1.Early Administration of Nelonemdaz May Improve the Stroke Outcomes in Patients With Acute Stroke
Jin Soo LEE ; Ji Sung LEE ; Seong Hwan AHN ; Hyun Goo KANG ; Tae-Jin SONG ; Dong-Ick SHIN ; Hee-Joon BAE ; Chang Hun KIM ; Sung Hyuk HEO ; Jae-Kwan CHA ; Yeong Bae LEE ; Eung Gyu KIM ; Man Seok PARK ; Hee-Kwon PARK ; Jinkwon KIM ; Sungwook YU ; Heejung MO ; Sung Il SOHN ; Jee Hyun KWON ; Jae Guk KIM ; Young Seo KIM ; Jay Chol CHOI ; Yang-Ha HWANG ; Keun Hwa JUNG ; Soo-Kyoung KIM ; Woo Keun SEO ; Jung Hwa SEO ; Joonsang YOO ; Jun Young CHANG ; Mooseok PARK ; Kyu Sun YUM ; Chun San AN ; Byoung Joo GWAG ; Dennis W. CHOI ; Ji Man HONG ; Sun U. KWON ;
Journal of Stroke 2025;27(2):279-283
		                        		
		                        		
		                        		
		                        	
2.Early Administration of Nelonemdaz May Improve the Stroke Outcomes in Patients With Acute Stroke
Jin Soo LEE ; Ji Sung LEE ; Seong Hwan AHN ; Hyun Goo KANG ; Tae-Jin SONG ; Dong-Ick SHIN ; Hee-Joon BAE ; Chang Hun KIM ; Sung Hyuk HEO ; Jae-Kwan CHA ; Yeong Bae LEE ; Eung Gyu KIM ; Man Seok PARK ; Hee-Kwon PARK ; Jinkwon KIM ; Sungwook YU ; Heejung MO ; Sung Il SOHN ; Jee Hyun KWON ; Jae Guk KIM ; Young Seo KIM ; Jay Chol CHOI ; Yang-Ha HWANG ; Keun Hwa JUNG ; Soo-Kyoung KIM ; Woo Keun SEO ; Jung Hwa SEO ; Joonsang YOO ; Jun Young CHANG ; Mooseok PARK ; Kyu Sun YUM ; Chun San AN ; Byoung Joo GWAG ; Dennis W. CHOI ; Ji Man HONG ; Sun U. KWON ;
Journal of Stroke 2025;27(2):279-283
		                        		
		                        		
		                        		
		                        	
3.Early Administration of Nelonemdaz May Improve the Stroke Outcomes in Patients With Acute Stroke
Jin Soo LEE ; Ji Sung LEE ; Seong Hwan AHN ; Hyun Goo KANG ; Tae-Jin SONG ; Dong-Ick SHIN ; Hee-Joon BAE ; Chang Hun KIM ; Sung Hyuk HEO ; Jae-Kwan CHA ; Yeong Bae LEE ; Eung Gyu KIM ; Man Seok PARK ; Hee-Kwon PARK ; Jinkwon KIM ; Sungwook YU ; Heejung MO ; Sung Il SOHN ; Jee Hyun KWON ; Jae Guk KIM ; Young Seo KIM ; Jay Chol CHOI ; Yang-Ha HWANG ; Keun Hwa JUNG ; Soo-Kyoung KIM ; Woo Keun SEO ; Jung Hwa SEO ; Joonsang YOO ; Jun Young CHANG ; Mooseok PARK ; Kyu Sun YUM ; Chun San AN ; Byoung Joo GWAG ; Dennis W. CHOI ; Ji Man HONG ; Sun U. KWON ;
Journal of Stroke 2025;27(2):279-283
		                        		
		                        		
		                        		
		                        	
4.Prevalence and Characteristics of Atrial Tachycardia From Noncoronary Aortic Cusp During Atrial Fibrillation Catheter Ablation
Myung-Jin CHA ; Jun KIM ; Yoon Jung PARK ; Min Soo CHO ; Hyoung-Seob PARK ; Soonil KWON ; Young Soo LEE ; Jinhee AHN ; Hyung-Oh CHOI ; Jong-Sung PARK ; YouMi HWANG ; Jin Hee CHOI ; Ki-Won HWANG ; Yoo-Ri KIM ; Seongwook HAN ; Seil OH ; Gi-Byoung NAM ; Kee-Joon CHOI ; Hui-Nam PAK
Korean Circulation Journal 2022;52(7):513-526
		                        		
		                        			 Background and Objectives:
		                        			Atrial tachycardias (ATs) from noncoronary aortic cusp (NCC) uncovered after radiofrequency ablation for atrial fibrillation (AF) are rarely reported. This study was conducted to investigate the prevalence and clinical characteristics of NCC ATs detected during AF ablation and compare their characteristics with de novo NCC ATs without AF. 
		                        		
		                        			Methods:
		                        			Consecutive patients who underwent radiofrequency catheter ablation for AF were reviewed from the multicenter AF ablation registry of 11 tertiary hospitals. The clinical and electrophysiological characteristics of NCC AT newly detected during AF ablation were compared with its comparators (de novo NCC AT ablation cases without AF). 
		                        		
		                        			Results:
		                        			Among 10,178 AF cases, including 1,301 redo ablation cases, 8 (0.08%) NCC AT cases were discovered after pulmonary vein isolation (PVI; 0.07% in first ablation and 0.15% in redo ablation cases). All ATs were reproducibly inducible spontaneously or with programmed atrial stimulation without isoproterenol infusion. The P-wave morphological features of tachycardia were variable depending on the case, and most cases exhibited 1:1 atrioventricular conduction. AF recurrence rate after PVI and NCC AT successful ablation was 12.5% (1 of 8). Tachycardia cycle length was shorter than that of 17 de novo ATs from NCC (303 versus 378, p=0.012). No AV block occurred during and after successful AT ablation. 
		                        		
		                        			Conclusions
		                        			Uncommon NCC ATs (0.08% in AF ablation cases) uncovered after PVI, showing different characteristics compared to de-novo NCC ATs, should be suspected irrespective of P-wave morphologies when AT shows broad propagation from the anterior interatrial septum. 
		                        		
		                        		
		                        		
		                        	
5.Development and Validation of a Symptom-Focused Quality of Life Questionnaire (KOQUSS-40) for Gastric Cancer Patients after Gastrectomy
Bang Wool EOM ; Joongyub LEE ; In Seob LEE ; Young-Gil SON ; Keun Won RYU ; Sung Geun KIM ; Hyoung-Il KIM ; Young-Woo KIM ; Seong-Ho KONG ; Oh Kyoung KWON ; Ji-Ho PARK ; Ji Yeong AN ; Chang Hyun KIM ; Byoung-Jo SUH ; Hong Man YOON ; Myoung Won SON ; Ji Yeon PARK ; Jong-Min PARK ; Sang-Ho JEONG ; Moon-Won YOO ; Geum Jong SONG ; Han-Kwang YANG ; Yun-Suhk SUH ; Ki Bum PARK ; Sang-Hoon AHN ; Dong Woo SHIN ; Ye Seob JEE ; Hye-Seong AHN ; Sol LEE ; Jae Seok MIN ; Haejin IN ; Ahyoung KIM ; Hoon HUR ; Hyuk-Joon LEE ;
Cancer Research and Treatment 2021;53(3):763-772
		                        		
		                        			Purpose:
		                        			Patients who have undergone gastrectomy have unique symptoms that are not appropriately assessed using currently available tools. This study developed and validated a symptom-focused quality of life (QoL) questionnaire for patients who have received gastrectomy for gastric cancer. Materials and Methods Based on a literature review, patient interviews, and expert consultation by the KOrean QUality of life in Stomach cancer patients Study group (KOQUSS), the initial item pool was developed. Two large-scale developmental studies were then sequentially conducted for exploratory factor analyses for content validity and item reduction. The final item pool was validated in a separate cohort of patients and assessed for internal consistency, test-retest reliability, construct validity, and clinical validity. 
		                        		
		                        			Results
		                        			The initial questionnaire consisted of 46-items in 12 domains. Data from 465 patients at 11 institutions, followed by 499 patients at 13 institutions, were used to conduct item reduction and exploratory factor analyses. The final questionnaire (KOQUSS-40) comprised 40 items within 11 domains. Validation of KOQUSS-40 was conducted on 413 patients from 12 hospitals. KOQUSS-40 was found to have good model fit. The mean summary score of the KOQUSS-40 was correlated with the EORTC QLQ-C30 and STO22 (correlation coefficients, 0.821 and 0.778, respectively). The KOQUSS-40 score was also correlated with clinical factors, and had acceptable internal consistency (> 0.7). Test-retest reliability was greater than 0.8. Conclusion The KOQUSS-40 can be used to assess QoL of gastric cancer patients after gastrectomy and allows for a robust comparison of surgical techniques in clinical trials.
		                        		
		                        		
		                        		
		                        	
6.KASL clinical practice guidelines: Management of nonalcoholic fatty liver disease
Seong Hee KANG ; Hye Won LEE ; Jeong-Ju YOO ; Yuri CHO ; Seung Up KIM ; Tae Hee LEE ; Byoung Kuk JANG ; Sang Gyune KIM ; Sang Bong AHN ; Haeryoung KIM ; Dae Won JUN ; Joon-Il CHOI ; Do Seon SONG ; Won KIM ; Soung Won JEONG ; Moon Young KIM ; Hong KOH ; Sujin JEONG ; Jin-Woo LEE ; Yong Kyun CHO ;
Clinical and Molecular Hepatology 2021;27(3):363-401
		                        		
		                        		
		                        		
		                        	
7.Development and Validation of a Symptom-Focused Quality of Life Questionnaire (KOQUSS-40) for Gastric Cancer Patients after Gastrectomy
Bang Wool EOM ; Joongyub LEE ; In Seob LEE ; Young-Gil SON ; Keun Won RYU ; Sung Geun KIM ; Hyoung-Il KIM ; Young-Woo KIM ; Seong-Ho KONG ; Oh Kyoung KWON ; Ji-Ho PARK ; Ji Yeong AN ; Chang Hyun KIM ; Byoung-Jo SUH ; Hong Man YOON ; Myoung Won SON ; Ji Yeon PARK ; Jong-Min PARK ; Sang-Ho JEONG ; Moon-Won YOO ; Geum Jong SONG ; Han-Kwang YANG ; Yun-Suhk SUH ; Ki Bum PARK ; Sang-Hoon AHN ; Dong Woo SHIN ; Ye Seob JEE ; Hye-Seong AHN ; Sol LEE ; Jae Seok MIN ; Haejin IN ; Ahyoung KIM ; Hoon HUR ; Hyuk-Joon LEE ;
Cancer Research and Treatment 2021;53(3):763-772
		                        		
		                        			Purpose:
		                        			Patients who have undergone gastrectomy have unique symptoms that are not appropriately assessed using currently available tools. This study developed and validated a symptom-focused quality of life (QoL) questionnaire for patients who have received gastrectomy for gastric cancer. Materials and Methods Based on a literature review, patient interviews, and expert consultation by the KOrean QUality of life in Stomach cancer patients Study group (KOQUSS), the initial item pool was developed. Two large-scale developmental studies were then sequentially conducted for exploratory factor analyses for content validity and item reduction. The final item pool was validated in a separate cohort of patients and assessed for internal consistency, test-retest reliability, construct validity, and clinical validity. 
		                        		
		                        			Results
		                        			The initial questionnaire consisted of 46-items in 12 domains. Data from 465 patients at 11 institutions, followed by 499 patients at 13 institutions, were used to conduct item reduction and exploratory factor analyses. The final questionnaire (KOQUSS-40) comprised 40 items within 11 domains. Validation of KOQUSS-40 was conducted on 413 patients from 12 hospitals. KOQUSS-40 was found to have good model fit. The mean summary score of the KOQUSS-40 was correlated with the EORTC QLQ-C30 and STO22 (correlation coefficients, 0.821 and 0.778, respectively). The KOQUSS-40 score was also correlated with clinical factors, and had acceptable internal consistency (> 0.7). Test-retest reliability was greater than 0.8. Conclusion The KOQUSS-40 can be used to assess QoL of gastric cancer patients after gastrectomy and allows for a robust comparison of surgical techniques in clinical trials.
		                        		
		                        		
		                        		
		                        	
8.KASL clinical practice guidelines: Management of nonalcoholic fatty liver disease
Seong Hee KANG ; Hye Won LEE ; Jeong-Ju YOO ; Yuri CHO ; Seung Up KIM ; Tae Hee LEE ; Byoung Kuk JANG ; Sang Gyune KIM ; Sang Bong AHN ; Haeryoung KIM ; Dae Won JUN ; Joon-Il CHOI ; Do Seon SONG ; Won KIM ; Soung Won JEONG ; Moon Young KIM ; Hong KOH ; Sujin JEONG ; Jin-Woo LEE ; Yong Kyun CHO ;
Clinical and Molecular Hepatology 2021;27(3):363-401
		                        		
		                        		
		                        		
		                        	
9.Bleeding after Endoscopic Resection in Patients with End-Stage Renal Disease on Dialysis: A Multicenter Propensity Score-Matched Analysis
In Kyung YOO ; Chan Gyoo KIM ; Young Ju SUH ; Younkyung OH ; Gwang Ho BAIK ; Sun Moon KIM ; Young Dae KIM ; Chul-Hyun LIM ; Jung Won JEON ; Su Jin HONG ; Byoung Wook BANG ; Joon Sung KIM ; Jun-Won CHUNG
Clinical Endoscopy 2020;53(4):452-457
		                        		
		                        			 Background/Aims:
		                        			Frequent bleeding after endoscopic resection (ER) has been reported in patients with end-stage renal disease (ESRD). We aimed to evaluate the association and clinical significance of bleeding with ER in ESRD patients on dialysis. 
		                        		
		                        			Methods:
		                        			Between February 2008 and December 2018, 7,571 patients, including 47 ESRD patients on dialysis who underwent ER for gastric neoplasia, were enrolled. A total of 47 ESRDpatients on dialysis were propensity score-matched 1:10 to 470 non-ESRD patients, to adjust for between-group differences in variables such as age, sex, comorbidities, anticoagulation use, tumor characteristics, and ER method. Matching was performed using an optimal matching algorithm. For the matched data, clustered comparisons were performed using the generalized estimating equation method. Medical records were retrospectively reviewed. Frequency and outcomes of post-ER bleeding were evaluated. 
		                        		
		                        			Results:
		                        			Bleeding was more frequent in the ESRD with dialysis group than in the non-ESRD group. ESRD with dialysis conferred a significant risk of post-ER bleeding (odds ratio, 6.1; 95% confidence interval, 2.7–13.6; p<0.0001). All post-ER bleeding events were controlled using endoscopic hemostasis except in 1 non-ESRD case that needed surgery. 
		                        		
		                        			Conclusions
		                        			ESRD with dialysis confers a bleeding risk after ER. However, all bleeding events could be managed endoscopically without sequelae. Concern about bleeding should not stop endoscopists from performing ER in ESRD patients on dialysis. 
		                        		
		                        		
		                        		
		                        	
10.2014–2017 Nationwide Bariatric and Metabolic Surgery Report in Korea
In Gyu KWON ; Jong Won KIM ; Gil Ho KANG ; Dong Wook KIM ; Sung Geun KIM ; Seong Min KIM ; Seong Soo KIM ; Yong Jin KIM ; Wook KIM ; Jong Han KIM ; Ji Heon KIM ; Jin Jo KIM ; Ho Goon KIM ; Seung Wan RYU ; Do Joong PARK ; Dong Jin PARK ; Sung Soo PARK ; Yoon Chan PARK ; Joong Min PARK ; Ji Yeon PARK ; Kyung Won SEO ; Byoung Jo SUH ; Soo Min AHN ; Hye Seong AHN ; Moon Won YOO ; Sang Kuon LEE ; Han Hong LEE ; Hyuk Joon LEE ; Kyong Hwa JUN ; Kyung Ook JUNG ; Minyoung CHO ; Seung Ho CHOI ; Man ho HA ; Tae Kyung HA ; Sang Moon HAN ; Sang Uk HAN ; Yoon Seok HEO ; Woo Jin HYUNG ; Joo Ho LEE ;
Journal of Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery 2018;7(2):49-53
		                        		
		                        			
		                        			PURPOSE: The information committee of the Korean Society for Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery (KSMBS) performed the nationwide survey of bariatric and metabolic operations to report IFSO (International Federation for the Surgery of Obesity and Metabolic Disorders) worldwide survey annually. This study aimed to report the trends of bariatric and metabolic surgery in Korea in 2014–2017. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We analyzed the accumulated nationwide survey data conducted for annual ISFO survey from 2014 to 2017. Trends such as the number of operations by hospital type and the number of operations by surgical method were analyzed. RESULTS: The number of operations has decreased sharply in 2015 comparing to 2014 (913⇒550). The number of operations performed in private hospitals dropped sharply from 529 to 250, 198, and 103 cases. The number of revisional surgeries increased to 223 in 2015. The primary surgery number fell from 757 in 2014 to 327 in 2015. In primary surgery, sleeve gastrectomy was gradually increased from 2014 to 143 (18.9%), 105 (32.1%), 167 (47.2%) and 200 (56.3%) and became the most frequently performed surgery. On the other hand, the incidence of adjustable gastric band decreased gradually from 439 (58.0%) to 117 (35.8%), 112 (31.6%) and 59 (16.6%). CONCLUSION: The overall number of obesity metabolic operations has decreased since 2014, especially the number of adjustable gastric band, and the number of operations in private hospitals declined sharply. On the other hand, the number of operations in university hospitals did not change much, and the number of sleeve gastrectomy increased.
		                        		
		                        		
		                        		
		                        			Bariatric Surgery
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		                        			Gastrectomy
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		                        			Hand
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		                        			Hospitals, Private
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		                        			Hospitals, University
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		                        			Incidence
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		                        			Korea
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		                        			Methods
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		                        			Obesity
		                        			
		                        		
		                        	
            
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