Kyung-Wuk Kim
Soongsil University
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Featured researches published by Kyung-Wuk Kim.
Bio-medical Materials and Engineering | 2015
Hyoung-Ho Kim; Young Ho Choi; Seung Bae Lee; Yasutaka Baba; Kyung-Wuk Kim; Sang-Ho Suh
A ureteral stenosis or occlusion causes the disturbance of normal urine flow and results in renal failure. Ureteral stents are used to relieve the stagnation of urine in the upper urinary tract. Peristalsis in the ureter, which occurs to help urine flow, becomes to weaken when a stent is inserted and effective peristalsis disappears as time goes on, and a stented ureter seems to be tubular and curved in the human body. Double J stents, which are manufactured by many medical companies and are used widely these days, have different geometries of side holes in the stent shafts. In total, 12 models-six curved models of a stented ureter according to different numbers and positions of side holes and ureteral and stent stenoses and another six straight models for comparison with the curved ones-were made based on the data collected from 19 men. The flow rate and pattern in the stented ureter were evaluated using computational fluid dynamics (CFD). According to the results, curved models reflecting the human anatomy seem to be more desirable in the CFD simulation of urine flow and must be good for evaluating the effect of geometrical variations in stent design on urine flow.
Bio-medical Materials and Engineering | 2015
Kyung-Wuk Kim; Young Ho Choi; Seung Bae Lee; Yasutaka Baba; Hyoung-Ho Kim; Sang-Ho Suh
A double J stent has been used widely these days for patients with a ureteral stenosis or with renal stones and lithotripsy. The stent has multiple side holes in the shaft, which supply detours for urine flow. Even though medical companies produce various forms of double J stents that have different numbers and positions of side holes in the stent, the function of side holes in fluid dynamics has not been studied well. Here, the flow rate and pattern around the side holes of a double J stent were evaluated in curved models of a stented ureter based on the human anatomy and straight models for comparison. The total flow rate was higher in the stent with a greater number of side holes. The inflow and outflow to the stent through the side holes in the curved ureter was more active than in the straight ureter, which means the flow through side holes exists even in the ureter without ureteral stenosis or occlusion and even in the straight ureter. When the diameter of the ureter changed, the in-stent flow rate in the ureter did not change and the extraluminal flow rate was higher in the ureter with a greater diameter.
Technology and Health Care | 2017
Hyoung-Ho Kim; Young Ho Choi; Seung Bae Lee; Yasutaka Baba; Kyung-Wuk Kim; Sang-Ho Suh
Ureteral stenosis presents with a narrowing in the ureter, due to an intrinsic or extrinsic ureteral disease, such as ureter cancer or retroperitoneal fibrosis. The placement of a double J stent in the upper urinary system is one of the most common treatments of ureteral stenosis, along with the insertion of a percutaneous nephrostomy tube into the renal pelvis. The effect that the side holes in a double J stent have on urine flow has been evaluated in a few studies using straight ureter models. In this study, urine flow through a double J stents side holes was analyzed in curved ureter models, which were based on human anatomy. In ureteral stenosis, especially in severe ureteral stenosis, a stent with side holes had a positive effect on the luminal and total flow rates, compared with the rates for a stent without side holes. The more side holes a stent has, the greater the luminal and total flow rates. However, the angular positions of the side holes did not affect flow rate. In conclusion, the side holes in a double J stent had a positive effect on ureteral stenosis, and the effect became greater as the ureteral stenosis became more severe.
Computational and Mathematical Methods in Medicine | 2017
Kyung-Wuk Kim; Young Ho Choi; Seung Bae Lee; Yasutaka Baba; Hyoung-Ho Kim; Sang-Ho Suh
The ureter provides a way for urine to flow from the kidney to the bladder. Peristalsis in the ureter partially forces the urine flow, along with hydrostatic pressure. Ureteral diseases and a double J stent, which is commonly inserted in a ureteral stenosis or occlusion, disturb normal peristalsis. Ineffective or no peristalsis could make the contour of the ureter a tube, a funnel, or a combination of the two. In this study, we investigated urine flow in the abnormal situation. We made three different, curved tubular, funnel-shaped, and undulated ureter models that were based on human anatomy. A numerical analysis of the urine flow rate and pattern in the ureter was performed for a combination of the three different ureters, with and without a ureteral stenosis and with four different types of double J stents. The three ureters showed a difference in urine flow rate and pattern. Luminal flow rate was affected by ureter shape. The side holes of a double J stent played a different role in detour, which depended on ureter geometry.
The KSFM Journal of Fluid Machinery | 2015
Sang-Ho Suh; Kyung-Wuk Kim; Hyoung-Ho Kim; In Sik Yoon; Min-Tae Cho
Journal of Thermal Science | 2015
Sang-Ho Suh; Rakibuzzaman; Kyung-Wuk Kim; Hyoung-Ho Kim; In Sik Yoon; Min-Tae Cho
The KSFM Journal of Fluid Machinery | 2014
Sang-Ho Suh; Hyoung-Ho Kim; Rakibuzzaman Rakibuzzaman; Kyung-Wuk Kim; In-Sik Yoon
Transactions of The Korean Society of Mechanical Engineers B | 2018
Hyoung-Ho Kim; Young Ho Choi; Seung Bae Lee; Yasutaka Baba; Kyung-Wuk Kim; Sang-Ho Suh
Journal of Mechanical Science and Technology | 2018
Rakibuzzaman; Kyung-Wuk Kim; Sang-Ho Suh
Journal of Power of Technologies | 2017
Rakibuzzaman; Kyung-Wuk Kim; Hyoung-Ho Kim; Sang-Ho Suh