-to-imaging time (17.8+/-11.0 min vs. 26.9+/-11.5 min, p=0.01) and door-to-needle time (29.7+/-9.6 min vs. 42.1+/-18.1 min, p=0.01) were significantly shorter in the 18 patients for whom there was prehospital notification and who ultimately received t-PA than in those for whom there was no prehospital notification. CONCLUSIONS: Our results indicate that prehospital notification could enable the rapid dispatch of AS patients needing IV t-PA to a stroke centre. In addition, it could reduce intrahospital delays, particularly, imaging processing times.
Emergencies
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Emergency Medical Services
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Humans
;
Retrospective Studies
;
Stroke
;
Tissue Plasminogen Activator