1.Studies on Pathogenesis of Peptic Ulcer.
Yonsei Medical Journal 1965;6(1):77-94
Peptic ulcer is known to rank very high among the diseases of the gastrointestinal system which seem most prevalent in this country. Although it's incidence in this country is difficult to know with any degree of precision at present because few statistical reports are available, it is frequently encountered in our daily practice. Many studies on the pathogenesis of the disease from the clincial aspect as well as the experimental, have been undertaken by many investigators. No definite conclusions, however, have been arrived at, and thus more diverse and intensified research is urgently required. The following studies, carried out in an effort to further elucidate the pathogenic mechanism, are reported here.
Female
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Human
;
Male
;
Peptic Ulcer/*etiology/pathology
2.Stress ulcer after tonsillectomy and adenoidectomy: one case report.
Xiangjun ZHANG ; Yang XIAO ; Zhiqin WANG
Journal of Clinical Otorhinolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery 2014;28(16):1267-1267
A 11-year-old child diagnosed as chronic tonsillitis and adenoid hypertrophy underwent adeno-tonsillectomy under general anesthesia. After surgery, patient complained with abdominal discomfort, paleness and vomiting, which presented as the old black contents. Complete blood count showed: 45.2 g/L, hemoglobin of red blood cells 2.57 x 10(12)/L, An emergency gastroscopy confirmed gastric ulcer with hemorrage. Hemorrage was controlled and complete blood count results restored to normal after supportive therapy. Gastric ulcer completely recovered two weeks after discharge.
Adenoidectomy
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Child
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Humans
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Male
;
Peptic Ulcer Hemorrhage
;
etiology
;
Postoperative Complications
;
Stomach Ulcer
;
etiology
;
Tonsillectomy
3.Subcutaneous Emphysema Due to Perforation of the Stomach.
Kyu Chul WHANG ; Chang Suh KIM ; Yun KIM ; Tae Yun YOUN
Yonsei Medical Journal 1970;11(2):203-207
No abstract available.
Adolescent
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Emphysema/etiology*
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Face
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Human
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Male
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Mediastinal Emphysema/etiology
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Neck
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Peptic Ulcer Perforation/complications*
;
Pneumoperitoneum/etiology
;
Stomach Ulcer/complications*
4.Surgical treatment of giant cavernous hemangiomas of the liver: analysis of 7 patients.
Jae Kwan SEO ; Byung Ki LEE ; Kwang Hee KIM ; Man Ha HUH
Journal of Korean Medical Science 1991;6(2):127-133
Seven patients with giant cavernous hemangioma of the liver were treated surgically with success at Pusan Gospel Hospital, Kosin Medical College, Pusan, from 1980 through 1989. They were 3 males and 4 females, and their ages ranged from 6 to 59 years. The tumors were located on the right lobe of the liver in 5 patients and on the left lobe in 2. The lesions were solitary in all patients, and their sizes varied from 4cm to 15cm in diameter. All patients underwent hepatic resection: 1 right hepatic lobectomy and 4 partial resections for tumors on the right lobe, and 1 left lobectomy and 1 left lateral segmentectomy for tumors on the left lobe. There was no surgical death, but 1 patient had a postoperative complication: multiple stress ulcers on the stomach and ileum. The pathologic diagnosis was cavernous hemangioma in all cases. In the long-term follow-up, there was no recurrence of preoperative symptoms in any patient.
Adult
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Child
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Female
;
Hemangioma, Cavernous/*surgery
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Humans
;
Ileal Diseases/etiology
;
Liver Neoplasms/*surgery
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Male
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Middle Aged
;
Postoperative Complications/etiology
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Prognosis
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Stomach Ulcer/etiology
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Stress, Physiological/etiology
;
Ulcer/etiology
5.Ghrelin - A Novel Appetite-stimulating Hormone Which Also Affects Gastrointestinal Functions.
Hidekazu SUZUKI ; Tatsuhiro MASAOKA ; Toshifumi HIBI
The Korean Journal of Gastroenterology 2006;48(2):82-88
Ghrelin, a novel gastrointestinal peptide with 28 amino acids, is secreted from the A-like cells of the gastric fundus. This peptide hormone does not only promote the release of growth hormone, but also stimulates food intake, gastric motility and cardiac output. Increased plasma ghrelin level has been reported in patients with upper gastrointestinal (GI) disease or in their disease animal model, suggesting its important role in the pathogenesis of upper GI disease.
Appetite/*physiology
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Cysteamine/metabolism
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Dyspepsia/etiology
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*Eating
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Gastrointestinal Diseases/*etiology
;
Ghrelin/*physiology
;
Humans
;
Peptic Ulcer/etiology
6.Diagnosis and treatment of chronic venous ulcer: research status and new strategies.
Acta Academiae Medicinae Sinicae 2007;29(1):5-8
The persistent venous hypertension is the primary cause of venous ulcer, and leukocyte activation plays an important role in the formation of venous ulcer. Venous ulcer should be differentiated from ulcers resulted from other diseases. Treatment options include conservative/medical therapies and surgical therapies. Injection sclerotherapy, superficial vein ligation and stripping, deep vein valve reconstruction, perforator ligation, and skin grafting favor the healing of ulcers.
China
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Chronic Disease
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Humans
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Varicose Ulcer
;
diagnosis
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etiology
;
therapy
7.The Development of the Ruminal Ulcer in the Albino Rats Fed with Low Protein Diet associated with Rocking Stress.
In Whan KIM ; Chung Suk SONG ; Soo Yun PAK
Yonsei Medical Journal 1968;9(1):70-73
The pathological changes of the gastric rumen produced by rocking stress in 38 young male albino rats fed on low protein diet for a short period and in 20 young male albino rats fed on low protein diet only as the control rats, were investigated macroscopically and histologically. The ulcerative lesions of the gastric rumen were observed in 17 out of 38 experimental rats accompanied with hyperplasia and cornification of the ruminal epithelial layer and more or less edematous changes of the tunica propria near the ulcer site. The authors, finding of the ruminal ulcer in albino rats produced by rocking stress associated with feeding on a low protein diet for a short period were compared with the results of others. The authors discussed other opinions concerning of the gastric ruminal ulcer of the albino rats produced in various ways.
Animal
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Male
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Protein Deficiency/complications*
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Rats
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Rumen*
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Stomach Ulcer/etiology*
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Stomach Ulcer/pathology
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Stress*
8.Gastric Ulcer Perforation in Heart-Lung Transplant Patient: A Successful Case of Early Surgical Intervention and Management.
Hyo Chae PAIK ; Do Hyung KIM ; Doo Yun LEE ; Dong Sup YOON ; Jae Hoon LEE
Yonsei Medical Journal 2003;44(6):1094-1097
Gastrointestinal complications may follow organ transplantation. A patient who underwent heart lung transplantation due to patent ductus arteriosus and Eisenmenger's syndrome had an episode of acute cardiac rejection and was treated with a bolus injection of methylprednisolone followed by a high oral dose of prednisone. On the 22nd postoperative day, the patient complained of acute abdominal pain with muscular rigidity and a plain chest x-ray showed free air in the right subdiaphragmatic area. Under the suspicion of bowel perforation, an emergency laparotomy was performed and the perforated stomach had a wedge-shaped resection that included the perforation. Following the laparotomy, the postoperative course was uneventful and the patient was discharged on post-laparotomy day 10.
Adult
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Heart-Lung Transplantation/*adverse effects
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Human
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Male
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Peptic Ulcer Perforation/*etiology/*surgery
;
Stomach Ulcer/*surgery
9.Helicobacter pylori Infection in Korea.
In Suh PARK ; Yong Chan LEE ; Hyo Jin PARK ; Tae Il KIM ; Sang In LEE ; Hoguen KIM ; Ki Sub CHUNG ; Yang Cha LEE-KIM
Yonsei Medical Journal 2001;42(4):457-470
Helicobacter pylori is a gram-negative bacterium that was first isolated in 1982. Since then, H. pylori infection in humans has been shown to be associated with gastritis, peptic ulcer disease, gastric carcinoma, and mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue (MALT) lymphoma as well. The epidemiology, transmission, and pathogenicity of H. pylori has been a subject of intensive study. Successful treatment improves the cure rate of peptic ulcerations and treatment with antimicrobials also decreases the recurrence rate of these diseases. Better regimens having less toxicity and a good eradication rate have also been developed. A better understanding of the pathophysiologic mechanisms relating to H. pylori induced mucosal damages would result in more options for the prevention of peptic ulcers and carcinogenesis. Korea has a relatively high incidence of H. pylori infection and gastric cancer. Growing interest has developed in view of its importance in being associated with various gastroduodenal diseases. Furthermore, along with a high incidence of H. pylori-related disease in Korea, because the interaction between H. pylori, host factors and environmental factors is important in disease pathogenesis, we need to have precise data on the characteristics of H. pylori-related diseases that occur in Korea. In the present report we review the epidemiology, transmission route, diagnosis, pathogenesis, treatment methods and relationship with gastroduodenal diseases with in special references to basic and clinical data that have been published.
Dyspepsia/etiology
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Helicobacter Infections/*complications/diagnosis/etiology
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*Helicobacter pylori
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Human
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Korea
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Peptic Ulcer/etiology
;
Stomach Neoplasms/etiology
10.A case report on nasal defect rehabilitation of patient with secondary diabetes from acute pancreatitis.
Biao KANG ; Yi-Min ZHAO ; Guo-Feng WU
Chinese Journal of Stomatology 2008;43(4):216-217
Adult
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Diabetes Mellitus
;
etiology
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Humans
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Male
;
Nose Diseases
;
etiology
;
surgery
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Pancreatitis
;
complications
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Reconstructive Surgical Procedures
;
Ulcer