1.The clinical features of the infratemporal fossa abscess and their significances.
Horatiu RATARU ; Michael CHO ; Yong Chan LEE ; Byoung Eun YANG ; Seong Gon KIM ; Jwa Young KIM ; Jin Cheol KIM ; Young Hee KIM
Journal of the Korean Association of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgeons 2007;33(1):40-45
OBJECTIVE: The objective of this international comparative study was to investigate the clinical features and outcome of the treatment of infratemporal fossa abscess (IFA). STUDY DESIGN: This retrospective study was conducted at the Deptartment of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery of Hallym University and "Iuliu Hatieganu" University of Medicine and Pharmacy. Ten-year records of patients were reviewed in Romania and six-year records were reviewed in Korea. The collected data was then analyzed. RESULTS: A total of 36 cases were found to be IFA (12 males and 24 females: average age; 36.3+/-15.5 yrs: 34 cases from Romania and 2 cases from Korea). The annual frequency of IFA in Romanian and Korean hospitals was 3.40 and 0.33 respectively (P<0.001). The etiology was septic anesthesia (33.3%), infection occurring after extraction (30.6%), periapical lesion (13.9%), impacted third molar (8.3%), post-extraction alveolitis (5.6%), and unknown (8.3%). A successful outcome was seen in 27 patients (75.0%) after initial treatment. The main complication after initial treatment was restricted movement of the mouth (9 cases). CONCLUSION: The etiology of IFA was various and minimal swelling hampered early diagnosis. To prevent IFA, preoperative painting with antiseptic agent must be stressed and proper drainage proved important to relieve pain and to prevent further complications.
Abscess*
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Anesthesia
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Drainage
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Early Diagnosis
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Female
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Humans
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Korea
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Male
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Molar, Third
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Mouth
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Paint
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Paintings
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Pharmacy
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Retrospective Studies
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Romania
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Surgery, Oral
2.Descriptive Psychiatry and the Development of Diagnostic Criteria in the History of Child Psychiatry and Phenomenological Descriptive Psychiatry.
Geon Ho BAHN ; Yeon Jung LEE ; Ju Hee HAN
Journal of the Korean Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry 2015;26(1):1-11
Phenomenology has been developed by philosophers like Kant and Husserl since the late 18th century. Jaspers, a German psychiatrist, adopted it into psychopathology studies and accumulated data by closely observing and recording the patients' symptoms and signs. Among descriptions done even before the psychopathology or diagnostic criteria of disorders in the field of child psychiatry was established, we can find exact and valuable descriptions matching the autism spectrum disorder or attention deficit/ hyperactivity disorder. The diagnostic criteria of modern childhood psychiatric disorders were established based on these grounds. Phenomenological/descriptive methods in various psychiatric fields lead to medical study methods for social phenomenon such as oiettolie, hikikomori, and internet game addiction. Since Romanian orphans were adopted to the western world, descriptive studies along with neurobiological studies on the influence of stimulus deprivation on emotional and physical development are being conducted. While phenomenology, which was adopted by Jaspers to verify psychopathology, was developed mainly by observation and description, recent studies are explaining such descriptive phenomena even at the synapse level due to advances in neurobiology. Although phenomenological/descriptive psychiatry, describing precise and detailed experiences of patients, is less applied nowadays among modern study methods, we must remember that such descriptions may lead to biological studies and provide evidence to improve the accuracy of choosing and applying treatment methods.
Autistic Disorder
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Child
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Autism Spectrum Disorder
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Child Psychiatry*
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Child, Orphaned
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Humans
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Internet
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Neurobiology
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Psychiatry
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Psychopathology
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Romania
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Synapses
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Western World
3.THE DIFFERENCE IN THE PREVALENCE OF THE IVS5-A/G OF THE TRANSFORMING GROWTH FACTOR-BETA3 GENE BETWEEN KOREANS AND ROMANIANS
Myung Hee KIM ; Dong Seok NAHM ; Je Yong CHOI ; Seong Gon KIM ; Chang Hoon CHOI ; Jin Cheol KIM ; Horatiu ROTARU ; Lucia HURUBEANU
Journal of the Korean Association of Maxillofacial Plastic and Reconstructive Surgeons 2004;26(2):162-166
Romania. The TGF-beta3 genotypes of 151 randomly selected common populations were analyzed using PCR amplification, SNaf1 restriction enzyme digestion, electrophoresis, and direct sequencing. The frequency of the substitution was calculated in different genders and statistically analyzed (Chisquare). Among 87 in Koreans (male: 49, female: 38), about 47% had an A/A homozygous genotype, 41% had a A/G heterozygous genotype, and the remaining 12% had a G/G homozygous genotype. The frequencies for the A and G alleles were 66% (p) and 34% (q), respectively. Among 64 in Romanians (male: 27, female: 37), about 78% had an A/A homozygous genotype, 20% had a A/G heterozygous genotype, and the remaining 2% had a G/G homozygous genotype. The frequencies for the A and G alleles were 87% (p) and 13% (q), respectively. There were significant differences between Koreans and Romanians (P<0.001). The study provides a fair estimate for the prevalence of the IVS5-A/G substitution of the TGF-beta3 gene in the general population in the Korea and the Romania, which will facilitate further investigations of the pathogenic effects of the gene.]]>
Alleles
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Digestion
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Electrophoresis
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Female
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Gene Frequency
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Genotype
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Humans
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Korea
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Polymerase Chain Reaction
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Prevalence
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Romania
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Transforming Growth Factor beta3
4.The Socialist Camp's North Korean Medical Support and Exchange (1945–1958): Between Learning from the Soviet Union and Independent Course
Korean Journal of Medical History 2019;28(1):139-190
This study focused on the socialist camp's North Korean medical support and its effects on North Korean medical field from liberation to 1958. Except for the Soviet assistance from liberation to the Korean War, existing studies mainly have paid attention to the ‘autonomous’ growth of the North Korean medical field. The studies on the medical support of the Eastern European countries during the Korean War have only focused on one-sided support and neglected the interactions with the North Korean medical field. Failing in utilizing the materials produced in North Korea has led to the omission of detailed circumstances of providing support. Since the review of China's support and the North Korea-China medical exchanges has been concentrated in the period after the mid-1950s, the impacts of China's medical support on North Korea during the Korean War period and the post-war recovery period have not been taken into account. In terms of these limitations, this study examined the medical activities by the Socialist camp of the Eastern European countries in North Korea after the Korean War. The medical aid teams from Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, Poland, and East Germany that came to North Korea in the wake of the Korean War continued to stay in North Korea after the war to build hospitals and train medical personnel. In the hospitals operated by these countries, cooperative medical care with North Korean medical personnel and medical technology education were conducted. Moreover, medical teams from each country in North Korea held seminars and conferences and exchanged knowledge with the North Korean medical field staffs. These activities by the Socialist countries in North Korea provided the North Korean medical personnel with the opportunity to directly experience the medical technology of each country. China's support was crucial to North Korea's ‘rediscovery’ of Korean medicine in the mid-1950s. After the Korean War, North Korea began to apply the Chinese-Western medicine integration policy, which was performed in China at that time, to the North Korean health care field through China's medical support and exchanges. In other words, China's emphasis on Chinese medicine and the integration of the Chinese-Western medicine were presented as one of the directions for medical development of North Korea in the 1950s, and the experiences of China in this process convinced North Korea that Korean medicine policy was appropriate. The decision-makers of the North Korean medical policies, who returned to North Korea after studying abroad in China at that time, actively introduced the experiences from China and constantly sought to learn about them. This study identified that a variety of external stimuli had complex impacts on the North Korean medical field in the gap between ‘Soviet learning’ in the late 1940s and the ‘autonomous’ medical development since the 1960s. The North Korean medical field was formed not by the unilateral or dominant influences of a single nation but by the stimulation from many nations and the various interactions in the process.
Asian Continental Ancestry Group
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Bulgaria
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China
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Congresses as Topic
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Czechoslovakia
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Delivery of Health Care
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Democratic People's Republic of Korea
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Education
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Germany
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Humans
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Hungary
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Korean War
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Learning
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Poland
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Romania
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USSR
5.Benefits of early enteral nutrition in extremely low birth weight infants.
Aniko MANEA ; Marioara BOIA ; Daniela IACOB ; Mirabela DIMA ; Radu Emil IACOB
Singapore medical journal 2016;57(11):616-618
INTRODUCTIONExtremely low birth weight (ELBW) infants (i.e. preterm infants weighing < 1,000 g) often present with morphofunctional multiple organ immaturity. This study aimed to determine whether early enteral feeding improves digestive tolerance, and whether there is a difference in growth between ELBW infants who were fed with formula and those who were fed with breast milk.
METHODSThis study was conducted from 2012-2013 and involved 34 ELBW infants from the Preterm Neonatology Clinic of the 'Louis Turcanu' Clinical Children's Hospital Timisoara, Romania. Early enteral nutrition was introduced for all the infants - Group I was fed with formula, while Group II was fed with breast milk. Infants in each group were given their designated type of milk (formula/breast milk), using the same feeding method and the same volume rate advancement. They were monitored for any evidence of digestive intolerance (i.e. clinical signs of infection and necrotising enterocolitis [NEC]). Their growth curves and signs of infection were also monitored.
RESULTSThe average weight gained per week was greater among the infants in Group II than in Group I (120.83 g vs 97.27 g). The incidence of infection was 100% in Group I and 66.6% in Group II. Two of the infants in Group I developed NEC.
CONCLUSIONEarly enteral feeding helped to improve the weight of ELBW infants. Breast milk was more effective than formula at improving the weight of these infants. Feeding with formula increased the incidence of NEC, invasive infection and morbidity among ELBW infants.
Body Weight ; Enteral Nutrition ; methods ; Enterocolitis, Necrotizing ; epidemiology ; therapy ; Female ; Hospitalization ; Humans ; Infant ; Infant, Extremely Low Birth Weight ; Infant, Newborn ; Infant, Premature ; growth & development ; Male ; Milk, Human ; Romania ; Weight Gain
6.Cerebral microangiopathy in patients with non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus.
Ligia PETRICA ; Maxim PETRICA ; Mircea MUNTEANU ; Adrian VLAD ; Flaviu BOB ; Cristina GLUHOVSCHI ; Gheorghe GLUHOVSCHI ; Catalin JIANU ; Adalbert SCHILLER ; Silvia VELCIOV ; Virginia TRANDAFIRESCU ; Gheorghe BOZDOG
Annals of the Academy of Medicine, Singapore 2007;36(4):259-266
INTRODUCTIONThe aim of the study was to evaluate cerebral microangiopathy in type 2 noninsulin- dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM) patients and to establish potentially conducive factors.
MATERIALS AND METHODSA group of 34 patients with NIDDM and 31 gender- and agematched normal controls (NC) were assessed by extracranial Doppler ultrasound, in order to evaluate the pulsatility index (PI) and the resistance index (RI) in the internal carotid arteries (ICAs); transcranial Doppler was utilised to assess the same parameters in the middle cerebral arteries (MCAs). All patients underwent screening for favouring factors for cerebral vascular remodelling.
RESULTSOf the 34 NIDDM patients, 21 patients (61.76%) (subgroup A) presented with microangiopathic complications [of these, 19 patients (90.46%) had diabetic nephropathy (DN)] versus 13 NIDDM patients (38.24%) (subgroup B) without complications. In subgroup A, 16 patients (76.19%) had PI >1 and RI >0.7 in the ICAs and MCAs (changes consistent with cerebral microangiopathy) versus 5 patients (35.46%) in subgroup B, and no modifications in NC. Of the 19 patients with DN, 14 patients (73.68 %) had impaired haemodynamic indices. Univariate regression analysis showed the following risk factors for the cerebral haemodynamics changes: fibrinogen (F) (OR = 3.11), C-reactive protein (CRP) (OR = 2.40), duration of DM (OR = 2.40), proteinuria (OR = 1.80), serum creatinine (OR = 1.66). Multivariate regression analysis showed as predictors for impaired haemodynamic indices: duration of DM (HR =1.70), proteinuria (HR = 1.70). The haemodynamic indices in the ICAs correlated with duration of DM (r = 0.87, P <0.0001), F (r = 0.86; P <0.0001), CRP (r = 0.80; P <0.0001); in the MCAs with the duration of DM (r = 0.66, P <0.0001), F (r = 0.38; P <0.0001), CRP (r = 0.88; P <0.0001).
CONCLUSIONCerebral microangiopathy has a high prevalence in NIDDM patients. These cerebral vascular changes correlate with the duration of DM, parameters of inflammation, and proteinuria.
Carotid Artery Diseases ; diagnostic imaging ; epidemiology ; etiology ; Carotid Artery, Internal ; diagnostic imaging ; pathology ; Case-Control Studies ; Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 ; complications ; diagnostic imaging ; Diabetic Angiopathies ; diagnostic imaging ; epidemiology ; etiology ; Female ; Humans ; Inflammation ; Male ; Middle Aged ; Prevalence ; Prognosis ; Risk Assessment ; Risk Factors ; Romania ; Time Factors ; Ultrasonography, Doppler, Pulsed