1.Life and Medical Activities of Yun Ti Wang.
Hyoung Woo PARK ; Jeong Wan HONG ; Yunjae PARK
Korean Journal of Medical History 2008;17(2):205-222
Yun Ti Wang studied medicine in England, different from other Korean medical doctors in early days. Yun, who entered medical school at Glasgow University in England in March 1919, graduated with a Bachelor of Medicine in October 1925, along with an England medical license. Yun began working as an instructor at Severance Medical College from November 1927, and received Doctor of Medicine from the College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists at Kyoto Imperial University in August 1936. After the Liberation, Yun began working as a faculty member at the medical school at Seoul University, and he also worked as a Chief of the Second Medical Clinic of the school from 1946. Yun made a great effort in order to build an integrated committee, eventually contributing to the launching of Joseon Medical Associates in 1947. He was also elected as a first president at Joseon Obstetrics and Gynecology Associates, which was organized at the same year as the Joseon Medical Associates. Yun entered military as an army surgeon in April 1949 and has worked there until he was appointed as a principal at the Army Medical School in September 1953. His contributions to the development of military medical services include the following: expansion of medical facilities in army, stable system of workforce in military medical service, launching of Medical Aid and establishment of Department of Medical Care, and introduction of new medical technologies in anesthesiology and neurosurgery, etc. The career of Yun can be largely divided into the field of gynecology and military medical services. In the gynecological field, Yun contributed to the settlement of obstetrics in Korea, by taking in charge of the obstetrics class at Severance following medical missionaries. As for the military medical services, he has contributed to the establishment of military medical system as well as to the opening of new academic areas. The impact of his activities on the establishment of military medical services is especially significant, since it was a field that no Korean citizens had access to during the colonization era.
Education, Medical/history
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England
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Gynecology/history
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History, 20th Century
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Korea
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Military Medicine/*history
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Obstetrics/*history
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Societies, Medical/history
2.The Lives and Diseases of Females during the Latter Half of the Joseon Dynasty as Reconstructed with Cases in Yeoksi Manpil (Stray Notes with Experienced Tests).
Korean Journal of Medical History 2015;24(2):497-532
Through the cases of approximately 80 females in the case records of traditional physician Yi Sugwi (1664-1740?), the present study divided and reclassified the lives and diseases of females during the latter half of the Joseon Dynasty into childhood, obstetrics- and gynecology-related problems in adulthood, other diseases in adulthood, and old age and analyzed them. According to the results, female children were treated less preciously than were male children so that treatments by traditional physicians were sought out less when they were ill than in the case of male children, and acute infectious diseases were the most serious health problems. In the process of receiving treatment from traditional physicians as adults, females came in contact with traditional physicians, who were male, when necessary including face-to-face sessions and the reception of pulse examination but the yangban (literati-official) class practiced sex segregation as much as possible while the lower classes were considerably free from such restrictions. For female adults, the most serious health issues were pregnancy and childbirth so that they received help from traditional physicians and midwives when there were problems. Traditional physicians determined females' pregnancy and the health of fetuses and pregnant women through pulse examinations and medication and actively responded to diverse problems that surfaced in the process with medication and other treatments. Acute infectious diseases, too, were serious diseases suffered by females, and problems involving cold damage and the digestive system were among diseases frequently suffered by females in adulthood and old age. In old age, females often became ill in the arduous process of dealing with the deaths of adult descendants, siblings, and spouses, and tumors were among the major causes of their deaths. The deaths of those aged 70 or above were accepted as quite natural. Aged females endeavored to maintain their health and played the role of elders giving care to their descendants.
Adolescent
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Adult
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Aged
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Child
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Child, Preschool
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Communicable Diseases/etiology/*history/therapy
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Delivery, Obstetric/*history
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Female
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Gynecology/*history
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History, 17th Century
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History, 18th Century
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Humans
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Infant
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Infant, Newborn
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Korea
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Middle Aged
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Obstetrics/*history
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Young Adult
3.A Clinicopathological Study in patients with Granulosa Stromal Cell Tumor of the Ovary.
Bo Seop KIM ; Min Ji CHUNG ; Dae Gy HONG ; Il Soo PARK
Korean Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology 2006;49(9):1919-1933
OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this study is to know the pathological and clinical characteristics of granulosa stromal cell tumor of the ovary. METHODS: From January 1996 to December 2005, patients with granulosa cell tumor of ovary and ones with thecoma, which are included in granulosa stromal cell tumor of the ovary, treated in the Obstetrics and Gynecology, College of Medicine, the Kyungpook National University Hospital of Korea were identified and reviewed retrospectively for patient profiles, mode of therapy, length of survival and so on. RESULTS: There were 14 granulosa cell tumors, and 55 thecomas. The mean age of patients with granulosa cell tumor was 46.8 years old, and 7 women (50.0%) were menopausal. Bilaterality was absent, and mean size of tumor was 11.1 cm. The chief complaints of patients were 3 cases (21.4%) of abdominal discomfort or pain, 3 cases (21.4%) of vaginal bleeding and 4 cases (28.6%) of no symptom. Of 14 cases, total abdominal hysterectomy with bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy was performed in 5 cases (35.7%). Chemotherapy was performed in 5 cases (35.7%), and regimen was combination of BEP (bleomycin+etoposide+cisplatin). According to FIGO staging, 10 cases (71.4%) were stage I. Second look operation was done in one case (7.1%). Among 14 patients of follow-up, one patient (7.1%) was expired. Surgical staging was associated with survival rate of patients. The mean age of patients with thecoma was 49.6 years old, and 28 women (50.9%) were menopausal. Bilaterality was 3 cases (5.4%), and mean size of tumor was 8.5cm. The chief complaints of patients were 14 cases (25.4%) of abdominal discomfort or pain, and 19 cases (34.5%) of no symptom. Of 55 cases, total abdominal hysterectomy with bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy was performed in 21 cases (38.2%). Among 55 patients of follow-up, all patients survived. CONCLUSION: Thecomas are regarded as benign tumors but granulosa cell tumors are characterized by a long natural history with a significant capacity to recur years after apparent clinical cure. The patients with granulosa cell tumor should be followed up indefinitely.
Drug Therapy
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Female
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Follow-Up Studies
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Granulosa Cell Tumor
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Gyeongsangbuk-do
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Gynecology
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Humans
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Hysterectomy
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Korea
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Natural History
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Obstetrics
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Ovary*
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Retrospective Studies
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Stromal Cells*
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Survival Rate
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Thecoma
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Uterine Hemorrhage