1.Aneurysmal Subarachnoid Hemorrhage in Honjo-Yuri District of Akita Prefecture of Japan
Kenji KIKUCHI ; Yoshitaka SUDA ; Hitoshi SHIOYA ; Kenjiro SHINDO
Journal of the Japanese Association of Rural Medicine 2004;53(1):11-22
Purpose : The purpose of this study was to analyze the incidence if subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) in residents of Honjo City and its vicinity in northen Japan with a total population of 123,000 during the 8-year period from 1995 through 2002, and to evaluated the overall management outcome of the patients with SAH. Methods : All patients suspected of having SAH are referred to our hospital, which plays a crucial role as a “core” hospital in the region. Computed tomography (CT) scan was indicated for all the patients to verify the occurrence of SAH, and subsequently three dimensional (3D) CT angiography and/or catheter angiography were performed to confirm rupture of aneurysms. Results : During the period under review a total of 327 patients were diagnosed as having aneurysmal SAH, and ruptured aneurysms were confirmed in 276 cases (84%). The cruse annual incidence was 33.0 per 100,000 population for all ages during the entire 8-year period. However, the annual incidence has gradually decreased in contrast to an increasing number of operations for unruptured aneurysms performed during the same period. The age ranged from 21 to 92 years with the mean age of 64.5, and the incidence reached a peak in the 70-79 age group. Women far exceeded men in the incidence at the ratio of 1.8 to 1. The high grade patients with severe SAH as evaluated as grade 4 and 5 according to Hunt & Kosnik’s classification consisted of 45%, and 50% of this group were the patients 70 and older. Overall management outcome was assessed 6 months after the onset of SAH with the use of Glasgow Outcome Scale, and favorable outcome such as good recovery and moderate disability was obtained in 42% of the total 327 patients and death occurred in 39%. Conclusion : The high incidence of SAH was confirmed, and it was also noted that the number of elderly patients with severe SAH has increased in this region. Preventive treatment for unruptured aneurysms may be one clue to the solution of this devastating medical problem.
incidence of cases
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X-Ray Computed Tomography
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Japan
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Subarachnoid Hemorrhage, Aneurysmal
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Hospitals
2.Cerebrovascular Accident (Stroke) in Honjo-Yuri District of Akita Prefecture, Japan ---the Past and Present---
Kenji KIKUCHI ; Yoshitaka SUDA ; Hitoshi SHIOYA ; Kenjiro SHINDO ; Kenichi ASAKURA ; Tamio NISHINARI ; Jun KUROKI ; Hiroyuki GOTO ; Yasuo YAMANAKA ; Shigeki NISHIMURA ; Tohru NAKANISHI ; Satoshi MURAI
Journal of the Japanese Association of Rural Medicine 2005;54(1):37-49
A clinico-epidemiological analysis was performed of 2,414 consecutive stroke patients who were treated in our hospital during the 6-year period from 1997 through 2003. All the patients were neurologically examined and diagnostic studies were made by use of computed tomography. Cerebral infarction, cerebral hemorrhage, and subarachnoid hemorrhage accounted for 68%, 22%, and 10% of the stroke cases, respectively. The incidence of these subtypes of stroke in this region during the past 20 years was characterized by a singnificant decrease in cerebral hemorrhage, and an increased proportion of cerebral infarction. Men exceeded women in the incidences of both cerebral infarction and hemorrhage, whereas characteristically women far exceeded men in subarachnoid hemorrhage. The incidence reached a peak in the 70-79 age group regardless of the subtypes of stroke, and 64% of the entire stroke patients were those 70 and older. Women were found to suffer from stroke at much older age than men. As to the site of hemorrhage, putaminal hemorrhage was the most frequent, experienced by 36% of the patients, followed by thalamic hemorrhage in 34% of the patients. Putaminal and pontine hemorrhages predominated in the age groups younger than 60;thalamic, cerebellar and subcortical hemorrhages were predominant in the age groups older than 70. The incidence of these subtypes of hemorrhage during the past 20 years was characterized by a dramatic decrease in putaminal hemorrhage in a younger population, and a significant increase in thalamic, cerebellar, and subcortical hemorrhages in an older population.
Cerebrovascular accident
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Hemorrhage
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seconds
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Age Group Unspecified
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incidence of cases
3.Chronic Kidney Disease As a Risk Factor of Stroke
Kenji KIKUCHI ; Kazuo SUZUKI ; Hisashi KOJIMA ; Katsuya FUTAWATARI ; Kenji MURAISHI ; Yoshitaka SUDA ; Junkoh SASAKI ; Susumu FUSHIMI ; Yasunari OTAWARA ; Toshirou OOTSUKA ; Hidehiko ENDO ; Makie TANAKA ; Naoko SUZUKI ; Kimiyo TAKAHASHI ; Yuko KIKUCHI ; Kozue IKEDA ; Mutsumi NITTA ; Mikiko FUJIWARA ; Miyuki NANBU ; Akiko TAKAHASHI ; Shousaku OGASAWARA
Journal of the Japanese Association of Rural Medicine 2014;63(4):596-605
Chronic kidney disease (CKD) has recently been reported to be an independent risk factor for stroke. However, a detailed analysis was yet to be conducted according to stroke subtype. We attempted to determine the risk factors for stroke using data from the “specific health checkup” for metabolic syndrome conducted by the 9 hospitals affiliated with the Akita Prefectural Federation of Agricultural Cooperatives, and evaluate and determine the risk factors for stroke. There were 401 patients who had undergone metabolic syndrome checkups from 2007 and 2010 and suffered from stroke afterwards within 3 years after the screening. The controls were all 69,407 subjects who were screened during the same period. The predictors examined were sex, age, blood pressure, BMI, cholesterol values (HDL・LDL), history of diabetes mellitus, presence of atrial fibrillation, CKD, and drinking and smoking habits. Analysis was conducted using logistic regression. The risk factors for stroke as a whole were male sex, age, blood pressure, diabetes, atrial fibrillation, CKD, and smoking history. For cerebral infarction, the risk factors were male sex, age, blood pressure, diabetes, atrial fibrillation, CKD, and smoking habit. The risk factors for cerebral hemorrhage were age, blood pressure, and CKD. For subarachnoid hemorrhage, the risk factors were female sex, age, blood pressure, low HDLemia, and CKD. In conclusion, CKD is an independent risk factor for the 3 subtypes of stroke, and in particular plays an important role as a higher risk factor for cerebral hemorrhage. Smoking cessation and controls of blood pressure, diabetes and atrial fibrillation are the important measures for stroke prevention. In addition, the further intervention should also be targeted to those with the result of CKD revealed by specific health checkups.