1.Imaging Patterns of Bacillus Calmette–Guérin-Related Granulomatous Prostatitis Based on Multiparametric MRI
Seungsoo LEE ; Young Taik OH ; Hye Min KIM ; Dae Chul JUNG ; Hyesuk HONG
Korean Journal of Radiology 2022;23(1):60-67
Objective:
To categorize multiparametric MRI features of Bacillus Calmette–Guérin (BCG)-related granulomatous prostatitis (GP) and discover potential manifestations for its differential diagnosis from prostate cancer.
Materials and Methods:
The cases of BCG-related GP in 24 male (mean age ± standard deviation, 66.0 ± 9.4 years; range, 50–88 years) pathologically confirmed between January 2011 and April 2019 were retrospectively reviewed. All patients underwent intravesical BCG therapy followed by a MRI scan. Additional follow-up MRI scans, including diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI), were performed in 19 patients. The BCG-related GP cases were categorized into three: A, B, or C. The lesions with diffusion restriction and homogeneous enhancement were classified as type A. The lesions with diffusion restriction and a poorly enhancing component were classified as type B. A low signal intensity on high b-value DWI (b = 1000 s/mm2 ) was considered characteristic of type C. Two radiologists independently interpreted the MRI scans before making a consensus about the types.
Results:
The median lesion size was 22 mm with the interquartile range (IQR) of 18–26 mm as measured using the initial MRI scans. The lesion types were A, B, and C in 7, 15, and 2 patients, respectively. Cohen’s kappa value for the inter-reader agreement for the interpretation of the lesion types was 0.837. On the last follow-up MRI scans of 19 patients, the size decreased (median, 5.8 mm; IQR, 3.4–8.5 mm), and the type changed from A or B to C in 11 patients. The lesions resolved in four patients. In five patients who underwent prostatectomy, caseous necrosis on histopathology matched with the non-enhancing components of type B lesions and the entire type C lesions.
Conclusion
BCG-related GP demonstrated three imaging patterns on multiparametric MRI. Contrast-enhanced T1-weighted imaging and DWI may play a role in its differential diagnosis from prostate cancer.
2.Urethroplasty of extensive penile urethral strictures with a longitudinal ventral tubed flap of penile skin (modified Orandi urethroplasty): 20 years of follow-up of two cases
Jae Won HEO ; Woo Taik HONG ; Yong Hun KIM ; Chae Eun YANG ; Jiye KIM ; Sug Won KIM
Archives of Plastic Surgery 2020;47(6):613-618
The surgical treatment of extensive urethral strictures remains a controversial topic; although techniques have evolved, there is still no definite method of choice. Since 1968, when Orandi presented an original technique for one-stage urethroplasty using a penile skin flap, the Orandi technique has become the most prevalently used one-stage procedure for anterior urethral strictures. We present a 20-year follow-up experience with one-stage reconstruction of long urethral strictures using a longitudinal ventral tubed flap of penile skin, with some important technical changes to Orandi’s original technique to overcome the deficient vascularity caused by periurethral scar tissue. In 1997, a 55-year-old male patient complained of severe voiding difficulty and a weak urinary stream because of transurethral resection of the prostate due to benign prostatic hyperplasia. Another 47-year-old male patient had the same problem due to self-removal of a Foley catheter in 2002. In both patients, a urethrogram demonstrated extensive strictures involving the long segment of the anterior urethra. A rectangular skin flap on the ventral surface of the penis was used considering the appropriate length, diameter, and depth of the neourethra. The modified Orandi flap provided a pedicled strip of penile skin measuring an average of 8 cm. The mean duration of follow-up was 20.5 years. A long-term evaluation revealed stable performance characteristics without any complications.
3.Eggerthella Lenta Bacteremia after Appendectomy in a Healthy Patient
Sara JEONG ; Hyun Young PARK ; In Taik HONG ; Jae Bin KANG ; Soo Youn MOON ; Ki Ho PARK ; Mi Suk LEE ; Jun Seong SON
Korean Journal of Medicine 2019;94(6):530-532
Eggerthella lenta (E. lenta) has been reported to cause bacteremia in patients with gastrointestinal tract disorders or malignancies and in immunocompromised patients. Cases of E. lenta have been increasing with the recent development of testing equipment. The mortality rate due to E. lenta bacteremia is high. The authors report a case of E. lenta bacteremia in an immunocompetent patient.
Appendectomy
;
Bacteremia
;
Gastrointestinal Tract
;
Humans
;
Immunocompromised Host
;
Mortality
4.Minimizing tissue damage due to filler injection with systemic hyperbaric oxygen therapy
Woo Taik HONG ; JIye KIM ; Sug Won KIM
Archives of Craniofacial Surgery 2019;20(4):246-250
Recently, there is a growing interest of hyperbaric oxygen therapy in many fields of medicine. We had a 43-year-old female patient presented with severe necrosis of the nose, philtrum, and upper lip due to retrograde arterial occlusion after nasolabial fold hyaluronic acid filler injection. Our patient went through 43 sessions of systemic hyperbaric oxygen therapy from December 2, 2017 to January 18, 2018. We administered 2.8 atmosphere absolute (ATA) for 135 minutes in the first session and the remaining sessions consisted of 2.0 ATA for 110 minutes. In reporting this case, we wish to provide a warning regarding the latent risk of filler injections and share our experience about minimizing soft tissue damage in the early stages with systemic hyperbaric oxygen therapy.
Adult
;
Atmosphere
;
Female
;
Humans
;
Hyaluronic Acid
;
Hyperbaric Oxygenation
;
Lip
;
Nasolabial Fold
;
Necrosis
;
Nose
5.Trigeminal somatosensory evoked potential test as an evaluation tool for infraorbital nerve damage
Woo Taik HONG ; Jin Hee CHOI ; Ji Hyun KIM ; Yong Hun KIM ; Chae Eun YANG ; Jiye KIM ; Sug Won KIM
Archives of Craniofacial Surgery 2019;20(4):223-227
BACKGROUND: Neurosensory changes are frequently observed in the patients with mid-face fractures, and these symptoms are often caused by infraorbital nerve (ION) damage. Although ION damage is a relatively common phenomenon, there are no established and objective methods to evaluate it. The aim of this study was to test whether trigeminal somatosensory evoked potential (TSEP) could be used as a prognostic predictor of ION damage and TSEP testing was an objective method to evaluate ION injury. METHODS: In this prospective TSEP study, 48 patients with unilateral mid-face fracture (only unilateral blow out fracture and unilateral zygomaticomaxillary fracture were included) and potential ION damages were enrolled. Both sides of the face were examined with TSEP and the non-traumatized side of the face was used as control. We calculated the latency difference between the affected and the unaffected sides. RESULTS: Twenty-four patients recovered within 3 months, and 21 patients took more than 3 months to recover. The average latency difference between the affected side and unaffected side was 1.4 and 4.1 ms for the group that recovered within 3 months and the group that recovered after 3 months, respectively. CONCLUSION: Patients who suffered ION damage showed prolonged latency when examined using the TSEP test. TSEP is an effective tool for evaluation of nerve injury and predicting the recovery of patients with ION damage.
Evoked Potentials, Somatosensory
;
Humans
;
Methods
;
Orbital Fractures
;
Prospective Studies
;
Trigeminal Nerve Injuries
6.Eggerthella Lenta Bacteremia after Appendectomy in a Healthy Patient
Sara JEONG ; Hyun Young PARK ; In Taik HONG ; Jae Bin KANG ; Soo Youn MOON ; Ki Ho PARK ; Mi Suk LEE ; Jun Seong SON
Korean Journal of Medicine 2019;94(6):530-532
Eggerthella lenta (E. lenta) has been reported to cause bacteremia in patients with gastrointestinal tract disorders or malignancies and in immunocompromised patients. Cases of E. lenta have been increasing with the recent development of testing equipment. The mortality rate due to E. lenta bacteremia is high. The authors report a case of E. lenta bacteremia in an immunocompetent patient.
7.Effects of Altered Calcium Metabolism on Cardiac Parameters in Primary Aldosteronism.
Jung Soo LIM ; Namki HONG ; Sungha PARK ; Sung Il PARK ; Young Taik OH ; Min Heui YU ; Pil Yong LIM ; Yumie RHEE
Endocrinology and Metabolism 2018;33(4):485-492
BACKGROUND: Increasing evidence supports interplay between aldosterone and parathyroid hormone (PTH), which may aggravate cardiovascular complications in various heart diseases. Negative structural cardiovascular remodeling by primary aldosteronism (PA) is also suspected to be associated with changes in calcium levels. However, to date, few clinical studies have examined how changes in calcium and PTH levels influence cardiovascular outcomes in PA patients. Therefore, we investigated the impact of altered calcium homeostasis caused by excessive aldosterone on cardiovascular parameters in patients with PA. METHODS: Forty-two patients (mean age 48.8±10.9 years; 1:1, male:female) whose plasma aldosterone concentration/plasma renin activity ratio was more than 30 were selected among those who had visited Severance Hospital from 2010 to 2014. All patients underwent adrenal venous sampling with complete access to both adrenal veins. RESULTS: The prevalence of unilateral adrenal adenoma (54.8%) was similar to that of bilateral adrenal hyperplasia. Mean serum corrected calcium level was 8.9±0.3 mg/dL (range, 8.3 to 9.9). The corrected calcium level had a negative linear correlation with left ventricular end-diastolic diameter (LVEDD, ρ=−0.424, P=0.031). Moreover, multivariable regression analysis showed that the corrected calcium level was marginally associated with the LVEDD and corrected QT (QTc) interval (β=−0.366, P=0.068 and β=−0.252, P=0.070, respectively). CONCLUSION: Aldosterone-mediated hypercalciuria and subsequent hypocalcemia may be partly involved in the development of cardiac remodeling as well as a prolonged QTc interval, in subjects with PA, thereby triggering deleterious effects on target organs additively.
Adenoma
;
Aldosterone
;
Calcium*
;
Heart Diseases
;
Homeostasis
;
Humans
;
Hyperaldosteronism*
;
Hypercalciuria
;
Hyperplasia
;
Hypocalcemia
;
Metabolism*
;
Parathyroid Hormone
;
Plasma
;
Prevalence
;
Renin
;
Veins
8.Small Bowel Obstruction Caused by Aloe vera Bezoars: A Case Report.
In Taik HONG ; Jae Myung CHA ; Hye Jin KI ; Min Seob KWAK ; Jin Young YOON ; Hyun Phil SHIN ; Jung Won JEOUN ; Sung Il CHOI
The Korean Journal of Gastroenterology 2017;69(5):312-315
Small bowel obstruction is a clinical condition commonly caused by postoperative adhesion, volvulus, intussusceptions, and hernia. Small bowel obstruction due to bezoars is clinically uncommon, accounting for approximately 2-4% of all obstructions. Computed tomography (CT) is a useful method in diagnosing the cause of small bowel obstruction. However, small bowel obstruction caused by bezoars may not be detected by an abdominal CT examination. Herein, we report a rare case of small bowel obstruction by Aloe vera bezoars, which were undetected by an abdominal CT. Phytobezoars should be included in the differential diagnosis of small bowel obstruction in patients with predisposing factors, such as excessive consumption of high-fiber food and diabetes.
Aloe*
;
Bezoars*
;
Causality
;
Diagnosis, Differential
;
Hernia
;
Humans
;
Intestinal Obstruction
;
Intestinal Volvulus
;
Intestine, Small
;
Intussusception
;
Methods
;
Tomography, X-Ray Computed
9.Cerebral venous thrombosis in a patient with Crohn's disease.
Young Hak CHO ; Min Kyu CHAE ; Jae Myung CHA ; Joung Il LEE ; Kwang Ro JOO ; Hyun Phil SHIN ; Il Hyun BAEK ; Jung Won JEON ; Jun Uk LIM ; In Taik HONG ; Hye Jin KI ; Jae Bin KANG
Intestinal Research 2016;14(1):96-101
Patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) have an elevated risk of venous thromboembolism compared with the general population. The most common sites of venous thromboembolism in IBD patients are the deep veins of the legs, the pulmonary system, and portal and mesenteric veins. However, cerebral venous thrombosis is rarely associated with IBD. This report describes a case of cerebral venous thrombosis in a patient with Crohn's disease. A 17-year-old girl, diagnosed 4 years earlier with Crohn's disease, presented with headache and vomiting. Magnetic resonance imaging of the brain with venography showed venous thrombosis in the cortical veins, superior sagittal sinus, right transverse sinus, and right internal jugular vein. The patient immediately started anticoagulation therapy with intravenous heparin infusion followed by daily oral rivaroxaban 10 mg. Follow-up imaging after 2 weeks showed resolution of the thrombosis, with recanalization of the cortical veins, superior sagittal sinus, right transverse sinus, and right internal jugular vein. She continued rivaroxaban therapy for 6 months, and remained well, without neurologic sequelae. A high level of concern for cerebral venous thrombosis may be important when treating active IBD patients, because anticoagulation treatment can prevent fatal complications.
Adolescent
;
Brain
;
Crohn Disease*
;
Female
;
Follow-Up Studies
;
Headache
;
Heparin
;
Humans
;
Inflammatory Bowel Diseases
;
Jugular Veins
;
Leg
;
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
;
Mesenteric Veins
;
Phlebography
;
Rivaroxaban
;
Superior Sagittal Sinus
;
Thrombosis
;
Veins
;
Venous Thromboembolism
;
Venous Thrombosis*
;
Vomiting
10.Outcomes of Take-Back Operations in Breast Reconstruction with Free Lower Abdominal Flaps.
Ji Hong YIM ; Jiyoung YUN ; Taik Jong LEE ; Eun Key KIM ; Jonghan CHO ; Jin Sup EOM
Archives of Plastic Surgery 2015;42(6):741-745
BACKGROUND: Microvascular complications after free-flap breast reconstructions are potentially devastating problems that can increase patient morbidity and lead to flap loss. To date, no comprehensive study has examined the rates of salvage and the methods of microvascular revision in breast reconstruction. We reviewed the treatment of microvascular complications of free-flap breast reconstruction procedures over a seven-year period. METHODS: A retrospective review of all patients who underwent microvascular breast reconstruction at our institution between April 2006 and December 2013 was conducted. Based on their surgical records, all patients who required emergency re-exploration were identified, the rate of flap salvage was determined, the factors associated with flap salvage were evaluated, and the causes and methods of revision were reviewed. RESULTS: During the review period, 605 breast reconstruction procedures with a free lower abdominal flap were performed. Seventeen of these flaps were compromised by microvascular complications, and three flaps were lost. The overall salvage rate was 82.35%. No significant differences between the salvaged group and the failed group were observed with regard to age, BMI, axillary dissection, number of anastomotic arteries and veins, recipient vessel types, or use of the superficial inferior epigastric vein in the revision operation. Successful salvage of the flap was associated with a shorter time period between recognizing the signs of flap compromise and the take-back operation. CONCLUSIONS: The salvage rate of compromised lower abdominal flaps was high enough to warrant attempting re-exploration. Immediate intervention after the onset of flap compromise signs is as important as vigilant postoperative monitoring.
Arteries
;
Breast*
;
Emergencies
;
Female
;
Free Tissue Flaps
;
Humans
;
Mammaplasty*
;
Perforator Flap
;
Retrospective Studies
;
Salvage Therapy
;
Surgical Flaps
;
Veins

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