1.Perioperative Anticoagulation Therapy for Patient with Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm after Heart Valve Surgery.
Masakazu Abe ; Tomoaki Jikuya ; Mio Noma ; Katsutoshi Nakamura ; Masato Sato ; Toshihisa Asakura ; Yuzuru Sakakibara ; Naotaka Atsumi ; Yasushi Terada ; Toshio Mitsui
Japanese Journal of Cardiovascular Surgery 1996;25(3):147-151
Under scheduled anticoagulation therapy, surgery for abdominal aortic aneurysm was performed in 4 patients who had undergone heart valve surgery and implantation of a mechanical prosthesis. Warfarin and antiplatelet agents were prescribed in all cases preoperatively. Antiplatelet agents were discontinued from seven to 10 days before operation. Warfarin was stopped from two to three days before operation and heparin (200IU/kg/day) was administered by continuous intravenous infusion to produce an activated clotting time of around 150 seconds. Bolus intravenous heparin of 3, 000 IU was added before aortic crossclamp. Oral anticoagulants were resumed from the beginning of oral intake, and heparin was stopped when the prothrombin time reached therapeutic levels (% PT=40%). In three patients perioperative courses were uneventful. Intraperitoneal hemorrhage occurred in one patient who simultaneously underwent cholecystectomy and aneurysmectomy with Y-grafting. He required blood transfusion and interruption of anticoagulation. Brain thromboembolism occurred in this patient 26 days after the operation. We believe that scheduled anticoagulation for the operation of abdominal aortic aneurysm is safe and useful in patients with prior prosthetic heart valve surgery. However, the coexistence of coagulopathy requires more intensive anticoagulation therapy.
2.Development of a Novel Database That Rapidly Provides Valuable Information Efficiently Aimed at Improving the Safety of the Simple Suspension Method
Masahiro Watanabe ; Tatsuya Tai ; Shigeko Tsuji ; Hiroaki Tanaka ; Takahiro Motoki ; Kazunori Yamaguchi ; Kenta Sumiyoshi ; Takato Nozaki ; Masato Kaji ; Masato Asakura ; Shinji Kosaka ; Hitoshi Houchi
Japanese Journal of Drug Informatics 2015;17(2):69-76
Objective: Many patients in Kagawa University Hospital are administered medicines prepared by the simple suspension method. Pharmacists in charge of these patients receive inquiries from doctors and nurses regarding the suitability of medicines for the simple suspension method. Answering these inquiries is complicated and time-consuming as multiple data sources need to be searched. In order to simplify these complicated procedures, we herein attempted to develop a novel database to provide valuable information that could contribute to the safe performance of the simple suspension method, and evaluated its usefulness.
Method: The specifications of the database were determined by analyzing previously answered inquiries. To evaluate the usefulness of the database, we used test prescriptions and compared the amount of time required to gather information using the database and the conventional method, i.e., using books alone. We also analyzed previous prescriptions with the database in order to determine what kinds of problems could be detected.
Results: The investigation of previous prescriptions indicated that some medicines needed to be examined not only for their suitability for the simple suspension method, but also their incompatibility. Therefore, we added a feature regarding the incompatibility of medicines to the database. The time required to gather the information needed to answer the test prescription was shorter with our database than with the conventional method. Furthermore, the database improved the detection of medicines that require particular attention for their properties including incompatibility. An analysis of previous prescriptions using our database indicated the possibility of incompatibility in half of the previous prescriptions examined.
Conclusion: Our database could rapidly provide information related to the simple suspension method, including the incompatibility of medicines.
3.Risk Factors for Stroke in Akita Prefecture
Tetsuya SAKAMOTO ; Kenjiro SHINDO ; Yasufumi KIKUCHI ; Kenichi AKASAKA ; Nobuko SAITO ; Tsuneo YASUDA ; Katsuya FUTAWATARI ; Kenichi ASAKURA ; Kenji KIKUCHI ; Hikaru OOISHI ; Motohiro YONEYA ; Toshiro OOTSUKA ; Masato HAYASHI ; Kazuo SUZUKI
Journal of the Japanese Association of Rural Medicine 2008;57(5):698-703
In Akita Prefecture, there are nine hospitals established by the Akita Prefectural Federation of Agricultural Cooperatives for Health and Welfare (Koseiren). Half of the stroke patients in the prefecture were treated in these Koseiren hospitals, and half of the mass screening projects for the prevention of cardio vascular diseases were undertaken by these hospitals. A retrospective cohort study was done using mass-screening data (age, sex, past history of diabetes mellitus, blood pressure, body mass index, smoking and drinking habits) of 175,033 cases stored at these hospitals from 1988 to 1999, and the prefecture-wide stroke data of 2,520 initial stroke events registered from 1988 to 2003. The number of stroke cases was broken down into 1,428 cases of cerebral infarction (57%, CI), 693 cases of cerebral hemorrhage (27%, CH) and 399 cases of subarachnoid hemorrhage (16%, SAH). The subjects were also divided into five age groups:30-49, 50-59, 60-69, 70-79 and 80-89. Blood pressure (BP) was classified into six categories according to the JNC 6 criteria. Risk factors were determined using the Cox analysis. The hazard ratio for CI and CH was increasing with advancing age. CI showed a higher hazard ratio in men than women (hazard ratio for men was 1.8). The hazard ratio was increasing as BP became higher in any of three stroke subtypes, and especially CH showed the strongest correlation with BP. Uncontrollable risk factors were very closely associated with the attack of CI. On the other hand, BP (controllable risk) was closely linked with the attack of CH. Our results showed the prevention of CI was not easy. Controlling BP may be the most effective strategy for preventing hemorrhagic stroke (CH and SAH).
Cerebrovascular accident
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Cephalic index
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Blood pressure determination
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hazard
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Risk Factors