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Dive into the research topics where Hong Suk Park is active.

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Featured researches published by Hong Suk Park.


Journal of Vascular and Interventional Radiology | 2010

Extremity Arteriovenous Malformations Involving the Bone: Therapeutic Outcomes of Ethanol Embolotherapy

Young Soo Do; Kwang Bo Park; Hong Suk Park; Sung Ki Cho; Sung Wook Shin; Jung Won Moon; Dong Ik Kim; Young-Wook Kim; Il Soo Chang; Sang Hyun Lee; Hee Youn Hwang; Ji Hye Hwang; In-Wook Choo

PURPOSEnTo assess retrospectively the therapeutic results, complications, and therapeutic approach to ethanol embolotherapy of extremity arteriovenous malformations (AVMs) involving the bone.nnnMATERIALS AND METHODSnFrom December 1996 to May 2009, 22 patients (12 male, 10 female; eight children, 14 adults; age range, 1-64 years) with extremity AVMs involving the bone underwent staged ethanol embolotherapy (range, 1-12 procedures; mean, 4.4 procedures) under general anesthesia. Four patients had pure bone AVMs and 18 had mixed bone and soft-tissue AVMs. Pulmonary artery pressure and arterial blood pressure were monitored as ethanol was injected. Ethanol embolotherapy was performed by direct puncture and/or transcatheter approach. Therapeutic outcomes were established by evaluation of the clinical response of symptoms and signs, as well as the degree of devascularization at follow-up angiography or computed tomography.nnnRESULTSnNinety-six ethanol embolotherapy procedures were performed in 22 patients. Four (18%) were cured, 14 (64%) showed improvement, three (14%) showed no change, and one (4%) experienced treatment failure and amputation of the affected extremity. Ethanol embolotherapy was considered effective (ie, combined cure and improvement outcomes) in 18 patients (82%). Ten patients (45%) experienced complications. Twelve minor complications (skin and transient peripheral nerve injury; 13%) and one major complications (longstanding nerve palsy; 1%) occurred in 96 procedures.nnnCONCLUSIONSnEthanol embolotherapy of extremity AVMs involving the bone has the potential to eliminate or improve symptoms in a high percentage of patients, with an acceptable risk of minor and major complications.


Journal of Vascular Surgery | 2012

Endovascular treatment combined with emboloscleorotherapy for pelvic arteriovenous malformations

Young Soo Do; Young-Wook Kim; Kwang Bo Park; Dong Ik Kim; Hong Suk Park; Sung Ki Cho; Sung Wook Shin; Yang Jin Park

PURPOSEnTo describe the clinical features and treatment outcomes after combined endovascular and embolosclerotherapy treatment of pelvic arteriovenous malformations (AVMs).nnnMETHODSnFrom November 1996 to May 2011, we treated 12 patients (seven males, five females; mean age, 38.1 ±14.6 years; age range, 23-70 years) with pelvic AVMs. Our treatment strategy was coil embolization of a dilated draining vein of the AVM to reduce blood flow velocity in the AVM lesion and sclerotherapy of the residual arteriovenous fistulae with high-concentration ethanol to eradicate potential AVM recurrence. To ensure effective endovascular treatment, we used transarterial, transvenous, percutaneous, or combined access routes. Treatment outcomes were assessed with periodic computed tomography angiograms and clinical examinations.nnnRESULTSnDuring the follow-up period (mean, 33.2 months; median, 21.3 months; range, 1-96 months) after embolosclerotherapy, we observed complete remission (no residual or recurrent AVM lesion on follow-up computed tomography and complete symptomatic relief) in 10 (83.3%) patients and partial remission in two (16.7%) patients. One major complication of focal bladder necrosis occurred (1/22 sessions, 4.5%, 1/12 patients, 8.3%), but this resolved with conservative treatment. As early procedure-related complications, transient pulmonary hypertension and/or hemoglobinuria developed in 54.5% (12/22 sessions) and 22.7% (5/22 sessions) of patients, respectively.nnnCONCLUSIONSnCombined embolosclerotherapy of pelvic AVMs with coils and ethanol was efficacious at achieving complete remission.


Journal of Vascular Surgery | 2011

Ethanol embolotherapy of hand arteriovenous malformations

Hong Suk Park; Young Soo Do; Kwang Bo Park; Dong Ik Kim; Young-Wook Kim; Myung Joo Kim; Byung Seop Shin; In Wook Choo

PURPOSEnEthanol embolotherapy is one of the established methods in the treatment of extremity arteriovenous malformations (AVMs). The purpose of this study was to report the application of this method to hand AVMs and to assess retrospectively the therapeutic outcomes and complications.nnnPATIENTS AND METHODSnFrom December 1998 to March 2009, we treated 31 patients with hand AVMs (16 women, 15 men, age range, 5-51 years; mean age, 27 years). With the patients under general anesthesia, they underwent staged ethanol embolotherapy (range, 1-11 sessions; mean, 2.8 sessions) by direct puncture and or intra-arterial approach. Therapeutic outcomes were evaluated by clinical responses of symptoms and signs, as well as the degree of devascularization on angiography. We also divided the patients into three groups according to the extent of involvement: a group involving fingers (n = 14), a group involving fingers and parts of the palm (n = 9), and a group involving parts of the palm (n = 8) and compared the therapeutic outcomes and complications among groups.nnnRESULTSnOne patient (3%) was cured, 22 patients (73%) showed improvement, and 7 patients (23%) showed no change or aggravation after the treatment. One patient was lost to follow-up. Nineteen patients (61%) had one or more complications, including skin necrosis in 14 patients (45%), bullae in 7 patients (23%), joint stiffness or contracture in 6 patients (19%), and transient nerve palsy in 4 patients (13%). All of the complications were resolved completely after 1 to 8 months (average, 3.4 months) follow-up, except in 2 patients who underwent amputation. According to the location of AVMs, rates of therapeutic benefit and complications were 93% and 64% in the group involving fingers, 38% and 78% in the group involving fingers and the palm, and 88% and 38% in the group involving the palm, respectively.nnnCONCLUSIONnEthanol embolotherapy of hand AVMs improves symptoms in a certain percentage of patients with a relatively high risk of complications. According to the extent of AVMs, there was a trend toward a higher complication rate in treatment of AVMs involving fingers and a lower rate of therapeutic benefit in AVMs involving both the fingers and the palm.


Journal of Vascular and Interventional Radiology | 2010

Effects of Repeat Bolus Ethanol Injections on Cardiopulmonary Hemodynamic Changes during Embolotherapy of Arteriovenous Malformations of the Extremities

Byung Seop Shin; Young Soo Do; Hyun Sung Cho; Dong Ik Kim; Tae Soo Hahm; Chung Su Kim; Justin Sangwook Ko; Si Ra Bang; Kwang Bo Park; Sung Ki Cho; Hong Suk Park; Seonwoo Kim

PURPOSEnThis study was designed to investigate the effects of repeat bolus absolute ethanol injections on cardiopulmonary hemodynamic changes during ethanol embolotherapy of inoperable congenital arteriovenous (AV) malformations in the extremities.nnnMATERIALS AND METHODSnThirty adult patients (14 male, 16 female; age range, 22-51 years) who underwent ethanol embolotherapy of extremity AV malformations were enrolled in the study. A pulmonary artery catheter was used to measure hemodynamic profiles at baseline (T(baseline)), immediately before (T(pre)) and after (T(post)) a bolus injection of absolute ethanol, at the time of the maximum mean pulmonary arterial pressure (PAP) value during a session (T(highest)), 10 minutes after the final injection (T(final)), and after restoration of spontaneous breathing (T(resp)).nnnRESULTSnThe systolic, mean, and diastolic PAP (P < .01, P < .01, and P < .01, respectively) and the systemic vascular resistance index (P < .05) and pulmonary vascular resistance index (PVRI; P < .05) of T(highest) and T(resp) were significantly higher than values for T(final). The volume of a single bolus injection of absolute ethanol from 0.023 to 0.175 mL/kg of body weight showed that the systolic PAP (P = .02), pulmonary capillary wedge pressure (P = .02), and PVRI (P < .01) significantly increased in accordance with the increased single volume of absolute ethanol. A significant increase of the right ventricular end-diastolic volume index and right ventricular end-systolic volume index were observed at a dose of more than 0.14 mL/kg of body weight for a single bolus injection of absolute ethanol.nnnCONCLUSIONSnDuring ethanol embolotherapy of extremity AV malformations, significant hemodynamic changes can arise during a bolus injection of absolute ethanol. Cardiopulmonary hemodynamic profiles should be monitored closely after a bolus injection of more than 0.14 mL/kg of body weight of absolute ethanol.


Acta Radiologica | 2011

Ischemic liver injuries after hepatic artery embolization in patients with delayed postoperative hemorrhage following hepatobiliary pancreatic surgery

Sung Ki Cho; Sam Soo Kim; Young Soo Do; Kwang Bo Park; Sung Wook Shin; Hong Suk Park; Sung Wook Choo; In Wook Choo

Background Many collateral pathways to the liver are dissected during hepatobiliary pancreatic surgery and, if the arterial bleeding is massive and a hematoma becomes larger, the adjacent portal vein can be compressed with impairment of the portal venous flow. Purpose To evaluate the frequency and severity of ischemic liver injuries after hepatic artery embolization in patients with delayed postoperative arterial hemorrhage after hepatobiliary pancreatic surgery. Material and Methods Eighteen patients undergoing proper or common hepatic artery embolization for delayed postoperative arterial hemorrhage after hepatobiliary pancreatic surgery achieved hemostasis. To evaluate the frequency and severity of ischemic liver injuries, the liver enzyme levels and CT findings before and after hepatic artery embolization were retrospectively compared and the clinical outcomes after hepatic artery embolization were analyzed. Angiographic findings were also analyzed to reveal any association with development of ischemic liver injuries after hepatic artery embolization. Results Ischemic liver injuries were observed in 15 (83%) of 18 patients undergoing hepatic artery embolization for postoperative hemorrhage. Injuries included hepatic infarction combined with abscess in one (5%) patient, hepatic infarction in 12 (67%) patients, and transient hepatic ischemia/dysfunction in two (11%). As for the extent of hepatic infarction, lobar infarction developed in two patients and subsegmental infarction in 11. One patient with right hepatic lobar infarction died of hepatic failure 11 days after hepatic artery embolization. In the other 14 patients with ischemic liver injuries, the elevated liver enzymes returned to baseline levels within two weeks. All of the four patients with portal vein stenosis, four patients with no hepatic arterial flow on post-embolization angiogram, and one patient with both had hepatic infarction after hepatic artery embolization. No ischemic liver injuries developed after hepatic artery embolization in three patients with no portal vein stenosis and bilobar hepatic arterial flow via the left hepatic artery aberrantly arising from the left gastric artery or from the common hepatic artery. Conclusion Ischemic liver injuries can develop in most patients undergoing hepatic artery embolization for postoperative arterial hemorrhage after hepatobiliary pancreatic surgery; hepatic infarction appears to be the most frequent type of ischemic liver injury. Hepatic artery embolization for postoperative arterial hemorrhage after hepatobiliary pancreatic surgery may carry a great risk of ischemic liver injury if a patient has portal vein stenosis or no aberrant hepatic artery.


Annals of Vascular Surgery | 2012

The Results of Surgical Treatment for Patients With Venous Malformations

Young-Nam Roh; Young Soo Do; Kwang Bo Park; Hong Suk Park; Young-Wook Kim; Byung-Boong Lee; Jai-Kyong Pyon; So-Young Lim; Goo-Hyun Mun; Dong Ik Kim

BACKGROUNDnThe objective of this study was to estimate the outcomes of surgical treatment for patients with venous malformations (VMs).nnnMETHODSnWe retrospectively reviewed the data of 48 patients who underwent surgical management for VMs from 1994 to 2009 at our institute. The 1-year responses to surgeries were classified into three groups based on the results: remission, improvement, and no change.nnnRESULTSnThe indications of surgeries were mass or swelling in 48 patients (100%), intractable pain in 11 (23%), limb length discrepancy in seven (15%), bleeding in three (6%), and limitation of the range of motion in one (2%). The locations of the VMs were head and neck in 17 patients (35%), abdomen and pelvis in one (2%), perineum and genitalia in three (6%), upper extremities in 12 (25%), and lower extremities or buttocks in 15 (31%). Of the 48 surgeries for radical excision and debulking, 25 (52%) resulted in remission, 11 (23%) in improvement, and 12 (25%) in no change. During follow-up (mean: 44.8 ± 36.6 months, range: 0-111 months), recurrence after radical excision occurred in 10% (3 of 31) of the patients, and size increase after debulking surgery in 24% (4 of 17) of the patients.nnnCONCLUSIONSnSurgical treatment can be an option in patients with VMs, especially with symptoms that cannot be managed with conservative therapy or sclerotherapy. After excisional or debulking surgery in patient with VMs, remission or improvement can be observed in 75%.


Journal of The Korean Surgical Society | 2012

Spontaneous aortic rupture in a patient with neurofibromatosis type 1

Yang Jin Park; Keun Myoung Park; Jiyoung Oh; Hong Suk Park; Jung-Sun Kim; Young-Wook Kim

Neurofibromatosis type I (NF-1) is a rare autosomal dominant genetic disorder occurring in 1 in 3,000 individuals. Vasculopathy is a rarely reported finding in patients with NF-1. Here, we report a case of recurrent aortic pseudoaneurysm after endovascular aneurysm repair in a 49-year-old male patient with NF-1. On the sixth postoperative day following a successful open surgical repair of an aortic pseudoaneurysm, he developed hemoperitoneum due to a delayed rupture of the mesenteric artery branch. This was treated with endovascular coil embolization. We report the clinical features and histologic findings of this rare vascular disorder with a review of the relevant literature.


Journal of Vascular and Interventional Radiology | 2010

Cardiovascular Effects and Predictability of Cardiovascular Collapse after Repeated Intravenous Bolus Injections of Absolute Ethanol in Anesthetized Pigs

Byung Seop Shin; Young Soo Do; Hyun Sung Cho; Tae Soo Hahm; Chung Su Kim; Woo Seok Sim; Chul Joong Lee; Sang Hyun Lee; Hyun Seung Jin; Hyoung Gon Song; Kwang Bo Park; Hong Suk Park; Sang Tae Kim

PURPOSEnTo evaluate the effects of repeated intravenous bolus injections of absolute ethanol on cardiopulmonary hemodynamic changes and to investigate the predictability of ethanol-induced cardiovascular collapse in anesthetized pigs.nnnMATERIALS AND METHODSnTwenty pigs aged 3-6 months and weighing 28-38 kg were enrolled in the study. Absolute ethanol (0.1 mL/kg of body weight) was repeatedly injected through the inferior vena cava central to the renal vein at 10-minute intervals up to a total volume of 1.0 mL/kg. The subjects were divided into a cardiovascular collapse group and a no-collapse group according to the development or absence of cardiac collapse.nnnRESULTSnAmong the 20 pigs, 12 died before the final injection. Hemodynamic parameters measured immediately before the injection of absolute ethanol did not differ between the cardiovascular collapse group and the no-collapse group except that among animals with cardiovascular collapse, the injection immediately before the one causing cardiovascular collapse resulted in significant increases in the following hemodynamic parameters: mean pulmonary arterial pressure (P < .01), pulmonary vascular resistance (P = .04), and right ventricular end-diastolic volume (P = .02). No such increases were observed in the no-collapse group.nnnCONCLUSIONSnHemodynamic profiles in pigs obtained immediately before intravenous injection of absolute ethanol did not predict the subsequent occurrence of cardiovascular collapse except after the injection immediately preceding the one resulting in cardiovascular collapse. In this animal model, significant increases in select hemodynamic parameters occurred after the injection immediately preceding the one resulting in cardiovascular collapse.


Journal of Vascular and Interventional Radiology | 2011

Heavily Calcified Occlusive Lesions of the Iliac Artery: Long-Term Patency and CT Findings After Stent Placement

Il Soo Chang; Kwang Bo Park; Young Soo Do; Hong Suk Park; Sung Wook Shin; Sung Ki Cho; Sung Wook Choo; In-Wook Choo; Dong Ik Kim; Young-Wook Kim

PURPOSEnTo evaluate the influence of heavy calcification on iliac arterial stent expansion and patency and to define the spatial relationship between the stent and heavy calcifications on computed tomography (CT).nnnMATERIALS AND METHODSnThirteen patients (11 men, two women; mean age, 66.5 y) with 14 heavily calcified iliac arteries received primary stent treatment between 1998 and 2008. Anatomic success was defined by less than 30% residual stenosis on final follow-up CT angiography. Hemodynamic success was defined as an increase in the ankle-brachial index (ABI) of at least 0.15 versus baseline. Clinical success was defined by achievement of clinical improvement of at least one clinical category. Stent patency; anatomic, hemodynamic, and clinical success rate; morphology of heavy calcifications; calcium score; and stent geometry were evaluated.nnnRESULTSnStents were successfully inserted in all cases. During a mean follow-up of 33.6 months (range, 8-55 mo), the stent-implanted iliac arteries remained anatomically patent in all patients on final follow-up. The anatomic, hemodynamic, and clinical success rates were 28.6%, 60%, and 78.6%, respectively. Mean ABIs were 0.68 ± 0.22 before the procedure and 0.91 ± 0.23 after the procedure (P = .021). Mean luminal stenosis measurements were 77.9% before the procedure and 47.9% after the procedure (P = .008).nnnCONCLUSIONSnIliac stents in heavily calcified lesions showed hemodynamically significant residual stenosis in a considerable number of cases. However, stent patency was not affected even with incomplete expansion of the stent.


Clinical Imaging | 2012

Evolution of portal vein tumor thromboses in patients with hepatocellular carcinoma: CT findings and transition of serum tumor markers

Il Soo Chang; Sung Wook Shin; Sung Ki Cho; Hyunchul Rhim; Dongil Choi; Kwang Bo Park; Hong Suk Park; Sung Wook Choo; Young Soo Do; In-Wook Choo

We investigated the patterns of evolution of portal vein tumor thromboses (PVTTs) and the changes in serum tumor marker levels in untreated hepatocellular carcinomas. The mean time required for the subsegmental or lower-order branch PVTTs and the segmental PVTTs to reach the large portal vein was 120 and 101 days, respectively. The mean values of the serum alpha-fetoprotein levels markedly increased after the appearance of PVTTs from 1858.7 ng/ml to 6795.2 ng/ml.

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Dong Ik Kim

Samsung Medical Center

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Sung Ki Cho

Samsung Medical Center

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