1.Operative Cases of the Distal Aortic Arch Aneurysm through Median Sternotomy.
Hirohisa Goto ; Hirofumi Nakano ; Tetsuya Kono ; Tsuneo Nakajima ; Tamaki Takano ; Jun Amano ; Hideo Tsunemoto ; Yukio Fukaya
Japanese Journal of Cardiovascular Surgery 1999;28(2):73-77
Seven patients underwent surgical repair of the distal aortic arch aneurysm from January 1990 to October 1997. They were 5 men and 2 women ranging from 63 to 78 years of age (mean, 72.7 years). All patients were operated with a median sternotomy only. There was one operative death, which was ruptured case. However, there were no major complications in non-ruptured cases. This retrospective study suggests that it is possible to repair the distal aortic arch aneurysm through a median sternotomy approach alone, when 1) descending aorta originates with normal size just distal to sacciform aneurysm, 2) the maximum diameter of the aneurysm is over 70mm and 3) distal involvement of the aneurysm does not extend beyond the bifurcation of the trachea. It is useful to retract descending aorta proximally by three threads with pledget for distal anastomosis in inclusion technique.
2.Direct Aortic Reimplantation with Mitral Valve Repair for BWG Syndrome in an Adult Case.
Tetsuya Kono ; Hirohisa Goto ; Tsuneo Nakajima ; Hirofumi Nakano ; Jun Amano ; Yorikazu Harada
Japanese Journal of Cardiovascular Surgery 1999;28(6):370-373
Direct coronary artery reimplantation to the aorta and mitral valve repair were successfully performed in a 29-year-old female with Bland-White-Garland syndrome (BWG syndrome). Under cardiopulmonary bypass, the main pulmonary artery was completely transected and the left coronary artery was excised with a cuff of pulmonary artery wall. Then the left coronary artery was directly anastomosed to the ascending aorta. Mitral regurgitation was repaired with valvulo-annuloplasty. The post operative course was excellent.
3.A Surgical Case of Acute Aortic Dissection with Antiphospholipid Syndrome.
Tsuneo Nakajima ; Hiroto Kitahara ; Tetsuya Kono ; Keizo Ohta ; Tamaki Takano ; Ryo Hasegasa ; Hirohisa Goto ; Hirofumi Nakano ; Hideo Kuroda ; Jun Amano
Japanese Journal of Cardiovascular Surgery 2001;30(6):311-313
The patient was a 52-year-old man with a history of antiphospholipid syndrome (APS), renal dysfunction and myasthenia gravis (MG). On May 2, 1998, he had sudden chest pain while sleeping. Enhanced computed tomography revealed acute aortic dissection (DeBakey type I). We performed emergency graft replacement of the ascending aorta and the aortic arch under extracorporeal circulation. Because of perioperative anuria, we used peritoneal dialysis (PD) just after the operation. Two days after the operation, we performed re-intubation nine hours after the extubation of the tracheal tube, and performed re-extubation three days later. For a while, his postoperative course was uneventful, but because of gradual worsening of APS, we administered more prednisolone, but 74 days after the operation, he died of multiple organ failure caused by an opportunistic infection, sepsis, and disseminated intravascular coagulation. This was very rare case of acute aortic dissection with MG and APS. After administration of more glucocorticoids, it is important to be wary of opportunistic infections.
4.Impact of postoperative nutritional status on the patients’ clinical outcomes and knee biomechanics following total knee arthroplasty in Japan: a prospective cohort study
Kenichi KONO ; Tetsuya TOMITA ; Takaharu YAMAZAKI ; Masashi TAMAKI ; Shuji TAKETOMI ; Ryota YAMAGAMI ; Reo INOUE ; Yuki TANIGUCHI ; Sakae TANAKA ; Kazuhiko FUKATSU
Annals of Clinical Nutrition and Metabolism 2025;17(1):50-57
Purpose:
The impact of postoperative nutritional status on clinical outcomes and biomechanics following total knee arthroplasty remains largely unknown. This study aimed to assess this question using the prognostic nutritional index to evaluate the nutritional status of orthopedic participants.
Methods:
Patients with knee osteoarthritis who underwent total knee arthroplasty (n=49) in Japan were divided into two groups based on their 1-week postoperative prognostic nutritional index. Group L patients had a prognostic nutritional index <40, whereas Group H comprised patients with a prognostic nutritional index ≥40. Postoperative improvements in Knee Injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score were evaluated. The patients performed squats under single-fluoroscopic surveillance in the sagittal plane for biomechanical evaluation. A two-dimensional/three-dimensional registration technique was employed to measure the tibiofemoral kinematics. The axial rotation of the femoral component relative to the tibial component and the anteroposterior translation of the medial and lateral femorotibial contact points were measured.
Results:
Group H showed significantly higher pain scores than Group L at 12 and 36 months postoperatively and a significantly higher symptom score at 36 months postoperatively. The kinematic comparison revealed that the axial external rotation in Group L was larger than that in Group H from 70° to 80° with flexion. Moreover, in the medial anteroposterior translation, Group L was more anteriorly located than Group H, with flexion beyond 30°.
Conclusion
The results suggest that a high postoperative nutritional status significantly improved pain and other symptoms and was associated with better knee biomechanics following total knee arthroplasty.
5.Impact of postoperative nutritional status on the patients’ clinical outcomes and knee biomechanics following total knee arthroplasty in Japan: a prospective cohort study
Kenichi KONO ; Tetsuya TOMITA ; Takaharu YAMAZAKI ; Masashi TAMAKI ; Shuji TAKETOMI ; Ryota YAMAGAMI ; Reo INOUE ; Yuki TANIGUCHI ; Sakae TANAKA ; Kazuhiko FUKATSU
Annals of Clinical Nutrition and Metabolism 2025;17(1):50-57
Purpose:
The impact of postoperative nutritional status on clinical outcomes and biomechanics following total knee arthroplasty remains largely unknown. This study aimed to assess this question using the prognostic nutritional index to evaluate the nutritional status of orthopedic participants.
Methods:
Patients with knee osteoarthritis who underwent total knee arthroplasty (n=49) in Japan were divided into two groups based on their 1-week postoperative prognostic nutritional index. Group L patients had a prognostic nutritional index <40, whereas Group H comprised patients with a prognostic nutritional index ≥40. Postoperative improvements in Knee Injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score were evaluated. The patients performed squats under single-fluoroscopic surveillance in the sagittal plane for biomechanical evaluation. A two-dimensional/three-dimensional registration technique was employed to measure the tibiofemoral kinematics. The axial rotation of the femoral component relative to the tibial component and the anteroposterior translation of the medial and lateral femorotibial contact points were measured.
Results:
Group H showed significantly higher pain scores than Group L at 12 and 36 months postoperatively and a significantly higher symptom score at 36 months postoperatively. The kinematic comparison revealed that the axial external rotation in Group L was larger than that in Group H from 70° to 80° with flexion. Moreover, in the medial anteroposterior translation, Group L was more anteriorly located than Group H, with flexion beyond 30°.
Conclusion
The results suggest that a high postoperative nutritional status significantly improved pain and other symptoms and was associated with better knee biomechanics following total knee arthroplasty.
6.Impact of postoperative nutritional status on the patients’ clinical outcomes and knee biomechanics following total knee arthroplasty in Japan: a prospective cohort study
Kenichi KONO ; Tetsuya TOMITA ; Takaharu YAMAZAKI ; Masashi TAMAKI ; Shuji TAKETOMI ; Ryota YAMAGAMI ; Reo INOUE ; Yuki TANIGUCHI ; Sakae TANAKA ; Kazuhiko FUKATSU
Annals of Clinical Nutrition and Metabolism 2025;17(1):50-57
Purpose:
The impact of postoperative nutritional status on clinical outcomes and biomechanics following total knee arthroplasty remains largely unknown. This study aimed to assess this question using the prognostic nutritional index to evaluate the nutritional status of orthopedic participants.
Methods:
Patients with knee osteoarthritis who underwent total knee arthroplasty (n=49) in Japan were divided into two groups based on their 1-week postoperative prognostic nutritional index. Group L patients had a prognostic nutritional index <40, whereas Group H comprised patients with a prognostic nutritional index ≥40. Postoperative improvements in Knee Injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score were evaluated. The patients performed squats under single-fluoroscopic surveillance in the sagittal plane for biomechanical evaluation. A two-dimensional/three-dimensional registration technique was employed to measure the tibiofemoral kinematics. The axial rotation of the femoral component relative to the tibial component and the anteroposterior translation of the medial and lateral femorotibial contact points were measured.
Results:
Group H showed significantly higher pain scores than Group L at 12 and 36 months postoperatively and a significantly higher symptom score at 36 months postoperatively. The kinematic comparison revealed that the axial external rotation in Group L was larger than that in Group H from 70° to 80° with flexion. Moreover, in the medial anteroposterior translation, Group L was more anteriorly located than Group H, with flexion beyond 30°.
Conclusion
The results suggest that a high postoperative nutritional status significantly improved pain and other symptoms and was associated with better knee biomechanics following total knee arthroplasty.
7.Impact of postoperative nutritional status on the patients’ clinical outcomes and knee biomechanics following total knee arthroplasty in Japan: a prospective cohort study
Kenichi KONO ; Tetsuya TOMITA ; Takaharu YAMAZAKI ; Masashi TAMAKI ; Shuji TAKETOMI ; Ryota YAMAGAMI ; Reo INOUE ; Yuki TANIGUCHI ; Sakae TANAKA ; Kazuhiko FUKATSU
Annals of Clinical Nutrition and Metabolism 2025;17(1):50-57
Purpose:
The impact of postoperative nutritional status on clinical outcomes and biomechanics following total knee arthroplasty remains largely unknown. This study aimed to assess this question using the prognostic nutritional index to evaluate the nutritional status of orthopedic participants.
Methods:
Patients with knee osteoarthritis who underwent total knee arthroplasty (n=49) in Japan were divided into two groups based on their 1-week postoperative prognostic nutritional index. Group L patients had a prognostic nutritional index <40, whereas Group H comprised patients with a prognostic nutritional index ≥40. Postoperative improvements in Knee Injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score were evaluated. The patients performed squats under single-fluoroscopic surveillance in the sagittal plane for biomechanical evaluation. A two-dimensional/three-dimensional registration technique was employed to measure the tibiofemoral kinematics. The axial rotation of the femoral component relative to the tibial component and the anteroposterior translation of the medial and lateral femorotibial contact points were measured.
Results:
Group H showed significantly higher pain scores than Group L at 12 and 36 months postoperatively and a significantly higher symptom score at 36 months postoperatively. The kinematic comparison revealed that the axial external rotation in Group L was larger than that in Group H from 70° to 80° with flexion. Moreover, in the medial anteroposterior translation, Group L was more anteriorly located than Group H, with flexion beyond 30°.
Conclusion
The results suggest that a high postoperative nutritional status significantly improved pain and other symptoms and was associated with better knee biomechanics following total knee arthroplasty.
8.Impact of postoperative nutritional status on the patients’ clinical outcomes and knee biomechanics following total knee arthroplasty in Japan: a prospective cohort study
Kenichi KONO ; Tetsuya TOMITA ; Takaharu YAMAZAKI ; Masashi TAMAKI ; Shuji TAKETOMI ; Ryota YAMAGAMI ; Reo INOUE ; Yuki TANIGUCHI ; Sakae TANAKA ; Kazuhiko FUKATSU
Annals of Clinical Nutrition and Metabolism 2025;17(1):50-57
Purpose:
The impact of postoperative nutritional status on clinical outcomes and biomechanics following total knee arthroplasty remains largely unknown. This study aimed to assess this question using the prognostic nutritional index to evaluate the nutritional status of orthopedic participants.
Methods:
Patients with knee osteoarthritis who underwent total knee arthroplasty (n=49) in Japan were divided into two groups based on their 1-week postoperative prognostic nutritional index. Group L patients had a prognostic nutritional index <40, whereas Group H comprised patients with a prognostic nutritional index ≥40. Postoperative improvements in Knee Injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score were evaluated. The patients performed squats under single-fluoroscopic surveillance in the sagittal plane for biomechanical evaluation. A two-dimensional/three-dimensional registration technique was employed to measure the tibiofemoral kinematics. The axial rotation of the femoral component relative to the tibial component and the anteroposterior translation of the medial and lateral femorotibial contact points were measured.
Results:
Group H showed significantly higher pain scores than Group L at 12 and 36 months postoperatively and a significantly higher symptom score at 36 months postoperatively. The kinematic comparison revealed that the axial external rotation in Group L was larger than that in Group H from 70° to 80° with flexion. Moreover, in the medial anteroposterior translation, Group L was more anteriorly located than Group H, with flexion beyond 30°.
Conclusion
The results suggest that a high postoperative nutritional status significantly improved pain and other symptoms and was associated with better knee biomechanics following total knee arthroplasty.
9.Pulmonary alveolar hemorrhage from a pulmonary artery false aneurysm after Swan-Ganz catheterization in a thoracic aortic aneurysm patient: a case report.
Daisuke SUGIYAMA ; Shigeo IKENO ; Tetsuya TSUCHIHASHI ; Shigeru YOKOTA ; Hiroaki INA ; Tetsuya KONO ; Kunihiko YAMASHITA ; Mikito KAWAMATA
Korean Journal of Anesthesiology 2014;67(5):346-349
Pulmonary artery (PA) rupture caused by a PA Swan-Ganz catheter is a rare complication but remains fatal in almost 50% of cases. False aneurysm of the PA is a rare presentation of PA rupture and should be considered as a possible diagnosis in a patient with a new lung mass after PA catheterization. We present a case of sudden-onset pulmonary alveolar hemorrhage during cardiovascular surgery due to a traumatic PA false aneurysm. The Swan-Ganz catheter might have been displaced by the thoracic aortic aneurysm with displacement of the catheter causing the false aneurysm and bleeding.
Aneurysm, False*
;
Aortic Aneurysm, Thoracic*
;
Catheterization
;
Catheterization, Swan-Ganz*
;
Catheters
;
Diagnosis
;
Hemorrhage*
;
Humans
;
Lung
;
Pulmonary Artery*
;
Rupture
10.Effectiveness of the Impella Support for Preoperative Optimization in a Case of Blow Out Type Left Ventricular Rupture after Myocardial Infarction
Soichiro OTA ; Tomohiro TAKANO ; Kazuki NAITO ; Yu MATSUMURA ; Katsuaki TSUKIOKA ; Tetsuya KONO
Japanese Journal of Cardiovascular Surgery 2025;54(2):53-56
An 84-year-old woman, who had undergone ligation for a coronary pulmonary artery fistula, coronary aneurysmectomy, and coronary artery bypass grafting at the age of 76 years, was referred to another hospital for chest pain and diagnosed with acute myocardial infarction based on coronary angiography results. The day after admission, she was transferred to our hospital after her blood pressure decreased and echocardiography showed left ventricular rupture. The Impella CP was introduced on the same day, and the surgery was performed on day 8 after one week of heart failure management. Intraoperative findings revealed a ruptured site in the lateral wall, which was repaired by patch closure. The patient was transferred for rehabilitation on postoperative day 24. As the patient was elderly with multiple organ failure and at high operative risk, a preoperative period to allow remodeling of the infarcted myocardium was considered crucial for a successful repair procedure. The left ventricle was decompressed using the Impella system to prevent enlargement of the rupture site in this case, and a 7-day preoperative optimization period was sufficient for improving myocardial damage. Thus, preoperative Impella-assisted management for left ventricular rupture might be effective in cases of free wall rupture after cardiac surgery with stable hemodynamic status as in the present case or oozing rupture.