1.Pediatric Intussusception Presenting to Emergency Room.
Woo Yong LEE ; Yeon Kwon JEONG
Journal of the Korean Society of Emergency Medicine 1998;9(2):330-335
BACKGROUND: Intussuseception is one of the most common diseases requiring abdominal emergency care in early childhood. The delay in diagnosis increases morbidity and, in particular, reduces the success rate of the non-surgical method of reduction. In this report, the authors determined the clinical characteristics of pediatric patients with intussusception, and the factors involved in delayed diagnosis and the efficacy of doppler ultrasonography in diagnosis. METHODS: The authors performed a retrospective study of 44 cases in 42 patients with intussusception who had visited the emergency room of SamSung medical center from January 1st to December 31, 1996. RESULTS: The sex ratio was equal and 64.3% of the patients were under 1 year of age. The prevalent complaints were vomiting(36.4%) and abdominal pain(33.8%). Ultrasonography was used in 11 cases, 3 of them were performed because of obscure symptoms and the rest were due to diagnostic delay. The average time past from visit to diagnosis was 4 hours and 20 minutes, and there were 4 diagnostic delays. Air enema reductions were unsucessful in 11 cases(25%) and that was related to hospital-visit delays and long time past from symptom onset to diagnosis. There were no motalities. CONCLUSION: To reduce delays in diagnosis and unnecessary operations, the use of doppler ultrasonography is recommanded in suspicious cases. And to reduce the hospital-visit delays, related to the failure on non-surgical reduction, the education about this disease is necessary.
Delayed Diagnosis
;
Diagnosis
;
Education
;
Emergencies*
;
Emergency Medical Services
;
Emergency Service, Hospital*
;
Enema
;
Humans
;
Intussusception*
;
Retrospective Studies
;
Sex Ratio
;
Ultrasonography
;
Ultrasonography, Doppler
2.Milium-like Syringoma with Typical Histopathologic Features.
Yeon Soo KANG ; Sang Hyun CHO ; Jeong Duk LEE
Korean Journal of Dermatology 2012;50(8):751-752
No abstract available.
Syringoma
3.Chronic intestinal pseudoobstruction syndrome.
Kyung Mo YEON ; Jeong Kee SEO ; Yong Seok LEE
Journal of the Korean Radiological Society 1992;28(2):287-292
Chronic intestional pseudoobstruction syndrome is a rare clinical condition in which impaired intestinal peristalsis. Causes recurrent symptoms of bowel obstruction in the absence of a mechanical occlusion. This syndrome may involve variable segments of small or large bowel. And may be associated with urinary bladder retention. This study included 6 children(3 boys and 3 girls) of chronic intestinal obstruction. Four were symptomatic at birth and two were of the ages of one month and one year. All had abdominal distention and defication difficulty. Five had urinary bladder distention. Despite parenteral nutrition and surgical intervention(ileostomy or colostomy), bowel obstruction persisted and four patients expired from sepsis within one year. All had gaseous distention of small and large bowel on abdominal films. In small bowel series. Consistent findings were variable degree of dilatation. Decreased peristalsis(prolonged transit time) and microcolon or microrectum. This disease entity must be differentiated from congenital megacolon, ileal atresia and megacystis syndrome.
Dilatation
;
Hirschsprung Disease
;
Humans
;
Intestinal Obstruction
;
Intestinal Pseudo-Obstruction*
;
Parenteral Nutrition
;
Parturition
;
Peristalsis
;
Sepsis
;
Urinary Bladder
4.Sleep Patterns and Academic Performance in Medical Students.
Seo Yeon SHIN ; Jin Seong LEE ; Do Un JEONG
Sleep Medicine and Psychophysiology 2008;15(2):87-93
INTRODUCTION: Although it is well known that medical students are not getting an adequate amount of sleep, there have been only few studies on the sleep patterns of medical students in Korea. Therefore, the present study aimed to investigate the life style and sleep patterns of Korean medical students and the impact they have on the students' academic performance. METHODS: A questionnaire package was administered to the 3rd year medical students at the Seoul National University to examine their sleep patterns on weekdays and weekends. It consisted of questions asking about their lifestyles as well as Pittsburgh sleep quality index (PSQI) and GPA (Grade Point Average) that are considered relevant to their sleep patterns. A total of 110 students (85 males and 25 females, mean age 24.4+/-20.6) responded to the survey and the result was analyzed using the independent t-test, the chi-square test, the paired t-test, Pearson's rank correlation and ANOVA. P-values of less than 0.05 were considered statistically significant in all analyses. RESULTS: The weekend bedtime was significantly delayed (01:24 on weekday; 03:12 on weekend; t=-5.23, p<0.01), the weekend rise time was delayed (07:36 on weekday; 10:30 on weekend; t=-24.48, p<0.01) and the total sleep time was increased on weekends (5:57 on weekday; 8:17 on weekend; t=15.94, p<0.01). They wished to sleep for 7 hours 6 minutes which was different from their actual weekday total sleep time (t=-11.41, p<0.01). The poor sleeper group had lower GPAs than the good sleeper group (t=2.05, p<0.05). The GPA of medical students were negatively correlated with age (r=-0.23, p<0.05), daily amount of smoking (r=-0.78, p<0.01), total amount of smoking (r=-0.75, p<0.01), weekday sleep latency (r=-0.23, p<0.05), weekend sleep latency (r=-0.23, p<0.05) and PSQI score (r=-0.30, p<0.01). CONCLUSION: Medical students were experiencing a lack of sleep during weekdays as they have a later bedtime and earlier rise time, and consequently had more hours of sleep on weekends. Overall, the responded students were experiencing poor sleep quality, and the GPAs of the poor sleeper group were lower than those of the good sleeper group.
Female
;
Humans
;
Korea
;
Life Style
;
Male
;
Surveys and Questionnaires
;
Smoke
;
Smoking
;
Students, Medical
5.Development of Infection Control Guideline for Postpartum Care Centers.
Ihn Sook JEONG ; Su Jin LEE ; Jae Sim JEONG ; Sung Won YOON ; Sun Young JEONG ; Jin HA ; Ju Yeon SONG ; Yeon Hee LEE
Korean Journal of Nosocomial Infection Control 2013;18(2):57-88
BACKGROUND: This study aimed to develop feasible and detailed infection control guidelines (ICG) and audit protocols for health care workers and auditors in postpartum care centers (PCC). METHODS: PCC ICG and audit protocols were developed in several steps: 1) review of previous ICG for PCCs; 2) establishment of frameworks for updating guidelines and audit protocols; 3) review of new ICG, regulations, etc.; 4) drafting of PCC ICG and audit protocols and revision based on feedback from the research committee; 5) Delphi survey to solicit opinions from infection control, infant care, and maternal care professionals as well as PCC health care workers; 6) re-revision after discussion with the research committee; and 7) finalization of PCC ICG and audit protocols. RESULTS: We developed ICG with 4 categories and 26 sub-categories, and internal and external audit protocols with 163 and 85 items, respectively. CONCLUSION: The ICG and audit protocols are valid and feasible; we recommend their utilization as auditing tools, baseline data for the development of national infection control policies, and as educational materials for PCC healthcare workers.
Checklist
;
Delivery of Health Care
;
Humans
;
Infant
;
Infant Care
;
Infection Control*
;
Postnatal Care*
;
Postpartum Period*
;
Social Control, Formal
6.A Case of Heat Stroke after a Marathon.
Bo Seung KANG ; Jeong Hoon LEE ; Hyung Kon SONG ; Keun Jung SONG ; Yeon Kwon JEONG
Journal of the Korean Society of Emergency Medicine 2000;11(3):390-396
Heat stroke, a medical emergency, occurs when the body's thermal regulation is upset and unable to dissipate adequate amounts of heat with a rise in body temperature. It is characterized by hyperyrexia, with a core temperature of 40degrees C or more, hot dry skin, and central nervous system disturbance and usually results in rhabdomyolysis and multiorgan failure. Our case, a 43-year-old healthy male, was caused by a marathon, half course, on a sunny day in late summer. He suddenly fell down on the road and was delivered to a nearby hospital, where a seizure developed. He was transfered to our hospital and then displayed Central Nervous System disturbance, hot dry skin, acute liver failure, rhabdomyolysis, anuric acute renal failure, and disseminated intravasculular coagulopathy. He was treated with general supportive care and hemofiltration. Despite the aggressive management, he died of shock on the fifth day after admission.
Acute Kidney Injury
;
Adult
;
Body Temperature
;
Central Nervous System
;
Emergencies
;
Heat Stroke*
;
Hemofiltration
;
Hot Temperature*
;
Humans
;
Liver Failure, Acute
;
Male
;
Rhabdomyolysis
;
Seizures
;
Shock
;
Skin
7.Endotracheal Intubation in the Emergency Department of an Tertiary Care Center.
Byeong Cheol KIM ; Bo Seung KANG ; Hyoung Gon SONG ; Jeong Hun LEE ; Keun Jeong SONG ; Yeon Kwon JEONG
Journal of the Korean Society of Emergency Medicine 1999;10(4):579-586
BACKGROUND: The purpose of this study was to analyze the endotracheal intubation cases performed in the emergency department. METHODS: We investigated retrospectively 326 cases of endotracheal intubation performed in the emergency department of a tertiary care center from April 1, 1998 to March 31, 1999. We focused on operators, medications used, its success rate and immediate complications, and the relationship between its success rate and medications. RESULTS: Of 326 consecutive intubations, 193 patients(59.2%) were done by emergency medicine residents or attending physician. While 320 patients(98.2%) were successfully intubated, 6 patients could not be intubated and 2 patients underwent tracheostomy. Of 50 cases of intubations(15.3%) attempted with paralyzing agents, 48 cases were done with succinylcholine and 46 cases underwent by emergency physicians. Intubations with neuromuscular paralysis resulted in high success rates at the first attempt. Of 55 immediate adverse events were encountered in 47 patients(desaturation=17, bronchial intubation=15, hypotension=8, bradycardia=4, cardiac arrest=2, others=5). CONCLUSION: At this institution, paralyzing agents were used infrequently, but almost all of them were used by emergency physicians.
Emergencies*
;
Emergency Medicine
;
Emergency Service, Hospital*
;
Humans
;
Intubation
;
Intubation, Intratracheal*
;
Paralysis
;
Retrospective Studies
;
Succinylcholine
;
Tertiary Care Centers*
;
Tertiary Healthcare*
;
Tracheostomy
8.Torsion of a mucocele of the vermiform appendix: a case report and review of the literature.
Chang Ho LEE ; Min Ro LEE ; Jae Chun KIM ; Myoung Jae KANG ; Yeon Jun JEONG
Journal of the Korean Surgical Society 2011;81(Suppl 1):S47-S50
Torsion of a mucocele of the vermiform appendix is an extremely rare condition and also a rare cause of an acute abdomen with a clinical presentation that is indistinguishable from acute appendicitis, and thus, the condition is diagnosed during operation. Here, the authors describe the case of a 78-year-old female, who presented with intermittent abdominal pain. The appendix had a pelvic position and the torsion was counterclockwise. In addition, the torsion was associated with mucocele of the appendix, which was considered a secondary factor of torsion. Appendectomy and drainage were performed.
Abdomen, Acute
;
Abdominal Pain
;
Aged
;
Appendectomy
;
Appendicitis
;
Appendix
;
Drainage
;
Female
;
Humans
;
Mucocele
;
Torsion Abnormality
9.The compliance of hyperlipidemic patients according to therapeutic methods.
Soon Hee JEONG ; Kum Yae HAN ; Young Mi HAN ; Yeon Joo LEE ; Hong Soo LEE
Journal of the Korean Academy of Family Medicine 1993;14(1):1-8
No abstract available.
Compliance*
;
Humans
10.The compliance of hyperlipidemic patients according to therapeutic methods.
Soon Hee JEONG ; Kum Yae HAN ; Young Mi HAN ; Yeon Joo LEE ; Hong Soo LEE
Journal of the Korean Academy of Family Medicine 1993;14(1):1-8
No abstract available.
Compliance*
;
Humans