1.Meningioma with Intratumoral Hemorrhage.
Sae Myoung CHUN ; Tae Sung KIM ; Gi Taek YEE ; Jun Seok KOH ; Young Jin LIM ; Gook Ki KIM ; Won LEEM ; Bong Arm RHEE
Journal of Korean Neurosurgical Society 2001;30(9):1134-1139
Meningioma associated with intratumoral hemorrhage is rarely reported. We present two patients with intratumoral hemorrhage. One 70-year-old man was admitted to our department with a decreased level of consciousness and left hemiparesis. CT scan and MRI scan revealed huge tumor with intratumoral hemorrhage in the frontal lobe. After surgical removal of the tumor, histopathological diagnosis was a meningotheliomatous meningioma. The other seemed patients was 56-year-old woman with headache and vomiting. She showed no specific neurological deficit. CT and MRI scan revealed large size tumor with intratumoral hemorrhage that looks like meningioma. The patient died suddenly before surgery. We reviewed the relevant literature and discussed the possible mechanism of hemorrhage in the meningioma.
Aged
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Consciousness
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Diagnosis
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Female
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Frontal Lobe
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Headache
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Hemorrhage*
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Humans
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Magnetic Resonance Imaging
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Meningioma*
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Middle Aged
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Paresis
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Tomography, X-Ray Computed
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Vomiting
2.Assessment of Autonomic Function in Stroke Patients by Power Spectral Analysis of Heart Rate Variability.
Joong Son CHON ; Sae Il CHUN ; Seung Hyun PARK ; Juhn AHN ; Soh Young BAEK ; Youn Joo KANG ; Won Su DOH ; Kee Sam JEONG ; Kun Soo SHIN ; Myoung Ho LEE
Journal of the Korean Academy of Rehabilitation Medicine 1998;22(4):778-783
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the effects of orthostatic stress with a head-up tilt on the autonomic nervous system and to determine how a cerebral stroke influences the cardiac autonomic function, using the power spectral analysis(PSA) of heart rate variability(HRV). METHOD: We studied 11 stroke patients with a left hemiplegia and 14 patients with a right hemiplegia. Their hemispheric brain lesions were confirmed by the MRI. The ECG and respiration signals were recorded at the tilt angle of 0o and 70o for 5 minutes under the condition of frequency controlled respirtaion(0.25 Hz). Data were compared with the age- and sex-matched 12 healthy controls. RESULT: In a control group, the normalized high frequency power showed a significant decrease during the head-up tilt(p<0.05), whereas the normalized low frequency power showed a significant increase(p<0.05). But for the left and right hemiplegia groups, there were no significant changes of normalized high and low frequency power under the orthostatic stress(p>0.05). Compared with the right hemiplegia and control groups, the left hemiplegia group was associated more with a reduced low and high frequency power and showed no significant changes under the orthostatic stress. CONCLUSION: PSA of HRV can identify the reduced cardiac autonomic activity in stroke patients, with a greater reduction in the left hemiplegia group than in the right hemiplegia group, which may cause a high risk of cardiac arrhythmias and sudden death.
Arrhythmias, Cardiac
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Autonomic Nervous System
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Brain
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Death, Sudden
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Electrocardiography
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Heart Rate*
;
Heart*
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Hemiplegia
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Humans
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Magnetic Resonance Imaging
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Respiration
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Stroke*
3.Assessment of Autonomic Nervous Function in Young Adults by Power Spectral Analysis of Heart Rate Variability.
Joong Son CHON ; Sae Il CHUN ; Kyung Ja CHO ; Mi Ryeong JIN ; Tae Sun KIM ; Deog Young KIM ; Juhn AHN ; Kee Sam JEONG ; Kun Soo SHIN ; Myoung Ho LEE
Journal of the Korean Academy of Rehabilitation Medicine 1997;21(5):928-935
The powers of the low-frequency(LF) and high-frequency(HF) components characterizing heart rate variability (HRV) appear to reflect, in their reciprocal relationship, changes in the state of the sympatho-vagal balance occurring during orthostatic stress with head-up tilt. We studied 24 healthy volunteers (median age, 23.1 years) who were subjected after a rest period to a series of passive head-up tilt steps chosen from the following angles: 0 degree. 15 degrees, 30degrees, 45degrees, 70degrees, and 90degrees under the condition of frequency controlled respiration(0.25Hz) in order to get data of the Korean young adults. During head-up tilt, heart rate and normalized low frequency power(LF(N : 0.05-0.15 Hz) of HRV showed significant increase(p=0.000), but normalized high frequency power(HFN : 0.2-0.3 Hz) and total power showed progressive decrease(p=0.000, p<0.01 respectively). Male showed significantly higher LF(N and lower HFN than female at tilt table angle 0degree(p<0.01). Power spectral analysis of HRV appears to be capable of providing a noninvasive quantitatibve evaluation of graded changes in the state of the sympatho-vagal balance.
Female
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Healthy Volunteers
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Heart Rate*
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Heart*
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Humans
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Male
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Young Adult*
4.Incidence and Epidemiological Characteristics of 2009 Pandemic Influenza A (H1N1) Among School-Based Populations in Korea.
Hyun Jung KIM ; Byung Chul CHUN ; Hoo Jae HANN ; Jang Wook SOHN ; Sae Yoon KEE ; Si Hyun KIM ; Myoung Youn JO ; Kyung Young LEE ; Seok Hyeon LEE ; Min Ja KIM ; Hyeong Sik AHN
Infection and Chemotherapy 2012;44(6):431-438
BACKGROUND: During the 2009 influenza pandemic in Korea, school-age children were mostly attacked by the novel influenza A virus (H1N1). Nevertheless, there is limited information on the cumulative incidence of the 2009 influenza pandemic among school populations. The aim of this study was to estimate the incidence of 2009 H1N1 influenza and influenza-like illness (ILI), and characterize the epidemiology among school-based populations in Korea. MATERIALS AND METHODS: This study analyzed the data collected by the daily school influenza reporting system for laboratory-confirmed influenza (H1N1 2009 pdm) and ILI in elementary, middle and high schools in Korea during the period, July 1 to December 20, 2009. RESULTS: Between July 1 and December 20, 2009, a total of 525,668 cases of H1N1 2009 pdm were reported from the schools analyzed. The cumulative incidence of H1N1 2009 pdm was highest in elementary school children between 8 and 13 years of age (11,058 per 100,000 population), followed by middle school students between 14 and 16 years of age (10,080 per 100,000), and high school students between 17 and 19 years of age (8,886 per 100,000). With the alignment of the epidemic curves by the three levels of school education, the age group-specific differences in the timing of the infection became apparent. The infections peaked 1 week earlier in both middle and high school students (November 3, 2009) than in elementary school children (November 10, 2009). The infections occurred an average of 7.3 [95% confidence interval(CI): 7.2-7.4] and 3.4 (95% CI: 3.3-3.5) days earlier in the middle and high school students, respectively, than elementary school children (P<0.001). The overall trend of the epidemic waves from the school reporting system data was similar to that of the national surveillance date from the Korea Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. CONCLUSIONS: This study suggests that during the 2009 pandemic, one student in every 10 was infected with H1N1 2009 pdm, which is double that estimated from the national surveillance data. In addition, middle and high school students were important drivers of H1N1 2009 pdm transmission in 2009. During the 2009 influenza pandemic, the daily school reporting system provided valuable information for estimating the incidence as well as the epidemiological characteristics in school-based populations.
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (U.S.)
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Child
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Humans
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Incidence
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Influenza A virus
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Influenza, Human
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Korea
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Pandemics