1.A Clinical Study on Anti-Hypertensive Effect and Safety of Candesartan Cilexetil (Atacand) in Mild to Moderate Hypertensive Patients.
Seokmin KANG ; Namsik CHUNG ; Dong Hoon CHOI ; Shinki AHN ; Sejoong RIM ; Jon Won HA ; Yangsoo JANG ; Won Heum SHIM ; Seung Yeon CHO ; Sung Soon KIM ; Sunho LEE
Korean Circulation Journal 1999;29(9):937-943
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Candesartan cilexetil (Atacand ), a selective type I angiotensin II receptor blocker, has recently been introduced as a new antihypertensive agent. We evaluated its anti-hypertensive effect and safety in mild to moderate hypertensive patients. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Candesartan cilexetil, 8 mg or 16 mg, was administered once a day over 8 weeks period in the patients with mild to moderate hypertension (25 male, 26 female, mean age: 53.5+/-1.2 years). For safety evaluation, laboratory tests were performed before and after treatment with candesartan cilexetil. Changes in blood pressure, heart rate and electrocardiogram were also observed. RESULTS: 1) The mean blood pressures in the sitting position were systolic 164.1+/-2.1 mmHg and diastolic 106.3+/-0.8 mmHg before treatment, which were lowered to 135.4+/-2.0 mmHg and 89.1+/-1.1 mmHg, repectively after 8 weeks of treatment (p<0.05). 2) Candesartan cilexetil had a significant dose-dependent antihypertensive effect for diastolic pressure in 35 patients (8 mg: 97.8+/-0.9 mmHg, 16 mg: 91.3+/-1.1 mmHg, p<0.05). 3) Heart rate was not significantly changed before and after treatment during the treatment with candesartan cilexetil (72.2+/-1.2/min vs. 72.0+/-1.3/min: p>0.05). 4) Laboratory tests revealed no significant abnormality by the treatment with candesartan cilexetil. 5) Left ventricular hypertrophy by ECG criteria detected in 3 cases disappeared after treatment with candesartan cilexetil. 6) No significant side effects were observed during the treatment period. CONCLUSION: Candesartan cilexetil, 8 mg or 16 mg, once a day is an effective and well tolerated antihypertensive treatment. It has a significant dose-dependent antihypertensive effect.
Blood Pressure
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Electrocardiography
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Female
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Heart Rate
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Humans
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Hypertension
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Hypertrophy, Left Ventricular
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Male
;
Receptors, Angiotensin
2.Yeungnam University type drive-through (YU-Thru) coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) screening system: a rapid and safe screening system
Wan Seok SEO ; Seong Ho KIM ; Si Youn SONG ; Jian HUR ; Jun LEE ; Sunho CHOI ; Yoojung LEE ; Dai Seg BAI
Yeungnam University Journal of Medicine 2020;37(4):349-355
Active and prompt scale-up screening tests are essential to efficiently control the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) outbreak. The goal of this work was to identify shortcomings in the conventional screening system (CSS) implemented in the beginning of the outbreak. To overcome these shortcomings, we then introduced a novel, independently developed system called the Yeungnam University type drive-through (YU-Thru), and distributed it nationwide in Korea. This system is similar to the drive-throughs utilized by fast food restaurants. YU-Thru system has shortened the time taken to test a single person to 2–4 minutes, by completely eliminating the time required to clean and ventilate the specimen collection room. This time requirement was a major drawback of the CSS. YU-Thru system also reduced the risk of subjects and medical staff infecting one another by using a separate and closed examination system. On average, 50 to 60 tests were conducted per day when using the CSS, while now up to 350 tests per day are conducted with the YU-Thru system. We believe that the YU-Thru system has made an important contribution to the rapid detection of COVID-19 in Daegu, South Korea. Here, we will describe the YU-Thru system in detail so that other countries experiencing COVID-19 outbreaks can take advantage of this system.
3.Changes in Strain Pattern and Exercise Capacity after Transcatheter Closure of Atrial Septal Defects.
Jung Yoon KIM ; Bong Sic YUN ; Sunho LEE ; Se Yong JUNG ; Jae Young CHOI ; Nam Kyun KIM
Korean Circulation Journal 2017;47(2):245-253
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Assessment of left ventricle (LV) function by using strain and strain rate is popular in the clinical setting. However, the use of these echocardiographic tools in assessing right ventricle (RV) failure, and the manner in which they both reflect the functional capacity of the patient, remains poorly understood. This study aimed to investigate the change in exercise capacity and strain between before and (1 month) after the transcatheter closure of atrial septal defects (ASDs). SUBJECTS AND METHODS: Thirty patients who underwent transcatheter closure of ASD between May 2014 and June 2015 at the Division of Pediatric Cardiology, Severance Cardiovascular Hospital, were enrolled. We compared and analyzed the results of the following examinations, before and (1 month) after the procedure: echocardiography, cardiopulmonary exercise test (CPET), and N-terminal pro-brain natriuretic peptide level. RESULTS: There were no mortalities, and the male-to-female ratio was 1:2. The mean defect size was 22.3±4.9 mm; the mean Qp/Qs ratio, 2.1±0.5; and the mean device size, 22.3±4.9 mm. Changes in global RV longitudinal (GRVL) strain and LV torsion were measured echocardiographically. Exercise capacity improved from 7.7±1.2 to 8.7±1.8 metabolic equivalents (p=0.001). These findings correlated to the change in GRVL strain (p=0.03). CONCLUSION: The average exercise capacity increased after device closure of ASD. The change in strain was evident on echocardiography, especially for GRVL strain and LV torsion. Further studies comparing CPET and strain in various patients may show increased exercise capacity in patients with improved RV function.
Cardiology
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Echocardiography
;
Exercise Test
;
Heart Septal Defects, Atrial*
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Heart Ventricles
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Humans
;
Metabolic Equivalent
;
Mortality
;
Natriuretic Peptide, Brain
4.Graphene as an Enabling Strategy for Dental Implant and Tissue Regeneration.
Chan PARK ; Sunho PARK ; Dohyeon LEE ; Kyoung Soon CHOI ; Hyun Pil LIM ; Jangho KIM
Tissue Engineering and Regenerative Medicine 2017;14(5):481-493
Graphene-based approaches have been influential in the design and manipulation of dental implants and tissue regeneration to overcome the problems associated with traditional titanium-based dental implants, such as their low biological affinity. Here, we describe the current progress of graphene-based platforms, which have contributed to major advances for improving cellular functions in in vitro and in vivo applications of dental implants. We also present opinions on the principal challenges and future prospects for new graphene-based platforms for the development of advanced graphene dental implants and tissue regeneration.
Dental Implants*
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Graphite*
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In Vitro Techniques
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Regeneration*
;
Titanium
5.A single emergency center study for evaluation of P-POSSUM and Mannheim Peritonitis Index as a risk prediction model in patients with non-traumatic peritonitis
Boram KIM ; Seong Hun KIM ; Sung Pil Michael CHOE ; Daihai CHOI ; Dong Wook JE ; Woo Young NHO ; Soo Hyung LEE ; Sunho CHO ; Shinwoo KIM ; Hyoungouk KIM ; Jeong Sik YI
Journal of the Korean Society of Emergency Medicine 2022;33(2):193-202
Objective:
Peritonitis is a life-threatening, emergent surgical disease with very high mortality and morbidity. Currently, there are insufficient Korean studies using the P-POSSUM (Portsmouth-Physiological and Operative Severity Score for the enUmeration of Mortality and morbidity) and the Mannheim Peritonitis Index (MPI) as risk prediction models for nontraumatic peritonitis patients who visit the emergency room.
Methods:
This retrospective study was carried out on 196 cases of non-traumatic peritonitis in a single emergency center from January 2015 to December 2019. Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves were obtained and the area under the ROC curve (AUC) was compared using both P-POSSUM and MPI. The observed mortality and expected mortality for P-POSSUM were compared using the goodness of fit assessed using the Hosmer-Lemeshow equation.
Results:
Diastolic blood pressure, blood urea nitrogen, potassium, length of stay, and intensive care unit admissions were significantly different between survivors and non-survivors. The AUC was 0.812 for P-POSSUM and 0.646 for MPI. The observed-to-expected mortality ratio for P-POSSUM indicated fewer than expected deaths in all quintiles of risk and this was more pronounced, especially when the expected mortality was over 60%.
Conclusion
In non-traumatic peritonitis patients, P-POSSUM was more useful in predicting risk than the MPI score. However, P-POSSUM overestimated the risk in high-risk patients. Although the MPI score is only somewhat useful for predicting mortality in patients with non-traumatic peritonitis, it is useful as an adjuvant.
6.Clinical Implication of Concordant or Discordant Genomic Profiling between Primary and Matched Metastatic Tissues in Patients with Colorectal Cancer
Jung Yoon CHOI ; Sunho CHOI ; Minhyeok LEE ; Young Soo PARK ; Jae Sook SUNG ; Won Jin CHANG ; Ju Won KIM ; Yoon Ji CHOI ; Jin KIM ; Dong-Sik KIM ; Sung-Ho LEE ; Junhee SEOK ; Kyong Hwa PARK ; Seon Hahn KIM ; Yeul Hong KIM
Cancer Research and Treatment 2020;52(3):764-778
Purpose:
The purpose of this study was to identify the concordant or discordant genomic profiling between primary and matched metastatic tumors in patients with colorectal cancer (CRC) and to explore the clinical implication.
Materials and Methods:
Surgical samples of primary and matched metastatic tissues from 158 patients (335 samples) with CRC at Korea University Anam Hospital were evaluated using the Ion AmpliSeq Cancer Hotspot Panel. We compared genetic variants and classified them as concordant, primary-specific, and metastasis-specific variants. We used a combination of principal components analysis and clustering to find genomic groups. Kaplan-Meier curves were used to appraise survival between genomic groups. We used machine learning to confirm the correlation between genetic variants and metastatic sites.
Results:
A total of 282 types of deleterious non-synonymous variants were selected for analysis. Of a total of 897 variants, an average of 40% was discordant. Three genomic groups were yielded based on the genomic discrepancy patterns. Overall survival differed significantly between the genomic groups. The poorest group had the highest proportion of concordant KRAS G12V and additional metastasis-specific SMAD4. Correlation analysis between genetic variants and metastatic sites suggested that concordant KRAS mutations would have more disseminated metastases.
Conclusion
Driver gene mutations were mostly concordant; however, discordant or metastasis-specific mutations were present. Clinically, the concordant driver genetic changes with additional metastasis-specific variants can predict poor prognosis for patients with CRC.
7.Reliability and Validity of the Korean Version of the Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder Checklist in Public Firefighters and Rescue Workers.
Shinwon PARK ; Hyeonseok S JEONG ; Jooyeon Jamie IM ; Yujin JEON ; Jiyoung MA ; Yera CHOI ; Soonhyun BAN ; Sungeun KIM ; Siyoung YU ; Sunho LEE ; Saerom JEON ; Ilhyang KANG ; Bora LEE ; Sooyeon LEE ; Jihee SON ; Jae ho LIM ; Sujung YOON ; Eui Jung KIM ; Jieun E KIM ; In Kyoon LYOO
Journal of the Korean Society of Biological Psychiatry 2016;23(1):29-36
OBJECTIVES: Firefighters and rescue workers are likely to be exposed to a variety of traumatic events; as such, they are vulnerable to the risk of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). The psychometric properties of the Korean version of the PTSD Checklist (PCL), a widely used self-report screening tool for PTSD, were assessed in South Korean firefighters and rescue workers. METHODS: Data were collected via self-report questionnaires and semi-structured clinical interviews administered to 221 firefighters. Internal consistency, item-total correlation, one-week test-retest reliability, convergent validity, and divergent validity were examined. Content validity of the PCL was evaluated using factor analysis and receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analyses were used to estimate the optimal cutoff point and area under the curve. RESULTS: The PCL demonstrated excellent internal consistency (alpha = 0.97), item-total correlation (r = 0.72-0.88), test-retest reliability (r = 0.95), and convergent and divergent validity. The total score of PCL was positively correlated with the number of traumatic events experienced (p < 0.001). Factor analysis revealed two theoretically congruent factors: re-experience/avoidance and numbing/hyperarousal. The optimal cutoff was 45 and the area under the ROC curve was 0.97. CONCLUSIONS: The Korean version of the PCL may be a useful PTSD screening instrument for firefighters and rescue workers, further maximizing opportunities for accurate PTSD diagnosis and treatment.
Checklist*
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Diagnosis
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Firefighters*
;
Humans
;
Mass Screening
;
Psychometrics
;
Reproducibility of Results*
;
Rescue Work*
;
ROC Curve
;
Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic*
8.Organizing an in-class hackathon to correct PDF-to-text conversion errors of Genomics & Informatics 1.0
Sunho KIM ; Royoung KIM ; Ryeo-Gyeong KIM ; Enjin KO ; Han-Su KIM ; Jihye SHIN ; Daeun CHO ; Yurhee JIN ; Soyeon BAE ; Ye Won JO ; San Ah JEONG ; Yena KIM ; Seoyeon AHN ; Bomi JANG ; Jiheyon SEONG ; Yujin LEE ; Si Eun SEO ; Yujin KIM ; Ha-Jeong KIM ; Hyeji KIM ; Hye-Lynn SUNG ; Hyoyoung LHO ; Jaywon KOO ; Jion CHU ; Juwon LIM ; Youngju KIM ; Kyungyeon LEE ; Yuri LIM ; Meongeun KIM ; Seonjeong HWANG ; Shinhye HAN ; Sohyeun BAE ; Sua KIM ; Suhyeon YOO ; Yeonjeong SEO ; Yerim SHIN ; Yonsoo KIM ; You-Jung KO ; Jihee BAEK ; Hyejin HYUN ; Hyemin CHOI ; Ji-Hye OH ; Da-Young KIM ; Hee-Jo NAM ; Hyun-Seok PARK
Genomics & Informatics 2020;18(3):e33-
This paper describes a community effort to improve earlier versions of the full-text corpus of Genomics & Informatics by semi-automatically detecting and correcting PDF-to-text conversion errors and optical character recognition errors during the first hackathon of Genomics & Informatics Annotation Hackathon (GIAH) event. Extracting text from multi-column biomedical documents such as Genomics & Informatics is known to be notoriously difficult. The hackathon was piloted as part of a coding competition of the ELTEC College of Engineering at Ewha Womans University in order to enable researchers and students to create or annotate their own versions of the Genomics & Informatics corpus, to gain and create knowledge about corpus linguistics, and simultaneously to acquire tangible and transferable skills. The proposed projects during the hackathon harness an internal database containing different versions of the corpus and annotations.
9.Organizing an in-class hackathon to correct PDF-to-text conversion errors of Genomics & Informatics 1.0
Sunho KIM ; Royoung KIM ; Ryeo-Gyeong KIM ; Enjin KO ; Han-Su KIM ; Jihye SHIN ; Daeun CHO ; Yurhee JIN ; Soyeon BAE ; Ye Won JO ; San Ah JEONG ; Yena KIM ; Seoyeon AHN ; Bomi JANG ; Jiheyon SEONG ; Yujin LEE ; Si Eun SEO ; Yujin KIM ; Ha-Jeong KIM ; Hyeji KIM ; Hye-Lynn SUNG ; Hyoyoung LHO ; Jaywon KOO ; Jion CHU ; Juwon LIM ; Youngju KIM ; Kyungyeon LEE ; Yuri LIM ; Meongeun KIM ; Seonjeong HWANG ; Shinhye HAN ; Sohyeun BAE ; Sua KIM ; Suhyeon YOO ; Yeonjeong SEO ; Yerim SHIN ; Yonsoo KIM ; You-Jung KO ; Jihee BAEK ; Hyejin HYUN ; Hyemin CHOI ; Ji-Hye OH ; Da-Young KIM ; Hee-Jo NAM ; Hyun-Seok PARK
Genomics & Informatics 2020;18(3):e33-
This paper describes a community effort to improve earlier versions of the full-text corpus of Genomics & Informatics by semi-automatically detecting and correcting PDF-to-text conversion errors and optical character recognition errors during the first hackathon of Genomics & Informatics Annotation Hackathon (GIAH) event. Extracting text from multi-column biomedical documents such as Genomics & Informatics is known to be notoriously difficult. The hackathon was piloted as part of a coding competition of the ELTEC College of Engineering at Ewha Womans University in order to enable researchers and students to create or annotate their own versions of the Genomics & Informatics corpus, to gain and create knowledge about corpus linguistics, and simultaneously to acquire tangible and transferable skills. The proposed projects during the hackathon harness an internal database containing different versions of the corpus and annotations.