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Featured researches published by Jee Young Lee.


Neuroreport | 2009

Cortico-muscular coherence increases with tremor improvement after deep brain stimulation in Parkinson's disease.

Hame Park; June Sic Kim; Sun Ha Paek; Beom S. Jeon; Jee Young Lee; Chun Kee Chung

Deep brain stimulation on the subthalamic nucleus has been used to relieve Parkinsonian motor symptoms. However, the underlying physiological mechanism has not been fully understood. Beta-band cortico-muscular coherence increases when healthy humans perform isometric contraction. We hypothesized that this might be a measure of symptomatic improvement in motor performance after subthalamic nucleus deep brain stimulation. Here, we measured the &bgr;-band cortico-muscular coherence with magnetoencephalography from three Parkinsons disease patients. We then compared the coherence values for stimulator on-state and off-state. We found that when the stimulator is on, the &bgr; cortico-muscular coherence elevates significantly for the tremorous hand compared with that when the stimulator is off. This suggests that deep brain stimulation resulted in better cortico-muscular coordination.


Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry | 2014

Extrastriatal dopaminergic changes in Parkinson’s disease patients with impulse control disorders

Jee Young Lee; Seongho Seo; Yu Kyeong Kim; Hye Bin Yoo; Young Eun Kim; In Chan Song; Jae Sung Lee; Beom S. Jeon

Objective To investigate the extrastriatal dopaminergic neural changes in relation to the medication-related impulse control disorders (ICD) in Parkinsons disease (PD). Method A total of 31 subjects (11 and 11 drug-treated PD patients with and without medication-related ICDs and 9 healthy controls) having no other co-morbid psychiatric disorders participated in this study. Each subject underwent dynamic N-(3-[18F]fluoropropyl)-2-carbomethoxy-3-(4-iodophenyl) nortropane (FP-CIT) positron emission tomography scans. Binding potentials (BP) at nucleus accumbens, amygdala, orbitofrontal and ventromedial prefrontal cortex (VMPFC), putamen and caudate nucleus were estimated, and whole brain parametric maps of [18F]-FP-CIT binding were analysed by original and putaminal normalised manners. Results Compared with the healthy controls, BPs at both VMPFCs were significantly high and the extrastriatal to putaminal BP ratios at all regions were approximately three times higher in both PD groups. The PD ICD patients showed significantly higher BPs at the right VMPFC and tendency to lower BPs at the left nucleus accumbens compared with those free of ICD. The ICD subjects also showed reduced uptakes at both ventral striatal regions in the original parametric analysis and higher uptakes at the left insular and right posterior cingulate cortex and lower uptakes at both ventral pallidums in the putaminal normalised parametric analysis compared with the non-ICD subjects. Conclusions A great gap in extrastriatal versus striatal dopaminergic fibre degenerations is an intrinsic condition predisposing to ICD in PD. Distinct pattern of extrastriatal changes between the ICD and non-ICD patients could provide a further insight into a mechanism of ICD in PD.


Journal of Clinical Neurology | 2016

The KMDS-NATION Study: Korean Movement Disorders Society Multicenter Assessment of Non-Motor Symptoms and Quality of Life in Parkinson's Disease NATION Study Group

Do Young Kwon; Seong Beom Koh; Jae-Hyeok Lee; Hee Kyung Park; Han-Joon Kim; Hae Won Shin; Jinyoung Youn; Kun Woo Park; Sun Ah Choi; Sang Jin Kim; Seong Min Choi; Ji Yun Park; Beom S. Jeon; Ji-Young Kim; Sun Ju Chung; Chong Sik Lee; Jeong Ho Park; Tae Beom Ahn; Won Chan Kim; Hyun Sook Kim; Sang Myung Cheon; Hee Tae Kim; Jee Young Lee; Ji Sun Kim; Eun Joo Kim; Jong-Min Kim; Kwang Soo Lee; Joong-Seok Kim; Min-Jeong Kim; Jong Sam Baik

Background and Purpose Nonmotor symptoms (NMS) in Parkinsons disease (PD) have multisystem origins with heterogeneous manifestations that develop throughout the course of PD. NMS are increasingly recognized as having a significant impact on the health-related quality of life (HrQoL). We aimed to determine the NMS presentation according to PD status, and the associations of NMS with other clinical variables and the HrQoL of Korean PD patients. Methods We surveyed patients in 37 movement-disorders clinics throughout Korea. In total, 323 PD patients were recruited for assessment of disease severity and duration, NMS, HrQoL, and other clinical variables including demographics, cognition, sleep scale, fatigability, and symptoms. Results In total, 98.1% of enrolled PD subjects suffered from various kinds of NMS. The prevalence of NMS and scores in each NMS domain were significantly higher in the PD group, and the NMS worsened as the disease progressed. Among clinical variables, disease duration and depressive mood showed significant correlations with all NMS domains (p<0.001). NMS status impacted HrQoL in PD (rS=0.329, p<0.01), and the association patterns differed with the disease stage. Conclusions The results of our survey suggest that NMS in PD are not simply isolated symptoms of degenerative disease, but rather exert significant influences throughout the disease course. A novel clinical approach focused on NMS to develop tailored management strategies is warranted to improve the HrQoL in PD patients.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Weight Change Is a Characteristic Non-Motor Symptom in Drug-Naïve Parkinson's Disease Patients with Non-Tremor Dominant Subtype: A Nation-Wide Observational Study.

Jun Kyu Mun; Jinyoung Youn; Jin Whan Cho; Eung Seok Oh; Ji Sun Kim; S Park; Wooyoung Jang; Jin Se Park; Seong Beom Koh; Jae-Hyeok Lee; Hee Kyung Park; Han-Joon Kim; Beom S. Jeon; Hae Won Shin; Sun Ah Choi; Sang Jin Kim; Seong Min Choi; Ji Yun Park; Ji-Young Kim; Sun Ju Chung; Chong Sik Lee; Tae Beom Ahn; Won Chan Kim; Hyun Sook Kim; Sang Myung Cheon; Jae Woo Kim; Hee Tae Kim; Jee Young Lee; Eun Joo Kim; Jong-Min Kim

Despite the clinical impact of non-motor symptoms (NMS) in Parkinson’s disease (PD), the characteristic NMS in relation to the motor subtypes of PD is not well elucidated. In this study, we enrolled drug-naïve PD patients and compared NMS between PD subtypes. We enrolled 136 drug-naïve, early PD patients and 50 normal controls. All the enrolled PD patients were divided into tremor dominant (TD) and non-tremor dominant (NTD) subtypes. The Non-Motor Symptom Scale and scales for each NMS were completed. We compared NMS and the relationship of NMS with quality of life between normal controls and PD patients, and between the PD subtypes. Comparing with normal controls, PD patients complained of more NMS, especially mood/cognitive symptoms, gastrointestinal symptoms, unexplained pain, weight change, and change in taste or smell. Between the PD subtypes, the NTD subtype showed higher total NMS scale score and sub-score about weight change. Weight change was the characteristic NMS related to NTD subtype even after controlled other variables with logistic regression analysis. Even from the early stage, PD patients suffer from various NMS regardless of dopaminergic medication. Among the various NMS, weight change is the characteristic NMS associated with NTD subtype in PD patients.


Journal of Movement Disorders | 2017

Validation of the Korean Version of the Scale for Outcomes in Parkinson's Disease-Autonomic

Ji-Young Kim; In Uk Song; Seong Beom Koh; Tae Beom Ahn; Sang Jin Kim; Sang Myung Cheon; Jin Whan Cho; Yun Joong Kim; Hyeo Il Ma; Mee Young Park; Jong Sam Baik; Phil Hyu Lee; Sun Ju Chung; Jong-Min Kim; Han-Joon Kim; Young Hee Sung; Do Young Kwon; Jae-Hyeok Lee; Jee Young Lee; Ji Sun Kim; Ji Young Yun; Hee-Jin Kim; Jin Young Hong; Mi Jung Kim; Jinyoung Youn; Ji Seon Kim; Eung Seok Oh; Hui Jun Yang; Won Tae Yoon; Sooyeoun You

Objective Autonomic symptoms are commonly observed in patients with Parkinson’s disease (PD) and often limit the activities of daily living. The Scale for Outcomes in Parkinson’s disease-Autonomic (SCOPA-AUT) was developed to evaluate and quantify autonomic symptoms in PD. The goal of this study was to translate the original SCOPA-AUT, which was written in English, into Korean and to evaluate its reliability and validity for Korean PD patients. Methods For the translation, the following processes were performed: forward translation, backward translation, expert review, pretest of the pre-final version and development of the final Korean version of SCOPA-AUT (K-SCOPA-AUT). In total, 127 patients with PD from 31 movement disorder clinics of university-affiliated hospitals in Korea were enrolled in this study. All patients were assessed using the K-SCOPA-AUT and other motor, non-motor, and quality of life scores. Test-retest reliability for the K-SCOPA-AUT was assessed over a time interval of 10−14 days. Results The internal consistency and reliability of the K-SCOPA-AUT was 0.727 as measured by the mean Cronbach’s α-coefficient. The test-retest correlation reliability was 0.859 by the Guttman split-half coefficient. The total K-SCOPA-AUT score showed a positive correlation with other non-motor symptoms [the Korean version of non-motor symptom scale (K-NMSS)], activities of daily living (Unified Parkinson’s Disease Rating Scale part II) and quality of life [the Korean version of Parkinson’s Disease Quality of Life 39 (K-PDQ39)]. Conclusion The K-SCOPA-AUT had good reliability and validity for the assessment of autonomic dysfunction in Korean PD patients. Autonomic symptom severities were associated with many other motor and non-motor impairments and influenced quality of life.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Acoustic Characteristics of Stridor in Multiple System Atrophy.

Dae Lim Koo; Jee Young Lee; Eun Yeon Joo; Seung Bong Hong; Hyunwoo Nam

Nocturnal stridor is a breathing disorder prevalent in patients with multiple system atrophy (MSA). An improved understanding of this breathing disorder is essential since nocturnal stridor carries a poor prognosis (an increased risk of sudden death). In this study, we aimed to classify types of stridor by sound analysis and to reveal their clinical significance. Patients who met the criteria for probable MSA and had undergone polysomnography (PSG) were recruited. Patients were then assessed clinically with sleep questionnaires, including the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index, and the Hoehn and Yahr scale. Nocturnal stridor and snoring were analyzed with the Multi-Dimensional Voice Program. Nocturnal stridor was recorded in 22 patients and snoring in 18 patients using the PSG. Waveforms of stridors were classified into rhythmic or semirhythmic after analysis of the oscillogram. Formants and harmonics were observed in both types of stridor, but not in snoring. Of the 22 patients diagnosed with stridor during the present study, fifteen have subsequently died, with the time to death after the PSG study being 1.9 ± 1.4 years (range 0.8 to 5.0 years). The rhythmic waveform group presented higher scores on the Hoehn and Yahr scale and the survival outcome of this group was lower compared to the semirhythmic waveform group (p = 0.030, p = 0.014). In the Kaplan Meier’s survival curve, the outcome of patients with rhythmic waveform was significantly less favorable than the outcome of patients with semirhythmic waveform (log-rank test, p < 0.001). Stridor in MSA can be classified into rhythmic and semirhythmic types and the rhythmic component signifies a poorer outcome.


Physics in Medicine and Biology | 2016

Noninvasive bi-graphical analysis for the quantification of slowly reversible radioligand binding.

Seongho Seo; Su Jin Kim; Hye Bin Yoo; Jee Young Lee; Yu Kyeong Kim; Dong Soo Lee; Yun Zhou; Jae Sung Lee

In this paper, we presented a novel reference-region-based (noninvasive) bi-graphical analysis for the quantification of a reversible radiotracer binding that may be too slow to reach relative equilibrium (RE) state during positron emission tomography (PET) scans. The proposed method indirectly implements the noninvasive Logan plot, through arithmetic combination of the parameters of two other noninvasive methods and the apparent tissue-to-plasma efflux rate constant for the reference region ([Formula: see text]). We investigated its validity and statistical properties, by performing a simulation study with various noise levels and [Formula: see text] values, and also evaluated its feasibility for [18F]FP-CIT PET in human brain. The results revealed that the proposed approach provides distribution volume ratio estimation comparable to the Logan plot at low noise levels while improving underestimation caused by non-RE state differently depending on [Formula: see text]. Furthermore, the proposed method was able to avoid noise-induced bias of the Logan plot, and the variability of its results was less dependent on [Formula: see text] than the Logan plot. Therefore, this approach, without issues related to arterial blood sampling given a pre-estimate of [Formula: see text] (e.g. population-based), could be useful in parametric image generation for slow kinetic tracers staying in a non-RE state within a PET scan.


Journal of Korean Medical Science | 2018

Validation of the Korean Version of the Scales for Outcomes in Parkinson's Disease-Sleep

Young Hee Sung; Hee-Jin Kim; Seong Beom Koh; Joong-Seok Kim; Sang Jin Kim; Sang Myung Cheon; Jin Whan Cho; Yoon Joong Kim; Hyeo Il Ma; Mee Young Park; Jong Sam Baik; Phil Hyu Lee; Sun Ju Chung; Jong-Min Kim; In Uk Song; Han-Joon Kim; Ji-Young Kim; Do Young Kwon; Jae-Hyeok Lee; Jee Young Lee; Ji Seon Kim; Ji Young Yun; Jin Yong Hong; Mi Jung Kim; Jinyoung Youn; Ji Sun Kim; Eung Seok Oh; Hui Jun Yang; Won Tae Yoon; Sooyeoun You

Background Sleep problems commonly occur in patients with Parkinsons disease (PD), and are associated with a lower quality of life. The aim of the current study was to translate the English version of the Scales for Outcomes in Parkinsons Disease-Sleep (SCOPA-S) into the Korean version of SCOPA-S (K-SCOPA-S), and to evaluate its reliability and validity for use by Korean-speaking patients with PD. Methods In total, 136 patients with PD from 27 movement disorder centres of university-affiliated hospitals in Korea were enrolled in this study. They were assessed using SCOPA, Hoehn and Yahr Scale (HYS), Unified Parkinsons Disease Rating Scale (UPDRS), Parkinsons Disease Sleep Scale 2nd version (PDSS-2), Non-motor Symptoms Scale (NMSS), Montgomery Asberg Depression Scale (MADS), 39-item Parkinsons Disease Questionnaire (PDQ39), Neurogenic Orthostatic Hypotension Questionnaire (NOHQ), and Rapid Eye Movement Sleep Behaviour Disorder Questionnaire (RBDQ). The test-retest reliability was assessed over a time interval of 10–14 days. Results The internal consistency (Cronbachs α-coefficients) of K-SCOPA-S was 0.88 for nighttime sleep (NS) and 0.75 for daytime sleepiness (DS). Test-retest reliability was 0.88 and 0.85 for the NS and DS, respectively. There was a moderate correlation between the NS sub-score and PDSS-2 total score. The NS and DS sub-scores of K-SCOPA-S were correlated with motor scale such as HYS, and non-motor scales such as UPDRS I, UPDRS II, MADS, NMSS, PDQ39, and NOHQ while the DS sub-score was with RBDQ. Conclusion The K-SCOPA-S exhibited good reliability and validity for the assessment of sleep problems in the Korean patients with PD.


Journal of Neurology | 2013

Intravenous amantadine on freezing of gait in Parkinson’s disease: a randomized controlled trial

Jee Young Lee; Sohee Oh; Jong-Min Kim; Ji Sun Kim; Eungseok Oh; Hee-Tae Kim; Beom S. Jeon; Jin Whan Cho


Parkinsonism & Related Disorders | 2011

SCA in Korea and its regional distribution: A multicenter analysis ☆

Han-Joon Kim; Beom S. Jeon; Won Yong Lee; Sun Ju Chung; Seok Woo Yong; Ji-Hoon Kang; Seung Han Lee; Kun Woo Park; Mee Young Park; Byeong C. Kim; Jae Woo Kim; Hee Tae Kim; Choong Kun Ha; Seong Beom Koh; Jong-Min Kim; Kwang Dong Choi; Young Hee Sung; Tae Beom Ahn; Geun Ho Lee; Jae-Hyeok Lee; Ho-Won Lee; Sang Jin Kim; Jeong Ho Park; Do Young Kwon; Min-Jeong Kim; Yun Joong Kim; Joong-Seok Kim; Jinwhan Cho; Jee Hyun Kwon; Eun Joo Kim

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Beom S. Jeon

Seoul National University Hospital

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Jong-Min Kim

Seoul National University

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Han-Joon Kim

Seoul National University Hospital

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Jae-Hyeok Lee

Pusan National University

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Ji Sun Kim

Soonchunhyang University

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