1.A Rare Complication after Tricuspid Annuloplasty
Masatoshi Sunada ; Hisao Suda ; Takuya Nakayama ; Toshiyuki Yamada ; Yosuke Miyata ; Tatsuhito Ogawa
Japanese Journal of Cardiovascular Surgery 2015;44(3):170-172
We report a rare case of severe aortic regurgitation after mitral valve replacement (MVR) and tricuspid annuloplasty (TAP). An 83-year-old woman underwent MVR and TAP for mitral regurgitation and secondary tricuspid regurgitation. The early postoperative course was not eventful until 6 days after surgery. However, 7 days after surgery, she suffered from acute heart failure and transthoracic echocardiography showed severe aortic regurgitation. We performed a second operation 13 days after the first surgery. Intraoperatively, we found the annulus suture of the TAP just under the NCC-RCC commissure of the aortic valve. We speculated that the suture pulled the aortic valve annulus, resulting in severe aortic regurgitation. We removed the suture and replaced the aortic valve with bioprosthetic artificial valve. Postoperative recovery was uneventful, and she was discharged 22 days after the second surgical procedure.
2.Lung Metastasis of Renal Cell Carcinoma Extended into the Left Atrium
Shun Nakaji ; Koji Hashizume ; Tsuneo Ariyoshi ; Yoichi Hisada ; Kazuyoshi Tanigawa ; Takashi Miura ; Seiji Matsukuma ; Mizuki Sumi ; Toshiyuki Nakayama ; Kiyoyuki Eishi
Japanese Journal of Cardiovascular Surgery 2013;42(2):145-147
We report an extremely rare case of renal cell carcinoma (RCC) extending into the left atrium through the pulmonary vein next to lung metastasis. The patient was a 76-year-old man. Extirpation of the RCC in the right kidney was carried out. Metastasis to the lungs, mediastinal lymph nodes and the pubis were diagnosed and 4 years later, a myxoma-like tumor was formed in the left atrium by echocardiography. We extirpated of the tumor. During surgery, continuity with the metastatic lesion in the right lung, right inferior pulmonary vein and the left atrium was suggested. Histopathologic examination showed the same histopathology as seen in the RCC.
3.Examination of a New Base for the Polaprezinc Oral Rinse
Masahiro Nakayama ; Takeshi Nakamura ; Tsuyoshi Azuma ; Toshiyuki Shikata ; Atsufumi Kawabata ; Kenji Matsuyama ; Masayuki Fujiwara ; Norihiko Kamikonya ; Takeshi Kimura
Japanese Journal of Drug Informatics 2013;15(1):13-17
Objective: In The Hospital of Hyogo College of Medicine, a oral rinse containing polaprezinc (PZ), a zinc-containing drug for gastric ulcers, was used as a hospital preparation to treat radiotherapy-related oral mucositis, and its efficacy was reported. However, the dispersibility of PZ for carboxymethylcellulose sodium (CMC), which was used as the base of the oral rinse, was unfavorable, raising an issue. In this study, we newly prepared a PZ oral rinse containing carboxyvinyl polymer (CP) as a base, and examined its usefulness.
Methods: A questionnaire survey regarding the usefulness involving 10 healthy volunteers and a pharmaceutical test were conducted.
Results: The results of the questionnaire survey showed that the optimal concentration of CP was 0.5%. There were no serial changes in the pH, adhesiveness, or PZ content for 7 days after preparation. Furthermore, there were no differences between CMC and CP. The dispersibility of PZ in the oral rinse containing CP as a base was more favorable than that in the oral rinse containing CMC.
Conclusion: The results of this study suggest that the PZ oral rinse containing 0.5% CP as a base is useful, and that its stability is similar to that of the oral rinse containing CMC as a base.
4.Prevalence of systemic and local risk factors for pulmonary non-tuberculous mycobacterial disease in Japan: a single-institution study
Ryohei KAMEI ; Michiru SAWAHATA ; Masayuki NAKAYAMA ; Toshiyuki YAMADA ; Nobuyuki TANIGUCHI ; Masashi BANDO ; Koichi HAGIWARA
Journal of Rural Medicine 2023;18(3):168-174
Objective: To identify the prevalence of risk factors for pulmonary non-tuberculous mycobacterial (NTM) disease in a Japanese population.Patients and Methods: We reviewed 337 consecutive Japanese patients (210 women) with pulmonary NTM disease, including 225 patients with Mycobacterium avium complex (MAC) disease (95.8%) at our hospital during 2006–2017. We calculated the prevalence of risk factors reported in Western countries among mycobacterial species.Results: Pulmonary MAC disease cases comprised 78.2% of pulmonary NTM patients in their 40s, increasing to 100% at age ≥80 years. Body mass index (BMI) was <18.5 in approximately 40% of patients, which was significantly higher than the prevalence of underweight in the Japanese population. The percentage of male heavy smokers (Brinkman index ≥600) was 58.2% of pulmonary NTM disease and was high for all mycobacterial species. In pulmonary MAC disease, systemic factors were observed in the order of malignant tumors (other than lung cancer), diabetes, rheumatoid arthritis, and tuberculosis. Local factors were observed in the order of bronchiectasis, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, lung cancer, and bronchial asthma.Conclusion: The risk factors reported in Western countries were relatively highly prevalent among Japanese pulmonary NTM disease patients. This observation may help elucidate disease onset mechanisms.
5.Pulmonary mycobacterium avium complex disease complicated by cancer: an 11-year survey at a single-center
Ryohei KAMEI ; Michiru SAWAHATA ; Naoko YOSHIZUMI ; Masafumi SATA ; Masayuki NAKAYAMA ; Toshiyuki YAMADA ; Nobuyuki TANIGUCHI ; Takuji SUZUKI ; Masashi BANDO ; Koichi HAGIWARA
Journal of Rural Medicine 2021;16(2):72-76
Objective: Pulmonary mycobacterium avium complex (MAC) disease is increasing significantly worldwide. Several studies have investigated the clinical features of pulmonary MAC disease in the setting of cancer. Here, we aimed to clarify the clinical characteristics of patients with cancer with recent onset of pulmonary MAC disease and the effect of cancer on the onset of this disease.Patients and Methods: Of the 323 consecutive Japanese patients newly diagnosed with pulmonary MAC disease at Jichi Medical University Hospital between and 2006–2017, we retrospectively reviewed 79 consecutive patients with cancer.Results: Seventeen patients had lung cancer (21.0%), while 62 had non-lung cancer. Of the 17 patients with lung cancer, 16 had adenocarcinoma of which 10 had stage I to III disease; 8 of the 10 patients had not received chemotherapy. Sixteen patients with lung cancer had a MAC infection in the ipsilateral lung. Notably, 9 of the 11 lung cancer patients who did not undergo surgery had a MAC infection in the affected lobe. Of the 39 patients with the most common types of non-lung cancer (14 had gastric cancer, 13 had colorectal cancer, and 12 had breast cancer), 22 had stage I to III disease, and 18 of these 22 had not received chemotherapy.Conclusion: Lung cancer may act as a local factor contributing to the onset of pulmonary MAC disease in the ipsilateral lung. However, the underlying mechanism by which a history of cancer might affect the onset of pulmonary MAC disease remains unclear. Further investigation into this mechanism is needed.