1.Improvement of sanitary conditions by installations of improved toilets whichorient to nature in a village of ethnic minorities in Northern Thailand
Makoto Ohashi ; Teruo Saeki ; Kimito Ando
Journal of International Health 2012;27(1):71-77
Installation of toilet is an important issue for improvement of sanitary condition all over the developing countries. A Japanese NGO is trying to improve toilets which are planned to fit the rural environment in a village of an ethnic minority, the Hmong people, in northern Thailand. The toilet installed in a nursery school can produce methane gas from septic tank for cooking of lunch. The overflowed water from septic tank is able to be used for fertilizer in a kitchen garden. The concept of this toilet is the minimization of the release of carbon dioxide in the human life by the ecological use of human faces and urine that consume much energy for appropriate treatment in developed countries. The system will be developed to be one of an ideal model of the recycle system of natural resource. This project of innovating toilet is useful for the educational materials of the model of sustainable development for not only for under developing countries but also for developed countries in that it reminds us the traditional culture of utilization of human feces in Japan.
4.A Case of Bentall's Operation at Ten Years after a Ross Operation
Mutsuo Tanaka ; Makoto Ando ; Yuzo Katayama ; Takahiro Sawada ; Taijun Ro ; Naoki Wada ; Yukihiro Takahashi
Japanese Journal of Cardiovascular Surgery 2009;38(5):332-335
A 22-year-old woman had been treated with a Ross operation for aortic root aneurysm and aortic regurgitation 10 years previously. In the initial Ross operation, a handmade tri-leaflet conduit was used for the right ventricle outflow tract (RVOT) reconstruction. The conduit was prepared preoperatively, by sewing a folded 0.1 mm expanded polytetrafluoroethylene (ePTFE) membrane onto the luminal cavity of the 24 mm woven double velour vascular graft, thereby creating a tri-leaflet valve. During ambulatory follow up after discharge, dilation of the pulmonary autograft had been observed, and its maximal diameter reached 60 mm. Furthermore, preoperative a pressure study revealed a 25 mmHg pressure gradient between the right ventricle and the pulmonary artery. At the time of reoperation, we performed an aortic root replacement combined with RVOT conduit replacement. A 24-mm woven double velour vascular graft integrating a 21-mm On-X mechanical prosthesis was used for aortic root replacement. A handmade ePTFE tri-leaflet conduit, 26 mm in size, was used to replace the previous RVOT conduit. The operation was successful, and the postoperative course was uneventful. The explanted conduit was sent for microscopic examination, which revealed that the graft was covered by a fibrocollagenous membrane. On the contrary, no surface membrane was found on the ePTFE valve. Moreover the microscopic examination showed cystic medionecrosis of the pulmonary autograft. Both dilatation of the pulmonary autograft and RVOT conduit failure were successfully treated at the second operation. However this young patient will require follow-up of the mechanical prosthesis and RVOT conduit for the rest of her life.
5.Effect of Edaravone on Cerebral Protection during Aortic Arch Surgery
Yousuke Kitanaka ; Haruo Makuuchi ; Hiroshi Murakami ; Makoto Ono ; Takashi Ando ; Kayoko Tanaka ; Shigeko Onuma
Japanese Journal of Cardiovascular Surgery 2011;40(2):48-53
Edaravone is an agent developed as a free radical scavenger, and is useful in functional recovery of the brain after cerebral infarction. However, to the best of our knowledge no experimental studies have been made regarding the effect of edaravone on cerebral protection during aortic arch surgery. We investigated the pharmacological effect of edaravone experimentally, through selective cerebral perfusion under deep hypothermia. Twelve adult dogs (body weight 14.8±2.0 kg) were used, and selective cerebral perfusion was performed under hypothermic circulatory arrest of 20°C for 120 min at 5 mg/kg/min, which was half the usual flow volume of cerebral perfusion. Group E (n=6) received 3 mg/kg edaravone for 30 min at the start of both selective cerebral perfusion and rewarming of the body, while Group C (n=6) received no drugs. Somatosensory evoked potential (SEP) was measured, and so were blood pressure, body temperature, pH level, oxygen partial pressure, and blood flow in the cerebral tissue. Histopathological investigations were also performed. In Group E, complete SEP recovery was observed in all dogs, while in Group C, complete SEP recovery was observed in only 2 dogs (33%) (p=0.014). A statistically significant difference was also observed in cerebral tissue pressure (p=0.014), but not in pH level, oxygen partial pressure, or cerebral tissue blood flow. On histopathological investigation, Group C demonstrated reduced staining of Nissl granules in neurons of the cerebral cortex, and many of them presented the appearance of acute circulatory impairment while Group E demonstrated no reduction in staining of Nissl granules. In the present experimental study of selective cerebral perfusion under deep hypothermia below the safety threshold flow, edaravone was effective in cerebral protection.
6.Atrial Blood Cyst: A Rare Tumor in an Adult
Takashi Ando ; Haruo Makuuchi ; Keita Kikuchi ; Hiroshi Murakami ; Makoto Oono ; Mamoru Tadokoro ; Masahiro Hoshikawa
Japanese Journal of Cardiovascular Surgery 2005;34(1):37-39
A regular check-up in a 69-year-old man showed normal blood chemistry values, except for elevated value of liver enzymes and inflammatory reactions. A computed tomography scan (CT) of the abdomen revealed a normal appearance of the liver, pancreas and spleen, but incidentally showed a tumor in the right atrium. The tumor (a blood cyst which contained white thrombus) was successfully excised. Blood cysts of the heart are extremely rare in adults. These tumors are incidently found at autopsy on cardiac valves in approximately 50% of infants under 2 months of age. The blood cyst in this case arose from the right atrial wall, which is also quite rare.
7.Midterm Results of ePTFE Trileaflet Dacron Graft Conduit for Reconstruction of Right Ventricular Outflow Tract in Children
Hiroki Hayashi ; Yukihiro Takahashi ; Makoto Ando ; Masahito Yamashiro ; Keima Nagamachi ; Toshio Kikuchi ; Hitoshi Kasegawa
Japanese Journal of Cardiovascular Surgery 2005;34(2):88-92
Reconstruction of the right ventriclar outflow tract (RVOT) in congenital heart disease often requires implantation of a valved conduit. A hand-made expanded polytetrafluoroethylene (ePTFE) trileaflet Dacron graft conduit has been used at our center since 1997, and has been implanted in 31 patients. Midterm results of this conduit were investigated in 30 of the patients who have been followed at our outpatient clinic. There were 16 males and 14 females. The mean age and body weight were 16.4±7.2 (range, 3.4-33.4) years and 41.7±13.3 (range, 13.0-64.0)kg, respectively. Diagnoses were tetralogy of Fallot with pulmonary atresia in 14 patients, RVOT reconstruction associated with Ross procedure in 8, transposition with pulmonary stenosis in 3, pulmonary atresia with intact ventricular septum in 2, tetralogy with absent pulmonary valve syndrome in 1, pulmonary regurgitation developed after tetralogy repair in 1, and hemitruncus in 1. The median size of the graft was 22 (range, 20-26)mm. All patients were in NYHA functional class I at the time of the latest follow-up. The pressure gradient across the conduit was 11.0±5.8mmHg during the same hospitalization and 13.8±6.5mmHg on the latest echocardiogram (Interval, 2.4±1.5 years, p=0.85). The valve function was well maintained in all patients, with the regurgitation graded as non-trivial in 22 patients, mild in 7, and moderate in only 1. Midterm results of hand-made ePTFE trileaflet valved cunduit was satisfactory. A longer follow-up is mandatory to assess its actual durability.
8.Research on Fluoride Pollution and Fluorosis in Rural Areas of China.
Shinji ASANUMA ; Makoto USUDA ; Mitsuru ANDO ; Shosui MATSUSHIMA ; Toshikazu WATANABE ; Takeshi KONDO ; Kenji TAMURA ; Shiro SAKURAI ; Xueqing CHEN
Journal of the Japanese Association of Rural Medicine 1999;48(2):124-131
A China-Japan joint project was carried out to study the incidence of fluorosis caused by coal burning in China from 1995 to 1997.
The health survey covered a control area and two flourosis areas. In those research areas, drinking water was not polluted with fluorides. The survey was designed to analyze the health status of people exposed to fluorides and evaluate the relationships between the dose and incidence of fluorosis. The concentration of airborne pollutants in both indoor and outdoor air was measured. The concentration of fluoride in the urine was analyzed and definite diagnoses for dental fluorosis and skeletal fluorosis were determined.
As a result, the incidence of coal burning fluorosis was confirmed in studied areas. Moreover, the fluorosis was caused not only by the direct inhalation of the airbone fluorides in indoor air but also by the intake of cereals polluted with fluorides. Fluoride was contained in both coal and soil. Therefore the mixture of coal and soil used for the adjustment of fire energy contributed to the air pollution to a great extent. The typical polluted crops were red pepper, corn and potato. An extremely high concentration of fluoride in the urine of residents in the polluted areas was detected.
9.The Myocardial Protection of Immersion Hearts in Perfluorochemicals during Ischemia.
Koichi Inoue ; Osamu Honda ; Yuji Hanabusa ; Susumu Ando ; Atsushi Ozawa ; Shigeaki Sekiguchi ; Seiro Nomoto ; Mitsutaka Kadokura ; Makoto Yamada ; Toshihiro Takaba
Japanese Journal of Cardiovascular Surgery 1995;24(5):305-310
Topical cardiac hypothermia has unequivocal preservation effects during ischemia, but it has some disadvantages. Topical cooling, especially with ice slush, can injure the phrenic nerve, disturb the equal distribution of the cardioplegic solution due to coronary artery spasm and damage the epicardium. It is easy to prevent cooling injury without topical hypothermia, but the myocardial oxygen demands are increased. In order to supply the myocardium with oxygen for the increased oxygen demands during ischemia, isolated rat hearts were immersed in perfluorochemicals (PFC) which have excellent transportation of oxygen. The effects of immersion in PFC during mild hypothermic ischemia (at 20°C without cardioplegia and at 30°C cardioplegic arrest) on the cardiac function on reperfusion were evaluated. Under 20°C hypothermic ischemia without cardioplegia, cardiac beating was maintained for 20±4 minutes in the hearts were immersed in PFC, and for 10±2 minutes in the hearts that were not immersed in any solution. In the recovery of cardiac function (LVDP and LVmax dp/dt) after mild hypothermic (30°C) cardioplegic arrest, the hearts immersed in PFC showed better results than hearts that were not immersed.
10.New Procedure to Detect Intra-Muscular and/or Intra-Fat Coronary Artery Using an Ultrasonic Flowmeter
Keita Kikuchi ; Haruo Makuuchi ; Hiroshi Murakami ; Takamaro Suzuki ; Takashi Ando ; Makoto Ohno ; Hirokuni Ono ; Kiyoshi Chiba ; Shinichi Endo
Japanese Journal of Cardiovascular Surgery 2005;34(2):159-161
Detection of the coronary artery is usually an easy procedure in the coronary artery surgery. However in cases with an intra-muscular and/or intra-fat coronary artery, it requires special skill and experience. Dissection of epicardial adipose tissue and/or muscle along the epicardial groove is a common procedure to reach such coronary artery in conventional CABG (C-CABG). Recently, off-pump CABG (OPCAB) has become a standard operation, and detection of such a coronary artery is difficult under the beating heart. Then conversion to the C-CABG becomes necessary to avoid ventricular rupture. We report a new procedure to easily detect such a coronary artery in OPCAB, using an ultrasonic Fowmeter used in neurosurgery. Because the tip of the probe is small (2mm in diameter) and flexible, its handling is quite similar to that of the micro-blade knife. Furthermore, audiable Doppler flow sound allows detection and dissection of the coronary artery without looking away from the operative field to check the coronary flow. In our case, use of the instrument enabled us to detect the anterior descending branch of the left coronary artery which was very deep in adipose tissue. Therefore, application of this ultrasound instrument is beneficial in OPCAB with an intra-muscular and/or intra-fat coronary artery.