1.An Epidemiologic Study on Hosts and Pathogens of Urinary Tract Infection in Urban Children of Korea (2012–2017)
Yeong Myong YOO ; Byeong Sub PARK ; Shin Young LEE ; Kyu Jung PARK ; Hyun Joo JUNG ; Ki Soo PAI
Childhood Kidney Diseases 2019;23(1):29-35
PURPOSE: We aimed to determine characteristics of host, causative organisms, and antibiotic susceptibility of bacteria in pediatric patients with UTI living in metropolitan area of Korea. METHODS: Retrospective investigation was done for the causative organisms of UTI in 683 pediatric cases treated at Ajou University Hospital from 2012 to 2017. Patients were classified into Escherichia coli and non-E.coli group, where E.coli group was subdivided into ESBL(+) and ESBL(−) groups based on whether the bacteria could produce extended spectrum beta-lactamase (ESBL). Antibiotic susceptibility of the causative organism was also determined. RESULTS: A total of 683 UTIs occurred in 550 patients, of which 463 (67.8%) were first-time infection and 87 (32.2%) were recurrent ones (2–7 recurrences, 2.52 average), and 64.9% were male and 35.1% were female. The most common causative organism was E.coli (77.2%) and ESBL(+) E.coli was found in 126 cases. The susceptibility of E.coli to 3rd or 4th generation cephalosporin was relatively higher than that to ampicillin or amoxicillin/clavulanic acid. ESBL(+) E.coli showed higher resistance rate to 3rd or 4th generation cephalosporin than ESBL(−) E.coli . CONCLUSION: New treatment guideline should be considered due to the incidence of ESBL(+) E.coli increased up to one quarter of UTI cases.
Ampicillin
;
Bacteria
;
beta-Lactamases
;
Child
;
Drug Resistance, Microbial
;
Epidemiologic Studies
;
Escherichia coli
;
Female
;
Humans
;
Incidence
;
Korea
;
Male
;
Recurrence
;
Retrospective Studies
;
Urinary Tract Infections
;
Urinary Tract
2.A Case of Chloroquine-resistant Plasmodium vivax Malaria Imported from Indonesia.
Eun Sil KIM ; Byung Kook NA ; Yun Kyu PARK ; Moon Hyun CHUNG ; Jin Soo LEE ; Seung min CHEON ; Je LEE ; Jeong hun SHIN ; Eun young KIM ; Hyunjoo PAI
Infection and Chemotherapy 2008;40(1):52-57
Resistance of falciparum malaria to antimalarial agents is prevalent in many areas, whereas chloroquine-resistant vivax malaria has been reported mainly around New Guinea since 1989. Concomitant with the spread of chloroquine-resistant P. vivax and increase in number of international travelers, imported cases of chloroquine-resistant vivax malaria in travelers returning from these areas has been reported. We experienced a case of chloroquine resistance P. vivax infection imported from Mangole Island, Indonesia. Its origin is confirmed not to be indigenous by the gene encoding analysis for the polymorphic region of apical membrane antigen-1 in P. vivax. Gene sequencing of the P. vivax mdr1 gene revealed only one substitution located at the codon 1076 (F1076L). The case was managed with oral quinidine with successful outcomes.
Antimalarials
;
Chloroquine
;
Codon
;
Indonesia
;
Malaria
;
Malaria, Vivax
;
Membranes
;
New Guinea
;
Plasmodium
;
Plasmodium vivax
;
Quinidine
3.A Case of Chloroquine-resistant Plasmodium vivax Malaria Imported from Indonesia.
Eun Sil KIM ; Byung Kook NA ; Yun Kyu PARK ; Moon Hyun CHUNG ; Jin Soo LEE ; Seung min CHEON ; Je LEE ; Jeong hun SHIN ; Eun young KIM ; Hyunjoo PAI
Infection and Chemotherapy 2008;40(1):52-57
Resistance of falciparum malaria to antimalarial agents is prevalent in many areas, whereas chloroquine-resistant vivax malaria has been reported mainly around New Guinea since 1989. Concomitant with the spread of chloroquine-resistant P. vivax and increase in number of international travelers, imported cases of chloroquine-resistant vivax malaria in travelers returning from these areas has been reported. We experienced a case of chloroquine resistance P. vivax infection imported from Mangole Island, Indonesia. Its origin is confirmed not to be indigenous by the gene encoding analysis for the polymorphic region of apical membrane antigen-1 in P. vivax. Gene sequencing of the P. vivax mdr1 gene revealed only one substitution located at the codon 1076 (F1076L). The case was managed with oral quinidine with successful outcomes.
Antimalarials
;
Chloroquine
;
Codon
;
Indonesia
;
Malaria
;
Malaria, Vivax
;
Membranes
;
New Guinea
;
Plasmodium
;
Plasmodium vivax
;
Quinidine
4.Patterns of self-harm/suicide attempters who visited emergency department over the past 10 years and changes in poisoning as a major method (2011–2020)
Kyu Hyun PAI ; Sung Woo LEE ; Su Jin KIM ; Kap Su HAN ; Juhyun SONG ; Sijin LEE ; Ji Hwan PARK ; Jeijoon SONG
Journal of The Korean Society of Clinical Toxicology 2023;21(2):69-80
Purpose:
Suicide ranks among the top causes of death among youth in South Korea. This study aimed to identify the characteristics of suicidal individuals treated at emergency departments between 2011 and 2020.
Methods:
A retrospective analysis was conducted using data from January 2011 to December 2020 in the Injury Surveillance Cohort, a prospective registry. Patients’ sex, age, mortality, methods of self-harm, and previous suicide attempts were analyzed. The methods of self-harm were categorized into falls, asphyxiation, blunt injuries, penetrating injuries, poisoning, and others. Sub-groups with and without poisoning were compared.
Results:
The proportion of self-harm/suicide attempts increased from 2.3% (2011) to 5.0% (2020). The mortality rate decreased from 10.8% (2011) to 6.3% (2020). Poisoning was the most common method (61.7%). Mortality rates ranged from 42.0% for asphyxiation to 0.2% for blunt injuries. Individuals in their 20s showed a marked increase in suicide/self-harm attempts, especially in the last three years. A large proportion of decedents in their 70s or older (52.6%) used poisoning as a method of suicide. The percentage of individuals with two or more previous attempts rose from 7.1% (2011) to 19.7% (2020). The death rates by poisoning decreased from 7.7% (2011) to 2.5% (2020).
Conclusion
Our findings underscore the urgent need for targeted interventions and suicide prevention policies. Managing and reducing suicide and self-harm in emergency settings will require a focus on poisoning, the 10–29 age group, and the elderly. This paper will be valuable for future policies aiming to reduce the societal burden of suicide and self-harm.
5.Etiology of Community-Acquired Pneumonia Surveyed by 7 University Hospitals.
Moon Hyun CHUNG ; Wan Shik SHIN ; Yang Ree KIM ; Moon Won KANG ; Min Ja KIM ; Hee Jin JUNG ; Seung Chull PARK ; Hyunjoo PAI ; Hee Jung CHOI ; Hyoung Shik SHIN ; Eui Chong KIM ; Kang Won CHOE ; Sungmin KIM ; Kyong Ran PECK ; Jae Hoon SONG ; Kyungwon LEE ; June Myeong KIM ; Yunsop CHONG ; Seong Woo HAN ; Kyu Man LEE
Korean Journal of Infectious Diseases 1997;29(5):339-359
BACKGROUND: Community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) is one of the leading causes of mortality and morbidity, but its management is still challenging. The limitations of diagnostic methods to identify etiologic agents rapidly make it necessary to use empiric antibiotics in almost all patients, and furthermore the discovery of new respiratory pathogens and the emergence of antibiotic-resistant organisms pose difficulties to the selection of an empiric antibiotic regimen. To clarify the factors necessary for the optimal choice of empirical antibiotics, such as the frequency of etiologic agents, the attributable rates to death and antimicrobial resistance rates in the community, six university hospitals in Seoul and one university hospital in Cheonan were participating in this study. METHODS: Medical records of adults (> 15 years of age) hospitalized for CAP or pulmonary tuberculosis between March 1995 and February 1996, were reviewed. Patients who satisfied all of the following criteria were included in the study: (1) fever or hypothermia; (2) respiratory symptoms; and (3) pulmonary infiltrates on chest roentgenogram. To exclude cases of pulmonary tuberculosis whose roentgenographic features were so typical that it could be easily differentiated from conventional pneumonia, two additional criteria were required for inclusion: antibiotic treatment during the first week of hospital admission and initiation of anti-tuberculosis medications thereafter. Organisms isolated from sterile body sites, acid-fast bacilli or Mycobacterium tuberculosis isolated from sputum, pathogens diagnosed by a 4-fold rising titer to "atypical" pathogens, or pathogens revealed by histopathology were defined as definitive cause of pneumonia; isolates from sputum with compatible Gram stain, pathogens diagnosed by a single diagnostic titer plus use of a specific antimicrobial agent, or tuberculosis diagnosed by clinical response to anti-tuberculosis medications were considered probable cause of pneumonia. The records of the clinical microbiology were reviewed for isolates of S. pneumoniae, H. influenzae, M. catarrhalis, Mycobacterium or acid-fast bacilli, and mycoplasma. Then the frequency of these agents, antimicrobial resistance rates of respiratory pathogens from all body sites, and their clinical significance were evaluated. RESULTS: After excluding 365 patients (230 with pulmonary tuberculosis and 135 with CAP) who were screened for inclusion but did not meet the inclusion criteria, 246 persons were enrolled in this study. Their mean age was 58.2 years old with slight male predominance (58.2%), and 171 (71%) patients had underlying illnesses. Blood cultures were performed on 191 (77.6%) patients and serologic tests on 44 (18.3%) patients. The etiologic agents were identified in 31.3%, and the list of individual agents, in decreasing order, was pulmonary tuberculosis (17 definite and 3 probable: data of six hospitals), S. pneumoniae (8 definite and 10 probable), non-pneumococcal streptococci (3 definite), aerobic gram-negative bacilli (7 definite and 4 probable), Haemophilus spp. (11 probable), mycoplasma (1 definite and 4 probable), polymicrobial infections (2 definite and 2 probable : E. coli and S. agalactiae, M. tuberculosis and S. aureus, S. pneumoniae and H. influenzae, and A. baumannii and K. pneumoniae), S. aureus (2 definite and 2 probable), and mucormycosis (1 definite). Among gram-negative bacilli, K. pneumoniae was the most common agent (8 isolates). The rates of admission to the intensive care unit and of using assisted ventilation were 18% and 9.3% respectively. The mortality was 13.8% and logistic regression analysis showed that hypothermia and tachypnea were associated with death. Hospital stay averaged 19 days. Susceptible rates of S. pneumoniae isolated from all body sites to penicillin ranged from 8% to 28% but all seven isolates from blood of patients with pneumonia were susceptible to penicillin. Also all 8 isolates of K. pneumoniae from patients with pneumonia were susceptible to cefotaxime and gentamicin. CONCLUSION: In Korea, in addition to S. pneumoniae, M. tuberculosis is an important agent causing community-acquired pneumonia. The low incidence of etiologic diagnosis is probably related to infrequent requesting of test to "atypical" pathogens and does not represent the true incidence of infections by "atypical" pathogens, which will be answered by a prospective study. The antimicrobial resistance rates of major respiratory pathogens from sterile body sites are low, however, because of a small number of the isolates this result needs confirmation by a nationwide surveillance of antimicrobial resistance.
Adult
;
Anti-Bacterial Agents
;
Anti-Infective Agents
;
Cefotaxime
;
Chungcheongnam-do
;
Coinfection
;
Diagnosis
;
Fever
;
Gentamicins
;
Haemophilus
;
Hospitals, University*
;
Humans
;
Hypothermia
;
Incidence
;
Influenza, Human
;
Intensive Care Units
;
Korea
;
Length of Stay
;
Logistic Models
;
Male
;
Medical Records
;
Mortality
;
Mucormycosis
;
Mycobacterium
;
Mycobacterium tuberculosis
;
Mycoplasma
;
Penicillins
;
Pneumonia*
;
Prospective Studies
;
Seoul
;
Serologic Tests
;
Sputum
;
Streptococcus pneumoniae
;
Tachypnea
;
Thorax
;
Tuberculosis
;
Tuberculosis, Pulmonary
;
Ventilation