1.Clinical evaluation of acute urinary tract infection.
Jongsoo LEE ; Byunguk HOWANG ; Youngsoo KIM ; Imsoo KOWAK ; Hayoun RHA
Korean Journal of Nephrology 1991;10(3):343-351
No abstract available.
Urinary Tract Infections*
;
Urinary Tract*
2.A Case of Pulmonary Carcinosarcoma which Metastasize to Pelvic Cavity After Left Pneumonectomy.
In Su JUNG ; Young Jee KIM ; Chung Hyeon KIM ; Si Min KIM ; Sang Moo LEE ; Youngsoo AHN
Tuberculosis and Respiratory Diseases 2001;51(5):453-461
Pulmonary carcinosarcoma(Sarcomatoid carcinoma of the lung) is a rare pulmonary malignancy, which is defined as having an admixtture of both carcinomatous and sarcomatous components. Pulmonary carcinosarcoma occurs most frequentlly in males between 50 and 80 years of age. It predominantly affects the upper lobe and/or the principal bronchi, and is associated with a history of smoking. Here, we report a case of pulmonary carcinosarcoma with a left lobe atelectasis due to an endobronchial mass in a 56-year-old male. After a left pneumonectomy, the pathologic stage was IIb (T3N0M0). Four months later, an abdominal mass was observed and exploratory laparotomy revealed metastases of the pulmonary carcinosarcoma to the pelvic cavity.
Bronchi
;
Carcinosarcoma*
;
Humans
;
Laparotomy
;
Male
;
Middle Aged
;
Neoplasm Metastasis
;
Pneumonectomy*
;
Pulmonary Atelectasis
;
Smoke
;
Smoking
3.Determining the Location of Urban Health Sub-center According to Geographic Accessibility.
Kun Sei LEE ; Chang Yup KIM ; Yong Ik KIM ; Youngsoo SHIM
Korean Journal of Preventive Medicine 1996;29(2):215-226
Decentralization to local governments and amending of Health center Law are to promote the efforts of health planning at the level of local agencies. In the health facility planning, it is important to take into account that what to be built, where to be located, how far should be service area and so forth, because health facilities are immovable, and require capital as well as personnel and consumable supplies. The aim of our study, answering to the question of 'where to be located?`, is to determine the best location of urban health sub-center. At the local level, planning is the matter of finding the best location of specific facility, in relation to population needs. We confine the accessibility, which is basic to location planning, to geographic one. Location-Allocation Model is used to solve the problem where the location is to maximize geographic accessibility. To minimize the weighted travel distance, objective function, Rk= aijwidij is used. Distances are measured indirectly by map measure-meter with l:25,000 Suwon map, and each potential sites, 10 administrative Dongs in Kwonson Gu, Suwon, are weighted by each number of households, total population, maternal age group, child age group, old age group, Relief for the livelihood, and population/primary health clinics. we find that Kuwoon-Dong, Seodun-Dong, Seryu3-Dong, according the descending orders, are best sites which can minimize the weighted distance, and conclude that it is reasonable to determine the location of urban health sub-center among those sites.
Child
;
Equipment and Supplies
;
Family Characteristics
;
Gyeonggi-do
;
Health Facilities
;
Health Facility Planning
;
Health Planning
;
Humans
;
Jurisprudence
;
Maternal Age
;
Politics
;
Urban Health*
4.Intravenous Immunoglobulin Nonresponsive Symptomatic Myocarditis during the Acute Stage of Incomplete Kawasaki Disease.
Pediatric Infection & Vaccine 2015;22(3):206-209
We report the case of a 7-year-old boy who showed treatment-nonresponsive hypotension (59/29 mmHg) and decreased left ventricular systolic function (fractional shortening 22%) in the acute stage of Kawasaki disease (KD). The present case serves to highlight that methylprednisolone pulse therapy should be considered in patients with intravenous immunoglobulin nonresponsive symptomatic myocarditis during the acute stage of KD.
Adrenal Cortex Hormones
;
Child
;
Humans
;
Hypotension
;
Immunoglobulins*
;
Male
;
Methylprednisolone
;
Mucocutaneous Lymph Node Syndrome*
;
Myocarditis*
5.Preventive Measures against Plague and the Control of Chinese Coolies in Colonial Korea.
Korean Journal of Medical History 2014;23(3):401-427
This paper aims to examine the preventive measures taken against the plague in colonial Korea, particularly as applied to the control of Chinese coolies in 1911, soon after the annexation. The Government General of Korea began preventive measures with a train quarantine in Shin'uiju and Incheon in response to the spread of the plague to the Southern Manchuria. Shin' uiju had become urbanized due the development of the transportation network, and the seaport of Incheon was the major hub for traffic with China. Examining the transportation routes for the entry and exit of Chinese to and from Korea makes clear the reason why the Korea Government General initiated preventive measures in mid-January, 1911. The Government General of Korea tried to block the entry of Chinese through the land border crossing with China and through ports of entry, primarily Incheon. During the implementation of the preventive measures, quarantine facilities were built, including a quarantine station and isolation facility in Incheon. It was also needed to investigate the population and residential locations of Chinese in Korea to prevent the spread of plague. A certificate of residence was issued to all Chinese in Korea, which they needed to carry when they travelled. The preventive measures against plague which broke out in Manchuria were removed gradually. However, there was no specific measures against Chinese coolies, those who had migrated from China to work in the spring in Korea. Still the Government General of Korea had doubt about an infection of the respiratory system. As a result, the labor market in colonial Korea underwent changes in this period. The Government General recruited Korean laborers, instead of Chinese coolies whose employment had been planned. This move explains the Government General's strong preventive measures against plague and uncertainty in the route of plague infection, which influenced subsequent regulations on the prohibition of Chinese coolies working on the public enterprise sites and the improvement of labor conditions for Korean laborers.
China/ethnology
;
Colonialism
;
History, 20th Century
;
Humans
;
Korea
;
Plague/*history/*prevention & control
;
Quarantine/*history
6.Development and Evaluation of a Field Education Program of Community Medicine.
Korean Journal of Medical Education 1992;4(2):18-33
This paper describes the curriculum development and its evaluation on the field education program of community medicine (FPCM) offered to all senior grade medical students at a rural site by the Depar tment of Health Policy and Management, Seoul National University College of Medicine. The FPCM is a course of study designed to prepare the students to function effectively in a primary health care setting assuming medical practitioner's role in response to the community needs, and as a member of a health team. The FPCM curriculum is focused on those issue that are important to community-based medical education such as problem-based active learning, communication skills, attitudes, team work and leadership skills, and scientific way of thinking. It also stressed the utilization of local health resources as educational health resources. Some important outcome of the curriculum are as follows: 1) 96.2% of the students answered that the program were helpful and necessary as a part of medical education. 2) The preceptors replied that 'having the teaching experience' was most significant aspects of their perfomance. 3) The program completed without any constraints. 4) The FPCM curriculum will be applicable to other medical colleges even under the limitation of educational resources.
Community Medicine*
;
Curriculum
;
Education*
;
Education, Medical
;
Health Policy
;
Health Resources
;
Humans
;
Leadership
;
Primary Health Care
;
Problem-Based Learning
;
Seoul
;
Students, Medical
;
Thinking
7.“Byoin” in Modern Japan: Focusing on the Terminological Introduction of “Hospital” and the Complex Formation of Its Concept.
Korean Journal of Medical History 2017;26(1):29-58
This paper aims to clarify when the term of Byoin (病院, hospital) was introduced and how its concept was developed in modern Japan. The word “Byoin” was introduced in Japan in 1787 for the first time, but it had not been in use until early 1860s. Instead, various medical institutions performing the functions of modern medical facilities, such as Yojosho (養生所, A place for preserving health), Shijuku (私塾, private school), called by traditional names as ever. Japanese intellectuals already adopted the word Byoin and the concept of western hospital in early 1860s when their national delegates were dispatched to Europe to revise the treaties forged with western powers. Japanese translations of hospital appeared in English-Japanese/Japanese-English dictionaries published in the 1860s. For instance, the word Byoin (hospital in Japanese) was first published in a dictionary published in 1867 and unclearly connected to the words, hospital, infirmary. This paper will argue that the concept of Byoin was sophisticated through Meiji government's efforts to implement reforms distinguishing medical facilities based on their capacity of inpatients and quality. The first medical law (醫制, Isei) proclaimed by the Meiji government in 1874 articulated regulations for a hospital in eight different articles. The government established hospitals in various parts of the country, following its newly established modern medical care policies. However, in this process, Iin (醫院, hospital/clinic), another term for “hospital” appeared. Regional differences and financial issues made standardizing the concept of a hospital even more difficult. In response to the widely embedded confusion, the Japanese government made an effort to clarify the concept of a hospital, setting up provisions regarding the size of medical facilities. As a result, the word Byoin finally came to be used for a hospital with more than ten beds, while a clinic with beds below ten was called Shinryojo (診療所, clinic). On the other hand, Iin meant a medical facility less qualified than a hospital since 1933 when Japanese government made a harder restriction on the usage of Byoin.
Asian Continental Ancestry Group
;
Europe
;
Hand
;
Humans
;
Inpatients
;
International Cooperation
;
Japan*
;
Jurisprudence
;
Social Control, Formal
;
Translations
8.Less Invasive Anterior Iliac Approach and Compression Osteosynthesis for the Treatment of High Anterior Column Fractures of the Acetabulum.
Youngsoo BYUN ; Youngho CHO ; Karam KIM
Clinics in Orthopedic Surgery 2018;10(3):279-285
BACKGROUND: Displaced anterior column fractures have increasingly been treated surgically by the ilioinguinal approach and fixation with lag screws and a buttress plate on the pelvic brim. However, a major disadvantage of the ilioinguinal approach is possible damage to the neurovascular bundle and the lymphatic structures in the intermediate part of the approach. This study aims to present a novel surgical technique of the less invasive anterior iliac approach and compression osteosynthesis for high anterior column fractures of the acetabulum. METHODS: In this retrospective case series, 19 patients treated operatively for isolated high anterior column fractures using the less invasive anterior iliac approach and compression osteosynthesis were included. Patient demographics, the cause of injury, associated injuries, time to surgical reconstruction, and operation time were collected from the medical records. The quality of reduction was assessed by postoperative standard radiographic views and computed tomography scans and graded according to Matta's criteria. Clinical and radiographic grades were assessed according to Matta's criteria at the last follow-up. RESULTS: This less invasive surgical technique was successful for reduction and fixation in all high anterior column fractures and provided sufficient stability to allow immediate mobilization of the patients after surgery. Twelve fractures were combined with the quadrilateral plate fracture and seven fractures did not involve the quadrilateral plate. According to Matta's criteria, anatomical reduction was obtained in 17 patients and imperfect reduction in two patients. Clinical results were excellent in 17 patients and good in two patients. Radiographic results were excellent in 17 patients and good in two patients. Ten patients had neurapraxia of the lateral femoral cutaneous nerve related to the approach, which was resolved completely in seven. One patient had deep vein thrombosis. CONCLUSIONS: Our less invasive surgical technique of the anterior iliac approach and compression osteosynthesis is a useful addition to the existing techniques in the treatment of high anterior column fractures of the acetabulum. Despite being a limited approach and fixation, this technique provides sufficient exposure for reducing and fixing the fracture and adequate stability to allow immediate mobilization of the patient after surgery.
Acetabulum*
;
Demography
;
Follow-Up Studies
;
Humans
;
Medical Records
;
Retrospective Studies
;
Venous Thrombosis
9.A Case of Behcet's Disease with Superior Vena Cava Syndrome.
Young Jee KIM ; Sang Moo LEE ; Youngsoo AHN
Tuberculosis and Respiratory Diseases 2004;56(6):657-663
As a chronic multisystemic inflammatory disorder, Behcet's disease may manifest vascular, cardiac, neurological and gastrointestinal abnormalities. However, involvement of large veins, such as thrombosis of the superior or inferior vena cava, is a very rare complication. Herein, a case of superior vena cava syndrome, due to the thrombotic obstructions of the subclavian and brachiocephalic vein, is reported in a 27-year old woman with chronic Behcet's disease.
Adult
;
Brachiocephalic Veins
;
Female
;
Humans
;
Superior Vena Cava Syndrome*
;
Thrombosis
;
Veins
;
Vena Cava, Inferior
;
Vena Cava, Superior*
10.Considerations for the Management of Medial Orbital Wall Blowout Fracture.
Yong Ha KIM ; Youngsoo PARK ; Kyu Jin CHUNG
Archives of Plastic Surgery 2016;43(3):229-236
Recently, diagnoses of and operations for medial orbital blowout fracture have increased because of the development of imaging technology. In this article, the authors review the literature, and overview the accumulated knowledge about the orbital anatomy, fracture mechanisms, surgical approaches, reconstruction materials, and surgical methods. In terms of surgical approaches, transcaruncular, transcutaneous, and transnasal endoscopic approaches are discussed. Reconstruction methods including onlay covering, inlay implantation, and repositioning methods are also discussed. Consideration and understanding of these should lead to more optimal outcomes.
Diagnosis
;
Inlays
;
Orbit*
;
Orbital Fractures
;
Surgical Procedures, Operative