2.Successful treatment of ischemic stroke associated with brachiocephalic artery stenosis using alteplase
Yuta MITANI ; Zen KOBAYASHI ; Eijiro HATTORI ; Yoshiyuki NUMASAWA ; Shoichiro ISHIHARA ; Hiroyuki TOMIMITSU ; Shuzo SHINTANI
Journal of Rural Medicine 2021;16(2):123-125
Introduction: Brachiocephalic artery stenosis rarely causes right hemispheric infarction with associated left hemiparesis. To date, there have been no reported cases of stroke associated with brachiocephalic artery stenosis that were successfully treated with recombinant tissue-type plasminogen activator (rt-PA), alteplase.Case Report: An 80-year-old woman presented with left hemiparesis. Brain computed tomography showed no hemorrhage, and computed tomography angiography demonstrated brachiocephalic artery stenosis. Alteplase was administered based on a diagnosis of ischemic stroke. Brain magnetic resonance imaging showed multiple acute infarctions. Thereafter, the blood pressure of the right arm was found to be lower than that of the left arm. The patient’s neurological deficits gradually improved; she was eventually able to walk again and was thus discharged home.Conclusion: While the combination of left hemiparesis and a decrease in blood pressure in the right arm are well known in patients with stroke associated with Stanford type A aortic dissections, it may also occur in patients with stroke due to brachiocephalic artery stenosis. Unlike stroke associated with Stanford type A aortic dissections, stroke due to brachiocephalic artery stenosis may be treated with alteplase.
4.Serial Changes in Score on the Japanese Version of the Trail Making Test (TMT-J) After Minor Ischemic Stroke
Miho YOSHIOKA ; Zen KOBAYASHI ; Kaori KATO ; Keisuke INOUE ; Masaki HAKOMORI ; Kazunori TOYODA ; Yoshiyuki NUMASAWA ; Toshiya MATSUDA ; Yuki KATAYAMA ; Shoichiro ISHIHARA ; Hiroyuki TOMIMITSU ; Shuzo SHINTANI
Journal of the Japanese Association of Rural Medicine 2020;69(4):351-
The Trail Making Test (TMT) is a widely used measure of attention impairment. The time needed to complete the TMT (TMT score) is longer with greater impairment of attention in patients with brain diseases. TMT score becomes large in a proportion of patients with minor ischemic stroke. The Japanese version of the TMT- (TMT-J) was published in 2019. The purpose of this study was to clarify serial changes in TMT-J scores in patients with minor ischemic stroke. We retrospectively reviewed the TMT-J scores in those patients who completed the test both 8-14 days and 29-35 days after stroke onset. On initial evaluation, 1 of 21 patients could not complete TMT-J Part A. TMT-J Part A scores had a mean of 67 s and were abnormally large in 45% of the 20 patients who completed this part. Two of these 20 patients could not complete TMT-J Part B. TMT-J Part B scores had a mean of 135 s and were abnormally large in 61% of the 18 patients who completed this part. On second evaluation, scores on Part A and Part B improved in 76% and 73% of patients, respectively. This study demonstrated that abnormal TMT-J scores 8-14 days after onset of minor ischemic stroke improved over time in most patients.
5.Practical guide to choosing dabigatran 150 mg twice daily or apixaban 5 mg twice daily for patients with atrial fibrillation
Zen KOBAYASHI ; Satoru ISHIBASHI ; Yoshiyuki NUMASAWA ; Shuzo SHINTANI
Journal of Rural Medicine 2019;14(2):153-155
Based on previous reports, we propose a practical guide to choose dabigatran 150 mg twice daily or apixaban 5 mg twice daily for patients with atrial fibrillation. We recommend the use of dabigatran 150 mg twice daily for patients with atrial fibrillation who have a high risk of embolism (e.g., ischemic stroke on other oral anticoagulants, presence of left atrial appendage thrombus) and a low risk of bleeding. However, the prevalence of such patients with atrial fibrillation is considered low because patients with atrial fibrillation with a high risk of embolism usually have a high risk of bleeding. In most other patients with atrial fibrillation, the use of apixaban 5 mg twice daily should be considered.
6.Clinical Features and Treatment of Patients With Essential Thrombocythemia
Zen KOBAYASHI ; Yoshiyuki NUMASAWA ; Shuzo SHINTANI
Journal of the Japanese Association of Rural Medicine 2018;67(1):1-8
We summarized recent findings regarding the clinical features and treatment of patients with essential thrombocythemia (ET), in particular, those with calreticulin (CALR ) mutations. CALR mutations are frameshift mutations of exon 9, which are mainly composed of a 52-bp deletion (Type 1) or 5-bp insertion (Type 2). ET with CALR mutations is associated with younger age, male sex, higher platelet count, lower hemoglobin level, lower leukocyte count, and lower incidence of thrombosis compared with ET with Janus kinase 2 (JAK2 ) mutations. There is no transformation to polycythemia vera in ET patients with CALR mutations. Patients with ET who have CALR type 1 mutations are at higher risk of thrombosis and myelofibrotic transformation compared with ET with CALR type-2 mutations. The standard treatment of CALR-mutated ET patients is currently based on the treatment algorithm of JAK2-unmutated ET patients. Further studies are necessary to clarify whether the appropriate treatment differs between type 1 and 2 mutations of CALR-mutated ET patients.
7.Acute pancreatitis is a very rare comorbidity of acute ischemic stroke
Kiyobumi OTA ; Ayako ONIKI ; Zen KOBAYASHI ; Shoichiro ISHIHARA ; Hiroyuki TOMIMITSU ; Shuzo SHINTANI
Journal of Rural Medicine 2018;13(1):72-75
Background: Although acute pancreatitis is listed among the exclusion criteria for the administration of recombinant tissue plasminogen activator according to the Japanese Guideline for the Management of Stroke, the co-occurrence of acute pancreatitis and acute ischemic stroke has not been investigated. The present study aimed to assess the incidence rate of acute pancreatitis in patients with acute ischemic stroke.Methods: This study consecutively enrolled all patients with ischemic stroke admitted to the Department of Neurology, JA Toride Medical Center between April 2014 and March 2016. Diagnosis of acute pancreatitis was made according to the revised Atlanta Classification of Acute Pancreatitis. We retrospectively analyzed serum amylase activity and the frequency of acute pancreatitis as a comorbidity of ischemic stroke.Results: A total of 411 ischemic stroke patients were included. Serum amylase activity was measured for 364 patients, 27 of whom presented with amylase activity exceeding the upper limit of normal. In two patients with serum amylase activity greater than three times-fold the upper limit of normal, computed tomography or transabdominal ultrasonography showed no characteristic findings of acute pancreatitis. No patient in the cohort met the diagnostic criteria for acute pancreatitis.Conclusions: Acute pancreatitis is a very rare comorbidity of acute ischemic stroke.
8.Perspectives concerning living wills in medical staff of a main regional hospital in Japan
Yoshitaka Maeda ; Shuzo Shintani
Journal of Rural Medicine 2015;10(1):29-33
Objective: Living wills, written types of advanced directives, are now widespread in western countries, but in Japan, their recognition still remains restricted to a small part of the population. As an initial step to introduction of such patient-oriented medicine, we surveyed present recognition and acceptance patterns concerning living wills in a main regional hospital located in a suburban area of Tokyo.
Methods: Without any preceding guidance on living wills, the questionnaire on living wills was distributed to all the staff working at JA Toride Medical Center in September 2013, and their responses were collected for analysis within one month.
Results: Questionnaires were distributed to all hospital staff, 843 in total, and 674 responses (80.0% of distributed) were obtained. The term of living will was known by 304 (45.1%) of the respondents, and introduction of living wills to patients was accepted in 373 (55.3%) of the respondents, meanwhile, 286 (42.4%) respondents did not indicate their attitude toward living wills. As to styles of document form, 332 respondents (49.3%) supported selection of wanted or unwanted medical treatments and care from a prepared list, and 102 respondents (15.1%) supported description of living wills in free form. As preferred treatment options that should be provided as a checklist, cardiac massage (chest compression) and a ventilator were selected by more than half of the respondents. Based on their responses, we developed an original type of living wills available to patients visiting the hospital.
Conclusions: Although not all the respondents were aware of living wills even in this main regional hospital, introduction of living wills to patients was accepted by many of the hospital staff. Awareness programs or information campaigns are needed to introduce living wills to support patient-centered medicine.
9.Problems With Medical Gas Fitting in Great Earthquake Disaster
Yasuji TAKANO ; Shuzo SHINTANI
Journal of the Japanese Association of Rural Medicine 2013;61(5):710-714
The water supply system in our hospital was disabled as its elevated water tank was badly damaged by the earthquake that hit northeast Japan on March11, 2011. Subsequently, the dysfunction of suction equipment of a water seal type threw the whole hospital into utter confusion, though temporarily. We realized that injection of some degree of water could recover the suction system on manual. To minimize the damage from a natural disaster and strengthen the hospital ability for all contingencies, we have decided to employ the oil rotary type rather than the water seal type in the system of suction equipment.
10.Effects of Ambient Changes on ADLs of Patients As Assessed by Use of Barthel Index--In the Cases of Stroke and Femoral Neck Fracture Patients--
Taizo YAMAMOTO ; Hiroko WATANABE ; Yoshimichi HIDANO ; Shuzo SHINTANI ; Taro HINO ; Jun AKANUMA ; Masayoshi MASUYAMA
Journal of the Japanese Association of Rural Medicine 2010;59(2):67-71
When subacute elderly patients are transferred from an acute hospital to a rehabilitation facility, the likelihood is that the environmental change will decrease the patients' ability to perform the basic activities of daily living (ADLs). In this study, we assessed the effects of the ambient changes on ADLs by the use of the Barthel Index, the reliability as well as validity of which is rated high for assessing the patient's fundamental ability. Our subjects consisted of the patients with hemiplegia who had undergone medical treatment of stroke and those who had been operated on for femoral neck fracture (FNF) in Toride Kyodo General Hospital. They were transferred to the convalescent rehabilitation ward (CRW) of Aida Memorial Rehabilitation Hospital, affiliated with our hospital. We compared the BI scores given to the patients by physical, occupational and speech therapists, when discharged from our hospital, and those scores given by nurses within one week after the patients moved to the CRW. Differences between BI scores given at Toride Hospital and those at the rehabilitation hospital averaged -5.9±16.0 points for stroke patients and -7.3±14.1 pointsfor FNF patients. Spearman's rank correlation coefficient of BI scores in the acute hospital and in the CRW for stroke patients was 0.91 (p<0.001) and 0.69 (p<0.001) for FNF. There was no significant difference in changes in BI scores between stroke and FNF. However, there was a tendency for the patients' functional ability in daily living to be assessed lower in the FNF patients than in the stroke patients. This was probably because the former were older than the latter on the average. The average age of the FNF patients was 81.4 years and that of the stroke patients was 68.5 years.


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