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Featured researches published by Sung-Bom Pyun.


Yonsei Medical Journal | 2015

Community Integration and Quality of Life in Aphasia after Stroke

Hyejin Lee; Yuna Lee; Hyunsoo Choi; Sung-Bom Pyun

Purpose To examine community integration and contributing factors in people with aphasia (PWA) following stroke and to investigate the relationship between community integration and quality of life (QOL). Materials and Methods Thirty PWA and 42 age-and education-matched control subjects were involved. Main variables were as follows: socioeconomic status, mobility, and activity of daily living (ADL) (Modified Barthel Index), language function [Frenchay Aphasia Screening Test (FAST)], depression [Geriatric Depression Scale (GDS)], Community Integration Questionnaire (CIQ) and Stroke and Aphasia Quality of Life Scale-39 (SAQOL-39). Differences between aphasia and control groups and factors affecting community integration and QOL were analyzed. Results Home and social integration and productive activity were significantly decreased in the aphasia group compared to the control group; 8.5 and 18.3 points in total CIQ score, respectively. Amount of time spent outside the home and frequency of social contact were also significantly reduced in the aphasia group. Total mean score on the SAQOL-39 was 2.75±0.80 points and was significantly correlated with economic status, gait performance, ADL, depressive mood, and social domain score on the CIQ. Depression score measured by GDS was the single most important factor for the prediction of QOL, but the FAST score was significantly correlated only with the communication domain of the SAQOL-39. Conclusion Community activities of PWA were very limited, and depression was highly associated with decreased community integration and QOL. Enhancing social participation and reducing emotional distress should be emphasized for rehabilitation of PWA.


Annals of Rehabilitation Medicine | 2014

Characteristics of Visual-Perceptual Function Measured by the Motor-Free Visual Perception Test-3 in Korean Adults

Areum Han; Doo-Yung Kim; Tae-Woong Choi; Hyun-Im Moon; Byung-Joo Ryu; Seungnam Yang; Sung-Bom Pyun

Objective To adapt and standardize the Motor-Free Visual Perception Test-3 (MVPT-3) to Koreans and investigate the change in visual-perceptual function using the MVPT-3 in healthy Korean adults. Methods The Korean version of the MVPT-3 was developed through a cross-cultural adaptation process according to 6 steps, including translation, reconciliation, back translation, cognitive debriefing, feedback, and final reconciliation. A total of 321 healthy Korean volunteers (mean age, 51.05 years) were recruited. We collected participant demographic data, such as sex, age, and years of education, and performed the Korean version of the Mini-Mental State Examination (K-MMSE) and MVPT-3. Internal consistency of the MVPT-3 and the relationships between demographic data, K-MMSE and MVPT-3 scores were analyzed. The results of this study were compared with published data from western countries including the United States and Canada. Results Total score on the MVPT-3 was positively correlated with years of education (r=0.715, p<0.001) and K-MMSE score (r=0.718, p<0.001). However, it had a negative correlation with age (r=-0.669, p<0.001). A post-hoc analysis of MVPT-3 scores classified age into 5 groups of ≤49, 50-59, 60-69, 70-79, ≥80 years and years of education into 4 groups of 0, 1-9, 10-12, ≥13 years. No significant differences in MVPT-3 scores were observed according to sex or country. Conclusion Visual perception was significantly influenced by age, years of education, and cognitive function. Reference values for the MVPT-3 provided in this study will be useful for evaluating and planning a rehabilitation program of visual perceptual function in patients with brain disorders.


Neuroradiology | 2018

Changes in the regional shape and volume of subcortical nuclei in patients with tinnitus comorbid with mild hearing loss

Woo-Suk Tae; Natalia Yakunina; Woo Hyun Lee; Yoon-Jong Ryu; Hyung-kyu Ham; Sung-Bom Pyun; Eui-Cheol Nam

PurposeTinnitus, the perception of sound without an external source, is a prevalent disease, but its underlying mechanism has not been fully elucidated. Recent studies have suggested the involvement of subcortical nuclei in tinnitus generation. We investigated changes in the local shape and volume of subcortical nuclei in relation to tinnitus.MethodsThe participants included 53 patients with tinnitus and 52 age- and gender-matched normal controls. Individual 3D T1-weighted structural images were obtained using 3-T magnetic resonance imaging. Surface-based vertex analysis (SVA) was performed with automated segmentation of the bilateral caudate nuclei, putamina, nucleus accumbens, thalami, pallidum, hippocampi, amygdalae, and brainstem. The scalar distances from the mean surface and volumes of 15 nuclei were compared between the tinnitus and control groups and correlated with tinnitus handicap score (THI) and tinnitus duration.ResultsSVA revealed regional contractions in the accessory basal and lateral nuclei of the right amygdala and expansions in the left medial and right ventral posterior nuclei and lateral dorsal nucleus of both thalami. The surface distances of the right nucleus accumbens were positively correlated with tinnitus duration, while those of the left nucleus accumbens and left hippocampus were negatively correlated with THI.ConclusionRegional atrophy of the amygdala may indicate self-modulation of emotional response regulation to diminish tinnitus-related emotional distress. Thalamic regional expansion may signify dysfunctional auditory gating in the thalamus, where inhibition of the tinnitus signal at the thalamus level is disrupted due to abnormal changes in the limbic system, ultimately leading to the tinnitus percept.


Journal of the Korean society of speech sciences | 2013

A Comparative Study of Spoken and Written Sentence Production in Adults with Fluent Aphasia

Ji-Wan Ha; Sung-Bom Pyun; Yu Mi Hwang; Hoyoung Yi; Hyun Sub Sim

Traditionally it has been assumed that written abilities are completely dependent on phonology. Therefore spoken and written language skills in aphasic patients have been known to exhibit similar types of impairment. However, a number of latest studies have reported the findings that support the orthographic autonomy hypothesis. The purpose of this study was to examine whether fluent aphasic patients have discrepancy between speaking and writing skills, thereby identifying whether the two skills are realized through independent processes. To this end, this study compared the K-FAST speaking and writing tasks of 30 aphasia patients. In addition, 16 aphasia patients, who were capable of producing sentences not only in speaking but also in writing, were compared in their performances at each phase of the sentence production process. As a result, the subjects exhibited different performances between speaking and writing, along with statistically significant differences between the two language skills at positional and phonological encoding phases of the sentence production process. Therefore, the study`s results suggest that written language is more likely to be produced via independent routes without the mediation of the process of spoken language production, beginning from a certain phase of the sentence production process.


Journal of the Neurological Sciences | 2009

Is visuospatial cognitive function preserved in aphasia

Sung-Bom Pyun; Hoyoung Yi; Yu Mi Hwang; Ji Wan Ha; S.-D. Yoo


Yonsei Medical Journal | 2013

The Author Reply. Re: Lateralization of Cognitive Functions in Aphasia after Right Brain Damage

Sung-Bom Pyun


Brain & Neurorehabilitation | 2011

Impact of Cognitive Function on Functional Recovery during Rehabilitation in Patients with Stroke

Yuna Lee; Hee-Kyu Kwon; Yoon Kyoo Kang; Sung-Bom Pyun


Brain & Neurorehabilitation | 2010

Stroke Rehabilitation Report using the Brain Rehabilitation Registration Online Database System in the Years 2006 to 2008

Han Young Jung; Il Soo Kim; Ueon Woo Rah; Yun-Hee Kim; Nam-Jong Paik; Min Ho Chun; Sung-Bom Pyun; Byung Kyu Park; Seung Don Yoo; Si-Woon Park; Sam-Gyu Lee; Joo Hyun Park; Tae Sik Yoon; Tae Im Yi; Woo-Kyoung Yoo; Tai Ryoon Han


Annals of Rehabilitation Medicine | 2003

Electrophysiologic Evaluation of the Effects of Volume and Neck Positions on Swallowing

Jung-Hoi Koo; Sung-Bom Pyun; Kyoung-Hyo Choi


Journal of Clinical Radiololgy | 2017

Alterations of White Matter Integrity in Patients with Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease: Tract-Based Analysis Using TRActs Constrained by UnderLying Anatomy

Mi-Kyung Um; Seung-Hwan Lee; Woo Jin Kim; Seong Whi Cho; Hye-Kyung Yoon; Myoung-Nam Lim; Sung-Bom Pyun; Woo-Suk Tae; Sam-Soo Kim

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