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Featured researches published by Bon D. Ku.


Journal of Korean Medical Science | 2011

Clinical Characteristics of a Nationwide Hospital-based Registry of Mild-to-Moderate Alzheimer's Disease Patients in Korea: A CREDOS (Clinical Research Center for Dementia of South Korea) Study

Hee Kyung Park; Duk L. Na; Seol-Heui Han; Ji-Young Kim; Hae-Kwan Cheong; Seong Yoon Kim; Sang Yun Kim; Chang Hyung Hong; Kim De; Bon D. Ku; So Young Moon; Jun-Young Lee; Yong S. Shim; Young Chul Youn; Eun-Joo Kim; Beoung-Chae Kim; Kee Hyung Park; Kyung Ryeol Cha; Sang Won Seo; Jae-Hong Lee

With rapid population aging, the socioeconomic burden caused by dementia care is snowballing. Although a few community-based studies of Alzheimers disease (AD) have been performed in Korea, there has never been a nationwide hospital-based study thereof. We aimed to identify the demographics and clinical characteristics of mild-to-moderate AD patients from the Clinical Research Center for Dementia of Korea (CREDOS) registry. A total of 1,786 patients were consecutively included from September 2005 to June 2010. Each patient underwent comprehensive neurological examination, interview for caregivers, laboratory investigations, neuropsychological tests, and brain MRI. The mean age was 74.0 yr and the female percentage 67.0%. The mean period of education was 7.1 yr and the frequency of early-onset AD (< 65 yr old) was 18.8%. Among the vascular risk factors, hypertension (48.9%) and diabetes mellitus (22.3%) were the most frequent. The mean score of the Korean version of Mini-Mental State Examination (K-MMSE) was 19.2 and the mean sum of box scores of Clinical Dementia Rating (CDR-SB) 5.1. Based on the well-structured, nationwide, and hospital-based registry, this study provides the unique clinical characteristics of AD and emphasizes the importance of vascular factors in AD in Korea.


European Neurology | 2011

Impact of white matter changes on activities of daily living in mild to moderate dementia.

So Young Moon; Duk L. Na; Sang Won Seo; Jun-Young Lee; Bon D. Ku; Seong Yoon Kim; Kyung Won Park; Yong S. Shim; Young Chul Youn; Chan-Seung Chung; Hae-Kwan Cheong; Seong Hye Choi; Kyung Ryeol Cha; Jungeun Kim; Jee H. Jeong

The association between white matter changes and activities of daily living (ADL) in a large, well-defined cohort of patients with mild-to-moderate dementia (either Alzheimer’s disease or subcortical vascular dementia) were investigated. A total of 289 patients were divided into three groups (140 mild, 99 moderate, and 50 severe) depending on the degree of white matter changes as indicated on brain magnetic resonance image scans. Further, we analyzed the three groups’ performances on basic and instrumental ADL. The degree of white matter changes was associated with greater age, hypertension, previous history of stroke, higher Hachinski Ischemic Score, worse global cognitive and functional status, and an increased impairment of basic ADL and instrumental ADL. The increased impairment with regard to the severe group’s performance on both the basic and instrumental ADL remained significant after adjustment for age and hypertension. Tasks involving physical activities were most significant. This was the first study investigating the association between white matter changes and ADL in a large, well-defined dementia cohort. The present study suggests that severe white matter changes may be associated with higher impairment on both basic and instrumental ADL.


European Neurology | 2011

Effects of Medial Temporal Atrophy and White Matter Hyperintensities on the Cognitive Functions in Patients with Alzheimer’s Disease

Yong S. Shim; Young Chul Youn; Duk L. Na; Seong Yoon Kim; Hae-Kwan Cheong; So Young Moon; Kyung Won Park; Bon D. Ku; Jun-Young Lee; Jee H. Jeong; Heeyoung Kang; Eun-Joo Kim; Jung-Sun Lee; Seok Min Go; Sook Hui Kim; Kyung Ryeol Cha; Sang Won Seo

Aims: We conducted this study to investigate the independent association of medial temporal atrophy (MTA) and white matter hyperintensities (WMH) with cognitive impairments of Alzheimer’s disease (AD) patients and the interaction between MTA and WMH. Methods: From 13 centers, a total of 216 AD patients were consecutively recruited and their MTA and WMH were visually rated. We evaluated the association of MTA and WMH with the various cognitive domains, and the interaction between MTA and WMH. Results: MTA independently correlated with scores of the Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE), Clinical Dementia Rating scale (CDR), delayed recalls of the Seoul Verbal Learning Test (SVLT), the Boston Naming Test (BNT), and Word Fluency. WMH independently correlated with MMSE, CDR, Digit Span, and Stroop word reading, but not with delayed recall. There were interactions of WMH and MTA on CDR (p = 0.004), SVLT (p = 0.023), BNT (p = 0.002) and the semantic Word Fluency (p = 0.007). Conclusion: MTA and WMH independently affected cognitive deficits in AD patients, with somewhat different patterns where MTA was associated mostly with memory and language, while WMH were associated with attention and frontal executive functions. This study also showed interactions between MTA and WMH on some cognitive deficits and dementia severity, suggesting that they synergistically contribute to cognitive impairment in AD.


International Psychogeriatrics | 2013

Effects of education on the progression of early- versus late-stage mild cognitive impairment.

Byoung Seok Ye; Sang Won Seo; Hanna Cho; Seong Yoon Kim; Jung-Sun Lee; Eun-Joo Kim; Yunhwan Lee; Joung Hwan Back; Chang Hyung Hong; Seong Hye Choi; Kyung Won Park; Bon D. Ku; So Young Moon; SangYun Kim; Seol-Heui Han; Jae-Hong Lee; Hae-Kwan Cheong; Duk L. Na

BACKGROUND Highly educated participants with normal cognition show lower incidence of Alzheimers disease (AD) than poorly educated participants, whereas longitudinal studies involving AD have reported that higher education is associated with more rapid cognitive decline. We aimed to evaluate whether highly educated amnestic mild cognitive impairment (aMCI) participants show more rapid cognitive decline than those with lower levels of education. METHODS A total of 249 aMCI patients enrolled from 31 memory clinics using the standard assessment and diagnostic processes were followed with neuropsychological evaluation (duration 17.2 ± 8.8 months). According to baseline performances on memory tests, participants were divided into early-stage aMCI (-1.5 to -1.0 standard deviation (SD)) and late-stage aMCI (below -1.5 SD) groups. Risk of AD conversion and changes in neuropsychological performances according to the level of education were evaluated. RESULTS Sixty-two patients converted to AD over a mean follow-up of 1.43 years. The risk of AD conversion was higher in late-stage aMCI than early-stage aMCI. Cox proportional hazard models showed that aMCI participants, and late-stage aMCI participants in particular, with higher levels of education had a higher risk of AD conversion than those with lower levels of education. Late-stage aMCI participants with higher education showed faster cognitive decline in language, memory, and Clinical Dementia Rating Sum of Boxes (CDR-SOB) scores. On the contrary, early-stage aMCI participants with higher education showed slower cognitive decline in MMSE and CDR-SOB scores. CONCLUSIONS Our findings suggest that the protective effects of education against cognitive decline remain in early-stage aMCI and disappear in late-stage aMCI.


Comprehensive Psychiatry | 2015

Gender differences in risk factors for transition from mild cognitive impairment to Alzheimer’s disease: A CREDOS study

Sangha Kim; Min-Ji Kim; Seonwoo Kim; Hyo Kang; Shin Won Lim; Woojae Myung; Yunhwan Lee; Chang Hyung Hong; Seong Hye Choi; Duk L. Na; Sang Won Seo; Bon D. Ku; Seong Yoon Kim; Sang Yun Kim; Jee Hyang Jeong; Sun Ah Park; Bernard J. Carroll; Doh Kwan Kim

BACKGROUND Women are subject to a disproportionate burden from Alzheimers disease (AD) and sex differences exist in treatment response and prognosis of the disease. Yet gender-specific risk factors have not been widely studied. We aimed to investigate gender-specific risk factors for AD in subjects with mild cognitive impairment (MCI). METHODS Participants (n=294) with MCI were recruited from a nationwide, prospective cohort study of dementia and were followed for a median (range) of 13.8 (6.0-36.0) months. Sex-stratified associations of progression to AD with baseline characteristics were explored. RESULTS Seventy-four individuals (25.2%) developed incident dementia (67 AD) during follow-up. Significant risk factors for probable AD differed by sex. In men, the significant risk factors were severe periventricular white matter hyperintensities, and poorer global cognitive function. In women, older age, clinically significant depressive symptoms at baseline, and positive APOE ε4 alleles were the significant risk factors. CONCLUSIONS Risk factors for progression from MCI to probable AD differed in men and women. These results may translate to gender-specific preventative or therapeutic strategies for patients with MCI.


Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry and Neurology | 2011

Different Associations of Periventricular and Deep White Matter Lesions with Cognition, Neuropsychiatric Symptoms, and Daily Activities in Dementia

Kee Hyung Park; Jun-Young Lee; Duk L. Na; Seong Yoon Kim; Hae-Kwan Cheong; So Young Moon; Yong S. Shim; Kyung Won Park; Bon D. Ku; Seong Hye Choi; Hwan Joo; Joong Sun Lee; Seok Min Go; Sook Hui Kim; SangYun Kim; Kyung Ryeol Cha; Juwon Lee; Sang Won Seo

We investigated the associations of periventricular white matter hyperintensities (PWMHs) and deep white matter hyperintensities (DWMHs) with cognition, activities of daily living (ADLs), and neuropsychiatric symptoms in dementia. This was a hospital-based MRI300 study. We recruited patients newly diagnosed with mild-to-moderate dementia caused either by Alzheimer’s disease or subcortical ischemic vascular dementia from 13 dementia clinics at university or general hospitals in South Korea. We enrolled 289 patients aged over 50 from August 2007 to March 2008. We compared cognition, ADLs, and neuropsychiatric symptoms among 3 groups according to the severities of PWMHs and DWMHs, respectively, by adjusting for age, vascular risk factors, and level of other WMHs. A higher severity of PWMHs was related to lower cognitive function and severer neuropsychiatric symptoms, whereas basic ADLs were associated with DWMH. Both PWMHs and DWMHs exhibited different associations with cognition, neuropsychiatric symptoms, and daily activities.


Clinical Neurology and Neurosurgery | 2009

Multiple bilateral non-hemorrhagic cerebral infarctions associated with microscopic polyangiitis

Bon D. Ku; Hyun Young Shin

Microscopic polyangiitis (MPA) is a systemic disorder that affects small vessels, such as arterioles, venules or capillaries. Cerebrovascular disease has been rarely reported in connection with MPA; this complication is usually associated with fatal hemorrhage or hemorrhagic conversion. We report a case of MPA with multiple bilateral non-hemorrhagic cerebral infarctions in a 66-year-old woman who was undergoing steroid pulse therapy. The diagnosis of MPA was based on the presence of painful mononeuritis multiplex, pulmonary fibrosis, and increased myeloperoxidase activity and on the biopsy of the sural nerve.


Cognitive and Behavioral Neurology | 2008

Cognitive Impairments in Patients With Hemispatial Neglect From Acute Right Hemisphere Stroke

Byung Hwa Lee; Eun-Joo Kim; Bon D. Ku; Kyung Mook Choi; Sang Won Seo; Gyeong-Moon Kim; Chin-Sang Chung; Kenneth M. Heilman; Duk L. Na

ObjectiveLittle is known about cognitive differences between patients showing neglect and those without neglect in their acute stroke stage. The aim of this study was to investigate how the patients with neglect (N+) differ from those without neglect (N−) in general cognitive function assessed by the Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE). MethodsPatients consisted of 98 consecutive patients with acute right hemisphere stroke. The patients underwent neglect test battery followed by MMSE in the same day. ResultsThe frequency of cognitive deficits in N+ group was higher than that of N− group (74.1% vs. 35.0%). A regression analysis, after controlling for lesion volume, age, and education, showed that neglect was a significant predictor of low MMSE score. Among MMSE subdomains, the severity of neglect was related to poor performances on episodic memory (orientation and 3-word recall), working memory/calculation (serial 7s), and constructional praxis (interlocking pentagons). ConclusionsThese results suggest that hemispatial neglect is associated with several forms of cognitive deficits in patients with acute right hemisphere stroke.


Journal of Clinical Neurology | 2007

Cerebral infarction producing sudden isolated foot drop.

Bon D. Ku; Eun Ja Lee; Hyeyun Kim

Foot drop usually results from lesions affecting the peripheral neural pathway related to dorsiflexor muscles, especially the peroneal nerve. Although a central nervous system lesion is suspected when there is a lack of clinical evidence for a lower motor neuron lesion, such cases are extremely rare. We describe a patient with sudden isolated foot drop caused by a small acute cortical infarction in the high convexity of the precentral gyrus. This report indicates that a cortical infarction may have to be considered as a potential cause of foot drop.


Journal of Korean Medical Science | 2007

Amnesic syndrome in a mammillothalamic tract infarction.

Key-Chung Park; Sung-Sang Yoon; Dae-Il Chang; Kyung-Cheon Chung; Tae-Beom Ahn; Bon D. Ku; John C. Adair; Duk L. Na

It is controversial whether isolated lesions of mammillothalamic tract (MTT) produce significant amnesia. Since the MTT is small and adjacent to several important structures for memory, amnesia associated with isolated MTT infarction has been rarely reported. We report a patient who developed amnesia following an infarction of the left MTT that spared adjacent memory-related structures including the anterior thalamic nucleus. The patients memory deficit was characterized by a severe anterograde encoding deficit and retrograde amnesia with a temporal gradient. In contrast, he did not show either frontal executive dysfunction or personality change that is frequently recognized in the anterior or medial thalamic lesion. We postulate that an amnesic syndrome can develop following discrete lesions of the MTT.

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Duk L. Na

Samsung Medical Center

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Eun-Joo Kim

Pusan National University

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Yong S. Shim

Catholic University of Korea

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