1.Driving of Motor Vehicles of the Epileptic Patients.
Yeung Ju BYUN ; Mee Young PARK ; Jung Sang HA
Yeungnam University Journal of Medicine 1994;11(1):16-29
No abstract available.
Humans
;
Motor Vehicles*
2.Effects of Posttraumatic MgSO4 Injection and Hypothermia an Animal Model of Traumatic Brain Injury(TBI).
Seong Rok HAN ; Dong Keun HYUN ; Chong Oon PARK ; Young Soo HA ; Joon Mee KIM
Journal of Korean Neurosurgical Society 2000;29(10):1296-1302
No abstract available.
Animals*
;
Brain*
;
Hypothermia*
;
Models, Animal*
3.A Study on Expression Pattern of p53, Rb Gene and Apoptosis in Ovarian Epithelial Borderline Tumors and Invasive Carcinoma.
Myeong Wan HA ; Hyeong Kweon KO ; Gi Joo KANG ; Man Soo YOON ; Mee Young SOL
Korean Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology 2000;43(3):407-413
OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study is to evaluate the role of tumor suppressor genes, p53 and Rb gene, as well as apoptosis in the carcinogenesis of ovarian epithelial tumors. And the value of these factors as prognostic markers to tell the transformation of borderline tumors to overt carcinomas is also studied. METHOD: Thirty cases of ovarian epithelial benign and borderline tumors and invasive carcinoma were used and the expression of the p53 protein and Rb gene protein were evaluated by immunohistochemical method. The apoptosis was evaluated by TUNNEL method. RESULTS: Positive rate of p53 expression in benign, borderline and invasive tumors were 0, 28, and 94 %, respectively. And also, p53 was highly expressed in chemoresistant cases (2/3), in residual tumor (4/5) and in recurred cancer (2/2). Rb protein was partly lost in the borderline tumors, but the rate of Rb protein loss in both borderline tumors and invasive carcinomas were similar. Apoptosis were more active in overt carcinomas than in borderline and benign tumors. In borderline tumors, p53 protein was expressed as 28.6% positivity, and apoptosis was expressed as 28.6% negativity, which showed indirectly that there was apoptosis induction effect of p53. In ten cases of invasive carcinomas showing highly expressed p53, apoptosis revealed all positive reaction except 2 cases, and Rb protein revealed variously. This result supported the apoptosis imduction effect of p53, but it was difficult to find the association of expression degree between the two tumor supressor genes CONCLUSION: In conclusion, the values of p53 is a discriminating factor of malignancy from benign and the expression of p53 is related with clinical aggressivity such as recurrence and residual cancers. Apoptosis are more active in overt carcinoma than in benign & borderline tumor, and in borderline tumor the expression of p53 is related to apoptosis induction which results to carcinomatous change.
Apoptosis*
;
Carcinogenesis
;
Genes, Retinoblastoma*
;
Genes, Tumor Suppressor
;
Neoplasm, Residual
;
Recurrence
;
Retinoblastoma Protein
4.Carcinosarcoma and Multiple Early Gastric Carcinomas of the Stomach.
Won Mee LEE ; Young Ha OH ; Moon Hyang PARK ; Kwang Su LEE ; Jung Dal LEE
Korean Journal of Pathology 1997;31(3):252-256
We report a rare case of carcinosarcoma arising in the stomach. The tumor is presented in the posterior wall of the gastric lower body and antrum of a 56-year-old man. Grossly the tumor has polypoid appearance with diffuse surface ulceration and measures 5.5 cm in diameter. The tumor is accompanied with three separate well differentiated early gastric adenocarcinomas (two EGC type IIc & IIa). Microscopically, the tumor consists of moderately well differentiated adenocarcinoma in the periphery, and lobulated sarcomatous areas in the center, which shows chondroid differentiation. Transitional areas between adenocarcinoma and chondrosarcoma are evident. Immunohistochemical studies show positivity for cytokeratin and carcinoembryonic antigen in the epithelial component, and for vimentin and S-100 in the sarcomatous component. The transitional areas are positive in carcinoembryonic antigen, vimentin, S-100, and cytokeratin. The tumor extended to the subserosa and showed metastasis of only adenocarcinomatous component in six out of 47 dissected perigastric lymph nodes.
Adenocarcinoma
;
Carcinoembryonic Antigen
;
Carcinosarcoma*
;
Chondrosarcoma
;
Humans
;
Keratins
;
Lymph Nodes
;
Middle Aged
;
Neoplasm Metastasis
;
Stomach*
;
Ulcer
;
Vimentin
5.Characterization of Haemophilus influenzae by SDS-PAGE, Restriction Enzyme Analysis and rRNA Gene Restriction Patterns.
Young Hee LEE ; Kyu Jam HWANG ; Song Mee BAE ; Ha Yong CHUNG
Journal of the Korean Society for Microbiology 1998;33(1):89-98
Among the fifty-three clinical isolates of Haemophilus influenzae, nineteen isolates including eight isolates of each biotype I-VIII, six of serotype b (Hib) strains and five of nontypeable strains were characterized by SDS-PAGE about outer membrane protein (OMP), restriction enzyme analysis (REA) and rRNA gene restriction pattems. OMP patterns showed to common band patterns in each H. influenzae isolate. Based on the two major proteins, 31KDa-38KDa, isolated strains were classified into 7 subtypes. In the OMP patterns about biotype and serotype, the specific pattern of each biotype was not distinguishable, but all of the serotype b strains were shown identical unique pattern, therefore it made distinctive difference with nontypeable strains. The digested genomic DNAs with EcoRI were identical result with rRNA gene restriction. It was more subdivided into 10 ribotypes. The most common ribotype I and serotype 1 accounted for 6 strains (31.6%) and 7 strains (36.8%) of the 19 clinical isolates, respectively. Hib isolates that were both OMP subtype 1 and ribotype I accounted for 2 strains (10.5%). In the epidemiologically unrelated strains, the putative association between the subtypes could not be confirmed. According to these results, the three methods were discriminatory and appropriate techniques for epidemiological studies of H. influenzae.
DNA
;
Electrophoresis, Polyacrylamide Gel*
;
Genes, rRNA*
;
Haemophilus influenzae type b
;
Haemophilus influenzae*
;
Haemophilus*
;
Influenza, Human
;
Membrane Proteins
;
Restriction Mapping*
;
Ribotyping
6.Composite Adenocarcinoma and Choriocarcinoma of the Sigmoid Colon with Hepatic Metastasis of the Choriocarcinomatous Component.
Young Ha OH ; Won Mee LEE ; Kyung Sook KIM ; Moon Hyang PARK ; Jung Dal LEE
Korean Journal of Pathology 1997;31(8):788-793
A rare case of hepatic metastasis with a choriocarcinomatous component from a composite adenocarcinoma and choriocarcinoma of the sigmoid colon in a 60-year-old man is reported. The hepatic metastasis displayed choriocarcinoma with extensive hemorrhagic necrosis. The tumor cells were poorly differentiated with scattered foci of bizzare syncytiotrophoblastic cells. Retrospective examination of the previous colonic carcinoma proved that the tumor was composed of two distinctive elements. One was a moderately well differentiated adenocarcinoma located in mucosa and submucosa. The other was a deep seated and undifferentiated carcinoma which was made up of hyperchromatic bizzare cells with syncytiotrophoblastic cells. There were transitional foci from adenocarcinoma to undifferentiated carcinoma with trophoblastic cells. Immunohistochemical staining showed beta-hCG expression in the undifferentiated cells of both the primary and the metastatic tumors. Implications for the possible origin and cause of tumor cell heterogeneity are briefly discussed.
Adenocarcinoma*
;
Carcinoma
;
Choriocarcinoma*
;
Colon
;
Colon, Sigmoid*
;
Female
;
Humans
;
Middle Aged
;
Mucous Membrane
;
Necrosis
;
Neoplasm Metastasis*
;
Population Characteristics
;
Pregnancy
;
Retrospective Studies
;
Trophoblasts
7.Verrucous Carcinoma of Uterine Cervix: A case report.
Mee Young SOL ; Sook Tae HA ; Kang Suek SUH ; Sun Kyung LEE
Korean Journal of Pathology 1985;19(4):427-430
Verrucous carcinoma is a highly differentiated variant of squamous cell carcinoma and is very rare in the uterine cervix. It infiltrates locally but practically never metastasizes. Authors present a case of verrucous carcinoma arising in the uterine cervix of a 48 year-old Korean female and review literatures about the verrucous carcinoma reported.
Female
;
Humans
8.E-Cadherin Expression and DNA Ploidy Analysis in Invasive Squamous Cell Carcinoma of the Uterine Cervix Comparison with those of CIN.
Yoo Jin KIM ; Mee Young SOL ; Man Ha HUH ; Sun Kyung LEE
Korean Journal of Pathology 1997;31(6):557-565
Epithelial cadherin (E-cadherin) is a Ca2+ -dependent cell-cell adhesion molecule that connects cells via homotypic interactions. Its function is critical in the induction and maintenance of cell polarity and differentiation, and its loss is associated with an invasive and poorly differentiated phenotype in a wide range of tumors. Formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissue sections from 36 cases of cervical intraepithelial neoplasia (CIN) and 14 cervical squamous cell carcinomas were investigated for the expression of E-cadherin immunohistochemically. While E-cadherin expression was usually restricted on the cell membrane of basal and parabasal cells in normal cervix, the presence of cytoplasmic E-cadherin was found to be associated with its grade in CIN lesions. Also, marked cytoplasmic staining was commonly revealed in poorly differentiated ones than well-differentiated squamous cell carcinomas. More intense reactivity of cytoplasmic E-cadherin was frequently seen in the foci of invasion than adjacent carcinoma in situ, and in its periphery than the center of tumor islands. In addition, DNA ploidy and S-phase fraction of squamous cell carcinomas were analyzed and compared with those of CIN lesion. We found that invasive squamous cell carcinomas more frequently disclosed DNA aneuploidy than CIN lesions, and there was correlation between cytoplasmic E-cadherin expression and DNA aneuploidy. Also, cytoplasmic E-cadherin-reactive cervical neoplasms had a higher rate of cell proliferation than that of membranous E-cadherin-reactive cases. These data suggest that the increased cytoplasmic E-cadherin expression may represent one of the abnormalities underlying the loss of polarity and invasiveness of cancer cells, and the abnormal E-cadherin expression combined with/without DNA ploidy or S-phase fraction may serve as a prognostic indicator.
Aneuploidy
;
Cadherins*
;
Carcinoma in Situ
;
Carcinoma, Squamous Cell*
;
Cell Membrane
;
Cell Polarity
;
Cell Proliferation
;
Cervical Intraepithelial Neoplasia
;
Cervix Uteri*
;
Cytoplasm
;
DNA*
;
Female
;
Islands
;
Phenotype
;
Ploidies*
;
Uterine Cervical Neoplasms
9.Comparison in Weight, Height, Degree of Obesity and Body Mass Index Among Different Methods for Body Shape Classification in School-Age Children.
Young mee AHN ; Min SOHN ; Sun Ha CHOI
Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing 2010;40(6):775-784
PURPOSE: The study was conducted to describe body shapes of school age children using the degree of obesity index (DOI) and body mass index obesity index classified by the Ministry of Education, Science and Technology (M-BOI) and Seoul Metropolitan Office of Education (S-BOI). METHODS: In this cross sectional descriptive study health screening data for school children collected in 2007 was used. RESULTS: Data were analyzed for 2,193 4th-6th grade boys (52%) and girls who attended 4 schools in rural areas. DOI determined that only 44.3% of students had average weight. This proportion was much lower than the results of other methods (74.3-77.6%). All three methods defined girls (51.3-61.8%) as skinnier than boys. Skinny and average body shaped children classified by DOI and obese children classified by S-BOI were heavier and taller and presented higher degrees of obesity (DO) and BMI scores than by other methods. M-BOI and S-BOI presented statistically significant positive correlations with weight, height, DO and BMI, while DOI was not correlated with height. CONCLUSION: BMI based body shape classifications provide a more rigorous classification of body shape which are favorable for school health professionals with limited resources and policy makers for internationally comparable references.
Anthropometry
;
Body Height
;
*Body Mass Index
;
Body Weight
;
Child
;
Cross-Sectional Studies
;
Female
;
Humans
;
Male
;
Obesity/*epidemiology
;
Students/classification
10.Effects of Posttraumatic Hypothermia in an Animal Model of Traumatic Brain Injury(TBI): Immunohistochemical Stain by TUNEL & beta-APP.
Byeong Kil AN ; Young Soo HA ; Dong Keun HYUN ; Chong Oon PARK ; Joon Mee KIM
Journal of Korean Neurosurgical Society 2000;29(4):461-470
No abstract available.
Animals*
;
Brain*
;
Hypothermia*
;
In Situ Nick-End Labeling*
;
Models, Animal*