1.Effects of Alginate Culture on Viability, Proliferation, and Phenotype of Canine Articular Chondrocytes.
Hyeong Geun PARK ; Jeong Im WOO ; So Ra PARK ; Han Jo LIM ; Byoung Hyun MIN
Journal of Korean Orthopaedic Research Society 2001;4(1):24-31
No Abstract Available.
Chondrocytes*
;
Phenotype*
2.Proton Nuclear MR Spectroscopy (H-MRS) in Adult Onset Hallervorden-Spatz Disease.
Jeong Ho HA ; Jae Young KOH ; Jo Hyuk IM ; Myoung Chong LEE ; Choong Kon CHOI
Journal of the Korean Neurological Association 1996;14(3):855-860
Background & Significance : Hallervorden-Spatz disease (HSD) is a rare neurologic disorder characterized by progressive dystonia, retinal degeneration, pyramidal sign, and mental deterioration. The neuropathological findings include preferential deposition of iron within the extrapyramidal nuclei, including globus pallidus, substantia nigra, and red nuclei. The final diagnosis depends on the typical pathologic findings. MRI brain imaging study commonly shows so-called "eye-of-the-tiger" in the globus pallidus. However 1H-MRS findings of HSD have not been reported. We experienced a case with clinically suspicious HSD whose diagnosis was further supported by 1H-MRS. Case : A forty four year-old man presented with slowly progressive dystonia for six years. He had been well until age of thirty eight, when he noticed clumsy hand-writing. Three years later, he developed difficulty in chewing. Clumsiness of his hands and arm movements progressed to the point of difficulty in using spoon and chopsticks. While walking, arm swing was decreased and both arms and neck took more dystonic posture. Brain MRI (T2Wl) showed symmetric high signal intensity lesions in the globus pallidus, surrounded by a peripheral zone of exaggerated low signal. On 1H-MRS of basal ganglia, although choline, creatine and N-acetyl-aspartate (NAA) peaks were detected, marked noise probably due to paramagnetic substance (iron), made quantitative analysis difficult. Conclusion : 1H-MRS of HSD is characterized by "noise", which may be suggestive of HSD.
Adult*
;
Arm
;
Basal Ganglia
;
Brain
;
Choline
;
Creatine
;
Diagnosis
;
Dystonia
;
Globus Pallidus
;
Hand
;
Humans
;
Iron
;
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
;
Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy*
;
Mastication
;
Neck
;
Nervous System Diseases
;
Neuroimaging
;
Noise
;
Pantothenate Kinase-Associated Neurodegeneration*
;
Posture
;
Protons*
;
Retinal Degeneration
;
Substantia Nigra
;
Walking
3.Lumbosacral Plexopathy Caused by Presacral Recurrence of Colon Cancer Mimicking Degenerative Spinal Disease: A Case Report.
Se Yeong JO ; Soo Bin IM ; Je Hoon JEONG ; Jang Gyu CHA
Korean Journal of Spine 2015;12(2):103-106
Radiculopathy triggered by degenerative spinal disease is the most common cause of spinal surgery, and the number of affected elderly patients is increasing. Radiating pain that is extraspinal in origin may distract from the surgical decision on how to treat a neurological presentation in the lower extremities. A 54-year-old man with sciatica visited our outpatient clinic. He had undergone laminectomy and discectomy to treat spinal stenosis at another hospital, but his pain remained. Finally, he was diagnosed with a plexopathy caused by late recurrence of colorectal cancer, which compressed the lumbar plexus in the presacral area. This case report illustrates the potential for misdiagnosis of extraspinal plexopathy and the value of obtaining an accurate history. Although the symptoms are similar, spinal surgeons should consider both spinal and extraspinal origins of sciatica.
Aged
;
Ambulatory Care Facilities
;
Colonic Neoplasms*
;
Colorectal Neoplasms
;
Diagnostic Errors
;
Diskectomy
;
Humans
;
Laminectomy
;
Lower Extremity
;
Lumbosacral Plexus
;
Middle Aged
;
Radiculopathy
;
Recurrence*
;
Sciatica
;
Spinal Diseases*
;
Spinal Stenosis
4.Change of working length in curved canals by various instrumentation techniques.
Jeong Im JO ; Myoung Uk JIN ; Young Kyung KIM ; Sung Kyo KIM
Journal of Korean Academy of Conservative Dentistry 2006;31(1):30-35
To evaluate the change of working length with various instrumentation techniques in curved canals, working length and canal curvature were determined before and after canal instrumentation in buccal or mesial canals of extracted human molars. Stainless steel K-files (MANI(R), Matsutani Seisakusho Co. Takanezawa, Japan), nickel-titanium K-files (Naviflex NT(TM), Brassler, Savannah, USA), ProFile(R), and ProTaper(TM) (Dentsply-Maillefer, Ballaigues, Switzerland) were used to prepare the canals with crown-down technique. In two hand instrumentation groups, coronal flaring was made with Gates Glidden burs. Apical canals were instrumented until apical diameter had attained a size of 30. Positional relation between the tooth apex and the #10 K-file tip was examined by using AutoCAD 2000 (Autodesk Corp., San Rafael. CA, USA) under a stereomicroscope before and after coronal flaring, and after apical instrumentation. Degree of canal curvature was also measured with Schneider's method in radiographs. Data of working length and canal curvature changes were statistically analyzed with one-way ANOVA and Tukey's studentized range test. Working length and canal curvature were decreased significantly in each step in all instrumentation groups. Coronal flaring using Gates Glidden burs in hand instrument groups and whole canal instrumentation using stainless steel hand K-files caused significantly more working length change than in ProFile instrumentation group (p < 0.05). The result of this study demonstrates that all of the above kinds of instrumentation in curved canals cause reduction of working length and canal curvature at each instrumentation steps, and hand instrumentation causes more working length change than ProFile.
Dental Instruments
;
Hand
;
Humans
;
Molar
;
Stainless Steel
;
Tooth Apex
5.Usefulness of Percutaneous Transluminal Angioplasty before Operative Treatment in Diabetic Foot Gangrene.
Chul Soon IM ; Myoung Jin LEE ; Jung Mo KANG ; Young Rak CHO ; Jeong Hyun JO ; Chan Soo LEE
Journal of Korean Foot and Ankle Society 2018;22(1):32-37
PURPOSE: Diabetic foot gangrene has a high morbidity rate and a great influence on the quality of life. Amputation is an appropriate treatment if conservative treatment is impossible according to the severity of gangrene and infection. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the usefulness of preoperative percutaneous transluminal angioplasty for the postoperative outcome. MATERIALS AND METHODS: From February 2013 to April 2016, among 55 patients with diabetic foot gangrene, who require surgical treatment, percutaneous transluminal angioplasty was performed on patients with an ankle brachial index (0.9 and stenosis) 50% on angiographic computed tomography. The study subjects were 49 patients, comprised of 37 males (75.5%) and 12 females (24.5%). The mean age of the patients was 70.0±9.6 years. The treatment results were followed up according to the position and length of the lesion and the changes during the follow-up period. RESULTS: As a result of angiography, there were 13 cases of atherosclerotic lesions in the proximal part, 11 cases in the distal part and 25 cases in both the proximal and distal parts. As a result of the follow-up after angiography, in 13 patients, the operation was not performed and only follow-up and dressing were performed around the wound. Sixteen patients underwent debridement for severe gangrene lesions and 20 patients, in whom the gangrene could not be treated, underwent amputation (ray amputation or metatarsal amputation, below knee amputation). CONCLUSION: Preoperative percutaneous angioplasty in diabetic foot gangrene patients with peripheral vascular occlusive disease is simple, and 59.2% of the patients with diabetic foot gangrene could be treated by conservative treatment or debridement.
Amputation
;
Angiography
;
Angioplasty*
;
Ankle Brachial Index
;
Bandages
;
Debridement
;
Diabetic Foot*
;
Female
;
Follow-Up Studies
;
Gangrene*
;
Humans
;
Knee
;
Male
;
Metatarsal Bones
;
Quality of Life
;
Wounds and Injuries
6.Differentiation of Benign and Malignant Ulcers of the Stomach on Computed Tomography.
Im Jeong SEO ; Suk KIM ; Jun Woo LEE ; Yeon Joo JEONG ; Ki Seok CHOO ; Suk Hong LEE ; Gwang Ha KIM ; Tae Oh KIM ; Hong Jae JO
Journal of the Korean Radiological Society 2006;55(4):353-359
PURPOSE: We wanted to determine the multidetector computed tomography (MDCT) findings for differentiating benign ulcers from malignant ones. MATERIALS AND METHODS: 18 clinicopathologically proven benign ulcers that had been detected by both endoscopy and MDCT were the focus of this study. 26 ulcerative advanced gastric cancers and 26 early gastric cancers with ulceration, all of which had been surgically proven, were selected as a control group. Five of the 26 early gastric cancers that were confined to the mucosa and that were not detected on CT were excluded in this study. The following CT findings were reviewed by two radiologists; ulcer size, the degree of enhancement and the thickness of inner enhancing layer in the ulcer base, the total thickness and the enhancing inner layer thickness in the largest part of the thickened ulcer mound, the presence of ulcer that projected beyond the healthy lumen, and the presence of perigastric fat infiltration and perigastric lymphadenopathy. RESULTS: An indiscernible thin-walled ulcer base (less than 1.5 mm) and suboptimal enhancement of the ulcer base for the discrimination of benign gastric ulcers from the malignant gastric ulcers showed sensitivities of 100% (18/18) and 78% (14/18), respectively, with specificities of 98% (46/47) and 92% (43/47), respectively. Ulcer projection was more significantly present in benign ulcer (13/18, 72%) than in the malignant gastric ulcers (7/47, 15%). The enhancing inner layer thickness in the ulcer mound was significantly greater in the AGC (mean: 7.4 mm) than in the benign gastric ulcers (mean, 2.2 mm). There were insignificant differences for ulcer size, total thickness of the ulcer mound, the perigastric fat infiltration and perigastric lymphadenopathy between the benign and malignant gastric ulcers. CONCLUSION: MDCT is an additional helpful diagnostic tool when benign gastric ulcers are histologically difficult to distinguish from malignant gastric ones.
Discrimination (Psychology)
;
Endoscopy
;
Lymphatic Diseases
;
Mucous Membrane
;
Multidetector Computed Tomography
;
Stomach Neoplasms
;
Stomach Ulcer
;
Stomach*
;
Ulcer*
7.Anti-inflammatory effect of (-)-epigallocatechin-3-gallate on Porphyromonas gingivalis lipopolysaccharide-stimulated fibroblasts and stem cells derived from human periodontal ligament.
Im Hee JUNG ; Dong Eun LEE ; Jeong Ho YUN ; Ah Ran CHO ; Chang Sung KIM ; Yoon Jeong YOU ; Sung Jo KIM ; Seong Ho CHOI
Journal of Periodontal & Implant Science 2012;42(6):185-195
PURPOSE: (-)-epigallocatechin-3-gallate (EGCG) has been reported to exert anti-inflammatory and antibacterial effects in periodontitis. However, its exact mechanism of action has yet to be determined. The present in vitro study evaluated the anti-inflammatory effects of EGCG on human periodontal ligament fibroblasts (hPDLFs) and human periodontal ligament stem cells (hPDLSCs) affected by bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS) extracted from Porphyromonas gingivalis. METHODS: hPDLFs and hPDLSCs were extracted from healthy young adults and were treated with EGCG and/or P. gingivalis LPS. After 1, 3, 5, and 7 days from treatment, cytotoxic and proliferative effects were evaluated using a 3-(4,5-dimethylthiazol-2-yl)-2,5-diphenyltetrazolium bromide assay and bromodeoxyuridine assay, respectively. And then, the gene expressions of hPDLFs and hPDLSCs were observed for interleukin (IL)-1beta, IL-6, tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha, osteoprotegerin (OPG), receptor activator of nuclear factor kappa-B ligand (RANKL), and RANKL/OPG using real-time polymerase chain reaction (PCR) at 0, 6, 24, and 48 hours after treatment. The experiments were performed with the following groups for hPDLFs and hPDLSCs; 1) No treat, 2) EGCG alone, 3) P. gingivalis LPS alone, 4) EGCG+P. gingivalis LPS. RESULTS: The 20 microM of EGCG and 20 microg/mL of P. gingivalis LPS had the lowest cytotoxic effects, so those concentrations were used for further experiments. The proliferations of hPDLFs and hPDLSCs increased in all groups, though the 'EGCG alone' showed less increase. In real-time PCR, the hPDLFs and hPDLSCs of 'EGCG alone' showed similar gene expressions to those cells of 'no treat'. The gene expressions of 'P. gingivalis LPS alone' in both hPDLFs and hPDLSCs were highly increased at 6 hours for IL-1beta, IL-6, TNF-alpha, RANKL, and RANKL/OPG, except the RANKL/OPG in hPDLSCs. However, those increased gene expressions were down-regulated in 'EGCG+P. gingivalis LPS' by the additional treatment of EGCG. CONCLUSIONS: Our results demonstrate that EGCG could exert an anti-inflammatory effect in hPDLFs and hPDLSCs against a major pathogen of periodontitis, P. gingivalis LPS.
Anti-Inflammatory Agents
;
Bromodeoxyuridine
;
Fibroblasts
;
Gene Expression
;
Humans
;
Interleukin-6
;
Interleukins
;
Osteoprotegerin
;
Periodontal Ligament
;
Periodontitis
;
Porphyromonas
;
Porphyromonas gingivalis
;
Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction
;
Stem Cells
;
Tetrazolium Salts
;
Thiazoles
;
Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha
;
Young Adult
8.Differences in Clinical Characteristics of Invasive Tracheobronchial Aspergillosis according to the Presence of Invasive Pulmonary Aspergillosis
Chuiyong PAK ; Woori JO ; Jin Hyoung KIM ; Jae Uk IM ; Joseph JEONG ; Hee Jeong CHA ; Eun-Young CHOI ; Seung Won RA
Tuberculosis and Respiratory Diseases 2021;84(4):326-332
Background:
The association of invasive tracheobronchial aspergillosis (ITBA) with invasive pulmonary aspergillosis (IPA) is not well established. We aimed to compare clinical characteristics between patients who exhibited ITBA with IPA and those who exhibited isolated ITBA (iITBA). Additionally, the usefulness of serum or bronchial galactomannan (GM) tests in diagnosing ITBA was evaluated.
Methods:
This retrospective single-center case-control study was conducted over a period of 4 years. Fifteen patients were enrolled after confirming the presence of ITBA using bronchoscopy-guided biopsy (iITBA, 7 vs. ITBA+IPA, 8). Clinical characteristics of patients and results obtained from serum or bronchial GM tests were compared between the two groups. Mortality was assessed using data collected from a 6-month follow-up period.
Results:
The ITBA+IPA group showed a higher prevalence of hematologic malignancy (75% vs. 14%, p=0.029), a greater number of patients with multiple bronchial ulcers (75% vs. 14%, p=0.029), lower platelet counts (63,000/μL vs. 229,000/μL, p<0.001), and a mortality rate which was significantly higher (63% vs. 0%, p=0.026) than the iITBA group. In the ITBA+IPA group, 57% of patients tested positive according to the serum GM assay, whereas in the iITBA group, all patients tested negative (p=0.070). The bronchial GM level was high in both groups, but there was no significant difference between them.
Conclusion
Patients with ITBA+IPA had a greater number of hematologic malignancies with lower platelet counts and a poorer prognosis than patients diagnosed with iITBA. Findings obtained from bronchoscopy and bronchial GM tests were more useful in diagnosing ITBA than the serum GM test results.
9.Differences in Clinical Characteristics of Invasive Tracheobronchial Aspergillosis according to the Presence of Invasive Pulmonary Aspergillosis
Chuiyong PAK ; Woori JO ; Jin Hyoung KIM ; Jae Uk IM ; Joseph JEONG ; Hee Jeong CHA ; Eun-Young CHOI ; Seung Won RA
Tuberculosis and Respiratory Diseases 2021;84(4):326-332
Background:
The association of invasive tracheobronchial aspergillosis (ITBA) with invasive pulmonary aspergillosis (IPA) is not well established. We aimed to compare clinical characteristics between patients who exhibited ITBA with IPA and those who exhibited isolated ITBA (iITBA). Additionally, the usefulness of serum or bronchial galactomannan (GM) tests in diagnosing ITBA was evaluated.
Methods:
This retrospective single-center case-control study was conducted over a period of 4 years. Fifteen patients were enrolled after confirming the presence of ITBA using bronchoscopy-guided biopsy (iITBA, 7 vs. ITBA+IPA, 8). Clinical characteristics of patients and results obtained from serum or bronchial GM tests were compared between the two groups. Mortality was assessed using data collected from a 6-month follow-up period.
Results:
The ITBA+IPA group showed a higher prevalence of hematologic malignancy (75% vs. 14%, p=0.029), a greater number of patients with multiple bronchial ulcers (75% vs. 14%, p=0.029), lower platelet counts (63,000/μL vs. 229,000/μL, p<0.001), and a mortality rate which was significantly higher (63% vs. 0%, p=0.026) than the iITBA group. In the ITBA+IPA group, 57% of patients tested positive according to the serum GM assay, whereas in the iITBA group, all patients tested negative (p=0.070). The bronchial GM level was high in both groups, but there was no significant difference between them.
Conclusion
Patients with ITBA+IPA had a greater number of hematologic malignancies with lower platelet counts and a poorer prognosis than patients diagnosed with iITBA. Findings obtained from bronchoscopy and bronchial GM tests were more useful in diagnosing ITBA than the serum GM test results.
10.Efficacy of Otolith Repositioning Maneuver and Its Clinical Features in Benign Paroxysmal Positional Vertigo.
Bo Seung KANG ; Pill Jo CHOI ; Tae Ho IM ; Sung Man BAE ; Hyung Gon SONG ; Geun Jung SONG ; Yeon Kwon JEONG
Journal of the Korean Society of Emergency Medicine 2002;13(3):256-261
PURPOSE: Until recently, three variants of benign paroxysmal positional vertigo (BPPV) have been recognized: the first is posterior-canal canalolithiasis, the second is horizontal-canal canalolithiasis, and the last is horizontal-canal cupulolithiasis. However, the last two types of BPPV have not been introduced into the textbook of Emergency Medicine yet. The otolith repositioning maneuvers are effective treatments for BPPV, but in emergency medicine, there has been little interest in and research on them. Our goals were to determine the efficacies of these treatments and to examine the clinical features of each types of BPPV. METHODS: We performed a 6-month prospective study on forty-one patients (47 cases) who presented with a history and physical examination consistent with active BPPV to the emergency departments of a secondary hospital and a tertiary hospital (Dec. 2001-May. 2002). The patients were treated with a modified Epley canalith repositioning maneuver for posterior-canal BPPV, a modified Barbecue rotation for horizontal-canal canalolithiasis, and the maneuver of Jo et al. for horizontal-canal cupulolithiasis. RESULTS: A resolution attributable to the first intervention was obtained in 71.4% of the posterior-canal BPPV cases by using the modified Epley maneuver and in 73.1% of the horizontal-canal BPPV cases by using a modified Barbecue rotation and the maneuver of Jo et al. CONCLUSION: The otolith repositioning maneuvers result in a resolution of vertigo in the majority of patients (84.8% of the cases) immediately after treatment. They are safe and require no special equipment or investigations. They should be established as the treatments of choice for BPPV in emergency department.
Emergency Medicine
;
Emergency Service, Hospital
;
Humans
;
Otolithic Membrane*
;
Physical Examination
;
Prospective Studies
;
Tertiary Care Centers
;
Vertigo*