Publications by authors named "Kwang H Cho"

Environmental effects in excitation energy transfer have mostly been modeled by baths of harmonic oscillators, but to what extent such modeling provides a reliable description of actual interactions between molecular systems and environments remains an open issue. We address this issue by investigating fluctuations in the excitation energies of the light harvesting 2 complex using a realistic all-atomistic simulation of the potential energy surface. Our analyses reveal that molecular motions exhibit significant anharmonic features, even for underdamped intramolecular vibrations.

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Purpose: Little information is known about the mentalis nerve course from the lower lip approximation margin (free margin) to the upper lip. Likewise, no difference in nerve distribution has been observed between the cutaneous and mucosal parts of the lip. Therefore, this study reexamined mentalis nerve morphology.

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Article Synopsis
  • * Histological analysis of 9 embryos and 17 fetuses revealed that the nerve ansa is typically found around the first and/or second ribs, with variations in positioning noted that could impact the glenohumeral joint's alignment.
  • * The study concludes that a higher positioning of the plexus may increase the risk of nerve injury during delivery and lead to joint deformities due to lack of support during development.
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Background And Aim: The cochlear aqueduct (CA) connects between the perilymphatic space of the cochlea and the subarachnoid space in the posterior cranial fossa. The study aimed to examine 1) whether cavitation of the CA occurs on the subarachnoid side or the cochlear side and 2) the growth and/or degeneration of the CA and its concomitant vein.

Methods: We examined paraffin-embedded histological sections from human fetuses: 15 midterm fetuses (crown-rump length or CRL, 39-115 mm) and 12 near-term fetuses (CRL, 225-328 mm).

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Article Synopsis
  • - The study investigates muscle growth in the eyelids of fetuses, focusing on how infrequent blinking affects their development, examining various stages of gestation in 21 term fetuses (30-42 weeks) and 10 midterm fetuses (12-15 weeks).
  • - Findings reveal that term fetuses show a thicker upper eyelid with specific muscle and nerve arrangements, differing significantly from adult eyelid morphology, with nerve fibers concentrated at the eyelid's edge.
  • - The research suggests that the unique conditions of limited blinking in fetuses influence muscle and nerve growth, highlighting the need for surgeons to recognize that infant eyelids are not simply smaller versions of adult eyelids.
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The topographical relationships among the lower cranial nerves, internal carotid artery (ICA), and internal jugular vein (IJV) in the upper parapharyngeal neurovascular bundle remain obscure. Thus, details of the anatomy were examined in human fetus histology. We observed the horizontal histological sections from 20 midterm (9-18 weeks) and 12 near-term (28-40 weeks) fetuses.

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The nature of the electron-binding forces in the dipole-bound states (DBS) of anions is interrogated through experimental and theoretical means by investigating the autodetachment dynamics from DBS Feshbach resonances of -, -, and -bromophenoxide (BrPhO). Though the charge-dipole electrostatic potential has been widely regarded to be mainly responsible for the electron binding in DBS, the effect of nonclassical electron correlation has been conceived to be quite significant in terms of its static and/or dynamic contributions toward the binding of the excess electron to the neutral core. State-specific real-time autodetachment dynamics observed by picosecond time-resolved photoelectron velocity-map imaging spectroscopy reveal that the autodetachment processes from the DBS Feshbach resonances of BrPhO anions cannot indeed be rationalized by the conventional charge-dipole potential.

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Background: Rectus capitis lateralis muscle (RCLM) is located at the border between the ventral and dorsal muscle groups, but the nerve topographical anatomy around the muscle is obscure.

Materials And Methods: We observed the RCLM in histological sections of 12 midterm and 10 near-term fetal heads (9-18 and 26-40 weeks of gestational age).

Results: At midterm, the RCLM wrapped around the inferiorly protruding inferolateral corner of the cartilaginous occipital bone.

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: Intensity-modulated radiation therapy (IMRT) is becoming a more common method of performing whole breast irradiation (WBI) for early breast cancer. This study aimed to examine the incidental dose to the axillary region using tomotherapy, a unique form of IMRT. : This study included 30 patients with early-stage breast cancer who underwent adjuvant WBI using TomoDirect IMRT.

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Background: Embryonic pulmonary veins (PVs) are believed to be absorbed into the left atrium (LA) to provide an adult morphology in which "four" veins drain separately into the atrium.

Materials And Methods: Serial histological sections were obtained from 27 human embryos and fetuses.

Results: Between 5 and 6 weeks, the four PVs joined together to form a trunk-like structure (initial spatium pulmonalis) that was larger than the initial LA (two-ostia pattern).

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Background: This study aimed to demonstrate the composite fibers of the lamina cribrosa (LC) and their layer-specific distributions. The elastic fiber-rich septa, showing a cribriform arrangement in the optic nerve, may continue into the LC.

Methods: Orbital content, including the long course of the optic nerve, was obtained from 25 elderly cadavers.

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Background: Helical tomotherapy (HT), a unique rotational dose delivery machine, has been updated from Hi-ART to Radixact. We retrospectively evaluated the treatment outcomes of stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT) using HT for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) and compared the dosimetric details of Hi-ART and Radixact.

Methods: Between April 2014 and November 2020, 28 patients with HCC were treated with SBRT using HT for a cure at Soonchunhyang University College of Medicine, Bucheon.

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Cohosts based on hole transporting and electron transporting materials often act as exciplexes in the form of intermolecular charge transfer complexes. Indeed, exciplex-forming cohosts have been widely developed as the host materials for efficient phosphorescent organic light-emitting diodes (OLEDs). In host-guest systems of OLEDs, the guest can be excited by two competing mechanisms, namely, excitation energy transfer (EET) and charge transfer (CT).

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Unlike the usual peripheral nerve, the optic nerve accompanies a thick "dural sheath," a thin "sheath of pia mater" (SPM), and multiple "septa," which divides the nerve fibers into fascicles. We collected specimens from 25 adult cadavers and 15 fetuses and revisited the histological architecture of the optic and oculomotor nerves. In the optic chiasma, the meningeal layer of the dura joins the pia to form a thick SPM, and the periosteum of the sphenoid is continuous with the dural sheath at the orbital exit of the bony optic canal.

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Article Synopsis
  • Depression and sleep-wake disorders are prevalent issues among emergency medicine (EM) residents in South Korea, particularly affecting females, who exhibit higher rates of mental health problems compared to males.
  • A survey of 384 EM residents showed that 27.5% experienced moderate to severe depression and 36.9% reported sleep-related issues, with factors like inflexible shift scheduling and frequent night shifts contributing to these problems.
  • Analysis of the data indicated that female residents are at a greater risk for both depression and sleepiness, highlighting the need for targeted interventions to address these issues in the work environment.
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Purpose: To histologically describe a direct contact (the so-called dehiscence) of the optic nerve (ON) and/or internal carotid artery (ICA) to the mucosa of posterior paranasal sinuses represented by the sphenoid sinus (SS).

Methods: Observations of histological sections of unilateral or bilateral skull bases (parasellar area and orbital apex) from 22 elderly cadavers were made.

Results: A bony septum was less than 300 µm between the SS and ICA and 200 µm between the SS and optic nerve.

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Radiation therapy (RT) for localized prostate cancer yields oncological outcomes similar to those following radical prostatectomy, but is associated with more anorectal toxicity. An endorectal balloon (ERB) has been utilized to decrease the incidental dose to the rectal wall. However, few studies analyzed whether the ERB can further spare the rectum in helical tomotherapy (HT), which by itself can be used to treat prostate cancer while minimizing irradiation of surrounding critical tissues.

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Background: Although helical tomotherapy (HT) tends to increase intermediate-dose spillage by increasing of low-dose region, this has not been fully determined in the clinical setting. Therefore, we investigated treatment outcomes of HT for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) with respect to intermediate-dose spillage.

Methods: We retrospectively reviewed 20 HCC patients, who received high-dose radiotherapy (RT) using HT with radical intent between April 2014 and September 2017.

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Coupling between pigment excitations and nuclear movements in photosynthetic complexes is known to modulate the excitation energy transfer (EET) efficiencies. Toward providing microscopic information, researchers often apply simulation techniques and investigate how vibrations are involved in EET processes. Here, reports on such roles of nuclear movements are discussed from a theory perspective.

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The recently developed narrow-band blue-emitting organoboron chromophores based on the multiple-resonance (MR) effect have now become one of the most important components for constructing efficient organic light emitting diodes (OLEDs). While they basically emit through fluorescence, they are also known for showing substantial thermally activated delayed fluorescence (TADF) even with a relatively large singlet-triplet gap (Δ ). Indeed, understanding the reverse intersystem crossing (RISC) dynamics behind this peculiar TADF will allow judicious molecular designs toward achieving better performing OLEDs.

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Purpose: To compare fetal and adult morphologies of the orbital muscle (OM) and to describe the detailed topographical anatomy in adults.

Methods: Using unilateral orbits from 15 near-term fetuses and 21 elderly cadavers, semiserial horizontal or sagittal paraffin sections were prepared at intervals of 20-100 µm. In addition to routine histology, we performed immunohistochemistry for smooth muscle actin.

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Purpose: The longissimus (LO) and iliocostalis (IC) of adults consist of myofibers extending from the superolateral to the inferomedial side of the back and, because of the same course, they are fused in the thoracolumbar region. The LO also has a medial attachment to the long myofibers of the transversospinalis (TS) showing a course from the superomedial to the inferolateral side. However, there is apparently no information regarding when and how these similar longitudinal muscles differentiate from a cluster of dorsomedial myotome cells.

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The effects of the environment in energy transfer systems have been continuously studied for decades. Here, we investigate how the energy transfer and the emergence of vibrational correlations cooperate with each other based on simulations with a few numerically approximate mixed quantum classical (MQC) methods. By adopting a two-state system with locally coupled underdamped vibrations that are resonant with the electronic energy gap, we observe prominent energy dissipations from the electronic system to the vibrations, rehighlighting the role of underdamped vibrations as a temporal electronic energy buffer.

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