1.Word Definition Ability in Patients with Alzheimer's disease.
Sunghee LIM ; Miseon KWON ; Hyun Sub SIM ; Sangyun KIM ; Jun Young LEE
Dementia and Neurocognitive Disorders 2014;13(1):7-15
BACKGROUND: The purposes of this study were (1) to investigate the abilities of word definition in patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD) according to the severity, and (2) to examine the error patterns in patients with Alzheimer's disease. METHODS: Eight individuals with MCI (CDR=0.5) and 16 patients with AD (eight for probable AD mild group of CDR=1 and eight for probable AD moderate group of CDR=2) participated in the study. Eight normal age-, gender-, and education-matched elderly adults served as a control group for the MCI and AD groups. As stimuli for the word definition, eleven semantic categories were used, and two concrete words were selected from each category, resulting in a total of 22 items. Prior to the task, four definition categories were provided: 1) functional, 2) relational, 3) perceptual, and 4) categorical. Statistical analyses were performed using Kruskal-Wallis test, and Bonferroni analyses were used as a post-hoc comparison for any significant results. RESULTS: There were significant differences in word definition scores among four groups. The probable AD moderate group showed the lower definition score than the probable AD mild group. And the probable AD moderate group showed the lower definition score than MCI group. Each group defined words in different ways. While the control group employed four definition different categories equally, the probable AD moderate group used a functional definition category mainly. However, relational and categorical definition categories were rarely observed in the probable AD moderate group. The analysis of error pattern showed that inadequate definition was frequently observed in all groups. CONCLUSIONS: The results from this study suggest that word definition task could be a sensitive indicator of the impairment of semantic knowledge in patients with AD.
Adult
;
Aged
;
Alzheimer Disease*
;
Humans
;
Mild Cognitive Impairment
;
Semantics
2.Ubiquitylation of Fe65 adaptor protein by neuronal precursor cell expressed developmentally down regulated 4-2 (Nedd4-2) via the WW domain interaction with Fe65.
Eun Jeoung LEE ; Sunghee HYUN ; Jaesun CHUN ; Sung Hwa SHIN ; Sang Sun KANG
Experimental & Molecular Medicine 2009;41(8):555-568
Fe65 has been characterized as an adaptor protein, originally identified as an expressed sequence tag (EST) corresponding to an mRNA expressed at high levels in the rat brain. It contains one WW domain and two phosphotyrosine interaction/phosphotyrosine binding domains (PID1/PID2). As the neuronal precursor cell expressed developmentally down regulated 4-2 (Nedd4-2) has a putative WW domain binding motif (72PPLP75) in the N-terminal domain, we hypothesized that Fe65 associates with Nedd4-2 through a WW domain interaction, which has the characteristics of E3 ubiquitin-protein ligase. In this paper, we present evidence for the interaction between Fe65 WW domain and Nedd4-2 through its specific motif, using a pull down approach and co-immunoprecipitation. Additionally, the co-localization of Fe65 and Nedd4-2 were observed via confocal microscopy. Co-localization of Fe65 and Nedd4-2 was disrupted by either the mutation of Fe65 WW domain or its putative binding motif of Nedd4-2. When the ubiquitin assay was performed, the interaction of Nedd4-2 (wt) with Fe65 is required for the cell apoptosis and the ubiquitylation of Fe65. We also observed that the ubiquitylation of Fe65 (wt) was augmented depending on Nedd4-2 expression levels, whereas the Fe65 WW domain mutant (W243KP245K) or the Nedd4-2 AL mutant (72PPLP75 was changed to 72APLA75) was under-ubiquitinated significantly. Thus, our observations implicated that the protein-protein interaction between the WW domain of Fe65 and the putative binding motif of Nedd4-2 down-regulates Fe65 protein stability and subcellular localization through its ubiquitylation, to contribute cell apoptosis.
Adaptor Proteins, Signal Transducing/chemistry/genetics/*metabolism
;
Cell Line
;
*Down-Regulation
;
Endosomal Sorting Complexes Required for Transport/genetics/*metabolism
;
*Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental
;
Humans
;
Immunoprecipitation
;
Microscopy, Confocal
;
Mutation
;
Protein Interaction Mapping
;
Protein Structure, Tertiary/*physiology
;
Transfection
;
Ubiquitin-Protein Ligases/genetics/*metabolism
;
Ubiquitination
3.Exploring the Relationship Between Different Pain Patterns and Depressive Symptom Among Older Koreans: Using Latent Growth Model
Kyu-Hyoung JEONG ; Hye-Gyeong SON ; Sunghee KIM ; Ju Hyun RYU ; Seoyoon LEE
Psychiatry Investigation 2025;22(4):382-388
Objective:
The purpose of this study is to identify the types of pain changes that affect older Koreans, as well as their effects on depressive symptom.
Methods:
We analyzed the Korean Longitudinal Study of Aging data collected from 2010 to 2018. A data of total of 1,359 participants, aged 65 or older were used to estimate the change in pain. A latent growth model and growth mixture modeling were performed to estimate the overall change in pain and to categorize the types of pain changes.
Results:
The pain changes of older adults were classified into two categories: low-stable and high increasing. The depressive symptom showed a stronger relationship among the high-increasing type of pain than the low-stable type. The high-increasing type had a higher percentage of females, lower income, relatively low educational attainment, and a higher percentage of rural residents than the low-stable type.
Conclusion
The significance of this study is that it reiterated the importance of early pain diagnosis and intervention by identifying the types of pain changes in older adults and analyzing their effects on depressive symptoms. Therefore, it is especially important to pay attention to interventions that are designed to help vulnerable groups with a high risk of pain obtain effective pain management.
4.Exploring the Relationship Between Different Pain Patterns and Depressive Symptom Among Older Koreans: Using Latent Growth Model
Kyu-Hyoung JEONG ; Hye-Gyeong SON ; Sunghee KIM ; Ju Hyun RYU ; Seoyoon LEE
Psychiatry Investigation 2025;22(4):382-388
Objective:
The purpose of this study is to identify the types of pain changes that affect older Koreans, as well as their effects on depressive symptom.
Methods:
We analyzed the Korean Longitudinal Study of Aging data collected from 2010 to 2018. A data of total of 1,359 participants, aged 65 or older were used to estimate the change in pain. A latent growth model and growth mixture modeling were performed to estimate the overall change in pain and to categorize the types of pain changes.
Results:
The pain changes of older adults were classified into two categories: low-stable and high increasing. The depressive symptom showed a stronger relationship among the high-increasing type of pain than the low-stable type. The high-increasing type had a higher percentage of females, lower income, relatively low educational attainment, and a higher percentage of rural residents than the low-stable type.
Conclusion
The significance of this study is that it reiterated the importance of early pain diagnosis and intervention by identifying the types of pain changes in older adults and analyzing their effects on depressive symptoms. Therefore, it is especially important to pay attention to interventions that are designed to help vulnerable groups with a high risk of pain obtain effective pain management.
5.Exploring the Relationship Between Different Pain Patterns and Depressive Symptom Among Older Koreans: Using Latent Growth Model
Kyu-Hyoung JEONG ; Hye-Gyeong SON ; Sunghee KIM ; Ju Hyun RYU ; Seoyoon LEE
Psychiatry Investigation 2025;22(4):382-388
Objective:
The purpose of this study is to identify the types of pain changes that affect older Koreans, as well as their effects on depressive symptom.
Methods:
We analyzed the Korean Longitudinal Study of Aging data collected from 2010 to 2018. A data of total of 1,359 participants, aged 65 or older were used to estimate the change in pain. A latent growth model and growth mixture modeling were performed to estimate the overall change in pain and to categorize the types of pain changes.
Results:
The pain changes of older adults were classified into two categories: low-stable and high increasing. The depressive symptom showed a stronger relationship among the high-increasing type of pain than the low-stable type. The high-increasing type had a higher percentage of females, lower income, relatively low educational attainment, and a higher percentage of rural residents than the low-stable type.
Conclusion
The significance of this study is that it reiterated the importance of early pain diagnosis and intervention by identifying the types of pain changes in older adults and analyzing their effects on depressive symptoms. Therefore, it is especially important to pay attention to interventions that are designed to help vulnerable groups with a high risk of pain obtain effective pain management.
6.Exploring the Relationship Between Different Pain Patterns and Depressive Symptom Among Older Koreans: Using Latent Growth Model
Kyu-Hyoung JEONG ; Hye-Gyeong SON ; Sunghee KIM ; Ju Hyun RYU ; Seoyoon LEE
Psychiatry Investigation 2025;22(4):382-388
Objective:
The purpose of this study is to identify the types of pain changes that affect older Koreans, as well as their effects on depressive symptom.
Methods:
We analyzed the Korean Longitudinal Study of Aging data collected from 2010 to 2018. A data of total of 1,359 participants, aged 65 or older were used to estimate the change in pain. A latent growth model and growth mixture modeling were performed to estimate the overall change in pain and to categorize the types of pain changes.
Results:
The pain changes of older adults were classified into two categories: low-stable and high increasing. The depressive symptom showed a stronger relationship among the high-increasing type of pain than the low-stable type. The high-increasing type had a higher percentage of females, lower income, relatively low educational attainment, and a higher percentage of rural residents than the low-stable type.
Conclusion
The significance of this study is that it reiterated the importance of early pain diagnosis and intervention by identifying the types of pain changes in older adults and analyzing their effects on depressive symptoms. Therefore, it is especially important to pay attention to interventions that are designed to help vulnerable groups with a high risk of pain obtain effective pain management.
7.Exploring the Relationship Between Different Pain Patterns and Depressive Symptom Among Older Koreans: Using Latent Growth Model
Kyu-Hyoung JEONG ; Hye-Gyeong SON ; Sunghee KIM ; Ju Hyun RYU ; Seoyoon LEE
Psychiatry Investigation 2025;22(4):382-388
Objective:
The purpose of this study is to identify the types of pain changes that affect older Koreans, as well as their effects on depressive symptom.
Methods:
We analyzed the Korean Longitudinal Study of Aging data collected from 2010 to 2018. A data of total of 1,359 participants, aged 65 or older were used to estimate the change in pain. A latent growth model and growth mixture modeling were performed to estimate the overall change in pain and to categorize the types of pain changes.
Results:
The pain changes of older adults were classified into two categories: low-stable and high increasing. The depressive symptom showed a stronger relationship among the high-increasing type of pain than the low-stable type. The high-increasing type had a higher percentage of females, lower income, relatively low educational attainment, and a higher percentage of rural residents than the low-stable type.
Conclusion
The significance of this study is that it reiterated the importance of early pain diagnosis and intervention by identifying the types of pain changes in older adults and analyzing their effects on depressive symptoms. Therefore, it is especially important to pay attention to interventions that are designed to help vulnerable groups with a high risk of pain obtain effective pain management.
8.A Case of Biliary Sepsis by Dysgonomonas capnocytophagoides
Sunghee MIN ; Hye Young LEE ; Jeong Hyun CHANG ; Heungsup SUNG ; Mi Na KIM ; Mi Hyun BAE ; Myung Hwan KIM
Laboratory Medicine Online 2018;8(1):34-38
Dysgonomonas capnocytophagoides is a gram-negative, facultatively anaerobic coccobacillus that was formerly designated CDC group dysgonic fermenter (DF)-3, occurring as a normal flora in human gut and rarely causing human infections such as bacteremia, abscess, diarrhea, and cholecystitis. In this study, we report a case of biliary sepsis caused by D. capnocytophagoides in a patient with biliary obstruction. A seventy four-year-old man, admitted to the hospital due to common bile-duct stone, also had cholangitis caused by D. capnocytophagoides and Enterococcus avium, which were isolated from his blood cultures. D. capnocytophagoides was initially identified as D. gadei by MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry, but later confirmed as D. capnocytophagoides by 16S rRNA gene sequencing. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report of human infection by D. capnocytophagoides in Korea.
Abscess
;
Bacteremia
;
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (U.S.)
;
Cholangitis
;
Cholecystitis
;
Cholelithiasis
;
Diarrhea
;
Enterococcus
;
Genes, rRNA
;
Humans
;
Korea
;
Mass Spectrometry
;
Sepsis
9.Association of preoperative pain in knee and external to knee with postoperative pain outcome after total knee arthroplasty
Tak Kyu OH ; Chong Bum CHANG ; Hyun Jung SHIN ; Sunghee HAN ; Sang Hwan DO ; Hyun Hee CHO ; Jung Won HWANG
Anesthesia and Pain Medicine 2019;14(4):480-488
BACKGROUND: Preoperative pain in the symptomatic knee may predict postoperative pain severity in patients undergoing total knee arthroplasty (TKA). However, the effect of preoperative pain external to the knee on postoperative pain is unclear. This study evaluated postoperative pain outcomes in TKA patients according to the presence of preoperative pain in the knee only or in the knee and external to the knee.METHODS: We retrospectively assessed medical records of patients who underwent unilateral TKA. The relationship between reported preoperative pain characteristics and morphine equivalent consumption or numerical rating scale (NRS) pain scores on postoperative day (POD) 0–3 was assessed using a multivariable generalized linear model.RESULTS: In total, 3,429 adult patients who underwent their first TKA were included; 2,864 (83.5%) patients preoperatively experienced only knee pain and 565 (16.5%) knee pain with external to knee pain. Preoperative pain in the knee and external to the knee was associated with 5% higher morphine equivalent consumption on POD 0–3 compared to preoperative knee pain only (exponentiated regression coefficient: 1.05; 95% confidence interval: 1.02 to 1.09; P = 0.004). However, the NRS pain scores on POD 0, 1, 2, and 3 and adjuvant analgesics consumption (acetaminophen and ketorolac) on POD 0–3 were not significantly different between the two groups (P > 0.05).CONCLUSIONS: This study showed that there was an increase of morphine equivalent consumption during POD 0–3 in patients with preoperative knee pain with external to knee pain than in patients with preoperative only knee pain.
Adult
;
Analgesics
;
Analgesics, Opioid
;
Arthralgia
;
Arthroplasty, Replacement, Knee
;
Humans
;
Knee
;
Linear Models
;
Medical Records
;
Morphine
;
Pain, Postoperative
;
Retrospective Studies
10.Analyses of the Studies on Cancer-Related Quality of Life Published in Korea.
Eun Hyun LEE ; Hee Boong PARK ; Myung Wook KIM ; Sunghee KANG ; Hye Jin LEE ; Won Hee LEE ; Mison CHUN
The Journal of the Korean Society for Therapeutic Radiology and Oncology 2002;20(4):359-366
PURPOSE: The purpose of the present study was to analyze and evaluate prior studies published in Korea on the cancer-related quality of life, in order to make recommendations for further research. MATERIALS AND METHODS: A total of 31 studies were selected from three different databases. The selected studies were analyzed according to 11 criteria, such as site of cancer, domain, independent variable, research design, self/proxy rating, single/battery instrument, translation/back translation, reliability, validity, scoring, and findings. RESULTS: Of the 31 studies, approximately half of them were conducted using a mixed cancer group of patients. Many of the studies asserted that the concept of quality of life had a multidimensional attribute. Approximately 30% were longitudinal design studies giving information about the changes in quality of life. In all studies, except one, patients directly rated their level of quality of life. With respect to the questionnaires used for measuring the quality of life, most studies did not consider whether or not their reliability and validity had been established. In addition, when using questionnaires developed in other languages, no studies employed a translation/ back-translation technique. All studies used sum or total scoring methods when calculating the level of quality of life. The types of variables tested for their influence on quality of life were quite limited. CONCLUSION: It is recommended that longitudinal design studies be performed, using methods of data collection whose validity and reliability has been confirmed, and that studies be conducted to identify new variables having an influence on the quality of life.
Data Collection
;
Humans
;
Korea*
;
Quality of Life*
;
Surveys and Questionnaires
;
Reproducibility of Results
;
Research Design