1.Designing a semantic network for Unified Nursing Language System.
Sookyung HYUN ; Hyeoun Ae PARK
Journal of Korean Society of Medical Informatics 2000;6(3):39-50
Nursing language plays an important role in describing and defining nursing phenomena and nursing actions. There are numerous vocabularies describing nursing diagnoses, interventions, and outcomes in nursing domain. However, lack of a standardized, unified nursing language is considered as a problem for further development of the discipline of nursing. With this background this study was conducted to construct a semantic network based on cross mapping of existing nursing terminologies. specifically NANDA taxonomy I, Omaha system, HHCC. and NIC. which arc recognized as standard terminology by the American Nurses Association. The nursing semantic network was proposed with the cross mapping results based on the UMLS semantic network.
American Nurses' Association
;
Classification
;
Nursing Diagnosis
;
Nursing*
;
Semantics*
;
Unified Medical Language System
;
Vocabulary
2.Mortality Rates and Risk Factors in Community Based Dementia Patients.
Sookyung PARK ; Jun Young LEE ; Guk Hee SUH ; Sung Man CHANG ; Maeng Je CHO
Journal of Korean Geriatric Psychiatry 2007;11(1):25-28
OBJECTIVES: The aim of this study was to investigate mortality rates and risk factors in dementia patients in a rural cohort. METHODS: A total of 114 subjects with clinically diagnosed dementia were followed up for eight years from 1997 to 2005. Their mortality was compared with sociodemographic and clinical variables using the Cox proportional hazards models after adjusting age, sex, and education. RESULTS: During follow-up, the mortality rate of subjects was 80.2% and the mean (SD) duration of survival from at diagnosis to death was 4 years. Mortality in subjects with dementia depended on old age (relative risk [RR] : 1.05 ; 95% confidence interval [CI] : 1.01-1.08), male (RR : 1.61 ; CI : 1.00-2.59), low Clinical Dementia Rating scale (RR : 1.54 ; CI : 1.14-2.10), low Activities of Daily Living (RR : 0.72 ; CI : 0.59-0.89), low Instrumental Activities of Daily Living (RR : 0.83 ; CI : 0.75-0.92), no physical activity (RR : 0.44 ; CI : 0.28-0.70), smoking (RR : 1.74 ; CI : 1.05-2.89). CONCLUSION: Mortality in dementia depended on age, sex, CDR, ADL, IADL, physical activity, smoking. These findings have important implications that contribute to make the disease management of dementia patients.
Activities of Daily Living
;
Cohort Studies
;
Dementia*
;
Diagnosis
;
Disease Management
;
Education
;
Follow-Up Studies
;
Humans
;
Male
;
Mortality*
;
Motor Activity
;
Proportional Hazards Models
;
Risk Factors*
;
Smoke
;
Smoking
3.Circadian variation of IV PCA use in patients after orthognathic surgery: a retrospective comparative study.
Sookyung PARK ; Seong In CHI ; Kwang Suk SEO ; Hyun Jeong KIM
Journal of Dental Anesthesia and Pain Medicine 2015;15(3):141-146
BACKGROUND: An understanding of the features of postoperative pain is essential for optimal analgesic dosing strategies. Using a visual analogue scale (VAS) score and patient controlled analgesia (PCA) infusion pattern analysis, an anesthesiologist can estimate when and how severely patients suffer from pain. Several reports have been published about circadian changes in the pain threshold. Postoperative pain was analyzed retrospectively in 250 patients who underwent orthognathic surgery. METHODS: A total of 250 patients were allocated into two groups according to the time of recovery from anesthesia. Patients in the early group (group E) recovered from anesthesia before 06:00 p.m. Patients in the late group (group L) recovered from anesthesia after 06:00 p.m. All patients received intravenous patient controlled analgesia (IV PCA) at the end of the operation. The VAS score of pain intensity was measured. Self-administration of bolus analgesic from the IV PCA device was also analyzed according to actual time and elapsed time. RESULTS: VAS scores showed no difference between the two groups except 36 hours after recovery from anesthesia. On POD1, there were two peaks for self-administration of bolus analgesics in group L and one peak in the morning for group E. Two peaks each in the morning and in the afternoon were shown in both groups on POD2. CONCLUSIONS: Diurnal variance in pain should be considered for effective dosing strategies.
Analgesia, Patient-Controlled
;
Analgesics
;
Anesthesia
;
Humans
;
Orthognathic Surgery*
;
Pain Threshold
;
Pain, Postoperative
;
Passive Cutaneous Anaphylaxis*
;
Retrospective Studies*
4.Circadian variation of IV PCA use in patients after orthognathic surgery: a retrospective comparative study.
Sookyung PARK ; Seong In CHI ; Kwang Suk SEO ; Hyun Jeong KIM
Journal of Dental Anesthesia and Pain Medicine 2015;15(3):141-146
BACKGROUND: An understanding of the features of postoperative pain is essential for optimal analgesic dosing strategies. Using a visual analogue scale (VAS) score and patient controlled analgesia (PCA) infusion pattern analysis, an anesthesiologist can estimate when and how severely patients suffer from pain. Several reports have been published about circadian changes in the pain threshold. Postoperative pain was analyzed retrospectively in 250 patients who underwent orthognathic surgery. METHODS: A total of 250 patients were allocated into two groups according to the time of recovery from anesthesia. Patients in the early group (group E) recovered from anesthesia before 06:00 p.m. Patients in the late group (group L) recovered from anesthesia after 06:00 p.m. All patients received intravenous patient controlled analgesia (IV PCA) at the end of the operation. The VAS score of pain intensity was measured. Self-administration of bolus analgesic from the IV PCA device was also analyzed according to actual time and elapsed time. RESULTS: VAS scores showed no difference between the two groups except 36 hours after recovery from anesthesia. On POD1, there were two peaks for self-administration of bolus analgesics in group L and one peak in the morning for group E. Two peaks each in the morning and in the afternoon were shown in both groups on POD2. CONCLUSIONS: Diurnal variance in pain should be considered for effective dosing strategies.
Analgesia, Patient-Controlled
;
Analgesics
;
Anesthesia
;
Humans
;
Orthognathic Surgery*
;
Pain Threshold
;
Pain, Postoperative
;
Passive Cutaneous Anaphylaxis*
;
Retrospective Studies*
5.The Recurrent Pregnancy Loss Associated with a Female Carrier of a Structural Chromosome Rearrangement.
Soomin LEE ; Sanghee GO ; Sookyung JO ; Sohyun PARK ; Soojin MOON ; Dongsuk LEE ; Ki Chul KIM ; Doyeong HWANG
Journal of Genetic Medicine 2010;7(2):156-159
Inversion, one of the balanced rearrangements, usually does not lead to phenotypic abnormalities; all genetic information exists in the proper amount, merely in a different order or in an abnormal location. However, offspring of an inversion carrier is at risk of chromosomal imbalance because an inversion loop can be formed during crossing-over of the paternal and the maternal chromosomes in meiosis. We report a 38-year-old woman with inversion and balanced translocation and her fetus with unusual rearrangement causing chromosomal imbalance. We performed conventional cytogenetic analysis, MLPA, and subtelomeric FISH in the cells of the embryo. The results showed that the distal portion of chromosome 13q was added to the terminal portion of chromosome 9p during crossing-over. Therefore, the final karyotype of the fetus was 46,XY,rec(9)t(9;13)(p22;q32)inv(9)(p12q13)mat, confirmed using molecular-cytogenetic analyzing tools.
Adult
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Cytogenetic Analysis
;
Embryonic Structures
;
Female
;
Fetus
;
Humans
;
Karyotype
;
Meiosis
;
Pregnancy
6.Combitube insertion in the situation of acute airway obstruction after extubation in patients underwent two-jaw surgery.
Yoon Ji CHOI ; Sookyung PARK ; Seong In CHI ; Hyun Jeong KIM ; Kwang Suk SEO
Journal of Dental Anesthesia and Pain Medicine 2015;15(4):235-239
The Combitube is an emergency airway-maintaining device, which can supply oxygen to dyspneic patients in emergency situations following two-jaw surgery. These patients experience difficulty in opening the mouth or have a partially obstructed airway caused by edema or hematoma in the oral cavity. As such, they cannot maintain the normal airway. The use of a Combitube may be favorable compared to the laryngeal mask airway because it is a thin and relatively resilient tube. A healthy 24-year-old man was dyspneic after extubation. Oxygen saturation fell below 90% despite untying the bimaxillary fixation and ambubagging. The opening of the mouth was narrow; thus, emergency airway maintenance was gained by insertion of a Combitube. The following day, a facial computer tomography revealed that the airway space narrowing was severe compared to its pre-operational state. After the swelling subsided, the patient was successfully extubated without complications.
Airway Obstruction*
;
Edema
;
Emergencies
;
Hematoma
;
Humans
;
Laryngeal Masks
;
Mouth
;
Oxygen
;
Young Adult
7.Identifying the more suitable nostril for nasotracheal intubation using radiographs.
Seong In CHI ; Sookyung PARK ; Li Ah JOO ; Teo Jeon SHIN ; Hyun Jeong KIM ; Kwang Suk SEO
Journal of Dental Anesthesia and Pain Medicine 2016;16(2):103-109
BACKGROUND: One nostril must be selected for nasotracheal intubation. In some cases, structural anomalies within the nasal cavity hinder the insertion of the tube or complications, such as epistaxis, develop. This study examined the possibility of using radiography to select the nostril that would induce fewer complications. METHODS: Four hundred and five patients who underwent nasotracheal intubation under general anesthesia were studied. A 7.0-mm internal diameter nasal right angle endotracheal (RAE) tube and 6.5-mm internal diameter nasal RAE tube were inserted into men and women, respectively. Complications were considered to have developed in cases in which insertion of the tube into the nasal cavity failed or epistaxis occurred. The tube was inserted into the other nostril for insertion failures and hemostasis was performed in cases of epistaxis. The degree of nasal septal deviation was determined from posteroanterior skull radiographs or panoramic radiographs; the incidence of complications was compared depending on the direction of the septal deviation and the intubated nostril. RESULTS: The radiographs of 390 patients were readable; 94 had nasal septum deviation. The incidence of complications for cases without nasal septum deviation was 16.9%, that for cases in which the tube was inserted into the nostril on the opposite side of the deviation was 18.5%, and that for cases in which the tube was inserted into the nostril with the deviation was 35.0%, showing a high incidence of complications when intubation is performed through the nostril with septum deviation (chi-square test, P < 0.05 ). CONCLUSIONS: Although there were no differences in the incidence rates of complications between intubation through the left nostril and that through the right nostril, radiological findings indicated that incidence of complications significantly increased when the tube was inserted into the nostril with the septum deviation.
Anesthesia, General
;
Epistaxis
;
Female
;
Hemostasis
;
Humans
;
Incidence
;
Intubation*
;
Male
;
Nasal Cavity
;
Nasal Septum
;
Radiography
;
Radiography, Panoramic
;
Skull
8.Identifying the more suitable nostril for nasotracheal intubation using radiographs.
Seong In CHI ; Sookyung PARK ; Li Ah JOO ; Teo Jeon SHIN ; Hyun Jeong KIM ; Kwang Suk SEO
Journal of Dental Anesthesia and Pain Medicine 2016;16(2):103-109
BACKGROUND: One nostril must be selected for nasotracheal intubation. In some cases, structural anomalies within the nasal cavity hinder the insertion of the tube or complications, such as epistaxis, develop. This study examined the possibility of using radiography to select the nostril that would induce fewer complications. METHODS: Four hundred and five patients who underwent nasotracheal intubation under general anesthesia were studied. A 7.0-mm internal diameter nasal right angle endotracheal (RAE) tube and 6.5-mm internal diameter nasal RAE tube were inserted into men and women, respectively. Complications were considered to have developed in cases in which insertion of the tube into the nasal cavity failed or epistaxis occurred. The tube was inserted into the other nostril for insertion failures and hemostasis was performed in cases of epistaxis. The degree of nasal septal deviation was determined from posteroanterior skull radiographs or panoramic radiographs; the incidence of complications was compared depending on the direction of the septal deviation and the intubated nostril. RESULTS: The radiographs of 390 patients were readable; 94 had nasal septum deviation. The incidence of complications for cases without nasal septum deviation was 16.9%, that for cases in which the tube was inserted into the nostril on the opposite side of the deviation was 18.5%, and that for cases in which the tube was inserted into the nostril with the deviation was 35.0%, showing a high incidence of complications when intubation is performed through the nostril with septum deviation (chi-square test, P < 0.05 ). CONCLUSIONS: Although there were no differences in the incidence rates of complications between intubation through the left nostril and that through the right nostril, radiological findings indicated that incidence of complications significantly increased when the tube was inserted into the nostril with the septum deviation.
Anesthesia, General
;
Epistaxis
;
Female
;
Hemostasis
;
Humans
;
Incidence
;
Intubation*
;
Male
;
Nasal Cavity
;
Nasal Septum
;
Radiography
;
Radiography, Panoramic
;
Skull
9.Requirements for Trustworthy Artificial Intelligence and its Application in Healthcare
Myeongju KIM ; Hyoju SOHN ; Sookyung CHOI ; Sejoong KIM
Healthcare Informatics Research 2023;29(4):315-322
Objectives:
Artificial intelligence (AI) technologies are developing very rapidly in the medical field, but have yet to be actively used in actual clinical settings. Ensuring reliability is essential to disseminating technologies, necessitating a wide range of research and subsequent social consensus on requirements for trustworthy AI.
Methods:
This review divided the requirements for trustworthy medical AI into explainability, fairness, privacy protection, and robustness, investigated research trends in the literature on AI in healthcare, and explored the criteria for trustworthy AI in the medical field.
Results:
Explainability provides a basis for determining whether healthcare providers would refer to the output of an AI model, which requires the further development of explainable AI technology, evaluation methods, and user interfaces. For AI fairness, the primary task is to identify evaluation metrics optimized for the medical field. As for privacy and robustness, further development of technologies is needed, especially in defending training data or AI algorithms against adversarial attacks.
Conclusions
In the future, detailed standards need to be established according to the issues that medical AI would solve or the clinical field where medical AI would be used. Furthermore, these criteria should be reflected in AI-related regulations, such as AI development guidelines and approval processes for medical devices.
10.Clinical considerations in the use of forced-air warming blankets during orthognathic surgery to avoid postanesthetic shivering.
Fiona Daye PARK ; Sookyung PARK ; Seong In CHI ; Hyun Jeong KIM ; Kwang Suk SEO ; Hye Jung KIM ; Jin Hee HAN ; Hee Jeong HAN ; Eun Hee LEE
Journal of Dental Anesthesia and Pain Medicine 2015;15(4):193-200
BACKGROUND: During head and neck surgery including orthognathic surgery, mild intraoperative hypothermia occurs frequently. Hypothermia is associated with postanesthetic shivering, which may increase the risk of other postoperative complications. To improve intraoperative thermoregulation, devices such as forced-air warming blankets can be applied. This study aimed to evaluate the effect of supplemental forced-air warming blankets in preventing postanesthetic shivering. METHODS: This retrospective study included 113 patients who underwent orthognathic surgery between March and September 2015. According to the active warming method utilized during surgery, patients were divided into two groups: Group W (n = 55), circulating-water mattress; and Group F (n = 58), circulating-water mattress and forced-air warming blanket. Surgical notes and anesthesia and recovery room records were evaluated. RESULTS: Initial axillary temperatures did not significantly differ between groups (Group W = 35.9 ± 0.7℃, Group F = 35.8 ± 0.6℃). However, at the end of surgery, the temperatures in Group W were significantly lower than those in Group F (35.2 ± 0.5℃ and 36.2 ± 0.5℃, respectively, P = 0.04). The average body temperatures in Groups W and F were, respectively, 35.9 ± 0.5℃ and 36.2 ± 0.5℃ (P = 0.0001). In Group W, 24 patients (43.6%) experienced postanesthetic shivering, while in Group F, only 12 (20.7%) patients required treatment for postanesthetic shivering (P = 0.009, odds ratio = 0.333, 95% confidence interval: 0.147-0.772). CONCLUSIONS: Additional use of forced-air warming blankets in orthognathic surgery was superior in maintaining normothermia and reduced the incidence of postanesthetic shivering.
Anesthesia
;
Body Temperature
;
Body Temperature Regulation
;
Head
;
Humans
;
Hypothermia
;
Incidence
;
Methods
;
Neck
;
Odds Ratio
;
Orthognathic Surgery*
;
Postoperative Complications
;
Recovery Room
;
Retrospective Studies
;
Shivering*