1.Brain Death Donor Organ Transplantation.
Journal of the Korean Medical Association 1999;42(4):338-341
No abstract available.
Brain Death*
;
Brain*
;
Humans
;
Organ Transplantation*
;
Tissue Donors*
;
Transplants*
2.Surgical complications of CAPD.
Chan Dae PARK ; Jin Young KWAK
Journal of the Korean Surgical Society 1992;43(3):439-444
No abstract available.
Peritoneal Dialysis, Continuous Ambulatory*
3.Clinical analysis of complications after 200 renal transplantation.
Ooh Shin SHIM ; Jin Young KWAK
Journal of the Korean Surgical Society 1993;45(5):827-839
No abstract available.
Kidney Transplantation*
4.Experience of 4 cases of deep vein injury
Journal of the Korean Society for Vascular Surgery 1991;7(1):108-112
No abstract available.
Veins
5.Primary Endodermal Sinus Tumor In The Sacrococcygium.
Jong In KIM ; Jin YANG ; Ik Jun LEE ; Young Hyun KWAK
Journal of the Korean Pediatric Society 1983;26(6):584-588
No abstract available.
Endoderm*
;
Endodermal Sinus Tumor*
6.Effective Control of MRSA Nosocomial Infection in Intensive Care Unit.
Hye Young JIN ; Yun Sik KWAK ; Wee Gyo LEE
Korean Journal of Nosocomial Infection Control 1999;4(1):7-16
BACKGROUND: It is well known that Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) is hardly controllable organism among pathogens of nosocomial infection. The MRSA infection control measures have been initiated at a brand new tertiary care teaching hospital which was opened in June, 1994. However, the control measures did bring out little effect. In 1997, reenforcement of all control measures were practiced in intensive care units. The measures brought out a significant improvement in reducing the incidence of MRSA infection, subsequently the same control measures were implemented through-out the entire inpatient area. METHODS: The following control measures have been reenforced since March 1997: first, application of thorough surveillance of confirmed MRSA infected patients: second, providing cohort care: third, enforcing handwashing practices after patient contact; fourth, establishing infected patients isolation zone: fifth, tagging infected patient's bed and medical record, providing disinfectant spray for washing hands, identifying and treating carriers among patient contact staffs, separate disposal of contaminated wastes, and finally repeating education of nursing staff and family members of the patients. Each month the number of incidence in MRSA nosocomial infection were followed and the leu supervisors were notified the outcome. RESULTS: The incidence of MRSA infection started to decline soon after the initiation of the control measures, from 132% in March 1997 to 5.8% in July 1997. In 1998, the infection rate maintained close to 2-3%. There had been 467 MRSA infected cases (5.7%) out of 8,253 discharges during the study period; among them 319 cases were infected once; 40 cases twice; 15 cases three times: four cases four times and 1 case seven times. The order of preference of organs infected are lungs (56.3%), wounds(11.8%), blood (7.9%), and urinary tract (1.9%). The highest incidence of this infection was found in Medicine (34.8%) and Neurosurgery (22.8%) CONCLUSION: The implementation and reenforcement of infection control measures are key to successful control of nosocomial infection, in particular, hand washing of patient contact staffs and eradication of carriers could be the most effective measures.
Cohort Studies
;
Cross Infection*
;
Education
;
Hand
;
Hand Disinfection
;
Hospitals, Teaching
;
Humans
;
Incidence
;
Infection Control
;
Inpatients
;
Intensive Care Units*
;
Critical Care*
;
Lung
;
Medical Records
;
Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus*
;
Neurosurgery
;
Nursing Staff
;
Tertiary Healthcare
;
Urinary Tract
7.Peutz-Jeghers Syndrome with Extensive Epithelial Misplacements and Adenomatous and Carcinomatous Transformation: A case report.
Jeong Ja KWAK ; So Young JIN ; Dong Wha LEE
Korean Journal of Pathology 1993;27(6):630-637
Peutz-Jeghers syndrome is an autosomal dominant disease characterized by gastrointestinal ployposis and mucocutaneous melanin pigmentation involving the lip, oral mucosa, digits, palms and soles. The polyps are almost hamartomatous. The relationship of gastrointestinal carcinoma and the Peutz-Jeghers syndrome has been discussed for many years. The question is unsettled whether gastrointestinal carcinoma arise in hamartomatous polyps itself. Recently, there are a few reports that adenomatous and carcinomatous changes were superimposed upon the background of the hamartoma. Occasionally epithelial misplacement of the epithelium is found in the small intestinal polyps. Since the epithelial misplacement may involve submucosa, muscularis propria and serosa, a difficulty of histopathologic differential diagnosis between the epithelial misplacement and invasive adenocarcinoma cause overdiagnosis of cancer in the gastrointestinal polyps of Peutz-Jeghers syndrome. We present a case of Peutz-Jeghers syndrome of 39-year-old woman with multiple gastrointestinal polyps, two of which showed extensive epithelial misplacement even into the pancreas and another one at the colon showed carcinomatous change at the tip portion. Areas of hamartoma, adenoma and in situ carcinoma were noted in this colonic hamartomatous polyp. This case support that adenoma and carcinomatous changes may evolve directly within a hamartomaous polyp itself.
Female
;
Humans
;
Diagnosis, Differential
;
Adenocarcinoma
;
Adenoma
8.Experimental hepatocyte transplantation.
Pa Jong JUNG ; Kwang Soo LEE ; Jin Young KWAK
The Journal of the Korean Society for Transplantation 1993;7(1):39-45
No abstract available.
Hepatocytes*
9.Fine needle aspiration cytology of apocrine carcinoma of the breast: two cases report-.
So Young JIN ; Dong Wha LEE ; Jeong Ja KWAK
Korean Journal of Cytopathology 1992;3(2):67-74
No abstract available.
Biopsy, Fine-Needle*
;
Breast*
10.Fine needle aspiration cytology of langerhans cell histiocytosis.
Jeong Ja KWAK ; So Young JIN ; Dong Wha LEE
Korean Journal of Cytopathology 1993;4(2):140-145
No abstract available.
Biopsy, Fine-Needle*
;
Histiocytosis, Langerhans-Cell*