2.Lumbar Spinal Stenosis: Pathophysiology and Treatment Principle: A Narrative Review
Byung Ho LEE ; Seong-Hwan MOON ; Kyung-Soo SUK ; Hak-Sun KIM ; Jae-Ho YANG ; Hwan-Mo LEE
Asian Spine Journal 2020;14(5):682-693
Patients with lumbar spinal stenosis may exhibit symptoms such as back pain, radiating pain, and neurogenic claudication. Although long-term outcome of treatments manifests similar results for both nonsurgical and surgical treatments, positive effects such as short-term improvement in symptoms and decreased fall risk may be expected with surgery. Surgical treatment is basically decompression, and a combination of treatments can be added depending on the degree of decompression and the accompanying instability. Recently, minimally invasive surgery has been found to result in excellent outcomes in the treatment of lumbar spinal stenosis. Therefore, better treatment effects can be anticipated with an approach aimed at understanding the overall pathophysiology and treatment methods of lumbar spinal stenosis.
3.Weight in children's minds: body shape dissatisfactions for 12-year old children.
Bong Yul HUH ; Jin A PARK ; Seong Won KIM ; Yeum Seung YANG ; Jeung In HAN ; Hwan Sik HWANG
Journal of the Korean Academy of Family Medicine 1997;18(6):622-631
BACKGROUND: Diet and weight concerns are commonplace and almost accepted features of life for girls during adolescence. Until recently, younger age groups haue largely been ignored, as these concerns were thought to be a product of pubertal development and sexual maturity. Girls under the age of fifteen therefore, have been assumed to be free of the pressures experienced by adult women. However, this belief is now hard to sustain. The object of the present study was to investigate the self-perception and body shape satisfaction in different weight categories of boys and girls aged 12-years old in Korea. METHODS: In May, 1995, one hundred and sixty seven boys and one hundred and twenty girls from two schools in Seoul completed assessments of body-esteem, self-esteem, body shape preference. The children's body weight and height were also measured. RESULTS: The heaviest children expressed the most discontent, having a low body-esteem, a desire for thinness. By the age of 12, girls boys already differ in their body shape satisfaction and differ in their body shape aspirations. There was a significant effect of weight category on the children's body esteem(boys(P =.005), girls(P=.0001). Children in both extreme categories, under-and over-weight, had lower body-esteem scores than those in other weight categories. However, it was the overweight children who had the lowest. reported body-esteem. Body esteem was highest among girls in the 'slightly underweight' category and highest among boys on the 'average weight' category. There was no effects of either weight category or gender on the childrens appraisal of self-esteem. A comparison of the points chosen on the silhouette scales to reflect current and preferred body shapes revealed clear gender differences. Of the girls, 63% placed their preferred body shape at a point thinner than their currently perceived shape, while only 15% chose a broader figure. In contrast,, 41% of the boys rated their preferred figure as broader than their current perception, and 37% as thinner than their current perception. CONCLUSIONS: This study has noted a relationship between body weight and self-perception in 12-year old children. The heaviest children expressed low body-esteem, a desire for thinness. This pattern was more characteristic of girls than boys. Even at this age, well before they have completed physical maturation, girls are aspiring to a body shape which is thinner than their average. This discontent experienced by the heaviest children on this sample was apparent in their lower body-esteem and the distance between their current and preferred body shapes. The girls preference was for thinness, while in the boys it was for a body shape which was broader than their current shape. From their responses, it would appear that the boys' desire was not for fatness, but for a more athletic and muscular build.
Adolescent
;
Adult
;
Aspirations (Psychology)
;
Body Weight
;
Child*
;
Diet
;
Female
;
Humans
;
Korea
;
Overweight
;
Self Concept
;
Seoul
;
Sports
;
Thinness
;
Weights and Measures
4.The role of computed tomography as decision factor of laparotomy in blunt abdominal trauma.
Hyo Gon KIM ; Cheong Yong KIM ; Seong Hwan KIM ; Yang Soo JUNG
Journal of the Korean Surgical Society 1991;40(2):214-222
No abstract available.
Laparotomy*
5.A study of the completeness of fecal diversion in loop colostomy(by TC scanning).
Yang Sik CHO ; Seong Hwan KIM ; Young Don MIN ; Cheong Yong KIM
Journal of the Korean Society of Coloproctology 1993;9(4):363-374
No abstract available.
6.Sonographic evaluation of new bone formation at the distraction site in ilizarov limb lengthening procedure.
Hui Wan PARK ; Jun Seop JAHNG ; Kyu Hyun YANG ; Ki Keun OH ; Seong Hwan MOON
The Journal of the Korean Orthopaedic Association 1992;27(1):360-368
No abstract available.
Extremities*
;
Osteogenesis*
;
Ultrasonography*
7.A clinical study of laryngeal premalignant lesions.
Ki Hwan HONG ; Seong Woan KIM ; Jin Young YANG ; Young Chan LEE ; Yong Joo YOON
Korean Journal of Otolaryngology - Head and Neck Surgery 1991;34(1):89-99
No abstract available.
8.A Clinical Study in the Prognosis of the Temporomandibular disorder.
Jin Ho CHOI ; Il Kyu KIM ; Nam Sik OH ; Seong Seob OH ; Eui Seong KIM ; Seong Ho LEE ; Dong Hwan YANG
Journal of the Korean Association of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgeons 2000;26(5):497-506
This study is comprised of data obtained from the files of 346 patients with temporomandibular disorders. All patients were diagnosed, treated and followed in the Department of Dentistry at the Inha university hospital, Incheon, Korea. The patients had treated with medications, physical therapy, occlusal splint and arthrocentesis. The study data were obtained from the medical records and telephone interviews that were conducted by research assistants. The results were as follows 1. The patient's main complaint was pain(77%), and mouth opening limitation was 17%. 2. An analysis of the medical records of the 346 patients disclosed that 82% were improved and 17% had no improvement when they were dismissed. 1% of the patients had become worse during therapy. 3. A success rate of 82% was achieved when medication assisted physical therapy was included. In the current status at the telephone interview, 270 patients(89%) reported that they were doing well with 56% describing themselves as asymtomatic and 32% experiencing only minor residual or recurrent symptoms. 11% regarded themselves as unimproved and worse. 4. In the current status of the unsuccessfully treated patients by medications and physical therapy, 64% of patients were doing well(3% as asymptomatic and 56% as only minor residual or recurrent symptom). But 36% of patients was reported as unimproved and worse. 5. TMJ has a remarkable adaptive potential and TMJ disorder has a natural history of spontaneous fluctuations and favorable prognosis during the subsequent natural course. 6. In the treatment of the temporomandibular disorders, there is a treatment ladder, starting with the simplest and least expensive treatment, that is ascended until resolution of the patient's symptoms occur. These findings suggest that conservative reversible therapies are both sufficient and appropriate for management of temporomandibular disorder in most patients. Major alterations of mandibular position or dentoalveolar relationships do not appear to be necessary for obtaining either short term or long term success and therefore they can be generally regards as inappropriate treatment for this disorder. The fact that physical therapy is non-invasive and does not appear to be fraught with irreversible changes, makes it a very applicable vehicle in the area of clinical TMJ disorder management.
Dentistry
;
Humans
;
Incheon
;
Interviews as Topic
;
Korea
;
Medical Records
;
Mouth
;
Natural History
;
Occlusal Splints
;
Prognosis*
;
Temporomandibular Joint
;
Temporomandibular Joint Disorders*
9.A Clinical Review of the HELLP Syndrome.
Sang Tae AHN ; Haeng Soo KIM ; Jeong In YANG ; Joon Hwan OH ; Ki Su HAN ; Seong Cheon YANG ; Kie Suk OH
Korean Journal of Perinatology 2001;12(2):122-130
No abstract available.
Female
;
HELLP Syndrome*
;
Pregnancy
10.Mechanism of Ligamentum Flavum Hypertrophy.
Jae Ho YANG ; Young Mi KANG ; Chul Hyun KI ; Sa Hyun SUNG ; Hwan Mo LEE ; Seong Hwan MOON
Journal of Korean Orthopaedic Research Society 2015;18(1):25-32
Ligamentum flavum (LF) is yellowish ligament tissue connecting the lamina of adjacent vertebra. Degenerative changes in the spine cause the hypertrophy of LF and facet joint and disc bulging and herniation. These changes results in a narrowing of the spinal canal. Neural decompression surgery by removing the hypertrophied lamina, LF and disc pathologies has been considered as successful treatment method in lumbar spinal stenosis. This surgery has showed relatively satisfactory clinical results and has increased life-expectancy in elderly patients. However, issues about post spinal surgery syndrome and re-stenosis after the surgery also have been reported. Because LF is one of the main mechanisms of spinal stenosis, accurate understanding about pathologic mechanism on the LF hypertrophy may suggest alternative treatment methods such as medical treatment or less invasive treatment than surgical decompression can be considered. Hypertrophy of the ligamentum flavum is generated from increase of collagen synthesis, fibroblast proliferation, and fibrosis caused by 1) the expression of growth factors (TGF-beta1 etc.) stimulated by the repeated mechanical tension, 2) inflammatory cytokines from spinal facet joint structure and LF 3) delayed cell death, and 4) inflammatory cytokine from hypertrophied and degenerated LF itself. After the middle ages, gradual and partial inhibition of LF hypertrophy can be expected by administration NSAIDs or selective cyclo-oxygenase-2 inhibitors because these drugs may cause reduction of the increased cytokines. Also, relaxin can be another new treatment material for spinal stenosis by the mechanism of melting hypertrophied LF and reducing synthesis of collagen.
Aged
;
Anti-Inflammatory Agents, Non-Steroidal
;
Cell Death
;
Collagen
;
Cytokines
;
Decompression
;
Decompression, Surgical
;
Fibroblasts
;
Fibrosis
;
Freezing
;
Humans
;
Hypertrophy*
;
Intercellular Signaling Peptides and Proteins
;
Ligaments
;
Ligamentum Flavum*
;
Pathology
;
Relaxin
;
Spinal Canal
;
Spinal Stenosis
;
Spine
;
Zygapophyseal Joint