1.The Kashima Scan Study 2: a protocol for a prospective observational cohort study of cerebral small vessel disease in neurologically healthy adults.
Kohei SUZUYAMA ; Yusuke YAKUSHIJI ; Akiko MATSUMOTO ; Toshihiro IDE ; Mikiko TOKIYA ; Atsushi OGATA ; Junko NAKAJIMA ; Tatsumi HIROTSU ; Shuhei IKEDA ; Tatsuya DOYAMA ; Masayasu MORIKAWA ; Yuta GOTO ; Yoshiko KATSUKI ; Kazuhiro KAWAMOTO ; Yoshimasa ODA ; Haruki KOIKE ; Hideo HARA
Environmental Health and Preventive Medicine 2025;30():52-52
BACKGROUND:
Our previous observational cohort study, the Kashima Scan Study (KSS), identified associations between lifestyle, cerebral small vessel disease (SVD) as detected by magnetic resonance imaging of the brain, and disease outcomes including cognitive impairment and vascular diseases. However, established modifiers of the outcomes such as genetic background, drinking and exercise habits, and socioeconomic status were not considered. Regarding genetic factors in particular, the ALDH2 rs671 variant, East Asian-specific diversity, and APOE status are expected to have strong effects. The aim of KSS-2 is to examine the interactions of genetic background, lifestyle factors including drinking habit, socioeconomic status, and/or SVD markers for cognitive impairment, vascular disease, and death.
METHOD:
The KSS-2 is a prospective regional observational study of a healthy Japanese cohort that will clarify lifestyle habits to better maintain brain health from midlife by genotype. Japanese adults who underwent brain health checkups at their own expense are enrolled and will be followed-up for 10 years. We will extend the protocol of the KSS to include genetic background and potential confounding factors, including lifestyle (including drinking and exercise habit) and socioeconomic status, and perform survival analyses. The study outcomes are cognitive impairment, vascular events, and death.
RESULTS:
We enrolled 908 healthy adults (mean age 64.2 years; range 35 to 84 years; 41% male) from September 1, 2018 until December 31, 2024.
CONCLUSION
This study will provide important insights into the development of individualized health intervention strategies.
Adult
;
Aged
;
Aged, 80 and over
;
Female
;
Humans
;
Male
;
Middle Aged
;
Cerebral Small Vessel Diseases/diagnostic imaging*
;
Japan/epidemiology*
;
Life Style
;
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
;
Prospective Studies
;
Observational Studies as Topic
2.Laparoscopic Liver Resection of Segments 7 and 8: from the Initial Restrictions to the Current Indications
Victor LOPEZ-LOPEZ ; Yusuke OME ; Yusuke KAWAMOTO ; Alvaro Gómez RUIZ ; Ricardo Robles CAMPOS ; Goro HONDA
Journal of Minimally Invasive Surgery 2020;23(1):5-16
Since the beginning of laparoscopic liver surgery, resection of the posterosuperior segments has been considered one of the most challenging procedure due to its difficult access. The main drawbacks of the laparoscopic approach to dome lesions are poor visualization, the difficulty of instrumentation and the greater complexity in the control of bleeding. In the evolution of minimally invasive techniques from hybrid techniques to the current purely laparoscopic approaches, the different authors have established gradually the currents indications and surgical techniques to operate these segments with a similar feasibility and safety than open approach. The standardization in the patient position, the use of intercostal trocars, the learning curve in laparoscopic liver surgery, the management of the hepatic blood flow and the refinement of the technique in the extrahepatic and intrahepatic Glissonean pedicle approaches, has allowed to leave behind the initial contraindications about the laparoscopic approach in these segments. In the present review of the literature, the accumulated experience of the different groups in minimally invasive liver surgery together with the technological advances in the different laparoscopic devices have facilitated the resection of tumors in segments 7 and 8 with similar and even better results than open surgery.
3.Endovascular Treatment of the Celiac Trunk for Ischemic Colitis in Two Cases Following Cardiac Surgery
Yoshiki Watanabe ; Hiroshi Takano ; Kei Horiguchi ; Masao Yoshitatsu ; Kei Torikai ; Seiichi Kawamoto ; Miho Yamakawa ; Yusuke Iwasaki
Japanese Journal of Cardiovascular Surgery 2014;43(4):218-223
Ischemic colitis following cardiac surgery is a rare but critical complication. We report two cases of ischemic colitis following cardiac surgery successfully treated with stenting of the stenotic celiac trunk. Case 1 was a 65-year-old man who developed perioperative myocardial infarction during off-pump coronary artery bypass grafting. He experienced abdominal pain and bloody stool on postoperative day 19. Severe ischemic changes in the sigmoid colon and descending colon were seen on colonoscopy, and CT scan revealed significant stenosis of the celiac trunk and occlusion of the inferior mesenteric artery and bilateral internal iliac arteries. Revascularization of the celiac trunk via stenting resulted in dramatic improvement in colonic ischemic changes. Case 2 was a 60-year-old woman who underwent a restoration procedure for a left ventricular aneurysm. She experienced gradual onset of postprandial pain beginning 9 days after surgery and massive bloody stool on postoperative day 33. Imaging revealed severe ischemic changes in the descending colon on colonoscopy and stenoses of the celiac trunk, superior mesenteric artery, inferior mesenteric artery, and bilateral common iliac arteries on CT angiogram. Stenting was performed to the celiac trunk on postoperative day 52. Her abdominal pain and bloody stool were completely resolved after treatment. Prior to the introduction of endovascular treatment of mesenteric ischemia in 1980, the standard treatment had been open surgical repair. Since then, endovascular repair has become widely accepted. In our experience, endovascular treatment of the mesenteric vessels may be an effective and less invasive approach to treating mesenteric ischemia in unstable patients after cardiac surgery.


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