1.Educational Program for Prehospital Trauma Life Support in the United States
Yuko TAKEDA ; Taichi TAKEDA ; Hideharu TANAKA ; Taketo MATSUDA
Medical Education 2003;34(2):101-106
To provide a “gold standard” for care of trauma patients, the American College of Surgeons Committee on Trauma developed Advanced Trauma Life Support (ATLS) in 1979. Prehospital Trauma Life Support (PHTLS) courses are based on ATLS and provide a prehospital trauma care philosophy that stresses the need to multisystem trauma as a unique entity with specific requirements. We participated in “provider courses” and “instructor courses” of PHTLS and were the first Japanese to be certified as PHTLS instructors. PHTLS was designed as a scenario-based program for prehospital care-providers of all levels. PHTLS courses are internationally recognized continuing education programs utilizing various teaching skills. This is the first report on PHTLS courses, which we believe are beneficial for prehospital emergency health care professionals and educators.
2.A Case of Granulocyte-Colony Stimulating Factor-Producing Hepatocellular Carcinoma Confirmed by Immunohistochemistry.
Satoru JOSHITA ; Koh NAKAZAWA ; Shoichiro KOIKE ; Atsushi KAMIJO ; Kiyoshi MATSUBAYASHI ; Hideharu MIYABAYASHI ; Kiyoshi FURUTA ; Kiyoshi KITANO ; Kaname YOSHIZAWA ; Eiji TANAKA
Journal of Korean Medical Science 2010;25(3):476-480
Granulocyte-colony stimulating factor (G-CSF) is a naturally occurring glycoprotein that stimulates the proliferation and maturation of precursor cells in the bone marrow into fully differentiated neutrophils. Several reports of G-CSF-producing malignant tumors have been published, but scarcely any in the hepatobiliary system, such as in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Here, we encountered a 69-yr-old man with a hepatic tumor who had received right hepatic resection. He showed leukocytosis of 25,450/microL along with elevated serum G-CSF. Histological examination of surgical samples demonstrated immunohistochemical staining for G-CSF, but not for G-CSF receptor. The patient survived without recurrence for four years, but ultimately passed away with multiple bone metastases. In light of the above, clinicians may consider G-CSF-producing HCC when encountering patients with leukocytosis and a hepatic tumor. More cases are needed to clarify the clinical picture of G-CSF-producing HCC.
Aged
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Bone Neoplasms/secondary
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Carcinoma, Hepatocellular/*metabolism/pathology
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Fatal Outcome
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Granulocyte Colony-Stimulating Factor/*metabolism
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Humans
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Liver Neoplasms/*metabolism/pathology
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Male
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Receptors, Granulocyte Colony-Stimulating Factor/metabolism
3.Comparison of trauma systems in Asian countries: a cross-sectional study
Young Hee JUNG ; Dae Han WI ; Sang Do SHIN ; Hideharu TANAKA ; Goh E SHAUN ; Wen Chu CHIANG ; Jen Tang SUN ; Li Min HSU ; Kentaro KAJINO ; Sabariah Faizah JAMALUDDIN ; Akio KIMURA ; James F HOLMES ; Kyoung Jun SONG ; Young Sun RO ; Ki Jeong HONG ; Sung Woo MOON ; Ju Ok PARK ; Min Jung KIM
Clinical and Experimental Emergency Medicine 2019;6(4):321-329
OBJECTIVE: This study aimed to compare the demographic characteristics and trauma service structures and processes of hospitals in 15 countries across the Asia Pacific, and to provide baseline data for the integrated trauma database: the Pan-Asian Trauma Outcomes Study (PATOS).METHODS: Medical directors and emergency physicians at PATOS-participating hospitals in countries across the Asia Pacific were surveyed through a standardized questionnaire. General information, trauma care system data, and trauma emergency department (ED) outcomes at each hospital were collected by email and analyzed using descriptive statistics.RESULTS: Survey data from 35 hospitals across 15 countries were collected from archived data between June 2014 and July 2015. Designated trauma centers were identified as the highest hospital level for trauma patients in 70% of surveyed countries. Half of the hospitals surveyed had special teams for trauma care, and almost all prepared activation protocol documents for these teams. Most hospitals offered specialized trauma education programs, and 72.7% of hospitals had a hospital-based trauma registry. The total number of trauma patients visiting the ED across 25 of the hospitals was 300,376. The overall survival-to-discharge rate was 97.2%; however, it varied greatly between 85.1% and 99.7%. The difference between survival-to-discharge rates of moderate and severe injury groups was highest in Taiwan (41.8%) and lowest in Thailand (18.6%).CONCLUSION: Trauma care systems and ED outcomes vary widely among surveyed hospitals and countries. This information is useful to build further detailed, systematic platforms for trauma surveillance and evidence-based trauma care policies.
Asia
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Asian Continental Ancestry Group
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Cross-Sectional Studies
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Education
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Electronic Mail
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Emergencies
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Emergency Service, Hospital
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Epidemiology
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Humans
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Physician Executives
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Taiwan
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Thailand
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Trauma Centers