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Publications (5)12.88 Total impact

  • Article: High incidence of false-positive Aspergillus galactomannan test results in patients with aspiration pneumonia.
    Journal of the American Geriatrics Society 06/2009; 57(5):935-6. · 3.74 Impact Factor
  • Article: [Two cases of severe necrotizing pneumonia caused by community-acquired methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus].
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    ABSTRACT: We present 2 cases with severe necrotizing pneumonia due to community-acquired methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (CA-MRSA) infection. The patients were a 89-year-old man and a male student of 15 years of age. Chest X-rays and CT scans demonstrated multiple consolidations with cavitary lesions showing necrotizing pneumonia. MRSA strains were isolated from the sputum cultures on admission in these patients who did not have any established risk factors for MRSA infections such as history of hospitalization, surgery, hemodialysis, the presence of a permanent indwelling catheter or percutaneous medical device, and residence in a long-term care facility. These patients thus satisfied the international criteria for CA-MRSA presented by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Unfortunately, the first case died of CA-MRSA pneumonia in spite of intensive treatments including anti-MRSA antibiotics. Unlike the severe CA-MRSA cases in western countries, Panton-Valentine leukocidin (PVL) genes were not detected in the present cases, suggesting that factors other than PVL had a significant effect on the severity of necrotizing pneumonia. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report of severe necrotizing pneumonia caused by CA-MRSA in Japan.
    Nihon Kokyūki Gakkai zasshi = the journal of the Japanese Respiratory Society. 06/2008; 46(5):395-403.
  • Article: Congenital bronchobiliary fistula in a 65-year-old woman.
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    ABSTRACT: Congenital bronchobiliary fistula (CBBF) is quite a rare malformation and the diagnosis is usually made within a few hours or years from birth because of lower respiratory diseases beginning from early infancy. Surgical repair is necessary. Of the 29 cases reported, 4 occurred in adults aged 22-32 years. We detected CBBF incidentally in a 65-year-old woman. During bronchoscopy and thoracic computed tomographic study of the pulmonary nodules, we found an accessory bronchus descending from the carina and composed of a dark green secretion that contained 10% bilirubin. Drip infusion cholangiography revealed air in the left bile duct. Cholescintigraphy showed dilatation of the left bile duct and radiotracer pooling at the top edge of the left hepatic lobe. These findings indicated a narrow fistula between the airway and biliary duct. We attributed the patient's long survival without major complications to the narrowness of the communication. To our best knowledge, this is the fifth and oldest reported adult diagnosed with CBBF.
    Internal Medicine 01/2008; 47(14):1367-70. · 0.94 Impact Factor
  • Article: T cells of atopic asthmatics preferentially infiltrate into human bronchial xenografts in SCID mice.
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    ABSTRACT: T cells play an important role in the pathogenesis of bronchial asthma. However, it is not completely known how circulating lymphocytes infiltrate into the airways of asthmatic patients. Because SCID mice are unable to reject xenogenic transplants, many xenotransplant models using various human tissues have been developed. Therefore, to examine the interaction between bronchi and T lymphocytes of asthma, it may be possible to use the human bronchial xenograft and PBMC xenograft in SCID mice. We transplanted human bronchi into the subcutaneum of SCID mice and i.p. injected PBMCs that were obtained from patients with atopic asthma, atopic dermatitis and rheumatoid arthritis, and normal subjects (asthmatic, dermatitis, rheumatic, and normal huPBMC-SCID mice). There was no difference in the percentage of CD3-, CD4-, CD8-, CD25-, CD45RO-, CD103-, and cutaneous lymphocyte Ag-positive cells in PBMCs among the patients with asthma, dermatitis, rheumatoid arthritis, and normal subjects, and CD3-positive cells in peripheral blood of asthmatic, dermatitis, rheumatic, and normal huPBMC-SCID mice. The number of CD3-, CD4-, and CD8-positive cells in the xenografts of asthmatic huPBMC-SCID mice was higher than those of dermatitis, rheumatic, and normal huPBMC-SCID mice. IL-4 mRNA and IL-5 mRNA were significantly higher in the xenografts of asthmatic huPBMC-SCID mice than those in the xenografts of normal huPBMC-SCID mice, but there were no significant differences in the expressions of IL-2 mRNA or IFN-gamma mRNA between them. These findings suggest that T cells, especially Th2-type T cells, of asthmatics preferentially infiltrate into the human bronchi.
    The Journal of Immunology 07/2003; 170(11):5712-8. · 5.79 Impact Factor
  • Article: Dyspnoea and hyperventilation induced by synthetic progesterone chlorpromadinone acetate for the treatment of prostatic hypertrophy
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    ABSTRACT: We describe a 74-year-old patient with dyspnoea and tachypnoea induced by chlorpromadinone acetate, a synthetic progesterone used to treat prostatic hyperplasia. The dyspnoea, tachypnoea and hypocapnia improved after discontinuing the chlorpromadinone acetate. It is important to recognize that synthetic progesterones can cause dyspnoea and hyperventilation.
    Respirology 12/2001; 6(3):265 - 267. · 2.42 Impact Factor