1.How Can the Western and Oriental Ideas of Illness Communicate?.
Journal of the Korean Medical Association 1997;40(3):283-287
No abstract available.
2.The Geopolitics of Tropical Diseases: A Geo-epidemiological Perspective.
Korean Journal of Medical History 2005;14(2):151-170
The objective of my article is to investigate how the West had strong interest in tropical diseases and developed tropical medicine and hygiene from the 1870s through the 1910s. Its focus is to identify the geopolitical conditions in which the West constructed 'tropical diseases'to extend its imperial interests into non-Western tropical regions. The article has several specific research tasks: first, I attempt to explore the way in which European people transformed their attitudes toward tropical diseases from the sixteenth century to the 1860s. A variety of writings by European physicians are discussed; the second part shows European change in its domestic sanitary situation in relation to its imperial interests in tropical regions. Sanitary hygiene in metropole and colonies are not separate, but interconnected; third, the paper illuminates how the West responded to the spread of 'Asiatic cholera' in the nineteenth century. Cholera provides a typical example for the West to perceive Asian origin of tropical diseases; finally, the article demonstrates that hygienic governance of tropical diseases is the key to imperial dominion over colonies by taking the Panama Canal as an example. Although several European countries such as Spain, Britain, Germany, and France had strong imperial interests in the Panama Canal that might facilitate trade between the Atlantic and the Pacific, they failed to occupy the canal because of their inability to control high prevalence of malaria and yellow fever. Taking advantage of 'tropical medicine, ' the United States succeeded in taking up the canal by eradicating tropical diseases in the canal. It was owing to the scientific development of tropical hygiene and medicine that the West transformed its pessimistic into optimistic position about the colonization of tropical regions. Tropical diseases became the geopolitical reference for Western conceptualization of Asia, Africa, Latin America, and the Pacific.
Tropical Medicine/*history
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Sanitation/history
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Hygiene/*history
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Humans
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History, 20th Century
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History, 19th Century
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Europe
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Colonialism/history
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Cholera/epidemiology/*history
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Attitude of Health Personnel
3.The Institutionalization of Public Hygiene in Korea, 1876-1910.
Jong Chan LEE ; Chang Duck KEE
Korean Journal of Medical History 1995;4(1):23-35
On the whole, the major impetus for the institutionalization of public hygiene in Korea came from two directions. On one hand, the self-enlightened intellectuals had introduced a variety of Western ideas and theories on public hygiene since the mid-eighteenth century. On the other hand, Japan strongly influenced the modern systems of Korean health care and medical education, especially through Japanese efforts at the sanitary control of infectious diseases such as smallpox and cholera. The institutionalization of Korea's public hygiene in this period corresponded not to the high ideas of the progressive intellectuals but to the larger social and institutional changes caused by the major political events. Ideas of public hygiene were institutionalized as a powerful strategy of linking the imperial capital and colonial domains.
Colonialism/*history
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History of Medicine, 19th Cent.
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History of Medicine, 20th Cent.
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Japan
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Korea
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Politics
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Public Health/*history
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Sanitation/*history
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Western World
5.Analysis of Mitochondrial DNA in Patients with Essential Tremor.
Uhn LEE ; Young Mi YOO ; Chan Jong YOO
Journal of Korean Neurosurgical Society 2000;29(2):188-195
No abstract available.
DNA, Mitochondrial*
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Essential Tremor*
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Humans
6.Blood Conservation Strategy during Cardiac Valve Surgery in Jehovah's Witnesses: a Comparative Study with Non-Jehovah's Witnesses.
Tae Sik KIM ; Jong Hyun LEE ; Chan Young NA
Korean Journal of Critical Care Medicine 2016;31(2):101-110
BACKGROUND: We compared the clinical outcomes of cardiac valve surgery in adult Jehovah's Witness patients refusing blood transfusion to those in non-Jehovah's Witness patients without any transfusion limitations. METHODS: From 2005 to 2014, 25 Jehovah's Witnesses (JW group) underwent cardiac valve surgery using a blood conservation strategy. Twenty-five matched control patients (non-JW group) were selected according to sex, age, operation date, and surgeon. Both groups were managed according to general guidelines of anticoagulation for valve surgery. RESULTS: The operative mortality rate was 4.0% in the JW group and 0% in the non-JW group (p = 1.000). There was no difference in postoperative major complications between the groups (p = 1.000). The overall survival rate at 5 and 10 years was 85.6% ± 7.9% and 85.6% ± 7.9% in the JW group, respectively, and 100.0% ± 0.0% and 66.7% ± 27.2% in the non-JW group (p = 0.313). The valve-related morbidity-free survival rates (p = 0.625) and late morbidity-free survival rates (p = 0.885) were not significantly different between the groups. CONCLUSIONS: Using a perioperative strategy for blood conservation, cardiac valve surgery without transfusion had comparable clinical outcomes in adult patients. This blood conservation strategy could be broadly applied to major surgeries with careful perioperative care.
Adult
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Blood Transfusion
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Bloodless Medical and Surgical Procedures*
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Heart Valves*
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Humans
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Jehovah's Witnesses*
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Mortality
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Perioperative Care
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Survival Rate
7.The in Vitro Proliferative Properties of Fibroblasts Originating from Upper and Lower Dermis of Psoriatic Skin Lesions.
Jong Min KIM ; Hyoun Chan CHO ; Yoo Shin LEE
Korean Journal of Dermatology 1987;25(1):41-51
To investigate the heterogeneity of fibroblast proliferation rate depending on the depth of dermis in the psoriatic skin lesions, fibroblasts were obtained from the upper and lower dermis of the forearm skin lesions in 9 psoriatir, patients and of the comparable sites in 7 healthy persons respectively, and were cultured. The in vitro proliferation rates of the fibroblasts were calculated by measuring the efficiency af cell attachment, cell numbers on varying days of culture and the population doubling time during the 3rd passage of subculture. The results were as follows: 1, The efficiencies of cell attachment at 24 hours after seeding were not statistically different between the upper derrnal fibroblasts and the lower ones in both psoriatic skin lesions and normal skins. 2. By rneasuring the cell numbers and the population doubling times, the prolifeatior rate of the upper der mal fibroblasts was greater than that of the lower ones in both psoriatic skin lesions and normal skins and that the fibroblastic proliferation rate was significantly inereased in the psoriatic skin lesion compared to the normal skin.
Cell Count
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Dermis*
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Fibroblasts*
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Forearm
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Humans
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Population Characteristics
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Skin*
8.The neurilemmoma of the stomach.
Ha Chul PARK ; Byung Wook KIM ; Jong Chan LEE
Journal of the Korean Surgical Society 1992;42(6):862-866
No abstract available.
Neurilemmoma*
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Stomach*
9.A Case of Ovarian Mullerian Mucinous Papillary Cystadenoma of Borderline Malignancy.
Jong Chan PARK ; Jung Hee AHN ; Kyu Wan LEE
Korean Journal of Gynecologic Oncology and Colposcopy 1993;4(3):79-85
Mullerian Mucinous papillary Cyatadenernas of Borderline tumor(MMBT) is lined by mucinous epithelium of endocervical type and is characterized by papillae architecturally similer to those of serous horderline tumors, It has been described rarely in the literature, Thia case was reported with a brief review of the concerened literatures. It has important clinical and pathological diBerences from mucinous birderline tumors with intestinal differentiation, but has many similatities to mixed epithelial borderline tumora of Mulierian type. Recently, a case of MMBT in a 22 years old woman was experienced at our department. We presented this case with a brief review of literature.
Cystadenoma, Papillary*
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Epithelium
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Female
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Humans
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Mucins*
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Young Adult
10.The Life and Thought of Dr. Suh Jae-Phil (Philip Jaison): Propagating Modern Ideas of Public Health and Sanitarian Hygiene.
Korean Journal of Medical History 1997;6(2):217-230
The paper explores the life and thought of Dr. Suh Jae-Phil, an enlightened reformer of the late Yi dynasty, in terms of modern concepts and theories on public hygiene. He had never been involved in medical practices in Korea. Rather he actively participated in achieving national independence and disseminating enlightenment thought. This first Western medical doctor in Korea had struggled to propagate modern thought of public health and sanitarian hygiene in the editorials of The Independent(Tongnip Sinmun), one of the most active newspapers to spread Western ideas of civilization in that period. The editorials were strategically used as a vehicle for spreading Western liberal ideas in general and ideas of public hygiene in particular. Dr. Suh asserted modern ideas of public hygiene to be prerequisites for the establishment of modern state. His strong committment to them included the control of infectious diseases, small pox vaccination, clean water, population growth, and personal hygiene.