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1.
Korean Journal of Clinical Pharmacy ; : 111-118, 2015.
Article in Korean | WPRIM | ID: wpr-37257

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: It is thought that drug use of parents is related to that of young children. The status of drug among young children's parents and a correlation of with parents and their children on drug use was surveyed by questionnaire. METHOD: The questionnaire is composed of 34 items, and the data was collected by 108 parents of young children from March to April of 2012. RESULTS: On the basis of the analysis results, the following conclusions were drawn. About half of parents thought the minimum use of drug was better for health, and 44% parents thought drug is essential for cure. When parents had queries on prescription, they mostly consult with doctors and pharmacists. Most parents had a household medicine. A fever reducer was the most common household medicine (92.5%). They pick the household medicine by consulting with pharmacist. Parents usually checked the expiration date of drug before they use and they dumped the drugs when the expiration date was due (82.4%). Over half of young children and their parents took a dietary supplements. They got an information about a dietary supplement by associates (30.5%) and internet (19.4%). Most parents tried to follow the directions as prescribed. However, more than half of the parents stopped taking the drug when the symptoms disappeared. CONCLUSION: Drug use of parents and that of young children had a very strong positive correlation, suggesting that correct drug use of parents have an impact on their young children's drug use.


Subject(s)
Child , Humans , Dietary Supplements , Family Characteristics , Fever , Internet , Parents , Pharmacists , Prescriptions
2.
Journal of the Korean Radiological Society ; : 25-30, 1994.
Article in Korean | WPRIM | ID: wpr-196688

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: The purpose of this study is to illustrate MR patterns of bone marrow of calvarium and vertebral body in normal subjects according the age distribution and to understand the course of the fatty replacement from red marrow. METHODS AND MATERIAL: We retrospectively evaluated MR examinations of the calvaria(n=71), cervical spine(n=71), thoracic spine(n=65), Imbar spine(n =68) in subjects without bone marrow abnormality whose age ranged 3 weeks to 74 years. Three distinctive patterns were categorized on Tl-weighted images of the skull. In pattern 1, uniformly low signal intensity with or without very small areas of high intensity in frontal and occipital bones is noted. In pattern 2, frontal and occipital bones have uniformly high signal intensity, and patchy area of high intensity appears in parietal bone. In pattern 3, the entire skull has uniformly high signal intensity. In the spine, four patterns were categorized on Tl-weighted MR images. In pattern 1, the vertebral body has uniformly low signal intensity except for linear areas of high intensity superior and inferior to basivertebral vein. In pattern 2, bandlike and triangular areas of high signal intensity are found in the periphery. Pattern 3 and 4 have diffusely distributed areas of high signal intensity; pattern 3 consist of numerous indistinct dots measuring a few millimeter or less, and pattern 4 consist of fairly well marginated areas ranging in size from 5 to 1.5cm. RESULT:In the calvaria, 73% of pattern 1 were younger than 20 years, pattern 2 were evenly distributed, and 86% of pattern 3 were older than 40 years. In the spine, 87% of pattern 1 were younger than 40 years, 72% of pattern 3 were in 40 to 50 years, and 87% of pattern 4 were older than 50 years. Pattern 2 were evenly distributed in the cervical and thoracic spine, but in the thoracic spine 62% were younger than 30 years. CONCLUSION:It is concluded that younger age group shows mainly pattern 1, whereas elderly group has pattern 3 or 4 in the calvarial and vertebral body marrow. This suggests that conversion to fatty marrow begin locally and progress diffusely with age.


Subject(s)
Aged , Humans , Age Distribution , Bone Marrow , Occipital Bone , Parietal Bone , Retrospective Studies , Skull , Spine , Veins
3.
Journal of the Korean Radiological Society ; : 901-906, 1994.
Article in Korean | WPRIM | ID: wpr-182549

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: To assess the role of MRI in the diagnosis of uterine anomaly. MATERIAL AND METHODS: MRI(n:15), hysterosalpingography(n:7) and ultrasonography(n:7) were performed in 15 patients with suspected MullerJan duct anomaly. Nine cases were proved by operation and six cases were diagnoed with imaging and clinical findings. According to Buttram and Gibbons modified classification, the anomalies were 4 cases of class I, 2 cases of class III, one case of class IV, and 8 cases of class V. RESULTS: MRI enabled accurate diagnoses of anomalies in all cases, but HSG and USG showed wrong diagnoses in 3 of 7 cases and in 1 of 7 cases. CONCLUSION: MRI, especially T2-weighted images parallel to long axis of uterine corpus, was very useful in diagnosis of the Mullerian duct anomaly, because it could depict exactly the external fundal contour, intercornual distance, septum, transverse vaginal septum, and associated abnormalities such as hematocolpos and hematometra.


Subject(s)
Female , Humans , Axis, Cervical Vertebra , Classification , Diagnosis , Hematocolpos , Hematometra , Hylobates , Magnetic Resonance Imaging
4.
Journal of the Korean Radiological Society ; : 941-947, 1994.
Article in Korean | WPRIM | ID: wpr-73882

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: The purpose of this study to access MR findings of the lipomatous soft tissue tumor based on histopathologic correlation and its predictability of the histopathologic diagnosis. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We retrospectively analyzed the MR findings and photomicrographs of 9 patients with histopathologically proven lipomatous soft tissue tumors as follows;classic lipoma(4), fibrolipoma(1), lipoblastoma(2), atypical l ipoma(1) and well-differentiated liposarcoma(1). RESULTS: All cases of lipoma showed the same signal intensities as subcutaneous fat which is composed of mature fat cells. Linear low signal intensity lesions corresponded to fibrous connective tissues within lipomas. Two cases of lipoblastoma showed heterogeneous signal intensity with areas of high signal intensity brighter than subcutaneous fat on T2WI, corresponding to myxoid matrix of cytoplasm of immature lipoblasts, and the areas of myxoid degeneration within tumors. Both atypical lipoma and liposarcoma showed heterogeneous signal intensity with ill-defined margins due to presence of lipoblasts and infiltration to adjacent muscle bundles. CONCLUSION: MR image findings were well correlated with histopathologic findings of lipomatous soft tissue tumor, especially with maturity of fat cells and the signal intensity of mesenchymal components within the tumors. MR may predict the pathologic diagnosis of lipoblastoma by presence of myxoid degeneration within Ihe tumor, but atypical lipoma and liposarcoma revealed similar MR findings.


Subject(s)
Humans , Adipocytes , Connective Tissue , Cytoplasm , Diagnosis , Lipoblastoma , Lipoma , Liposarcoma , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Retrospective Studies , Subcutaneous Fat
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