1.2023 Clinical Practice Guidelines for Diabetes Management in Korea: Full Version Recommendation of the Korean Diabetes Association
Jun Sung MOON ; Shinae KANG ; Jong Han CHOI ; Kyung Ae LEE ; Joon Ho MOON ; Suk CHON ; Dae Jung KIM ; Hyun Jin KIM ; Ji A SEO ; Mee Kyoung KIM ; Jeong Hyun LIM ; Yoon Ju SONG ; Ye Seul YANG ; Jae Hyeon KIM ; You-Bin LEE ; Junghyun NOH ; Kyu Yeon HUR ; Jong Suk PARK ; Sang Youl RHEE ; Hae Jin KIM ; Hyun Min KIM ; Jung Hae KO ; Nam Hoon KIM ; Chong Hwa KIM ; Jeeyun AHN ; Tae Jung OH ; Soo-Kyung KIM ; Jaehyun KIM ; Eugene HAN ; Sang-Man JIN ; Jaehyun BAE ; Eonju JEON ; Ji Min KIM ; Seon Mee KANG ; Jung Hwan PARK ; Jae-Seung YUN ; Bong-Soo CHA ; Min Kyong MOON ; Byung-Wan LEE
Diabetes & Metabolism Journal 2024;48(4):546-708
2.A simple and novel equation to estimate the degree of bleeding in haemorrhagic shock: mathematical derivation and preliminary in vivo validation
Sung-Bin CHON ; Min Ji LEE ; Won Sup OH ; Ye Jin PARK ; Joon-Myoung KWON ; Kyuseok KIM
The Korean Journal of Physiology and Pharmacology 2022;26(3):195-205
Determining blood loss [100% – RBV (%)] is challenging in the management of haemorrhagic shock. We derived an equation estimating RBV (%) via serial haematocrits (Hct1 , Hct2 ) by fixing infused crystalloid fluid volume (N) as [0.015 × body weight (g)]. Then, we validated it in vivo. Mathematically, the following estimation equation was derived: RBV (%) = 24k / [(Hct1 / Hct2 ) – 1]. For validation, nonongoing haemorrhagic shock was induced in Sprague–Dawley rats by withdrawing 20.0%–60.0% of their total blood volume (TBV) in 5.0% intervals (n = 9). Hct1 was checked after 10 min and normal saline N cc was infused over 10 min. Hct 2 was checked five minutes later. We applied a linear equation to explain RBV (%) with 1 / [(Hct1 / Hct2 ) – 1]. Seven rats losing 30.0%–60.0% of their TBV suffered shock persistently. For them, RBV (%) was updated as 5.67 / [(Hct1 / Hct2 ) – 1] + 32.8 (95% confidence interval [CI] of the slope: 3.14–8.21, p = 0.002, R2 = 0.87). On a Bland-Altman plot, the difference between the estimated and actual RBV was 0.00 ± 4.03%; the 95% CIs of the limits of agreements were included within the pre-determined criterion of validation (< 20%). For rats suffering from persistent, non-ongoing haemorrhagic shock, we derived and validated a simple equation estimating RBV (%). This enables the calculation of blood loss via information on serial haematocrits under a fixed N.Clinical validation is required before utilisation for emergency care of haemorrhagic shock.
3.Right cardiac border to cardiac diameter (RB:CD) ratio, a simple radiological index associated with a good neurological outcome
Himchan CHOI ; Sung-Bin CHON ; Seung Min YOO ; Hyoungouk KIM
Journal of the Korean Society of Emergency Medicine 2021;32(6):493-508
Objective:
The optimum chest compression point during cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) associated with a good neurological outcome is unestablished. We aimed to suggest the association between the point and a simple index measured on anteroposterior chest radiography (chest_AP).
Methods:
This retrospective, cross-sectional study included all adults with available chest_AP who arrived at a university hospital from January 2014 to June 2019 for non-traumatic out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA). Distances from the vertical midsternum to the farthest right and left cardiac borders were defined as RB and LB, respectively. Their sum provided cardiac diameter (CD). Assuming the universality of cardiac anatomy, the cardiac structure immediately beneath the midsternum was compressed most forcefully during CPR. The influencing outcome of CPR was determined using the RB:CD ratio. We investigated the association of RB:CD ratio with a good neurological outcome at discharge using multiple logistic regression analysis, adjusting for the core Utstein elements and comorbidities.
Results:
Among 429 patients (63.2±14.5 years; 121 [28.2%] female), return of spontaneous circulation, survival-to-discharge and good neurological outcome at discharge were achieved in 259 (60.4%), 121 (28.2%) and 84 (19.6%) cases, respectively. The RB:CD ratio (0.279±0.072) was divided into semi-tertiles to enhance clinical usage: <0.25 (n=149, reference), 0.25-0.30 (n=119) and >0.30 (n=161). The second group was associated with good neurological outcome (odds ratio, 6.00 [95% confidence interval, 1.58-22.8], P=0.010).
Conclusion
An RB:CD ratio of 0.25-0.30 measured on chest_AP is associated with good neurological outcomes in OHCA victims receiving CPR.
4.Association between hepatic steatosis and the development of hepatocellular carcinoma in patients with chronic hepatitis B
Yun Bin LEE ; Yeonjung HA ; Young Eun CHON ; Mi Na KIM ; Joo Ho LEE ; Hana PARK ; Kwang il KIM ; Soo Hwan KIM ; Kyu Sung RIM ; Seong Gyu HWANG
Clinical and Molecular Hepatology 2019;25(1):52-64
BACKGROUND/AIMS: Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is becoming a worldwide epidemic, and is frequently found in patients with chronic hepatitis B (CHB). We investigated the impact of histologically proven hepatic steatosis on the risk for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) in CHB patients without excessive alcohol intake. METHODS: Consecutive CHB patients who underwent liver biopsy from January 2007 to December 2015 were included. The association between hepatic steatosis (≥ 5%) and subsequent HCC risk was analyzed. Inverse probability weighting (IPW) using the propensity score was applied to adjust for differences in patient characteristics, including metabolic factors. RESULTS: Fatty liver was histologically proven in 70 patients (21.8%) among a total of 321 patients. During the median (interquartile range) follow-up of 5.3 (2.9–8.3) years, 17 of 321 patients (5.3%) developed HCC: 8 of 70 patients (11.4%) with fatty liver and 9 of 251 patients (3.6%) without fatty liver. The five-year cumulative incidences of HCC among patients without and with fatty liver were 1.9% and 8.2%, respectively (P=0.004). Coexisting fatty liver was associated with a higher risk for HCC (adjusted hazards ratio [HR], 3.005; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.122–8.051; P=0.03). After balancing with IPW, HCC incidences were not significantly different between the groups (P=0.19), and the association between fatty liver and HCC was not significant (adjusted HR, 1.709; 95% CI, 0.404–7.228; P=0.47). CONCLUSIONS: Superimposed NAFLD was associated with a higher HCC risk in CHB patients. However, the association between steatosis per se and HCC risk was not evident after adjustment for metabolic factors.
Biopsy
;
Carcinoma, Hepatocellular
;
Fatty Liver
;
Follow-Up Studies
;
Hepatitis B virus
;
Hepatitis B, Chronic
;
Hepatitis, Chronic
;
Humans
;
Incidence
;
Liver
;
Liver Neoplasms
;
Non-alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease
;
Propensity Score
5.Determination of the theoretical personalized optimum chest compression point using anteroposterior chest radiography
Shinwoo KIM ; Sung Bin CHON ; Won Sup OH ; Sunho CHO
Clinical and Experimental Emergency Medicine 2019;6(4):303-313
OBJECTIVE: There is a traditional assumption that to maximize stroke volume, the point beneath which the left ventricle (LV) is at its maximum diameter (P_max.LV) should be compressed. Thus, we aimed to derive and validate rules to estimate P_max.LV using anteroposterior chest radiography (chest_AP), which is performed for critically ill patients urgently needing determination of their personalized P_max.LV.METHODS: A retrospective, cross-sectional study was performed with non-cardiac arrest adults who underwent chest_AP within 1 hour of computed tomography (derivation:validation=3:2). On chest_AP, we defined cardiac diameter (CD), distance from right cardiac border to midline (RB), and cardiac height (CH) from the carina to the uppermost point of left hemi-diaphragm. Setting point zero (0, 0) at the midpoint of the xiphisternal joint and designating leftward and upward directions as positive on x- and y-axes, we located P_max.LV (x_max.LV, y_max.LV). The coefficients of the following mathematically inferred rules were sought: x_max.LV=α₀*CD-RB; y_max.LV=β₀*CH+γ₀ (α₀: mean of [x_max.LV+RB]/CD; β₀, γ₀: representative coefficient and constant of linear regression model, respectively).RESULTS: Among 360 cases (52.0±18.3 years, 102 females), we derived: x_max.LV=0.643*CD-RB and y_max.LV=55-0.390*CH. This estimated P_max.LV (19±11 mm) was as close as the averaged P_max.LV (19±11 mm, P=0.13) and closer than the three equidistant points representing the current guidelines (67±13, 56±10, and 77±17 mm; all P<0.001) to the reference identified on computed tomography. Thus, our findings were validated.CONCLUSION: Personalized P_max.LV can be estimated using chest_AP. Further studies with actual cardiac arrest victims are needed to verify the safety and effectiveness of the rule.
Adult
;
Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation
;
Critical Illness
;
Cross-Sectional Studies
;
Heart Arrest
;
Heart Ventricles
;
Humans
;
Intensive Care Units
;
Joints
;
Linear Models
;
Radiography
;
Radiography, Thoracic
;
Retrospective Studies
;
Stroke Volume
;
Thorax
;
Tomography, X-Ray Computed
6.Sarcopenia Predicts Prognosis in Patients with Newly Diagnosed Hepatocellular Carcinoma, Independent of Tumor Stage and Liver Function.
Yeonjung HA ; Daejung KIM ; Seungbong HAN ; Young Eun CHON ; Yun Bin LEE ; Mi Na KIM ; Joo Ho LEE ; Hana PARK ; Kyu Sung RIM ; Seong Gyu HWANG
Cancer Research and Treatment 2018;50(3):843-851
PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to demonstrate the prognostic significance of changes in body composition in patients with newly diagnosed hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). MATERIALS AND METHODS: Patients (n=178) newly diagnosed with HCC participated in the study between 2007 and 2012. Areas of skeletal muscle and abdominal fat were directly measured using a three-dimensional workstation. Cox proportional-hazards modes were used to estimate the effect of baseline variables on overall survival. The inverse probability of treatmentweighting (IPTW) method was used to minimize confounding bias. RESULTS: Cutoff values for sarcopenia, obtained from receiver-operating characteristic curves, were defined as skeletal muscle index at the third lumbar vertebra of ≤ 45.8 cm/m2 for males and ≤ 43.0 cm/m2 for females. Sarcopenia patients were older, more likely to be female, and had lower body mass index. Univariable analysis showed that the presence of sarcopenia and visceral to subcutaneous fat area ratio (VSR) were significantly associatedwith prognosis. The multivariable analyses revealed that VSR was predictive of overall survival. However, in the multivariable Cox model adjusted by IPTW, sarcopenia, not VSR, were associated with overall survival. CONCLUSION: The presence of sarcopenia at HCC diagnosis is independently associated with survival.
Abdominal Fat
;
Bias (Epidemiology)
;
Body Composition
;
Body Mass Index
;
Carcinoma, Hepatocellular*
;
Diagnosis
;
Female
;
Humans
;
Intra-Abdominal Fat
;
Liver*
;
Male
;
Methods
;
Muscle, Skeletal
;
Prognosis*
;
Sarcopenia*
;
Spine
;
Subcutaneous Fat
7.A Case of Management for Advanced Hepatocellular Carcinoma with Extrahepatic Metastasis by Autologous Natural Killer Cells Combined with Immune Checkpoint Inhibitor
Ara WOO ; Eun Ju KIM ; Sun Young SHIN ; Hong Jae JEON ; Hana PARK ; Young Eun CHON ; Yun Bin LEE ; Seong Gyu HWANG ; Kyu Sung RIM ; Joo Ho LEE
Journal of Liver Cancer 2018;18(1):67-74
Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) has extremely poor prognosis. Immunotherapy has emerged as a new treatment for a number of cancers. Adoptive immunotherapy is one of the important cancer immunotherapy, which relies on the various lymphocytes including cytotoxic T lymphocytes, natural killer (NK) and cytokine induced killer cells. Also, there has been advance in techniques of NK cell activation to more effectively kill the cancer cells. Of note, recently the blocking antibodies targeting programmed cell death protein 1 (PD-1) have shown promising results in diverse cancers including HCC. We report our recent experience of a patient accompanying advanced HCC with extrahepatic metastases. Disease progression had occurred after sorafenib administration, while the patient showed local tumor control and tumor marker decrease by NK cell immunotherapy combined with PD-1 inhibitor therapy. Though, there was no definite survival advantage due to impaired liver function, which might be caused by treatment related toxicities as well as cancer progression.
Antibodies, Blocking
;
Carcinoma, Hepatocellular
;
Cell Death
;
Cytokine-Induced Killer Cells
;
Disease Progression
;
Humans
;
Immunotherapy
;
Immunotherapy, Adoptive
;
Killer Cells, Natural
;
Liver
;
Lymphocytes
;
Neoplasm Metastasis
;
Prognosis
;
Programmed Cell Death 1 Receptor
;
T-Lymphocytes, Cytotoxic
8.Search for Structural Cardiac Abnormalities Following Sudden Cardiac Arrest Using Post-mortem Echocardiography in the Emergency Department: A Preliminary Study.
Sung Bin CHON ; Sang Do SHIN ; Sang Hoon NA ; Youngsuk CHO ; Hwan Suk JUNG ; Jun Hyeok CHOI ; Gyu Chong CHO ; Kap Su HAN ; Taehwan CHO ; Sung Woo LEE ; Yong Joo PARK
Journal of the Korean Society of Emergency Medicine 2017;28(1):124-132
PURPOSE: Sudden cardiac arrest (SCA) accounts for approximately 15% of all-cause mortality in the US and 50% of all cardiovascular mortalities in developed countries; 10% of cases have an underlying structural cardiac abnormality. An echocardiography has widely been used to evaluate cardiac abnormality, but it needs to be performed by emergency physicians available in the emergency department immediately after death, rather than by cardiologists. We aimed to determine whether post-mortem echocardiography (PME) performed in the emergency department may reveal such abnormalities. METHODS: We evaluated the reliability and validity of PME performed by emergency physicians in the emergency department. Measurement by a cardiologist was used as reference. RESULTS: Two emergency physicians performed PME on 3 out of the 4 included patients who died after unsuccessful cardiopulmonary resuscitation. PME was started within 10 minutes of death, and it took 10 minutes to complete. Parasternal views in either supine or left decubitus position were most helpful. The adequacy of the image was rated good to fair, and that of measurements was acceptable to borderline. Regarding the chamber size and left ventricular wall thickness, intraclass correlation coefficients for reliability and validity were 0.97 (n=15) and 0.95 (n=35), respectively (p<0.001). Evaluation of presence/absence of left ventricular wall thinning, valve calcification, and pericardial effusion was incomplete (3/7-5/7), precluding further analysis. CONCLUSION: Emergency physicians could perform reliable and valid PME to assess the chamber size and left ventricular wall thickness. A large prospective study with collaboration between emergency physicians and cardiologists would reveal the feasibility and usefulness of PME in diagnosing structural causes of sudden cardiac arrest.
Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation
;
Cooperative Behavior
;
Death, Sudden, Cardiac*
;
Developed Countries
;
Echocardiography*
;
Emergencies*
;
Emergency Service, Hospital*
;
Heart Arrest
;
Humans
;
Mortality
;
Pericardial Effusion
;
Prospective Studies
;
Reproducibility of Results
9.Should We Convert Prehospital Supraglottic Airway to Endotracheal Tube Immediately in Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest? A Preliminary, Retrospective, Observational Study.
Journal of the Korean Society of Emergency Medicine 2017;28(6):610-619
PURPOSE: This study examined whether the immediate conversion of the prehospital supraglottic airway (SGA) to endotracheal intubation (ETI) is associated with the return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC) and survival to discharge among out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) victims. METHODS: This retrospective observational study included OHCA victims aged ≥18 years who were treated from 2014 to 2016. The patient-, prehospital arrest-, and emergency department (ED)-related variables were collected based on the Utstein template. The immediate conversion of SGA to ETI was defined when it had been initiated within ≤2 minutes after arrival at the ED. To investigate the factors related to ROSC and survival to discharge, multiple logistic regression analysis of the immediate conversion of SGA to ETI and variables showing a difference (p < 0.15) on the Mann-Whitney U and chi-square test was performed. RESULTS: A total of 129 patients were enrolled, with a median age of 59 years (interquartile range, 51 to 72 years). Of these, 30 (23.3%) were female, 41 (31.8%) achieved ROSC, and 7 (5.4%) survived to discharge. Sixty-nine (53.5%) received immediate conversion showing no differences in the demographic and clinical characteristics compared to the delayed conversion group. Multiple logistic regression analysis showed that ROSC was related to the existence of lung disease, presence of witnesses, and a cardiopulmonary resuscitation duration ≤15 minutes at the ED, whereas the survival to discharge was associated with the prehospital shockable initial rhythm. Neither ROSC nor survival to discharge were related to the immediate conversion of SGA to ETI. CONCLUSION: The immediate conversion of prehospital SGA to ETI at ED in an OHCA victim might be unrelated to ROSC and survival to discharge.
Airway Management
;
Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation
;
Emergency Service, Hospital
;
Female
;
Humans
;
Intubation
;
Intubation, Intratracheal
;
Laryngeal Masks
;
Logistic Models
;
Lung Diseases
;
Observational Study*
;
Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest*
;
Retrospective Studies*
10.Calculation of the Residual Blood Volume after Acute, Non-Ongoing Hemorrhage Using Serial Hematocrit Measurements and the Volume of Isotonic Fluid Infused: Theoretical Hypothesis Generating Study.
Journal of Korean Medical Science 2016;31(5):814-816
Fluid resuscitation, hemostasis, and transfusion is essential in care of hemorrhagic shock. Although estimation of the residual blood volume is crucial, the standard measuring methods are impractical or unsafe. Vital signs, central venous or pulmonary artery pressures are inaccurate. We hypothesized that the residual blood volume for acute, non-ongoing hemorrhage was calculable using serial hematocrit measurements and the volume of isotonic solution infused. Blood volume is the sum of volumes of red blood cells and plasma. For acute, non-ongoing hemorrhage, red blood cell volume would not change. A certain portion of the isotonic fluid would increase plasma volume. Mathematically, we suggest that the residual blood volume after acute, non-ongoing hemorrhage might be calculated as 0·25N/[(Hct1/Hct2)-1], where Hct1 and Hct2 are the initial and subsequent hematocrits, respectively, and N is the volume of isotonic solution infused. In vivo validation and modification is needed before clinical application of this model.
Blood Volume
;
Hematocrit
;
Humans
;
Isotonic Solutions/*therapeutic use
;
*Models, Theoretical
;
Shock, Hemorrhagic/*prevention & control/*therapy

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