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1.
Yonsei Medical Journal ; : 707-716, 2022.
Article in English | WPRIM | ID: wpr-939382

ABSTRACT

Purpose@#To evaluate the efficacy of intervention policies on coronavirus disease-19 (COVID-19) dissemination. @*Materials and Methods@#An age-structured compartmental model for the COVID-19 outbreak was proposed to predict the impact of control measures in the Seoul/Gyeonggi region. The model was calibrated based on actual data and realistic situations, including daily vaccine doses, proportion of delta variant cases, and confirmed cases by age. We simulated different scenarios for non-pharmaceutical interventions by varying social distancing and school attendance strategies. @*Results@#Two-step mitigation of social distancing without in-person classes would result in a rapid increase in confirmed cases up to 10000 but would keep severe cases within the manageable range of the health care system. The overall impact of taking down the distancing level by one step with twice the increase in contacts at school was comparable to the above scenario. Implementation of two-step mitigation of social distancing along with a two-fold increase in contacts among the school-age group would dramatically increase confirmed and severe cases by over 80000 and 100, respectively, as early as the beginning of December. This policy would cause the situation to spiral out of control, considering the scale of the response and time to prepare. On the other hand, the burden on the current healthcare system caused by two-step mitigation of social distancing and 40% increased contacts in the school-age group was manageable if prepared. @*Conclusion@#A compromise between social distancing and school attendance policy and timely preparations for the spread of COVID-19 are required.

2.
Journal of the Korean Child Neurology Society ; : 89-92, 2017.
Article in Korean | WPRIM | ID: wpr-25848

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: Rufinamide (RFM) is known to be effective for children with Lennox-Gastaut syndrome (LGS). The aim of this study is to evaluate its efficacy and tolerability of Korean children with LGS. METHODS: This is a single center, open label, retrospective study. Patients with LGS who received rufinamide as adjunctive therapy were enrolled in this study. Their baseline clinical characteristics, the percent change in the seizure frequency per 4 weeks, and adverse events were evaluated. RESULTS: Among 32 children, 20 were males and the mean age was 11.3±6.6 years. After 1 month of rufinamide medication, the frequency of seizures was reduced by more than 50% in 31.3% of patients and 6.3% of patients had no seizures. After 6 months of rufinamide administration, patients with a 50% or less decrease in seizure frequency remained in a state of reduced seizure frequency and 3.1% of patients had no seizures. Side effects such as nausea, vomiting, anorexia, less active, somnolence, aggression, drooling were noted in 28.1% of patients. CONCLUSION: This study suggests that rufinamide can be considered as an effective and safe treatment option for intractable epileptic children such as LGS.


Subject(s)
Child , Humans , Male , Aggression , Anorexia , Epilepsy , Nausea , Retrospective Studies , Seizures , Sialorrhea , Vomiting
3.
Korean Circulation Journal ; : 1465-1472, 1998.
Article in Korean | WPRIM | ID: wpr-23161

ABSTRACT

Coronary stenting for long complex lesion is effective but associated with complication. We compared the results of stenting between with multiple conventional stenting group (group A) and with single long stenting group (group B). Fifty patients were prospectively and randomly enrolled: 25 patients for each group. Each group showed no significant differences of clinical characteristics. One patient died of heart failure in each group, not associated with the procedure itself. One patients had cerebrovascular accident in each group. Five patients had major bleeding (2, group A; 3, group B). Angiographic success rate was 100% in each group and procedural success rate was 96% and 100% in group A and B, respectively. Angiographic and clinical restenosis rate at 6 months follow-up were 60%, 36% in group A and 65%, 44% in group B, respectively (p=S). Multivariate analysis showed that several factors affected the angiographic restenosis rate as follows; a) male gender (M:F=76.9%:25.0%, P<0.001), b) AMI (AMI:stable angina pectoris=72.7%:66.7%, P<0.001), c) lesion length d) residual stenosis. In conclusion, there were no statistical differences of restenosis and complication rate between the two groups. Our data support single long stenting is acceptable and economically more favorable for long diffuse lesion, compared to multiple conventional stenting.


Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Constriction, Pathologic , Coronary Stenosis , Coronary Vessels , Follow-Up Studies , Heart Failure , Hemorrhage , Multivariate Analysis , Prospective Studies , Stents , Stroke
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