1.Clinical Research Support in Mito Kyodo General Hospital: Current Practice and Future Problems
Sanae AOTO ; Keiko FUJIE ; Yoshio NAKATA ; Hiroyuki KOBAYASHI ; Shigeyuki WATANABE ; Atsushi HIRANO ; Koichi HASHIMOTO
Journal of the Japanese Association of Rural Medicine 2017;65(6):1177-1187
Clinical research is essential for the practice of evidence-based medicine. This study reports on our current practice of clinical research support in Mito Kyodo General Hospital and discusses future challenges. In April 2013, the University of Tsukuba hired a clinical research assistant to provide clinical research support in Mito Kyodo General Hospital. The clinical research assistant worked full-time in the hospital in collaboration with 3 university faculty members. The target population for this study comprised 450 medical personnel including doctors, nurses, and other medical staff. From April 2014, 1 of the 3 faculty members visited the hospital once a month to offer clinical research consultations and deliver a lecture on nursing research. We analyzed past records of clinical research support and conducted a questionnaire survey to explore the level of satisfaction of the medical personnel. Four-hundred and ninety records of 91 research topics proposed by 68 medical personnel were identified. Of these, 93.4% were proposed by doctors or nurses. Most studies employed an observational study design (64.8%) and were conducted in order to make a presentation at an academic conference (51.1%). The consultation sessions were held 1–5 times, for 40–405 min, and lasted from 1–84 days per research topic. Consultations mostly pertained to research design and protocol planning (57.1%). Forty-seven clients were invited to participate in the questionnaire survey, 30 of whom provided valid responses. The results showed that 96.6% of the clients were satisfied with the consultations. The number of clients who participated in the consultations comprised only 15.1% of the target population. These practice biases need to be addressed in future. However, nearly all respondents were satisfied with the consultations. These findings suggest that our clinical research support was beneficial to medical personnel.
2.A Case of Jaundiced Constrictive Pericarditis.
Noriyoshi Kutsukata ; Shigeyuki Hirano ; Tomomi Hirata ; Takao Hisayoshi ; Masafumi Hioki ; Shigeo Tanaka
Japanese Journal of Cardiovascular Surgery 1998;27(2):111-113
We treated a constrictive pericarditis patients that developed jaundice. The 28-year-old male complained chiefly of dyspnea on exertion. In addition to hyperbilirubinemia, his chest X-ray showed calcification of the pericardium. Cardiac catheterization found increased central venous pressure (24mmHg), a dip and plateau of the right and left ventricular pressure, and a patent foramen ovale (PFO). Surgery to excise the pericardium and close the PFO was performed under extracorporeal circulation. Hypertrophic pericardium had expanded throughout the right atrium to the free wall of the right ventricle and was partially calcified. Surgery restored the patient's cardiac and liver functions and allowed him to resume normal social activity.
3.A Case Report of Mitral Valve Replacement for the Patient with Severely Calcified Mitral Annulus after Long-Term Hemodialysis
Katsutoshi Adachi ; Tomoaki Sato ; Hironori Tenpaku ; Masaki Kajimoto ; Shigeyuki Makino ; Koji Hirano ; Jin Tanaka ; Yukikatsu Okada
Japanese Journal of Cardiovascular Surgery 2003;32(5):293-296
A 53-year-old woman underwent mitral valve replacement for congestive heart failure due to mitral stenosis and regurgitation. She had been receiving hemodialysis because of diabetic nephropathy since 1993, and had had congestive heart failure since 1999. Echocardiography demonstrated mitral stenosis (MVA; 1.10cm2) and regurgitation with a severely calcified mitral annulus. Annular calcification extended to the posterior wall of the left ventricle and the base of bilateral papillary muscles. After removing all calcium from the mitral annulus to the base of the papillary muscle, the left ventricular posterior wall and mitral annulus were reconstructed by glutaraldehyde-preserved autologous pericardium. Then, a Carbo-Medics mechanical valve was placed at the mitral annulus using everting mattress sutures. Although her hemodynamics were stable, bacteremia and multi-organ failure developed 3 months after surgery and she died. Autopsy showed that the reconstructed left ventricular posterior wall and mitral annulus using glutaraldehyde preserved autologous pericardium were in excellent condition without any thrombus. No dehiscence was found at the suture line of the mechanical valve. Mitral annulus reconstruction with glutaraldehyde preserved autologous pericardium is thought to be effective for patients with calcified mitral annulus who require mitral valve surgery.