Publications by authors named "Ginam Kim"

Ensuring the quality of color contact lenses is vital, particularly in detecting defects during their production since they are directly worn on the eyes. One significant defect is the "center deviation (CD) defect", where the colored area (CA) deviates from the center point. Measuring the extent of deviation of the CA from the center point is necessary to detect these CD defects.

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Background: Rathke's cleft cysts (RCCs) are benign tumors of the pituitary gland. Small, asymptomatic RCCs do not require surgical treatment, whereas surgical treatment is required for symptomatic RCCs.

Methods: We retrospectively reviewed medical records of patients with an RCC who were diagnosed and managed in our institution between April 2004 and April 2020 and generated two different cohorts: the observation (n=114) and the surgical group (n=99).

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Silk protein is being increasingly introduced as a prospective material for biomedical devices. However, a limited locus to intervene in nature-oriented silk protein makes it challenging to implement on-demand functions to silk. Here, we report how polymorphic transitions are related with molecular structures of artificially synthesized silk protein and design principles to construct a green-lithographic and high-performative protein resist.

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Flow-diverting stents (FDSs) have proven advantageous for the treatment of large, fusiform, and dissecting aneurysms that are otherwise difficult to treat. Retreatment strategies for recurrent large or giant aneurysms after FDSs are limited to overlapping implantation of an additional FDS or definitive occlusion of the parent vessel. We report a recurrent giant aneurysm that was initially treated with an FDS with coils and was successfully treated with an additional FDS.

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Trimethylsilylated silicate nanoparticle (termed MQ resin, combining M MeSiO and Q SiO units)/poly(styrene--polydimethylsiloxane) (PS-PDMS, 31K-15K, polydispersity PD = 1.15, weight-average molecular weight = 45.5K) blends behave similarly to block copolymers with different PS/PDMS ratios.

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The molecular distribution in nanocolloids of poly(dimethyl siloxane) (PDMS) and an organic copolymer (methyl acrylate co-methyl methacrylate co-vinyl acetate) preserved in a frozen aqueous solution was investigated using cryovalence electron energy-loss spectroscopy (EELS) coupled with a scanning transmission electron microscope. Low energy-loss spectra depend upon valence electron structure, and we show that they are substantially different for the PDMS, the copolymer, and the vitrified water studied here. Combining a high efficiency detection system and the use of high-signal low-loss spectra in EELS, we achieved a spatial resolution of 8 nm without serious beam-induced specimen damage in this radiation-sensitive soft-materials system.

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Using valence electron energy loss spectroscopy (EELS) in the cryo-scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM), we found that the polymer-polymer interface in two-phase nanocolloids of polydimethyl siloxane (PDMS) and copolymer (methyl acrylate (MA)-methyl methacrylate (MMA)-vinyl acetate (VA)) preserved in water was diffuse despite the fact that equilibrium thermodynamics indicates it should only be on the order of a few nanometers. The diffuse interface is a result of the kinetic trapping of the copolymer within the PDMS phase, and this finding suggests new nonequilibrium pathways to control interfaces during the synthesis of multicomponent polymeric nanostructures.

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