1.A Case of Congenital Hypoplastic Anemia.
Sae Jin LEE ; Moon Chung CHO ; Kyung Sook CHO ; Doo Sung MOON ; Chong Dae CHO
Journal of the Korean Pediatric Society 1985;28(8):801-804
No abstract available.
Anemia, Hypoplastic, Congenital*
2.A Case of Sturge-Weber Syndrome.
Jin Soo JO ; Moon Chung CHAO ; Doo Seong MOON ; Kyung Sook CHO ; Chong Dae CHO
Journal of the Korean Pediatric Society 1986;29(4):103-108
No abstract available.
Sturge-Weber Syndrome*
3.Two Cases of Peutz-Jeghers Syndrome.
Joo Saeng MOON ; Sung Ki JIN ; Doo Sung MOON ; Kyung Sook CHO ; Jong Dase CHO
Journal of the Korean Pediatric Society 1987;30(8):907-915
No abstract available.
Peutz-Jeghers Syndrome*
4.The Effect of Preoperative Warming On Reducing Rectal Temperature Drop in Surgical Patients.
Seung Hwa LIM ; Moon Su CHO ; Kyung Sook CHOI
Journal of Korean Academy of Adult Nursing 1997;9(1):55-69
Although there are many peri-operative measures to reduce core temperature loss during operation, rapid drop has been experienced in the first sixty minutes following induction of general anesthesia. Recently, preoperative warming has been emphasized to prevent inadvertant hypothermia during operation. The purpose of this study is to find the effect of preoperative warming on reducing rectal temperature drop in surgical patients. With informed consent, 46 female adult patients, scheduled for total abdominal hysterectomy or salpingo-oophorectomy in the Seoul National University Hospital from September 3, 1996 to September 19, 1996 were divided into two groups. The variables of age and body surface were matched between the two groups as possible. Among them, 24 patients were preparatively covered up to the shoulders with a forced-air warming blanket(WARM TOUCHTM). set between 36-40degrees C for prewarming, and the other 22 patients(control group)were not before the induction of anesthesia. Rectal temperature was measured by mercury thermometer for rectum after admission to the operating room and by rectal probe which was inserted in the rectum just before the induction during the operation. The rectal temperature was monitored and recorded at every fifteen minutes for the first sixty minutes after the induction and each step during the surgery(intubation, surgical draping, peritoneum opening, one hour and the end of the operation) Collected data were analyzed by means of t-test, Repeated Measures Analysis of Variance with PC-SAS. The results of this study are as following. (1) There was no significant difference between the two groups in age, weight, height, room temperature, basal rectal temperature, operation time. (2) Temperature gradient of the rectal temperature in the warming group was less steeper than that in the control roup during the first sixty minutes after general anesthesia. (3) The rectal temperature measured at every fifteen minutes for the first sixty minutes and the end of surgery after the general anesthesia showed the difference between the two groups during surgery. (4) There was no rectal temperature difference during the intubation, however there was significant temperature difference between the two groups from draping to the end of surgery. In conclusion, prewarming of the surgical patient before induction resulted in increased the skin temperature and heat content, which relieved the dangerous core temperature drop which is potential to be provoked within one hour after induction of the surgical patients and kept the rectal temperature higher than that of the control group during surgery. The suggestions from this study shown below : First, further study is needed to find the preventive effect of the core temperature drop in the first sixth minutes after anesthetic induction by preoperative warming for gastrorectal, thoracic surgery patients who man have the core temperature drop during the operation. Second, in other to keep patient normothermia during the surgery, it needs to study whether using pre-and peri-operative warming can prevent hypothermia or not. Finally, the study of the peroperative warming effect on surgical patients' relaxation and thermal discomfort before the operation is needed because most patients in the case group said to have felt thermal comfort ; 'comfortable' and 'good'.
Adult
;
Anesthesia
;
Anesthesia, General
;
Female
;
Hot Temperature
;
Humans
;
Hypothermia
;
Hysterectomy
;
Informed Consent
;
Intubation
;
Operating Rooms
;
Peritoneum
;
Rectum
;
Relaxation
;
Seoul
;
Shoulder
;
Skin Temperature
;
Thermometers
;
Thoracic Surgery
5.A Case of Tuberous Sclerosis.
Ju Kyeong LEE ; Kwang Soo HWANG ; Kyung Sook CHO ; Doo Sung MOON ; Chong Dae CHO
Journal of the Korean Pediatric Society 1985;28(5):514-517
No abstract available.
Tuberous Sclerosis*
6.A Case of Sacrococcygeal teratoma complicated by hydronephrosis and hydroureter.
Doo Sung MOON ; Kyung Sook CHO ; Jong Dae CHO ; In Ki SUNG ; Bo Hyun HAN
Journal of the Korean Pediatric Society 1988;31(1):134-140
No abstract available.
Hydronephrosis*
;
Teratoma*
7.A Case of Congenital Asplenia Syndrome.
Hyung Sook KIM ; Jin Soo CHO ; Sung Kee JIM ; Doo Sung MOON ; kyung Sook CHO ; Jong Dae CHO
Journal of the Korean Pediatric Society 1987;30(2):218-222
No abstract available.
Heterotaxy Syndrome*
8.A Study on the Leukopenia during Chemotherapy in Patients with Gynecologic Malignancies.
Sam Hyun CHO ; Kyung Tae KIM ; Hyung MOON ; Yoon Young HWANG ; Young Jin MOON ; Jong Woon BAE
Korean Journal of Gynecologic Oncology and Colposcopy 2000;11(2):131-139
The recent introduction of chemotherapy in the treatment of the gynecologic malignancies has gained wide acceptance along with preoperative and postoperative adjuvant therapy and with preradiation and concurrent chemoradiaton therapy. But, the side effects of chemotherapy including bleeding and infection due to bone marrow suppression have resulted in increased morbidity and mortality of the patients and delayed treatment and a reduction in the chemotherapeutic agents used. In spite of the development of antibiotics and the supportive care of infection, sustained leukopenia in the patients during chemotherapy accounts for the high mortality rate due to sepsis. The early detection of the leukopenia during chemotherapy may enable clinicians to overcome infection problems by timely use of prophylactic broad spectrum antibiotics and G-CSF or GM-CSF. The author investigated the grade, duration, time of onset and other clinical features of the leukopenia and the effects of the age (> or =60 years vs <60 years), the number of the cycle of chemotherapy (> or =3 cycles vs < 3 cycles), fever and performance scale on the leukopenia. 79 cases (32 patients) of the leukopenia during chemotherapy of various gynecologic malignancies at the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology at Hanyang University between January, 1996 and December, 1998 entered to this study. The results were as follows; 1. Leukopenia occurred at 14.2+/-6.1 day from the first day of chemotherapy, 2. The duration of leukopenia was 2.5+/-1.6 days 3. No significant difference was found between eldely patients ( > or =60 years, n=13) and younger patients ( <60 years, n=66) about the severity, duration and time of onset of leukopenia. 4. No significant difference was found between the patients with more than 3 cycles of chemotherapy (n=40) and less than 3 cycles (n=39) about the severity, duration and time of onset of leukopenia. 5. Febrile leukopenic cases (n=6) had significantly lower granulocyte count, longer leukopenic period and earlier onset of leukopenia than afebrile (n=73). 6. It is thought that performance status scale does not affect the grade of leukopenia, onset of leukopenia and the leukopenic period.
Anti-Bacterial Agents
;
Bone Marrow
;
Drug Therapy*
;
Fever
;
Granulocyte Colony-Stimulating Factor
;
Granulocyte-Macrophage Colony-Stimulating Factor
;
Granulocytes
;
Gynecology
;
Hemorrhage
;
Humans
;
Leukopenia*
;
Mortality
;
Obstetrics
;
Sepsis
9.The development of industrial health information management system.
Sung Hyun HAN ; Young Moon CHAE ; Young Hahn MOON ; Jaehoon ROH ; Kyung Jong LEE ; Myung Wha CHO ; Hae Young MIN
Korean Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine 1992;4(2):181-189
No abstract available.
Information Management*
;
Occupational Health*
10.The Clinical Study of the Torsion of the Ovarian Tumor in Postmenopausal Women.
Seung Ryong KIM ; Soo Hyun CHO ; Kyung Tai KIM ; Hyung MOON ; Youn Yeung HWANG ; Joong Sik SHIN ; Young Jin MOON
Korean Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology 2000;43(7):1139-1143
OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this study is to evaluate the clinicopathologic characteristics of the torsion of the ovarian tumor in postmenopausal women. METHODS: We reviewed the medical records of 20 postmenopausal patients with a postoperative diagnosis of torsion of the ovarian tumor in Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Hanyang University Hospital from January 1989 to December 1998. RESULTS: The postmenopausal patients with torsion of the ovarian tumor constitute 20/94 (21.3%) of all adnexal torsion patients encountered during this period. The mean (+/-SD) age of the 20 patients was 63.5+/-9.0 years, with a range of 52-90 years. The mean time since menopause was 16.5+/-10.3 years, with a range of 1-39 years. The mean parity was 5.4+/-2.0 (range of 3-10). Lower abdominal pain (65%) was the most frequently presenting symptom, palpable mass(20%) or diagnosed mass(15%) being the second. But, in 20% of cases there was no lower abdominal pain. The torsion occurred at the right side in 11cases (55%) and at the left side in 9 cases. The most frequent degree of torsion was those cases that was rotated twice (720 degrees). The neoplasms undergoing torsion ranged in diameter between 5cm and 30cm and the most prevalent size was 6 to 10 cm (8 cases). Most of the patients (17cases) were treated by total abdominal hysterectomy and bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy. The tumors that produce torsion varied histologically and the most common type was cystic teratoma (in 5 cases), simple cyst(in 3 cases), serous cystadenoma(in 2 cases), mucinous cystadenoma(in 2 cases). CONCLUSIONS: In our study, ovarian tumor torsion occurring in postmenopausal patients constituted approximately 20% of all torsion patients, therefore adnexal torsion should be considered when a postmenopausal woman presents with lower abdominal pain. When torsion is diagnosed, total abdominal hysterectomy and bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy is the usual treatment for postmenopausal patients. Histologically, in more than 90% of cases, the tumors that produce torsion were benign. If cancer is evident, more extensive surgery is required.
Abdominal Pain
;
Diagnosis
;
Female
;
Gynecology
;
Humans
;
Hysterectomy
;
Medical Records
;
Menopause
;
Mucins
;
Obstetrics
;
Parity
;
Teratoma