1.Sleep Characteristics in Infants
Sleep Medicine and Psychophysiology 2020;27(2):33-40
An infant’s sleep varies considerably from that of adults in terms of structure, amount, and breathing pattern. After birth, sleep becomes evenly distributed throughout the day and night. Nighttime sleep gradually increases with the maturation of circadian rhythm, and sleep is gradually consolidated. Electroencephalography characteristics change with age, from early and dominant active (REM) sleep in newborns to increasing NREM sleep. Similar to other elements of growth, the upper respiratory tract and ribcage gradually increase in size with age, and respiratory control also improves. With these changes, sleep patterns also change. At this time that various sleep disorders may appear. Improved understanding of age-dependent changes in infant sleep can help determine the etiology and facilitate diagnosis of infant sleep diseases.
2.Sleep Characteristics in Infants
Sleep Medicine and Psychophysiology 2020;27(2):33-40
An infant’s sleep varies considerably from that of adults in terms of structure, amount, and breathing pattern. After birth, sleep becomes evenly distributed throughout the day and night. Nighttime sleep gradually increases with the maturation of circadian rhythm, and sleep is gradually consolidated. Electroencephalography characteristics change with age, from early and dominant active (REM) sleep in newborns to increasing NREM sleep. Similar to other elements of growth, the upper respiratory tract and ribcage gradually increase in size with age, and respiratory control also improves. With these changes, sleep patterns also change. At this time that various sleep disorders may appear. Improved understanding of age-dependent changes in infant sleep can help determine the etiology and facilitate diagnosis of infant sleep diseases.
3.Depression and marital intimacy level in parents of infants with sleep onset association disorder: a preliminary study on the effect of sleep education.
Sihyoung LEE ; Seonkyeong RHIE ; Kyu Young CHAE
Korean Journal of Pediatrics 2013;56(5):211-217
PURPOSE: Sleep onset association disorder (SOAD) is a form of behavioral insomnia observed in children that is caused by inappropriate sleep training. SOAD typically disturbs the sleep of not only infants and children but also their parents. We investigated levels of depression and marital intimacy among parents of infants with typical SOAD, to understand the influence of SOAD on family dynamics, as well as examine ways for improving depression and marital intimacy through behavioral training. METHODS: Depression and marital intimacy were assessed using the Beck Depression Inventory (BDI) and Waring Intimacy Questionnaire (WIQ). These measures were administered to 65 parents of infants (n=50) diagnosed with SOAD. We conducted sleep education and behavioral training for the parents and compared levels of depression and marital intimacy after 2-6 weeks of training. RESULTS: The 65 parents consisted of 50 mothers and 15 fathers. Depressive symptoms were higher among mothers than fathers (P =0.007). Marital intimacy was negatively correlated with depressive symptoms. Twenty-six parents were assessed again after sleep training. We found that mothers' depressive symptoms and marital intimacy improved post training. CONCLUSION: SOAD can be detrimental to both infants and parents, especially for parents who sleep with their infants. For instance, disruption of sleep patterns in such parents can reduce marital intimacy. However, behavioral modification is an effective treatment for infants with frequent nighttime waking, as well as for diminishing the depressive symptoms of sleep-deprived parents.
Child
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Depression
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Fathers
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Humans
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Infant
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Mothers
;
Parents
;
Surveys and Questionnaires
;
Sleep Initiation and Maintenance Disorders
4.Sleep patterns and school performance of Korean adolescents assessed using a Korean version of the pediatric daytime sleepiness scale.
Seonkyeong RHIE ; Sihyoung LEE ; Kyu Young CHAE
Korean Journal of Pediatrics 2011;54(1):29-35
PURPOSE: Korean adolescents have severe nighttime sleep deprivation and daytime sleepiness because of their competitive educational environment. However, daytime sleep patterns and sleepiness have never been studied using age-specific methods, such as the pediatric daytime sleepiness scale (PDSS). We surveyed the daytime sleepiness of Korean adolescents using a Korean translation of the PDSS. METHODS: We distributed the 27-item questionnaire, including the PDSS and questions related to sleep pattern, sleep satisfaction, and emotional state, to 3,370 students in grades 5-12. RESULTS: The amount of nighttime sleep decreased significantly with increasing age. During weekday nights, 5-6th graders slept for 7.95+/-1.05 h, 7-9th graders for 7.57+/-1.05 h, and 10-12th graders for 5.78+/-1.13 h. However, the total amounts of combined daytime and nighttime sleep during weekdays were somewhat greater, 8.15+/-1.12 h for 5-6th graders, 8.17+/-1.20 h for 7-9th graders, and 6.87+/-1.40 h for 10-12th graders. PDSS scores increased with age, 11.89+/-5.56 for 5-6th graders, 16.57+/-5.57 for 7-9th graders, and 17.71+/-5.24 for 10-12th graders. Higher PDSS scores were positively correlated with poor school performance and emotional instability. CONCLUSION: Korean teenagers sleep to an unusual extent during the day because of nighttime sleep deprivation. This negatively affects school performance and emotional stability. A Korean translation of the PDSS was effective in evaluating the severity of daytime sleepiness and assessing the emotional state and school performance of Korean teenagers.
Adolescent
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Humans
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Surveys and Questionnaires
;
Sleep Deprivation
5.Percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy in children.
Jye Hae PARK ; SeonKyeong RHIE ; Su Jin JEONG
Korean Journal of Pediatrics 2011;54(1):17-21
PURPOSE: Percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy (PEG) can improve nutritional status and reduce the amount of time needed to feed neurologically impaired children. We evaluated the characteristics, complications, and outcomes of neurologically impaired children treated with PEG. METHODS: We retrospectively reviewed the records of 32 neurologically impaired children who underwent PEG between March 2002 and August 2008 at our medical center. Forty-two PEG procedures comprising 32 PEG insertions and 10 PEG exchanges, were performed. The mean follow-up time was 12.2 (6.6) months. RESULTS: Mean patient age was 9.4 (4.5) years. The main indications for PEG insertion were swallowing difficulty with GI bleeding due to nasogastric tube placement and/or the presence of gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD). The overall rate of complications was 47%, with early complications evident in 25% of patients and late complications in 22%. The late complications included one gastro-colic fistula, two cases of aggravated GERD, and four instances of wound infection. Among the 15 patients with histological evidence of GERD before PEG, 13 (87%) had less severe GERD, experienced no new aspiration events, and showed increased body weight after PEG treatment. CONCLUSION: PEG is a safe, effective, and relatively simple technique affording long-term enteral nutritional support in neurologically impaired children. Following PEG treatment, the body weight of most patients increased and the levels of vomiting, GI bleeding, and aspiration fell. We suggest that PEG with post-procedural observation be considered for enteral nutritional support of neurologically impaired children.
Body Weight
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Child
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Deglutition
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Fistula
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Follow-Up Studies
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Gastroesophageal Reflux
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Gastrostomy
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Hemorrhage
;
Humans
;
Nutritional Status
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Nutritional Support
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Retrospective Studies
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Vomiting
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Wound Infection
6.Incidence of Febrile Urinary Tract Infection According to Clinical Characteristics in Patients with Congenital Hydronephrosis and Hydronephrotic Patients Diagnosed at First Febrile Urinary Tract Infection.
Geun Jung KIM ; Seonkyeong RHIE ; Jun Ho LEE
Journal of the Korean Society of Pediatric Nephrology 2010;14(2):184-194
PURPOSE: The aim of this study was to evaluate the incidence of febrile urinary tract infection (UTI) according to clinical characteristics in patients with congenital hydronephrosis (CH) and hydronephrotic patients first diagnosed with hydronephrosis during treatment of febrile UTII. METHODS: In this study, 200 patients with congenital hydronephrosis were enrolled in group 1 and 252 patients first diagnosed with hydronephrosis during treatment of febrile UTI were enrolled in group 2. We counted the episodes of UTI in the two groups according to clinical characteristics, the presence of VUR, type of feeding, and clinical outcomes since 2000. And we compared those results between the two groups. and compared two groups as well. RESULTS: The incidence of recurrent UTI was 10%, 0.028 per person-year in group 1 and 16.7%, 0.051 per person-year in group 2, respectively (P <0.05). Group 2 had more VUR (3% vs. 27%, P <0.05) and higher incidence of UTI than group 1. The incidence of UTI in patients with CH of Society of Fetal Urology (SFU) grade 4 or grade 4-5 VUR was 80% and 44.4%, respectively. No significant differences were found in incidence of UTI between BMF (breast milk feeding) and artificial milk feeding group in both groups (P 1= 0.274, P 2=0.4). The time of resolution of CH had no correlation with either number of UTI episodes or the presence of VUR. CONCLUSION: The overall incidence of UTI is low in patients with CH as well as patients patients first diagnosed with hydronephrosis during treatment of febrile UTI except patients with SFU grade 4 or grade 4-5 VUR. BMF has no protective effect against UTI.
Humans
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Hydronephrosis
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Incidence
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Milk
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Urinary Tract
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Urinary Tract Infections
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Urology
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Vesico-Ureteral Reflux
7.Reconsideration of urine culture for the diagnosis of acute pyelonephritis in children: a new challenging method for diagnosing acute pyelonephritis
Korean Journal of Pediatrics 2019;62(12):433-437
Acute pyelonephritis (APN) should be detected and treated as soon as possible to reduce the risk of the development of acquired renal scarring. However, in the medical field, urine culture results are not available or considered when the prompt discrimination of APN is necessary and empirical treatment is started. Furthermore, urine culture cannot discriminate APN among children with febrile urinary tract infection (UTI) (pyelitis, lower UTI with other fever focus). Therefore, the usefulness of urine culture for diagnostic purposes is small and the sampling procedure is invasive. Congenital hypoplastic kidney is the most common cause of chronic kidney injury in children. Thus, it is desirable that a main target be detected as early as possible when imaging studies are performed in children with APN. However, if APN does not recur, no medical or surgical treatment or imaging studies would be needed because the acquired renal scar would not progress further. Therefore, the long-term prognosis of APN in young children, particularly infants, depends on the number of recurrent APN, not other febrile UTI. New methods that enable prompt, practical, and comfortable APN diagnosis in children are needed as alternatives to urinary catheterization for urine culture sampling.
Child
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Cicatrix
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Diagnosis
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Discrimination (Psychology)
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Fever
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Humans
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Infant
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Kidney
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Methods
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Prognosis
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Pyelitis
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Pyelonephritis
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Urinary Catheterization
;
Urinary Catheters
;
Urinary Tract Infections
8.Predictors of renal scars in infants with recurrent febrile urinary tract infection: a retrospective, single-center study
Jae Ha HAN ; Seonkyeong RHIE ; Jun Ho LEE
Childhood Kidney Diseases 2022;26(1):52-57
Purpose:
To determine predictive factors for detecting renal parenchymal damages (RPDs) in infants with recurrent febrile urinary tract infection (fUTI).
Methods:
From January 2015 to December 2021, 102 infants with recurrent fUTI and who underwent 99mTc-dimercaptosuccinic acid (DMSA) renal scan in our hospital were included in this study. Controls included infants with normal DMSA results performed 3 months apart from the 2nd episode of fUTI. DMSA-positive group included infants with positive DMSA results performed 3 months apart from the 2nd episode of fUTI or at the 3rd episode of fUTI. The recurrence rate, causative bacteria, renal size discrepancy of both kidneys, and laboratory findings including C-reactive protein (CRP) and spot urine sodium-to-potassium ratio (uNa/K) were compared between both groups.
Results:
Only 3.8% of 79 infants with a 2nd episode of fUTI showed positive DMSA results. fUTI recurred more frequently within 12 months of follow-up in the DMSA-positive group than in the control group (69% vs. 13%, P=0.00). CRP values were significantly higher in the DMSA-positive group than in the control group (7.3 mg/dL vs. 3.7 mg/dL, P=0.00). Spot uNa/K were significantly lower in the DMSA-positive group than in the control group (0.6 vs. 1.1, P=0.00).
Conclusions
Congenital renal scar and RPDs on the DMSA scan were more frequently found in infants with recurrent fUTI than those in the control group. High CRP values and low spot uNa/K in acute infections were helpful in predicting the presence of RPD in infants with recurrent fUTI.
9.A Case of Combined Acute Disseminated Encephalomyelitis and Acute Flaccid Paralysis associated with Enteroviral Infection.
Jungjin LEE ; Youjin CHOI ; Seonkyeong RHIE ; Sun Jung JANG ; Kyu Young CHAE
Journal of the Korean Child Neurology Society 2013;21(3):208-212
Enterovirus infection is often aggravated and manifests as various neurological complications such as aseptic meningitis, brainstem encephalitis, poliomyelitis-like acute flaccid paralysis, transverse myelitis, and severe systemic diseases. There are a few reports indicating that enterovirus is associated with acute disseminated encephalomyelitis (ADEM), acute flaccid paralysis, or Guillain-Barre syndrome separately. However, none of these report ADEM and acute flaccid paralysis occurring simultaneously. Here, we present a case of combined ADEM and acute flaccid paralysis associated with enteroviral infection in a child and reviewed the relevant literature. A 5-year-old boy was admitted to the hospital for headache and vomiting with evident meningeal irritation signs. Despite of antibiotic therapy, his mental state rapidly declined to coma with abnormal upper motor neuron (UMN) signs. During 5 consecutive days of steroid pulse therapy, his abnormal UMN signs abruptly changed to flaccid paralysis. Suspected acute flaccid paralysis due to enterovirus prompted the addition of intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG). On hospital day 33, he was discharged with full recovery of muscle tone and strength with an alert mental state.
Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity
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Brain Stem
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Child
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Child, Preschool
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Coma
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Encephalitis
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Encephalomyelitis
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Encephalomyelitis, Acute Disseminated*
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Enterovirus
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Enterovirus Infections
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Guillain-Barre Syndrome
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Headache
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Humans
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Immunoglobulins
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Male
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Meningitis, Aseptic
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Motor Neurons
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Muscle Hypotonia
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Muscles
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Myelitis, Transverse
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Paralysis*
;
Vomiting
10.Impact of Sleep Duration on Emotional Status in Adolescents.
Jungjin LEE ; Jeonghee KANG ; Seonkyeong RHIE ; Kyu Young CHAE
Journal of the Korean Child Neurology Society 2013;21(3):100-110
PURPOSE: South Korean adolescents have been identified as a chronic partial sleep-deprived population in several previous studies. This study was to identify the current nocturnal sleep duration by age in South Korean adolescents and to analyze the association of emotional status factors such as subjective happiness, depression and suicidal attempts, and health-risk behaviors with the nocturnal sleep duration. METHODS: The findings in this study are based on the data obtained from the 7th Korea Youth Risk Behavior Web-Based Survey (KYRBWS-VII), a cross-sectional, annual survey of the health-risk behaviors in a representative sample of South Korean middle- and high-school students aged 13-18 years, which was conducted in 2011. Out of 75,643 students from 800 schools across the nation, 75,205 students were selected by using the complex sampling design of the survey. We analyzed the relationships between the duration of nocturnal sleep and emotional status (subjective happiness, stress level, depression, and suicidal thoughts), health-risk behaviors (smoking, drinking), and sleep satisfaction. RESULTS: There was a significant relationship between the duration of sleep and the emotional status. In general, happy students had the longest nocturnal sleep duration, regardless of their grades. Self-rated stress levels and depression in adolescents were inversely proportional to nocturnal sleep duration. Health-risk behaviors such as smoking and alcohol consumptions were more common in sleep-deprived students (P<0.001). CONCLUSION: Appropriate nocturnal sleep duration is critical for emotional health as well as prevention of suicide in the adolescent population.
Adolescent*
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Depression
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Happiness
;
Humans
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Korea
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Risk-Taking
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Sleep Deprivation
;
Smoke
;
Smoking
;
Suicidal Ideation
;
Suicide