1.Acute Aortic Regurgitation due to Aortic Dissection Limited to the Sinus of Valsalva, Which Was Found at the Time of Surgery: a Case Report
Yu NOSAKA ; Hironari NO ; Hiroki KATO
Japanese Journal of Cardiovascular Surgery 2024;53(3):109-113
Aortic dissection is one cause of acute aortic regurgitation, and transthoracic echocardiography and computed tomography are useful for diagnosis. We report a case of intraoperatively discovered acute aortic regurgitation caused by aortic dissection limited to the sinus of Valsalva. The patient was a 71-year-old man who regularly visited his local doctor for hypertension and diabetes mellitus. He visited the doctor with a week-long history of cough and dyspnea, and was referred to our hospital due to acute congestive heart failure. We diagnosed severe acute aortic regurgitation as the cause of the heart failure, but the aortic root dissection was not detected by transthoracic echocardiography or plain computed tomography. Since his heart failure progressively worsened even with intensive medical therapy, urgent surgery was decided on the 6th day after hospitalization. Intraoperatively, we noted that the aortic dissection was limited to the sinus of Valsalva, and had induced aortic regurgitation due to dissected and separated aortic commissure. We changed the surgical procedure from aortic valve replacement to the Bentall procedure (Piehler method). Postoperatively, the patient was intubated for 7 days and stayed in the ICU for 14 days due to treatment for pneumothorax and organizing pneumonia. He was successfully transferred to a rehabilitation hospital on the 35th postoperative day. Acute aortic regurgitation caused by aortic dissection limited to the sinus of Valsalva is rare, so we report the case based on literature reviews and as a heart team.
2.Comparison of Bilateral and Trisegment Drainage in Patients with High-Grade Hilar Malignant Biliary Obstruction: A Multicenter Retrospective Study
Kazuyuki MATSUMOTO ; Hironari KATO ; Kosaku MORIMOTO ; Kazuya MIYAMOTO ; Yosuke SARAGAI ; Hirofumi KAWAMOTO ; Hiroyuki OKADA
Gut and Liver 2023;17(1):170-178
Background/Aims:
Bilateral endoscopic drainage with self-expanding metallic stent (SEMS) can be used to effectively manage hilar malignant biliary obstruction. However, the benefits of using a trisegment drainage method remain unknown.
Methods:
This study retrospectively reviewed the data of 125 patients with Bismuth type IIIa or IV unresectable malignant strictures who underwent bilateral endoscopic drainage using SEMSs at four tertiary centers. The patients were divided into the bilateral and trisegment drainage groups for comparison. The primary endpoint was stent patency and the secondary endpoints were technical success, technical and clinical success of reintervention, and overall survival.
Results:
The technical success rates of the bilateral and trisegment drainage groups were 95% (34/36) and 90% (80/89) (p=0.41), respectively, with median stent patency durations of 226 and 170 days (p=0.26), respectively. Although the technical success of reintervention was not significantly different between the two groups (p=0.51), the clinical success rate of reintrvention was significantly higher in the trisegment drainage group (73% [11/15] vs 96% [47/49], p=0.009). The median survival times were 324 and 323 days in the bilateral and trisegment drainage groups, respectively (p=0.72). Multivariate Cox hazards model revealed no stent patency-associated factor; however, chemotherapy was associated with longer survival.
Conclusions
Although no significant difference was noted with respect to stent patency, significantly higher clinical success rates were achieved with reintervention using the trisegment drainage method than using the bilateral drainage method alone.
3.Development of Dilated Esophagus, Sigmoid Esophagus, and Esophageal Diverticulum in Patients With Achalasia: Japan Achalasia Multicenter Study
Hiroki SATO ; Yusuke FUJIYOSHI ; Hirofumi ABE ; Hironari SHIWAKU ; Junya SHIOTA ; Chiaki SATO ; Hiroyuki SAKAE ; Masaki OMINAMI ; Yoshitaka HATA ; Hisashi FUKUDA ; Ryo OGAWA ; Jun NAKAMURA ; Tetsuya TATSUTA ; Yuichiro IKEBUCHI ; Hiroshi YOKOMICHI ; Shuji TERAI ; Haruhiro INOUE
Journal of Neurogastroenterology and Motility 2022;28(2):222-230
Background/Aims:
Patients with achalasia-related esophageal motility disorders (AEMDs) frequently present with dilated and sigmoid esophagus, anddevelop esophageal diverticulum (ED), although the prevalence and patients characteristics require further elucidation.
Methods:
We conducted a multicenter cohort study of 3707 patients with AEMDs from 14 facilities in Japan. Esophagography on 3682 patients were analyzed.
Results:
Straight (n = 2798), sigmoid (n = 684), and advanced sigmoid esophagus (n = 200) were diagnosed. Multivariate analysis revealed that long disease duration, advanced age, obesity, and type I achalasia correlate positively, whereas severe symptoms and integrated relaxation pressure correlate negatively with development of sigmoid esophagus. In contrast, Grade II dilation (3.5-6.0 cm) was the most common (52.9%), while grade III dilation (≥ 6 cm) was rare (5.0%). We found early onset, male, obesity, and type I achalasia correlated positively, while advanced age correlated negatively with esophageal dilation. Dilated and sigmoid esophagus were found mostly in types I and II achalasia, but typically not found in spastic disorders. The prevalence of ED was low (n = 63, 1.7%), and non-dilated esophagus and advanced age correlated with ED development. Patients with right-sided ED (n = 35) had a long disease duration (P = 0.005) with low integrated relaxation pressure values (P = 0.008) compared with patients with left-sided ED (n = 22). Patients with multiple EDs (n = 6) had lower symptom severity than patients with a single ED (P = 0.022).
Conclusions
The etiologies of dilated esophagus, sigmoid esophagus, and ED are considered multifactorial and different. Early diagnosis and optimal treatment of AEMDs are necessary to prevent these conditions.
7.A Surgical Experience of Unroofing for Anomalous Aortic Origin of Right Coronary Artery with Ischemia in Adult
Honami MIZUSHIMA ; Hiroki KATO ; Naoki SAITO ; Hideyasu UEDA ; Hironari NO ; Shintaro TAKAGO ; Kenji IINO ; Keiichi KIMURA ; Hirofumi TAKEMURA
Japanese Journal of Cardiovascular Surgery 2020;49(5):253-256
We describe a 50-year-old man who was diagnosed with anomalous aortic origin of the right coronary artery (AAORCA) by coronary angiography and coronary computed tomography performed for chest pain on exertion. Exercise-loaded myocardial scintigraphy revealed inferior wall ischemia, and hence surgery was performed. Intraoperatively, the right coronary artery was seen to run in the aortic wall, and hence, right coronary ostioplasty (unroofing) was performed. Postoperatively, coronary computed tomography revealed that the right coronary artery originated from a normal position, and exercise-loaded myocardial scintigraphy indicated no ischemia.
8.Utility of Endoscopic Ultrasound-Guided Fine Needle Aspiration in the Diagnosis of Local Recurrence of Pancreaticobiliary Cancer after Surgical Resection
Kazuyuki MATSUMOTO ; Hironari KATO ; Shigeru HORIGUCHI ; Takeshi TOMODA ; Akihiro MATSUMI ; Yuki ISHIHARA ; Yosuke SARAGAI ; Saimon TAKADA ; Shinichiro MURO ; Daisuke UCHIDA ; Hiroyuki OKADA
Gut and Liver 2020;14(5):652-658
Background/Aims:
Endoscopic ultrasound (EUS)-guided fine needle aspiration (FNA; EUS-FNA) allows for diagnostic tissue specimens from various regions to be analyzed. How-ever, diagnosing recurrent pancreaticobiliary cancer after surgery is sometimes difficult. We evaluated the efficacy of EUS-FNA in the diagnosis of local recurrence of pancreatico-biliary cancer and analyzed the factors associated with falsenegative results.
Methods:
Fifty-one consecutive patients who underwent EUS-FNA due to suspected recurrence of pancreaticobiliary cancer after surgery in an academic cen-ter were retrospectively analyzed. The criteria for EUS-FNA were a resected margin or remnant pancreas mass, round swollen lymph node (≥10 mm in diameter), and soft-tissue enhancement around a major artery. Patients with suspected liver metastasis or malignant ascites were excluded.
Results:
Thirty-nine of the 51 patients had pancreatic cancer; the remaining 12 had biliary cancer. The target sites for EUS-FNA were the soft tissue around a major artery (n=22, 43%), the resected margin or remnant pancreas (n=12, 24%), and the lymph nodes (n=17, 33%). The median size of the suspected recurrent lesions was 15 mm (range, 8 to 40 mm). The over-all sensitivity, specificity and accuracy of EUS-FNA for the diagnosis of recurrence was 84% (32/38), 100% (13/13), and 88% (45/51), respectively. FNA of the soft tissue around major arteries (odds ratio, 8.23; 95% confidence interval, 1.2 to 166.7; p=0.033) was significantly associated with a falsenegative diagnosis in the multivariate analysis.
Conclusions
EUS-FNA is useful for diagnosing recurrent cancer, even after pancreaticobiliary surgery. The diagnoses of recurrence at soft-tissue sites should be interpreted with caution.
9.Negative Pressure Wound Therapy and Pectoralis Major Myocutaneous Flap in the Treatment of Postoperative Sternal Osteomyelitis after CABG
Shintaro TAKAGO ; Hiroki KATO ; Hideyasu UEDA ; Hironari NO ; Yoshitaka YAMAMOTO ; Keiichi KIMURA ; Kenji IINO ; Hirofumi TAKEMURA
Japanese Journal of Cardiovascular Surgery 2019;48(3):179-184
We report two cases with postoperative sternal osteomyelitis after coronary artery bypass graft (CABG), in whom successful two-stage reconstruction was performed via negative pressure wound therapy (NPWT) and pectoralis major myocutaneous flaps. Two patients underwent CABG using bilateral internal thoracic arteries, after which they had surgical site infection (SSI). The intractable wound did not heal with irrigation and NPWT. Then, sternal osteomyelitis was observed via magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), so we planned two-stage reconstruction. The first stage of treatment consisted of complete debridement (including removal of sternal wires and necrosectomy of soft tissue and sequestrum) and application of NPWT until the remission of inflammation. The second stage consisted of wound closure with pectoralis major myocutaneous advancement flaps. After wound closure, the two patients were given 2 months of oral antibiotics, and the postoperative results were good. Two-stage reconstruction with NPWT and pectoralis major myocutaneous flaps results in excellent clinical outcome. In the first stage, the key to the successful management of postoperative sternal osteomyelitis is infection control. This includes surgical debridement and wound-bed preparation with NPWT. The pectoralis major myocutaneous flap technique is brief and does not require a second cutaneous incision or an intact internal thoracic artery. In conclusion, the pectoralis major myocutaneous flap is a useful option in two-stage reconstruction after CABG.
10.Total Arch Replacement with Open Stent Grafting for Aberrant Right Subclavian Artery in Two Cases
Shintaro TAKAGO ; Hiroki KATO ; Hideyasu UEDA ; Hironari NO ; Yoshitaka YAMAMOTO ; Kenji IINO ; Keiichi KIMURA ; Hirofumi TAKEMURA
Japanese Journal of Cardiovascular Surgery 2019;48(3):210-214
We report two cases of total arch replacement with open stent graft for the aberrant right subclavian artery (ARSA). Case 1 was a thoracic artery aneurysm with an ARSA. We thought it would be difficult to perform in-situ reconstruction of ARSA via median sternotomy, so we performed total arch replacement with the open stent-grafting technique. Therefore the right axillary artery was reconstructed by extra-anatomical bypass and coil embolization of the ARSA proximal to the vertebral artery to achieve complete thrombosis of the ARSA. The postoperative course was uneventful. Case 2 was a Stanford type A acute aortic dissection involving an ARSA with the entry located near the ARSA. Total arch replacement was performed using the open stent-grafting technique to close the entry site and origin of the ARSA. Then the right axillary artery was reconstructed by extra-anatomical bypass and coil embolization of the ARSA. The postoperative course was uneventful. The open stent-grafting technique might be an effective alternative management of thoracic aortic disease with ARSA.


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