1.Acupuncture and renal function. 1 Assessment by radioisotope renography.
Takaaki OKAMOTO ; Mitsuru NAKAMURA ; Hiroshi HASEGAWA
Journal of the Japan Society of Acupuncture and Moxibustion 1986;36(2):90-94
Radioisotope renography, which is a technique for extracorporeal examination of kidney utilizing radionuclides, can provide the data of renal dynamics such as blood flow and excretion of urine about individual kidney. Since this technique allowes simple and noninvasive examination of renal functions, it is now commonly used clinically.
The present study was designed to elucidate a relationship between renal function and meridian point by using radioisotope renography. In this paper the effect of acupuncture applied placing-needle wlth low frequency wave to Shenshu (UB-23) of the urinary bladder channel of foot-taiyang on renal function, especially excretion of urine, was observed.
It was found that urinary elimination of radioisotope after acupuncture increased, although no marked change was noted on the pattern of renogram curve.
2.Quality of life improvement in patients diagnosed with hormone refractory prostate cancer with bone metastasis as a result of chemotherapy and the administration of zoledronic acid
Maki Arakawa ; Hiroko Saito ; Takaaki Hasegawa ; Yasuto Kato ; Kiyohito Ishikawa
Palliative Care Research 2008;3(2):308-315
Bone metastases occur in patients who have developed prostate cancer, and severely compromise the patient's quality of life. Here, we evaluated the quality of life in our inpatients diagnosed with prostate cancer with multiple bone metastases and bone pain. In our study, we evaluated pain using a pain diary, investigated the palliative effects of opioid dose, and assessed the quality of life using SF-36. The administration of chemotherapy and zoledronic acid (ZA) resulted in pain palliation, an anti tumor effect and improvements in the quality of life. We suggest that the administration of ZA might be an effective clinical strategy for multimodality advanced solid cancer therapy. We conclude that a 'combined' examination, in which a pain diary evaluating pain is considered in association with an SF-36 assessment evaluating quality of life is crucial to patient care. Palliat Care Res 2008 ; 3(2) : 308-315
3.Outcome evaluation of introducing the Japanese version of the Liverpool Care Pathway for patients with cancer in a general ward
Takaaki Hasegawa ; Mio Taguchi ; Nanori Kuzuya ; Yasuyuki Sugiyama
Palliative Care Research 2015;10(4):315-320
This study sought to determine whether the Japanese version of the Liverpool Care Pathway (LCP-J) could improve nurses’ practice in dying-phase and difficulties with palliative care in a general ward. Between July 2014 and June 2015, LCP-J intervention and educational program for nurse were introduced in a general ward. The primary aims of this study were to clarify the changes in self-reported practice and difficulties of nurse before and after the interventions. Self-reported practice and difficulties were measured using Palliative Care Self-Reported Practice Scale (PCPS) and Palliative Care Difficulty Scale (PCDS), respectively. The secondary aim was to clarify the defference in treatment, care and examination within last 48 hours between LCP-J patients and non-LCP-J patients. We obtained 21 responses in pre-intervention and 22 responses in post-intervention surveys from eligible nurses. Significant improvements were noted on domain of dying-phase care in PCPS and domain of alleviation of symptom in PCDS (3.00±1.16 versus 3.52±0.61 [p=0.042], 3.56±0.78 versus 3.10±0.63 [p=0.015], respectively). LCP-J was used for 9 dying cancer patients (40%), and no significant difference in treatment and examination within last 48 hours between LCP-J patients and non-LCP-J patients. LCP-J in general ward may improve nurses’ practice in dying-phase and difficulties with alleviation of symptom. In addition, considering the burden of LCP-J, to develop a useful checklist and educational interventions for dying patients is promising.
4.The current state of patient education for opioids by doctors, nurses and pharmacists, and evaluation of a pamphlet
Ikuto Kawamura ; Kousuke Kawai ; Yoshitsugu Sano ; Naomi Kubokawa ; Mari Teramachi ; Takashi Mizui ; Yukio Toyama ; Hiroko Saito ; Takaaki Hasegawa
Palliative Care Research 2009;4(1):214-227
The first step of cancer medical treatment is to eliminate anxiety about opioids. It is recommended to use printed matter in the "Guideline for Cancer Pain Management" edited by Japanese Society of Palliative Medicine,but few medical professionals actually use it. We developed the Opioids' pamphlet designed by Aichi Prefectural Society of Hospital Pharmacists; abbreviated OPA. This pamphlet is little burdened for readers; focusing on eliminating anxiety about opioids. Evaluation of the utility of the OPA and the actual conditions of patient education about the use of opioids by medical professionals were investigated, since there have been no reports on these issues. A questionnaire survey was conducted in hospitals with more than 150 beds in Aichi Prefecture. It targeted doctors, pharmacists and nurses who were practicing palliative care using opioids. There were many pharmacists and nurses who had been consulted about opioids, and most of the consultations were about addiction. 60% of pharmacists and 30% of nurses voluntarily performed patient education. Awareness of the guideline for of cancer pain management was low. OPA, which was reviewed based on the guideline, was applicable to 99% of the cases where the nurses were consulted. Its size and contents were highly acclaimed. Therefore, OPA is extremely valuable in clinical practice. Palliat Care Res 2009; 4(1): 214-227
5.Evaluation of the effect of analgesics for cancer patients using their pain descriptions
Kikuyo Nishida ; Yukio Toyama ; Kumi Kuno ; Shigeki Hirano ; Yuko Deguchi ; Yuiko Matsuda ; Takashi Watanabe ; Chie Yamazeki ; Yukari Itakura ; Hiroko Saito ; Takaaki Hasegawa
Palliative Care Research 2009;4(1):207-213
Purpose: The present study aims to evaluate the effect of analgesics in cancer patients based on their pain descriptions. Methods: The relationship between the words that patients used to describe their pain due to cancer and the efficacy of treatment with analgesics such as non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) or opioids was evaluated. Results: We recorded 529words that were used by 164patients to describe their pain and pain quality and classified them into 108types of pain.For patients who used the actual word 'dull' or one with a similar meaning, treatment with opioids was effective. However, treatment with opioids was less effective in patients who used words such as "numb" and "tingling". Conclusion: We were able to gain a good understanding of cancer pain by listening to the actual words that patients used when complaining of pain. These findings suggested that we could choose a suitable medication through evaluation of the actual words cancer patients used to describe their pain and successfully relieve their pain. Palliat Care Res 2009: 4(1): 207-213
6.Effects of Body Weight Reduction on Serum Irisin and Metabolic Parameters in Obese Subjects.
Yaeko FUKUSHIMA ; Satoshi KUROSE ; Hiromi SHINNO ; Ha Cao THI THU ; Nana TAKAO ; Hiromi TSUTSUMI ; Takaaki HASEGAWA ; Toshiaki NAKAJIMA ; Yutaka KIMURA
Diabetes & Metabolism Journal 2016;40(5):386-395
BACKGROUND: Irisin is a myokine implicated in lipid and glucose metabolism. The objective of this study is to examine the effect of a body weight reduction on the serum irisin level and physical indicators in obese Japanese patients without diabetes. METHODS: The subjects were 22 patients (male/female, 5/17; age, 46.1±16.0 years; body mass index [BMI], 36.9±5.0 kg/m²) who completed a 6-month body weight reduction program at our clinic. The program included diet, exercise therapy and cognitive behavioral therapy. Blood parameters, body composition, exercise tolerance, homeostasis model assessment of insulin resistance (HOMA-IR), and serum irisin were determined before and after intervention, and relationships among changes in these data were examined. RESULTS: There were significant decreases in body weight and BMI after the intervention. Irisin before the intervention was significantly positively correlated with HOMA-IR (r=0.434, P<0.05). The mean irisin level showed no significant change after the intervention in all participants. However, improvements in % body fat, subcutaneous fat area, triglycerides, and fasting glucose were significantly greater in patients with an increase in irisin compared to those with a decrease in irisin after the intervention. Patients with an increase in irisin also had significantly lower fasting insulin (9.7±4.8 vs. 16.4±8.2, P<0.05) and HOMA-IR (2.2±1.1 vs. 3.7±1.6, P<0.05) after the intervention, compared to patients with a decrease in irisin. CONCLUSION: Body weight reduction did not alter irisin levels. However, irisin may play important roles in fat and glucose metabolism and insulin resistance, and the effects of body weight reduction on irisin kinetics may be a key for obesity treatment.
Adipose Tissue
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Asian Continental Ancestry Group
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Body Composition
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Body Mass Index
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Body Weight*
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Cognitive Therapy
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Diet
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Exercise Therapy
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Exercise Tolerance
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Fasting
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Glucose
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Homeostasis
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Humans
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Insulin
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Insulin Resistance
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Kinetics
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Metabolism
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Obesity
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Subcutaneous Fat
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Triglycerides
7.Effectiveness of endoscopic ultrasound-guided tissue acquisition with stereomicroscopic on-site evaluation for preoperative diagnosis of resectable or borderline resectable pancreatic cancer: a prospective study
Junro ISHIZAKI ; Kosuke OKUWAKI ; Masafumi WATANABE ; Hiroshi IMAIZUMI ; Tomohisa IWAI ; Rikiya HASEGAWA ; Takahiro KUROSU ; Masayoshi TADEHARA ; Takaaki MATSUMOTO ; Kai ADACHI ; Taro HANAOKA ; Mitsuhiro KIDA ; Chika KUSANO
Clinical Endoscopy 2024;57(6):807-813
Background/Aims:
To validate endoscopic ultrasound-guided tissue acquisition (EUS-TA) used in conjunction with stereomicroscopic on-site evaluation (SOSE) as a preoperative diagnostic tool for resectable pancreatic cancer (R-PC) and borderline resectable PC (BR-PC).
Methods:
Seventy-eight consecutive patients who underwent EUS-TA for suspected R-PC or BR-PC were enrolled. The primary endpoint was the sensitivity of EUS-TA together with SOSE based on the stereomicroscopically visible white core (SVWC) cutoff value. One or two sites were punctured by using a 22-gauge biopsy needle for EUS-TA, based on the SOSE findings.
Results:
We collected 99 specimens from 56 and 22 patients with R-PC and BR-PC, respectively. Based on the SOSE results, we performed 57 procedures with one puncture. The SVWC cutoff values were met in 73.7% and 73.1% of all specimens and in those obtained during the first puncture, respectively. The final diagnoses were malignant and benign tumors in 76 and two patients, respectively. The overall sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy of EUS-TA for the 78 lesions were 90.8%, 100%, and 91.0%, respectively. The sensitivity for malignant diagnosis based on the SVWC cutoff value were 89.5% and 90.4% for the first puncture and all specimens, respectively.
Conclusions
The sensitivity of EUS-TA in conjunction with SOSE for malignancy diagnosis in patients with suspected R-PC or BR-PC was 90.4%.
8.Effectiveness of endoscopic ultrasound-guided tissue acquisition with stereomicroscopic on-site evaluation for preoperative diagnosis of resectable or borderline resectable pancreatic cancer: a prospective study
Junro ISHIZAKI ; Kosuke OKUWAKI ; Masafumi WATANABE ; Hiroshi IMAIZUMI ; Tomohisa IWAI ; Rikiya HASEGAWA ; Takahiro KUROSU ; Masayoshi TADEHARA ; Takaaki MATSUMOTO ; Kai ADACHI ; Taro HANAOKA ; Mitsuhiro KIDA ; Chika KUSANO
Clinical Endoscopy 2024;57(6):807-813
Background/Aims:
To validate endoscopic ultrasound-guided tissue acquisition (EUS-TA) used in conjunction with stereomicroscopic on-site evaluation (SOSE) as a preoperative diagnostic tool for resectable pancreatic cancer (R-PC) and borderline resectable PC (BR-PC).
Methods:
Seventy-eight consecutive patients who underwent EUS-TA for suspected R-PC or BR-PC were enrolled. The primary endpoint was the sensitivity of EUS-TA together with SOSE based on the stereomicroscopically visible white core (SVWC) cutoff value. One or two sites were punctured by using a 22-gauge biopsy needle for EUS-TA, based on the SOSE findings.
Results:
We collected 99 specimens from 56 and 22 patients with R-PC and BR-PC, respectively. Based on the SOSE results, we performed 57 procedures with one puncture. The SVWC cutoff values were met in 73.7% and 73.1% of all specimens and in those obtained during the first puncture, respectively. The final diagnoses were malignant and benign tumors in 76 and two patients, respectively. The overall sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy of EUS-TA for the 78 lesions were 90.8%, 100%, and 91.0%, respectively. The sensitivity for malignant diagnosis based on the SVWC cutoff value were 89.5% and 90.4% for the first puncture and all specimens, respectively.
Conclusions
The sensitivity of EUS-TA in conjunction with SOSE for malignancy diagnosis in patients with suspected R-PC or BR-PC was 90.4%.
9.Effectiveness of endoscopic ultrasound-guided tissue acquisition with stereomicroscopic on-site evaluation for preoperative diagnosis of resectable or borderline resectable pancreatic cancer: a prospective study
Junro ISHIZAKI ; Kosuke OKUWAKI ; Masafumi WATANABE ; Hiroshi IMAIZUMI ; Tomohisa IWAI ; Rikiya HASEGAWA ; Takahiro KUROSU ; Masayoshi TADEHARA ; Takaaki MATSUMOTO ; Kai ADACHI ; Taro HANAOKA ; Mitsuhiro KIDA ; Chika KUSANO
Clinical Endoscopy 2024;57(6):807-813
Background/Aims:
To validate endoscopic ultrasound-guided tissue acquisition (EUS-TA) used in conjunction with stereomicroscopic on-site evaluation (SOSE) as a preoperative diagnostic tool for resectable pancreatic cancer (R-PC) and borderline resectable PC (BR-PC).
Methods:
Seventy-eight consecutive patients who underwent EUS-TA for suspected R-PC or BR-PC were enrolled. The primary endpoint was the sensitivity of EUS-TA together with SOSE based on the stereomicroscopically visible white core (SVWC) cutoff value. One or two sites were punctured by using a 22-gauge biopsy needle for EUS-TA, based on the SOSE findings.
Results:
We collected 99 specimens from 56 and 22 patients with R-PC and BR-PC, respectively. Based on the SOSE results, we performed 57 procedures with one puncture. The SVWC cutoff values were met in 73.7% and 73.1% of all specimens and in those obtained during the first puncture, respectively. The final diagnoses were malignant and benign tumors in 76 and two patients, respectively. The overall sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy of EUS-TA for the 78 lesions were 90.8%, 100%, and 91.0%, respectively. The sensitivity for malignant diagnosis based on the SVWC cutoff value were 89.5% and 90.4% for the first puncture and all specimens, respectively.
Conclusions
The sensitivity of EUS-TA in conjunction with SOSE for malignancy diagnosis in patients with suspected R-PC or BR-PC was 90.4%.
10.Stereomicroscopic on-site evaluation in endoscopic ultrasound-guided tissue acquisition of upper gastrointestinal subepithelial lesions
Seigo NAKATANI ; Kosuke OKUWAKI ; Masafumi WATANABE ; Hiroshi IMAIZUMI ; Tomohisa IWAI ; Takaaki MATSUMOTO ; Rikiya HASEGAWA ; Hironori MASUTANI ; Takahiro KUROSU ; Akihiro TAMAKI ; Junro ISHIZAKI ; Ayana ISHIZAKI ; Mitsuhiro KIDA ; Chika KUSANO
Clinical Endoscopy 2024;57(1):89-95
Background/Aims:
In stereomicroscopic sample isolation processing, the cutoff value (≥4 mm) of stereomicroscopically visible white cores indicates high diagnostic sensitivity. We aimed to evaluate endoscopic ultrasound-guided tissue acquisition (EUS-TA) using a simplified stereomicroscopic on-site evaluation of upper gastrointestinal subepithelial lesions (SELs).
Methods:
In this multicenter prospective trial, we performed EUS-TA using a 22-gauge Franseen needle in 34 participants with SELs derived from the upper gastrointestinal muscularis propria, requiring pathological diagnosis. The presence of stereomicroscopically visible white core (SVWC) in each specimen was assessed using stereomicroscopic on-site evaluation. The primary outcome was EUS-TA’s diagnostic sensitivity with stereomicroscopic on-site evaluation based on the SVWC cutoff value (≥4 mm) for malignant upper gastrointestinal SELs.
Results:
The total number of punctures was 68; 61 specimens (89.7%) contained stereomicroscopically visible white cores ≥4 mm in size. The final diagnoses were gastrointestinal stromal tumor, leiomyoma, and schwannoma in 76.5%, 14.7%, and 8.8% of the cases, respectively. The sensitivity of EUS-TA with stereomicroscopic on-site evaluation based on the SVWC cutoff value for malignant SELs was 100%. The per-lesion accuracy of histological diagnosis reached the highest level (100%) at the second puncture.
Conclusions
Stereomicroscopic on-site evaluation showed high diagnostic sensitivity and could be a new method for diagnosing upper gastrointestinal SELs using EUS-TA.