1.Effect of Hormone Replacement Therapy on Lipoprotein(a) and Lipids in Postmenopausal Women : Influence of Androgenic Activity of Progesterone.
Chee Jeong KIM ; Wang Seong RYU ; Un Ho RYOO
Korean Circulation Journal 1996;26(5):1030-1037
BACKGROUND: Many reports have shown that hormone replacement therapy(HRT) in postmenopausal women decreases lipoprotein(a)[Lp(a)]. However these had small numbers of subjects, short duration of therapy, or comparisons of only a few regimens. The influences of progesterone on Lp(a) and lipids, administered with estrogen, are controversial. METHODS: Five hundred and fifty-one postmenopausal women were divided into 4 groups : group A ; 0.625mg conjugated equine estrogen(CEE)(m=140), group B ; 0.625mg CEE plus 5mg medroxyprogesterone acetate(MPA)(m=97), group C ; 0.625mg CEE plus 10mg MPA(n=109), and group D ; 2mg estradiol valerate(E2) plus 0.5mg norgestrel(N)(n=134) and group E ; control(n=71). Lp(a) and lipids levels were measured before and 12 months after HRT. RESULTS: Estrogen replacement therapy(ERT) for 12 months lowered Lp(a) level by 37.1%. The addition of progesterone attenuated the Lp(a)-lowering effect of estrogen and decreased by 27.7%, 29.6%, and 30.3% in groups B(p<0.05), C(p<0.05), and D(p<0.0001) respectively. High density lipoprotein cholesterol(HDL-C) was increased markedly in group A(16.5%), increased moderately in groups B(10.8%) and C(11.3%), and not changed in group D. Low density lipoprotein cholesterol was decreased by 10.9%, 13.7%, 11.3%, and 17.6% in groups A, B, C, and D respectively. CONCLUSIONS: Reduction of Lp(a) with estrogen replacement therapy may be one of mechanisms for cardioprotective effect in postmenopausal women. The combined therapy of estrogen and progesterone may reveal different effects on heart due to adverse actions of progesterone on Lp(a) and HDL-C. The variations in the androgenic potency of progesterone may explaine inconsistent results on HDL-C in previous studies.
Cholesterol, LDL
;
Estradiol
;
Estrogen Replacement Therapy
;
Estrogens
;
Female
;
Heart
;
Hormone Replacement Therapy*
;
Humans
;
Lipoprotein(a)*
;
Lipoproteins
;
Medroxyprogesterone
;
Progesterone*
2.Detrended Fluctuation Analysis on Sleep EEG of Healthy Subjects.
Hong Beom SHIN ; Do Un JEONG ; Eui Joong KIM
Sleep Medicine and Psychophysiology 2007;14(1):42-48
INTRODUCTION: Detrended fluctuation analysis (DFA) is used as a way of studying nonlinearity of EEG. In this study, DFA is applied on sleep EEG of normal subjects to look into its nonlinearity in terms of EEG channels and sleep stages. METHOD: Twelve healthy young subjects (age: 23.8+/-2.5 years old, male:female=7:5) have undergone nocturnal polysomnography (nPSG). EEG from nPSG was classified in terms of its channels and sleep stages and was analyzed by DFA. Scaling exponents (SEs) yielded by DFA were compared using linear mixed model analysis. RESULTS: Scaling exponents (SEs) of sleep EEG were distributed around 1 showing long term temporal correlation and self-similarity. SE of C3 channel was bigger than that of O1 channel. As sleep stage progressed from stage 1 to slow wave sleep, SE increased accordingly. SE of stage REM sleep did not show significant difference when compared with that of stage 1 sleep. CONCLUSION: SEs of Normal sleep EEG showed nonlinear characteristic with scale-free fluctuation, long-range temporal correlation, self-similarity and self-organized criticality. SE from DFA differentiated sleep stages and EEG channels. It can be a useful tool in the research with sleep EEG.
Electroencephalography*
;
Polysomnography
;
Sleep Stages
;
Sleep, REM
3.Spectral Analysis of REM Sleep EEG in Narcolepsy and REM Sleep Behavior Disorder.
Hyung Il KIM ; Do Un JEONG ; Kwang Suk PARK
Sleep Medicine and Psychophysiology 2008;15(1):33-38
INTRODUCTION: It has been proposed that narcolepsy and REM sleep behavior disorder (RBD) have overlapped symptom profile and pathophysiology. This study was aimed at measuring and comparing changes in EEG frequency band of REM sleep in narcolepsy and RBD, applying EEG spectral analysis method. METHODS: Nine patients diagnosed as narcolepsy and the same number of RBD patients were studied. Spectral analysis of the REM sleep EEG was performed in each patient on 9 epochs selected evenly from the first, second, and third REM periods. Then, we compared frequency band percentages of REM sleep EEG in narcolepsy and RBD. RESULTS: Narcolepsy patients had significantly higher delta frequency ratio than RBD ones (p=0.00). In alpha and beta2 frequency bands, RBD patients showed higher percentage than narcolepsy ones. Slow wave sleep was more prevalent in narcolepsy patients. But, no difference of REM sleep percentage was found between the two groups (p=0.93). CONCLUSION: Higher delta frequency ratio in REM sleep of narcolepsy patients than RBD ones reflects that sleep-promoting mechanism is more dominant in narcolepsy than in RBD.
Electroencephalography
;
Humans
;
Narcolepsy
;
REM Sleep Behavior Disorder
;
Sleep, REM
4.The effects of modafinil on clinical features and sleep structure of narcolepsy patients and healthy controls.
Hong Beom SHIN ; Eui Joong KIM ; Do Un JEONG
Sleep Medicine and Psychophysiology 2006;13(2):67-74
INTRODUCTION: Excessive daytime sleepiness and cataplexy are key features of narcolepsy. Modafinil is psychostimulant used in the treatment of narcolepsy. In this study, we evaluated effects of modafinil on nocturnal sleep structure and sleep latency in multiple sleep latency test and clinical features. METHODS: Twelve narcoleptic patients (7 male, age: 22.9 +/- 2.6 yrs) were participated in the study. All of them had done nocturnal polysomnography (nPSG), multiple sleep latency test (MSLT), clinical symptoms scales and have repeated same procedure after taking 200 mg of modafinil. We have done linear mixed model analysis to describe effects of group, medication and nap time on these measures. RESULTS: Modafinil did not affect clinical scales except PSQI which had been reduced after medication. In this study, Modafinil reduced total sleep time, sleep efficiency and increased wake after sleep onset and percent of arousal during sleep in nocturnal polysomnography and prolonged mean sleep latency in multiple sleep latency tests in both group. DISCUSSION: Modafinil has stimulant effect of central nervous system but its effect on night sleep is less than other psychostimulants such as methylphenidate. We ascertained that modafinil affected total sleep time, sleep efficiency and percent of wake during sleep but did not effect on sleep structure. Modafinil was effective in the management of day time sleepiness. Modafinil can enhance alertness of control group without day time sleepiness.
Arousal
;
Cataplexy
;
Central Nervous System
;
Humans
;
Male
;
Methylphenidate
;
Narcolepsy*
;
Polysomnography
;
Weights and Measures
5.Comparison of Clinical Characteristics and Polysomnographic Features between Subjects with Manifest and Latent REM Sleep Behavior Disorders.
Seog Ju KIM ; Yu Jin LEE ; Eui Joong KIM ; Do Un JEONG
Sleep Medicine and Psychophysiology 2004;11(1):37-43
OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this paper is to study the possible differences in clinical and polysomnographic findings, depending on the presence or absence of subjective complaints of abnormal sleep behavior, in patients with RWA on polysomnography. METHOD: We reviewed patient records and polysomnographic data of patients referred to the Sleep Laboratory at Seoul National University Hospital from June 1996 through October 2002. We defined the manifest RBD group (n=32) as patients having both complaints of abnormal sleep behavior and RWA on polysomnography. The latent RBD group (n=20) consisted of patients who exhibited RWA on polysomnography but did not complain of abnormal sleep behavior. The clinical characteristics and polysomnographic findings between the two groups were compared and analyzed. RESULTS: Fifty-two subjects had RWA, as detected by polysomnography (42 males and 10 females, mean age of 55.1+/-19.1 years). Subjects in the manifest RBD group were significantly older than those in the latent RBD group (61.59+/-13.5 vs. 44.70+/-2.76 years, independent t-test, p<0.01). More subjects in the manifest RBD group exhibited abnormal REM behavior on polysomnography than did subjects in the latent RBD group (81.3 vs. 50.0%, Fisher's exact test, p<0.05). No significant differences between the groups were found in the prevalence of brain disorders and primary sleep disorders, gender proportion, and sleep architecture. CONCLUSION: No difference in sleep architecture was found between the manifest and the latent RBD groups. Only age and the presence of abnormal sleep behavior on polysomnography differentiated the two groups. We suggest that RWA on polysomnography without complaints of abnormal sleep behavior may be early manifestation of manifest RBD. Attention to RWA on polysomnography is necessary to help prevent full-blown RBD from developing.
Brain Diseases
;
Female
;
Humans
;
Male
;
Mental Disorders*
;
Polysomnography
;
Prevalence
;
REM Sleep Behavior Disorder
;
Seoul
;
Sleep Wake Disorders
;
Sleep, REM*
6.Differential Factors of Obstructive Sleep Apnea in Subjects whose Main Sleep Complaint was Insomnia.
Seog Ju KIM ; Yu Jin LEE ; Eui Joong KIM ; Do Un JEONG
Sleep Medicine and Psychophysiology 2004;11(1):22-28
OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this study is to investigate the prevalence rate of OSA in subjects whose main sleep complaint is insomnia and to find differential factors of OSA in these insomniac subjects. METHOD: We reviewed the medical records and polysomnographic findings of patients referred to the Sleep Laboratory at Seoul National University Hospital from January 1996 to December 2002. Four-hundred and seventy subjects complained of insomnia as their main sleep problem (235 males and 235 females, mean age 53.6+/-12.4 years). First, we investigated the prevalence rate of OSA in these insomniac patients. Second, we compared the clinical and demographic characteristics of the OSA-associated group with those of the non-associated group. Third, we examined whether the degree or presence of differential factors within the OSA group correlate with severity of OSA, as determined by the respiratory disturbance index (RDI). RESULTS: Among 470 insomniac subjects, 125 subjects (26.6%) were diagnosed as OSA by nocturnal polysomnography. OSA-associated subjects were significantly older (58.4+/-12.3 years vs. 51.8+/-11.2 years, p<0.01), and had significantly higher body mass index (BMI) (23.4+/-3.3 kg/m2 vs. 22.5+/-3.1 kg/m2, p=0.44) than non-associated subjects. The OSA-associated group had more subjects with male gender (64.0 % vs. 44.9 %, p<0.01), hypertension (20.0 % vs. 9.3 %, p<0.01) or snoring (96.0 % vs. 63.5 %, p<0.01). Within the OSA-associated group, age had a significant positive correlation with RDI (p=0.01). CONCLUSION: We found that a considerable portion of patients complaining of insomnia as their main sleep problem were diagnosed as OSA. Snoring, old age, male gender, obesity, and comorbid hypertension were found to be differential factors of OSA in insomniac patients. We suggest that diagnostic efforts including nocturnal polysomnography are needed for insomniac patients with any of the above risk factors of OSA.
Body Mass Index
;
Female
;
Humans
;
Hypertension
;
Male
;
Medical Records
;
Obesity
;
Polysomnography
;
Prevalence
;
Risk Factors
;
Seoul
;
Sleep Apnea, Obstructive*
;
Sleep Initiation and Maintenance Disorders*
;
Snoring
7.Characteristics of Obstructive Sleep Apnea Syndrome Patients Proven with Nocturnal Polysomnography as Correlates of Age and Gender.
Ju Young LEE ; Seog Ju KIM ; Jung Ho LEE ; Do Un JEONG
Sleep Medicine and Psychophysiology 2009;16(2):65-73
OBJECTIVES: The purpose of this study was to assess the clinical and polysomnographic characteristics of Korean patients with obstructive sleep apnea syndrome (OSAS), especially in relation to differences due to age and gender. METHODS: All subjects were consecutive patients who were proven to have OSAS with nocturnal polysomnography. They were interviewed with a structured interview format including sociodemographic information, past medical history, medication, and sleep-related history. Simultaneously, they were also given Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI) and Epworth Sleepiness Scale (ESS) to answer in order to check subjective sleep quality and subjective sleepiness. RESULTS: Mean age of the 308 subjects was 49.5+/-13.3 years, with 77.6% of the subjects being males and 22.4% of the subjects being females. The aging effects on the sleep architecture in Korean OSAS corresponded with normal aging, but with the effect of OSAS itself superimposed, the extent of aging effects was more marked than that of normal aging. The severity of Korean patients of OSAS was not correlated with age. When divided into age subgroups, significant correlation was found between RDI and BMI in patients of each subgroup of those in the 4th to 7th decades. The oldest subgroup (>70 years) described their subjective sleep quality as poorer than any other age subgroups, despite of less subjective drowsiness. The severity of OSAS and the change of sleep architecture of male subjects turned out to be severer than those of female ones. The female/male ratio of the subjects tended to increase with aging. CONCLUSIONS: The aging effect on the sleep architecture in Korean OSAS seems to be a mixture of the changes by normal aging and sleep disorder per se. The severity of OSAS was not correlated with age, but highly correlated with BMI. The severity of OSAS and the change of sleep architecture of male patients were severer than those of female ones.
Aging
;
Body Mass Index
;
Female
;
Humans
;
Male
;
Polysomnography
;
Sleep Apnea, Obstructive
;
Sleep Stages
8.Characteristics of Sleep Pattern among Korean College Students.
Seog Ju KIM ; In Kyoon LYOO ; Chang Yeon WON ; Do Un JEONG
Sleep Medicine and Psychophysiology 2006;13(1):15-21
INTRODUNTION: The objective of the present study was to investigate bedtime, rise time and time-in-bed of Korean college students, separately on weekday and on weekend and to compare them. In addition, this study also aimed to evaluate the influence of gender, age and grade on the above sleep parmeters in Korean college students. METHODS: Information regarding bedtime and rise time, separately on weekday and on weekend, of Korean college students were obtained by self-administered questionnaire. Questionnaires of 1,825 students (1,416 females and 409 males, age 18-30 ; mean age 21.1+/-2.2) were used for statistical analyses. RESULTS: Korean college students retired to bed 50 minutes later (00 : 49 on weekday ; 01 : 40 on weekend ; t=39.67, p<0.001), rose 1 hour 58 minutes later (07 : 52 on weekday ; 09 : 50 on weekend ; t=39.46, p<0.001), and slept 1 hour 8 minutes longer (t=13.33, p<0.001) on weekend. Compared to male students, female students had earlier rise time (t=8.96, p<0.01 ; t=3.89, p<0.01) and earlier bedtime both on weekday and weekend (t=7.10, p<0.01; t=6.04, p<0.01), and shorter time-in-bed on weekday (t=1.99, p<0.01). In addition, rise time delay and time-in-bed increase on weekend were more prominent in female students than in male students (t=3.41, p<0.01 ; t=3.68, p<0.01). Grade was correlated with bedtime and rise time on weekday (beta=0.1022, p<0.01 ; beta=0.1009, p<0.01), bedtime and time-in-bed on weekend (beta=0.1096, p<0.01 ; beta=-0.0990, p<0.01), and differences between weekday and weekend of the rise time and the time-in-bed (beta=-0.0906, p<0.01 ; beta=-0.1115, p=0.02). CONCLUSIONS: In this study, Korean college students had earlier bedtime/rise time and shorter time-in-bed on weekday than on weekend. These findings suggest that weekday sleep-wake schedule of Korean college students may be advanced relative to their biological sleep-wake cycle and that this discrepancy may be associated with weekday sleep deprivation. In addition, differences of sleep patterns between weekday and weekend were more prominent in female students and students with lower grade. Therefore, discrepancy between weekday sleep-wake schedule and biological sleep-wake cycle, as well as weekday sleep deprivation, might be more serious in female or lower-grade students.
Appointments and Schedules
;
Female
;
Humans
;
Male
;
Surveys and Questionnaires
;
Sleep Deprivation
9.Respiratory disease resembling byssinosis in sisal rope-making worker.
Jong Tae LEE ; Chang Woon KANG ; Jeong Ho KIM ; Kui Weon JEONG ; Sung Chun KIM ; Chae Un LEE
Korean Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine 1991;3(1):43-50
No abstract available.
Byssinosis*
10.Cutaneous Metastasis from Pancreatic Cancer Simultaneously Developed on the Scalp and Chest.
Dong Yeup LEE ; Dong Joo KIM ; Soo Kyung LEE ; Myoung Shin KIM ; Un Ha LEE ; Jeong Hee HAHM
Korean Journal of Dermatology 2016;54(8):662-664
No abstract available.
Neoplasm Metastasis*
;
Pancreatic Neoplasms*
;
Scalp*
;
Thorax*