1.Early Onset Alzheimer's Disease Presenting as Logopenic Primary Progressive Aphasia.
Mi Jin OH ; SangYun KIM ; Young Ho PARK ; Jeewon SUH ; SangHak YI
Dementia and Neurocognitive Disorders 2018;17(2):66-70
No abstract available.
Alzheimer Disease*
;
Aphasia, Primary Progressive*
2.Hydrocephalus in a Patient with Alzheimer's Disease.
Min Ju KANG ; Young Ho PARK ; SangYun KIM ; SangHak YI
Dementia and Neurocognitive Disorders 2018;17(1):32-36
BACKGROUND: Normal pressure hydrocephalus (NPH) is an etiology of dementia that is reversible following cerebrospinal fluid shunt placement, however, surgical intervention not always clinically effective and the respons to shunt therapy is poorly understood. Furthermore, NPH is a source of comorbidity in diseases with neurodegenerative pathology, such as Alzheimer's disease (AD). CASE REPORT: A 61-year-old woman presented to the neurology clinic with progressive gait difficulties and cognitive impairment over five years. Nine years after ventriculoperitoneal (VP) shunt treatment, the patient began to experience frequent falls. There was no improvement in clinical symptoms after the alteration of valve pressure on the VP shunt. An 18F-florbetaben amyloid positron emission tomography scan showed increased diffusion uptake over the bilateral cortices, precuneus, and posterior cingulate cortex. CONCLUSIONS: The patient of NPH was unresponsive to shunt therapy due to the development of AD.
Accidental Falls
;
Alzheimer Disease*
;
Amyloid
;
Cerebrospinal Fluid Shunts
;
Cognition Disorders
;
Comorbidity
;
Dementia
;
Diffusion
;
Female
;
Gait
;
Gyrus Cinguli
;
Humans
;
Hydrocephalus*
;
Hydrocephalus, Normal Pressure
;
Middle Aged
;
Neurology
;
Parietal Lobe
;
Pathology
;
Positron-Emission Tomography
3.Metronidazole Induced Encephalopathy with Irreversible Course
Journal of the Korean Neurological Association 2018;36(2):136-137
No abstract available.
Brain Diseases
;
Metronidazole
4.Seasonal Variation in the Incidence of Transient Global Amnesia in South Korea.
SangHak YI ; Young Ho PARK ; SangYun KIM
Journal of Clinical Neurology 2017;13(4):435-436
No abstract available.
Amnesia, Transient Global*
;
Incidence*
;
Korea*
;
Seasons*
5.Neurosyphilis Mimicking Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease.
Jae Won JANG ; Jeong Hoon PARK ; Yong Jun EO ; Seong Heon KIM ; Kyung Ho CHOI ; SangHak YI ; Young Ho PARK ; SangYun KIM
Dementia and Neurocognitive Disorders 2016;15(4):170-173
BACKGROUND: As rapidly progressive dementia (RPD), general paresis and Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) may have overlapping clinical presentation due to a wide variety of clinical manifestations. CASE REPORT: A 57-year-old man presented with rapid progressive cognitive decline, behavioral change, ataxic gait, tremor and pyramidal signs for 3 months. In addition to these multiple systemic involvements, positive result for the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) 14-3-3 protein tentatively diagnosed him as probable CJD. However, due to increased serum rapid plasma reagin, venereal disease research laboratory, and fluorescent treponemal antibody-absorption reactivity in CSF, the final diagnosis was changed to general paresis. CONCLUSIONS: A patient with RPD needs to be carefully considered for differential diagnosis, among a long list of diseases. It is important to rule out CJD, which is the most frequent in RPD and is a fatal disease with no cure. Diagnostic criteria or marker of CJD, such as 14-3-3 protein, may be inconclusive, and a typical pattern in diffusion-weighted imaging is important to rule out other reversible diseases.
14-3-3 Proteins
;
Cerebrospinal Fluid
;
Creutzfeldt-Jakob Syndrome*
;
Dementia
;
Diagnosis
;
Diagnosis, Differential
;
Gait
;
Humans
;
Middle Aged
;
Neurosyphilis*
;
Plasma
;
Sexually Transmitted Diseases
;
Tremor
9.Ventral Anterior Cingulate Atrophy as a Predisposing Factor for Transient Global Amnesia
Jeewon SUH ; Young Ho PARK ; Hang-Rai KIM ; Jae-Won JANG ; SangHak YI ; Min Ju KANG ; Yun Jung BAE ; Byung Se CHOI ; Jae Hyoung KIM ; SangYun KIM
Dementia and Neurocognitive Disorders 2024;23(2):89-94
Background:
and Purpose: This study aimed to evaluate the brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of patients with acute transient global amnesia (TGA) using volumetric analysis to verify whether the brains of TGA patients have pre-existing structural abnormalities.
Methods:
We evaluated the brain MRI data from 87 TGA patients and 20 age- and sexmatched control subjects. We included brain MRIs obtained from TGA patients within 72 hours of symptom onset to verify the pre-existence of structural change. For voxel-based morphometric analyses, statistical parametric mapping was employed to analyze the structural differences between patients with TGA and control subjects.
Results:
TGA patients exhibited significant volume reductions in the bilateral ventral anterior cingulate cortices (corrected p<0.05).
Conclusions
TGA patients might have pre-existing structural changes in bilateral ventral anterior cingulate cortices prior to TGA attacks.
10.Executive Summary of the 2021 International Conference of Korean Dementia Association: A Report From the Academic Committee of the Korean Dementia Association
Kee Hyung PARK ; Jae-Won JANG ; Jeewon SUH ; SangHak YI ; Jae-Sung BAE ; Jae-Sung LIM ; Hyon LEE ; Juhee CHIN ; Young Ho PARK ; Yun Jeong HONG ; Geon Ha KIM ; On behalf of Academic Committee of the Korean Dementia Association
Dementia and Neurocognitive Disorders 2022;21(2):45-58
Recently, aducanumab, a beta amyloid targeted immunotherapy, has been approved by the US Food and Drug Administration for the treatment of Alzheimer’s dementia (AD). Although many questions need to be answered, this approval provides a promising hope for the development of AD drugs that could be supported by new biomarkers such as blood-based ones and composite neuropsychological tests that can confirm pathologic changes in early stages of AD. It is important to elucidate the complexity of AD which is known to be associated with other factors such as vascular etiologies and neuro-inflammation. Through the second international conference of the Korean Dementia Association (KDA), researchers from all over the world have participated in the exchange of opinions with KDA members on the most up-to-date topics. The Academic Committee of the KDA summarizes lectures to provide the depth of the conference as well as discussions. This will be an important milestone to widen the latest knowledge in the research of AD’s diagnosis, therapeutics, pathogenesis that can lead to the establishment of future directions.