1.Incidence of Abnormal Liver Function and Risk Factors in Male Employees.
Young Ae HA ; Kyeong Dong CHUNG ; Byung Yeol CHUN
Korean Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine 2000;12(1):59-69
OBJECTIVES: This study was conducted to estimate the incidence of abnormal liver function and risk factors in male employees of an industry in Ulsan City. METHODS: Five hundreds and seventy nine male employees were selected as the study cohort and 533(92.1%) of them were followed after one year. The blood sample was collected to test for AST, ALT, gamma-GTP, total-cholesterol, fasting blood sugar and a self-administered questionnaire on life style was done. General characteristics(age, marital status, educational level), job department, exposure status for organic solvents, life style(alcohol, smoking, exercise, diet), past history of liver disease, family history of liver disease, drug intake, HBsAg, blood glucose, total-cholesterol were considered as risk factors. The result of liver function test after 1 year follow-up was treated as dependent variable. The operational definition of abnormal liver function was as follows; those who had abnormal liver functions in the two repeated tests with one month interval. RESULTS: The annual incidence of abnormal liver function was 9.6 per 100 and age-standardized incidence was 9.5. BMI, alcohol, past history of liver disease, and meat intake were significantly related to the incidence(p<0.05). In multiple logistic regression analysis, BMI(RR=2.70, 95% CI=1.41-5.16) and alcohol(RR=1.98, 95% CI=1.08-3.60) were proved as the significant variables. By stratified analysis considering changing pattern of alcohol and BMI, the relative risk of the BMI normal-normal and alcohol intake high-high group was 2.24(95% CI=1.09-4.62) and that of the BMI obese-obese and alcohol intake high-high group was 5.66(95% CI=2.69-11.88) compared with that of BMI normal-normal and alcohol intake low-low group. CONCLUSIONS: The age-standardized annual incidence of abnormal liver function was 9.5 per 100 in male employees. Thus, an active effort for reducing alcohol intake and controlling BMI should be done to reduce the incidence.
Blood Glucose
;
Cohort Studies
;
Fasting
;
Follow-Up Studies
;
Hepatitis B Surface Antigens
;
Humans
;
Incidence*
;
Life Style
;
Liver Diseases
;
Liver Function Tests
;
Liver*
;
Logistic Models
;
Male*
;
Marital Status
;
Meat
;
Questionnaires
;
Risk Factors*
;
Smoke
;
Smoking
;
Solvents
;
Ulsan
2.Concentrations of welding fume by local exhaust ventilation.
Sung Ki PARK ; Kyeong Dong CHUNG ; Doo Hie KIM
Korean Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine 1993;5(1):163-170
No abstract available.
Ventilation*
;
Welding*
3.Functional Brain Mapping Using H2 15O Positron Emission Tomography ( I ): Statistical Parametric Mapping Method.
Dong Soo LEE ; Jae Sung LEE ; Kyeong Min KIM ; June Key CHUNG ; Myung Chul LEE
Korean Journal of Nuclear Medicine 1998;32(3):225-237
PURPOSE: We investigated the statistical methods to compose the functional brain map of human working memory and the principal factors that have an effect on the methods for localization. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Repeated PET scans with successive four tasks, which consist of one control and three different activation tasks, were performed on six right-handed normal volunteers for 2 minutes after bolus injections of 925 MBq H0 at the intervals of 30 minutes. Irnage data were analyzed using SPM96 (Statistical Parametric Mapping) imple-mented with Matlab (Mathworks Inc., U.S.A.). Images from the same subject were spatially registered and were normalized using linear and nonlinear transformation methods. Significant difference between control and each activation state was estimated at every voxel based on the general linear model. Differences of global counts were removed using analysis of covariance (ANCOVA) with global activity as covariate. Using the mean and variance for each condition which was adjusted using ANCOVA, t-statistics was performed on every voxel To interpret the results more easily, t-values were transformed to the standard (saussian distri-bution (Z-score). RESULTS: All the subjects carried out the activation and control tests successfully. Average rate of correct answers was 95%. The numbers of activated blobs were 4 for verbal memory I, 9 for verbal memory II, 9 for visual memory, and 6 for canjunctive activation of these three tasks. The verbal working memory activates predominantly left-sided slruetures, and the visual memory activates the right hernisphere. CONCLUSION: We conclude that rCBF PET imaging and statistical parametric mapping method were useful in the localization of the brain regions for verbal and visual working memory.
Brain Mapping*
;
Brain*
;
Electrons*
;
Healthy Volunteers
;
Humans
;
Linear Models
;
Memory
;
Memory, Short-Term
;
Positron-Emission Tomography*
4.Effect of Zinc Administration on the Autistic Children.
Kyeong Dong CHUNG ; Doohie KIM
Korean Journal of Preventive Medicine 1990;23(3):309-315
The purpose of this study was to evaluate the effect of zinc administration on the autistic children. the subject diagnosed as infantile autism were 24 male and 10 female children of a special school in Taegu city. Control group were selected from 1 : 2 ratio matched with cases on sex and age. The results were as follows. In female autistic group, the mean content of zinc in hair was significantly lower than control group, but in male the result was inverse at all age group. The content of zinc in hair showed significant correlation with age in male autistic group and control group. Zinc content of hair, age and sex accounted for 37.2% of the variance of autistic score and the most significant variable was zinc content. Autistic group were divided into two group. Group I which zinc content of hair below 150 ppm were administrated with multi-vitamin contained 10mg of zinc, Group II which zinc content of hair above 150 ppm were administrated with placebo. Total administration period was eight weeks. In zinc administration group, there was a decreasing tendency of autistic score as the zinc content of hair was increased but the relationship was not statistically significant.
Autistic Disorder
;
Child*
;
Daegu
;
Female
;
Hair
;
Humans
;
Male
;
Zinc*
5.Clinical use of cholescintigraphy in acute cholecystitis:a comparative study with ultrasonography.
Kwang Hee SEO ; Hye Kyeong CHUNG ; Myeong Gon KIM ; Duck Soo CHUNG ; Nak Kwan SUNG ; Ok Dong KIM
Korean Journal of Nuclear Medicine 1993;27(1):81-87
No abstract available.
Ultrasonography*
6.Reproducibility of non-invasive measurement for left ventricular contractility using gated myocardial SPECT.
Kyeong Min KIM ; Dong Soo LEE ; Yu Kyeong KIM ; Gi Jeong CHEON ; Seok Ki KIM ; June Key CHUNG ; Myung Chul LEE
Korean Journal of Nuclear Medicine 2001;35(3):152-160
No abstract available.
Tomography, Emission-Computed, Single-Photon*
7.Influence of Gating and Attenuation-correction for Diagnostic Performance of Usual Rest/stress Myocardial Perfusion SPECT in Coronary Artery Disease.
Myung Chul LEE ; June Key CHUNG ; Dong Soo LEE ; Kyeong Min KIM ; Young SO ; Jeong Seok YEO ; Gi Jeong CHEON
Korean Journal of Nuclear Medicine 1999;33(2):131-142
PURPOSE: Either gated myocardial perfusion SPECT or attenuation corrected SPECT can be used to improve specificity in the diagnosis of coronary artery disease. We investigated in this study whether gating or attenuation correction improved diagnostic performance of rest/stress perfusion SPECT in patients having intermediate pre-test likelihood of coronary artery disease. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Sixty-eight patients underwent rest attenuation-corrected T1-20l/dipyridamole stress gated attenuation-corrected Tc-99m-MIBI SPECT using an ADAC vertex camera (M:F=29:39, aged 59+/-12 years, coronary artery stenosis> or =70%. one vessel: 13, two vessel: 18, three vessel: 8, normal: 29). Using a five-point scale, three physicians graded the post-test likelihood of coronary artery disease for each arterial territory (1 normal, 2: possibly normal 3:equivocal, 4: possibly abnormal, 5: abnormal). Sensitivity, specificity and area under receiver-operating-characteristic curves were compared for each operator between three METHODS: (A) non-attenuation-corrected SPECT; (B) gated SPECT added to (A); and (C) attenuation-corrected SPECT added to (B). RESULTS: When grade 3 was used as the criteria for coronary artery disease, no differences in sensitivity and specificity were found between the three methods for each operator Areas under receiver- operating-characteristic curves for diagnosis of coronary artery disease revealed no differences between each modality (p>005). CONCLUSION: In patients at intermediate risk of coronary artery disease, gated SPECT and attenuation-corrected SPECT did not improve diagnostic performance.
Coronary Artery Disease*
;
Coronary Vessels*
;
Diagnosis
;
Humans
;
Perfusion*
;
ROC Curve
;
Sensitivity and Specificity
;
Tomography, Emission-Computed, Single-Photon*
8.Association of Anti-cyclic Citrullinated Peptide (CCP) Antibodies and Functional Status in Rheumatoid Arthritis.
Kyeong Hee KIM ; Sung Won LEE ; Won Tae CHUNG
The Journal of the Korean Rheumatism Association 2006;13(1):46-51
No abstract available.
Antibodies*
;
Arthritis, Rheumatoid*
;
Rheumatoid Factor
9.Optimization of Subtraction Brain Perfusion SPECT with Basal / Acetazolamide Consecutive Acquisition.
Chang Soon KOH ; Myung Chul LEE ; Jung Key CHUNG ; Dong Soo LEE ; Tae Hoon LEE ; Kyeong Min KIM
Korean Journal of Nuclear Medicine 1997;31(3):330-338
This study investigated the method to adjust acquisition time(a) and injection dose(i) to make the best basal and subtraction images in consecutive SPECT. Image quality was assumed to be mainly affected by signal to noise ratio(S/N). Basal image was subtracted from the second image consecutively acquired at the same position. We calculated S/N ratio in basal SPECT images(S1/N1) and subtraction SPECT images(Ss/Ns) to find a(time) and i(dose) to maximize S/N of both images at the same time. From phantom images, we drew the relation of image counts and a(time) and i(dose) in our system using fanbeam-high-resolution collimated triple head SPECT. Noise by imaging process depended on Poisson distribution. We took maximum tolerable duration of consecutive acquisition as 30 minutes and maximum injectible dose as 1,850MBq(50 mCi)(sum of two injections) per study. Counts of second-acquired image(S2), counts(Ss) and noise(Ns) of subtraction SPECT were as follows. C1 was the coefficient of measurement with our system.
Acetazolamide*
;
Brain*
;
Head
;
Noise
;
Perfusion*
;
Signal-To-Noise Ratio
;
Tomography, Emission-Computed, Single-Photon*
10.Comparison of DNA preparation methods from mycobacterium tuberculosis in clinical specimens for polymerase chain reaction.
Kyeong Han YOON ; Tae Yoon LEE ; Sang Nae CHO ; Dook Soon KIM ; Dong Hyun CHUNG ; Joo Deuk KIM
Journal of the Korean Society for Microbiology 1991;26(2):159-166
No abstract available.
DNA*
;
Mycobacterium tuberculosis*
;
Mycobacterium*
;
Polymerase Chain Reaction*