1.Nasal reconstruction with various flaps: case report.
Jong Woo CHOI ; Sang Hun CHUNG ; Chong Kun LEE ; Sang Tae AHN ; Poong LIM
Journal of the Korean Society of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgeons 1991;18(2):265-273
No abstract available.
2.Barrier Rcovery after Topically Applied Desoxymethasone Ontment, Vaseline and Hydrobase on Benzalkonium Chloride-irritated Hairless Mice Skin.
Sung Ku AHN ; Eung Ho CHOI ; Jiang SHAOJUN ; Sang Min HWANG ; Seung Hun LEE
Korean Journal of Dermatology 1998;36(5):820-826
BACKGROUND: Topical irritants disrupt the cutaneous permeability barrier through the removal of stratum comeum lipids. This perturbation of barrier integrity stimulates a variety of homeostatic repair responses that ultimately result in the normalization of bamer function. Object To measure the effect of desoxymethasone ointment, vaseline and hydrobase on the barrier recovery of benzalkonium chloride (BKC) imtated skin. MATERIALS AND METHODS: The left flank skin of 2-3 monthold hairless mice was treated with BKC and then desoxymethasone ointment, vaseline and hydrobase were applied. Transepidermal water loss (TEWL) was checked after 0, 3, 6, 9, 12, 15, 18, 21 and 24 hours. Electron microscopic examination was performed after 3 and 24 hours after desoxymethasone, vaseline and hydrobase had been applied. RESULTS: The recovery of TEWL was most prominantly observed in the desoxymethasone ointment treated group followed by vaseline and hydrobase. Electron microscopic examination using ruthenium tetroxide fixation revealed that secretion and numbers of lamellar bodies and complete formatice of lipid bilayers were most prominent at desoxymethasone ointment and vaseline treated group. CONCLUSION: Desoxymethasone ointment, vaseline and hydrobase can be good agents in improving bamer recovery after exposure to irritant material.
Animals
;
Benzalkonium Compounds*
;
Desoximetasone*
;
Irritants
;
Lipid Bilayers
;
Mice
;
Mice, Hairless*
;
Permeability
;
Petrolatum*
;
Ruthenium
;
Skin*
3.Stratum Corneum and Skin Barrier.
Seung Hun LEE ; Han Gil CHUNG ; Eung Ho CHOI ; Sang Min HWANG ; Sung Ku AHN
Korean Journal of Aerospace and Environmental Medicine 1999;9(1):39-52
No abstract available.
Skin*
4.A Case of Congenital Solitary Morphea Profunda.
Hyung Jin AHN ; Eung Ho CHOI ; Sung Ku AHN ; Sang Min HWANG ; Sung Hun LEE
Annals of Dermatology 2000;12(4):306-309
A 4-year-old boy has had a solitary sclerotic depressed plaque on the right anterior chest since birth. The histopathologic findings are consistent with morphea profunda: thickening, hyalinization, and homogenization of collagen bundles in the dermis and subcutaneous tissues, admixture with a prominent lymphocytic and plasma cell infiltrate, and sweat glands en-trapped between the thickened collagen bundles. We report a case of congenital solitary morphea profunda.
Child, Preschool
;
Collagen
;
Dermis
;
Humans
;
Hyalin
;
Male
;
Parturition
;
Plasma Cells
;
Scleroderma, Localized*
;
Subcutaneous Tissue
;
Sweat Glands
;
Thorax
5.Analysis of Higher-Order Wavefront Aberrations in Standard PRK.
Sang Bumm LEE ; Byeung Hun CHOI
Journal of the Korean Ophthalmological Society 2005;46(9):1454-1463
PURPOSE: To investigate the preoperative characteristics and postoperative change of the higher-order wavefront aberrations (HOAs) in myopic photorefractive keratectomy (PRK). METHODS: Standard PRK was performed in 39 eyes (spherical equivalent -4.71+/-1.56D) using the VISX(R) STAR S4(TM) excimer laser system. Wavefront analysis was performed preoperatively and 6 months postoperatively using the VISX(R) WaveScan(TM) aberrometer. Statistical analysis was performed to assess the preoperative characteristics of the HOAs and the PRK-induced aberrations. RESULTS: The preoperative root mean square (RMS) value of the total HOAs was 0.291 micrometer: coma 0.159 micrometer, trefoil 0.157 micrometer, spherical aberration 0.093 micrometer. Among the 3 HOAs, only the spherical aberration showed moderate magnitude negative correlation with the spherical equivalent (p=0.012) and sphere (p=0.005). The magnitude of all of the HOAs, except trefoil, were significantly increased at postoperative 6 months: total HOAs 183% (0.533 micrometer, p<0.001), spherical aberration 341% (0.317 micrometer, p<0.001), coma 185% (0.294 micrometer, p<0.001), trefoil 104% (0.163 micrometer, p=0.681). In the postoperative correlation analysis, only the PRK-induced spherical aberration showed the increase of magnitude with increasing preoperative spherical equivalent (p=0.036) and sphere (p=0.019). CONCLUSIONS: The HOAs, especially spherical aberration and coma, were increased after PRK. Among the 3 HOAs, the spherical aberration showed the greatest increase of magnitude and percent change; it also showed a positive correlation with increasing preoperative spherical equivalent and sphere. Further software improvements in the wavefront-guided surface ablations need to have a diminution of PRK-induced spherical aberration.
Coma
;
Lasers, Excimer
;
Lotus
;
Photorefractive Keratectomy
6.A Case of Necrobiosis Lipoidica Treated with Cyclosporine.
Do Hun KIM ; Sang Yun JIN ; Yun Seok CHOI ; Ai Young LEE ; Seung Ho LEE
Korean Journal of Dermatology 2013;51(6):484-485
No abstract available.
Cyclosporine
;
Necrobiosis Lipoidica
;
Necrobiotic Disorders
7.The Effect of Bentonite and Glycolic Acid on the Stratum corneum.
San KIM ; Sang Min HWANG ; Eung Ho CHOI ; Sung Ku AHN ; Seung Hun LEE
Annals of Dermatology 2001;13(4):205-210
BACKGROUND: Bentonite clay, which is a major component of mud pack, has been used for various purposes in cosmetics. Glycolic acid is known to be effective in the treatment of acne. Al-though those products are used widely, information on the mode of action and effects on the skin are little and controversial till now. OBJECTIVE: To investigate whether bentonite alone, or bentonite with glycolic acid in mixed formulation affect the stratum corneum leading to alteration on cutaneous barrier function and whether those products alter the lipid lamellae and desmosomes of corneocytes. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Mud pack-type ointment of bentonite, bentonite and 5% glycolic acid formulation, bentonite and 10% glycolic acid formulation were applied on the volar fore-arm of the five healthy men and flank skin of five 6-8 week old hairless mice. Transepidermal water loss and capacitance were measured. Electron microscopic examination after ruthenium tetroxide postfixation was performed on the flank skin of the mice. RESULTS: Transepidermal water loss(TEWL) increased immediately and normalized 4 to 6 hours later after removal of vapor permeable membrane in both mouse and human. Capacitance did not show any evidence of change in the water content of the stratum corneum. Electron microscopic examination revealed that lipid lamellae and desmosome of corneocytes were not de-graded, but lamellar body secretion and partially electron-lucent material was-increased in 10% glycolic acid and bentonite mixture-treated area. CONCLUSION: Barrier function of stratum corneum is not disturbed by bentonite and glycolic acid formulations at the concentration used. Barrier structures are not disrupted, but lamellar body secretion and partially electron-lucent material was increased by bentonite and glycolic acid formulations at higher concentration.
Acne Vulgaris
;
Animals
;
Bentonite*
;
Desmosomes
;
Humans
;
Male
;
Membranes
;
Mice
;
Mice, Hairless
;
Mud Therapy
;
Ruthenium
;
Skin
;
Water
8.The effect of serum from patients with endometriosis on mouse embryo development in vitro.
Jae Ho CHOI ; Gill Woo LEE ; Sang Hun CHA ; Tae Ho CHO
Korean Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology 1993;36(7):1554-1560
No abstract available.
Animals
;
Embryonic Development*
;
Embryonic Structures*
;
Endometriosis*
;
Female
;
Humans
;
Mice*
;
Pregnancy
9.Utility of endometrial bacterial cultures in the prediction of endometritis following cesarean section.
Young Ha CHOI ; Tae Gyu PARK ; Sang Hun KIM ; Yoon Kee PARK ; Sung Ho LEE
Korean Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology 1992;35(9):1373-1379
No abstract available.
Cesarean Section*
;
Endometritis*
;
Female
;
Pregnancy
10.The Response of diabetic Rabbit Femoral Artey on the Electrical Stimulation and vasodilators.
Jin Soo LIM ; Youn Suk CHOI ; Sang Hun CHUNG ; Sok I YI ; Ho KWON ; Poong LIM
Journal of the Korean Society of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgeons 1999;26(6):1125-1130
This experiment was aimed to investigate the contractile responses of the fermoral artery to the electrical stimulation and the inhibitory effects of verapamil and papaverine on the electrical stimulation of the fermoral artery in the control (n=46) and the diabetic rabbits(n=40). Diabetic rabbits were made by and administration of alloxan (100 mg/kg) intravenously and sacrified 8 weeks later. Femoral arterial rings 3 mm in length were taken and mounted on the force-displacement transducer for the measurements of isometric tension. All experiments were done in the aerated (95% O2 with 5% CO2)biological chamber filled with Kreb's solution and the initial tension of 1.5g was applied to the rings. After 1 hour of equilibrium of the rings, the contractile responses of the electrical stimulation on the femoral arterial rings were taken without vasoactive drugs and then, under verapamil and papaverine solution. And we compared the morphologic findings of the vessels in the two groups in relation to the functional changes by transmission electron miroscopy. The results are as follows: 1. The contractile responses in the presence of verapamil or papaverine solutions to the electrical stimulation were lowed significantly in the fermoral arterial rings of the diabetic rabbits compared with that of the control rabbits (verapamil; 10M~10M: p<0.01, papaverine; 10M & 10M: p<0.01). 2. Transmission electron microphotographs showed many morphological differences of the femoral arteries between the control and the diabetic rabbits. These were irregularities of the internal elastic lamina and the hypertrophy of the cytoplasms of the smooth muscle cells. And also, there were many vacuoles in the cytoplasm of the endothelial cells, lateral to the internal elastic laminaes, and between the smooth muscle cells in the diabetic rabbit femoral artery. By this study, we found that the contractile responses of the femoral arterial rings to the electrical stimulation were decreased in the diabetic rabbits, and the vasodiatory effects of verapamil and papaverine on the electrically stimulated femoral arterial rings were also lowered in the diabetic rabbits compared with the control rabbits. These changes of the vasular responses of the diabetic vessel may be associated with morphological changes manifested by transmission electron microscopy or any other functional derangement of the vessels.
Alloxan
;
Arteries
;
Cytoplasm
;
Electric Stimulation*
;
Endothelial Cells
;
Femoral Artery
;
Hypertrophy
;
Microscopy, Electron, Transmission
;
Myocytes, Smooth Muscle
;
Papaverine
;
Rabbits
;
Transducers
;
Vacuoles
;
Vasodilator Agents*
;
Verapamil