1.Analysis of the Drug Monitoring Information by Using the CYP-Database for Predicting Drug-Drug Interactions
Katsunori Yamaura ; Maki Shimada ; Noriyuki Nakayama ; Masanori Ogawa ; Tadashi Nomoto ; Eiji Nakano ; Takao Namiki ; Koichi Ueno
Japanese Journal of Drug Informatics 2011;12(3):111-116
Objective: In the previous study, the CYP database was constructed in order to relate drug-drug interactions to the CYP metabolic information of the package inserts. In this study, we evaluated the clinical usefulness of the CYP database by using the Pharmaceutical and Medical Devices Agency (PMDA) Drug Monitoring Information.
Methods: We examined the drugs in CYP isoform responsible for drug metabolism. The age, sex, suspect drugs and co-administered drugs were extracted from 6,236 cases of the PMDA database of drug monitoring from January till November of 2008.
Results: Twenty-three percent of all cases had co-administered drugs. Forty-five percent of these cases were metabolized both suspect and co-administered drugs by the same CYP isoform, and three fourths of these cases were able to be detected only by the CYP database. In addition, the administration of substrate medicines in combination with substrate medicines was the largest (57%), followed by cases of substrate medicines in combination with inhibitor medicines (28%). Seventy-seven percent of the suspect drugs that had a large number of reported cases of side effects were substrate medicines, and the frequency of co-administration with substrate medicines was very high.
Conclusion: These data suggest that the CYP database, being used together with package inserts, might be a clinically useful tool to avoid adverse events caused by drug-drug interactions.
2.A Case of Intraoperative Acute Aortic Dissection during Mitral Valve Plasty.
Masahiro Ueno ; Yukinori Moriyama ; Yoshifumi Iguro ; Koichi Hisatomi ; Riichiro Toda ; Hitoshi Matsumoto ; Akira Kobayashi ; Goichi Yotsumoto ; Yoshihiro Fukumoto ; Akira Taira
Japanese Journal of Cardiovascular Surgery 2000;29(1):29-32
A 74-year-old man undergone mitral valve plasty. After cessation of cardiopulmonary bypass, bleeding persisted from the cardioplegia injection site and dilatation of the ascending aorta with discoloration was observed. The diagnosis of type A aortic dissection extending to the descending aorta was made by transesophageal echocardiogram. Replacement of the ascending aorta was performed under deep hypothermic circulatory arrest. The postoperative course was uneventful. The false lumen of the aortic arch and descending aorta was thrombosed completely on postoperative computed tomography. Intraoperative aortic dissection is a rare but fatal complication of cardiopulmonary bypass. Prompt recognition and appropriate surgical management are of prime importance.
3.Assessment of the Initial Diagnostic Accuracy of a Fragility Fracture of the Sacrum: A Study of 56 Patients
Ryo UMEDA ; Yasushi IIJIMA ; Nanako YAMAKAWA ; Toshiaki KOTANI ; Tsuyoshi SAKUMA ; Shunji KISHIDA ; Keisuke UENO ; Daisuke KAJIWARA ; Tsutomu AKAZAWA ; Yasuhiro SHIGA ; Shohei MINAMI ; Seiji OHTORI ; Koichi NAKAGAWA
Asian Spine Journal 2023;17(6):1066-1073
Methods:
Fifty-six patients (13 males and 43 females) with an average age of 80.2±9.2 years admitted to the hospital for FFS between 2006 and 2021 were analyzed retrospectively. The following patient data were collected using medical records: pain regions, a history of trauma, initial diagnoses, and rates of fracture detection using radiography, computed tomography (CT), and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI).
Results:
Forty-one patients presented with low back and/or buttock pain, nine presented with groin pain, and 17 presented with thigh or leg pain. There was no history of trauma in 18 patients (32%). At the initial visit, 27 patients (48%) were diagnosed with sacral or pelvic fragility fractures. In contrast, 29 patients (52%) were initially misdiagnosed with lumbar spine disease (23 patients), hip joint diseases (three patients), and buttock bruises (three patients). Fracture detection rates for FFS were 2% using radiography, 71% using CT, and 93% using MRI. FFS was diagnosed definitively using an MRI with a coronal short tau inversion recovery (STIR) sequence.
Conclusions
Some patients with FFS have leg pain with no history of trauma and are initially misdiagnosed as having lumbar spine disease, hip joint disease, or simple bruises. When these clinical symptoms are reported, we recommend considering FFS as one of the differential diagnoses and performing lumbar or pelvic MRIs, particularly coronal STIR images, to rule out FFS.