1.Ecthyma Gangrenosum in a Previously Healthy Adolescent.
Soo Min KIM ; In Hyuk CHUNG ; Gwang Cheon JANG ; Seum CHUNG ; Yeejeong KIM ; Nam Joon CHO
Korean Journal of Dermatology 2017;55(9):630-631
No abstract available.
Adolescent*
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Ecthyma*
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Humans
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Pseudomonas aeruginosa
3.Neonatal Herpes Simplex Virus 1 Infection
Soo Min KIM ; Shin Won YOON ; Yeejeong KIM
Korean Journal of Dermatology 2020;58(5):350-351
4.Two Cases of SARS-CoV-2-Positive Mothers and Their Newborns in Korea
Ju Hyun JIN ; Yeejeong KIM ; Jongha YOO ; Eui Hyeok KIM ; Shin Won YOON
Infection and Chemotherapy 2022;54(2):372-377
It is unclear how severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) affects pregnant women and their fetuses or newborns. We report two infants born to mothers with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) in Korea. The first case was a healthy female baby born at 39 +3 weeks' gestation from a mother diagnosed with COVID-19. The second case was a female baby born at 38 +0 weeks' gestation. The newborn in the second case had symptoms of respiratory distress immediately after birth, and nasal continuous positive airway pressure support was applied for 8 hours. Real-time polymerase chain reaction test results for SARSCoV-2 using amniotic fluid, neonatal nasopharyngeal and oropharyngeal swabs, blood, urine, stool, and rectal swab were all negative in the 1st and 2nd days of life in both cases. Placental pathology showed acute necrotizing deciduitis and intervillous fibrin deposition with acute intervillositis. Although clinical evidence of vertical transmission was not found in our cases, with the possibility of placental inflammation, close monitoring of SARS-CoV-2 positive mothers and their newborn is required.
5.Thyroid Fine-Needle Aspiration Cytology Practice in Korea.
Yoon Jin CHA ; Ju Yeon PYO ; SoonWon HONG ; Jae Yeon SEOK ; Kyung Ju KIM ; Jee Young HAN ; Jeong Mo BAE ; Hyeong Ju KWON ; Yeejeong KIM ; Kyueng Whan MIN ; Soonae OAK ; Sunhee CHANG
Journal of Pathology and Translational Medicine 2017;51(6):521-527
We reviewed the current status of thyroid fine-needle aspiration cytology (FNAC) in Korea. Thyroid aspiration biopsy was first introduced in Korea in 1977. Currently, radiologists aspirate the thyroid nodule under the guidance of ultrasonography, and cytologic interpretation is only legally approved when a cytopathologist makes the diagnosis. In 2008, eight thyroid-related societies came together to form the Korean Thyroid Association. The Korean Society for Cytopathology and the endocrine pathology study group of the Korean Society for Pathologists have been updating the cytologic diagnostic guidelines. The Bethesda System for Reporting Thyroid Cytopathology was first introduced in 2009, and has been used by up to 94% of institutions by 2016. The average diagnosis rates are as follows for each category: I (12.4%), II (57.9%), III (10.4%), IV (2.9%), V (3.7%), and VI (12.7%). The malignancy rates in surgical cases are as follows for each category: I (28.7%), II (27.8%), III (50.6%), IV (52.3%), V (90.7%), and VI (100.0%). Liquid-based cytology has been used since 2010, and it was utilized by 68% of institutions in 2016. The categorization of thyroid lesions into “atypia of undetermined significance” or “follicular lesion of undetermined significance” is necessary to draw consensus in our society. Immunocytochemistry for galectin-3 and BRAF is used. Additionally, a molecular test for BRAF in thyroid FNACs is actively used. Core biopsies were performed in only 44% of institutions. Even the institutions that perform core biopsies only perform them for less than 3% of all FNACs. However, only 5% of institutions performed core biopsies up to three times more than FNAC.
Biopsy
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Biopsy, Fine-Needle*
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Biopsy, Needle
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Consensus
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Diagnosis
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Galectin 3
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Immunohistochemistry
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Korea*
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Pathology
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Thyroid Gland*
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Thyroid Neoplasms
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Thyroid Nodule
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Ultrasonography