1.A Case Study of Imagery Rehearsal Therapy in a Nightmare Disorder Patient with Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
Soyeong PARK ; Su Jung CHOI ; Eun Yeon JOO ; Sooyeon SUH
Journal of Sleep Medicine 2019;16(1):61-66
Nightmares are vivid, unpleasant dreams that result in awakening during sleep. According to previous studies, the prevalence of nightmare disorder is 2–5% of the general population and is associated with other medical conditions and mental illnesses. Imagery rehearsal therapy (IRT) is an evidence-based treatment for nightmare disorder. The current study is a case study with a 35-year-old female who was diagnosed with nightmare disorder and posttraumatic stress disorder, and participated in IRT for five sessions. Prior to treatment, the patient reported difficulties initiating and maintaining sleep, and reported suffering from nightmares more than 2–3 times per week. After treatment, the patient reported no longer experienced nightmares, accompanied by improvements in both sleep and clinical indicators.
Adult
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Dreams
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Female
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Humans
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Prevalence
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Sleep Initiation and Maintenance Disorders
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Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic
2.Sleep in the Greek Mythology
Journal of Sleep Medicine 2019;16(1):21-25
OBJECTIVES: There was also an observation about the “sleep” in the Greek era, which is called the primordial current of modern medicine, which is interpreted as a phenomenon organized by God and appears in various forms in Greek mythology. METHODS: We used the words ‘Greek mythology,’ ‘Sleep,’ ‘God of Sleep,’ ‘Greece,’ and ‘myth’ in English and Korean on Google site for information on sleep in Greek mythology. RESULTS: In Greek mythology, stories appeared about the sleeping god Hypnos, his wife Pasithea, and the dream gods Oneiroi, to explain the mystery of sleep. The various ideas of ancient Greeks' sleep are reflected in legends about Ceyx and Alcyone, Psyche, Endymion, Ariadne, Argos, and Polyphemus. CONCLUSIONS: The images of sleep in Greek mythology that have continued for decades include observations and experiences of mankind. This can be interpreted from a medical point of view as the important significance of sleep on humans.
Dreams
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History, Modern 1601-
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Humans
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Mythology
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Spouses
3.Survey of Knowledge on Insomnia for Sleep Clinic Clients
Sleep Medicine and Psychophysiology 2019;26(1):23-32
OBJECTIVES: Insomnia is not only the most common sleep-related disorder, but also is one of the most important. Knowledge of the comorbidities of insomnia is essential for proper treatment including pharmacological and non-pharmacological methods to prevent disease chronification. This study aimed to determine sleep clinic patients' knowledge of insomnia. METHODS: This study recruited 44 patients (24 males and 20 females; mean age 54.11 ± 16.30 years) from the sleep clinic at National Center for Mental Health. All subjects were asked to complete a self-report questionnaire about their reasons for visiting a sleep clinic and about their knowledge of treatment and comorbidities of insomnia. RESULTS: The reasons for visiting the sleep clinic were insomnia symptoms of daytime sleepiness, irregular sleeping time, nightmares, snoring, and sleep apnea, in that order. Of the responders, 72.7% had a comorbidity of insomnia, and 22.7% showed high-risk alcohol use. In addition, 70.5% of responders chose pharmacological treatment of insomnia as the first option and reported collection of information about treatment of insomnia mainly from the internet and medical staff. More than half (52.3%) of the respondents reported that they had never heard about non-pharmacological treatments of insomnia such as cognitive behavioral treatment (CBT-I) or light therapy. The response rate about comorbidities of varied, with 75% of responders reporting knowledge of the relation between insomnia and depression, but only 38.6% stating awareness of the relation between insomnia and alcohol use disorder. Of the total responders, 68.2% were worried about hypnotics for insomnia treatment, and 70% were concerned about drug dependence. CONCLUSION: This study showed that patients at a sleep clinic had limited knowledge about insomnia. It is necessary to develop standardized insomnia treatment guidelines and educational handbooks for those suffering from insomnia. In addition, evaluation of alcohol use disorders is essential in the initial assessment of sleep disorders.
Comorbidity
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Depression
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Dreams
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Female
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Humans
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Hypnotics and Sedatives
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Internet
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Male
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Medical Staff
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Mental Health
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Phototherapy
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Sleep Apnea Syndromes
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Sleep Initiation and Maintenance Disorders
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Sleep Wake Disorders
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Snoring
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Substance-Related Disorders
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Surveys and Questionnaires
4.Being Metabolically Healthy, the Most Responsible Factor for Vascular Health
Diabetes & Metabolism Journal 2018;42(1):19-25
The prevalence of obesity is rapidly increasing worldwide. One-thirds of world population is suffering from the deleterious effects of excessive fat and adipose tissue in their body. At the same time, the average life expectancy is becoming higher and higher every decade. Therefore, living healthy and longer is the dream for everyone. Simply being obese is not the primary cause for the consequence of obesity; rather, the depot where the fat is accumulated, is the primary key for the deleterious effects of obesity. Results from historical research suggest that visceral fat increases the risk for cardiovascular and metabolic diseases, such as diabetes, myocardial infarction and ischemic stroke, not subcutaneous fat. Therefore, body mass index (BMI), which reflects body weight relative to height might not reflect the appropriate size of metabolic burden of fat in our body. In contrast, waist circumference, which reflects abdominal obesity, would mirror the metabolic burden of fat better than BMI. Visceral fat is the marker of ectopic fat accumulation. In this review, I will introduce my researches mainly involved in uncovering the clues to the link between metabolic health and cardiovascular disease.
Adipose Tissue
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Body Mass Index
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Body Weight
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Cardiovascular Diseases
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Dreams
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Intra-Abdominal Fat
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Life Expectancy
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Metabolic Diseases
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Myocardial Infarction
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Obesity
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Obesity, Abdominal
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Prevalence
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Stroke
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Subcutaneous Fat
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Waist Circumference
5.Nursing Students' Observation Experiences During Operations
Journal of Korean Biological Nursing Science 2018;20(3):159-168
PURPOSE: This study aimed to explore nursing students' experiences of observing surgeries in the operating room. METHODS: The data were collected through written scripts of nursing students who participated in the operating room practice. Data were analyzed via qualitative content analysis. RESULTS: Five themes emerged from the data: ‘preparing with the thrilled hearts toward unknown area’, ‘drawing back in front of the mirror of realities’, ‘becoming an audience at a lifesaving orchestra’, ‘reaching a tipping point of knowing’, and ‘redrawing the trajectory of dream to be a nurse. CONCLUSION: This study will prove helpful in describing their needs for systemic and emotional support. Findings indicated that major contributions of surgical observations to nursing students are more integrated understandings of nursing and the determinations of their career preferences.
Dreams
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Heart
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Humans
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Nursing
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Operating Rooms
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Qualitative Research
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Students, Nursing
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Surgical Procedures, Operative
6.“Journal of Korean Neuropsychiatric Association” Dreaming of Re-Leap
Journal of Korean Neuropsychiatric Association 2018;57(1):1-1
No abstract available.
Dreams
7.Sharing Pathological Mechanisms of Insomnia and Osteoporosis, and a New Perspective on Safe Drug Choice
Sun Shin YI ; Soo Ho CHUNG ; Pan Soo KIM
Journal of Menopausal Medicine 2018;24(3):143-149
Lack of adequate sleep has become increasingly common in our 24/7 modern society. Reduced sleep has significant health consequences including metabolic and cardiovascular disorders, and mental problems including depression. In addition, although the increase in life expectancy has provided a dream of longevity to humans, the occurrence of osteoporosis is a big obstacle to this dream for both male and female. It is known that insomnia and bone health problems, which are very critical conditions in human life, interestingly, share a lot of pathogenesis in recent decades. Nevertheless, due to another side effects of the synthetic drugs being taken for the treatment of insomnia and osteoporosis, patients have substantial anxiety for the safety of drugs with therapeutic expectation. This review examines the pathogenesis shared by sleep and osteoporosis together and herbal medicine, which has recently been shown to be safe and efficacious in the treatment of both diseases other than synthetic drugs. We suggestions for how to treat osteoporosis. These efforts will be the first step toward enabling patients to have comfortable and safe prescriptions through a wide selection of therapeutic agents in the future.
Anxiety
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Depression
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Dreams
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Female
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Herbal Medicine
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Humans
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Life Expectancy
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Longevity
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Male
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Osteoporosis
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Prescriptions
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Sleep Initiation and Maintenance Disorders
8.Sleep Related Problems as a Nonmotor Symptom of Dentatorubropallidoluysian Atrophy.
Hyeyun KIM ; Ji Young YUN ; Kyoung Gyu CHOI ; Heasoo KOO ; Hyun Jeong HAN
Journal of Korean Medical Science 2018;33(17):e130-
Dentatorubropallidoluysian atrophy (DRPLA) is a neurodegenerative disease caused by an expansion of a cytosine-adenine-guanine (CAG) repeat encoding a polyglutamine tract in the atrophin-1 protein. Unlike other CAG repeat diseases, sleep related problems have not been reported in patients with DRPLA. There was a 65-year-old man and his family with DRPLA. They suffered from seizure, gait disturbance, and cognitive decline. The patients commonly showed dream enacting sleep disorder, insomnia. The results from overnight polysomnography showed rapid eye movement (REM) without atonia in patients with DRPLA. The man died 2 years after diagnosis and was subjected for brain autopsy. We report REM sleep behavior disorders in patients with DRPLA confirmed with polysomnography with pathological description of the patient.
Aged
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Atrophy*
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Autopsy
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Brain
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Cerebellar Ataxia
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Diagnosis
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Dreams
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Gait
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Humans
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Mental Disorders
;
Neurodegenerative Diseases
;
Polysomnography
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Seizures
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Sleep Initiation and Maintenance Disorders
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Sleep Wake Disorders
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Sleep, REM
9.Modafinil Dependence: A Case with Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder.
Huseyin ALACAM ; Omer BASAY ; Selim TUMKAYA ; Mehmet MART ; Gokce KAR
Psychiatry Investigation 2018;15(4):424-427
Modafinil is generally known as a drug with low addiction potential. There are few case reports in the literature demonstrating that Modafinil, stated being capable of diminishing symptoms of attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), causes addiction. In the present article a Modafinil addicted ADHD case, consuming usurious doses (5,000 mg/per day) of Modafinil is presented. The case presented to our psychiatry outpatient clinic due to: requirement of in taking high dose Modafinil in order to achieve the initial effects, difficulty in obtaining the drug, irritability, anxiousness, sleep irregularities, fatigue and unpleasant vivid dreams when he did not use the drug. It was realized that the patient, himself increased doses of Modafinil incrementally, in order to keep its effects on attention symptoms at the same level. It has to be kept in mind that ADHD patients can develop Modafinil addiction. It is necessary to carry out systemic studies on this subject.
Ambulatory Care Facilities
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Dreams
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Fatigue
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Humans
10.A Qualitative Study on the Process of the Mental Health Assessment and Intervention after the Sewol Ferry Disaster: Focusing on Survivors among Danwon High School Students.
Mi Sun LEE ; Jun Won HWANG ; Soo Young BHANG
Journal of the Korean Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry 2018;29(4):161-171
OBJECTIVES: This study aimed to identify the process of psychosocial assessment, the experience of intervention, and the improvement after the disaster that Danwon high school students survived from the sinking of the Motor Vessel (MV) Sewol in South Korea on April 16, 2014. METHODS: We conducted in-depth qualitative research using individual interviews from January to February 2017. Twenty-one of 75 Danwon high school students survived by the MV Sewol disaster were studied. Two interviewers participated in the in-depth interview. Interviews were transcribed verbatim, coded, and analyzed through content analysis based on psychosocial assessment and intervention after the disaster. RESULTS: Twenty-one participants were 20 years old, where 10 were male (47.62%), and 11 were female (52.38%). More than 75% of the interviewed students felt that mental health services were needed, and more than 85% required mental health assessments. Regarding psychiatric symptoms, the students reported that they suffered depression and insomnia (19.05%), anxiety (14.29%), nightmares and phobias (9.52%), and difficulties regarding concentration, aggression, and game addiction (4.76%). CONCLUSION: Despite survivors experiencing the same disaster, there were differences in their responses to mental health assessments and interventions experienced during the three years, and conflicting opinions were reported. In planning future evaluations and interventions, it is necessary for strategies to cope with flexibly to consider the characteristics and symptoms of the survivors while maintaining principles.
Aggression
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Anxiety
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Depression
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Disasters*
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Dreams
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Female
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Humans
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Korea
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Male
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Mental Health Services
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Mental Health*
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Phobic Disorders
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Qualitative Research
;
Sleep Initiation and Maintenance Disorders
;
Survivors*

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