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result(s) for
"Lee, Gha-Hyun"
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Clinical significance of Epstein-Barr virus in the cerebrospinal fluid of immunocompetent patients
2021
•The clinical significance of Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) DNA in CSF of individuals with suspected CNS infection remains unclear.•EBV DNA in CSF is occasionally found in the immunocompetent population.•EBV was frequently found together with other microbes in CSF and associated with encephalitis and poor prognosis.
Polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-based testing of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) samples has greatly facilitated the diagnosis of central nervous system (CNS) infections. However, the clinical significance of Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) DNA in CSF of individuals with suspected CNS infection remains unclear. We wanted to gain a better understanding of EBV as an infectious agent in immunocompetent patients with CNS disorders.
We identified cases of EBV-associated CNS infections and reviewed their clinical and laboratory characteristics. The study population was drawn from patients with EBV PCR positivity in CSF who visited Pusan National University Hospital between 2010 and 2019.
Of the 780 CSF samples examined during the 10-year study period, 42 (5.4 %) were positive for EBV DNA; 9 of the patients (21.4 %) were diagnosed with non-CNS infectious diseases, such as optic neuritis, Guillain-Barré syndrome, and idiopathic intracranial hypotension, and the other 33 cases were classified as CNS infections (22 as encephalitis and 11 as meningitis). Intensive care unit admission (13/33 patients, 39.3 %) and presence of severe neurological sequelae at discharge (8/33 patients, 24.2 %) were relatively frequent. In 10 patients (30.3 %), the following pathogens were detected in CSF in addition to EBV: varicella-zoster virus (n = 3), cytomegalovirus (n = 2), herpes simplex virus 1 (n = 1), herpes simplex virus 2 (n = 1), Streptococcus pneumomiae (n = 2), and Enterococcus faecalis (n = 1). The EBV-only group (n = 23) and the co-infection group (n = 10) did not differ in age, gender, laboratory data, results of brain imaging studies, clinical manifestations, or prognosis; however, the co-infected patients had higher CSF protein levels.
EBV DNA in CSF is occasionally found in the immunocompetent population; the virus was commonly associated with encephalitis and poor prognosis, and frequently found together with other microbes in CSF.
Journal Article
Comparisons of clinical characteristics, brain MRI findings, and responses to epidural blood patch between spontaneous intracranial hypotension and post-dural puncture headache: retrospective study
by
Cho, Jae Wook
,
Kim, Hyun-Woo
,
Kim, Jiyoung
in
Blood
,
Blood products
,
Blood transfusion, Autologous
2021
Background
Spontaneous intracranial hypotension and post-dural puncture headache are both caused by a loss of cerebrospinal fluid but present with different pathogeneses. We compared these two conditions concerning their clinical characteristics, brain imaging findings, and responses to epidural blood patch treatment.
Methods
We retrospectively reviewed the records of patients with intracranial hypotension admitted to the Neurology ward of the Pusan National University Hospital between January 1, 2011, and December 31, 2019, and collected information regarding age, sex, disease duration, hospital course, headache intensity, time to the appearance of a headache after sitting, associated phenomena (nausea, vomiting, auditory symptoms, dizziness), number of epidural blood patch treatments, and prognosis. The brain MRI signs of intracranial hypotension were recorded, including three qualitative signs (diffuse pachymeningeal enhancement, venous distention of the lateral sinus, subdural fluid collection), and six quantitative signs (pituitary height, suprasellar cistern, prepontine cistern, mamillopontine distance, the midbrain-pons angle, and the angle between the vein of Galen and the straight sinus).
Results
A total of 105 patients (61 spontaneous intracranial hypotension patients and 44 post-dural puncture headache patients) who met the inclusion criteria were reviewed. More patients with spontaneous intracranial hypotension required epidural blood patch treatment than those with post-dural puncture headache (70.5% (43/61) vs. 45.5% (20/44);
p
= 0.01) and the spontaneous intracranial hypotension group included a higher proportion of patients who underwent epidural blood patch treatment more than once (37.7% (23/61) vs. 13.6% (6/44);
p
= 0.007). Brain MRI showed signs of intracranial hypotension in both groups, although the angle between the vein of Galen and the straight sinus was greater in the post-dural puncture headache group (median [95% Confidence Interval]: 85° [68°-79°] vs. 74° [76°-96°],
p
= 0.02).
Conclusions
Patients with spontaneous intracranial hypotension received more epidural blood patch treatments and more often needed multiple epidural blood patch treatments
.
Although both groups showed similar brain MRI findings, the angle between the vein of Galen and the straight sinus differed significantly between the groups.
Journal Article
Seasonal and Weekly Patterns of Korean Adolescents’ Web Search Activity on Insomnia: Retrospective Study
2024
Sleep deprivation in adolescents is a common but serious public health issue. Adolescents often have a progressive circadian delay and suffer from insufficient sleep during weekdays due to the school schedule. Temporal patterns in internet search activity data can provide relevant information for understanding the characteristic sleep problems of the adolescent population.
We aimed to reveal whether adolescents exhibit distinct temporal seasonal and weekly patterns in internet search activity on insomnia compared to adults.
We hypothesized that adolescents exhibit larger variations in the internet search volume for insomnia, particularly in association with the school schedule (e.g., academic vacations and weekends). We extracted the daily search volume for insomnia in South Korean adolescents (13-18 years old), adults (19-59 years old), and young adults (19-24 years old) during the years 2016-2019 using NAVER DataLab, the most popular search engine in South Korea. The daily search volume data for each group were normalized with the annual median of each group. The time series of the search volume was decomposed into slow fluctuation (over a year) and fast fluctuation (within a week) using fast Fourier transform. Next, we compared the normalized search volume across months in a year (slow fluctuation) and days in a week (fast fluctuation).
In the annual trend, 2-way ANOVA revealed a significant (group) × (month) interaction (P<.001). Adolescents exhibited much greater seasonal variations across a year than the adult population (coefficient of variation=0.483 for adolescents vs 0.131 for adults). The search volume for insomnia in adolescents was notably higher in January, February, and August, which are academic vacation periods in South Korea (P<.001). In the weekly pattern, 2-way ANOVA revealed a significant (group) × (day) interaction (P<.001). Adolescents showed a considerably increased search volume on Sunday and Monday (P<.001) compared to adults. In contrast, young adults demonstrated seasonal and weekly patterns similar to adults.
Adolescents demonstrate distinctive seasonal and weekly patterns in internet searches on insomnia (ie, increased search in vacation months and weekend-weekday transitions), which are closely associated with the school schedule. Adolescents' sleep concerns might be potentially affected by the disrupted daily routine and the delayed sleep phase during vacations and weekends. As we demonstrated, comparing various age groups in infodemiology and infoveillance data might be helpful in identifying distinctive features in vulnerable age groups.
Journal Article
Gender differences in the effect of comorbid insomnia symptom on depression, anxiety, fatigue, and daytime sleepiness in patients with obstructive sleep apnea
by
Chung, Seockhoon
,
Lee, Gha-hyun
,
Lee, Sang-Ahm
in
Adolescent
,
Adult
,
Adult and adolescent clinical studies
2014
Purpose
This study investigated gender differences in the effect of comorbid insomnia symptom on depression, anxiety, fatigue, daytime sleepiness, and quality of life in patients with obstructive sleep apnea. There are gender differences in the presentation of obstructive sleep apnea. However, the influence of gender on the presentation of comorbid insomnia symptom and obstructive sleep apnea is not known.
Methods
Allparticipantsperformed overnightpolysomnography and completed a battery of questionnaires including Beck Depression Inventory, State-Trait Anxiety Inventory, Multidimensional Fatigue Inventory, Epworth Sleepiness Scale, and Short Form-36 Health Survey. Insomnia symptom was defined as present if a patient had any insomnia complaints longer than 1 month and at least one time per week.
Results
Six hundred fifty-five adult patients with obstructive sleep apnea were enrolled; 233 (35.5 %) reported comorbid insomnia symptom with obstructive sleep apnea. The severity of obstructive sleep apnea was not related to comorbid insomnia symptom. Based on linear regression, women had higher depression, fatigue, and daytime sleepiness and lower health-related quality of life than men (all,
p
< 0.05). The presence of insomnia symptom had negative effects on fatigue (
p
= 0.005) and quality of life only (
p
= 0.015) in men but not in women when taking gender-by-insomnia interaction into consideration. There were significant differences in polysomnography-based sleep architecture between the obstructive sleep apnea-only and obstructive sleep apnea–insomnia groups, but only in the subgroup of men.
Conclusions
Men are more prone to the negative impact of comorbid insomnia symptom and obstructive sleep apnea on their level of fatigue and quality of life than women.
Journal Article
Quantitative EMG criteria for diagnosing idiopathic REM sleep behavior disorder
by
Lee, Sang-Ahm
,
Kim, Cheon Sik
,
Kim, Bomi
in
Behavior disorders
,
Confidence intervals
,
Dentistry
2015
Purpose
The purpose of this study is to determine the diagnostic cutoff for the proportion of rapid eye movement (REM) sleep with tonic and phasic activities of the submentalis muscle activity that can be used to diagnose REM sleep behavior disorder (RBD).
Methods
Seventeen patients clinically diagnosed as idiopathic RBD and 15 age- and gender-matched controls were studied. Surface electromyography was recorded from the submentalis muscle, and two sleep technologists manually identified epochs with tonic and phasic activities during REM sleep. Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves were constructed to find the optimal cutoff values for diagnosing RBD using the proportion of REM sleep with tonic and phasic activities of the submentalis muscle. Cohen’s kappa coefficient was calculated to evaluate interrater reliability.
Results
The cutoff value with the optimal sensitivity and specificity was 6.5 % for the proportion of REM sleep with tonic activity (sensitivity, 94.1 %; specificity, 93.3 %; area under the ROC curve, 0.976) and 9.5 % for the proportion of REM sleep with phasic activity (sensitivity, 94.1 %; specificity, 93.3 %; area under the ROC curve, 0.992). The cutoff value required to achieve a specificity of 100 % was 8.9 % for tonic activity and 11.1 % for phasic activity. Cohen’s kappa coefficient between two scorers was 0.96 (95 % confidence interval, 0.95−0.97) and 0.95 (95 % confidence interval, 0.94−0.95) for tonic and phasic activities, respectively (both
p
< 0.001).
Conclusions
Identifying periods of tonic and phasic activities of the submentalis muscle during REM sleep is useful to discriminate patients with idiopathic RBD from controls.
Journal Article
Comparison of three actigraphic algorithms used to evaluate sleep in patients with obstructive sleep apnea
2013
Purpose
Actigraphy is a non-invasive and valid method to detect sleep/wake status. However, the technique lacks reliability in patients with sleep-disordered breathing and its results may depend on the algorithm employed.
Methods
We compared three currently used algorithms (the Cole-Kripke, Sadeh, and University of California San Diego [UCSD]) and determined which is the most reliable in patients with obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) assessing total sleep time. After identification of the most reliable algorithm, we compared total sleep time with the severity of obstructive sleep apnea.
Results
The mean total sleep time was not significantly different from that yielded by polysomnography when the UCSD algorithm was employed (
p
= 0.798) and UCSD algorithm was associated with the smallest bias. The correlation levels (with polysomnographic data) were mild-to-modest when the results yielded by all algorithms were evaluated, but were highest when the UCSD algorithm was employed (UCSD,
r
= 0.498,
p
< 0.001; Cole-Kripke,
r
= 0.389,
p
< 0.01; Sadeh,
r
= 0.272,
p
= 0.057). Actigraphic measures of mean total sleep time underestimated sleep in patients with severe obstructive sleep apnea (apnea–hypopnea index [AHI] ≥30), and the correlation was low (
r
= 0.317,
p
= 0.116), but overestimated sleep, with high correlations, in patients with mild (5 ≤ AHI < 15) and moderate OSA (15 ≤ AHI < 30;
r
= 0.859,
p
< 0.001;
r
= 0.842,
p
< 0.001, respectively).
Conclusions
Among the three actigraphic algorithms tested in this study, sleep duration estimated by the UCSD algorithm was the most correlated with polysomnography data in an OSA population. However, none of them was reliable enough for estimating sleep time in patients with sleep-disordered breathing, especially in patients with severe OSA.
Journal Article