1.Unilateral Anterior Cerebral Artery Infarction Presenting with Sensory Level
Journal of the Korean Neurological Association 2025;43(1):28-30
The author reports a patient with anterior cerebral artery (ACA) territory infarction presenting with myelopathy-like symptoms. The patient developed leg weakness and sensory loss below T4 level on the right side. Magnetic resonance imaging revealed no abnormalities in the spinal cord, but acute infarction in the left medial frontal lobe and stenosis of the left ACA. This case presents unusual clinical manifestation of ACA infarction mimicking myelopathy.
2.Unilateral Anterior Cerebral Artery Infarction Presenting with Sensory Level
Journal of the Korean Neurological Association 2025;43(1):28-30
The author reports a patient with anterior cerebral artery (ACA) territory infarction presenting with myelopathy-like symptoms. The patient developed leg weakness and sensory loss below T4 level on the right side. Magnetic resonance imaging revealed no abnormalities in the spinal cord, but acute infarction in the left medial frontal lobe and stenosis of the left ACA. This case presents unusual clinical manifestation of ACA infarction mimicking myelopathy.
3.Unilateral Anterior Cerebral Artery Infarction Presenting with Sensory Level
Journal of the Korean Neurological Association 2025;43(1):28-30
The author reports a patient with anterior cerebral artery (ACA) territory infarction presenting with myelopathy-like symptoms. The patient developed leg weakness and sensory loss below T4 level on the right side. Magnetic resonance imaging revealed no abnormalities in the spinal cord, but acute infarction in the left medial frontal lobe and stenosis of the left ACA. This case presents unusual clinical manifestation of ACA infarction mimicking myelopathy.
4.Efficacy and Safety of Low-Dose Intravesical OnabotulinumtoxinA Injections in Female Patients With Detrusor Overactivity With Detrusor Underactivity
Hyun Seok NA ; Chung Lyul LEE ; Jae Sung LIM ; Ki Hak SONG ; Ju Hyun SHIN ; Jong Mok PARK ; Ji Yong LEE
International Neurourology Journal 2024;28(1):52-58
Purpose:
We assessed the effectiveness and safety of using intravesical onabotulinumtoxinA (onabotA; BOTOX) injection with a low dose (75 units) for treating urinary storage symptoms in patients with detrusor overactivity with detrusor underactivity (DODU) compared to using the standard 100 units of onabotA in patients with overactive bladder (OAB).
Methods:
This ambidirectional study included 121 female patients who received intravesical onabotA injections at our hospitals. A total of 87 patients with OAB and 34 patients with DODU were reviewed using a 3-day voiding diary, uroflowmetry, and questionnaires including the International Prostate Symptom Score (IPSS), Overactive Bladder Symptom Score, and Patient Perception of Bladder Condition. Patients were evaluated at baseline, within 2 weeks of treatment, and beyond 3 months after treatment.
Results:
Questionnaire scores of the DODU group demonstrated significant improvement in the short term, with a subsequent decline, but an overall improvement compared to baseline in the long term. Notably, the DODU group exhibited enhanced IPSS voiding scores after the treatment. In the OAB group, most questionnaire scores, excluding the IPSS voiding score, showed significant posttreatment improvement, which was sustained to some extent in the long term. Voiding diary parameters related to storage symptoms were enhanced in both groups. The maximum and mean flow rates decreased in the OAB group but increased in the DODU group, particularly in the short term (P=0.000). The postvoid residual volume increased in both groups after posttreatment, with a mitigated change in the long term. Safety assessments revealed manageable adverse events in both groups with comparable frequencies.
Conclusions
Low-dose intravesical onabotA for DODU demonstrated a relatively shorter duration of efficacy than OAB. Nonetheless, the treatment improved both storage and voiding symptoms in patients with DODU without significant adverse effects.
6.Three Cases of Suicide Using Dry Ice
Dae Yoil KIM ; SangHan LEE ; Young Mi KIM ; Min Seon SONG ; Munju KIM ; Jung Mok KIM
Korean Journal of Legal Medicine 2023;47(3):70-74
Dry ice is a solid form of carbon dioxide and is commonly used in everyday life to keep food or medicine cold. In South Korea, there have been rare cases of carbon dioxide asphyxiation and poisoning from dry ice, though there have been no reports of its use in suicide. In the first case, a man was found lying down dead and left a large amount of dry ice in his room. In the second case, a man died by tying a belt around his neck after placing a plastic bag filled with dry ice over his head. The third death was by placing a large amount of dry ice in a large rubber basin in his room and filling it with water. Dry ice itself is mostly harmless, but if it is not handled carefully in a confined space, it can cause accidents due to accidental oxygen deprivation. Its easy availability in everyday life also means it is likely to be misused for suicidal purposes. Investigators should consider the potential for asphyxiation or poisoning incidents if they discover dry ice or its packaging at the forensic scene.
7.Magnetic resonance imaging features of syringobulbia in small breed dogs
Young-Mok SONG ; In LEE ; Yu-Mi SONG ; Ho-Jung CHOI ; Young-Won LEE
Korean Journal of Veterinary Research 2023;63(3):e26-
Syringobulbia is a rare neurological disorder characterized by a fluid-filled cavity in the brainstem. In this study, clinical signs, features on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), and the diseases present concurrently with syringobulbia were investigated in 33 small breed dogs. Most dogs (97%) had concurrent syringomyelia, and some dogs (24%) presented with vestibular or cranial nerve symptoms associated with the medulla oblongata. MRIs revealed slit-like, bulbous, and vertical linear shapes of the cavities on T2-weighted hyperintense and T1-weighted hypointense signals similar to the cerebrospinal fluid. Chiari-like malformations were identified in all dogs. This study highlights the association of syringobulbia with syringomyelia and Chiari-like malformations in small breed dogs with or without brainstem-associated clinical signs.
8.Multiple Cerebral infarction Associated with Heat Stroke
Journal of the Korean Neurological Association 2022;40(1):63-65
Heat stroke is a condition of severe heat injury characterized by hyperthermia, multiorgan failure and central nervous system dysfunction. A 79-year-old woman was brought to our hospital in a semicomatose state. She was found lying unconscious on her house yard at a hot summer day. Her body temperature was 40.3°C. Laboratory findings were consistent with multiorgan failure and rhabdomyolysis. Brain magnetic resonance imaging showed multifocal infarctions in the bilateral basal ganglia, cerebellum, and occipital lobe. Despite cooling therapy and supportive treatment, her mentality was not recovered. This case suggests that multiple cerebral infarction may occur as a complication of heat stroke and prompt treatment is crucial.
9.Clinical and psychosocial characteristics related to self-harm in adolescent admitted to psychiatric wards in Korea: a retrospective chart review
In Mok SONG ; Yoo-Sook JOUNG ; Byoung-Uk KIM ; Hyerin LEE ; Jung Yoon CHA ; Chang Won JANG ; Bo Mi AHN
Journal of the Korean Medical Association 2022;65(11):758-770
Background:
Self-harm is an important public health problem with increasing incidences among adolescents for over a decade. This study aimed to identify factors associated with self-harm in adolescent psychiatric inpatients in Korea. We also investigated clinical characteristics associated with nonsuicidal self-injury disorder (NSSI-D) and suicidal behavior disorder (SBD) according to the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders 5 criteria.
Methods:
This retrospective study included 215 adolescents aged between 12 to 18 years, who were admitted to the psychiatric ward of Samsung Medical Center, Seoul, Korea, from January 2014 to February 2021. Participants were divided into three groups according to NSSI-D and SBD diagnostic criteria. Collected data were analyzed using chi-square test and analysis of variance test.
Results:
Overall, 57.7% of the participants (n=124) reported self-harm at least once in their lives. Patients with self-harm were more likely to have experienced parental conflict, parent-child relational problems, and verbal, physical, or sexual abuse. Among the three groups divided according to NSSI-D and SBD diagnostic criteria, patients with both NSSI-D and SBD were more likely to have experienced parent-child relational problems than those with either NSSI-D only or SBD only.
Conclusion
This study shows that parent-child relational problem is associated with high incidences of selfharm. Especially, the parent-child relational problem seemed to be a risk factor for SBD among patients with NSSI-D. These are important findings that provide an understanding of the self-harm characteristics and therefore improve prevention and treatment strategies in psychiatric adolescent patients.
10.Comparison of the Optimized Intraocular Lens Constants Calculated by Automated and Manifest Refraction for Korean
Youngsub EOM ; Dong Hui LIM ; Dong Hyun KIM ; Yong-Soo BYUN ; Kyung Sun NA ; Seong-Jae KIM ; Chang Rae RHO ; So-Hyang CHUNG ; Ji Eun LEE ; Kyong Jin CHO ; Tae-Young CHUNG ; Eun Chul KIM ; Young Joo SHIN ; Sang-Mok LEE ; Yang Kyung CHO ; Kyung Chul YOON ; In-Cheon YOU ; Byung Yi KO ; Hong Kyun KIM ; Jong Suk SONG ; Do Hyung LEE
Journal of the Korean Ophthalmological Society 2022;63(9):747-753
Purpose:
To derive the optimized intraocular lens (IOL) constants from automated and manifest refraction after cataract surgery in Korean patients, and to evaluate whether there is a difference in optimized IOL constants according to the refraction method.
Methods:
This retrospective multicenter cohort study enrolled 4,103 eyes of 4,103 patients who underwent phacoemulsification and in-the-bag IOL implantation at 18 institutes. Optimized IOL constants for the SRK/T, Holladay, Hoffer Q, and Haigis formulas were calculated via autorefraction or manifest refraction of samples using the same biometry and IOL. The IOL constants derived from autorefraction and manifest refraction were compared.
Results:
Of the 4,103 eyes, the majority (62.9%) were measured with an IOLMaster 500 followed by an IOLMaster 700 (15.2%). A total of 33 types of IOLs were used, and the Tecnis ZCB00 was the most frequently used (53.0%). There was no statistically significant difference in IOL constants derived from autorefraction and manifest refraction when IOL constants were optimized with a large number of study subjects. On the other hand, optimized IOL constants derived from autorefraction were significantly smaller than those from manifest refraction when the number of subjects was small.
Conclusions
It became possible to use the IOL constants optimized from Koreans to calculate the IOL power. However, if the IOL constant is optimized using autorefraction in a small sample group, the IOL constant tends to be small, which may lead to refractive error after surgery.

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