1.Effects of Nutrition Education for Chinese College Students in Korea: Focused on Personalized Daily Energy Requirement and Food Exchange Units.
Jia Li GUO ; Soon Kyung KIM ; Jeong Weon KIM ; Mi Hyun KIM ; Se Na KIM ; Sook Bae KIM
Korean Journal of Community Nutrition 2013;18(6):565-576
The purpose of this study was to investigate the effects of nutrition education on nutrition knowledge, dietary attitude and dietary intake of Chinese college students in Korea. The subjects were 64 Chinese college students in Korea (educated group, 32 students vs. non-educated group, 32 students). Educated group was lessoned as group and/or individual. Nutrition education program consisted of four lessons (40min / lesson), '6 major nutrients & function (group lesson)', '6 food group and sources (group lesson)', 'personalized daily needed energy and food exchange units using Food Exchange System (individual lesson)', and 'smart choice of snacks and eating-out foods (group lesson)'. We examined the differences between educated group and non-educated group in nutrition knowledge, dietary attitudes and nutrients intake. After education, there were positive improvements on nutrition knowledge: 'function and foods of 6 nutrients', on dietary attitudes: 'type of breakfast' in educated group. In the evaluation of nutrient intakes according to Dietary Reference Intakes for Korean (KDRI), there were positive improvements on intake levels of riboflavin, fiber, vitamin B6, vitamin C, folate, Ca and K in the educated group. In the index of nutrition quality (INQ), nutrition adequacy ratio (NAR) and mean nutrition adequacy ratio (MAR) were significantly increased in the educated group. In conclusion, it is possible to improve nutrition knowledge, dietary attitude and dietary intake of Chinese college students in Korea through the nutrition education focused on personalized daily needed energy and food exchange units.
Ascorbic Acid
;
Asian Continental Ancestry Group*
;
Education*
;
Folic Acid
;
Humans
;
Korea*
;
Riboflavin
;
Snacks
;
Vitamin B 6
2.A Study on the Prevalence and Associated Factors of Falls in Some Rural Elderly.
Nam Gu LIM ; Kyu Beom SHIM ; Yong Beom KIM ; Ju Li PARK ; Eun Young KIM ; Baek Ju NA ; Dae Kyeong KIM ; Moo Skik LEE
Journal of the Korean Geriatrics Society 2002;6(3):183-196
BACKGROUNDS: It is to find out ins and outs of falls, and then to study risky factors that are preventable. METHODS: Total 260 elderly people living in Nonsan who are 60 years old and over were analyzed for data. Stereotyped of those are populational, social specific, physical functions, and basis diseases. And concerning falls, it was analyzed if they have had experience of up to 5 times within 3 years recently. RESULTS: The analyzed are total 260 people, men 112(43%), and women 148(57%). And the ones who answered they have had experience of falls are 108(41.6%), men 31(28.7%), and women 77(71.3%), showing a distinguishable difference between two groups. Women have had more experience than men have(p<0.001), and according to their age, the average age of those experienced falls showed to be higher than the one of those who have not(p=0.036). And according to their education, the ones who did not go to any schools have had more experience than those who did, showing the education has something to do with falls(p<0.001). The mean mass index(p=0.043) and average weight(p=0.023) also showed a mere difference between the group of the people who have had experience and the one of those who have not. Taking into account the fact that there were more women in the group who have had experienced falls, it is shown that there is nothing practical to pay attention to. In Activity of Daily Living(ADL) the experienced is 10.8(+/-4.2), and the unexperienced 9.1(+/-3.1), showing a mere difference between two groups(p<0.000). Concerning chronic diseases, there was no difference between those two groups, but individual patient histories showed that the experienced group had less rheumatic trouble than the unexpedenced(p=0.033). Looking at the difference of the causes for the falls according to their gender, the range of their movements(p=0.043), illumination(p=0.012), influence of alcoho1(p=0.001), and the shoes when they were falling down(p<0.001), the first aid treatments after falls(p=0.014), and influence of medications(p<0.001) showed a mere difference between men and women, while did not show any difference in seasons, time of falls, places, and the descriptions of the surfaces of the places. The mean number of falls within recent 3 years of the experienced was 1.79 times, and the comparison of the relation between the frequency and the causes of falls was done between the ones with experience of I fall, and the ones with experience of more twice falls. The average height(p=0.046) was much higher thai those with experience of more than 2 falls. There was also a mere difference between two groups in movements(p=0.009), illumination(p=0.005), influence of alcohol(p=0.003), the shoes (p=0.048), and first aid treatments after falls(p<0.001). CONCLUSION: The group with higher risk rate includes women, age, poor education, skinny physical figures, and lack of ability to act in daily life. Therefore, those results should be considered when a preventive program of falls for elderly people is designed.
Aged*
;
Asian Continental Ancestry Group
;
Chronic Disease
;
Chungcheongnam-do
;
Education
;
Female
;
First Aid
;
Humans
;
Male
;
Middle Aged
;
Prevalence*
;
Seasons
;
Shoes
3.Correlation Analysis of Tear Film Lipid Layer Thickness and Ocular Surface Disease Index.
Rae Young KIM ; Kyung Sun NA ; Yu Li PARK ; Hyun Seung KIM
Journal of the Korean Ophthalmological Society 2017;58(7):788-796
PURPOSE: To analyze the relationship between ocular surface disease index and tear film lipid layer thickness (LLT) using a LipiView II® (LipiView® Ocular Surface Interferometer, TearScience®, Morrisville, NC, USA) interferometer. METHODS: Forty-nine patients diagnosed with dry eye syndrome were recruited for this prospective study. Patients completed ocular surface disease index questionnaires. We performed slit lamp examination, Schirmer test, corneal and conjunctival fluorescein staining, measured tear film break-up time, and graded meibomian gland dysfunction. Tear LLT, blinking time, and dynamic meibomian imaging were analyzed using a LipiView II® ocular interferometer. To control for missing data, we analyzed four sets of imputated data via the multiple imputation method and performed Pearson correlation analysis. Patients were assigned to one of two LLT categories (LLT < 60 or LLT ≥ 60) and Chi-square test was performed. RESULTS: Among ocular surface disease parameters, tear film break-up time (tBUT) had a statistically significant correlation with average and maximum LLT (average LLT; p = 0.008, 0.035, 0.006, 0.049, maximum LLT; p = 0.006, 0.042, 0.020, 0.049, Pearson correlation analysis with multiple imputation) but there was no significant correlation with minimum LLT (minimum LLT; p = 0.048, 0.090, 0.079, 0.039). Of the patients with a relatively thick average LLT or maximum LLT (LLT ≥ 60 nm), 80% and 88% had a tBUT < 10, respectively. Conversely, 39% and 47% of patients with relatively thin average LLT (LLT < 60 nm) had a tBUT < 10 (average LLT; p = 0.013, maximum LLT; p = 0.039). CONCLUSIONS: Average LLT and maximum LLT were significantly correlated with tBUT. Patients with a relatively thin average or maximum LLT tended to have a shorter tBUT. Based on these results, measuring tear film LLT using a LipiView II® interferometer may be useful in the diagnosis and follow-up of patients with evaporative dry eye.
Blinking
;
Diagnosis
;
Dry Eye Syndromes
;
Fluorescein
;
Follow-Up Studies
;
Humans
;
Interferometry
;
Meibomian Glands
;
Methods
;
Prospective Studies
;
Slit Lamp
;
Tears*
4.The Effect of Glenohumeral Internal Rotation Deficit on the Isokinetic Strength, Pain, and Quality of Life in Male High School Baseball Players.
Jinyoung LEE ; Li Na KIM ; Hongsun SONG ; Sunghwan KIM ; Seungseok WOO
Annals of Rehabilitation Medicine 2015;39(2):183-190
OBJECTIVE: To investigate the effects of glenohumeral internal rotation deficit (GIRD) on the isokinetic strength, body pain, and the quality of life in male high school baseball players of Korea. METHODS: Fifty-six male high school baseball players were divided into either group A (GIRD> or =20degrees, n=12) or group B (GIRD<20degrees, n=44). The range of motion in the shoulder and the isokinetic strength were measured. Questionnaires were administered regarding the body pain location by using the visual analogue scale, and the quality of life was measured by using the SF-36 Form. RESULTS: All subjects had increased external rotation range of motion and decreased internal rotation in the throwing shoulder. The incidence of GIRD (> or =20degrees) was 21.43% in the present study. In the isokinetic strength test, a significantly weaker muscular state at an angular velocity of 180degrees/s was observed in group A, compared to group B. For the comparison of the pain, the frequency of shoulder pain was higher (33.93%) than other body pain, among the study subjects. CONCLUSION: GIRD is one of the main risk factors of glenohumeral joint damage, and it is correlated with reduced isokinetic strength and quality of life. High school baseball players will need appropriate shoulder rehabilitation programs for the improvement in their quality of life and performance.
Baseball*
;
Humans
;
Incidence
;
Korea
;
Male
;
Quality of Life*
;
Range of Motion, Articular
;
Rehabilitation
;
Risk Factors
;
Shoulder
;
Shoulder Joint
;
Shoulder Pain
;
Surveys and Questionnaires
5.Comparison of Blueberry (Vaccinium spp.) and Vitamin C via Antioxidative and Epigenetic Effects in Human.
Minju KIM ; Hyunkyung NA ; Hiroshi KASAI ; Kazuaki KAWAI ; Yun Shan LI ; Mihi YANG
Journal of Cancer Prevention 2017;22(3):174-181
BACKGROUND: Chemopreventive effects and the underlying mechanisms of blueberry (Vaccinium spp.) are not clearly understood in human. We hypothesized blueberry would work via antioxidative and epigenetic modulation, which is similar to vitamin C. METHODS: We performed a pilot and non-inferiority study in healthy young women (n = 12), who consumed vitamin C (1 g/d) or 240 mL of blueberry juice (total polyphenols 300 mg and proanthocyanidin 76 mg/d) for 2 weeks. We analyzed 8-hydroxydeoxyguanosine (8-OHdG) and malondialdehyde (MDA) levels in their urine, and global and specific DNA methylation at the NAD(P)H quinone oxidoreductase 1 (NQO1), methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase (MTHFR), or DNA methyltransferase 1 (DNMT1) genes in their blood. RESULTS: Urinary 8-OHdG levels were reduced by blueberry consumption rather than by vitamin C. The methylation (%) of the MTHFR was significantly decreased in blueberry-consumers and the antioxidant-susceptible subgroup, whose urinary MDA levels were decreased by the intervention. We also found a positive correlation between changes of urinary 8-OHdG and of DNA methylation at the MTHFR or the DNMT1 (P < 0.05). However, the genetic polymorphism of the MTHFR (C677T in exon 4) did not affect any above markers. CONCLUSIONS: Blueberry juice shows similar anti-oxidative or anti-premutagenic activity to vitamin C and the potential as a methylation inhibitor for the MTHFR and the DNMT1 in human.
Ascorbic Acid*
;
Blueberry Plant*
;
DNA
;
DNA Methylation
;
Epigenomics*
;
Exons
;
Female
;
Humans*
;
Malondialdehyde
;
Methylation
;
Methylenetetrahydrofolate Reductase (NADPH2)
;
Oxidative Stress
;
Polymorphism, Genetic
;
Polyphenols
;
Vitamins*
6.Inhibitory Effect of a Sesquiterpene from Artemisia iwayomogi on Expression of Inducible Nitric Oxide Synthase by Suppression of I-κBα Degradation in LPS-stimulated RAW 264.7 Cells.
Na Yeon KIM ; Hye Jin KOH ; Hua LI ; Hwa Jin LEE ; Jae Ha RYU
Natural Product Sciences 2017;23(2):92-96
A sesquiterpene was purified from Artemisia iwayomogi methanolic extract during the course of searching anti-inflammatory principle from medicinal plants. A sesquiterpene identified as armefolin inhibited the production of nitric oxide (NO) and attenuated inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) protein level in lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-activated RAW 264.7 cells. Armefolin also down-regulated mRNA expressions of iNOS and pro-inflammatory cytokines, interleukin-1β and interleukin-6 in LPS-activated macrophages. Moreover, armefolin suppressed the degradation of inhibitory-κBα (I-κBα) in LPS-activated macrophages. These data suggest that armefolin from A. iwayomogi can suppress the LPS-induced production of NO and the expression of iNOS gene through inhibiting the degradation of I-κBα. Taken together, armefolin from A. iwayomogi might be a candidate as promising anti-inflammatory agent.
Artemisia*
;
Cytokines
;
Interleukin-6
;
Macrophages
;
Methanol
;
Nitric Oxide
;
Nitric Oxide Synthase Type II*
;
Plants, Medicinal
;
RAW 264.7 Cells*
;
RNA, Messenger
7.Influence of Reflex Sympathetic Dystrophy on Functional Outcomes of the Upper Extremity in Stroke Patients.
Hee Kyu KWON ; Sang Ryong LEE ; Dae Won YOON ; Li Na KIM ; Su Han CHAE ; Hang Jae LEE
Journal of the Korean Academy of Rehabilitation Medicine 2003;27(4):480-484
OBJECTIVE: To assess the influence of reflex sympathetic dystrophy (RSD) on functional status and recovery of the hemiplegic upper extremity in stroke patients. METHOD: Retrospective chart review was performed in 561 patients. Among 561 stroke patients, 116 subjects were recruited and classified into two groups: patient group, 43 cases with RSD; control group, 73 cases without RSD. Upper extremity function was assessed based on feeding, dressing and personal hygiene scores of the modified Barthel index at the beginning of rehabilitation treatment and at the time of discharge. Causes of stroke and length of stay were recorded. Median nerve-somatosensory evoked potential studies were performed and assessed. RESULTS: The incidence of RSD was 7.7% and the time to development of RSD was 62.3+/-34.1 days after the onset of stroke. There was no significant difference in functional status between two groups at initial and final evaluation. The upper extremity function had improved in both groups although the length of stay was longer in patient group. SSEP abnormalities were more frequent in the patient group. CONCLUSION: The presence of well-managed RSD affected neither the functional status nor the functional recovery of upper extremity in stroke patients.
Bandages
;
Evoked Potentials
;
Evoked Potentials, Somatosensory
;
Humans
;
Hygiene
;
Incidence
;
Length of Stay
;
Reflex Sympathetic Dystrophy*
;
Reflex*
;
Rehabilitation
;
Retrospective Studies
;
Stroke*
;
Upper Extremity*
8.Comparison of Short-term Clinical Outcomes between Scleral Fixation vs. Iris Fixation of Dislocated IOL.
Youlim LEE ; Min Ho KIM ; Yu Li PARK ; Kyung Sun NA ; Hyun Seung KIM
Journal of the Korean Ophthalmological Society 2017;58(10):1131-1137
PURPOSE: To compare clinical outcomes between iris fixation and scleral fixation as treatments for dislocated Intra Ocular Lens. METHODS: Ten eyes of 10 patients underwent scleral fixation (scleral fixation group) and 8 eyes of 8 patients underwent iris fixation (iris fixation group) were enrolled in this retrospective study. In each group, visual acuity and intra ocular pressure, slit lamp examination, fundus examination, refraction, keratometry, axial length and anterior chamber depth were measured before the surgery. Regular follow up was made 1 day, 1 week, 1 month, and 2 months after surgery and visual acuity, intra ocular pressure, slit lamp exam, refractory error, anterior chamber depth, intraocular lens (IOL) tilting, and decentration were measured at each visit. RESULTS: There were no significant differences in uncorrected visual acuity (UCVA), best corrected visual acuity (BCVA), and refractive error for patients with iris and scleral fixation before and after surgery. Patients with iris fixation had significantly deeper anterior chamber depth (ACD) and more IOL tilting than patients with scleral fixation. CONCLUSIONS: In this study, the iris fixation group tended to have more IOL tilting and deepening of anterior chamber depth than the scleral fixation group. We can use this information to choose the appropriate surgical method for dislocated IOL and to select of new IOL.
Anterior Chamber
;
Cataract
;
Follow-Up Studies
;
Humans
;
Iris*
;
Lenses, Intraocular
;
Methods
;
Refractive Errors
;
Retrospective Studies
;
Slit Lamp
;
Visual Acuity
9.Comparison of Short-term Clinical Outcomes between Scleral Fixation vs. Iris Fixation of Dislocated IOL.
Youlim LEE ; Min Ho KIM ; Yu Li PARK ; Kyung Sun NA ; Hyun Seung KIM
Journal of the Korean Ophthalmological Society 2017;58(10):1131-1137
PURPOSE: To compare clinical outcomes between iris fixation and scleral fixation as treatments for dislocated Intra Ocular Lens. METHODS: Ten eyes of 10 patients underwent scleral fixation (scleral fixation group) and 8 eyes of 8 patients underwent iris fixation (iris fixation group) were enrolled in this retrospective study. In each group, visual acuity and intra ocular pressure, slit lamp examination, fundus examination, refraction, keratometry, axial length and anterior chamber depth were measured before the surgery. Regular follow up was made 1 day, 1 week, 1 month, and 2 months after surgery and visual acuity, intra ocular pressure, slit lamp exam, refractory error, anterior chamber depth, intraocular lens (IOL) tilting, and decentration were measured at each visit. RESULTS: There were no significant differences in uncorrected visual acuity (UCVA), best corrected visual acuity (BCVA), and refractive error for patients with iris and scleral fixation before and after surgery. Patients with iris fixation had significantly deeper anterior chamber depth (ACD) and more IOL tilting than patients with scleral fixation. CONCLUSIONS: In this study, the iris fixation group tended to have more IOL tilting and deepening of anterior chamber depth than the scleral fixation group. We can use this information to choose the appropriate surgical method for dislocated IOL and to select of new IOL.
Anterior Chamber
;
Cataract
;
Follow-Up Studies
;
Humans
;
Iris*
;
Lenses, Intraocular
;
Methods
;
Refractive Errors
;
Retrospective Studies
;
Slit Lamp
;
Visual Acuity
10.Successful removal of a foreign body by endoscopic balloon dilatation at the colonic stricture.
Chang Jo IM ; Ji Hoon NA ; Hyun Sik KIM ; Sung Sam HA ; Yoo Li LIM ; Ji Hyeon LEE ; Hee Kyoung CHOI ; Hee Man KIM
Yeungnam University Journal of Medicine 2016;33(1):29-32
Most ingested foreign bodies pass readily throughout intestinal tract if they reach the stomach. In some cases, foreign bodies may be impacted behind a luminal constriction but are rare in colon. Here, we report the case of a 59-year-old man who did laparoscopic anterior resection due to sigmoid colon cancer 2 years ago and ischemic colitis was repeated on the anastomosis site. He initially presented with symptoms of abdominal pain 3 months before and melena 1 day before admission. Abdomen computerized tomography showed a 3.2 cm segment of luminal narrowing of the proximal colon involving upstream foreign material stasis. Sigmoidoscopic approaches revealed near complete obstruction on the anal verge of 20 cm and scope passing failed. Balloon dilatations were done on the obstruction site four times all and a foreign body impacted above the obstruction site was removed by an alligator without any complications. The foreign body removed looks like plastic or a shell, about 20 mm in size.
Abdomen
;
Abdominal Pain
;
Alligators and Crocodiles
;
Colitis, Ischemic
;
Colon*
;
Constriction
;
Constriction, Pathologic*
;
Dilatation*
;
Foreign Bodies*
;
Humans
;
Melena
;
Middle Aged
;
Phenobarbital
;
Plastics
;
Sigmoid Neoplasms
;
Stomach