1.Inhibitory Effect of Calcium Currents by Clonidine and Tetracaine in Rat Dorsal Root Ganglion Neurons.
Sung Min HAN ; Jong Uk KIM ; Jeong Gill LEEM ; In Cheol CHOI
Korean Journal of Anesthesiology 1997;32(3):329-335
No abstract available.
Animals
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Calcium*
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Clonidine*
;
Ganglia, Spinal*
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Rats*
;
Spinal Nerve Roots*
;
Tetracaine*
2.A Case Report of Cobb's Syndrome.
Eun Woo LEE ; Jeong Su LEEM ; Min Kyun SOHN ; Bong Ok KIM
Journal of the Korean Academy of Rehabilitation Medicine 1998;22(4):989-993
Cobb's syndrome, or cutaneomeningospinal angiomatosis, is a combination of the vascular skin nevus and angioma in the spinal cord within a corresponding segment or two to the dermatoms involved. A 15 year old girl showed the portwine nevus at T2-T11 dermatomes and multilevel spinal angioma at C7-L3 levels. She had suffered from a slowly progressive weakness of both lower extremities. Motor weakness of lower extremities improved after the combined rehabilitation management and radiation therapy for 4 months. We report the typical manifestations of Cobb's syndrome in a 15 year old girl with the brief review of literatures.
Adolescent
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Angiomatosis
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Female
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Hemangioma
;
Humans
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Lower Extremity
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Nevus
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Rehabilitation
;
Skin
;
Spinal Cord
3.Motor Unit Number Estimation in Thenar Muscles of the Hemiplegic Patients.
Min Kyun SOHN ; Jeong Su LEEM ; Bong Ok KIM
Journal of the Korean Academy of Rehabilitation Medicine 1998;22(2):392-398
Motor unit number estimation(MUNE) was performed in the thenar muscles of 22 hemiplegic patients without a peripheral nerve lesion using the statistical method. The studies were done bilaterally in the affected and unaffected sides. The distal latency and conduction velocity of median nerve in the affected side were not different from those in the unaffected side. But the amplitude and area of the compound muscle action potential in the affected side were smaller than those in the unaffected side. Motor unit numbers in the affected side decreased than those of the unaffected side, especially in the first 6 months after the onset of hemiplegia. And the motor unit numbers in the affected side decreased as the muscle strength decreased. Single motor unit potential(SMUP) area in the affected side increased after 1 year from the onset of hemiplegia. The estimation of the number of motor units in the thenar muscles of hemiplegic patients could be an indicator for predicting recovery of the muscle power in hemiplegia.
Action Potentials
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Hemiplegia
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Humans
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Median Nerve
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Muscle Strength
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Muscles*
;
Peripheral Nerves
4.The Clinical and Electrophysiological Study of the Suprascapular Nerve Palsy.
Min Kyun SOHN ; Seung Ho YUNE ; Jeong Su LEEM
Journal of the Korean Academy of Rehabilitation Medicine 1997;21(2):362-367
The medical records of twenty-one patients with suprascapular nerve palsy were reviewed retrospectively. Nine patients had isolated suprascapular nerve lesions and twelve patients accompanied axillary nerve lesions. In trauma cases, combined nerve lesions were common and severe. In three cases isolated suprascapular nerve lesions were noted spontaneously. Isolated infraspinatus muscle lesions were noted in four cases which were due to compressions of suprascapular nerves at the spinoglenoid notch, and in one case from ganglionic cyst was diagnosed by ultrasonography. At initial examination, three patients showed complete and eighteen patients showed incomplete lesion. Eight patients with incomplete lesion and one patient with complete lesion were followed up. Seven patients with incomplete lesion showed regeneration between 1-7 months after injury. Therefore electrodiagnostic study is necessary to evaluate severity and level of nerve lesion and regeneration.
Ganglion Cysts
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Humans
;
Medical Records
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Paralysis*
;
Regeneration
;
Retrospective Studies
;
Ultrasonography
5.The Effect of Intrathecal Bupivacaine with Hypothermia on Neuronal Protection against Transient Spinal Cord Ischemia in Rats.
Jeong Rak LEE ; Jeong Gil LEEM ; Seung Jun HWANG ; Dong Min JANG ; Jung Won KIM
Korean Journal of Anesthesiology 2006;51(2):207-215
BACKGROUND: Local anesthetics can reduece excitotoxic neuronal injury from ischemia. We investigated neuroprotective effects of intrathecally administered bupivacaine and hypothermia in rat model of transient spinal cord ischemia. METHODS: A PE-10 intrathecal catheter was implanted into thirty six male Sprague-Dawley rats through L4-5 interlaminar space. Animals of normothermia (N) and hypothermia (H) groups were administered 15microliter of normal saline, and 15microliter of 0.5% bupivacaine for bupivacaine (B) and bupivacaine-hypothermia (BH) groups. Transient spinal cord ischemia was induced by inflation of a 2 F Fogarty catheter placed into aortic arch for 12 minutes. During ischemia, rectal temperature was maintained to 37.0+/-0.5 degrees C for N and B groups, 34.5 +/- 0.5degrees C for H and BH groups. Motor and sensory deficit score were assessed 2 and 24 hour after reperfusion. Lumbar spinal cords were harvested for histopathology, and for immunoreactivity of heat shock protein 70 (HSP70). RESULTS: The motor and sensory deficit score of N and B group was significantly higher than H group (P < 0.05) and BH group (P < 0.05). There were also significant difference in the motor and sensory deficit score between H and BH group at 24 hr (P < 0.05). Neuronal cell death and immunoreactivity of HSP70 was frequently observed in the N and B groups, but not in the H and BH groups. CONCLUSIONS: These results suggest that intrathecal bupivacaine did not provide neuroprotection during normothermic transient spinal cord ischemia in rats, but it can enhance neuroprotective effects of hypothermia.
Anesthetics, Local
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Animals
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Aorta, Thoracic
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Bupivacaine*
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Catheters
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Cell Death
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HSP70 Heat-Shock Proteins
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Humans
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Hypothermia*
;
Inflation, Economic
;
Ischemia
;
Male
;
Models, Animal
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Neurons*
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Neuroprotective Agents
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Rats*
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Rats, Sprague-Dawley
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Reperfusion
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Spinal Cord Ischemia*
;
Spinal Cord*
6.Comparison of the Spinal Neuropathic Pain Induced by Intraspinal Injection of N-Methyl-D-Aspartate and Quisquate in Rats.
Seong Soo CHOI ; Kyung Don HAHM ; Hong Gi MIN ; Jeong Gil LEEM
Journal of Korean Neurosurgical Society 2011;50(5):420-425
OBJECTIVE: Excitatory amino acids play important roles in the development of secondary pathology following spinal cord injury (SCI). This study was designed to evaluate morphological changes in the dorsal horn of the spinal cord and assess profiles of pain behaviors following intraspinal injection of N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) or quisqualate (QUIS) in rats. METHODS: Forty male Sprague-Dawley rats were randomized into three groups : a sham, and two experimental groups receiving injections of 125 mM NMDA or QUIS into their spinal dorsal horn. Following injection, hypersensitivity to cold and mechanical stimuli, and excessive grooming behaviors were assessed serially for four weeks. At the end of survival periods, morphological changes in the spinal cord were evaluated. RESULTS: Cold allodynia was developed in both the NMDA and QUIS groups, which was significantly higher in the QUIS group than in the NMDA group. The mechanical threshold for the ipsilateral hind paw in both QUIS and NMDA groups was significantly lower than that in the control group. The number of groomers was significantly higher in the NMDA group than in the QUIS group. The size of the neck region of the spinal dorsal horn, but not the superficial layer, was significantly smaller in the NMDA and QUIS groups than in the control group. CONCLUSION: Intraspinal injection of NMDA or QUIS can be used as an excitotoxic model of SCI for further research on spinal neuropathic pain.
Animals
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Cold Temperature
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Excitatory Amino Acids
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Grooming
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Horns
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Humans
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Hyperalgesia
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Hypersensitivity
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Injections, Spinal
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Male
;
N-Methylaspartate
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Neck
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Neuralgia
;
Quisqualic Acid
;
Rats
;
Rats, Sprague-Dawley
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Salicylamides
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Spinal Cord
;
Spinal Cord Injuries
7.Effects of Epinephrine on the Voltage Dependent Na+, Ca2+ Channels and Cellular Excitability in Dorsal Root Ganglion Neurons, and Its Interaction with Tetracaine.
Jeong Gill LEEM ; Joung Uk KIM ; Jin Woo SHIN ; Kyu Sam HWANG ; Cheong LEE ; Sung Min HAN
Korean Journal of Anesthesiology 1998;34(1):18-26
BACKGROUND: The addition of epinephrine to local anesthetics has been known to prolong the duration of neural blokade and to increase the intensity of analgesia, but underlying mechanisms are unclear. This study was designed to investigate electrophysiologically the analgesic effects of epinephrine and its interaction with tetracaine. METHODS: Whole cell patch clamp recordings were made from acutely dissociated neurons from adult rat dorsal root ganglion (DRG). Using voltage clamp method, we compared the IC50 values of tetracaine for Na+ and Ca2+ channel suppression in the absence and presence of a fixed dose of epinephrine. Action potentials evoked by current pulses were also investigated to evaluate the effect of tetracaine and epinephrine on the excitability of DRG neurons. RESULTS: Clinical doses of epinephrine did not alter the dose-response curves of tetracaine for peak Na+ and Ca2+ channel current, but the amplitude of action potential spikes was reduced and firing rates evoked by sustained current pulse increased. The addition of epinephrine did not affect the changes of action potential parameters caused by tetracaine alone. CONCLUSIONS: The ability of epinephrine to increase the intensity of analgesia induced by tetracaine seems more likely due to an analgesic action at the level of spinal cord rather than a direct analgesic action at a level of primary sensory neurons. Local vasoconstriction and stimulation of descending inhibitory system via alpha-adrenergic pathway may play a role.
Action Potentials
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Adult
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Analgesia
;
Anesthetics, Local
;
Animals
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Diagnosis-Related Groups
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Epinephrine*
;
Fires
;
Ganglia, Spinal*
;
Humans
;
Inhibitory Concentration 50
;
Neurons
;
Rats
;
Sensory Receptor Cells
;
Spinal Cord
;
Spinal Nerve Roots*
;
Tetracaine*
;
Vasoconstriction
8.Treatment-Induced Neuropathy of Diabetes
Kee Hoon KIM ; Min Jeong LEEM ; Tae Im YI ; Joo Sup KIM ; Seo Yeon YOON
Clinical Pain 2020;19(1):32-35
Treatment-induced neuropathy in diabetes (TIND) is a reversible neuropathy that occurs in patients with diabetes, usually after a fast improvement in glycemic control. TIND is defined as the sudden onset of neuropathic pain or autonomic dysfunction with a large improvement in glycemic control (glycated hemoglobin [HbA1c] level of ≥ 2% over 3 months). We report the first case of a 24-year-old woman with type 1 diabetes mellitus who developed TIND in Korea. Her HbA1c level had decreased from 16.7% to 7.3% within a 3-month period. She developed acute-onset, severe, and continuous burning pain affecting her back and lower extremities. She was administered tapentadol (50 mg), pregabalin (75 mg), and vitamin B with minerals twice daily for neuropathic pain. She complained of orthostatic hypotension; thus, midodrine (2.5 mg) and anti-embolic stockings were prescribed. She almost completely recovered 6 months after the onset. A physician should be aware of TIND and gradually reduce HbA1c levels to prevent the occurrence of TIDN. They must also try to provide relief from severe pain or autonomic dysfunction and emphasize on an almost complete recovery.
9.Conservative management with Carnoy’s solution in ameloblastoma involving two unerupted teeth: a report of two cases
Sang Min LEE ; Jeong-Kui KU ; Dae Ho LEEM ; Jin-A BAEK ; Seung-O KO
Journal of the Korean Association of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgeons 2021;47(1):40-46
Marsupialization is widely used as a primary treatment modality for reducing size of large cysts. However, there is no recommendation for specific duration of marsupialization. In addition, Carnoy’s solution usually is applied at the time of enucleation as a fixative agent. In this report, we present an appropriate marsupialization duration of ameloblastoma involving two unerupted teeth. In this present study, marsupialization using a Foley catheter was performed in two cases of ameloblastoma of the mandible involving two adjacent impacted teeth. Carnoy’s solution was applied for 3-5 minutes after enucleation in both patients. Periodically during marsupialization, the size of the radiolucency was measured in panoramic view, and clinical examination was performed. No remarkable paresthesia or soft tissue injury was observed after application of Carnoy’s solution or during follow-up.We recommend 12 to 16 weeks as an adequate marsupialization duration for a large ameloblastoma involving two impacted teeth based on increased radiopacity along the margins of the lesions. Poor oral hygiene was an issue after 12 weeks of marsupialization in one case. There were no remarkable complications with Carnoy’s solution in either case. The Foley tube has a two-way system that is more effective for irrigating the cavity than is the conventional one-way system.
10.Treatment-Induced Neuropathy of Diabetes
Kee Hoon KIM ; Min Jeong LEEM ; Tae Im YI ; Joo Sup KIM ; Seo Yeon YOON
Clinical Pain 2020;19(1):32-35
Treatment-induced neuropathy in diabetes (TIND) is a reversible neuropathy that occurs in patients with diabetes, usually after a fast improvement in glycemic control. TIND is defined as the sudden onset of neuropathic pain or autonomic dysfunction with a large improvement in glycemic control (glycated hemoglobin [HbA1c] level of ≥ 2% over 3 months). We report the first case of a 24-year-old woman with type 1 diabetes mellitus who developed TIND in Korea. Her HbA1c level had decreased from 16.7% to 7.3% within a 3-month period. She developed acute-onset, severe, and continuous burning pain affecting her back and lower extremities. She was administered tapentadol (50 mg), pregabalin (75 mg), and vitamin B with minerals twice daily for neuropathic pain. She complained of orthostatic hypotension; thus, midodrine (2.5 mg) and anti-embolic stockings were prescribed. She almost completely recovered 6 months after the onset. A physician should be aware of TIND and gradually reduce HbA1c levels to prevent the occurrence of TIDN. They must also try to provide relief from severe pain or autonomic dysfunction and emphasize on an almost complete recovery.