1.Factors Influencing Children's Immunization.
Eun Shil YIM ; Kyung Ja LEE ; Eui Young CHEON ; Mi Ran LIM
Journal of Korean Academy of Community Health Nursing 2006;17(2):283-294
No abstract available.
Child
;
Health Promotion
;
Humans
;
Immunization*
;
Child Health
2.Expression and use of Truncated Recombimnant Flagellin Protein ( FlaB ) in ELISA for Diagnosis of Leptospirosis.
Cheon Kwon YOO ; Myo Ah PAIK ; Hae Kyung LEE ; Man Suck PARK ; Mi Yeoun PARK
Journal of the Korean Society for Microbiology 2000;35(5):365-365
No Abstract Available.
Diagnosis*
;
Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay*
;
Flagellin*
;
Leptospirosis*
3.Tourniquet-induced Tibial Nerve Palsy Complicating Partial Lateral Meniscectomy: A case report.
Kyung Seok CHEON ; Yong Mi AN ; Cheon Hee PARK ; Jeong Lyul KIM
Korean Journal of Anesthesiology 2008;54(1):81-83
We report a case of tibial nerve palsy after pneumatic tourniquet application for 40 minutes with a tourniquet pressure of 300 mmHg. A 45 years old woman with morbid obesity and diabetes mellitus was underwent partial lateral meniscectomy of left knee. Even 3 months after the event, nerve palsy was not completely recovered. The case underscores the necessity of being aware of the potential for complications associated with tourniquets, despite following recommended guidelines of tourniquet time and pressure. Especially, in the patients with metabolic diseases such as diabetes mellites or obesity, safe duration of tourniquet application may be shortened.
Diabetes Mellitus
;
Female
;
Humans
;
Knee
;
Metabolic Diseases
;
Obesity
;
Obesity, Morbid
;
Paralysis
;
Tibial Nerve
;
Tourniquets
4.Nursing Students' Perceptions on Diet and as Environmental Factors Related to Cancer Risk Factors.
Hae Kyung LEE ; Seong Joo CHEON ; Mi Hye HWANG ; Soon Rim SUH
Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing 1998;28(1):193-200
The purpose of this study was to identify how students majoring in nursing perceive cause of cancers and the effects of diet for preventing cancers. Data for the study were collected by 651 nursing students, who were registered in the second and third year in three technical colleges and third and fourth year in two universities. The research instruments included items on general characteristics of subjects, items about the degree of perception of the frequency of cancer onset and items on the perception of mortality, risk factors, preventive diets, knowledge, and high risk factor for cancer in specific body areas. The findings of this study are as follows : 1. Almost all subjects(92.8%) reported that the frequency of cancer onset increases and that it is 93.9% for people over 40. Degree of perception about cancer mortality was low at 33.0%. 2. As far as the perception of risk factors for cancer onset was concerned, smoking, stress, heredity, family history, and alcohol were rated high, over 80.0%. Risk factor in clouding, virus, hormones, pesticides were rated as low. 3. As to the perception of risk factor for body area as associated with diet salted and scorched food were rated at 44.5% for stomach cancer, alcohol, 50.4% for liver cancer, smoking, 72.8% for lung cancer, pregnancy times, 25.3%, and marriage age, 23.0% for uterine cancer, and no delivery experience, 40% for breast cancer. 4. The knowledge score for cancer was between 12 and 36, with a mean score of 26.75(SD=4.13). There was a statistically significant difference between experience in caring for cancer patients during clinical practice and knowledge score(t=3.09, p=.002).
Breast Neoplasms
;
Diet*
;
Heredity
;
Humans
;
Liver Neoplasms
;
Lung Neoplasms
;
Marriage
;
Mortality
;
Nursing*
;
Pesticides
;
Pregnancy
;
Risk Factors*
;
Smoke
;
Smoking
;
Stomach Neoplasms
;
Students, Nursing
;
Uterine Neoplasms
5.A Survey on the Factors of Breast Feeding Failure Related to the Role of Medical Personnels.
Min Jung CHO ; Cheong Mi CHEON ; Jeong Kyung SEO ; Son Moon SHIN
Journal of the Korean Pediatric Society 2001;44(4):389-396
PURPOSE: The reasons for breast feeding failure within the first month of birth were related to inappropriate handling of problems in breast feeding. We investigated common reasons for the failure during the neonatal period and assessed medical personnels' attempts to solve them. METHODS: We conducted a survey with a prepared questionnaire on one-hundred-twenty mothers who failed in breast feeding within the first month after delivery. They were selected among those who brought their infants to local private clinics or general hospitals in Taegu from July to August 1999. RESULTS: The breast feeding rate at the starting time of feeding after delivery was significantly higher in the infants who were born at local clinics than general hospitals(52.7% vs 31.8%, P< 0.05), and higher with rooming-in service than routine nursery care(62.1% vs 31.8%, P<0.05). Most with routine nursery care(79.7%) had to feed breast milk at the appointed time. As a consequence, hospital policy was inconvenient for breast feeding. 51.7 per cent of the responders did not even try breast feeding until discharge from hospitals. Information about breast feeding were obtained mainly from their mothers' advice(39.3%). And it was only 7.7 per cent of the responders who obtained information from physicians. The common reasons for breast feeding failure within the first month were insufficient secretion of milk(36.7%), looser stool(16.7%), and inverted nipple(15%), which could have been solved with adequate support and advice from medical personnel. CONCLUSION: To increase the breast feeding rate, medical personnel should actively recommend breast feeding as early as possible after delivery, should educate mothers on the problems that may arise during breast feeding, and should make the hospital environment more convenient for breast feeding.
Breast Feeding*
;
Breast*
;
Daegu
;
Hospitals, General
;
Humans
;
Infant
;
Milk, Human
;
Mothers
;
Nurseries
;
Parturition
;
Surveys and Questionnaires
6.A Case of Mercury Intoxication Presenting Cerebellar Ataxia.
Hak Young RHEE ; Mi Sook LEE ; Sung Sang YOON ; Te Gyu LEE ; Dae Il CHANG ; Kyung Cheon CHUNG
Journal of the Korean Neurological Association 2002;20(4):425-427
Mercury poisoning affects various organs including peripheral and central nervous systems, especially cerebellum. We report a case of mercury intoxication presenting cerebellar ataxia. From several days after exposure to mercury vapor, scanning speech, head titubation, bilateral limb and truncal ataxia developed and progressed slowly. On admission, brain MRI did not show remarkable change. However, nine months later, atrophic changes in both cerebellar hemispheres on follow-up brain MRI and perfusion defects in same areas on brain SPECT were found.
Ataxia
;
Brain
;
Central Nervous System
;
Cerebellar Ataxia*
;
Cerebellum
;
Extremities
;
Follow-Up Studies
;
Head
;
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
;
Mercury Poisoning
;
Perfusion
;
Poisoning
;
Tomography, Emission-Computed, Single-Photon
7.Profound Hypotension after an Intradermal Injection of Indigo Carmine for Sentinel Node Mapping.
Youn Yi JO ; Mi Geum LEE ; Soon Young YUN ; Kyung Cheon LEE
Journal of Breast Cancer 2013;16(1):127-128
Intradermal injections of indigo carmine for sentinel node mapping are considered safe and no report of an adverse reaction has been published. The authors described two cases of profound hypotension in women that underwent breast-conserving surgery after an intradermal injection of indigo carmine into the periareolar area for sentinel node mapping.
Breast Neoplasms
;
Female
;
Humans
;
Hypotension
;
Indigo Carmine
;
Indoles
;
Injections, Intradermal
;
Mastectomy, Segmental
;
Nitriles
;
Pyrethrins
;
Sentinel Lymph Node Biopsy
8.Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha Levels and Promoter Polymorphism in Patients with Kawasaki Disease in Korea.
Sun Young AHN ; Gwang Cheon JANG ; Jeon Soo SHIN ; Kyung Mi SHIN ; Dong Soo KIM
Yonsei Medical Journal 2003;44(6):1021-1026
Tumor necrosis factor (TNF) -alpha plays a major role in the pathogenesis of Kawasaki disease (KD), a systemic vasculitis primarily affecting young children. We performed this study to examine the serum levels of TNF-alpha and to investigate a possible relation to promoter polymorphism at positions -238 and -308 in KD patients in Korea. We obtained 48 paired serum samples from 24 patients in the acute and subacute stages of KD, and control sera from 12 age-matched children who were having routine blood samples taken before elective surgical procedures. Our studies showed a significant increase in serum levels of TNF-alpha measured in the acute stage of KD (24.1+/-9.4 pg/mL) compared to those in the subacute stage (11.8+/-5.8 pg/mL; p < 0.01) and normal controls (10.4+/-4.9 pg/mL; p < 0.01). Previous studies report that the presence of the A allele at positions -308 and -238 may be associated with higher TNF-alpha levels. However, our results showed that the frequency of the A allele at position -308 in the KD patients was the same as the controls (2 out of 24, 8.3% vs. 8.3%, odds ratio (OR) = 1.00), while the frequency of the A allele at position -238 in the KD patients was lower than the controls (0/24, 0% vs. 8.3%, OR=0.00) ; this difference though was not statistically significant. We concluded that although TNF-alpha levels were significantly elevated in the acute stage of KD, there was no significant difference in the frequency of the A allele at positions -238 and -308 between the KD and control groups in Korean patients.
Case-Control Studies
;
Child, Preschool
;
Human
;
Korea
;
Mucocutaneous Lymph Node Syndrome/*blood/*genetics
;
*Polymorphism (Genetics)
;
Promoter Regions (Genetics) /*genetics
;
Tumor Necrosis Factor/*genetics/*metabolism
9.The Usefulness of Critical Pathway in Laparoscopic Cholecystectomy.
Jae Uk CHONG ; Jung Bum CHOI ; Mi Ae SEO ; Su Ji LEE ; Ja Hye CHEON ; Kyung Sik KIM
Journal of Minimally Invasive Surgery 2016;19(2):57-62
PURPOSE: Under the rising demand of health services, the critical pathway (CP) which standardizes the practice guideline was introduced as a means to provide quality healthcare service. CP may increase the patient's satisfaction rate by providing systematic and consistent service. We aimed to evaluate the significance of CP by development and application of CP to patients undergoing laparoscopic cholecystectomy. METHODS: From June 2010 to July 2011, 148 patients underwent elective laparoscopic cholecystectomy. Patients were divided into two groups, including 57 patients in the CP group and 91 patients in the non-CP group. In a retrospective review, related hospital costs were analyzed and compared for both groups. Survey results on satisfaction for the CP group were also analyzed. RESULTS: The mean age was 22.7 years in the CP group and 37.9 years in the non-CP group. Number of hospitalized days was one day for the CP group and 2.51 days for the Non-CP group with p<0.001. In cost analysis all variables showed a significant reduction in the CP group compared to the Non-CP group. The satisfaction rate in the CP group scored 8 points out of 10. CONCLUSION: Results have shown benefit from the financial point of the view for the CP group. Current inclusion criteria for CP are limited and still in development for a solid protocol. Further efforts with a large-scale comparative study to broaden the indication for CP are desired.
Cholecystectomy
;
Cholecystectomy, Laparoscopic*
;
Costs and Cost Analysis
;
Critical Pathways*
;
Delivery of Health Care
;
Health Services
;
Hospital Costs
;
Humans
;
Retrospective Studies
10.A Treatment of Facial Blushing with Beta Blockade and Antianxiety Drug: A report of two cases.
Jin Cheon MOON ; Seung Ho CHOI ; Kyung Bong YOON ; Won Oak KIM ; Duck Mi YOON
The Korean Journal of Pain 2005;18(2):259-262
Facial blushing is a personally disabling condition, which can result in emotional disturbance and be an impediment to social life. Although numerous treatment options exist, including beta blocker, cognitive behavioral therapy and sympathetic neurolysis, no generally accepted form of treatment has been established. Herein, we report two cases of successful reduction of facial blushing following the administration of beta blocker and a minor tranquillizing antianxiety drug.
Affective Symptoms
;
Blushing*
;
Cognitive Therapy
;
Humans