1.A Case of Closure of the Foramen Ovale by Minimally Invasive Cardiac Surgery through Right Thoracotomy for the Treatment of the Platypnea-Orthodeoxia Syndrome Caused by a Patent Foramen Ovale
Takuo ASODA ; Yuki TAKAGI ; Toru MIKOSHIBA ; Haruki TANAKA ; Hajime ICHIMURA ; Noburo OHASHI ; Yuko WADA ; Tatsuichiro SETO
Japanese Journal of Cardiovascular Surgery 2026;55(1):14-18
The patient was a 78-year-old man who presented with dyspnea and decreased SpO₂ in the sitting and standing positions. Transthoracic echocardiography revealed a patent foramen ovale (PFO), and a microbubble test showed Grade 1 in the supine position and Grade 4 in the sitting position, suggesting an increase in shunt volume when seated. Chest CT revealed age-related kyphosis and right atrial compression by the ascending aorta. The patient was diagnosed with platypnea-orthodeoxia syndrome (POS) due to PFO, and a PFO closure was performed using minimally invasive cardiac surgery (MICS). The postoperative course was favorable, and the patient was discharged on the 20th postoperative day. Although percutaneous device closure is generally performed for PFO closure, MICS was useful in this case due to the anatomical unsuitability caused by an atrial septal aneurysm.
2.Factors That Influence Functional Prognosis in Elderly Patients with Hip Fracture
Shigeko TAKAYAMA ; Masayuki IKI ; Yukinori KUSAKA ; Haruki TAKAGI ; Shigeyuki TAMAKI
Environmental Health and Preventive Medicine 2001;6(1):47-53
The purpose of this study was to evaluate in aged patients with hip fracture, the degree of recovery at discharge and after discharge relative to the pre-fracture walking level, to clarify the factors involved in unsuccessful recovery. The patients were 189 patients aged 60 years and older who underwent surgery between 1988 and 1994. Patients who died within 1 year or lacked data on walking were excluded. Multiple logistic regression analysis was applied to data on the walking level before fracture, that at discharge, and the best walking level after discharge, to clarify factors involved in unsuccessful recovery. The rate of recovery to the pre-fracture level was 55.1% at discharge. Unsuccessful recovery at discharge was influenced by prior dementia, a history of cerebrovascular diseases, and an age of 85 or more years. Analysis showed an “after-discharge” recovery rate of 63.2%. Prior dementia and the residence outside one’s own home influenced unsuccessful recovery rate. These findings suggested that it is important to provide patients with such factors a more effective postoperative rehabilitation program not merely the standard rehabilitation program. In addition, a walking rehabilitation program should be offered to those who were re-hospitalized or admitted to other health care facilities.
Walking
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Personal failure
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Rehabilitation therapy
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Dementia
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seconds
3.Rate of Mortality with Hip Fracture and its Prognostic Factors in an elderly Japanese population
Shigeko TAKAYAMA ; Masayuki IKI ; Yukinori KUSAKA ; Haruki TAKAGI ; Shigeyuki TAMAKI
Environmental Health and Preventive Medicine 2000;5(4):160-166
The purpose of this study was to clarify the survival rates and prognostic factors in elderly Japanese patients with hip fractures. This study investigated the outcome of 256 patients aged 60 years and older with surgically treated hip fractures. Information including age, gender, duration of hospitalization, place of residence before fracture and at discharge, and level of mobility before fracture and at discharge was obtained from patient records. The survival of the patients after discharge was determined by mail surveys supplemented with telephone inquiries.The observed survival rates were significantly lower than the expected survival rates (p<0.001, by Mantel Haenszel test). The short-term mortality rates were 6% for six months and 12.7% for one year, which were lower than previously reported rates in Western countries. Significantly higher hazard ratios (HR) for mortality adjusted for age and gender were observed in patients who had lived in places other than their own home before fracture (HR=2.67(1.63-4.3)), were discharged to places other than their own home (Nursing home HR=2.25 (1.24-4.1) or to a non-orthopedic unit (HR=5.95 (3.12-11.34)), those requiring full-time assistance for mobility at discharge (HR=5.71 (3.59-9.01)), and those who had stayed in a hospital for fewer than 40 days (HR=2.20 (1.38-3.51)). After adjusting for the effects of all the potential prognostic factors, discharge to places other than their own home and the lowest level of mobility at discharge remained significant factors causing adverse effects on survival.Therefore, to improve the prognosis, patients should be allowed to recover to a level at which they can ambulate with some assistance, enabling them return to their own homes.
survival aspects
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seconds
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Japanese language
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prognostic
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Mortality Vital Statistics


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