1.Hip Extensor Strength Influences Dynamic Postural Changes during Gait in Patients with Adult Spinal Deformity: A Cross-Sectional Study Using Three-Dimensional Motion Analysis
Keita SATO ; Ryoji TOMINAGA ; Tatsuya ENDO ; Takuya MIURA ; Masumi IWABUCHI ; Toshikazu ITO ; Osamu SHIRADO
Asian Spine Journal 2022;16(5):643-650
Methods:
Thirty patients with ASD aged ≥50 years who were admitted to our hospital between July 2016 and September 2019 were included in this study. X-ray parameters (i.e., sagittal vertical axis, pelvic tilt, and pelvic incidence minus lumbar lordosis) were evaluated from the full-length standing radiographs of the subjects. Trunk and hip extensor strength was evaluated using a hand-held dynamometer. Dynamic postural changes (i.e., sagittal trunk shift during standing, sagittal trunk shift during gait, and delta sagittal trunk shift) were assessed using a three-dimensional motion analysis system. The relationships between dynamic postural change and various X-ray parameters, as well as trunk and hip extensor strength, were examined using multivariable analysis.
Results:
Multivariable analysis showed that hip extensor strength is the factor most strongly associated with dynamic postural change among the X-ray parameters and physical functions assessed in this study (β=−0.41, R2=0.12).
Conclusions
We demonstrated the association between dynamic postural change and hip extensor strength in patients with ASD. Our results may be useful to healthcare providers treating patients with ASD. Interventions for dynamic postural change in patients with ASD should focus on hip extensor strength.
2.Relationship between Lower Limb Pain Intensity and Dynamic Lumbopelvic-Hip Alignment in Patients with Degenerative Lumbar Spinal Canal Stenosis: A Cross-Sectional Study
Takuya MIURA ; Ryoji TOMINAGA ; Keita SATO ; Tatsuya ENDO ; Masumi IWABUCHI ; Toshikazu ITO ; Osamu SHIRADO
Asian Spine Journal 2022;16(6):918-926
Methods:
Thirty patients with LSS scheduled for spine surgery participated in this study. Lower limb pain was assessed using the Visual Analog Scale (VAS), and the patients were divided into two groups based on the mean scores (patients with scores above and below the mean were classified as the high-VAS and low-VAS groups, respectively). The kinematics of the spine, pelvis, and hip joints during gait were then measured using a 3D motion analysis system. Student paired t -tests were used to compare the angles of the spine, pelvis, and hip during gait between the two groups.
Results:
Compared to those in the low-VAS group, the spine was significantly extended and bent toward the more painful lower limb side, and the pelvis was significantly anteriorly tilted among individuals in the high-VAS group.
Conclusions
Patients with LSS experiencing severe pain in their lower limb tend to keep the spine in a more extended position, bend laterally toward the painful side, and have an anteriorly tilted pelvic posture. The dynamic spinal and pelvic alignment was closely related to the intensity of the lower limb pain.
3.Vaginal Double Circular Incision-Closure Method: A New Technique for Vaginal Cuff Dehiscence after Total Laparoscopic Hysterectomy
Koji SHIMABUKURO ; Takanori YOSHIDA ; Tamami ODAI ; Takafumi TSUKADA ; Reiko NAKAMURA ; Ikuno YAMAUCHI ; Tatsuya SATO ; Haruka MANEYAMA ; Shiori KOHRI ; Yukiko NUSHI ; Yasuko NISHIDA ; Rie KITANO ; Asami HIRATA ; Maiko ICHIKAWA ; Seiichi ENDO ; Masae SAKAMOTO
Journal of the Japanese Association of Rural Medicine 2017;66(1):91-94
We report a case of vaginal cuff dehiscence after total laparoscopic hysterectomy that was successfully managed by a newly developed vaginal double-layer circular incision-closure method through a transvaginal approach. The nulligravid postmenopausal patient with cervical cancer received a diagnosis of vaginal evisceration on postoperative day 24. The eviscerated small intestine was pushed back after vaginal douching with normal saline before the procedure. The vaginal mucosa was incised circularly in two layers at the levels of 10 mm and 15 mm from the vaginal stump, and the edges apposed with double-layer closures. She was discharged on postoperative day 3 and followed up for 5 years, with no recurrence of cancer or vaginal dehiscence. This operative method is especially useful for a nulligravida with a small vagina.
4.Placenta Accreta: A Case Series and Literature Review
Natsuki YATABE ; Rie KITANO ; Fumiko TSUBATA ; Shiho KANEKO ; Shiho TAKEUCHI ; Yuri TERAMOTO ; Tatsuya MATSUOKA ; Maiko ICHIKAWA ; Seiichi ENDO ; Masae SAKAMOTO ; Koji SHIMABUKURO
Journal of the Japanese Association of Rural Medicine 2023;72(1):1-10
Placenta accreta spectrum (PAS) disorders may lead to massive postpartum hemorrhage but optimal treatment strategies have yet to be determined. This retrospective analysis involved 35 cases of PAS that occurred at our hospital between January 2014 and November 2021. Mean maternal age was 37 (21-43) years and 8 pregnancies were the result of assisted reproductive therapy. Fifteen patients had placenta previa, 12 had a history of cesarean delivery, and one had a history of PAS. Mean gestational age was 36 (26-41) weeks. Twenty deliveries were by cesarean section and 15 were vaginal deliveries. Mean blood loss was 2,970 (300-14,727) mL. Nine patients were treated by manual placenta removal, one of whom had a delayed hysterectomy because of bleeding. Eleven patients were treated by cesarean hysterectomy and 2 were treated by curettage. Thirteen patients were treated by conservative management, and in 3 of them, treatment was changed to curettage, abdominal placenta resection, or hysterectomy because of vaginal bleeding or intrauterine infection. Four patients thought to have PAS before delivery were treated by cesarean hysterectomy and the amount of bleeding was not severe. Conservative treatment for placenta accreta was successful in 10 patients (77%), and the uterus could be preserved in 12 women (92%). In cases thought to be PAS before delivery, if the placenta is not removed, cesarean hysterectomy should be selected. Conservative management tends to be selected in cases of PAS when the main part of the placenta can be removed. However, in cases of life-threatening hemorrhage or infection, clinicians might need to perform peripartum hysterectomy or uterine artery embolization when bleeding or infection occurs. Therefore, clinicians should obtain informed consent for such treatment in advance.
5.A Case of Ureteral Endometriosis That Developed 5 Years After Laparoscopic Adnexectomy
Ikuno YAMAUCHI ; Shinji MORIMOTO ; Takafumi TSUKADA ; Tatsuya MATSUOKA ; Shunya FUNAZAKI ; Mina KAMAGATA ; Yuri TERAMOTO ; Junichiro MITSUI ; Atsuhiro MATSUDA ; Yukiko NUSHI ; Rie KITANO ; Maiko ICHIKAWA ; Seiichi ENDO ; Masae SAKAMOTO ; Koji SHIMABUKURO
Journal of the Japanese Association of Rural Medicine 2019;67(6):688-693
We report a case of ureteral endometriosis thought to have developed following relapse of pelvic peritoneal endometriosis after laparoscopic surgery. The patient was a woman in her late 40s who had undergone laparoscopic right adnexectomy for an endometrial cyst 5 years earlier. Electrocoagulation was performed for residual endometriosis of adherent cyst wall on the right sacrouterine ligament. The normal left ovary was preserved and she received no postoperative hormonal therapy. She developed right back pain during menstruation 5 years after the surgery. Pyeloureterography revealed stenosis of the ureter to the right of the uterus. Urinary cytology revealed endometrial cells with no atypia. Conservative management was opted for because malignant transformation of endometriosis was considered unlikely and she was expected to reach menopause within a few years. She is now doing well 24 months after initiation of progestin treatment with placement of a ureteral stent. Postoperative hormonal therapy is recommended for patients who are considered to have possible lesions of residual endometriosis and for whom ovarian function is preserved.