1.Preoperative Staging of Rectal Cancer by CT & MRI.
Jong Keun SHIN ; Sang Mock LEE ; Ho Chul PARK ; Kee Hyung LEE ; Soo Myung OH ; Choong YOON ; Dong Ho LEE
Journal of the Korean Society of Coloproctology 2000;16(3):177-185
Accurate staging of rectal cancer preoperatively is important to plan a proper treatment and to predict treatment results. For the preoperative staging of rectal cancer, computed tomography (CT), transrectal ultrasonography (TRUS), and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) have been used, but the role of them remains controversial. This research was intended to compare and analyze the accuracy of CT and MRI in the preoperative staging of rectal cancer. METHODS: From January 1998 to June 1999, sixty patients were studied by CT and MRI before their operations for rectal cancer in our institution, but two patients with local excision were excluded in N-staging as objects. The patients who had preoperative irradiation were also excluded in this study. Preoperative staging with CT and MRI were conducted by one radiologist according to 1997's TNM classification based on AJCC. On the results of pathological findings after operation, preoperative staging with CT and MRI were classified into T-staging and N-staging. Accuracy and agreement rate between pathological staging and preoperative staging by CT and MRI were compared and analyzed by Kappa value. RESULTS: The accuracy of CT was 68 percent in T-staging, and 58 percent in N-staging, MRI showed accuracy of 82 percent in T-staging and 64 percent in N-staging. In the T-staging, the agreement rate between pathological staging and CT staging was 0.54 (95% confidence interval), while the agreement rate was 0.70 in MRI staging, resulting in a higher agreement rate with MRI than with CT. In the N-staging, the agreement rate between pathological staging and CT staging was 0.38, with a relatively lower agreement rate, while the agreement rate was 0.56 in MRI staging. In our study, MRI showed a higher agreement rate than CT. CONCLUSIONS: In the future, more research should be conducted, but it can be conclued that in preoperative staging for rectal cancer, MRI using body arrayed coil has a better accuracy than CT. Subsequently MRI staging should be considered as a more useful investigation method before operation than CT.
Classification
;
Humans
;
Magnetic Resonance Imaging*
;
Rectal Neoplasms*
;
Ultrasonography
2.Laparoscopic Management of Vesicouterine Fistula due to Intrauterine Device.
Dong Kon CHO ; Duck Kyo KIM ; Choong Hyun LEE ; Sang Mock LEE
Korean Journal of Urology 1999;40(2):242-244
We report the vesicouterine fistula due to migration of intrauterine device in 35-year-old woman, who had suffered from dysuria and watery vaginal discharge for 4 months. The vesicouterine fistula was confirmed by ultrasonography, cystoscopy and fistulography, and treated with laparoscopic fistulectomy.
Adult
;
Cystoscopy
;
Dysuria
;
Female
;
Fistula*
;
Humans
;
Intrauterine Devices*
;
Ultrasonography
;
Vaginal Discharge
3.Primary Aldosteronism.
Young Hyug KIM ; Suck Hwan KOH ; Sang Mock LEE ; Kee Hyung LEE ; Sung Hwa HONG ; Choong YOON
Journal of the Korean Surgical Society 1999;56(Suppl):1031-1037
BACKGROUND: Management of primary aldosteronism has undergone dramatic changes in the past 40 years. This retrospective study was carried out to review our surgical experience and postoperative outcome and to identify the clinical charateristics of primary aldosteronism. METHODS: Twenty-five patients who underwent an adrenalectomy for primary aldosteronism from 1983 to 1997 were included in the study. All patients were operated on at the Department of Surgery, School of Medicine, Kyung-Hee University. We reviewed the records of 18 women and 7 men, ranging in age from 22 to 59 years. Data examined included clinical presentation, biochemical results, hormonal evaluation, localization studies, operative results, pathologic details, and postoperative outcome. The diagnosis of primary aldosteronism was based on a demonstration of hypertension, hypokalemia, elevated plasma aldosterone concentration, and suppressed plasma renin activity. Localization studies, including computed tomography (CT) and ultrasonography (US) were performed in all patients. A follow-up study was conducted by either reviewing clinical records, telephone contact, or examination of patients during return visits. RESULTS: Hypertension and hypokalemia were present in all patients. Serum potassium ranged from 1.4 to 3.2 mEq/L (2.3+/-0.5; mean+/-standard deviation {SD}mEq/L), and hypokalemia was considered an important diagnostic clue. We found the accuracy rate for CT results in our patients to be 96.0% (24 patients). An adrenal venous sampling was performed in one patient whose CT results were not confirmatory. A unilateral adrenalectomy was performed through posterior (22 patients), an anterior transabdominal (1 patient), or a lateral transabdominal laparoscopic (2 patients) approach. A laparoscopic adrenalectomy will minimize postoperative pain and hospital stay. The histological findings were 23 aldosterone-producing adenomas and 1 nodular hyperplasia. During a mean follow-up of 31.6 months, 22 (91.7%) of the 24 patients required no further antihypertensive treatment. CONCLUSION: Primary aldosteronism due to an aldosterone-producing adenoma can be diagnosed and localized expeditiously, and surgical treatment can be performed safely.
Adenoma
;
Adrenalectomy
;
Aldosterone
;
Diagnosis
;
Female
;
Follow-Up Studies
;
Humans
;
Hyperaldosteronism*
;
Hyperplasia
;
Hypertension
;
Hypokalemia
;
Length of Stay
;
Male
;
Pain, Postoperative
;
Plasma
;
Potassium
;
Renin
;
Retrospective Studies
;
Telephone
;
Ultrasonography
4.Ophthalmoplegia in Mitochondrial Disease.
Sang Jun LEE ; Ji Hoon NA ; Jinu HAN ; Young Mock LEE
Yonsei Medical Journal 2018;59(10):1190-1196
PURPOSE: To evaluate the classification, diagnosis, and natural course of ophthalmoplegia associated with mitochondrial disease. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Among 372 patients with mitochondrial disease who visited our hospital between January 2006 and January 2016, 21 patients with ophthalmoplegia were retrospectively identified. Inclusion criteria included onset before 20 years of age, pigmentary retinopathy, and cardiac involvement. The 16 patients who were finally included in the study were divided into three groups according to disease type: Kearns-Sayre syndrome (KSS), KSS-like, and chronic progressive external ophthalmoplegia (CPEO). RESULTS: The prevalences of clinical findings were as follows: ptosis and retinopathy, both over 80%; myopathy, including extraocular muscles, 75%; lactic acidosis, 71%; and elevated levels of serum creatine kinase, 47%. Half of the patients had normal magnetic resonance imaging findings. A biochemical enzyme assay revealed mitochondrial respiratory chain complex I defect as the most common (50%). The prevalence of abnormal muscle findings in light or electron microscopic examinations was 50% each, while that of large-scale mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) deletions in a gene study was 25%. We compared the KSS and KSS-like groups with the CPEO patient group, which showed pigmentary retinopathy (p < 0.001), cardiac conduction disease (p=0.013), and large-scale mtDNA deletions (p=0.038). KSS and KSS-like groups also had gastrointestinal tract disorders such as abnormal gastrointestinal motility (p=0.013) unlike the CPEO group. CONCLUSION: Patients with KSS had gastrointestinal symptoms, which may indicate another aspect of systemic involvement. The presence of large-scale mtDNA deletions was an objective diagnostic factor for KSS and a gene study may be helpful for evaluating patients with KSS.
Acidosis, Lactic
;
Classification
;
Creatine Kinase
;
Diagnosis
;
DNA, Mitochondrial
;
Electron Transport
;
Enzyme Assays
;
Gastrointestinal Motility
;
Gastrointestinal Tract
;
Genes, vif
;
Humans
;
Kearns-Sayre Syndrome
;
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
;
Mitochondrial Diseases*
;
Muscles
;
Muscular Diseases
;
Ophthalmoplegia*
;
Ophthalmoplegia, Chronic Progressive External
;
Prevalence
;
Retinitis Pigmentosa
;
Retrospective Studies
5.Analysis of the Clinicopathologic Characteristics of Multifocal Papillary Thyroid Carcinoma.
Min Wuk LEE ; Tae Kwun HA ; Sung Mock RYU ; Sang Hyo KIM
Korean Journal of Endocrine Surgery 2010;10(1):24-28
PURPOSE: Papillary thyroid carcinoma (PTC) is the most common malignancy that develops from the thyroid gland and its prognosis is quite excellent. One of the characteristic behaviors of PTC is that it often occurs at multiple foci. The purpose of this study was to investigate the clinicopathologic features and risk factors of multifocal papillary thyroid cancer. METHODS: A retrospective review was carried out on 624 patients with PTC and who underwent surgery from January 2005 to December 2007. Two hundred twenty-nine of them were found to have multiple tumor foci (≥2 foci). The risk factors that included gender, age at diagnosis, tumor size, capsular invasion, extrathyroidal extension (ETE), cervical lymph node (LN) involvement, the TNM classification, local recurrence and distant metastasis were comparatively analyzed between the solitary PTC and multifocal PTC groups. RESULTS: The enrolled patients were 59 male and 565 females. The mean age was 46 years (range: 15~77 years). Age (P=0.025), tumor size (P=0.027), capsular invasion (P<0.001), ETE (P<0.001) and cervical LN metastasis (P=0.002) were the significantly related factors for multifocal papillary thyroid cancer. However, gender was not significantly related with multifocality. CONCLUSION: The results of this study showed that multifocal tumors were significantly associated with age, tumors size, capsular invasion, ETE and cervical LN metastasis in patients with PTC. LN metastasis was mostly influenced by multifocality in the PTC patients. It seems certain that total thyroidectomy and formal central node dissection with postoperative adjuvant therapy are essential treatment for these patients, and closely surveying the nodal status is needed on the follow up of patients with multifocal PTC.
Classification
;
Diagnosis
;
Female
;
Follow-Up Studies
;
Humans
;
Lymph Nodes
;
Male
;
Neoplasm Metastasis
;
Prognosis
;
Recurrence
;
Retrospective Studies
;
Risk Factors
;
Thyroid Gland*
;
Thyroid Neoplasms*
;
Thyroidectomy
6.Visually evoked potential in children with mitochondrial respiratory chain defects.
Ji Eun SONG ; He Min KIM ; Sang Chul LEE ; Yoon Gghil PARK ; Suk Ho BYEON ; Young Mock LEE ; Joon Soo LEE ; Heung Dong KIM
Korean Journal of Pediatrics 2009;52(4):471-475
PURPOSE: Mitochondrial disorders are a clinical entity characterized by diverse symptoms and signs of involvement of various systems. Furthermore, the disorders are known to show ophthalmologic manifestations as well as neurological findings. Visually evoked potential is a sensitive measure to check the integrity of the visual pathway. In this study, we have investigated the value of visually evoked potential in mitochondrial disorders with respiratory chain defects. METHODS: Nineteen patients diagnosed with mitochondrial respiratory chain complex I defect as confirmed by spectrophotometric enzyme assay in muscle samples were enrolled for this study. The patients underwent a visually evoked potential study. We classified the results into four groups and compared these with clinical ophthalmologic findings. RESULTS: Among the 19 patients, 14 showed abnormal visually evoked potential findings. Seven patients showed abnormal clinical ophthalmologic findings. All patients with abnormal ophthalmologic findings showed abnormal visually evoked potential findings. Among the 12 patients with normal ophthalmologic findings, seven showed abnormal results in visually evoked potential. CONCLUSION: Visually evoked potential study could be used as an effective screening tool for mitochondrial disorders to detect ophthalmologic and neurological abnormalities.
Child
;
Electron Transport
;
Enzyme Assays
;
Evoked Potentials
;
Eye
;
Humans
;
Mass Screening
;
Mitochondria
;
Mitochondrial Diseases
;
Muscles
;
Visual Pathways
7.Isolated Cerebellar Variant of Adrenoleukodystrophy with a de novo Adenosine Triphosphate-Binding Cassette D1 (ABCD1) Gene Mutation.
Joon Won KANG ; Sang Mi LEE ; Kyo Yeon KOO ; Young Mock LEE ; Hyo Suk NAM ; Zhejiu QUAN ; Hoon Chul KANG
Yonsei Medical Journal 2014;55(4):1157-1160
X-linked adrenoleukodystrophy (X-ALD) shows a wide range of phenotypic expression, but clinical presentation as an isolated lesion of the cerebellar white matter and dentate nuclei has not been reported. We report an unusual presentation of X-ALD only with an isolated lesion of the cerebellar white matter and dentate nuclei. The proband, a 37-year-old man presented with bladder incontinence, slurred speech, dysmetria in all limbs, difficulties in balancing, and gait ataxia. Brain magnetic resonance imaging showed an isolated signal change of white matter around the dentate nucleus in cerebellum. With high level of very long chain fatty acid, gene study showed a de novo mutation in exon 1 at nucleotide position c.277_296dup20 (p.Ala100Cysfs*10) of the adenosine triphosphate-binding cassette D1 gene. It is advised to consider X-ALD as a differential diagnosis in patients with isolated cerebellar degeneration symptoms.
ATP-Binding Cassette Transporters/*genetics
;
Adrenoleukodystrophy/blood/*genetics
;
Adult
;
Cerebellar Diseases/blood/*genetics
;
Fatty Acids/blood
;
Humans
;
Male
;
Mutation
8.Functional Electrical Stimulation to Ankle Dorsiflexor and Plantarflexor Using Single Foot Switch in Patients With Hemiplegia From Hemorrhagic Stroke.
Young Hee LEE ; Sang Yeol YONG ; Sung Hoon KIM ; Ji Hyun KIM ; Jong Mock SHINN ; Youngho KIM ; Seunghyeon KIM ; Seonhong HWANG
Annals of Rehabilitation Medicine 2014;38(3):310-316
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the effects of functional electrical stimulation (FES) to ankle dorsiflexor (DF) and ankle plantarflexor (PF) on kinematic and kinetic parameters of hemiplegic gait. METHODS: Fourteen post-stroke hemiplegic patients were considered in this study. Electrical stimulation was delivered to ankle DF during the swing phase and ankle PF during the stance phase via single foot switch. Kinematic and kinetic data were collected using a computerized motion analysis system with force plate. Data of no stimulation (NS), DF stimulation only (DS), DF and PF stimulation (DPS) group were compared among each other. RESULTS: Peak ankle dorsiflexion angle during swing phase is significantly greater in DS group (-1.55degrees+/-9.10degrees) and DPS group (-2.23degrees+/-9.64degrees), compared with NS group (-6.71degrees+/-11.73degrees) (p<0.05), although there was no statistically significant difference between DS and DPS groups. Ankle plantarflexion angle at toe-off did not show significant differences among NS, DS, and DPS groups. Peak knee flexion in DPS group (34.12degrees+/-13.77degrees) during swing phase was significantly greater than that of NS group (30.78degrees+/-13.64degrees), or DS group (32.83degrees+/-13.07degrees) (p<0.05). CONCLUSION: In addition to the usual FES application stimulating ankle DF during the swing phase, stimulation of ankle PF during stance phase can help to increase peak knee flexion during the swing phase. This study shows the advantages of stimulating the ankle DF and PF using single foot switch for post-stroke gait.
Ankle*
;
Biomechanical Phenomena
;
Electric Stimulation*
;
Foot*
;
Gait
;
Gait Disorders, Neurologic
;
Hemiplegia*
;
Humans
;
Knee
;
Stroke*
9.Comparison of Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation and Electroneuronography Between Bell's Palsy and Ramsay Hunt Syndrome in Their Acute Stages.
Dong Min HUR ; Seong Hoon KIM ; Young Hee LEE ; Sung Hoon KIM ; Jung Mi PARK ; Ji Hyun KIM ; Sang Yeol YONG ; Jong Mock SHINN ; Kyung Joon OH
Annals of Rehabilitation Medicine 2013;37(1):103-109
OBJECTIVE: To examine the neurophysiologic status in patients with idiopathic facial nerve palsy (Bell's palsy) and Ramsay Hunt syndrome (herpes zoster oticus) within 7 days from onset of symptoms, by comparing the amplitude of compound muscle action potentials (CMAP) of facial muscles in electroneuronography (ENoG) and transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS). METHODS: The facial nerve conduction study using ENoG and TMS was performed in 42 patients with Bell's palsy and 14 patients with Ramsay Hunt syndrome within 7 days from onset of symptoms. Denervation ratio was calculated as CMAP amplitude evoked by ENoG or TMS on the affected side as percentage of the amplitudes on the healthy side. The severity of the facial palsy was graded according to House-Brackmann facial grading scale (H-B FGS). RESULTS: In all subjects, the denervation ratio in TMS (71.53+/-18.38%) was significantly greater than the denervation ratio in ENoG (41.95+/-21.59%). The difference of denervation ratio between ENoG and TMS was significantly smaller in patients with Ramsay Hunt syndrome than in patients with Bell's palsy. The denervation ratio of ENoG or TMS did not correlated significantly with the H-B FGS. CONCLUSION: In the electrophysiologic study for evaluation in patients with facial palsy within 7 days from onset of symptoms, ENoG and TMS are useful in gaining additional information about the neurophysiologic status of the facial nerve and may help to evaluate prognosis and set management plan.
Action Potentials
;
Bell Palsy
;
Denervation
;
Facial Muscles
;
Facial Nerve
;
Facial Paralysis
;
Herpes Zoster
;
Herpes Zoster Oticus
;
Humans
;
Muscles
;
Paralysis
;
Prognosis
;
Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation
10.A Case Rhabdomyolysis by Rare Causes: After Consumption of Common Doses of Acetaminophen and Sauna.
Heung Jin KIM ; In Sang LEE ; Yeoung Hoon WHANG ; Yong Mock BAE ; Gil Dong SEO ; Myong June KIM ; Soo Heung KIM ; Il Doo KIM
Korean Journal of Nephrology 2000;19(1):153-157
A 21-year-young man had an episode of myalgia and chilling 3 days prior to hospital admission. He had consumed common doses of acetaminophen for one day, and was presented in the sauna room for an hour. On the next morning, he complained of dyspnea and was admitted. He presented in rhabdo-myolysis and acute renal failure with increased up-take in the proximal muscles by (99m)Tc-MPD bone scan. He was treated by hemodialysis and discharged on the twenty-eighth hospital day. Rhabdomyolysis has the variable causes. The causes of this case are two, the first cause is common doses of acetaminophen. But, there is no reports for rhabdomyolysis by common doses of acetaminophen only. However, we should consider that acetaminophen is a contributing factor in this case. The second cause is viral infection. Our patient had myalgia and chilling prior to hospital admission. Heat- stroke is well known cause of rhabdomyolysis. The mechnisms for rhabdomyolysis in this disease are hypovolemia, total body potassium deficit, and increased variable cytokines. Sauna, the last cause of our rhabdomyolysis case may have the same mechanisms with heatstroke. Our case had two causative factors, common doses of acetaminophen and sauna. These factors might be cooperated in our case of rhabdomyolysis and acute renal failure.
Acetaminophen*
;
Acute Kidney Injury
;
Cytokines
;
Dyspnea
;
Heat Stroke
;
Humans
;
Hypovolemia
;
Muscles
;
Myalgia
;
Potassium
;
Renal Dialysis
;
Rhabdomyolysis*
;
Steam Bath*
;
Stroke