1.Analysis of Factors Relating Postoperative Urinary Retention in Patients Undergoing Laparotomy.
Young Ran HWANG ; Seung Hwa LIM ; Moon Su CHO
Journal of Korean Academy of Adult Nursing 1999;11(2):240-251
Urinary retention is a common complication after abdominal surgery. Urinary retention causes infection and damage to the urinary system, prolonging hospital stays and increasing health care costs in the end. Because medical personnel tend to regard urinary retention as not being a serious problem, it is hard to find any method which decrease the postoperative urinary retention. There are few papers reporting the incidence and the factors which influence the postoperative urinary retention. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the incidence of postoperative urinary retention and to identify the factors which affect the postoperative urinary retention. We retrospectively reviewed 296 patients out of 338, who had been undergone laparotomy under spinal or general endotracheal anesthesia during a three month period from January to March 1998. We reviewed nursing, anesthetic and operative records. Among the 296 patients, male were 189(63.9%) and female were 107(36.1%). Postoperative urinary retention occurred in 71 patients(24%). The incidence rate was higher in female patients than in male (M : F=18% : 35%). Factors that in fluence the incidence of postoperative urinary retention were sex, duration of operation, the amount of fluid given the patient, preoperative history of dysuria, and preoperative insertion of a urinary catheter. Among those factors, preoperative urinary catheter insertion is the most effective preventive measure in lowering the incidence of postoperative urinary retention (Spearman correlation coefficient, r=-.462). Shortening the operation time and sparing the fluid which is infused during operation are important in preventing postoperative urinary retention. Preoperative urinary catheter insertion may be helpful in lowering urinary retention in those patients who have a possibility of postoperative urinary retention.
Anesthesia
;
Dysuria
;
Female
;
Health Care Costs
;
Humans
;
Incidence
;
Laparotomy*
;
Length of Stay
;
Male
;
Nursing
;
Retrospective Studies
;
Urinary Catheters
;
Urinary Retention*
2.The Effect of Preoperative Warming On Reducing Rectal Temperature Drop in Surgical Patients.
Seung Hwa LIM ; Moon Su CHO ; Kyung Sook CHOI
Journal of Korean Academy of Adult Nursing 1997;9(1):55-69
Although there are many peri-operative measures to reduce core temperature loss during operation, rapid drop has been experienced in the first sixty minutes following induction of general anesthesia. Recently, preoperative warming has been emphasized to prevent inadvertant hypothermia during operation. The purpose of this study is to find the effect of preoperative warming on reducing rectal temperature drop in surgical patients. With informed consent, 46 female adult patients, scheduled for total abdominal hysterectomy or salpingo-oophorectomy in the Seoul National University Hospital from September 3, 1996 to September 19, 1996 were divided into two groups. The variables of age and body surface were matched between the two groups as possible. Among them, 24 patients were preparatively covered up to the shoulders with a forced-air warming blanket(WARM TOUCHTM). set between 36-40degrees C for prewarming, and the other 22 patients(control group)were not before the induction of anesthesia. Rectal temperature was measured by mercury thermometer for rectum after admission to the operating room and by rectal probe which was inserted in the rectum just before the induction during the operation. The rectal temperature was monitored and recorded at every fifteen minutes for the first sixty minutes after the induction and each step during the surgery(intubation, surgical draping, peritoneum opening, one hour and the end of the operation) Collected data were analyzed by means of t-test, Repeated Measures Analysis of Variance with PC-SAS. The results of this study are as following. (1) There was no significant difference between the two groups in age, weight, height, room temperature, basal rectal temperature, operation time. (2) Temperature gradient of the rectal temperature in the warming group was less steeper than that in the control roup during the first sixty minutes after general anesthesia. (3) The rectal temperature measured at every fifteen minutes for the first sixty minutes and the end of surgery after the general anesthesia showed the difference between the two groups during surgery. (4) There was no rectal temperature difference during the intubation, however there was significant temperature difference between the two groups from draping to the end of surgery. In conclusion, prewarming of the surgical patient before induction resulted in increased the skin temperature and heat content, which relieved the dangerous core temperature drop which is potential to be provoked within one hour after induction of the surgical patients and kept the rectal temperature higher than that of the control group during surgery. The suggestions from this study shown below : First, further study is needed to find the preventive effect of the core temperature drop in the first sixth minutes after anesthetic induction by preoperative warming for gastrorectal, thoracic surgery patients who man have the core temperature drop during the operation. Second, in other to keep patient normothermia during the surgery, it needs to study whether using pre-and peri-operative warming can prevent hypothermia or not. Finally, the study of the peroperative warming effect on surgical patients' relaxation and thermal discomfort before the operation is needed because most patients in the case group said to have felt thermal comfort ; 'comfortable' and 'good'.
Adult
;
Anesthesia
;
Anesthesia, General
;
Female
;
Hot Temperature
;
Humans
;
Hypothermia
;
Hysterectomy
;
Informed Consent
;
Intubation
;
Operating Rooms
;
Peritoneum
;
Rectum
;
Relaxation
;
Seoul
;
Shoulder
;
Skin Temperature
;
Thermometers
;
Thoracic Surgery
3.Study on Macrosomia Based on Birth Certificate Data.
Sang Hwa PARK ; Jung Ho HAN ; Kyung Sil LIM ; Seung Yup KU ; Seok Hyun KIM
Korean Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology 2000;43(9):1611-1615
No abstract available.
Birth Certificates*
;
Parturition*
4.Three Cases of Secondary Membranous Lipodystrophy.
Seung lee SEO ; Myung Hwa KIM ; Yeon Soon LIM ; Hae Young CHOI ; Ki Bum MYUNG
Korean Journal of Dermatology 1999;37(1):91-96
Membranous lipodystrophy is a peculiar type of fat necrosis, present in patients with various types of skin diseases. It is charaeterized by the presence of microcysts and macrocysts lined by amorphous eosinophilic material with a crenelated arabesque appearance and microgranules in the subcutis with massive fat necrosis. The eosinophilic lining and microgranules stain positively with periodic acid-Schiff, are resistant to diastase, and also stain with Sudan black B. We report three cases of subcutanous membranous lipodystrophy in patients with erythema induratum, posttraumatic panniculitis and morphea with typical clinical and histopathologic findings.
Amylases
;
Eosinophils
;
Erythema Induratum
;
Fat Necrosis
;
Humans
;
Lipodystrophy*
;
Panniculitis
;
Scleroderma, Localized
;
Skin Diseases
;
Sudan
5.Evaluation of Fever Reducing Methods in Children.
Soo Young LIM ; Hwa Jeong LEE ; Seung Hee MOK ; Heui Jeong KWON ; In Sil LEE
Journal of the Korean Pediatric Society 1994;37(6):746-751
The efficacy of acetaminophen, sponging plus acetaminophen, and sponging alone as method of lowering body temperature was compared in 108 children aged 8 weeks to 5 years who presented with an axillary temperature of 38.5degrees C or greater during the period from January 1993 to April 1993. The following results were obtained. 1) The male to female ratio was 2.5:1 and clinical diagnosis in the order of frequency were upper respiratory infection, gastroenteritis, pneumonia, urinary tract infection, cellulitis, chickenpox and hand-foot-mouth disease. 2) At thirty minutes after treatment, there was no significant difference on the decrement of temperature among the three groups. 3) At sixty minutes, the temperature decrement was the greatest in the group of sponging plus acetaminophen and that was statistically significant (P<0.01). But there was no significant difference between the group of acetaminophen and that of sponging.
Acetaminophen
;
Body Temperature
;
Cellulitis
;
Chickenpox
;
Child*
;
Diagnosis
;
Female
;
Fever*
;
Gastroenteritis
;
Humans
;
Male
;
Pneumonia
;
Urinary Tract Infections
6.Study on Multiple Birth Based on Birth Certificate Data.
Sang Hwa PARK ; Kyung Sil LIM ; Seung Yup KU ; Seok Hyun KIM
Korean Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology 2000;43(7):1253-1257
OBJECTIVE: Multiple birth implicates the important health and social problems such as preterm birth, low birth weight, high perinatal mortality, and increased medical cost. This study was performed to investigate the multiple birth rate in Korea using the birth certificate data. METHODS: Retrospective review and analysis of data from Korean birth certificate in 1996. RESULTS: Multiple birth rate was 1.4% of total births(683,043 cases). Mean birth weight was 3.29+/-0.47kg for singleton birth and 2.57+/-0.58kg for multiple birth. Mean gestational age was 39.56+/-1.32 weeks for singleton birth and 37.47+/-2.41 weeks for multiple birth. Rate of low birth weight (< 2.5kg) was 14 times higher for multiple birth compared with that of singleton birth, and rate of preterm birth(< 37 weeks) was 10 times higher. Multiple logistic regression analysis was performed to examine the relationship between multiple birth and selected variables including maternal age, job and birth order. As the odds ratio(OR) was 2.47(95% CI: 2.34 - 2.59, p<0.001) for the second birth, and 5.31(95% CI: 4.99 - 5.65, p<0.001) for the third and over birth compared with the first birth, there was a significant correlation between multiple birth and birth order. CONCLUSIONS: Based on the birth certificate data in 1996, the incidence of twin and higher order multiple birth was 1.7%, and a significant correlation between multiple birth and birth order was revealed. Further studies are necessary to elucidate the etiology and prognosis of multiple birth and the developmental problems from birth to adolescence.
Adolescent
;
Birth Certificates*
;
Birth Order
;
Birth Weight
;
Gestational Age
;
Humans
;
Incidence
;
Infant, Low Birth Weight
;
Infant, Newborn
;
Korea
;
Logistic Models
;
Maternal Age
;
Multiple Birth Offspring*
;
Parturition*
;
Perinatal Mortality
;
Pregnancy
;
Premature Birth
;
Prognosis
;
Retrospective Studies
;
Social Problems
;
Twins
7.Comparative evaluation of biochemical and microscopic urinalysis in pediatric population.
Hwa Jeong LEE ; Soo Young LIM ; Seung Hee MOK ; Heui Jeong KWON ; In Sil LEE
Journal of the Korean Pediatric Society 1993;36(5):643-648
The authors determined the value of performing urine microscopy on biochemically negative urine sepcimens in a pediatric population. The 746 urine specimens of patients who were either visited or admitted to the Department of Pediatrics, National Police Hospital, from March 1991 to July 1992 were reviewed on the basis of comparative evaluation of biochemical and microscopic urine analysis. Eight reactions of Clinitek(r) 200 were used as biochemical indicators, namely, pH, nitrite, albumin, glucose, ketone, urobilinogen, bilirubin, and blood. Out of 746 urine specimens studied, 186 were true positive. Thirty-six specimens reacted biochemically in the absence of positive microscopic findings (false postive), 492 specimens were true negatives. Thirty-two specimens had negative biochemical indicators, in spite of positive microscopy. The sensitivity of the biochemical parameters for predicting significant microscopy of urinary sediment is 85% and the specificity is 99%. The positive predictive value is 69.7% and the negative predictive value is 99.3%. The sensitivity of blood for RBC is 94%. and the specificity is 99%. The predictive value of a positive result is 84.6% and that of a negative result is 99.7%. We therefore conclude that urine microscopy is less necessary in biochemically negative urine specimens from asymptomatic pediatric patients, with hopefully resultant time and cost effectiveness.
Bilirubin
;
Cost-Benefit Analysis
;
Glucose
;
Humans
;
Hydrogen-Ion Concentration
;
Microscopy
;
Pediatrics
;
Police
;
Sensitivity and Specificity
;
Urinalysis*
;
Urobilinogen
8.Brain MRI findings in children with developmental motor delay.
Jeong Lim MOON ; Seung Han YANG ; Sae Yoon KANG ; Chan Seok OH ; Young Shin PARK ; OK Hwa KIM
Journal of the Korean Academy of Rehabilitation Medicine 1993;17(4):585-594
No abstract available.
Brain*
;
Child*
;
Humans
;
Magnetic Resonance Imaging*
9.Survey of Public Attitudes toward the Secondary Use of Public Healthcare Data in Korea
Junho JUNG ; Hyungjin KIM ; Seung-Hwa LEE ; Jungchan PARK ; Sungsoo LIM ; Kwangmo YANG
Healthcare Informatics Research 2023;29(4):377-385
Objectives:
Public healthcare data have become crucial to the advancement of medicine, and recent changes in legal structure on privacy protection have expanded access to these data with pseudonymization. Recent debates on public healthcare data use by private insurance companies have shown large discrepancies in perceptions among the general public, healthcare professionals, private companies, and lawmakers. This study examined public attitudes toward the secondary use of public data, focusing on differences between public and private entities.
Methods:
An online survey was conducted from January 11 to 24, 2022, involving a random sample of adults between 19 and 65 of age in 17 provinces, guided by the August 2021 census.
Results:
The final survey analysis included 1,370 participants. Most participants were aware of health data collection (72.5%) and recent changes in legal structures (61.4%) but were reluctant to share their pseudonymized raw data (51.8%). Overall, they were favorable toward data use by public agencies but disfavored use by private entities, notably marketing and private insurance companies. Concerns were frequently noted regarding commercial use of data and data breaches. Among the respondents, 50.9% were negative about the use of public healthcare data by private insurance companies, 22.9% favored this use, and 1.9% were “very positive.”
Conclusions
This survey revealed a low understanding among key stakeholders regarding digital health data use, which is hindering the realization of the full potential of public healthcare data. This survey provides a basis for future policy developments and advocacy for the secondary use of health data.
10.A Case of Elevated Prothrombin Time-International Normalized Ratio (PT-INR) Associated with Concurrent Use of Erlotinib and Warfarin.
Seung Kyoung KIM ; Kyung Seon PARK ; Seung Hwa CHOI ; Jae Ho BYUN ; In Sook WOO ; Chi Hwa HAN ; Hyo Lim KIM
Korean Journal of Medicine 2011;80(6):729-733
Erlotinib, an orally active epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI), is indicated for EGFR mutation-positive patients with poor performance status. Erlotinib is also used as a second-line agent in patients who show disease progression after failure of first-line therapy. Warfarin is administered in patients with advanced cancer for the prevention or treatment of venous thromboembolism. Both erlotinib and warfarin are metabolized in the human liver primarily by the CYP3A4 enzyme system. Thus, erlotinib may inhibit the metabolism of warfarin and clinicians should pay attention to the possible interaction between the two drugs when they are administered concurrently. We report the case of a 50-year-old man who showed changes in the prothrombin time-international normalized ratio (PT-INR) after coadministration of erlotinib and warfarin.
Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung
;
Disease Progression
;
Humans
;
Liver
;
Middle Aged
;
Protein-Tyrosine Kinases
;
Prothrombin
;
Prothrombin Time
;
Quinazolines
;
Receptor, Epidermal Growth Factor
;
Venous Thromboembolism
;
Warfarin
;
Erlotinib Hydrochloride