1.Surgical Treatment of Subdural Hygromas in Infants and Children.
Jun Beom CHO ; Ki Hong CHO ; Se Hyuk KIM ; Yong Sam SHIN ; Wonchung LEE ; Soo Han YOON
Journal of Korean Neurosurgical Society 2005;38(4):273-280
OBJECTIVE: There is no acceptable indication and treatment of choice for infantile and child subdural hygroma and there are only a few reports about that in Korea. So the authors studied the clinical findings of infantile and child patients with subdural hygroma to improve the understanding and to suggest a standard treatment method. METHODS: The authors retrospectively evaluated the causes, preoperative symptoms, radiological thicknesses, and postoperative results of 25patients with subdural hygroma who received surgical therapy. RESULTS: There were 16boys and 9girls whose median age was 6months(range 2~120months). The main clinical manifestations were seizures, increased intracranial pressure, macrocrania and alteration of consciousness. Radiological thicknesses of the subdural hygroma varied from 7mm to 42mm and postoperative changes of thickness(y) could be expressed with the factor of month(x): y = -1.32 x +11.8 in subdural drainage, and y = -1.52 x +14.9 in subduroperitoneal shunts. Of the 25patients, 2 (50%) were successfully treated by aspiration, 13 (59%) by subdural drainage, and 9 (69%) by subduroperitoneal shunt. CONCLUSION: It is suggested that the diagnosis and treatment of subdural hygroma in infants and children should be carefully addressed because of its high prevalence in children, and especially in infants. It is also suggested that the subdural drainage could be primary initial treatment method because it is simpler than a shunt, and since our data show that there is no statistical difference in postoperative recovery duration between the two operative methods.
Child*
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Consciousness
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Diagnosis
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Drainage
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Hematoma, Subdural
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Humans
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Infant*
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Intracranial Pressure
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Korea
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Prevalence
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Retrospective Studies
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Seizures
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Subdural Effusion*
2.Role of brown adipose tissue in metabolic syndrome, aging, and cancer cachexia.
Meng DONG ; Jun LIN ; Wonchung LIM ; Wanzhu JIN ; Hyuek Jong LEE
Frontiers of Medicine 2018;12(2):130-138
Brown adipose tissue (BAT) plays a fundamental role in maintaining body temperature by producing heat. BAT that had been know to exist only in mammals and the human neonate has received great attention for the treatment of obesity and diabetes due to its important function in energy metabolism, ever since it is recently reported that human adults have functional BAT. In addition, beige adipocytes, brown adipocytes in white adipose tissue (WAT), have also been shown to take part in whole body metabolism. Multiple lines of evidence demonstrated that transplantation or activation of BAT or/and beige adipocytes reversed obesity and improved insulin sensitivity. Furthermore, many genes involved in BATactivation and/or the recruitment of beige cells have been found, thereby providing new promising strategies for future clinical application of BAT activation to treat obesity and metabolic diseases. This review focuses on recent advances of BAT function in the metabolic aspect and the relationship between BAT and cancer cachexia, a pathological process accompanied with decreased body weight and increased energy expenditure in cancer patients. The underlying possible mechanisms to reduce BAT mass and its activity in the elderly are also discussed.
Adipose Tissue, Brown
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metabolism
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Aging
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metabolism
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Animals
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Cachexia
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metabolism
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pathology
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Disease Models, Animal
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Energy Metabolism
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Humans
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Metabolic Syndrome
;
metabolism
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Neoplasms
;
metabolism
;
pathology
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Obesity
;
metabolism
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Thermogenesis