1.Application of Vacuum-assisted Closure in Difficult Wounds.
Heun Guyn JUNG ; Sungchan KI ; Byunghak KIM ; Kwanwoo KIM ; Yungkyung KIM ; Yugyung CHO ; Yongsoo CHOI
The Journal of the Korean Orthopaedic Association 2012;47(1):41-47
PURPOSE: We analyzed the usefulness of vacuum-assisted closure (VAC) dressing to facilitate the healing of difficult wounds by comparing the results of conventional dressings. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We selected 20 cases for the experimental group (VAC group) and 20 cases for the control group (conventional dressing), and investigated the change in wound size, formation of granulation tissue, and duration of wound healing in the two groups. RESULTS: In the VAC group, the size of wound decreased from 60.2+/-59.1 cm2 to 29.7+/-18.8 cm2 (p=0.001). In the control group, it decreased from 60.3+/-83.3 cm2 to 34.4+/-47.6 cm2 (p=0.04). For formation of granulation, it increased from 1.2+/-0.4 to 2.7+/-0.6 (p=0.001) in the VAC group and from 1.2+/-0.4 to 2.4+/-0.5 in the control group. For the duration of healing, it took 17.5+/-8.3 days for the VAC group and 22.9+/-22.0 days in the control group (p=0.857). However there were no statistically significant differences in all the parameters between the 2 groups (p>0.05). CONCLUSION: The clinical application of VAC to difficult wound yield comparable results in terms of a decrease in wound size, formation of granulation, and the duration of healing. VAC dressing could be an alternative treatment option for a difficult wound considering the advantage of saving medical human resources.
Bandages
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Granulation Tissue
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Humans
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Imidazoles
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Negative-Pressure Wound Therapy
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Nitro Compounds
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Wound Healing
2.Development and Validation Study of the Internet Overuse Screening Questionnaire.
Han Kyeong LEE ; Hae Woo LEE ; Joo Hyun HAN ; Subin PARK ; Seok Jin JU ; Kwanwoo CHOI ; Ji Hyeon LEE ; Hong Jin JEON
Psychiatry Investigation 2018;15(4):361-369
OBJECTIVE: Concerns over behavioral and emotional problems caused by excessive internet usage have been developed. This study intended to develop and a standardize questionnaire that can efficiently identify at-risk internet users through their internet usage habits. METHODS: Participants (n=158) were recruited at six I-will-centers located in Seoul, South Korea. From the initial 36 questionnaire item pool, 28 preliminary items were selected through expert evaluation and panel discussions. The construct validity, internal consistency, and concurrent validity were examined. We also conducted Receiver Operating Curve (ROC) analysis to assess diagnostic ability of the Internet Overuse Screening-Questionnaire (IOS-Q). RESULTS: The exploratory factor analysis yielded a five factor structure. Four factors with 17 items remained after items that had unclear factor loading were removed. The Cronbach’s alpha for the IOS-Q total score was 0.91, and test-retest reliability was 0.72. The correlation between Young’s internet addiction scale and K-scale supported concurrent validity. ROC analysis showed that the IOS-Q has superior diagnostic ability with the Area Under the Curve of 0.87. At the cut-off point of 25.5, the sensitivity was 0.93 and specificity was 0.86. CONCLUSION: Overall, this study supports the use of IOS-Q for internet addiction research and for screening high-risk individuals.
Internet*
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Korea
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Mass Screening*
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Reproducibility of Results
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ROC Curve
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Sensitivity and Specificity
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Seoul