1.Usefulness of Bedside Sonographic Monitoring of Critical Neurosurgical Patients.
Yong Chan KIM ; Chang Wan OH ; Jae Seung BANG ; O Ki KWON ; Jeong Eun KIM ; So Hyang IM
Korean Journal of Cerebrovascular Surgery 2010;12(3):177-181
OBJECTIVE: Sonography is a noninvasive and safe bedside imaging modality that provides rapid and repeatable real-time radiological evaluations without a radiation hazard. However, sonography has not gained widespread acceptance as a diagnostic tool in adult brain disease because of limited imaging resolution through the bony window. We investigated the diagnostic potential and clinical usefulness of bedside brain sonography through surgical bone defects in neurosurgical patients. METHODS: We evaluated twelve patients, each of whom had undergone a decompressive craniectomy, via bedside sonography, and performed comparison CT or MRI for all patients. RESULTS: We obtained reliable information regarding anatomical structure displacement, ventricle systems, intracranial fluid collection, presence and distribution of cerebral infarctions, and hemorrhages. We performed several interventional trials under sonography guidance, including aspiration of entrapped fluid collection and insertion of an external ventricular drainage catheter into a collapsed and displaced ventricle cavity. CONCLUSION: Bedside sonography through surgically created bone defects is a non-invasive method that physicians can repeat as required with no radiation hazard, and it is of particular value in emergent and critical situations when conventional neuroimages are unobtainable. Bedside sonography can be a first-line monitoring tool, in lieu of CT, for critically ill patients with surgical cranial defects.
Adult
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Brain
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Brain Diseases
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Catheters
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Cerebral Infarction
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Critical Illness
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Decompressive Craniectomy
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Displacement (Psychology)
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Drainage
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Hemorrhage
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Humans
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Neurosurgery
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Ultrasonography, Doppler
2.Depressive Symptoms and Associated Factors in Caregivers of Patients with Chronic Mental Illness.
Minyoung SIM ; Seon Jin YIM ; Jin Hun KIM ; O Hyang KWON ; Seong Jin CHO ; Seog Ju KIM ; Kye Hyun KIM ; Byeonghak LEE ; Doug Hyun HAN
Journal of Korean Neuropsychiatric Association 2008;47(4):341-346
OBJECTIVES: It has been reported that caregivers of patients with chronic mental illness including schizophrenia are in higher risk for psychological and physical health problem. This study was performed to evaluate the depressive symptoms and associated factors in caregivers of patients with chronic mental illness. METHODS: The subjects were 77 unaffected caregivers (30 parents, 30 siblings, 10 offspring, and 7 spouses) of patients with chronic mental illness (62 schizophrenia, 4 schizoaffective disorder, 11 bipolar disorder) and 100 healthy controls. Depressed mood was assessed by Beck Depression Inventory (BDI) in all subjects. For their sick family members, clinical factors including psychotic symptoms using the Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale (PANSS), duration of illness, number of admission were assessed. RESULTS: The mean BDI score of the caregivers was significantly higher than that of control subjects (11.2+/-11.6 and 8.0+/-7.5). Given that 23.4% of family group and 23.0% of control group are attributed to mild to moderate depressed state and 22.0% of family group and 8.0% of control group to above moderate depressed state, significant depressive symptom is more frequently observed in family group. The mean BDI score of parent group was higher than that of sibling group controlling for sex and age. In the parent group, BDI scores are positively correlated with age while the offspring and spouse group had negative correlation between BDI scores and age. Higher age, lower socioeconomic state, more severe positive symptom scores of patients were potential predictors for BDI scores of caregivers. CONCLUSION: This study showed that caregivers of patients with chronic mental illness have significant depressive symptoms. It may be suggested that depressive symptoms of caregivers are associated with aging, low socioeconomic state, and severe positive symptom rather than chronicity of their sick family members.
Aging
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Caregivers
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Depression
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Humans
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Parents
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Psychotic Disorders
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Schizophrenia
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Siblings
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Spouses