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1.
The Journal of Korean Knee Society ; : 197-197, 2015.
Article in English | WPRIM | ID: wpr-759177

ABSTRACT

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2.
The Journal of Korean Knee Society ; : 49-55, 2015.
Article in English | WPRIM | ID: wpr-759160

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: In total knee arthroplasty (TKA), it is important to restore neutral mechanical alignment. The purpose of this study was to assess whether the lower limb alignment is neutral in healthy Korean females and investigate the incidence of constitutional varus knees among them. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Weight-bearing full-leg standing radiographs were obtained from 118 healthy females between the ages of 20 to 39 years. One radiologist and two orthopaedic surgeons measured the hip-knee-ankle angle (HKAA), medial proximal tibial angle (MPTA), and femoral anatomic mechanical angle (FAMA) on the radiographs and compared with the traditional gold standard HKAA of 0degrees, MPTA of 3degrees varus, and FAMA of 6degrees. RESULTS: The interobserver reliability of the three independent observers was high (p<0.001). The HKAA of the study subjects (1.35degrees+/-2.04degrees) was significantly different from the standard HKAA of 0degrees (p<0.001), but no statistically significant difference was observed in the MPTA (-3.18degrees+/-1.61degrees) and FAMA (5.99degrees+/-0.70degrees) from the standard values (p=0.083 and p=0.887, respectively). The incidence of constitutional varus alignment was 20.34%. CONCLUSIONS: In Korean females, the mechanical axis of the lower limb was not neutral and the incidence of constitutional varus alignment was slightly higher than that in Western females. We believe that these findings should be taken into consideration in planning reconstructive surgery of the knee, such as TKA, unicompartmental knee arthroplasty, and high tibial osteotomy.


Subject(s)
Female , Humans , Arthroplasty , Axis, Cervical Vertebra , Incidence , Knee , Lower Extremity , Osteotomy , Weight-Bearing
3.
Korean Journal of Gastrointestinal Endoscopy ; : 226-229, 2005.
Article in Korean | WPRIM | ID: wpr-16729

ABSTRACT

Intussusception frequently occurs in children as the main causes of intestinal obstruction in childhood but relatively rare in adult. A 65-year-old male visited our hospital because of abrupt onset right lower quadrant pain with tenderness for three days. He had a previous history of appendectomy and alcoholic liver cirrhosis. On physical exam, bowel sound was decreased. Abdomen ultrasonography showed a kidney like mass and abdominal computed tomography revealed the typical target lesion in the ileocecal area. Colonoscopy was performed which failed to find any lesion leading to intussusception. After the colonoscopy, the abdminal pain had disappeared, and we would not find any intussusception sign by abdominal ultrasonography. Colonocopy was done two weeks later. No pathologic lesion was found, then. We report a case of adult idiopathic ileocecal intussusception reduced by colonoscopy.


Subject(s)
Adult , Aged , Child , Humans , Male , Abdomen , Appendectomy , Colonoscopy , Intestinal Obstruction , Intussusception , Kidney , Liver Cirrhosis, Alcoholic , Ultrasonography
4.
Journal of the Korean Society of Neonatology ; : 72-77, 2001.
Article in Korean | WPRIM | ID: wpr-146426

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: High frequency oscillatory ventilation (HFOV) is used to support infants with severe respiratory failure unresponsive to conventional ventilation (CV). We reviewed chest radiographs before and after HFOV with clinical correlation in infants with respiratory distress syndrome (RDS). METHODS: Eighteen very low birth weight infants with RDS who had HFOV were included in this study. All patients were diagnosed as having RDS clinically and radiologically. Mean gestational age of infants was 27 weeks (range : 24-31 weeks). The mean duration of HFOV was 3 days (range : 14 hours-9 days). The chest radiographs of these infants within 3 hours before and after application of HFOV were retrospectively reviewed. Radiological findings based on aeration and parenchymal densities were classified into improved, no change, and progressed. Medical records were reviewed for FiO2 levels, clinical outcomes, complications, and causes of death. RESULTS: In 15 of 18 infants, aeration and parenchymal densities were improved and FiO2 levels were also improved after HFOV. Four of these 15 infants who showed improvement of radiological findings developed pneumothorax, sepsis, pulmonary or intestinal bleeding, and subsequently died. In remaining 3 infants in whom chest radiographs after HFOV showed no interval change or progression, oxygenation was also worsened and all died. CONCLUSION: Chest radiographs of HFOV-treated, very low birth weight infants showed improvement of aeration and parenchymal densities in most cases. Clinical outcome was good in infants who showed improvement on chest radiographs compared to those of progression group as far as there was no associated complication. Knowledge of radiological changes after HFOV will help in interpretation of chest radiographs in those HFOV-treated infants.


Subject(s)
Humans , Infant , Cause of Death , Gestational Age , Hemorrhage , Infant, Very Low Birth Weight , Medical Records , Oxygen , Pneumothorax , Radiography, Thoracic , Respiratory Insufficiency , Retrospective Studies , Sepsis , Ventilation
5.
Korean Journal of Radiology ; : 183-191, 2001.
Article in English | WPRIM | ID: wpr-161556

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To document the signal characteristics of intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) at evolving stages on diffusion-weighted images (DWI) by comparison with conventional MR images. MATERIALS AND METHODS: In our retrospective study, 38 patients with ICH underwent a set of imaging sequences that included DWI, T1-and T2-weighted imaging, and fluid-attenuated inversion recovery (FLAIR). In 33 and 10 patients, respectively, conventional and echo-planar T2* gradient-echo images were also obtained. According to the time interval between symptom onset and initial MRI, five stages were categorized: hyperacute (n=6); acute (n=7); early subacute (n=7); late subacute (n=10); and chronic (n=8). We investigated the signal intensity and apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) of ICH and compared the signal intensities of hematomas at DWI and on conventional MR images. RESULTS: DWI showed that hematomas were hyperintense at the hyperacute and late subacute stages, and hypointense at the acute, early subacute and chronic stages. Invariably, focal hypointensity was observed within a hyperacute hematoma. At the hyperacute, acute and early subacute stages, hyperintense rims that corresponded with edema surrounding the hematoma were present. The mean ADC ratio was 0.73 at the hyperacute stage, 0.72 at the acute stage, 0.70 at the early subacute stage, 0.72 at the late subacute stage, and 2.56 at the chronic stage. CONCLUSION: DWI showed that the signal intensity of an ICH may be related to both its ADC value and the magnetic susceptibility effect. In patients with acute stroke, an understanding of the characteristic features of ICH seen at DWI can be helpful in both the characterization of intracranial hemorrhagic lesions and the differentiation of hemorrhage from ischemia.


Subject(s)
Adult , Aged , Female , Humans , Male , Acute Disease , Cerebral Hemorrhage/diagnosis , Chronic Disease , Comparative Study , Diffusion , Disease Progression , Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods , Middle Aged , Retrospective Studies , Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted
6.
Journal of the Korean Radiological Society ; : 557-564, 2001.
Article in Korean | WPRIM | ID: wpr-197728

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: To evaluate the usefulness of diffusion-weighted imaging after intracranial surgery in patients with intracranial tumors. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Within ten days of intracranial surgery, diffusion-weighted MR images were obtained in 68 patients with intracranial tumors which included meningioma (n=31), glioma (n=21), neurogenic tumor(n=4), hemangiopericytoma (n=3), and in three cases involved metastasis. The signal intensity of the resected margin and adjacent parenchyma was visually assessed on diffusion-weighted images, and the signal intensities on seen T1-and T2-weighted images were also analyzed. In patients with newly developed hyperintense lesions in parenchyma adjacent to the resection sites seen on postoperative T2-weighted images, apparent diffusion coefficients (ADC) were calculated and analyzed on follow-up MR images. RESULTS: Immediate postoperative diffusion-weighted images showed various signal intensities at the resected margins visible on conventional and diffusion-weighted MR images. In 15 patients, newly developed hyperintense lesions adjacent to resected sites were seen on postoperative T2-weighted images. On diffusion-weighted images, nine of these lesions were hyperinteuse and and were shown by follow-up MR imaging to be subject to focal tissue loss and atrophy, and six were isointense but with no sign of tissue loss or atrophy. Among the 15 patients with postoperative lesions near the site of tumorectomy, diffusion-weighted imaging showed that the ADC values of hyperintense lesions were significantly lower than those of isointense lesions (independent sample t-test: p<0.05). CONCLUSION: In patients with intracranial tumors, immediate postoperative diffusion-weighted imaging is useful for differentiating between ischemic tissue damage and vasogenic edema.


Subject(s)
Humans , Atrophy , Diffusion , Edema , Follow-Up Studies , Glioma , Hemangiopericytoma , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Meningioma , Neoplasm Metastasis
7.
Journal of the Korean Radiological Society ; : 387-394, 2000.
Article in Korean | WPRIM | ID: wpr-79724

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: To assess the usefulness of diffusion-weighted MR imaging in patients with intracranial tumors. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Using the single-shot spin echo EPI technique on a 1.5T unit and two gradient steps(b values of 0, 900 s/mm2), diffusion-weighted MR images (DW-MRI) of 76 patients with various intracranial tumors including high-grade glioma (n=20), meningioma (n=15), metastasis(n=14), lymphoma (n=6), low-grade glioma (n=5), schwannoma (n=4), cerebellar hemangioblastoma (n=3), - and others- were obtained. The signal intensity of each tumor was visually assessed as one of four grades, and this and apparent diffusion coefficient(ADC) were analyzed in the solid and cystic portions of tumors, normal gray matter, white matter and CSF. RESULTS: Lymphomas, metastases, meningiomas, and high- and low-grade gliomas showed low ADC values in increasing order. Tumors showing high signal intensity on DW-MRI had low ADC values. Visual assessment whowed that solid portions of high-grade gliomas were significantly more hyperintense than those of low-grade gliomas. There was, however, no significant difference in ADCs between high- and low-grade gliomas. Lymphoma a and metastases showed significantly higher signal intensities on DW-MRI and lower ADCs than did high-grade gliomas. There were significant differences in signal intensities, as seen on DW-MRI, and in ADCs, between metastatic adenocarcinomas and non-adenocarcinomas. Schwannomas and cerebellar heman-gioblastomas showed low signal intensities and high ADC values. CONCLUSION: DW-MRI appears to provide an additional means of examining intracranial tumors, not available with conventional MRI, and may thus be helpful in the grading of gliomas and the differential diagnosis of some intracranial tumors.


Subject(s)
Humans , Adenocarcinoma , Brain Neoplasms , Diagnosis, Differential , Diffusion , Glioma , Hemangioblastoma , Lymphoma , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Meningioma , Neoplasm Metastasis , Neurilemmoma
8.
Journal of the Korean Radiological Society ; : 481-486, 1999.
Article in Korean | WPRIM | ID: wpr-8828

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: To assess the effectiveness of subsegmental transcatheter arterial chemoembolization(TAE) forhepatocellular carcinomas(HCCs) on the basis of tumor necrosis rate. MATERIAL AND METHODS: Between May 1996 andMarch 1998, ten patients with single HCC after subsegmental TAE underwent surgical resection. Subsegmental TAE wasperformed by injecting a mixture of lipiodol and adriamycin followed by gelatin sponge particles into the distalbranches of the subsegmental arteries. Tumor size and the extent of necrosis were analyzed in ten resectedlesions, and in all patients, complications after subsegmental TAE were assessed. RESULTS: The size of resectedtumors ranged from 1 to 5,5cm. On histological examination, complete necrosis was seen in 6 to 10 resected lesionsand 95% necrosis in three. In the remaining lesion, 85% necrosis had occured. Complete necrosis was noted in 4 of6 small HCCs(less than 3cm in diameter), while in the remaining two the extent of necrosis was 95%. Nocomplications were observed. CONCLUSION: For the treatment of HCC, subsegmental TAE is safe and effective.Curative therapy must, however, involve follow-up and repeated TAE.


Subject(s)
Humans , Arteries , Carcinoma, Hepatocellular , Doxorubicin , Ethiodized Oil , Follow-Up Studies , Gelatin , Liver Neoplasms , Necrosis , Porifera
9.
Journal of the Korean Radiological Society ; : 281-286, 1999.
Article in Korean | WPRIM | ID: wpr-119060

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: To evaluate the long-term patency of the Hanaro spiral stent (Solco Intermed, Seoul, Korea) when used as a palliative in patients with inoperable malignant biliary obstruction. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Between April 1996 and July 1998, 39 patients with malignant biliary obstruction underwent percutaneous placement of 48 Hanaro spiral stents. The causes of obstruction were bile duct carcinoma(n=18), pancreatic carcinoma (n=8), metastatic lymphadenopathy (n=5), gallbladder carcinoma (n=5), hepatocellular carcinoma (n=1) and other tumors (n=2). Using the kaplan-Meier method, patient survival and stent patency rates were estimated with regard to level of obstruction. RESULTS: As regards stent insertion, there was no technical failure. Overall 25- and 50-week survival rates for the entire patient group were 50% and 11%, respectively, while overall stent patency rates at 25 and 50 weeks were 42 % and 11 %, respectively. Twenty-five-week stent patency rates in patients with common bile duct (CBD) and hilar obstruction were 51 % and 18 %, respectively. The stent patency rates in the CBD obstruction group was significantly higher than that in the hilar obstruction group (p < 0.05). CONCLUSION: In patients with CBD obstruction, the clinical efficacy of Hanaro spiral stent was superior to that in patients with hilar obstruction. However, Hanaro spiral stents showed a lower patency rate with regard to patient survival, and further investigation is required.


Subject(s)
Humans , Bile Ducts , Carcinoma, Hepatocellular , Common Bile Duct , Gallbladder , Lymphatic Diseases , Seoul , Stents , Survival Rate
10.
Journal of the Korean Radiological Society ; : 1027-1034, 1999.
Article in Korean | WPRIM | ID: wpr-94478

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: To evaluate the preliminary results of endovascular coil treatment of acutely ruptured aneurysms. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Between August 1995 and December 1997, 18 patients with 20 ruptured aneurysms weretreated. They were classified as Hunt and Hess grade I (n=3), grade II (n=1), grade III (n=3), grade IV (n=10) orgrade V (n=1). Endovascular treatment was performed at mean 5.2 (range, 1-18) days. The first aneurysm was treatedwith mechanical detachable spirals (MDS) and the others with Guglielmi detachable coils (GDC). Aneurysm size wascategorized as small (n=17) or large (n=3). Ten aneurysms were located in the anterior circulation, and ten in theposterior circulation. Using the Glasgow outcome scale (GOS), clinical outcome was evaluated 5 to 27 months aftertreatment in 11 patients. Three patients had already died. RESULTS: In 14 of the 18 patients (16 of 20 aneurysms: 80%), treatment was successful. Four aneurysms failed due to unsuccessful catheter placement (n=2), smallaneurysm (n=1) or occlusion of the parent vessel (n=1). Total occlusion was observed in 13 aneurysms; 95-99%, orsubtotal occlusion, in two, and less than 95%, or incomplete occlusion, in one. Technical complications includedpassing of wire (n=1) and unintentional parent artery occlusion (n=1). There was a 7.1%(1/14) morbidity rate, butno mortality related to the technique. Six patients with Hunt and Hess grade I-III had good clinical outcome (3with GOS 1, and 2 with GOS 2). Four of the nine patients who were grade IV-V showed clinical improvement (GOS 3);two patients were clinically unchanged (GOS 4), and three died from the severity of primary hemorrhage. CONCLUSION: Endovascular coil treatment is a reasonable alternative for patients who are not candidates forconventional surgical treatment or in whom such treatment has failed.


Subject(s)
Humans , Aneurysm , Aneurysm, Ruptured , Arteries , Catheters , Glasgow Outcome Scale , Hemorrhage , Intracranial Aneurysm , Mortality , Parents
11.
Journal of the Korean Radiological Society ; : 1035-1040, 1999.
Article in Korean | WPRIM | ID: wpr-94477

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: To determine the accuracy of three-dimensional CT angiography(CTA) in the diagnosis of intracranialaneurysms. MATERIALS AND METHODS: 3D-CTA was performed in 46 consecutive patients with subarachnoid hemorrhage orsuspected intracranial aneurysm. Images were obtained using a helical CT scanner and the SSD techinque. 3D CTAfindings were reviewed retrospectively and independently in blind fashion by two neuroradiologists. Digitalsubtraction angiography(DSA) was used as the reference standard. RESULTS: DSA revealed, in 36 patients, 40aneurysms ranging from 2mm to 12mm in maximal diameter, and negative findings in 10 patients. For observer 1, theaccuracy of 3D-CTA for all aneurysms and all patients was 85.2% and 82.7%, respectively. For observer 2, therespective figures were 94.6% and 91.9%. The agreement rates between the two observers were 86% for all aneurysmsand 87% for all patients (Kappa value 0.58, 0.59). CONCLUSION: Three-dimensional CTA is a useful imagingtechnique for the diagnosis of intracranial aneurysms, with an accuracy of over 85%


Subject(s)
Humans , Aneurysm , Angiography , Diagnosis , Intracranial Aneurysm , Retrospective Studies , Silver Sulfadiazine , Subarachnoid Hemorrhage , Tomography, Spiral Computed
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