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Do Young Kim

Researcher at Yonsei University

Publications -  737
Citations -  18320

Do Young Kim is an academic researcher from Yonsei University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Hepatocellular carcinoma & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 58, co-authored 674 publications receiving 15091 citations. Previous affiliations of Do Young Kim include University of Ulsan & Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center.

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hTERT promoter gene polymorphism and the risk of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) in patients with chronic hepatitis B (초)

TL;DR: The polymorphism of hTERT promoter contributes to the development of HCC in patients with chronic hepatitis B, and a single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) –245kb upstream (Ets2 binding site, rs2853669) of the h TERT promoter was significant associated with an increased risk of H CC.
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Long-term effects of entecavir and tenofovir treatment on the fibrotic burden in patients with chronic hepatitis B.

TL;DR: In this paper, the long-term effects of entecavir (ETV) versus tenofovir (TDF) on fibrotic burden were investigated. But, the results showed that although patients treated with ETV had higher baseline APRI (1.71 vs 1.07, P<0.001) than those treated with TDF, significant fibrosis regression was identified during 6 years of AVT.
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Computed Tomography Findings of Alveolar Adenoma of the Lung with Histopathologic Comparison: A Case Report

TL;DR: The first case of alveolar adenoma with spotty enhancement of the nodule similar to that of sclerosing hemangioma on contrast enhanced CT is reported, based on the presence of stromal vessels in the interstitium of the compactAlveolar area on histopathologic comparison.
Journal Article

Changes in the metabolic profile and nutritional composition of rice in response to NaCl stress

TL;DR: In this paper, the metabolic profile and nutritional composition of rice in response to NaCl were analyzed, and the results suggest that although NaCl-salinity influences the phenotypic and metabolic profiles of rice shoots and roots at the tillering stage, this impact becomes negligible as tissue development proceeds.