1.Three Cases of Hemolytic Diseases of Newborns due to Anti - E Antibody.
Hee Joo HONG ; Jee Hyun KIM ; Sun Hee CHOI ; Chong Woo BAE ; Yong Mook CHOI
Korean Journal of Perinatology 2001;12(2):163-167
No abstract available.
Humans
;
Infant, Newborn*
2.Assessment of Utilization and Storage Management Practice of Frozen and Refrigerated Foods in School Foodservice: Focus on Meats, Seafoods and Processed Foods.
Hee Sun JEONG ; Ji Young YOON ; Hyun Joo BAE
Journal of the Korean Dietetic Association 2007;13(4):345-356
The purpose of this study was to investigate utilization and storage management practice of the frozen and refrigerated foods in school foodservice. 222 dietitians employed in school foodservice were surveyed. In school foodservice, the refrigerated stock farm products and seafoods (78.3%) were more used rather than frozen products (47.5%). According to school foodservice characteristics, the refrigerated meats including dairy products were more frequently used in elementary and middle schools than high school foodservice. On the other hand, the foodservice in high school used more frozen seafoods and processed foods than elementary school did. The data also showed a tendency for the contracted foodservice using more frozen meats and seafoods rather than refrigerated products when comparing with the self-operated foodservice. In terms of receiving conditions, storage methods and storage time, the result indicated that frozen or refrigerated products were often delivered at inappropriate temperature. Especially some products which were needed to be shipped and stored at refrigerated temperature such as mollusks, were delivered and kept at room temperature. The most frequently used thawing method were running water (56.9%), however, the frozen products were often sitted at room temperature for the purpose of thawing. According to the results, several inappropriate handling processes for frozen and refrigerated products were found in school foodservice. In order to improve handling process for frozen and refrigerated products, recognition of food handlers' weakness about storage and distribution, development of radical standards for receiving conditions, storage and thawing methods should be debated.
Dairy Products
;
Hand
;
Humans
;
Meat*
;
Mollusca
;
Nutritionists
;
Running
;
Seafood*
;
Ships
;
Water
3.The analysis of clinical contents in primary care in university-based family practice clinics.
Yong Sung SUH ; Eun Joo AHN ; Hee Chul KANG ; Chul Young BAE ; Dong Hak SHIN
Journal of the Korean Academy of Family Medicine 1992;13(4):327-334
No abstract available.
Family Practice*
;
Humans
;
Primary Health Care*
4.Prevalence and clinical characteristics of the anti-HCV positive patients who had invreased transaminase levels with negative HBsAg.
Eun Joo AHN ; Tae Ho CHUNG ; Hee Chul KANG ; Chul Young BAE ; Dong Hak SHIN
Journal of the Korean Academy of Family Medicine 1992;13(1):72-78
No abstract available.
Hepatitis B Surface Antigens*
;
Humans
;
Prevalence*
5.Effect of Hemodialysis on Levels of Malondialdehyde and Antioxidant Enzymes in Erythrocytes from Patients with End Stage Renal Disease.
Kyo Cheol MUN ; Il JOO ; You Hee KIM ; Sung Bae PARK ; Hyun Chul KIM
Korean Journal of Nephrology 1998;17(4):591-596
To clarify the mechanism of the protective effect of hemodialysis on lipid peroxidation in RBC membrane structures, the level of malondialdehyde (MDA) which is the lipid peroxidation product, and the activities of antioxidant enzymes such as superoxide dismutase (SOD), catalase, and glutathione peroxidase (GSH-Px) were determined before and after hemodialysis in the RBCs from 20 patients with end stage renal disease (ESRD), and from 14 healthy subjects. Before dialysis, MDA levels in the RBCs from the patients with ESRD were higher than those from healthy controls. SOD and catalase activities in the RBCs were lower. After hemodialysis, MDA, SOD, and catalase in the RBCs from the patients with ESRD were normalized. These results indicate that hemodialysis treatment is helpful to protect the peroxidative darnage through normalizing the activities of antioxidant enzymes.
Catalase
;
Dialysis
;
Erythrocytes*
;
Glutathione Peroxidase
;
Humans
;
Kidney Failure, Chronic*
;
Lipid Peroxidation
;
Malondialdehyde*
;
Membranes
;
Renal Dialysis*
;
Superoxide Dismutase
6.A case of midgut molmulus complicating pregnancy.
Sung Hee BAE ; Jung Bum HWANG ; Chang Joo KIM ; Tae Il CHO
Korean Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology 1993;36(7):2089-2090
No abstract available.
Pregnancy*
7.Urinary Transforming Growth Factor-beta-inducible Gene-h3 in Patients with Glomerular Diseases.
Hee Joo HONG ; Sung Do KIM ; Byoung Cheol LEE ; Hee Jung YOON ; Eun Hee BAE ; Byoung Soo CHO
Korean Journal of Nephrology 2006;25(2):229-234
BACKGOUND: Transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-alpha) has been implicated in the pathogenesis of a number of kidney diseases. However, TGF-alpha is secreted in a latent form requiring extracellular modification to become biologically active. Recently, the activity of TGF-alpha has been assessed by the measurement betaig-h3, a novel TGF-alpha induced gene product. Thus we evaluated the pattern of urinary betaig-h3 expression in various glomerular diseases. METHODS: 64 patients with biopsy-proven primary glomerulonephritis (FSGS 6, HSPN 16, IgAN 20, MPGN I 7, and MesPGN 15), 10 patients with nephrotic syndrome and 12 healthy controls were enrolled in the study. A total 86 subjects (51 males, 59.3% and 35 females, 40.7%, mean age 13.9+/-4.28 years) constituted study population. First morning urine were collected and betaig-h3 in the urine was determined by indirect competitive ELISA (Regen Biotech Inc, Seoul, Korea). RESULTS: betaig-h3 excretion was significantly higher in the urine from patients with HSPN (27.5+/-6.46, p=0.002), with IgAN (40.83+/-12.27, p=0.026), with MPGN I (21.64+/-7.29, p=0.042), MesPGN (26.42+/-6.68, p=0.007). In patients with FSGS (21.65+/-17.12) and minimal change nephrotic syndrome (6.26+/-2.18), mean urinary betaig-h3 excretion was not significant higher than that in control group (3.56+/-0.78). CONCLUSION: Urinary betaig-h3 excretion was high in proliferative renal diseases. However, betaig-h3 excretion was not high in non-proliferative renal diseases.
Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay
;
Female
;
Glomerulonephritis
;
Glomerulonephritis, Membranoproliferative
;
Humans
;
Kidney Diseases
;
Male
;
Nephrosis, Lipoid
;
Nephrotic Syndrome
;
Seoul
;
Transforming Growth Factor alpha
8.Activation of JNK and p38 in rat hippocampus after kainic acid induced seizure.
Song Hee JEON ; Yong Sik KIM ; Chang Dae BAE ; Joo Bae PARK
Experimental & Molecular Medicine 2000;32(4):227-230
Kainic acid, an analogue of glutamate, causes limbic seizures and induces cell death in the rat brain. We examined the activation of MAPK family kinases; ERKs, JNKs and p38 kinase in rat hippocampus after KA treatment. Activation of all three kinases were observed at 30 min after the treatment, but, in contrary to ERK phosphorylation, which lasted up to 3 h, the phosphorylation of JNK and p38 returned to the basal level by 2 h. The phosphorylation of' upstream kinases for the MAPK family was distinct. The phosphorylation of MEK1 clearly increased at 30 min but diminished rapidly thereafter. The phosphorylation of MKK6 was also increased but reached peak at 2 h after KA treatment. However, the phosphorylation of other upstream kinases, SEK1 and MKK3, gradually decreased to 3 h after KA treatment. These results indicate that the KA activates all of the three MAPK family kinases with different time patterns and suggest the possibility that MKK3 and MKK6, and SEK1 may not be the upstream kinases for p38 and JNK in rat hippocampus.
Animal
;
Enzyme Activation
;
Hippocampus/*drug effects/enzymology
;
Kainic Acid/*pharmacology
;
Limbic System/drug effects
;
Male
;
Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinases/*metabolism
;
Rats
;
Seizures/*chemically induced
9.Spatial analysis of PM10 and cardiovascular mortality in the Seoul metropolitan area.
Yu Ra LIM ; Hyun Joo BAE ; Youn Hee LIM ; Seungdo YU ; Geun Bae KIM ; Yong Sung CHO
Environmental Health and Toxicology 2014;29(1):e2014005-
OBJECTIVES: Numerous studies have revealed the adverse health effects of acute and chronic exposure to particulate matter less than 10 mum in aerodynamic diameter (PM10). The aim of the present study was to examine the spatial distribution of PM10 concentrations and cardiovascular mortality and to investigate the spatial correlation between PM10 and cardiovascular mortality using spatial scan statistic (SaTScan) and a regression model. METHODS: From 2008 to 2010, the spatial distribution of PM10 in the Seoul metropolitan area was examined via kriging. In addition, a group of cardiovascular mortality cases was analyzed using SaTScan-based cluster exploration. Geographically weighted regression (GWR) was applied to investigate the correlation between PM10 concentrations and cardiovascular mortality. RESULTS: An examination of the regional distribution of the cardiovascular mortality was higher in provincial districts (gu) belonging to Incheon and the northern part of Gyeonggido than in other regions. In a comparison of PM10 concentrations and mortality cluster (MC) regions, all those belonging to MC 1 and MC 2 were found to belong to particulate matter (PM) 1 and PM 2 with high concentrations of air pollutants. In addition, the GWR showed that PM10 has a statistically significant relation to cardiovascular mortality. CONCLUSIONS: To investigate the relation between air pollution and health impact, spatial analyses can be utilized based on kriging, cluster exploration, and GWR for a more systematic and quantitative analysis. It has been proven that cardiovascular mortality is spatially related to the concentration of PM10.
Air Pollutants
;
Air Pollution
;
Gyeonggi-do
;
Incheon
;
Mortality*
;
Particulate Matter
;
Seoul
;
Spatial Analysis*
10.Central Retinal Artery Occlusion after Cervical Spine Surgery in Prone Position under General Anesthesia: A case report.
Ki Yeoul BAE ; Kyeong Hee KIM ; Jin Churl JOO
Korean Journal of Anesthesiology 1996;31(1):114-117
Central retinal artery occlusion occurs rarely as a complication of spine surgery under general anesthesia in prone position, but is quite tragic. The suggested causes are hypotension during anesthesia and increased external ocular pressure by headrest, sand bag or others. We experienced a case of left central retinal artery occlusion following cervical spine surgery under general anesthesia using a horseshoe headrest. The patient was 53 years old male whose medical history was non remarkable except dislocation of cervical spine. He was positioned prone after induction. The vital signs were stable during opreration. At the recovery room, he presented left visual field disturbance and investigations revealed that left central retinal artery occlusion occured. This case demonstrates that proper positioning of the head on an adequate head rest and contineous cautious inspection during surgical procedure are important to prevent retinal damage.
Anesthesia
;
Anesthesia, General*
;
Dislocations
;
Head
;
Humans
;
Hypotension
;
Male
;
Middle Aged
;
Prone Position*
;
Recovery Room
;
Retinal Artery Occlusion*
;
Retinal Artery*
;
Retinaldehyde
;
Silicon Dioxide
;
Spine*
;
Visual Fields
;
Vital Signs