1.Central Pain from Excitotoxic Spinal Cord Injury Induced by Intraspinal NMDA Injection: A Pilot Study.
Yeon Ju LEEM ; Jung Wha JOH ; Kyoung Woon JOENG ; Jeong Hun SUH ; Jin Woo SHIN ; Jeong Gill LEEM
The Korean Journal of Pain 2010;23(2):109-115
BACKGROUND: The pathophysiological and neurochemical changes following spinal injury are not yet elucidated. This study was designed to evaluate the morphological changes of the dorsal horn of the spinal cord and profiles of pain behaviors following intraspinal injection of NMDA in rats. METHODS: Rats were randomized into three groups: a sham-operated control group and groups where the rats received 10 mM or 100 mM N-methyl-D-aspatate (NMDA) injected into their spinal dorsal horn. Following injection, hypersensitivity to cold and mechanical stimuli and excessive grooming behaviors were assessed serially for four weeks. Morphological changes of the spinal cord were evaluated four weeks after intraspinal injection. RESULTS: Few animals in the NMDA groups developed hypersensitivity to cold and mechanical stimuli. The number of groomers and the severity of excessive grooming were significantly higher in the 100 mM NMDA group than those values of the control and 10 mM NMDA groups. The size of the neck region (lamina III-IV) was significantly smaller in the 100 mM NMDA group than in the control and 10 mM NMDA groups. CONCLUSIONS: In conclusion, intraspinal injection of NMDA in rats leads to the pathological sequela in the spinal cord and to excessive grooming behavior. These results support the use of NMDA and excessive grooming behavior after excitotoxic SCI as a model to study chronic pain after SCI.
Animals
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Chronic Pain
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Cold Temperature
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Grooming
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Horns
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Hypersensitivity
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Injections, Spinal
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N-Methylaspartate
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Neck
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Pilot Projects
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Rats
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Spinal Cord
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Spinal Cord Injuries
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Spinal Injuries
2.A Case of Turcot's Syndrome Combined with Colon Cancer in a 15-year-old Girl.
Seok Ryeol LEE ; Kil Yeon LEE ; Kee Hyung LEE ; Won LEEM ; Hyo Jong KIM ; Ju Hie LEE
Journal of the Korean Society of Coloproctology 2002;18(3):200-204
Turcot's syndrome is a rare hereditary disease marked by the association of central nervous system neuroepithelial tumor with colonic polyposis. Authors report herein a case of a 15-year-old girl diagnosed as having Turcot's syndrome, otherwise known as brain tumor-polyposis syndrome, combined with sigmoid colon cancer. The patient was carried out craniostomy and brain tumor removal. The tumor was confirmed histologically to be oligodendroglioma. The patient visited the department of internal medicine for bloody diarrhea during 6 months. Colonoscopy and biopsy was done. The patient was diagnosed as having Turcot's syndrome combined with sigmoid colon cancer, and was then transferred to the department of surgery for treatment of sigmoid colon cancer. Total proctocolectomy and IPAA (ileal pouch-anal anastomosis) was carried out. Multiple polyps were found in the colon, two large masses were confirmed histologically to be adenocarcinoma. The remaining polyps were adenomas. This case report describes the characteristic features of Turcot's syndrome presented by this patient.
Adenocarcinoma
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Adenoma
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Adolescent*
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Biopsy
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Brain
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Brain Neoplasms
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Central Nervous System
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Colon*
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Colonic Neoplasms*
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Colonoscopy
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Diarrhea
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Female*
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Genetic Diseases, Inborn
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Humans
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Internal Medicine
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Neoplasms, Neuroepithelial
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Oligodendroglioma
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Polyps
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Sigmoid Neoplasms
3.The Association of Central Obesity with Type 2 Diabetes among Koreans according to the Serum Gamma-Glutamyltransferase Level: Korean Genome and Epidemiology Study.
Ji Yeon SHIN ; Jun Hyun HWANG ; Jin Young JEONG ; Sung Hi KIM ; Jai Dong MOON ; Sang Chul ROH ; Young Wook KIM ; Yangho KIM ; Jong Han LEEM ; Young Su JU ; Young Seoub HONG ; Eun Hee HA ; Yong Hwan LEE ; Duk Hee LEE ; Dong Hyun KIM
Journal of Preventive Medicine and Public Health 2009;42(6):386-391
OBJECTIVES: This cross-sectional study was performed to examine if the serum gamma-glutamyltransferase (GGT) level that is within its normal range is associated with the risk of type 2 diabetes and if the association between the waist hip ratio (WHR) and type 2 diabetes is different depending on the serum GGT levels. METHODS: The study subjects were 23,436 persons aged 40 years or older and who participated in regular health check-ups at 11 hospitals (males: 5,821, females: 17,615). The gender-specific quintiles of the serum GGT and WHR were used to examine the associations with type 2 diabetes. RESULTS: The serum GGT levels within their normal range were positively associated with type 2 diabetes only in women. The adjusted odds ratios (ORs) were 1.0, 1.0, 1.4, 2.1, and 2.5 according to the quintiles of the serum GGT (p(trend)<0.01). The WHR was more strongly associated with the prevalence of diabetes among the women with a high-normal serum GGT level as compared with those with a low-normal serum GGT level (p for interaction=0.02). For example, the adjusted ORs for women with a low normal serum GGT level were 1.0, 1.2, 1.5, 2.2, and 2.4 according to the quintiles of the WHR, while those figures were 1.0, 2.4, 3.6, 5.0, and 8.3 among the women with a high normal serum GGT level. However, in men, the serum GGT was very weakly associated with type 2 diabetes and the association between the WHR and type 2 diabetes was not different depending on the serum GGT level. CONCLUSIONS: Serum GGT within its normal range was positively associated with type 2 diabetes, and central obesity was more strongly associated with the prevalence of type 2 diabetes when the serum GGT level was high-normal. However, these associations were observed only in women, which is different from the previous findings. The stronger relation between central obesity and type 2 diabetes among women with a high-normal serum GGT level can be useful for selecting a group that is at high risk for type 2 diabetes irregardless of whatever the underlying mechanism is.
Blood Glucose
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Cross-Sectional Studies
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Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2/blood/enzymology/*epidemiology
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Epidemiologic Studies
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Female
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Humans
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Male
;
Middle Aged
;
Obesity, Abdominal/*epidemiology
;
Odds Ratio
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Prevalence
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Republic of Korea/epidemiology
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*Waist-Hip Ratio
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gamma-Glutamyltransferase/*blood