1.Evaluation of the Reformed Liberal Arts Education at Juntendo University School of Medicine.
Takao OKADA ; Yasumasa ARAI ; Reitaro IKEDA ; Tadashi KAGAMI ; Hideoki OGAWA
Medical Education 1999;30(3):177-181
Radical changes were made last year in the educational program of liberal arts at Juntendo University School of Medicine. The number of required courses was decreased, and students were given more freedom to choose electives. A survey at the end of the first semester evaluating the reforms showed great satisfaction on both sides: students were highly motivated to study, and the teachers were ready to answer their needs.
2.Endovascular Aortic Repair for Type B Acute Aortic Dissection with Leg Malperfusion
Kouki NAKASHIMA ; Yosuke HARI ; Hisato TAKAGI ; Tadashi KITAMURA ; Kagami MIYAJI
Japanese Journal of Cardiovascular Surgery 2021;50(1):69-72
Leg malperfusion accompanied with type B acute aortic dissection (AAD) is reported to be an independent predictor for mortality. In such a case, though aortic replacement, extra anatomical arterial bypass or endovascular aortic repair (EVAR) can be selected, an appropriate treatment strategy has not been established yet. A 53-year-old woman was urgently hospitalized with sudden low back pain and right leg weakness, despite the right popliteal and anterior tibial arteries being palpable. Computed tomography (CT) revealed a type B AAD, and antihypertensive therapy was initiated. She complained of intermittent claudication during rehabilitation, and right leg ischemia with decreased ankle brachial pressure index (ABPI) was detected. The follow-up CT revealed the narrow true lumen of the right common iliac artery compressed by the thrombosed false lumen and the large entry of the aortic dissection in the terminal aorta. At the subacute phase of the aortic dissection, EVAR was performed. To expand the true lumen and exclude the entry, Y-shaped stent-grafts were implanted in the infra-renal aorta and the bilateral common iliac arteries. The postoperative course was uneventful. Postoperative ABPI returned to the normal range, and the intermittent claudication disappeared. In conclusion, EVAR should be considered in patients with type B AAD complicated with leg malperfusion.