1.Availability of Ureteroscopic Removal in Impacted Ureteral Stone.
Korean Journal of Urology 2000;41(2):246-250
No abstract available.
Ureter*
2.The Role of Arthroscopy in Diagnosis and Treatment of the Knee Disorders
The Journal of the Korean Orthopaedic Association 1981;16(3):539-545
Arthroscopy has now become a valuable method for the diagnosis and treatment of the internal derangement of the knee. Based on the experiences gained during the past three years, in which 93 knees with posttraumatic disorders were observed arthroscopically, several uncommon and interesting findings were encountered. Such illustrative findings have been summarized here. I. Injury at the parameniscal portion is readily overlooked and especially the middle and posterior one-thirds are inaccessible. A wavy undulation of the concave margin of the meniscus, when abnormally exaggera;ed by tibial rotation, possibly suggests the presence of this type of injury. 2. The discoid cartilage and the bucket-handle tear of meniscus occasionally show similar pattern arthroscopically. 3. The plica of the knee can sometimes be a cause of knee disorders. Any internal derangement, which tends to be localized around the patella, warrants close scrutiny for its presence. 4. A large foreign body within a knee joint could easily be removed by virtue of direct arthroscopic visualization.
Arthroscopy
;
Cartilage
;
Diagnosis
;
Foreign Bodies
;
Knee Joint
;
Knee
;
Methods
;
Patella
;
Tears
;
Virtues
3.Development of a CD-ROM Titled 'Atlas of Pathology' for Medical Students.
Dong Sug KIM ; Yong Jin KIM ; Sun Woo PARK
Korean Journal of Pathology 2000;34(5):374-380
The authors have made a CD-ROM titled 'Atlas of Pathology (AP)' for medical students to understand histopathologic findings with ease. We used a 35 mm film scanner to convert an existing file into digital images. A pathologist and two professional programmers collaborated to create the program 'AtlasMaster 1.0' based on (IBM) PC for organization of previously captured digital images. Minimum system requirement for the 'AP' was Pentium II 166 MHz, 32 MB RAM, Windows 95 or 98, 800 600 resolution, 16-bit color, 20 speed CD-ROM drive. The 'AP' was composed of a execution file (Pathology_Atlas.exe), a DB file (pathology.mdb), and reference files (*.bmp, *.jpg, *.txt). The DB file contained fields for chapter, section, disease entity, and information for location of reference files. About 1,000 color images for various kinds of gross and microscopic pictures were stored in the CD-ROM and those were classified according to the chapters, sections, and disease entities. The 'AP' was easy to manipulate, and had advantages of self-learning for students. It could be applied to other fields in which many images were dealt with, such as histology, radiology, endoscopy, dermatology, and plastic surgery. The 'AP' was handy and very useful for medical students to study pathology and it would be a powerful self-learning tool.
CD-ROM*
;
Dermatology
;
Endoscopy
;
Humans
;
Pathology
;
Students, Medical*
;
Surgery, Plastic
4.Two-year Follow-up after Visual Laser Ablation of Prostate (V-LAP) for BPH.
Jong Bo CHOI ; Dong Sun KIM ; Duck Ki YOON
Korean Journal of Urology 2000;41(12):1546-1550
No abstract available.
Follow-Up Studies*
;
Laser Therapy*
;
Prostate*
5.A clinical study of postoperative biliary stricture.
Dong Seok LEE ; Sun Whe KIM ; Yong Hyun PARK
Journal of the Korean Surgical Society 1993;45(6):965-976
No abstract available.
Constriction, Pathologic*
6.Subendocardial Ischemic Necrosis in Hypertrophied Rabbit Heart Induced by Chronic Aoric.
Sung Sook KIM ; Dong Sun HAN ; Ie Tae PARK
Korean Circulation Journal 1997;27(7):738-743
BACKGROUND: Cardiac hypertrophy is the compensatory response of the myocadium to increased workload. Compensatory mechanisms come into play when the hypertrophied heart can no longer accommodate the increased demand or persistent stimuli. Although it has been reported that the molecular changes in hypertrophied hearts that initially mediate enhanced function may contribute to the development of heart failure, the structural/biochemical/molecular basis for myocardial contractile failure is still obscure. This study was aimed to clarify the structural basis for relation between hypertrophy and failure. METHOD: Nine pairs of rabbits were sacrificed at 8,12,24,48 hours and 1,2,4,6,8 weeks after experiment aortic constriction. There hearts were studied with routine histopathology. Each heart was weighed and compared with total body weight. Multiple sections were embedded in paraffin, sectioned at 5um, and stained with hematoxylin and cosin and Masson's trichrome and analysed. RESULTS: The heart weight to body weight ratio(g/Kg) increased progressively with time after aortic banding. Banding of the aorta in the rabbit resulted in multifocal areas of myofiber degeneration, necrosis and fibrosis through the wall of the left ventricle, in the papillary muscles of the left ventricle and in the left ventricular portions of the interventricular septum in rabbit of 6 and 8 weeks after aortic banding. By 4 weeks after banding, the foci of necrosis were not observed. CONCLUSION: There findings suggest that the increased necrosis, fibrosis in animals with cardiac hypertrophy induced by banding the aorta may play a role in progression to heart failure.
Animals
;
Aorta
;
Body Weight
;
Cardiomegaly
;
Constriction
;
Fibrosis
;
Heart Failure
;
Heart Ventricles
;
Heart*
;
Hematoxylin
;
Hypertrophy
;
Necrosis*
;
Papillary Muscles
;
Paraffin
;
Rabbits
7.A case of Leiner's disease.
Nam Joon CHO ; Un Sun CHOI ; Dong Kun KIM
Korean Journal of Dermatology 1992;30(4):543-545
In 1908 Leiner described the peculiar skin condition among infants to which he applied the name erythroderma desquamativa. The four cardinal features of Leiners disease are generalized seborrheic dermatitis, intractable severe diarrhea, recurrent local and systemic infections usually of gram negative etiology, and marked wasting and cyst rophy. A 2-month-old female presented to our clinic with generalized seborrheic erythrodermic eruption and intractable diarrhea. She had sufferd from these symptoms since birth. Her body weight was 3.4kg (below 3rd percentile). Her scalp was covered with thick yellowish crsts. There was generalized erythroderma covered vith scales and crusts. Laboratory result; revealed gram negative sepsis and DIC. Chest X-ray showed the findings of minimal aspir ition pneumonia in the right upper lobe. She expired on the following day.
Body Weight
;
Dacarbazine
;
Dermatitis, Exfoliative
;
Dermatitis, Seborrheic
;
Diarrhea
;
Female
;
Humans
;
Infant
;
Parturition
;
Pneumonia
;
Scalp
;
Sepsis
;
Skin
;
Thorax
;
Weights and Measures
8.Experiences with a New Technique of Nephrolithotomy in Removing Renal Caliceal Calculi.
Korean Journal of Urology 1988;29(1):61-66
A new technique of nephrolithotomy was used to remove calyceal stone in seven cases. Key points of this technique are direct removal of stone through the calicopuncture by forceps without renal vascular clamping and Gelfoam Packing followed by compression with hands for control of bleeding. The results were s follow : 1. With the exception of a single small stone all the targeted calculi were removed (94% in completeness of stone removal). 2. This method did not have any significant renal parenchymal damage and there was no episode of postoperative urine leakage of delayed bleeding. 3. Postoperative complications were a case of urinary obstruction caused by slipped Gelfoam into calyx accidently, which was delivered spontaneously during the voiding on 2nd postoperative day and a case of wound infection. This new technique nephrolithotomy was seemed to be an useful and rapid surgical method of calyceal stone surgery in some situations such as in case of marked adhesion present around the pelvis, narrow infundibulum and failed stone removal during the performing pyelolithotomy.
Calculi*
;
Constriction
;
Gelatin Sponge, Absorbable
;
Hand
;
Hemorrhage
;
Pelvis
;
Postoperative Complications
;
Surgical Instruments
;
Wound Infection
9.Revisit the Original Whitehead Hemorrhoidectomy The postoperative results of W-shaped circular incision & preservation of perianal skin.
Ji Hun KIM ; Dong Wan KANG ; Byung Ho SUN
Journal of the Korean Society of Coloproctology 1998;14(1):101-107
Since Whitehead had described a circular hemorrhoidectomy in 1882, many surgeons adopted it for decades for patients with protruding anal deformity. After a few decades of performing Whitehead operation, devastating complications such as anal stricture, fecal incontinence, and wet anus with mucosal eversion had been reported on the literatures and then it was buried as an abandoned procedure by surgeons for a long period. Recently, a few prominent anal surgeons reported that they could avoid such devastating complications by introducing diverse modifications of the original Whitehead's operation. The authors analyzed 22 patients who had undergone original Whitehead circular hemorrhoidectomy with the technique of preserving most of the perianal skin and W-shaped circular incision during the period from 1991 to 1996, with special regard to the com plications such as anal stricture and anal mucosal eversion which have been debated on so far and reviewed the articles about these issues. In immediate postoperative period, suture failure and resultant non-surgery requiring, mild anal stricture were documented in 3 of the 22 cases(13.6%). On long-term follow-up with the mean period of 44 months (18~79 months) in 14 cases, except those 8 cases that were lost, with phone-call questionaire, 13 patients(93%) had quite normal anal functions. The authors would like to suggest that the original Whitehead's circular hemorrhoidec tomy is a valuable surgical technique to manage the protruding anal deformity if surgeons can avoid well known complications such as anal stricture and anal mucosal eversion by choosing a correct location of initial W-shaped incision to preserve as much perianal skin as possible.
Anal Canal
;
Congenital Abnormalities
;
Constriction, Pathologic
;
Fecal Incontinence
;
Follow-Up Studies
;
Hemorrhoidectomy*
;
Humans
;
Postoperative Period
;
Skin*
;
Sutures
10.Prognostic parameters in Renal Cell Carcinoma.
Korean Journal of Urology 1988;29(3):375-380
This Study was designed to characterize the unfavorable prognostic factors of renal cell carcinoma through reviewing 27 cases with radical nephrectomy during the past 10 years from 1976 through 1986. The presence or absence of tumor invasion into renal capsule, perinephric fat, renal vein, regional lymph node, pelvis and/or ureter, hematuria at the time of first examination and the difference in the size of tumor and tumor cell type were studied. The 100 person-year mortality rates were analyzed with the chosen prognostic variables. Tests of significance between the difference in mortality rates of each two groups with or without a given characteristics were performed with Z-test. Author results as follows. : 1. The survival rate was decreased independently by the unfavorable factors such as the presence of tumor invasion into renal vein, regional lymph node, pelvis and/or ureter and tumor cell type other than clear cell(P<0.001, <0.001, <0.001, <0.05 respectively). 2. The survival rate was not affected by the following factors such as the presence or absence of hematuria at the time of first examination, tumor invasion into renal capsule, perinephric fat and the difference in size of tumor.
Carcinoma, Renal Cell*
;
Hematuria
;
Lymph Nodes
;
Mortality
;
Nephrectomy
;
Pelvis
;
Prognosis
;
Renal Veins
;
Survival Rate
;
Ureter