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1.
Japanese Journal of Cardiovascular Surgery ; : 67-72, 2022.
Article in Japanese | WPRIM | ID: wpr-924404

ABSTRACT

Objective: Frailty has been noticed as an important preoperative risk factor for cardiac surgery. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the effect of frailty on the rehabilitation process and walking ability after cardiac surgery. Methods: A total of 213 patients aged 65 years or older who underwent elective cardiac surgery at our hospital between August 2018 and October 2020 and who underwent a preoperative frailty assessment were included. The patients were divided into two groups: group F with frailty and group N without frailty, and the perioperative factors, postoperative course, and walking ability in both groups were examined. Results: Of all patients, 70 (33%) were diagnosed as frail. In the preoperative factors, gait speed and grip strength were significantly lower in group F, and there were more cases of sarcopenia and malnutrition. There was no significant difference in surgical factors between the two groups, except for a bias in the surgical category. In the postoperative course, there were no significant differences in intubation time, ICU stay, postoperative complications, or hospital stay between the two groups, but more patients in group F were transferred to another hospital. In the F group, the start of walking and the day of achieving 100 m walking were significantly delayed, and the number of patients who achieved 300 m walking was 52 (74%), which was significantly lower than 197 (89%) in the N group. The cutoff value of gait speed was 0.88 m/s. Conclusions: Frailty was associated with delayed rehabilitation and reduced walking ability after cardiac surgery, and increased hospital transfers. In addition, the preoperative gait speed was adopted as one of the factors related to the possibility of a 300 m walk after surgery. We believe that preoperative rehabilitation is a promising strategy to improve the condition of frail patients who require cardiac surgery.

2.
Japanese Journal of Social Pharmacy ; : 2-8, 2018.
Article in English | WPRIM | ID: wpr-689457

ABSTRACT

Objective : In 2011, the Ishikawa Prefectural Joint Committee of Blood Transfusion Therapy was organized in Ishikawa Prefecture. Since 2012, pharmacists have promoted educational activities regarding the appropriate use of albumin products for different occupations based on a survey involving all medical institutions in Ishikawa Prefecture. We examined the effects of these activities with respect to the usage of albumin products. Methods : A questionnaire survey regarding blood transfusion therapy, including the total usage of albumin products, departments responsible for the management of albumin products, and health care professionals’ awareness of issues on the appropriate use of albumin products, was conducted from 2011 until 2014 involving all medical institutions where blood transfusion preparations were used in Ishikawa Prefecture. Results : The questionnaire collection rate was ≥70%. The results showed that, in middle- or small-scale medical institutions, departments/physicians other than the Department of Pharmacy were responsible for the management of albumin products. Furthermore, some health care professionals did not recognize/understand problems regarding the appropriate use of albumin products. Pharmacists newly increased educational activities by study meetings for various occupations or panel discussions involving participants. The participants’ occupations varied, and the number of institutions to which they belonged was 20 to 24. The total usage of albumin products in Ishikawa Prefecture decreased by approximately 20% between 2011, when these attempts were started, and 2014. Discussion : This study suggests that the educational activities by pharmacists and other health care professionals at the prefectural level reduced the total usage of albumin products.

3.
The Journal of The Japanese Society of Balneology, Climatology and Physical Medicine ; : 138-146, 2015.
Article in English | WPRIM | ID: wpr-375968

ABSTRACT

<b>Background</b>: A 30-60 min rest after exercising is generally recommended before taking a bath. Although this was considered an appropriate bathing method, effects of pre-bath rest on recovery from exercise fatigue remain unclear. Here, we aimed to examine the effects on fatigue recovery of pre-bath rest after a workload, with the focus on changes in lactic acid levels. <BR><b>Methods and Results</b>: Ten healthy adult men increased their blood lactic acid levels through a treadmill workload performed in accordance with the Bruce method, then took either a 60-min post-workload rest followed by a 10-min full-immersion 38°C bath (Experiment A) or a 10-min full-immersion 38°C bath followed by a 60-min rest (Experiment B). Body temperature, blood pressure, pulse rate, and blood lactic acid level were measured at three time points: before workload (Test 1), after workload (Test 2), and after bathing/resting (Test 3). Decreases and percent decreases in blood lactic acid levels were calculated by comparing Test 3 results with Test 2 results. These calculated values and the measured values in three tests were compared between Experiment A and Experiment B using paired-t test. There were no significant differences in maximum systolic blood pressure, maximum diastolic blood pressure, maximum workload attained, and maximum pulse rate measurements between Experiment A and Experiment B. Differences in systolic blood pressure and diastolic blood pressure measurements in Tests 1, 2, and 3 were not significant. The pulse rates measured at the final measurement (Test 3) were significantly higher in Experiment A than in Experiment B (90.4 ± 18.2 bpm vs 79.6 ± 11.6 bpm, p = 0.04). No significant differences were observed in other measurement timings. The body temperature measurements at the final measurement were slightly higher in Experiment A than in Experiment B (36.4 ± 0.4 vs 36.1 ± 0.3°C, p = 0.05). No significant differences were observed in other measurements. Blood lactic acid levels before workload (Test 1) were significantly higher in Experiment A (6.6 ± 4.7mmol/L) than in Experiment B (2.0 ± 1.4 mmol/L, p = 0.02), but those at other measurement points (Test 2 and Test 3) were similar. Neither decreases nor percentage decreases in blood lactic acid levels differed between Experiment A and Experiment B.<BR><b>Conclusions</b>: Resting before a post-exercise bath did not change the decreases or percent decreases in blood lactic acid levels after bathing at 38°C, suggesting negligible effects of pre-bath resting on recovery from exercise fatigue.

4.
The Journal of The Japanese Society of Balneology, Climatology and Physical Medicine ; : 138-146, 2015.
Article in English | WPRIM | ID: wpr-689348

ABSTRACT

Background: A 30-60 min rest after exercising is generally recommended before taking a bath. Although this was considered an appropriate bathing method, effects of pre-bath rest on recovery from exercise fatigue remain unclear. Here, we aimed to examine the effects on fatigue recovery of pre-bath rest after a workload, with the focus on changes in lactic acid levels. Methods and Results: Ten healthy adult men increased their blood lactic acid levels through a treadmill workload performed in accordance with the Bruce method, then took either a 60-min post-workload rest followed by a 10-min full-immersion 38°C bath (Experiment A) or a 10-min full-immersion 38°C bath followed by a 60-min rest (Experiment B). Body temperature, blood pressure, pulse rate, and blood lactic acid level were measured at three time points: before workload (Test 1), after workload (Test 2), and after bathing/resting (Test 3). Decreases and percent decreases in blood lactic acid levels were calculated by comparing Test 3 results with Test 2 results. These calculated values and the measured values in three tests were compared between Experiment A and Experiment B using paired-t test. There were no significant differences in maximum systolic blood pressure, maximum diastolic blood pressure, maximum workload attained, and maximum pulse rate measurements between Experiment A and Experiment B. Differences in systolic blood pressure and diastolic blood pressure measurements in Tests 1, 2, and 3 were not significant. The pulse rates measured at the final measurement (Test 3) were significantly higher in Experiment A than in Experiment B (90.4 ± 18.2 bpm vs 79.6 ± 11.6 bpm, p = 0.04). No significant differences were observed in other measurement timings. The body temperature measurements at the final measurement were slightly higher in Experiment A than in Experiment B (36.4 ± 0.4 vs 36.1 ± 0.3°C, p = 0.05). No significant differences were observed in other measurements. Blood lactic acid levels before workload (Test 1) were significantly higher in Experiment A (6.6 ± 4.7mmol/L) than in Experiment B (2.0 ± 1.4 mmol/L, p = 0.02), but those at other measurement points (Test 2 and Test 3) were similar. Neither decreases nor percentage decreases in blood lactic acid levels differed between Experiment A and Experiment B. Conclusions: Resting before a post-exercise bath did not change the decreases or percent decreases in blood lactic acid levels after bathing at 38°C, suggesting negligible effects of pre-bath resting on recovery from exercise fatigue.

5.
Japanese Journal of Cardiovascular Surgery ; : 255-259, 2013.
Article in Japanese | WPRIM | ID: wpr-374581

ABSTRACT

Among 62 patients who underwent hybrid arch TEVAR, which is a combination of supra-aortic bypass and TEVAR to treat arch aneurysm, 5 patients encountered postoperative cerebral infarction. In 2 patients, whose thoracic aorta were extremely shaggy, cerebral infarction were multiple and fatal. Other 3 patients, whose aorta were not shaggy, developed visual disturbance after TEVAR and minor cerebral infarction were detected in the area of vertebral artery. To prevent cerebral infarction after hybrid arch TEVAR, the blood flow from the left subclavian to vertebral artery is considered to be significant.

6.
Japanese Journal of Cardiovascular Surgery ; : 164-167, 2011.
Article in Japanese | WPRIM | ID: wpr-362086

ABSTRACT

An 84-year-old man with a thoracic aortic aneurysm underwent total arch replacement with selective antegrade cerebral perfusion. Immediately after the operation, respiratory distress and hypotension developed and Chest X-ray films and computed tomography showed bilateral lung edema. Echocardiography showed a small, underfilled left ventricle, but with preserved systolic function. We suspected transfusion-related acute lung injury (TRALI), and started sivelestat and steroid pulse therapy. His respiratory condition gradually improved, and he was discharged on postoperative day 78. The diagnosis of TRALI was confirmed by positive test results of an HLA class I antibody in the transfused fresh frozen plasma and T- and B-cells of the patient. TRALI should be considered as a cause of acute lung injury after surgery with blood transfusion.

7.
Journal of Korean Society of Medical Informatics ; : 177-180, 2007.
Article in English | WPRIM | ID: wpr-49838

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: Today in United States, about one in eight women have been affected with breast cancer over their lifetime. Up to today, some various prediction models using SEER (Surveillance Epidemiology and End Results) datasets have been proposed in past studies. However, appropriate methods for predicting the 5 years survival rate of breast cancer have not established. In this study, we evaluate those models to predict the survival rate of breast cancer patients. METHODS: Five data mining algorithms (Artificial Neural Network, Naive Bayes , Decision Trees (ID3) and Decision Trees(J48)) besides a most generally used statistical method (Logistic Regression) were used to evaluate the prediction models using a dataset (37,256 follow-up cases from 1992 to 1997). We also used 10-fold cross-validation methods to assess the unbiased estimate of the five prediction models for comparison of performance of each method. RESULTS: The accuracy was 85.8+/-0.2%, 84.3+/-1.4%, 83.9+/-0.2%, 82.3+/-0.2%, 75.1+/-0.2% for the Logistic Regression, Artificial Neural, Naive Bayes, Decision Trees (ID3), Decision Trees(J48), respectively. Although the accuracy of Logistic Regression showed the highest performances, the Decision Trees (J48) was the lowest one. CONCLUSIONS: The accuracy of Logistic Regression was the best performances, on the other hand Decision Trees (J48) was the worst. Artificial Neural Network indicated relatively high performance.


Subject(s)
Female , Humans , Bays , Breast Neoplasms , Breast , Data Mining , Dataset , Decision Trees , Epidemiology , Follow-Up Studies , Hand , Logistic Models , SEER Program , Survival Rate , United States
8.
Journal of Korean Society of Medical Informatics ; : 181-185, 2007.
Article in English | WPRIM | ID: wpr-49837

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: We implemented automatic online medical consultation software. It infers disease of patients with knowledge about symptoms and the epidemiologic data. And we compared its performance of inference with that of human doctors. METHODS: This software accepts information about users' age, sex, and symptoms, lists up diseases compatible with these information, and sorts diseases by probability. We implement this software with Ruby and C. RESULTS: We compared diseases listed up by this software with those that by two human doctors, and found that 1) 90% of confirmed diagnoses was included in the list this software inferred, and 2) more than 50% of diseases in the list this software inferred are same diseases as ones both of two human doctors inferred. CONCLUSION: This software can not determine final diagnosis. But this software lists up probable diseases only by interview. Then we believe this software will be useful for patients when they want to check themselves before consulting their doctor. We believe that this software will be useful for patients to check their health status.


Subject(s)
Humans , Diagnosis
9.
Japanese Journal of Cardiovascular Surgery ; : 315-320, 2007.
Article in Japanese | WPRIM | ID: wpr-367295

ABSTRACT

Destructive aortic valve endocarditis or poor controlled aortitis cause the development of left ventricular-aortic discontinuity. We reported our experience with aortic root replacement for cases of severe aortic annular destruction. Between 1999 and 2006, 9 patients with severe aortic annular destruction underwent aortic root replacement at our institute. There were 8 men and one women with a mean age of 55 years. Seven patients were in New York Heart Association functional class III. Four of 9 patients had native valve endocarditis, 4 had prosthetic valve endocarditis (previous aortic valve replacements in 2, aortic root replacements in 2) and one had active aortitis with a detached mechanical valve. Radical debridement of the infected cavity and necrotic tissue was performed in all cases, followed by reconstruction of the aortic annulus using autologous or xenogenic pericardium in 3 cases. Antibiotic-saturated fibrin glue was applied to the cavity. Aortic root replacement was achieved with a pulmonary autograft (Ross procedure) in 4 and stentless aortic root xenograft in 4. One patient who had advanced liver cirrhosis underwent aortic valve replacement with a stentless xenograft by subcoronary implantation method. No mortality was observed during hospitalization and follow-up. Reoperation within 5 years was not necessary in 66.7% of the patients. Excellent outcome can be achieved by radical exclusion of the abscess cavity and viable pulmonary autograft or stentless aortic root xenograft in patients with severe aortic annular destruction.

10.
Kampo Medicine ; : 587-594, 1995.
Article in Japanese | WPRIM | ID: wpr-368077

ABSTRACT

The therapeutic effects of long-term treatment with Sho-saiko-to, a traditional Chinese medicine, was evaluated in patients with idiopathic interstitial pneumonia (IIP). Twenty-nine patients with IIP without steroid therapy were divided into two groups: one for administration of Sho-saiko-to (n=9) and another for control (n=20). Clinical symptoms and results of respiratory tests over periods of 11 to 43 months were recorded. No adverse effects of Sho-saiko-to were odserved.<br>One patient of the Sho-saiko-to administered group improved markedly, three improved slightly and five showed no changes, though no patients in the control group improved. The two patients of improving slightly had “Sho” of “Kyokyo-Kuman” (discomfort of the hypochondrium) which is applied for Sho-saiko-to. The results suggested that Sho-saiko-to might be a useful medicine to suppress the inflammatory procees in patients with IIP.

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