1.Effects of recombinant tissue plasminogen activator(RT-PA) in a chicken flexor tendon adhesion model.
Sang Tae AHN ; Bruce A KRAEMER ; Margie MCHLER ; Thomas A MUSTOE
Journal of the Korean Society of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgeons 1992;19(3):317-326
No abstract available.
Chickens*
;
Plasminogen*
;
Tendons*
2.Effect of a Randomized Controlled Trial Walking Program on Walking, Stress, Depressive Symptoms and Cardiovascular Biomarkers in Elderly Korean Immigrants.
Mo Kyung SIN ; Brandon IBARRA ; Thomas TAE ; Patrick J M MURPHY
Journal of Korean Biological Nursing Science 2015;17(2):89-96
PURPOSE: Despite well-known benefits of walking on cardiovascular health, no structured walking exercise program has been formally tested on elderly Korean immigrants (EKIs). This pilot randomized controlled trial study assessed the effect of a walking program on walking behavior (pedometer steps count), stress (cortisol), depressive symptoms (CESD-10), and cardiovascular disease biomarkers (hs-CRP and fibrinogen) via venipuncture in EKIs. METHODS: Seventy EKIs recruited from a Korean community were randomly assigned to a 12-week walking group or control group in a 3:2 ratio. The working program included a pedometer, buddy, monthly coffee card, weekly call for goal setting, and physical activity consultation. Walking group EKIs maintained the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommended exercise guidelines and good mental health status over 12 weeks. RESULTS: There was no significant difference in the outcomes between control and walking groups. CONCLUSION: Social networking with Koreans in the senior center and church from a well-established Korean community might have positive effects on mental health.
Aged*
;
Biomarkers*
;
Cardiovascular Diseases
;
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (U.S.)
;
Coffee
;
Depression*
;
Emigrants and Immigrants*
;
Humans
;
Mental Health
;
Motor Activity
;
Phlebotomy
;
Senior Centers
;
Walking*
3.Effect of muscle relaxation on the oxygenation of human skeletal muscle: a prospective in-vivo experiment using an isolated forearm technique.
Ka Young RHEE ; Tae Yop KIM ; In Su OH ; Seoung Joon LEE ; Thomas LEDOWSKI
Korean Journal of Anesthesiology 2015;68(1):13-16
BACKGROUND: Total oxygen consumption has been found to be reduced under deep neuromuscular blockade due to a lower rate of metabolism of skeletal muscles. However, the magnitude of this effect in individual muscles has not been investigated. Thus the aim of this study was to compare the oxygenation of paralyzed versus non-paralyzed forearm muscle under tourniquet-provoked ischemia. METHODS: After ethics approval and written informed consent, 30 patients scheduled for elective hand and wrist surgery were included. Ischemia was provoked by inflation of bilateral upper arm tourniquets and muscle relaxation was achieved via intravenous administration of rocuronium 0.9 mg/kg. Bilateral tourniquets were applied to both upper arms before induction of anesthesia and near infrared spectrometry (NIRS) electrodes applied on both forearms. Muscular ischemia in an isolated (= non-paralyzed, NP) as well as a paralyzed forearm (P) was created by sequential inflation of both tourniquets before and after intravenous administration of rocuronium. Muscle oxygen saturations (SmO2) of NIRS in both forearms and their changes were determined and compared. RESULTS: Data of 30 patients (15 male, 15 female; 41.8 +/- 14.7 years) were analyzed. The speed of SmO2 decrease (50% decrease of SmO2 from baseline (median [percentiles]: NP 210 s [180/480s] vs. P 180 [180/300]) as well as the maximum decrease in SmO2 (minimum SmO2 in % (median [percentiles]: NP 20 [19/24] vs. P 21 [19/28]) were not significantly affected by neuromuscular paralysis. CONCLUSIONS: No significant effect of muscle relaxation on NIRS-assessed muscle oxygenation under tourniquet-induced ischemia was found in human forearm muscles.
Administration, Intravenous
;
Anesthesia
;
Arm
;
Electrodes
;
Ethics
;
Female
;
Forearm*
;
Hand
;
Humans
;
Inflation, Economic
;
Informed Consent
;
Ischemia
;
Male
;
Metabolism
;
Muscle Relaxation*
;
Muscle, Skeletal*
;
Muscles
;
Neuromuscular Blockade
;
Oxygen Consumption
;
Oxygen*
;
Paralysis
;
Prospective Studies*
;
Spectroscopy, Near-Infrared
;
Spectrum Analysis
;
Tourniquets
;
Wrist
4.Development of intestinal ischemia/reperfusion-induced acute kidney injury in rats with or without chronic kidney disease: Cytokine/chemokine response and effect of alpha-melanocyte-stimulating hormone.
Martin SKOTTX ; Rikke NORREGAARD ; Hanne BIRKE-SORENSEN ; Johan PALMFELDT ; Tae Hwan KWON ; Thomas JONASSEN ; Jorgen FROKIAER ; Soren NIELSEN
Kidney Research and Clinical Practice 2014;33(2):79-88
BACKGROUND: The primary aim of the study was to investigate the cytokine/chemokine response in the kidney, lung, and liver following acute kidney injury (AKI). The secondary aim was to test whether alpha-melanocyte-stimulating hormone (alpha-MSH) could prevent a reduction in organ function, and attenuate the inflammatory cytokine/chemokine response within the kidney, lung, and liver following AKI in rats with or without preexisting chronic kidney disease (CKD). METHODS: A two-stage animal model, in which AKI was induced in rats with preexisting CKD, induced by 5/6 nephrectomy (Nx), was used. Six weeks later, AKI was induced by intestinal ischemia and reperfusion (IIR). Sham procedures [S(Nx) and S(IIR)] were also performed. RESULTS: Increasing levels of serum creatinine (sCr) demonstrated progressive development of CKD in response to Nx, and following IIR sCr levels increased further significantly, except in the S(Nx) group treated with alpha-MSH. However, no significant differences in the fractional increase in sCr were observed between any of the groups exposed to IIR. In kidney, lung, and liver tissue the levels of interleukin (IL)-1beta were significantly higher in rats undergoing IIR when compared to the S(IIR) and control rats. The same pattern was observed for the chemokine monocyte chemoattractant protein (MCP)-1 in lung and liver tissue. Furthermore, kidney IL-1beta and RANTES levels were significantly increased after IIR in the Nx rats compared to the S(Nx) rats. CONCLUSION: Both the functional parameters and the cytokine/chemokine response are as dramatic when AKI is superimposed onto CKD as onto non-CKD. No convincing protective effect of alpha-MSH was detected.
Acute Kidney Injury*
;
alpha-MSH*
;
Animals
;
Chemokine CCL5
;
Creatinine
;
Interleukins
;
Ischemia
;
Kidney
;
Liver
;
Lung
;
Models, Animal
;
Monocytes
;
Nephrectomy
;
Rats*
;
Renal Insufficiency, Chronic*
;
Reperfusion
5.Carbon Dioxide as a Venous Contrast Agent: Applications in Interventional Radiology.
Seong Tae HAHN ; Thomas PFAMMATTER ; Kyung Jae CHO ; Jae Mun LEE ; Choon Yul KIM ; Kyung Sub SHINN
Journal of the Korean Radiological Society 1997;37(3):435-441
PURPOSE: To evaluate the safety and usefulness of carbon dioxide (CO2) as a venous contrast agent for upper-arm placement of peripherally inserted central venous catheter (PICC), vena caval filter placement, and for visualization of the portal vein in transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunt (TIPS). MATERIALS AND METHODS: About 20-30ml of CO2 was used as an alternative to iodinated contrast material for digital subtraction angiography (DSA) and fluoroscopy to guide upper-arm placement of PICC in 46 patients, for inferior venacavogram before filter placement in five, and for visualization of the portal vein during TIPS in two. Vital signs, peripheral arterial oxygen saturation, and renal function were checked during and after delivery of CO2. RESULTS: All CO2 DSA for PICC placement clearly delineated patency or stenosis of the central veins. In 41 of 46 patients (89%), PICC placement with CO2 guidance was successful. The mean number of venipunctures for PICC placement was 1.9, and the mean volume of CO2 injected for venipuncture was 35 ml. In five patients, Titanium Greenfield filters were successfully implanted into the inferior vena cava following CO2 vena cavography. In two patients in whom hepatopetal portal flow was seen on indirect portography, the portal vein was visualized by CO2-wedged hepatic venography. Injection of CO2 into the splenic vein following TIPS placement revealed shunt patency. Vital signs and oxygen saturation did not change, and there was no evidence of renal toxicity following CO2 injection. CONCLUSION: CO2 is a safe and useful alternative contrast agent for upper-arm placement of PICC, pre-filter placement cavography, and wedged hepatic venography and portography for TIPS.
Angiography, Digital Subtraction
;
Carbon Dioxide*
;
Carbon*
;
Central Venous Catheters
;
Constriction, Pathologic
;
Fluoroscopy
;
Humans
;
Oxygen
;
Phlebography
;
Phlebotomy
;
Portal Vein
;
Portasystemic Shunt, Surgical
;
Portography
;
Radiology, Interventional*
;
Splenic Vein
;
Titanium
;
Veins
;
Vena Cava, Inferior
;
Vital Signs
6.Corrigendum: Effect of muscle relaxation on the oxygenation of human skeletal muscle: a prospective in-vivo experiment using an isolated forearm technique.
Ka Young RHEE ; Tae Yop KIM ; In Su OH ; Seoung Joon LEE ; Thomas LEDOWSKI
Korean Journal of Anesthesiology 2015;68(2):203-203
Article contained an error in Author's affiliation on 13 page. The authors apologize for any inconvenience this mistake may have caused.
7.Use of Paclitaxel Eluting Stents in Arteriovenous Fistulas: A Pilot Study
Krystal DINH ; Shannon D THOMAS ; Tae CHO ; John SWINNEN ; Phillip CROWE ; Ramon L VARCOE
Vascular Specialist International 2019;35(4):225-231
PURPOSE: We report short-term patency outcomes of a proof of concept study conducted to determine the efficacy of drug-eluting stent (DES) for the treatment of arteriovenous fistula (AVF) stenosis in hemodialysis patients.MATERIALS AND METHODS: This is a single-center, retrospective observational study involving 10 patients with AVF dysfunction treated with DESs between January 2017 and December 2017. The primary outcome was AVF patency confirmed by sonographic and clinical assessment at 1 month and 6 to 9 months after treatment.RESULTS: A total of 12 DESs were deployed in 10 patients with dysfunctional AVF (radiocephalic: 7, brachiocephalic: 3). During the early follow up (mean: 28.6 days), primary access circuit and DES patency was 100%, with an average volume flow rate of 886.4 mL/min. Nine patients were available for short-term follow up (mean: 202.4 days; 1 unrelated death), with a mean volume flow rate of 1,048.9 mL/min. The primary DES patency was 7/9 (77.8%), and 3 patients required angioplasty at other parts of the circuit (primary access circuit patency: 4/9 [44.4%]). The assisted primary access circuit patency was 77.8%. In 2 patients, the ultrasound revealed that the DESs were thrombosed without any antecedent stenosis; they were salvaged with angioplasty. Both patients previously underwent 2 DESs implanted and recently stopped dual antiplatelet therapy. B-mode sonographic assessment at all timepoints showed minimal intimal ingrowth on the stent struts.CONCLUSION: This study demonstrates acceptable short-term patency for DESs in the treatment of AVF stenosis. Dual antiplatelet therapy is probably mandatory in the short term.
Angioplasty
;
Arteriovenous Fistula
;
Constriction, Pathologic
;
Drug-Eluting Stents
;
Fistula
;
Follow-Up Studies
;
Humans
;
Observational Study
;
Paclitaxel
;
Pilot Projects
;
Renal Dialysis
;
Retrospective Studies
;
Stents
;
Ultrasonography
8.Skeletal structure of asymmetric mandibular prognathism and retrognathism
Tong XI ; Shankeeth VINAYAHALINGAM ; Stefaan BERGÉ ; Thomas MAAL ; Tae‑Geon KWON
Maxillofacial Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery 2023;45(1):27-
Background:
This study aimed to compare the skeletal structures between mandibular prognathism and retrogna‑ thism among patients with facial asymmetry.
Results:
Patients who had mandibular asymmetry with retrognathism (Group A) in The Netherlands were compared with those with deviated mandibular prognathism (Group B) in Korea. All the data were obtained from 3D-refor‑ matted cone-beam computed tomography images from each institute. The right and left condylar heads were located more posteriorly, inferiorly, and medially in Group B than in Group A. The deviated side of Group A and the contralateral side of Group B showed similar condylar width and height, ramus-proper height, and ramus height.Interestingly, there were no inter-group differences in the ramus-proper heights. Asymmetric mandibular body length was the most significantly correlated with chin asymmetry in retrognathic asymmetry patients whereas asym‑ metric elongation of condylar process was the most important factor for chin asymmetry in deviated mandibular prognathism.
Conclusion
Considering the 3D positional difference of gonion and large individual variations of frontal ramal inclination, significant structural deformation in deviated mandibular prognathism need to be considered in asym‑ metric prognathism patients. Therefore, Individually planned surgical procedures that also correct the malpositioning of the mandibular ramus are recommended especially in patients with asymmetric prognathism.
9.Seasonal Distribution of Ticks in Four Habitats near the Demilitarized Zone, Gyeonggi-do (Province), Republic of Korea.
Sung Tae CHONG ; Heung Chul KIM ; In Yong LEE ; Thomas M KOLLARS ; Alfredo R SANCHO ; William J SAMES ; Joon Seok CHAE ; Terry A KLEIN
The Korean Journal of Parasitology 2013;51(3):319-325
This study describes the seasonal distribution of larvae, nymph, and adult life stages for 3 species of ixodid ticks collected by tick drag and sweep methods from various habitats in the Republic of Korea (ROK). Grasses less than 0.5 m in height, including herbaceous and crawling vegetation, and deciduous, conifer, and mixed forests with abundant leaf/needle litter were surveyed at United States (US) and ROK operated military training sites and privately owned lands near the demilitarized zone from April-October, 2004 and 2005. Haemaphysalis longicornis Neumann adults and nymphs were more frequently collected from April-August, while those of Haemaphysalis flava Neumann and Ixodes nipponensis Kitaoka and Saito were collected more frequently from April-July and again during October. H. longicornis was the most frequently collected tick in grass habitats (98.9%), while H. flava was more frequently collected in deciduous (60.2%) and conifer (57.4%) forest habitats. While more H. flava (54.1%) were collected in mixed forest habitats than H. longicornis (35.2%), the differences were not significant. I. nipponensis was more frequently collected from conifer (mean 8.8) compared to deciduous (3.2) and mixed (2.4) forests.
Animals
;
Demography
;
*Ecosystem
;
Republic of Korea
;
*Seasons
;
Ticks/*classification/*physiology
10.Adrenalectomy Abolishes Fasting-induced Down-regulation of NADPH-diaphorase in the Rat Paraventricular Nucleus.
Jeong Won JAHNG ; Jong Ho LEE ; Gun Tae KIM ; Yun Mi KIM ; Thomas A HOUPT ; Dong Goo KIM
Yonsei Medical Journal 2004;45(1):123-128
This study was conducted to define the molecular mechanism of fasting-induced down-regulation of neuronal nitric oxide synthase (nNOS) expression in the hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus (PVN). Rats were adrenalectomized (ADX), and then either underwent food deprivation or received varying doses of dexamethasone for 48 h. The brain tissues were processed for NADPH-diaphorase (NADPH-d) staining, a histochemical marker of nNOS enzyme activity. Both the ADX and the sham operated rats showed a significant weight loss after 48 h of food deprivation. Food deprivation decreased the number of NADPH-d containing cells in the PVN of sham rats, however, not in the ADX rats. Dexamethasone dose- dependently decreased NADPH-d cells in the PVN of ADX rats. The effect of ADX or dexamethasone was limited to the parvocellular subdivision of PVN. These results suggest that the adrenal glucocorticoids may down-regulate nNOS expression in the PVN during food deprivation.
*Adrenalectomy
;
Animals
;
Biological Markers
;
Dexamethasone/blood/pharmacology
;
Down-Regulation/physiology
;
Fasting/*physiology
;
Food Deprivation/physiology
;
Glucocorticoids/blood/pharmacology
;
Male
;
NADPH Dehydrogenase/*metabolism
;
Nitric-Oxide Synthase/*metabolism
;
Paraventricular Hypothalamic Nucleus/*enzymology
;
Rats
;
Rats, Sprague-Dawley
;
Support, Non-U.S. Gov't