1.Relationship between Yearly Changes in Serum Calcium Level and Calcium Intake
Mitsuru Tsuchida ; Hideomi Iida ; Hajime Ishikawa ; Fumiyoshi Yanagisawa
Journal of the Japanese Association of Rural Medicine 1983;31(5):725-729
Yearly changes in serum electrolytes, especially calcium (Ca), and Ca intake which may influence such changes were studied for 2 years from 1979 to 1980 in the same inhabitants of a rural area with a tendency to low Ca intake, and the following results were obtained.
1) Among different components of electrolytes, yearly changes in Ca were greater than in magnesium and inorganic phosphorus.
2) Yearly changes in serum Ca level from 9 mg/dl or lower level to higher level or vice versa were more frequent in men than in women and the number of women with not more than 9 mg/dl showed a tendency to decrease.
3) Yearly changes in serum Ca were closely correlated with Ca intake. It was supposed that serum Ca level in those who took about 400 mg/day of Ca was fluctuating above or below 9 mg/dl level in proportion to amount of intake.
2.A Case of Pseudoaneurysm of the External Iliac Artery after Total Hip Arthroplasty.
Mitsuru Iida ; Nanao Negishi ; Yoshiyuki Ishii ; Seiryuu Niino ; Hideaki Maeda ; Katsuyuki Suzuki ; Yoshinori Sakuma ; Tetsuya Niino ; Takanori Yoshino ; Yukiyasu Sezai
Japanese Journal of Cardiovascular Surgery 1997;26(2):120-123
A case of pseudoaneurysm of the external iliac artery after a total hip arthroplasty is reported. A 48-year-old man had undergone a total left hip arthroplasty 5 years previously. Acute arterial occlusion (AAO) of the left lower extremity occurred 3 times. AAO was due to pseudoaneurysm of the external iliac artery, which was detected by rotating digital subtraction angiography (DAS). Aneurysmectomy and reconstruction were carried out. Rotating DSA was useful for the diagnosis of this unusual case of pseudoaneurysm of the external iliac artery after a total hip arthroplasty is unusual.