Atsushi Sakurai

University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, Miami, FL, USA

Are you Atsushi Sakurai?

Claim your profile

Publications (2)5.99 Total impact

  • Article: Mild hyperthermia worsens the neuropathological damage associated with mild traumatic brain injury in rats.
    [show abstract] [hide abstract]
    ABSTRACT: The effects of slight variations in brain temperature on the pathophysiological consequences of acute brain injury have been extensively described in models of moderate and severe traumatic brain injury (TBI). In contrast, limited information is available regarding the potential consequences of temperature elevations on outcome following mild TBI (mTBI) or concussions. One potential confounding variable with mTBI is the presence of elevated body temperature that occurs in the civilian or military populations due to hot environments combined with exercise or other forms of physical exertion. We therefore determined the histopathological effects of pre- and post-traumatic hyperthermia (39°C) on mTBI. Adult male Sprague-Dawley rats were divided into 3 groups: pre/post-traumatic hyperthermia, post-traumatic hyperthermia alone for 2 h, and normothermia (37°C). The pre/post-hyperthermia group was treated with hyperthermia starting 15 min before mild parasagittal fluid-percussion brain injury (1.4-1.6 atm), with the temperature elevation extending for 2 h after trauma. At 72 h after mTBI, the rats were perfusion-fixed for quantitative histopathological evaluation. Contusion areas and volumes were significantly larger in the pre/post-hyperthermia treatment group compared to the post-hyperthermia and normothermic groups. In addition, pre/post-traumatic hyperthermia caused the most severe loss of NeuN-positive cells in the dentate hilus compared to normothermia. These neuropathological results demonstrate that relatively mild elevations in temperature associated with peri-traumatic events may affect the long-term functional consequences of mTBI. Because individuals exhibiting mildly elevated core temperatures may be predisposed to aggravated brain damage after mTBI or concussion, precautions should be introduced to target this important physiological variable.
    Journal of neurotrauma 01/2012; 29(2):313-21. · 4.25 Impact Factor
  • Source
    Article: Distributed environment control using wireless sensor/actuator networks for lighting applications.
    Masayuki Nakamura, Atsushi Sakurai, Jiro Nakamura
    [show abstract] [hide abstract]
    ABSTRACT: We propose a decentralized algorithm to calculate the control signals for lights in wireless sensor/actuator networks. This algorithm uses an appropriate step size in the iterative process used for quickly computing the control signals. We demonstrate the accuracy and efficiency of this approach compared with the penalty method by using Mote-based mesh sensor networks. The estimation error of the new approach is one-eighth as large as that of the penalty method with one-fifth of its computation time. In addition, we describe our sensor/actuator node for distributed lighting control based on the decentralized algorithm and demonstrate its practical efficacy.
    Sensors 01/2009; 9(11):8593-609. · 1.74 Impact Factor

Top Journals

Institutions

  • 2012
    • University of Miami Miller School of Medicine
      • Department of Neurological Surgery
      Miami, FL, USA