1.Association between optic nerve sheath diameter/eyeball transverse diameter ratio and neurological outcomes in patients with aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage
Jinsung KIM ; Hyungoo SHIN ; Heekyung LEE
Journal of Korean Neurosurgical Society 2023;66(6):664-671
Objective:
: The optic nerve sheath diameter (ONSD)/eyeball transverse diameter (ETD) ratio is a more reliable marker of intracranial pressure than the ONSD alone. We aimed to investigate the predictive value of the ONSD/ETD ratio (OER) for neurological outcomes in patients with aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage (aSAH).
Methods:
: Adult patients with aSAH who visited the emergency department of a tertiary hospital connected to a South Korean university between January 2015 and December 2021 were included. Data on patient characteristics and brain computed tomography scan findings, including the ONSD and ETD, were collected using a predefined protocol. According to the neurological outcome at hospital discharge, the patients were divided into the unfavorable neurological outcome (UNO; cerebral performance category [CPC] score 3–5) and the favorable neurological outcome (FNO; CPC score 1–2) groups. The primary outcome was the association between the OER and neurological outcomes in patients with aSAH.
Results:
: A total of 171 patients were included in the study, of whom 118 patients (69%) had UNO. Neither the ONSD (p=0.075) nor ETD (p=0.403) showed significant differences between the two groups. However, the OER was significantly higher in the UNO group in the univariate analysis (p=0.045). The area under the receiver operating characteristic curve of the OER for predicting UNO was 0.603 (p=0.031). There was no independent relationship between the OER and UNO in the multivariate logistic regression analysis (adjusted odds ratio, 0.010; p=0.576).
Conclusion
: The OER was significantly higher in patients with UNO than in those with FNO, and the OER was more reliable than the ONSD alone. However, the OER had limited utility in predicting UNO in patients with aSAH.
6.Development of the DVH management software for the biologically-guided evaluation of radiotherapy plan.
Bokyong KIM ; Hee Chul PARK ; Dongryul OH ; Eun Hyuk SHIN ; Yong Chan AHN ; Jinsung KIM ; Youngyih HAN
Radiation Oncology Journal 2012;30(1):43-48
PURPOSE: To develop the dose volume histogram (DVH) management software which guides the evaluation of radiotherapy (RT) plan of a new case according to the biological consequences of the DVHs from the previously treated patients. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We determined the radiation pneumonitis (RP) as an biological response parameter in order to develop DVH management software. We retrospectively reviewed the medical records of lung cancer patients treated with curative 3-dimensional conformal radiation therapy (3D-CRT). The biological event was defined as RP of the Radiation Therapy Oncology Group (RTOG) grade III or more. RESULTS: The DVH management software consisted of three parts (pre-existing DVH database, graphical tool, and Pinnacle3 script). The pre-existing DVH data were retrieved from 128 patients. RP events were tagged to the specific DVH data through retrospective review of patients' medical records. The graphical tool was developed to present the complication histogram derived from the pre-existing database (DVH and RP) and was implemented into the radiation treatment planning (RTP) system, Pinnacle3 v8.0 (Phillips Healthcare). The software was designed for the pre-existing database to be updated easily by tagging the specific DVH data with the new incidence of RP events at the time of patients' follow-up. CONCLUSION: We developed the DVH management software as an effective tool to incorporate the phenomenological consequences derived from the pre-existing database in the evaluation of a new RT plan. It can be used not only for lung cancer patients but also for the other disease site with different toxicity parameters.
Humans
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Incidence
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Lung Neoplasms
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Medical Records
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Radiation Pneumonitis
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Retrospective Studies
7.Erratum: Acknowledgments correction.
BoKyong KIM ; Hee Chul PARK ; Dongryul OH ; Eun Hyuk SHIN ; Yong Chan AHN ; Jinsung KIM ; Youngyih HAN
Radiation Oncology Journal 2012;30(2):97-97
The funding acknowledgment in this article was partially omitted as published.
8.The Clinical Significance of Pediatric Testicular Microlithiasis in Relation to Testicular Tumors.
Geehyun SONG ; Jinsung PARK ; Kun Suk KIM
Korean Journal of Urology 2009;50(1):57-60
PURPOSE: The object of our study was to examine the clinical significance of pediatric testicular microlithiasis (TM) as it relates to testicular cancer. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Seven boys in whom TM was incidentally detected were followed for a mean of 51+/-44 months (range: 9-119 months) for testicular cancer surveillance. The average patient age at the initial diagnosis was 9.8+/-2.5 years. The frequency of coincidental TM detected on scrotal ultrasonography performed for all clinical purposes at our institution between January 1997 and January 2008 was investigated. Eighty-two testicular cancer patients and 1,006 noncancer patients underwent ultrasonography between 1997 and 2006, and these patients were divided into two age groups (children, age <15 years; adults, age > or =15 years) for purposes of analysis. RESULTS: Of the seven patients followed solely for TM, none developed testicular cancer during the surveillance period. Coincidental TM seen on scrotal ultrasonography was significantly higher in the testicular cancer patients than in the noncancer controls (11% (9/82) vs. 3.5% (36/1,006), p <0.0001). According to the age groups, TM was found in 6% and 5.8% of the testicular cancer patients and the noncancer controls, respectively, in the children's group, whereas in the adult group, 11.6% and 3.3% of the patients in the respective groups were found to have TM. CONCLUSIONS: The incidence of testicular cancer development in children with incidentally detected TM was very low, and the incidence of coincidental TM in children with testicular cancer did not differ from that in the noncancer control patients. However, the significantly higher incidence of TM accompanying testicular cancer after puberty may suggest an association of the two pathologies, which would then mandate cancer surveillance in cases of incidentally detected TM in this age group.
Adult
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Calculi
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Child
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Humans
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Incidence
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Lithiasis
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Pediatrics
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Puberty
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Testicular Diseases
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Testicular Neoplasms
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Testis
9.The Efficacy of Retrograde Intrarenal Surgery (RIRS) in the Management of Renal Stone Disease.
Jongwon KIM ; Jinsung PARK ; Hyungkeun PARK
Korean Journal of Urology 2009;50(8):786-790
PURPOSE: With recent technological advances, the indications for retrograde intrarenal surgery (RIRS) have gradually increased. We evaluated the efficacy and treatment outcomes of RIRS for the treatment of renal stones. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We retrospectively reviewed the medical records of 23 patients with renal stones (7 in the renal pelvis, 9 in the renal calyx, and 7 in the renal diverticulum) treated with RIRS from January 2001 to July 2008. Mean stone burden was 110 mm2 (range, 9.42-428.6 mm2), and all operations were performed under general anesthesia using a semi-rigid ureteroscope in 9 cases, a flexible ureteroscope in 11 cases, and both types simultaneously in 3 cases. The holmium:yttrium-aluminum-garnet (Ho: YAG) laser and the nitinol basket were used for stone fragmentation and retrieval. The patients were followed up postoperatively with KUB (21 cases) or nonenhanced computed tomography (CT; 2 cases). Success was defined as no visible stones on KUB or nonenhanced CT. RESULTS: The mean operating time was 93 minutes (range, 30-205 minutes) and the mean hospital stay was 3.7 days (range, 1-9 days). Of 23 patients, 16 (70%) experienced complete elimination of the stone after only a single intervention. After ancillary extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy (ESWL), the success rate was increased to 74% (17/23). In the remaining 6 patients, residual stone findings were less than 3 mm and were followed up with X-ray. CONCLUSIONS: RIRS is a feasible procedure for treating renal stone disease with minimal complications. The results of our study suggest that RIRS can be recommended as a primary modality in the management of renal stone disease in selected patients such as those with ESWL failure and renal diverticular stones.
Alloys
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Anesthesia, General
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Humans
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Kidney Pelvis
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Length of Stay
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Lithotripsy
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Medical Records
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Retrospective Studies
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Shock
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Ureteroscopes
10.Prognostic Significance of the Presence of Proper Muscle in the Resected Specimens of Primary T1G3 Bladder Cancer.
Jinsung PARK ; Jin Bum KIM ; Hanjong AHN
Korean Journal of Urology 2006;47(2):137-142
PURPOSE: According to the presence of proper muscle in the resected specimens from primary T1G3 bladder tumors, we compared the prognosis and investigated factors that were predictive of disease progression during the follow-up and upstaging after radical cystectomy. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We reviewed the records of 157 patients who were diagnosed with primary T1G3 bladder cancer for the assessment and comparison of disease recurrence, disease progression and patient survival. There were 101 and 56 patients with and without proper muscle in the their transurethral resection (TUR) specimens (T1G3 and T1xG3, respectively); 30 and 20 of these patients, respectively, had undergone immediate cystectomy. RESULTS: Among the patients who were followed up after transurethral surgery, there were no differences in the survival between the two groups. For the patients treated by immediate cystectomy, the 5-year cancer-specific survival was 100% for the T1G3 patients at a mean follow-up of 54.5 months while it was 76.6% for the T1xG3 patients at a mean follow-up of 46.0 months (p=0.042). With the absence of radiologic findings suggestive of invasive bladder cancer, 55.6% of the T1xG3 patients were upstaged after radical cystectomy, whereas only 12.0% of the T1G3 patients were upstaged (p=0.002). Between the followed-up group and the cystectomy groups, more patients in the cystectomy group had non-papillary shaped bladder tumor (75.0% vs. 38.9%, respectively, p=0.010). Similarly, the T1x-G3 patients who progressed during follow-up or who were upstaged after radical cystectomy had more non-papillary shaped tumor than the patients who were without progression or upstaging (80.1% vs. 38.5%, respectively, p=0.006). CONCLUSIONS: For primary T1G3 bladder cancer, non-papillary shaped tumor without proper muscle in the resected specimen is a risk factor for the progression during follow-up or upstaging after radical cystectomy that should warrant consideration for repeated resection or early cystectomy.
Cystectomy
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Disease Progression
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Follow-Up Studies
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Humans
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Prognosis
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Recurrence
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Risk Factors
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Urinary Bladder Neoplasms*
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Urinary Bladder*