1.Enterococcus hirae Bacteremia Secondary to Urinary Tract Infection: A Case Report
Kyeo Rae JU ; Ji Hye LIM ; Jae Won LEE ; Jinmee HWANG ; Eu Suk KIM
Korean Journal of Medicine 2024;99(5):263-267
Enterococcus hirae (E. hirae) infection is an uncommon pathogen in human infections. Bacteremia due to E. hirae associated with urinary tract infection is uncommon. We present a case of E. hirae bacteremia in a young woman with no underlying comorbidities. This case report emphasizes the importance of considering E. hirae as a potential pathogen in urinary tract infections.
2.Enterococcus hirae Bacteremia Secondary to Urinary Tract Infection: A Case Report
Kyeo Rae JU ; Ji Hye LIM ; Jae Won LEE ; Jinmee HWANG ; Eu Suk KIM
Korean Journal of Medicine 2024;99(5):263-267
Enterococcus hirae (E. hirae) infection is an uncommon pathogen in human infections. Bacteremia due to E. hirae associated with urinary tract infection is uncommon. We present a case of E. hirae bacteremia in a young woman with no underlying comorbidities. This case report emphasizes the importance of considering E. hirae as a potential pathogen in urinary tract infections.
3.Enterococcus hirae Bacteremia Secondary to Urinary Tract Infection: A Case Report
Kyeo Rae JU ; Ji Hye LIM ; Jae Won LEE ; Jinmee HWANG ; Eu Suk KIM
Korean Journal of Medicine 2024;99(5):263-267
Enterococcus hirae (E. hirae) infection is an uncommon pathogen in human infections. Bacteremia due to E. hirae associated with urinary tract infection is uncommon. We present a case of E. hirae bacteremia in a young woman with no underlying comorbidities. This case report emphasizes the importance of considering E. hirae as a potential pathogen in urinary tract infections.
4.Enterococcus hirae Bacteremia Secondary to Urinary Tract Infection: A Case Report
Kyeo Rae JU ; Ji Hye LIM ; Jae Won LEE ; Jinmee HWANG ; Eu Suk KIM
Korean Journal of Medicine 2024;99(5):263-267
Enterococcus hirae (E. hirae) infection is an uncommon pathogen in human infections. Bacteremia due to E. hirae associated with urinary tract infection is uncommon. We present a case of E. hirae bacteremia in a young woman with no underlying comorbidities. This case report emphasizes the importance of considering E. hirae as a potential pathogen in urinary tract infections.
5.Hair Cell Regeneration: From Animals to Humans
Sung-Won CHOI ; Julia M. ABITBOL ; Alan G. CHENG
Clinical and Experimental Otorhinolaryngology 2024;17(1):1-14
Cochlear hair cells convert sound into electrical signals that are relayed via the spiral ganglion neurons to the central auditory pathway. Hair cells are vulnerable to damage caused by excessive noise, aging, and ototoxic agents. Non-mammals can regenerate lost hair cells by mitotic regeneration and direct transdifferentiation of surrounding supporting cells. However, in mature mammals, damaged hair cells are not replaced, resulting in permanent hearing loss. Recent studies have uncovered mechanisms by which sensory organs in non-mammals and the neonatal mammalian cochlea regenerate hair cells, and outlined possible mechanisms why this ability declines rapidly with age in mammals. Here, we review similarities and differences between avian, zebrafish, and mammalian hair cell regeneration. Moreover, we discuss advances and limitations of hair cell regeneration in the mature cochlea and their potential applications to human hearing loss.
6.Propensity score matching for comparative studies: a tutorial with R and Rex
Bora LEE ; Nam-eun KIM ; Sungho WON ; Jungsoo GIM
Journal of Minimally Invasive Surgery 2024;27(2):55-71
Recently, there has been considerable progress in developing new technologies and equipment for the medical field, including minimally invasive surgeries. Evaluating the effectiveness of these treatments requires study designs like randomized controlled trials.However, due to the nature of certain treatments, randomization is not always feasible, leading to the use of observational studies. The effect size estimated from observational studies is subject to selection bias caused by confounders. One method to reduce this bias is propensity scoring. This study aimed to introduce a propensity score matching process between two groups using a practical example with R. Additionally, Rex, an Excel add-in graphical user interface statistical program, is provided for researchers unfamiliar with R programming.Further techniques, such as matching with three or more groups, propensity score weighting and stratification, and imputation of missing values, are summarized to offer approaches for more complex studies not covered in this tutorial.
7.Ornithodoros sawaii (Ixodida: Argasidae) Larvae Collected from Hydrobates monorhis on Sogugul and Gaerin Islands, Jeollanam-do (Province), Republic of Korea.
Heung Chul KIM ; Chang Yong CHOI ; Young Soo KWON ; Seok Min YUN ; Won Ja LEE ; Sung Tae CHONG ; Richard G ROBBINS ; Terry A KLEIN
The Korean Journal of Parasitology 2016;54(2):233-238
The 65th Medical Brigade and Public Health Command District-Korea, in collaboration with the Migratory Bird Research Center, National Park Research Institute, conducted migratory bird tick surveillance at Sogugul and Gaerin Islands (small rocky bird nesting sites), Jeollanam-do (Province), Republic of Korea (ROK), on 30 July and 1 August 2009. Breeding seabirds captured by hands in their nesting burrows were banded, identified to species, and carefully examined for ticks during the nesting season. A total of 9 Ornithodoros sawaii larvae were removed from 4 adult Hydrobates monorhis (Swinhoe's storm petrel). The identification of the larvae of O. sawaii collected from migratory seabirds were molecularly confirmed using mitochondrial 16S rDNA primer sets.
Academies and Institutes
;
Adult
;
Argasidae
;
Birds
;
Breeding
;
Cooperative Behavior
;
DNA, Ribosomal
;
Hand
;
Humans
;
Islands*
;
Jeollanam-do*
;
Larva*
;
Ornithodoros*
;
Public Health
;
Republic of Korea*
;
Seasons
;
Ticks
8.Sleep EEG Characteristics in Young and Elderly Patients with Obstructive Sleep Apnea Syndrome.
Yu Jin LEE ; Jong Won KIM ; Yu Jin G LEE ; Do Un JEONG
Psychiatry Investigation 2016;13(2):217-221
OBJECTIVE: In the present study, it was hypothesized that the sleep electroencephalogram (EEG) characteristics of young (<30 yrs) and elderly (>55 yrs) OSAS patients would differ. METHODS: We analyzed 76 sleep EEG recordings from OSAS patients (young group: n=40, mean age: 24.3±4.9 yrs; elderly group: n=36, mean age: 59.1±4.9 yrs), which were obtained during nocturnal polysomnography. The recordings were assessed via spectral analysis in the delta (0.5–4.5 Hz), theta (4.5–8 Hz), alpha (8–12 Hz), beta (12–32 Hz), slow sigma (11–13 Hz), and fast sigma (13–17 Hz) frequency bands. RESULTS: Apnea Hypopnea Index (AHI) and sleep efficiency (%) did not differ significantly between the two groups (19.8±14.4 vs. 25.9±16.0, p=0.085; 84.4±12.6 vs. 80.9±11.0, p=0.198, respectively). After adjusting for gender, the slow/fast sigma ratio was not significantly correlated with AHI in the elderly group (r=-0.047, p=0.790) but AHI was inversely correlated with the slow/fast sigma ratio in the young group (r=-0.423, p=0.007). A multiple linear regression analysis revealed that a higher AHI was related with a lower slow/fast sigma ratio in the young group (β=-0.392, p=0.028) but not the elderly. CONCLUSION: In the present study, sleep EEG activity differed between young and elderly OSAS patients. The slow/fast sigma ratio was associated with OSAS severity only in young patients, suggesting that young OSAS patients may have a distinctive brain plasticity compared with elderly patients.
Aged*
;
Apnea
;
Brain
;
Electroencephalography*
;
Humans
;
Linear Models
;
Plastics
;
Polysomnography
;
Sleep Apnea, Obstructive*
9.Crystallization of Local Anesthetics When Mixed With Corticosteroid Solutions.
Hyeoncheol HWANG ; Jihong PARK ; Won Kyung LEE ; Woo Hyung LEE ; Ja Ho LEIGH ; Jin Joo LEE ; Sun G CHUNG ; Chaiyoung LIM ; Sang Jun PARK ; Keewon KIM
Annals of Rehabilitation Medicine 2016;40(1):21-27
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate at which pH level various local anesthetics precipitate, and to confirm which combination of corticosteroid and local anesthetic crystallizes. METHODS: Each of ropivacaine-HCl, bupivacaine-HCl, and lidocaine-HCl was mixed with 4 different concentrations of NaOH solutions. Also, each of the three local anesthetics was mixed with the same volume of 3 corticosteroid solutions (triamcinolone acetonide, dexamethasone sodium phosphate, and betamethasone sodium phosphate). Precipitation of the local anesthetics (or not) was observed, by the naked eye and by microscope. The pH of each solution and the size of the precipitated crystal were measured. RESULTS: Alkalinized with NaOH to a certain value of pH, local anesthetics precipitated (ropivacaine pH 6.9, bupivacaine pH 7.7, and lidocaine pH 12.9). Precipitation was observed as a cloudy appearance by the naked eye and as the aggregation of small particles (<10 µm) by microscope. The amount of particles and aggregation increased with increased pH. Mixed with betamethasone sodium phosphate, ropivacaine was precipitated in the form of numerous large crystals (>300 µm, pH 7.5). Ropivacaine with dexamethasone sodium phosphate also precipitated, but it was only observable by microscope (a few crystals of 10-100 µm, pH 7.0). Bupivacaine with betamethasone sodium phosphate formed precipitates of non-aggregated smaller particles (<10 µm, pH 7.7). Lidocaine mixed with corticosteroids did not precipitate. CONCLUSION: Ropivacaine and bupivacaine can precipitate by alkalinization at a physiological pH, and therefore also produce crystals at a physiological pH when they are mixed with betamethasone sodium phosphate. Thus, the potential risk should be noted for their use in interventions, such as epidural steroid injections.
Adrenal Cortex Hormones
;
Anesthetics, Local*
;
Betamethasone
;
Bupivacaine
;
Crystallization*
;
Dexamethasone
;
Hydrogen-Ion Concentration
;
Lidocaine
;
Sodium

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