1.The role of G protein in the activation of phospholipase C from bovine brain.
Jung Hye KIM ; Dong Jin LEE ; Yeung Ju BYUN
Yeungnam University Journal of Medicine 1992;9(2):288-301
The objective of the present study was to identify the characteristics of phospholipase C (PLC) isozymes purified from bovine brain and to investigate their interrelationship with G protein. The purified PLC isozymes β, γ and δ were obtained and the characteristics of PLC activity on various concentrations of free Ca²⁺ were observed. The activity of PLC was increased with increasing Ca²⁺ concentration and the activity PLC δ was increased higher in the presence of phosphatidyl choline (PC) than in the absence of PC. For vesicle formation as the structure of cell membrane, cholic acid and deoxycholic acid as detergent on phosphatidylinositol bisphosphate (PIP₂) substrate containing PC were used, and then the activity of PLC isozymes were increased with increasing concentration of cholate, from 0.2% to 1% and were increased slightly in deoxycholate. In the PIP₂ containing phospholipid and glycolipid as brain extract, the activity of PLC isozymes were checked in 0.2-1% cholic acid. The activities of PLC isozymes were continuously increased up to 1% cholic acid. The quantitation of PLC isozymes from several bovine organs by radioimmunoassay was made. Brain was the most sufficient organ in terms of amount of PLC β and δ. A large amount of PLC δ was existed in adrenal gland. The binding capacity of GTPrS and G protein was observed and other observations of the binding effect of GTPrS-G protein and PLC monoclonal Ab-Protein A from tissue homogenate with PLC were made. From the observation the binding capacity was revealed the range of 0.11-1.49%. The effects of each type of G protein on the percent activity of purified PLC isozymes were observed. From the observation, activities of isozymes were increased in Goa & Gmix, and the activities of PLC β and δ were increased in Gβγ and Gia. Activities of PLC β and γ were decreased in Gta but PLC δ increased.
Adrenal Glands
;
Brain*
;
Cell Membrane
;
Cholates
;
Cholic Acid
;
Choline
;
Deoxycholic Acid
;
Detergents
;
GTP-Binding Proteins*
;
Isoenzymes
;
Phosphatidylinositols
;
Phospholipases*
;
Radioimmunoassay
;
Type C Phospholipases*
2.Factors Affecting Parents’ Influenza Vaccination Intentions for Their Adolescent Children
Journal of Korean Maternal and Child Health 2025;29(1):8-20
Purpose:
Adolescence involves parental health management, with parents or guardians often making decisions regarding vaccination. This study assessed how parents’ knowledge, attitudes, and health beliefs about influenza vaccination influenced their intentions to vaccinate their adolescent children.
Methods:
This descriptive survey was approved by the Institutional Review Board of Kyung Hee University for use between December 1 and 31, 2022. Parents of adolescents aged 13–19 years were surveyed face-to-face and online using a modified tool to evaluate their vaccination intentions, knowledge, attitudes, and health beliefs regarding their children’s influenza vaccination. The analysis included 149 responses and involved methods such as calculating means, standard deviations, t-tests, analyses of variance, Scheffe tests, correlations, and hierarchical regressions.
Results:
On a 7-point scale, the mean score for parental intention to vaccinate their adolescents was 4.99±1.24. Hierarchical regression analysis revealed that positive attitudes towards influenza vaccination, television and radio information, and perceived benefits influenced children’s vaccination intentions, with positive parental attitudes being the most significant factor. The independent variables accounted for 66.7% of the variance in vaccination intentions.
Conclusion
To improve parental intentions to vaccinate adolescent children against influenza, promoting vaccination benefits and safety through the media is crucial to enhance favorable attitudes. Initiatives that strengthen positive parental attitudes towards influenza vaccination and increase awareness of its benefits can effectively boost vaccination intentions.
3.Factors Affecting Parents’ Influenza Vaccination Intentions for Their Adolescent Children
Journal of Korean Maternal and Child Health 2025;29(1):8-20
Purpose:
Adolescence involves parental health management, with parents or guardians often making decisions regarding vaccination. This study assessed how parents’ knowledge, attitudes, and health beliefs about influenza vaccination influenced their intentions to vaccinate their adolescent children.
Methods:
This descriptive survey was approved by the Institutional Review Board of Kyung Hee University for use between December 1 and 31, 2022. Parents of adolescents aged 13–19 years were surveyed face-to-face and online using a modified tool to evaluate their vaccination intentions, knowledge, attitudes, and health beliefs regarding their children’s influenza vaccination. The analysis included 149 responses and involved methods such as calculating means, standard deviations, t-tests, analyses of variance, Scheffe tests, correlations, and hierarchical regressions.
Results:
On a 7-point scale, the mean score for parental intention to vaccinate their adolescents was 4.99±1.24. Hierarchical regression analysis revealed that positive attitudes towards influenza vaccination, television and radio information, and perceived benefits influenced children’s vaccination intentions, with positive parental attitudes being the most significant factor. The independent variables accounted for 66.7% of the variance in vaccination intentions.
Conclusion
To improve parental intentions to vaccinate adolescent children against influenza, promoting vaccination benefits and safety through the media is crucial to enhance favorable attitudes. Initiatives that strengthen positive parental attitudes towards influenza vaccination and increase awareness of its benefits can effectively boost vaccination intentions.
4.Factors Affecting Parents’ Influenza Vaccination Intentions for Their Adolescent Children
Journal of Korean Maternal and Child Health 2025;29(1):8-20
Purpose:
Adolescence involves parental health management, with parents or guardians often making decisions regarding vaccination. This study assessed how parents’ knowledge, attitudes, and health beliefs about influenza vaccination influenced their intentions to vaccinate their adolescent children.
Methods:
This descriptive survey was approved by the Institutional Review Board of Kyung Hee University for use between December 1 and 31, 2022. Parents of adolescents aged 13–19 years were surveyed face-to-face and online using a modified tool to evaluate their vaccination intentions, knowledge, attitudes, and health beliefs regarding their children’s influenza vaccination. The analysis included 149 responses and involved methods such as calculating means, standard deviations, t-tests, analyses of variance, Scheffe tests, correlations, and hierarchical regressions.
Results:
On a 7-point scale, the mean score for parental intention to vaccinate their adolescents was 4.99±1.24. Hierarchical regression analysis revealed that positive attitudes towards influenza vaccination, television and radio information, and perceived benefits influenced children’s vaccination intentions, with positive parental attitudes being the most significant factor. The independent variables accounted for 66.7% of the variance in vaccination intentions.
Conclusion
To improve parental intentions to vaccinate adolescent children against influenza, promoting vaccination benefits and safety through the media is crucial to enhance favorable attitudes. Initiatives that strengthen positive parental attitudes towards influenza vaccination and increase awareness of its benefits can effectively boost vaccination intentions.
5.Factors Affecting Parents’ Influenza Vaccination Intentions for Their Adolescent Children
Journal of Korean Maternal and Child Health 2025;29(1):8-20
Purpose:
Adolescence involves parental health management, with parents or guardians often making decisions regarding vaccination. This study assessed how parents’ knowledge, attitudes, and health beliefs about influenza vaccination influenced their intentions to vaccinate their adolescent children.
Methods:
This descriptive survey was approved by the Institutional Review Board of Kyung Hee University for use between December 1 and 31, 2022. Parents of adolescents aged 13–19 years were surveyed face-to-face and online using a modified tool to evaluate their vaccination intentions, knowledge, attitudes, and health beliefs regarding their children’s influenza vaccination. The analysis included 149 responses and involved methods such as calculating means, standard deviations, t-tests, analyses of variance, Scheffe tests, correlations, and hierarchical regressions.
Results:
On a 7-point scale, the mean score for parental intention to vaccinate their adolescents was 4.99±1.24. Hierarchical regression analysis revealed that positive attitudes towards influenza vaccination, television and radio information, and perceived benefits influenced children’s vaccination intentions, with positive parental attitudes being the most significant factor. The independent variables accounted for 66.7% of the variance in vaccination intentions.
Conclusion
To improve parental intentions to vaccinate adolescent children against influenza, promoting vaccination benefits and safety through the media is crucial to enhance favorable attitudes. Initiatives that strengthen positive parental attitudes towards influenza vaccination and increase awareness of its benefits can effectively boost vaccination intentions.
6.A Case of Stomach Perforation during the Therapy of Rheumatic Carditis.
Young Ju LEE ; Man Jin CHUNG ; Soon Ok BYUN ; Myung Hi SHIN ; Ji Sub OH
Journal of the Korean Pediatric Society 1983;26(12):1241-1246
No abstract available.
Myocarditis*
;
Stomach*
7.MR imaging of synovial sarcoma.
Jin Joo LE ; Hong Sik BYUN ; Kie Hwan KIM ; Il Ju YOON ; Soo Yil CHIN
Journal of the Korean Radiological Society 1993;29(5):1057-1061
MR images of seven patients with histologically documented synovial sarcoma were reviewed to find the suggestive or pathognomonic findings of the disease. MR appearance of the tumor was inhomogeneous, multiseptated mass with various degree of internal septation and infiltrative tumor margin. The signal intensity of the mass was slightly hyperintense relative to muscle on T1-weighted image and hyperintense relative to subcutaneous fatty tissue on T2-weighted image.
Adipose Tissue
;
Humans
;
Magnetic Resonance Imaging*
;
Sarcoma, Synovial*
8.Motor Driving of the Epileptic Patients.
Yeung Ju BYUN ; Yeung Ki LEE ; Se Jin LEE
Journal of the Korean Neurological Association 1995;13(4):843-853
Driving restrction for people with seizure disorder is intended to ensure the public's safety, but such resrictions may unduly harm the welfare of many people with seizures. There is a trend toward greater liberalization of driving standards for people with seizure disorder. The present survey indicates the current driving status of 194 male patients which were managed at the Yeungnam University Hospital from Jan. 1994 to JarL 1995. The result was as follows: 33% of the epileptic patients held traffic licences, 21% actually driving, 5% holding the licences and driving the truck and bus commercially; 72% of the patients took licences after onset of the disease, 29% disclosed by traffic authorities due to their military services; Over the half of the patients had complex partial seizure, 68% was seizure-free over one year, 91 % had no history of trabbic accident. Our traffic road regulations prohibited driving cars by epileptic patients, but practically the authorities permitted epileptic patients to drive cars case by case according to the medical certifications which were issued by the physician. In conclusion, we insist that new traffic road regulation, medical standards for permission and regulation, medico-legal- administrative committee, and thorough detection and regular follow-up of the patients were essential for safety of patients and other peoples.
Certification
;
Epilepsy
;
Follow-Up Studies
;
Humans
;
Male
;
Military Personnel
;
Motor Vehicles
;
Seizures
;
Social Control, Formal
9.The Inhibition of Stress-Induced c-fos Expression by Superior Cervical Ganglion Block in Rat Brain.
Hyun Ju JUNG ; Chong Min PARK ; Dong Suk CHUNG ; Myung Ja AHN ; Hyung Jin BYUN
Korean Journal of Anesthesiology 1997;33(6):1029-1036
BACKGROUND: Using c-fos expression one of the immediate early gene, as a marker of altered neuronal response, we investigated the effect of superior cervical ganglion block (SCGB) exhibiting the same effect of SGB of human on the activity of several brain regions which are considered as located on autonomic neural pathway and neuroendocrine axis in rat. METHOD: The 48 Sprague-Dawley strain rats were divided into 4 groups, as saline/stress (control) group, SCGB/stress (tested) group, saline group, SCGB group. Superior cervical ganglion block was conducted in the SCGB/stress group and SCGB group while saline/stress and saline group were sham operated. After then restraint stress was imposed on the animals of SCGB/stress group and saline/stress group. And 2 hour after injection (saline, SCGB group) or restraint stress (saline/stress, SCGB/stress group), c-fos protein (Fos) was localized by immunocytochemistry. RESULTS: Much stronger Fos immunoreactivity was induced in the several brain region of control group rats compared to other three groups and the numbers of Fos positive cell count of tested group were significantly decreased in paraventricular hypothalamic nucleus (p<0.01), A5 (p<0.01), raphe pallidus (p<0.05), nucleus tractus solitaius (p<0.01) compared to control group. CONCLUSION: This study demonstrate that superior cervical ganglion block attenuates stress induced neuronal activities of paraventricular hypothalamic nucleus, A5, raphe pallidus, nucleus tractus solitarius.
Animals
;
Axis, Cervical Vertebra
;
Brain*
;
Cell Count
;
Genes, vif
;
Humans
;
Immunohistochemistry
;
Neural Pathways
;
Neurons
;
Paraventricular Hypothalamic Nucleus
;
Rats*
;
Rats, Sprague-Dawley
;
Solitary Nucleus
;
Superior Cervical Ganglion*
10.A Preliminary Study on the Functional Recovery after Acute Stroke (Assessed by Barthel ADL index).
Jin Kook KIM ; Jung Sang HAH ; Yeung Ju BYUN
Journal of the Korean Neurological Association 1992;10(3):298-307
We evaluated the performance of activities of daily living by using Barthel ADL index and the factors affecting the quality of life were also analyzed in 82 survivors who suffered from single cerebral infarction in MCA territory and followed for more tham 3 months. The results were as follows: 1. Among the patients, 56(68.3%) patients regained functional indepeadency.but they were not necessarily normal or socially independent. 2. They improved markedly in first 4 weeks after onset of the stroke. 3. Functional recovery in the left hemiplegic patients was better than the right, but there was no difference in functional recovery related to sex and etiologic factors. 4. There was no correlation between age and ADL score 5. The major determinants for long term quality of life were the initial neurologic signs and the size of infarcted area demonstrated by Computed Tomography.
Activities of Daily Living*
;
Cerebral Infarction
;
Humans
;
Neurologic Manifestations
;
Quality of Life
;
Stroke*
;
Survivors
;
Tromethamine