1.Asymptomatic Cholecystocolic Fistula Diagnosed Accurately before Surgery
Korean Journal of Pancreas and Biliary Tract 2019;24(2):84-88
Cholecystocolic fistula (CCF) is a rare and late complication of gallbladder disease. The cause of CCF is known to be peptic ulcer, gallbladder disease, malignant tumor, trauma, and postoperative complications. The proper treatment method is to perform cholecystectomy and to identify and alleviate the CCF. However, cholecystectomy is not always possible owing to technical difficulties and disease severity. CCF is difficult to diagnose preoperatively, and CCF operation without an accurate preoperative diagnosis can lead to a more complicated surgery and cause surgeons to face more difficult situations or to endanger patients' lives. We report a case of asymptomatic CCF successfully treated with laparoscopic surgery after accurate diagnosis before surgery.
Cholecystectomy
;
Diagnosis
;
Fistula
;
Gallbladder Diseases
;
Laparoscopy
;
Methods
;
Peptic Ulcer
;
Postoperative Complications
;
Surgeons
2.Clinical feasibility and nutritional effects of early oral feeding after pancreaticoduodenectomy.
Si Eun HWANG ; Mi Jin JUNG ; Baik Hwan CHO ; Hee Chul YU
Korean Journal of Hepato-Biliary-Pancreatic Surgery 2014;18(3):84-89
BACKGROUNDS/AIMS: Pancreaticoduodenctomy (PD) is associated with high rates of postoperative morbidity and mortality. Although many studies have shown that early postoperative enteral nutrition improves postoperative outcomes, limited clinical information is available on postoperative early oral feeding (EOF) after PD. The aim of this study was to evaluate the clinical feasibility, safety, and nutritional effects of EOF after PD. METHODS: Clinical outcomes were investigated in 131 patients who underwent PD between 2003 and 2013, including 81 whose oral feeding was commenced within 48 hours (EOF group) and 50 whose oral feeding was commenced after resumption of bowel movements (traditional oral feeding [TOF] group). Postoperative complications, energy intake, and length of stay (LOS) were reviewed. RESULTS: Demographic factors were similar in the two groups. The EOF group had a significantly shorter LOS (25.9+/-8.5 days vs. 32.3+/-16.3 days; p=0.01) than the TOF group. The rates of anastomotic leak (1.2% vs. 16%, p=0.00) and reoperation (3.7% vs. 20%, p=0.01) were significantly lower in the EOF group. In the clinically acute phase from postoperative day 1 to day 5, the mean daily calorie intake (847.0 kcal vs. 745.6 kcal; p=0.04) and mean daily protein intake (42.2 g vs. 31.9 g; p=0.00) in the EOF group were significantly higher than that in the TOF group. CONCLUSIONS: Postoperative EOF is a clinically safe, feasible, and effective method of nutritional support after PD.
Anastomotic Leak
;
Demography
;
Energy Intake
;
Enteral Nutrition
;
Humans
;
Length of Stay
;
Mortality
;
Nutritional Support
;
Pancreaticoduodenectomy*
;
Postoperative Complications
;
Reoperation
3.Changes in Body Composition after a Radical Gastrectomy for a Gastric Adenocarcinoma using Bioelectrical Impedance Analysis during the First Year following Surgery.
Si Eun HWANG ; Chan Young KIM ; Doo Hyun YANG
Journal of the Korean Gastric Cancer Association 2007;7(4):228-236
PURPOSE: We have evaluated changes of body composition for patients that underwent a radical gastrectomy for stomach cancer by the use of available bioelectrical impedance analysis during the first year following surgery. We plan to utilize these findings in nutritional and physiological studies. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We evaluated clinical changes in body composition in patients using the bioelectrical impedance method (Inbody 4.0, Biospace, Korea), between November 2003 to November 2004. A total of 98 patients agreed to enroll in this study among all of the patients that underwent a radical gastrectomy. RESULTS: The average weight decreased by 6.7%, and 9.4%, within the first and 6 months after surgery, respectively (P<0.01). The fat free mass (FFM) dropped by 4.9% within the first month and there were no more changes after this period (P<0.01). The fat mass (FM) and visceral fat area (VFA) decreased 24.3% and 14.1% within the first 6 months (P<0.01), respectively. The reduction effects for female patients were greater than for male patients for weight, FFM and VFA (P<0.05). The edema index was higher in patients with stage III-IV disease than in patients with stage I-II disease (P<0.05). There were significant differences for Billroth I and BillrothI II patients as compared to patients that underwent an esophagojejunostomy for a reduction of the FM, as measured in the in the 12th month after surgery (27.6%, 22.1%, and 41.2%, respectively; P<0.05). CONCLUSION: Since nutritional supplementation and an improvement in body weight loss after a radical gastrectomy is significantly related with quality of life, nutritional and physiological studies should be greatly considered. In this study, bioelectrical impedance analysis was very useful in analyzing the diminution of body composition and we hope this study on the nutritional and physiological aspects related to a radical gastrectomy will be useful for later studies.
Adenocarcinoma*
;
Body Composition*
;
Body Weight
;
Edema
;
Electric Impedance*
;
Female
;
Gastrectomy*
;
Gastroenterostomy
;
Hope
;
Humans
;
Intra-Abdominal Fat
;
Male
;
Quality of Life
;
Stomach Neoplasms
4.Distribution of CD10-positive epithelial and mesenchymal cells in human mid-term fetuses: a comparison with CD34 expression.
Ji Hyun KIM ; Si Eun HWANG ; Hee Chul YU ; Hong Pil HWANG ; Yukio KATORI ; Gen MURAKAMI ; Baik Hwan CHO
Anatomy & Cell Biology 2014;47(1):28-39
CD10, a marker of immature B lymphocytes, is expressed in the developing epithelium of mammary glands, hair follicles, and renal tubules of human fetuses. To assess mesenchymal and stromal expression of CD10, we performed immunohistochemical assays in whole body sections from eight fetuses of gestational ages 15-20 weeks. In addition to expression in urinary tract and intestinal epithelium, CD10 was strongly expressed at both gestational ages in fibrous tissues surrounding the airways from the larynx to lung alveoli, in the periosteum and ossification center, and in the glans of external genitalia. CD10 was not expressed, however, in other cavernous tissues. These findings suggest that mesenchymal, in addition to epithelial cells at specific sites, are likely to express CD10. The glomeruli, alveoli, and glans are all end products of budding or outgrowth processes in the epithelium or skin. However, in contrast to the CD34 marker of stromal stem cells, CD10 was not expressed in vascular progenitor cells and in differentiated vascular endothelium. The alternating pattern of CD10 and CD34 expression suggests that these factors play different roles in cellular differentiation and proliferation of the kidneys, airway and external genitalia.
Endothelium, Vascular
;
Epithelial Cells
;
Epithelium
;
Fetus*
;
Genitalia
;
Gestational Age
;
Hair Follicle
;
Humans*
;
Intestinal Mucosa
;
Kidney
;
Larynx
;
Lung
;
Mammary Glands, Human
;
Mesoderm
;
Periosteum
;
Precursor Cells, B-Lymphoid
;
Skin
;
Stem Cells
;
Urinary Tract
5.Clinicopathological characteristics and prognostic factors in combined hepatocellular carcinoma and cholangiocarcinoma.
Sang Eun PARK ; Sung Ha LEE ; Jae Do YANG ; Hong Pil HWANG ; Si Eun HWANG ; Hee Chul YU ; Woo Sung MOON ; Baik Hwan CHO
Korean Journal of Hepato-Biliary-Pancreatic Surgery 2013;17(4):152-156
BACKGROUNDS/AIMS: Combined hepatocellular carcinoma and cholangiocarcinoma (cHCC-CC) is an uncommon subtype of primary liver cancer that has rarely been reported in detail. This study was performed in order to evaluate the clinicopathological characteristics and prognostic factors of cHCC-CC in single center. METHODS: The clinicopathological features of patients diagnosed and operated with cHCC-CC at Chonbuk National Hospital between July 1998 and July 2007 were retrospectively studied by comparing them with patients with only hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) who had undergone a hepatic resection during the same period. RESULTS: Ten out of 152 patients who had undergone a hepatic resection were diagnosed with cHCC-CC and thus included in this study (M : F=8 : 2, median age: 52+/-11.1 years). According to the parameters of the 7th American Joint Committee on Cancer T staging, there were 76 (50.0%), 44 (28.9%), 9 (5.9%), 18 (11.8%) and 5 (3.3%) patients with T stages 1, 2, 3a, 3b and 4, respectively. The overall survival period was longer in the HCC only group (68+/-40.4 months) than in the combined cHCC-CC group (23+/-40.1 months) (p<0.0001). The 5-year survival rate was 10% in the cHCC-CC group and 60% in the HCC group (p<0.0001). The disease free survival for patients with cHCC-HCC and HCC were 16+/-37.4 and 51+/-44.3 months, respectively (p<0.0001). Univariate analysis revealed that age, gender, transarterial chemoembolization (TACE), and T stage were statistically significant in terms of patient's overall survival. However, there were no significant clinicopathological factors identified by the multivariate analysis. CONCLUSIONS: Even after the hepatic resection in the HCC, the prognosis is poorer if the patient has cholangiocellular components compared to the usual HCC.
Carcinoma, Hepatocellular*
;
Cholangiocarcinoma*
;
Disease-Free Survival
;
Humans
;
Joints
;
Liver Neoplasms
;
Multivariate Analysis
;
Prognosis
;
Retrospective Studies
;
Survival Rate
6.A Case of Trichosporon beigelii Pneumonia in a Boy with Normal Immunological Status.
Hyun Hee KIM ; Hai Lee CHUNG ; Jin Bok HWANG ; Cheol Woo KO ; Si Eun LEE ; Su Jin LEE
Journal of the Korean Pediatric Society 2000;43(2):300-305
Invasive diseases caused by Trichosporon beigelii are rare, usually fatal, opportunistic infections that occur exclusively in immunocompromised patients. This fungus has been known to produce cutaneous involvement in immunocompetent hosts, and is rarely reported to cause systemic disease in patients with cardiac valve replacement. In this report, we described a case of invasive Trichosporon beigelii pneumonia in a 9-year-old boy who presented with persistent cough and dyspnea for 1 week. He showed no abnormality in immunologic function tests and had no predisposing factors. Trichosporon beigelii was isolated from the bronchoalveolar lavage culture.
Bronchoalveolar Lavage
;
Causality
;
Child
;
Cough
;
Dyspnea
;
Fungi
;
Heart Valves
;
Humans
;
Immunocompromised Host
;
Male*
;
Opportunistic Infections
;
Pneumonia*
;
Trichosporon*
7.Upper terminal of the inferior vena cava and development of the heart atriums: a study using human embryos.
Ji Hyun KIM ; Si Eun HWANG ; Jose Francisco RODRIGUEZ-VAZQUEZ ; Gen MURAKAMI ; Baik Hwan CHO
Anatomy & Cell Biology 2014;47(4):236-243
In the embryonic heart, the primitive atrium is considered to receive the bilateral sinus horns including the upper terminal of the inferior vena cava (IVC). To reveal topographical anatomy of the embryonic venous pole of the heart, we examined horizontal serial paraffin sections of 15 human embryos with crown-rump length 9-31 mm, corresponding to a gestational age of 6-7 weeks or Carnegie stage 14-16. The IVC was often fixed to the developing right pulmonary vein by a mesentery-like fibrous tissue. Rather than the terminal portion of the future superior vena cava, the IVC contributed to form a right-sided atrial lumen at the stage. The sinus venosus or its left horn communicated with the IVC in earlier specimens, but in later specimens, the left atrium extended caudally to separate the sinus and IVC. In contrast, the right atrium consistently extended far caudally, even below the sinus horn, along the IVC. A small (or large) attachment between the left (or right) atrium and IVC in adult hearts seemed to be derived from the left (or right) sinus valve. This hypothesis did not contradict with the incorporation theory of the sinus valves into the atrial wall. Variations in topographical anatomy around the IVC, especially of the sinus valves, might not always depend on the stages but partly in individual differences.
Adult
;
Animals
;
Crown-Rump Length
;
Embryonic Structures*
;
Gestational Age
;
Heart
;
Heart Atria*
;
Horns
;
Humans
;
Individuality
;
Paraffin
;
Pulmonary Veins
;
Vena Cava, Inferior*
;
Vena Cava, Superior
8.Mesoesophagus and other fascial structures of the abdominal and lower thoracic esophagus: a histological study using human embryos and fetuses.
Si Eun HWANG ; Ji Hyun KIM ; Sang In BAE ; Jose Francisco RODRIGUEZ-VAZQUEZ ; Gen MURAKAMI ; Baik Hwan CHO
Anatomy & Cell Biology 2014;47(4):227-235
A term "mesoesophagus" has been often used by surgeons, but the morphology was not described well. To better understand the structures attaching the human abdominal and lower thoracic esophagus to the body wall, we examined serial or semiserial sections from 10 embryos and 9 fetuses. The esophagus was initially embedded in a large posterior mesenchymal tissue, which included the vertebral column and aorta. Below the tracheal bifurcation at the fifth week, the esophagus formed a mesentery-like structure, which we call the "mesoesophagus," that was sculpted by the enlarging lungs and pleural cavity. The pneumatoenteric recess of the pleuroperitoneal canal was observed in the lowest part of the mesoesophagus. At the seventh week, the mesoesophagus was divided into the upper long and lower short parts by the diaphragm. Near the esophageal hiatus, the pleural cavity provided 1 or 2 recesses in the upper side, while the fetal adrenal gland in the left side was attached to the lower side of the mesoesophagus. At the 10th and 18th week, the mesoesophagus remained along the lower thoracic esophagus, but the abdominal esophagus attached to the diaphragm instead of to the left adrenal. The mesoesophagus did not contain any blood vessels from the aorta and to the azygos vein. The posterior attachment of the abdominal esophagus seemed to develop to the major part of the phrenoesophageal membrane with modification from the increased mass of the left fetal adrenal. After postnatal degeneration of the fetal adrenal, the abdominal esophagus might again obtain a mesentery. Consequently, the mesoesophagus seemed to correspond to a small area containing the pulmonary ligament and aorta in adults.
Adrenal Glands
;
Adult
;
Aorta
;
Azygos Vein
;
Blood Vessels
;
Diaphragm
;
Embryonic Structures*
;
Esophagus*
;
Fetus*
;
Humans
;
Ligaments
;
Lung
;
Membranes
;
Mesentery
;
Pleural Cavity
;
Spine
9.Potential Role of Homer-2a on Cutaneous Vascular Anomaly.
Jeong Tae KIM ; Si Hyun PARK ; Soek Kwun KIM ; Eun Young KWON ; Mi Hyang DO ; Tae Ho HWANG
Journal of Korean Medical Science 2002;17(5):636-640
Homer protein was identified based on its rapid induction in rat hippocampal granule cell neurons following excitatory synaptic activity. Although the presence of the Homer gene in the peripheral tissues has been observed in previous reports, the physiological function of the Homer protein in these tissues has not been noted. In this experiment, a Homer-2a cDNA fragment was successfully amplified by RTPCR in the involuting phase of human hemangioma but not in the human vascular malformation and normal vessel. After isolation of full Homer cDNA in a mouse liver cDNA library, E1-deleted recombinant adenovirus expressing the Homer protein (Adv.CMV.mHomer-2a) was constructed to determine its physiological function in peripheral tissues. Adv.CMV.mHomer2a, but not Adv.CMV.LacZ (recombinant adenovirus expressing beta-galactosidase), strongly inhibited the growth rate of HUVECs (human umbilical vein endothelial cells) probably via inducing apoptosis determined by acridine orange/ethidium bromide (AO/EB) staining methods. This study suggests that the Homer gene is present in human specimens in the involuting phase of hemangioma, and it might be involved in the growth control.
Adolescent
;
Adult
;
Animals
;
Apoptosis
;
Base Sequence
;
Blood Vessels/*abnormalities
;
Carrier Proteins/genetics/*physiology
;
Cells, Cultured
;
Child
;
Child, Preschool
;
DNA, Complementary/genetics
;
Endothelium, Vascular/cytology
;
Female
;
Hemangioma/blood supply/*genetics
;
Humans
;
Male
;
Mice
;
Middle Aged
;
Neuropeptides/genetics/*physiology
;
Rats
;
Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction
;
Skin/blood supply
;
Skin Neoplasms/blood supply/*genetics
10.Differing benefits of artificial intelligence-based computer-aided diagnosis for breast US according to workflow and experience level
Si Eun LEE ; Kyunghwa HAN ; Ji Hyun YOUK ; Jee Eun LEE ; Ji-Young HWANG ; Miribi RHO ; Jiyoung YOON ; Eun-Kyung KIM ; Jung Hyun YOON
Ultrasonography 2022;41(4):718-727
Purpose:
This study evaluated how artificial intelligence-based computer-assisted diagnosis (AICAD) for breast ultrasonography (US) influences diagnostic performance and agreement between radiologists with varying experience levels in different workflows.
Methods:
Images of 492 breast lesions (200 malignant and 292 benign masses) in 472 women taken from April 2017 to June 2018 were included. Six radiologists (three inexperienced [<1 year of experience] and three experienced [10-15 years of experience]) individually reviewed US images with and without the aid of AI-CAD, first sequentially and then simultaneously. Diagnostic performance and interobserver agreement were calculated and compared between radiologists and AI-CAD.
Results:
After implementing AI-CAD, the specificity, positive predictive value (PPV), and accuracy significantly improved, regardless of experience and workflow (all P<0.001, respectively). The overall area under the receiver operating characteristic curve significantly increased in simultaneous reading, but only for inexperienced radiologists. The agreement for Breast Imaging Reporting and Database System (BI-RADS) descriptors generally increased when AI-CAD was used (κ=0.29-0.63 to 0.35-0.73). Inexperienced radiologists tended to concede to AI-CAD results more easily than experienced radiologists, especially in simultaneous reading (P<0.001). The conversion rates for final assessment changes from BI-RADS 2 or 3 to BI-RADS higher than 4a or vice versa were also significantly higher in simultaneous reading than sequential reading (overall, 15.8% and 6.2%, respectively; P<0.001) for both inexperienced and experienced radiologists.
Conclusion
Using AI-CAD to interpret breast US improved the specificity, PPV, and accuracy of radiologists regardless of experience level. AI-CAD may work better in simultaneous reading to improve diagnostic performance and agreement between radiologists, especially for inexperienced radiologists.