1.Multiple odontogenic keratocysts as initial manifestation of gorlin-goltz syndrome: A case report.
Geralen Befina L. GERNALE-SONGAHID ; Marion A. ACUIN ; Jenny Lyn Y. UY-CHUA
Philippine Journal of Otolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery 2025;40(Supplement):24-28
OBJECTIVES
To present a rare case of a 17-year-old girl with multiple odontogenic keratocysts, skeletal abnormalities, central nervous system and cutaneous anomalies.
METHODSDesign:Case Report
Setting:Tertiary Government Training Hospital
Patient: One
RESULTSA 17-year-old Filipino girl presented with a one-year history of progressive left mandibular swelling. Orthopantomography revealed multiple cysts involving the mandible and maxillae. Histopathologic examination of incision biopsy specimens confirmed odontogenic keratocysts. Other physical examination findings included coarse face and multiple palmar and plantar pits. Radiologic investigations demonstrated calcification of the falx cerebri and tentorium cerebelli, bifid rib and cervicothoracic scoliosis. Based on clinical, radiological, and histopathological findings, a diagnosis of Gorlin-Goltz syndrome was established. The patient underwent enucleation and curettage of the cysts with peripheral ostectomy, and there was no recurrence on repeat orthopantomography at six months and two years post-operatively. However, on the fourth year, the patient claimed there was a mandibular cyst which was not verified as she was lost to follow-up.
CONCLUSIONThis case highlights the importance of recognizing multiple odontogenic keratocysts as a potential manifestation of Gorlin-Goltz Syndrome. Early diagnosis enables appropriate management and long term surveillance to monitor for other manifestations of this syndrome that may occur later in life.
Human ; Female ; Adolescent: 13-18 Yrs Old ; Basal Cell Nevus Syndrome ; Mandible ; Radiography, Panoramic ; Focal Dermal Hypoplasia ; Ribs ; Scoliosis ; Spinal Cord ; Women ; History ; Lost To Follow-up ; Diagnosis
2.Happiness among Pregnant Women: A Concept Analysis.
Korean Journal of Women Health Nursing 2016;22(3):128-138
PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to analyze the concept of happiness among pregnant women. METHODS: Walker and Avant's method for concept analysis was used. RESULTS: The defining attributes of happiness among pregnant women were 1) period of pregnancy, 2) emotional dimension (positive affect), and 3) cognitive dimension(existence need-satisfaction, relatedness need-satisfaction, growth need-satisfaction). The antecedents of happiness among pregnant women were 1) intrapersonal characteristics, 2) reproductive history and related characteristics, 3) interpersonal relationship, and 4) external factors. The consequences included 1) pregnant women's well-being, 2) fetal well-being, 3) maternal well-being, and 4) child's happiness. CONCLUSION: Although further studies are required to refine the diverse attributes of the concept, the results of this study contribute to explaining happiness among pregnant women. In addition, the development of adequate interventions to increase prenatal happiness is needed.
Female
;
Happiness*
;
Humans
;
Methods
;
Pregnancy
;
Pregnant Women*
;
Reproductive History
;
Walkers
3.Bodies for Empire: Biopolitics, Reproduction, and Sexual Knowledge in Late Colonial Korea.
Korean Journal of Medical History 2014;23(2):203-238
This paper explores the history of the biomedical construction of women's bodies as social bodies in the formation of colonial modernity in Korea. To do so, I engage with Michel Foucault's concepts of governmentality and biopolitics and the postcolonial history of medicine that has critically revisited these Foucauldian notions. These offer critical insights into the modern calculation of population and the biomedical gaze on female bodies on the Korean Peninsula under Japan's colonial rule (1910-1945). Foucauldian reflections on governmentality and colonial medicine can also shed light on the role of biomedical physicians in the advancement of colonial biopolitics. Biomedical physicians-state and non-state employees and colonizers and colonized alike - served as key agents investigating, knowing, and managing, as well as proliferating a discourse about, women's bodies and reproduction during Japan's empire-building. In particular, this paper sheds light on the processes by which Korean women's bodies became the objects of intense scrutiny as part of an attempt to quantify, as well as maximize, the total population in late colonial Korea. In the aftermath of the establishment of the Manchurian puppet state in 1932, Japanese imperial and colonial states actively sought to mobilize Koreans as crucial human resources for the further penetration of Japan's imperial holdings into the Chinese continent. State and non-state medical doctors meticulously interrogated, recorded, and circulated knowledge about the sexual and conjugal practices and reproductive life of Korean women in the agricultural sector, for the purposes of measuring and increasing the size, health, and vitality of the colonial population. At the heart of such medical endeavors stood the Investigative Committee for Social Hygiene in Rural Korea and Japan-trained Korean medical students/physicians, including Ch'oe Ug-sok, who carried out a social hygiene study in the mid-1930s. Their study illuminates the ways in which Korean women's bodies entered the modern domain of scientific knowledge at the intersection of Japan's imperialism, colonial governmentality, and biomedicine. A critical case study of the Investigative Committee's study and Ch'oe can set the stage for clarifying the vestiges as well as the reformulation of knowledge, ideas, institutions, and activities of colonial biopolitics in the divided Koreas.
Colonialism/*history
;
Female
;
Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice
;
History, 20th Century
;
*Human Body
;
Humans
;
Japan
;
Korea
;
Politics
;
Reproduction
;
Sexual Behavior
;
Women/*history
4.Marie Curie (1867-1934): famed female face of science.
Patricia Sims POOLE ; Siang Yong TAN
Singapore medical journal 2013;54(3):129-130
Female
;
History, 19th Century
;
History, 20th Century
;
Humans
;
Nobel Prize
;
Philately
;
Radiology
;
history
;
Science
;
history
;
Women
5.Dr Tan Cheng Im (1926-2010).
Singapore medical journal 2010;51(6):526-526
6.Establishment and Activity of PoKuNyoKwan.
Korean Journal of Medical History 2008;17(1):37-55
PoKuNyoKwan was established in 1887 by Meta Howard, a female doctor who was dispatched from Woman's Foreign Missionary Society, an evangelical branch affiliated with U.S. North Methodist Church. PoKuNyoKwan was equipped with dispensaries, waiting rooms, pharmacies, warehouses, operating rooms, and wards for about 30 patients. It used a traditional Korean house, which was renovated for its medical purpose, in Ewha Haktang. Residing in Chung Dong, the medical institution had taken care of women's mental and physical health for about 25 years, until it was merged with East Gate Lillian Harris Memorial Hospital in 1912, and then its dispensary function was abolished in 1913. Medical missionaries(Meta Howard, Rosetta Sherwood, Mary M. Cutler, Emma Ernsberger, Esther K. Pak, Amanda F. Hillman) and nurse missionaries(Ella Lewis, Margaret J. Edmunds, Alta I. Morrison, Naomi A. Anderson), who were professionally trained in the United States, and their helpers, who were trained by those missionaries, managed PoKuNyoKwan. Nurses who were educated in Nurses' Training School, which was also established by PoKuNyoKwan, helped to run the institution as well. At the beginning, they usually had worked as a team of one medical missionary and three helpers. Since its establishment in 1903, however, the helpers began to enter the Nurses' Training School to become professional nurses, and the helpers eventually faded out because of the proliferation of those nurses. PoKuNyoKwan did not only offer medical services but also executed educational and evangelical activities. Medical missionaries struggled to overcome Koreans' ignorance and prejudice against westerners and western medical services, while they took care of their patients at office, for calls, and in hospital dispensaries. Enlightening the public by criticizing Korean traditional medical treatments including fork remedies, acupuncture, and superstitions, they helped modernization of medical systems in Korea. In the area of education, Rosetta Sherwood taught helpers basic medical science to make them regular medical staff members, and Margaret J. Edmunds established the Nurses' Training School in PoKuNyoKwan for the first time in Korea. The nurses who graduated from the school worked at PoKuNyoKwan and some other medical institutions. Evangelical activities included Bible study in the waiting rooms of PoKuNyoKwan and prayer meeting on Sunday for those who were treated in PoKuNyoKwan. The institution in the end worked as a spot for spreading Christianity in Korea. As the first women's hospital, PoKuNyoKwan attempted to educate female doctors. Eventually, it played a role as a cradle to produce Esther K. Pak, who was the first female doctor in Korea. The hospital also ran the first nurse training center. It was, in a real sense, the foundational institution to raise professional practitioner undertaking medical services in Korea. Therefore, it is reasonable to say that PoKuNyoKwan provided sound basis for the development of modern medical services for women in Korea.
Education, Nursing/history
;
Female
;
History, 19th Century
;
History, 20th Century
;
Hospitals, Religious/history
;
Hospitals, Special/*history
;
Humans
;
Korea
;
Missions and Missionaries/*history
;
United States
;
Women's Health Services/*history
7.The Life and Works of Han Shin Gwang: a Midwife and Nurse of Korean Modern Times.
Korean Journal of Medical History 2006;15(1):107-119
Han Shin Gwang, born in an early Christian family in Korea in 1902, could get western education different from the ordinary Korean girls in that period. She participated in the 1919 Samil Independence Movement in her teens, and got nursing and midwifery education in a missionary hospital. She got a midwife license and worked as a member in an early mother-and-child health center. She organized 'Korean Nurses' Association' in 1924 and focused on public health movement as the chairwoman. She actively participated in women's movement organizations, and Gwangjoo Student's Movement. She was known to be a representative of leading working women, and wrote articles on woman's right, the needs and works of nurses and midwives. From late Japanese colonial period, she opened her own clinic and devoted herself to midwifery. After the Korean Liberation in 1945, she began political movement and went in for a senate election. During the Korean War, she founded a shelter for mothers and children in help. After the War, she reopened a midwifery clinic and devoted to the works of Korean Midwives' Association. Han Shin Gwang's life and works belong to the first generation of Korean working women in modern times. She actively participated in women's movement, nurses' and midwives professional movement, Korea liberation movement, and mother-and-child health movement for 60 years. Her life is truly exemplary as one of the first generation of working women in modern Korea, distinguished of devotion and calling.
Women's Rights/history
;
Nurse Midwives/history
;
Midwifery/*history
;
Maternal-Child Health Centers/history
;
Korea
;
Humans
;
History, 20th Century
;
History of Nursing
8.Some opinions of uteral revison
Journal of Vietnamese Medicine 2001;263(9):15-17
A study on all pregnant women had normal delivery in the Institute of Mother and Infant protection and care in 1999 has shown that the rate of uteral revision was high (68%) comparing with this of international and domestic data. The primarily finding showed that there was a relation between the uteral revision and some factors such as history of sponteneous abortion, induced abortion, fetal age, and amniotic rupture time. The indication for uteral revision due to the bleeding was highest (41.1%).
women
;
History
;
Delivery, Obstetric
;
pregnant women
9.Experience of Splenic Artery Aneurysms.
Yong Geul JOH ; Suk In JUNG ; Jun Won UM ; Sung Soo JUN ; In Gu KANG ; Young Ju KIM ; Sang Yong CHOI ; Cheung Wung WHANG
Journal of the Korean Society for Vascular Surgery 2000;16(1):54-60
PURPOSE: Splenic artery aneurysm is uncommon, but the increased frequency in use of arteriography, computed tomography, and ultrasonography has resulted in increasing clinical recognition of these lesions. This paper relates our experience in the outcome and management of aneurysms of the splenic artery. METHODS: From January 1992 to October 1999, 12 patients were diagnosed with splenic artery aneurysms. They were retrospectively analyzed. RESULTS: The male to female ratio was 1:4 and the mean age was 46.3 years. The mean of pregnancy history of all women was 3.0 and there were no pregnant women during operation. The associated diseases that might have caused the aneurysms were pancreatitis in 5 patients, portal hypertension in 1, operative trauma in 1, and ill defined pathogenesis in 5 patients. The size of the aneurysms was larger than 2 cm in all patients. The splenic artery aneurysms was located at distal in 9 patients, mid in 1, and proximal in 2 patients. 7 patients were treated surgically (aneurysmectomy without splenectomy in 1 patient, aneurysmectomy with splenectomy in 6 patients). Transcatheter embolization was used in 4 patients. One of them was treated with distal pancreatectomy after two months because of pancreatic pseudocyst. One patient without treatment died 2 years after diagnosis. CONCLUSION: Although surgery remains necessary in splenic artery aneurysms larger than 2 cm, transcatheter embolization is effective in initial treatment of the high risk group in splenic artery aneurysms.
Aneurysm*
;
Angiography
;
Diagnosis
;
Female
;
Humans
;
Hypertension, Portal
;
Male
;
Pancreatectomy
;
Pancreatic Pseudocyst
;
Pancreatitis
;
Pregnant Women
;
Reproductive History
;
Retrospective Studies
;
Splenectomy
;
Splenic Artery*
;
Ultrasonography
10.Falcine Mesenchmal Chondrosarcoma.
Ji Ho YANG ; Do Sung YOO ; Kyung Keun CHO ; Jang Hoe HWANG ; Joon Ki KANG ; Chang Ral CHOI
Journal of Korean Neurosurgical Society 1994;23(2):227-232
We experienced a case of falcine mesenchymal chondrosarcoma in a 22-year-old pregnant woman. Cartilage cell tumors within the cranium are very rare, only less than 0.2% of all intracranial tumors. Because a few examples of mesenchymal chondrosarcoma in this locttion have been reported, we reviewed previous reports cases, to determine the natural history of intracranial chondrosarcomas. The distinguishing features of this rare tumor are compared with previous cases of itracranial tumors derived from cartilage.
Cartilage
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Chondrosarcoma*
;
Chondrosarcoma, Mesenchymal
;
Female
;
Humans
;
Natural History
;
Pregnant Women
;
Skull
;
Young Adult


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