1.A Clinical Study on Antihypertensive Effects of Aldactazide (Spironolactone+Hydrochlorothiazide).
Myoung Mook LEE ; Seong Yun KIM ; Jeong Eui PARK ; Young Woo LEE ; Sung Ho LEE
Korean Circulation Journal 1977;7(2):27-33
The antihypertensive effects fo aldactazide and serum electrolytes changes before and after treatment with aldactazide were observed. The followings were obtained: 1. Results of antihypertensive therapy with aldactazide in 23 hypertensive patients revealed good effects in 52.17%, fair in 26.09%, poor in 8.7%, and failure in 13.04% of cases. In 78.26% of cases, good or fair control of blood pressure was obtained. 2. Daily doses of aldactazide ranged from 25mg to 50mg depending upon the level of blood pressure. The antihypertensive effects were appeared after average 11 days of administration. 3. The side effects during treatment with aldactazide were dizziness, weakness, indigestion, headache, and restlessness in 26.28% of cases (6 of 23 cases). 4. No significant changes in serum Na and K values were observed before and after treatment with aldactazide for average 23 days.
Blood Pressure
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Dizziness
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Dyspepsia
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Electrolytes
;
Headache
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Humans
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Psychomotor Agitation
2.Expanding the health belief model on dementia knowledge, fear, and preventive behaviors among older adults in Korea: a cross-sectional descriptive study
Journal of Korean Biological Nursing Science 2025;27(1):60-71
This study aimed to expand the health belief model by incorporating dementia knowledge and fear and to assess the effects of these variables on dementia prevention behaviors among older adults. Methods: In total, 199 elderly individuals from 10 senior centers in Korea completed a structured questionnaire assessing characteristics, dementia knowledge, fear, health beliefs, and prevention behaviors. Measures included the Alzheimer’s Disease Knowledge Scale, the Korean version of the Fear of Alzheimer’s Disease Scale, and the Korean version of the Motivation to Change Lifestyle and Health Behavior for Dementia. Hierarchical polynomial regression was conducted to examine the impact of integrating dementia knowledge and fear into the health belief model. Results: Hierarchical polynomial regression across four models revealed significant effects of various factors on dementia prevention behaviors, explaining 12%–36% of the variance. Perceived barriers significantly decreased dementia prevention behaviors, while higher levels of self-efficacy and cues to action had a positive influence. Additionally, a nonlinear relationship was identified between dementia knowledge and prevention behaviors, with the positive impacts of increased knowledge potentially diminishing beyond a certain point. Conclusion: Our findings underscore the necessity of modifying the health belief model to integrate dementia knowledge and fear, which play critical roles in shaping preventive behaviors among older adults. Future investigations should examine the optimal level of dementia knowledge to promote these behaviors and elucidate the intricate relationship between knowledge and actions.
3.Expanding the health belief model on dementia knowledge, fear, and preventive behaviors among older adults in Korea: a cross-sectional descriptive study
Journal of Korean Biological Nursing Science 2025;27(1):60-71
This study aimed to expand the health belief model by incorporating dementia knowledge and fear and to assess the effects of these variables on dementia prevention behaviors among older adults. Methods: In total, 199 elderly individuals from 10 senior centers in Korea completed a structured questionnaire assessing characteristics, dementia knowledge, fear, health beliefs, and prevention behaviors. Measures included the Alzheimer’s Disease Knowledge Scale, the Korean version of the Fear of Alzheimer’s Disease Scale, and the Korean version of the Motivation to Change Lifestyle and Health Behavior for Dementia. Hierarchical polynomial regression was conducted to examine the impact of integrating dementia knowledge and fear into the health belief model. Results: Hierarchical polynomial regression across four models revealed significant effects of various factors on dementia prevention behaviors, explaining 12%–36% of the variance. Perceived barriers significantly decreased dementia prevention behaviors, while higher levels of self-efficacy and cues to action had a positive influence. Additionally, a nonlinear relationship was identified between dementia knowledge and prevention behaviors, with the positive impacts of increased knowledge potentially diminishing beyond a certain point. Conclusion: Our findings underscore the necessity of modifying the health belief model to integrate dementia knowledge and fear, which play critical roles in shaping preventive behaviors among older adults. Future investigations should examine the optimal level of dementia knowledge to promote these behaviors and elucidate the intricate relationship between knowledge and actions.
4.Expanding the health belief model on dementia knowledge, fear, and preventive behaviors among older adults in Korea: a cross-sectional descriptive study
Journal of Korean Biological Nursing Science 2025;27(1):60-71
This study aimed to expand the health belief model by incorporating dementia knowledge and fear and to assess the effects of these variables on dementia prevention behaviors among older adults. Methods: In total, 199 elderly individuals from 10 senior centers in Korea completed a structured questionnaire assessing characteristics, dementia knowledge, fear, health beliefs, and prevention behaviors. Measures included the Alzheimer’s Disease Knowledge Scale, the Korean version of the Fear of Alzheimer’s Disease Scale, and the Korean version of the Motivation to Change Lifestyle and Health Behavior for Dementia. Hierarchical polynomial regression was conducted to examine the impact of integrating dementia knowledge and fear into the health belief model. Results: Hierarchical polynomial regression across four models revealed significant effects of various factors on dementia prevention behaviors, explaining 12%–36% of the variance. Perceived barriers significantly decreased dementia prevention behaviors, while higher levels of self-efficacy and cues to action had a positive influence. Additionally, a nonlinear relationship was identified between dementia knowledge and prevention behaviors, with the positive impacts of increased knowledge potentially diminishing beyond a certain point. Conclusion: Our findings underscore the necessity of modifying the health belief model to integrate dementia knowledge and fear, which play critical roles in shaping preventive behaviors among older adults. Future investigations should examine the optimal level of dementia knowledge to promote these behaviors and elucidate the intricate relationship between knowledge and actions.
5.Expanding the health belief model on dementia knowledge, fear, and preventive behaviors among older adults in Korea: a cross-sectional descriptive study
Journal of Korean Biological Nursing Science 2025;27(1):60-71
This study aimed to expand the health belief model by incorporating dementia knowledge and fear and to assess the effects of these variables on dementia prevention behaviors among older adults. Methods: In total, 199 elderly individuals from 10 senior centers in Korea completed a structured questionnaire assessing characteristics, dementia knowledge, fear, health beliefs, and prevention behaviors. Measures included the Alzheimer’s Disease Knowledge Scale, the Korean version of the Fear of Alzheimer’s Disease Scale, and the Korean version of the Motivation to Change Lifestyle and Health Behavior for Dementia. Hierarchical polynomial regression was conducted to examine the impact of integrating dementia knowledge and fear into the health belief model. Results: Hierarchical polynomial regression across four models revealed significant effects of various factors on dementia prevention behaviors, explaining 12%–36% of the variance. Perceived barriers significantly decreased dementia prevention behaviors, while higher levels of self-efficacy and cues to action had a positive influence. Additionally, a nonlinear relationship was identified between dementia knowledge and prevention behaviors, with the positive impacts of increased knowledge potentially diminishing beyond a certain point. Conclusion: Our findings underscore the necessity of modifying the health belief model to integrate dementia knowledge and fear, which play critical roles in shaping preventive behaviors among older adults. Future investigations should examine the optimal level of dementia knowledge to promote these behaviors and elucidate the intricate relationship between knowledge and actions.
6.Analysis of the Job of Nurses Working on Oriental Medicine Wards.
Myung Ja KIM ; Mi Hwan KIM ; Hee Sug JEONG ; Yun Seo KIM
Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing Administration 2015;21(4):341-353
PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to identify nurse's role through job analysis of nursing duties for nurses working on East Asia traditional medicine wards. METHODS: Major steps in the study included a literature review, description of job activities of nurses on oriental medicine wards, comparative description of the literature, expert tests of validity of derived duties and tasks, and investigation of importance, difficulty and frequency of duties on job list. RESULTS: The job of nurses on oriental medicine wards was classified into 12 duties, 59 tasks, and 295 task elements. The 12 duties were nursing assessment, nursing diagnosis, nursing planning, nursing implementation, nursing evaluation, supplies management, management of human resources, management of environment, management of documents, formation of cooperative relationships, self-development, and nursing activity in oriental medicine. 'Formation of cooperative relationships' was the duty ranked highest for importance (4.34), 'self-development' was ranked highest for difficulty (3.47), and 'Formation of cooperative relationships' was ranked highest for frequency (4.21). CONCLUSION: Basic education for nurses on an oriental medicine unit is necessary for the performance of oriental nursing to be considered as a specialized field. This study contributes to human resource management in the oriental medical hospital.
Education
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Equipment and Supplies
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Far East
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Humans
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Job Description
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Medicine, East Asian Traditional*
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Medicine, Traditional
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Nurse's Role
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Nursing
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Nursing Assessment
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Nursing Diagnosis
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Task Performance and Analysis
7.A Case Report of Palatoplasty in a Patient with Clotting Factor X Deficiency.
Suk Wha KIM ; Eui Cheol JEONG ; Byung Min YUN ; Tae Hyun CHOI ; Hyoung Jin KANG
Journal of the Korean Society of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgeons 2009;36(6):792-794
PURPOSE: Clotting factor X deficiency is one of the least common coagulation disorders. The authors describe a case of cleft palate in a patient with a congenital clotting factor X deficiency. METHODS: In pediatric patients with a cleft palate, the coagulation problem is more worrisome, because they are more sensitive to blood than adults, and because postoperative bleeding can cause blood ingestion with subsequent vomiting, aspiration, and airway obstruction. To prevent hemorrhagic complications in the described case, fresh frozen plasma (FFP) was administered every 24 hours from the day before surgery to the second postoperative day. RESULTS: Good hemostasis, normal healing, and no complications was shown postoperatively. CONCLUSION: The replacement of fresh frozen plasma was useful in the case of congenital clotting factor deficiency for bleeding prophylaxis in cleft palate operation.
Adult
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Airway Obstruction
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Cleft Palate
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Eating
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Factor X
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Factor X Deficiency
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Hemorrhage
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Hemostasis
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Humans
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Plasma
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Vomiting
8.A Case of Conversion to PRK Due to Lost-Free Cap in LASIK.
Yun jeong KIM ; Eui Sang CHUNG ; Woo Jung KIM
Journal of the Korean Ophthalmological Society 2002;43(3):631-636
PURPOSE: LASIK has several advantages over PRK such as less postoperative pain, quicker visual recovery, virtually no corneal haze and low incidence of myopic regression. But the primary disadvantage of LASIK is that flap-related complications rarely can occur. METHODS: In the LASIK procedure of a 30-year-old woman, we experienced the crescent form lost-free cap which developed in the direction of 4~7 clock hours and then we converted to PRK. RESULTS: Postoperative visual acuity showed 1.0 . On slit-lamp biomicroscopic examination we were able to find the completely healed cornea including lost-free cap site epithelium. On topography, we were able to find the improvement in the irregular surface of lost-free cap site. CONCLUSIONS: Intraoperative flap complications of LASIK are relatively uncommon, but we should consider the possibility of those complications. And though it may occur, proper management will result in good surgical outcomes without severe visual impairment.
Adult
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Cornea
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Epithelium
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Female
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Humans
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Incidence
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Keratomileusis, Laser In Situ*
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Pain, Postoperative
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Vision Disorders
;
Visual Acuity
9.Comparative Functional Connectivity of Core Brain Regions between Implicit and Explicit Memory Tasks Underlying Negative Emotion in General Anxiety Disorder
Shin-Eui PARK ; Yun-Hyeon KIM ; Jong-Chul YANG ; Gwang-Woo JEONG
Clinical Psychopharmacology and Neuroscience 2022;20(2):279-291
Objective:
To investigate not only differential patterns of functional connectivity of core brain regions between implicit and explicit verbal memory tasks underlying negatively evoked emotional condition, but also correlations of functional connectivity (FC) strength with clinical symptom severity in patients with generalized anxiety disorder (GAD).
Methods:
Thirteen patients with GAD and 13 healthy controls underwent functional magnetic resonance imaging for memory tasks with negative emotion words.
Results:
Clinical symptom and its severities of GAD were potentially associated with abnormalities of task-based FC with core brain regions and distinct FC patterns between implicit vs. explicit memory processing in GAD were potentially well discriminated. Outstanding FC in implicit memory task includes positive connections of precentral gyus (PrG) to inferior frontal gyrus and inferior parietal gyrus (IPG), respectively, in encoding period; a positive connection of amygdala (Amg) to globus pallidus as well as a negative connection of Amg to cerebellum in retrieval period. Meanwhile, distinct FC in explicit memory included a positive connection of PrG to inferior temporal gyrus (ITG) in encoding period; a positive connection of the anterior cingulate gyrus to superior frontal gyrus in retrieval period. Especially, there were positive correlation between GAD-7 scores and FC of PrG-IPG (r2 = 0.324, p = 0.042) in implicit memory encoding, and FC of PrG-ITG (r2 = 0.378, p = 0.025) in explicit memory encoding.
Conclusion
This study clarified differential patterns of brain activation and relevant FC between implicit and explicit verbal memory tasks underlying negative emotional feelings in GAD. These findings will be helpful for an understanding of distinct brain functional mechanisms associated with clinical symptom severities in GAD.
10.Effect of preoperative pan-immune-inflammation value on clinical and oncologic outcomes after colorectal cancer surgery: a retrospective study
Yun Ju SEO ; Kyeong Eui KIM ; Woon Kyung JEONG ; Seong Kyu BAEK ; Sung Uk BAE
Annals of Surgical Treatment and Research 2024;106(3):169-177
Purpose:
Surgical resection, the primary treatment for colorectal cancer (CRC), is often linked with postoperative complications that adversely affect the overall survival rates (OS). The pan-immune-inflammation value (PIV), a novel biomarker, is promising in evaluating cancer prognoses. We aimed to explore the impact of preoperative immune inflammation status on postoperative and long-term oncological outcomes in patients with CRC.
Methods:
A retrospective analysis of 203 patients with CRC who underwent surgery (January 2016–June 2020) was conducted. The preoperative PIV was calculated as [(neutrophil count + platelet count + monocyte count) / lymphocyte counts]. The PIV optimal cutoff value was determined based on the OS using the Contal and O’Quigley methods.
Results:
A PIV value ≥155.90 was defined as high. Patients were categorized into low-PIV (n = 85) and high-PIV (n = 118) groups. Perioperative clinical outcomes (total operation time, time to gas out, sips of water, soft diet, and hospital stay) were not significantly different between the groups. The high-PIV group exhibited more postoperative complications (P = 0.024), and larger tumor size compared with the low-PIV group. Multivariate analysis identified that American Society of Anesthesiologists grade III (P = 0.046) and high-PIV (P = 0.049) were significantly associated with postoperative complications. The low-PIV group demonstrated higher OS (P = 0.001) and disease-free survival rates (DFS) (P = 0.021) compared with the high-PIV group. Advanced N stage (P = 0.005) and high-PIV levels (P = 0.047) were the identified independent prognostic factors for OS, whereas advanced N stage (P = 0.045) was an independent prognostic factor for DFS.
Conclusion
Elevated preoperative PIV was associated with an increased incidence of postoperative complications and served as an independent prognostic factor for OS.