Chiharu Kadoi
Juntendo University
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Chiharu Kadoi.
Journal of Cataract and Refractive Surgery | 2003
Yasunori Nagaki; Seiji Hayasaka; Chiharu Kadoi; Masayuki Matsumoto; Shuiichiro Yanagisawa; Kazuhiko Watanabe; Konomi Watanabe; Yoriko Hayasaka; Nariko Ikeda; Shoichi Sato; Yasushi Kataoka; Mika Togashi; Tomohiro Abe
Purpose: To determine whether endophthalmitis after small‐incision cataract surgery is affected by the incision site (superior sclerocorneal versus temporal cornea) or the foldable intraocular lens (IOL) material (silicone versus acrylic). Setting: Multicenter study. Methods: Patients who had small‐incision cataract surgery at Toyama Medical and Pharmaceutical University Hospital and affiliated hospitals from March 1998 to March 2001 were examined prospectively. The patients were randomized into 3 groups. In Group A, an acrylic IOL (MA60BM, Alcon) was implanted through a temporal corneal incision. In Group B, an acrylic IOL (MA60BM) was implanted via a superior sclerocorneal incision. In Group C, a silicone poly(methyl methacrylate) IOL (SI‐40NB, Allergan) was implanted via a superior sclerocorneal incision. Each patient was followed for more than 6 months. Results: Initially, 7622 patients (12 317 eyes) agreed to participate in the study. The final study included 3831 eyes in Group A, 3901 eyes in Group B, and 3863 eyes in Group C. Postoperative endophthalmitis was diagnosed clinically in 11 eyes (0.29%) in Group A, 2 (0.05%) in Group B, and 2 (0.05%) in Group C. Endophthalmitis proven by culture was found in 9 eyes in Group A, 2 in Group B, and 2 in Group C. The incidence of endophthalmitis in Group A was higher than in the other groups. The incidence of endophthalmitis in Group B was similar to that in Group C. The relative risk of postoperative endophthalmitis proven by culture in Groups B and C was 4.6 times (P = .037) lower than in Group A. Conclusion: The findings suggest that a temporal corneal incision may lead to an increased risk of postoperative endophthalmitis and that the IOL material does not affect the incidence of this complication.
Journal of Cataract and Refractive Surgery | 1999
Yasunori Nagaki; Seiji Hayasaka; Chiharu Kadoi
PURPOSE To evaluate the possible causes of cataract progression in Japanese patients with atopic dermatitis. SETTING Department of Ophthalmology, Toyama Medical and Pharmaceutical University, Toyama, Japan. METHODS This prospective study comprised 41 patients (81 eyes) with atopic dermatitis. Cataract progression was determined by photographs and visual acuity results. Mean follow-up was 2.5 years (range 1.0 to 3.5 years). RESULTS Of 41 patients, 10 (24.4%) had progression of cataract. Of 81 eyes, 10 (12.3%) had slow progression and 9 (11.1%), rapid. Cataract progression was not statistically significantly related to patient sex or severity of systemic skin lesions but was to facial skin lesions. Soft contact lens wear and eye rubbing were also correlated with cataract progression. CONCLUSION Patients with facial atopic dermatitis, contact lenses, or both may rub their eyes more frequently than those with lesions on other body parts, increasing their risk of cataract progression.
Journal of Cataract and Refractive Surgery | 1999
Tomohiro Abe; Seiji Hayasaka; Yasunori Nagaki; Chiharu Kadoi; Masayuki Matsumoto; Yoriko Hayasaka
PURPOSE To evaluate the efficacy of high-dose methylprednisolone in the treatment of pseudophakic cystoid macular edema (CME). SETTING University-affiliated hospital. METHODS Four patients with pseudophakic CME who reported decreased visual acuities were treated with oral prednisolone (20 mg daily for 5 days), oral acetazolamide (500 mg daily for 5 days), and topical dexamethasone 0.1% and diclofenac 0.1% (4 times a day for 14 days). The CME did not resolve. Next, they were treated with high-dose (1000 mg daily) intravenous methylprednisolone for 3 days. RESULTS In 3 of 4 eyes, the CME resolved and visual acuity improved. CONCLUSION High-dose methylprednisolone may be effective in the treatment of pseudophakic CME.
Japanese Journal of Ophthalmology | 2001
Yasunori Nagaki; Seiji Hayasaka; Chiharu Kadoi; Nobuo Nakamura; Yoriko Hayasaka
PURPOSE To evaluate the possible inhibitory effects of hot water extract of Scutellariae radix and its major components (baicalein, baicalin, and wogonin) on experimental elevation of aqueous flare in pigmented rabbits. METHODS To produce aqueous flare elevation in rabbits, prostaglandin E(2) (PGE(2)), 25 microg/mL, was applied to the cornea with the use of a glass cylinder, or lipopolysaccharides (LPS), 0.5 microg/kg, were injected into an ear vein. Animals were pretreated by the oral administration of 150 g/day of food containing 0.02%, 0.07%, or 0.2% (w/w) extract of Scutellariae radix for 5 days, or by intravenous injection of baicalein, baicalin, or wogonin, 60 microg/kg or 600 microg/kg, 30 minutes before experimental uveitis was induced. Aqueous flare was measured with a laser flare-cell meter. Aqueous flare intensity was expressed as the area under the curve (AUC) in arbitrary units. RESULTS The AUC of PGE(2)- and LPS-induced aqueous flare elevation was 1,343 and 5,066 arbitrary units, respectively. Pretreatment by oral administration of 0.07% or 0.2% extract of Scutellariae radix did not inhibit PGE(2)-induced aqueous flare elevation (AUC: 1,252 and 1,210, respectively), but it did inhibit LPS-induced aqueous flare elevation (AUC: 2,248 and 1,973, respectively). Pretreatment by intravenous injection of 600 microg/kg of baicalein, baicalin, or wogonin inhibited LPS-induced aqueous flare elevation (AUC: 2,289, 2,163, and 1,509, respectively). Pretreatment with 60 microg/kg of wogonin also inhibited LPS-induced aqueous flare elevation (AUC: 1,980). CONCLUSION Hot water extract of Scutellariae radix may have an inhibitory effect on experimental anterior uveitis induced by LPS in pigmented rabbits.
Japanese Journal of Ophthalmology | 2001
Yasunori Nagaki; Seiji Hayasaka; Chiharu Kadoi; Masayuki Matsumoto; Takuro Sakagami
PURPOSE To report branch retinal vein occlusion and retinal hemorrhages associated with tsutsugamushi disease. METHODS Case report of a 60-year-old woman who complained of fever, chills, headache, lymphadenopathy, and blurred vision in the right eye following an insect bite to the lower right forehead. RESULTS Serological findings showed elevated titers for the strains of Rickettsia tsutsugamushi. Ophthalmologic examination disclosed bilateral conjunctival injection, flame-shaped hemorrhage in her right fundus, and scattered hemorrhage in her left fundus. Fluorescein angiography demonstrated dye leakage and dilation of capillaries. CONCLUSIONS Branch retinal vein occlusion associated with classical tsutsugamushi disease, as demonstrated in our patient, may be rare.
Ophthalmologica | 2000
Kazuo Shinoda; Seiji Hayasaka; Yasunori Nagaki; Chiharu Kadoi; Masanori Kurimoto; Eikichi Okada
A 40-year-old woman had a highly pigmented, slightly elevated tumor on the left optic disc. She had no visual disturbance in the left eye. The tumor was stationary for 5 years. At age 45 years, she complained of decreased visual acuity in the right eye. Magnetic resonance imaging showed a right-shifted homogeneous lesion at the tuberculum sellae. Histopathologic study of the excised lesion revealed interlacing bundles of spindle-shaped fibroblast-like cells with whorl formation. We believe that a relationship between melanocytoma of the optic nerve head and a tuberculum sellae meningioma may exist rather than a chance occurrence, as previously suggested by others.
Journal of Ocular Pharmacology and Therapeutics | 2001
Nariko Ikeda; Seiji Hayasaka; Yasunori Nagaki; Yoriko Hayasaka; Chiharu Kadoi; Masayuki Matsumoto
We evaluated prospectively the effects of traditional Sino-Japanese herbal medicines on elevation of aqueous flare. Fifty-four patients with age-related cataract undergoing phacoemulsification with intraocular lens implantation were studied. In the control group, 20 patients received no herbal medicine. In the treated groups, 14 patients were given Orengedoku- to (Huanglian-Jie-Du-Tang in Chinese) granules (7.5 g daily), 10 patients were given Kakkon-to (Ge-Gen-Tang in Chinese) granules (7.5 g daily), and 10 patients were given Sairei-to (Cai-Ling-Tang in Chinese) granules (9.0 g daily), for 3 days before surgery, the day of surgery, and for 7 days after surgery. Aqueous flare was measured before and after surgery. The differences in preoperative flare intensities among the four groups were not significant. In the control group, the flare was 29.4 photon counts/msec on day 1, and then gradually decreased. The flare intensities on days 1, 3, and 5 in the Orengedoku-to and Kakkon-to groups were significantly lower than in the control group. The flare intensities in the Sairei-to group were the same as those of the controls. Oral administration of Orengedoku-to and Kakkon-to decreased aqueous flare elevation after small-incision cataract surgery. Sairei-to had no effect on the elevation.
The American Journal of Chinese Medicine | 2003
Yasunori Nagaki; Seiji Hayasaka; Yoriko Hayasaka; Chiharu Kadoi; Nobuyasu Sekiya; Katsutoshi Terasawa; Iwao Sakakibara
Goshajinkigan (niu-che-shen-qi-wan in Chinese), a traditional herbal medicine, has been used in Japan to treat clinical symptoms of diabetic neuropathy. A double-masked study was performed to evaluate its effects on corneal sensitivity, superficial punctate keratopathy and tear production in patients with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. Fifty diabetic patients were randomized into two groups: Group A, in which 25 patients received goshajinkigan orally, 7.5 g/day for 3 months; Group B, in which 25 patients were orally administered placebo, 6.0 g/day for 3 months; and in Group C, 25 non-diabetic subjects were orally administered goshajinkigan, 7.5 g/day for 3 months. Corneal sensitivity was measured with an aesthesiometer. The area of superficial punctate keratopathy was expressed as a fluorescein staining score. Reflex tearing was determined with a Schirmer test without anesthesia goshajinkigan was analyzed by high-performance liquid chromatography. Corneal thresholds after treatment with goshajinkigan (2.03 g/mm2) in Group A were significantly lower than those before treatment (2.47 g/mm2). Those in Groups B and C did not change after treatment. Fluorescein staining scores after administration of Goshajinkigan (0.64) in Group A were significantly lower than those before treatment (1.32). Those in Groups B and C did not change after treatment. Schirmer test results after goshajinkigan administration (11.0 mm/5 min) in Group A were significantly higher than those before treatment (9.3 mm/5 min). Those in Groups B and C did not change after treatment. Hemoglobin A1c levels in Groups A, B,and C did not change after treatment. Several components in goshajinkigan were found on high performance liquid chromatography. In conclusion, goshajinkigan improved ocular surface disorders in patients with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus.
The American Journal of Chinese Medicine | 2002
Nariko Ikeda; Seiji Hayasaka; Yasunori Nagaki; Yoriko Hayasaka; Chiharu Kadoi; Masayuki Matsumoto
We evaluate prospectively the effects of traditional herbal medicines on elevation of aqueous flare after complicated cataract surgery. Twenty-seven patients with bilateral complicated cataract undergoing phacoemulsification with intraocular lens implantation were studied. The patients received no herbal medicine when the right eyes underwent cataract surgery. Fifteen patients were given kakkon-to (ge-gen-yang in Chinese) granules (7.5 g daily) and 12 patients were given sairei-to (cai-ling-tang in Chinese) granules (9.0 g daily), for 3 days before surgery, the day of surgery, and for 7 days after surgery when the left eyes underwent cataract surgery. Diclofenac eyedrops were instilled in all patients. Aqueous flare was measured before and after surgery. The differences in preoperative flare intensities between groups treated with Kakkon-to and Sairei-to were not significant. In the untreated right eyes of the kakkon-to and Sairei-to groups, the flare was 99.1 and 89.6 photon counts/msec, respectively, on day 1, and then gradually decreased. The flare intensities on days 1, 3, and 5 in the kakkon-to treated left eyes were significantly lower than in those of the untreated right eyes (Fig. 1). The flare intensities in the Sairei-to treated left eyes were the same as those in the untreated right eyes. Kakkon-to contributed to a reduction of aqueous flare elevation after surgery for complicated cataract.
Ophthalmologica | 2000
Konomi Watanabe-Numata; Seiji Hayasaka; Kazuhiko Watanabe; Yoriko Hayasaka; Chiharu Kadoi
Changes in deviation may occur following the correction of hyperopia in children with accommodative esotropia. We analyzed possible factors involving the development of changes in deviation. We examined 49 children (23 boys and 26 girls) who had fully refractive accommodative esotropia at the age of 3 or 4 years. All children wore glasses to correct the fully cycloplegic refractive errors. At the age of 10 or 11 years, 28 (57.1%) of these children had good alignment, 12 (24.5%) developed partial accommodative esotropia and 9 (18.4%) developed consecutive exotropia. The age at onset of esotropia, age at initial visit, and refraction, deviation and presence of stereopsis, as determined by the Titmus test using a fly at the initial visit, were similar among the three groups. In the consecutive exotropia group, amblyopia at the initial visit was significantly higher (89%) than that of the good alignment group (50%). The age at the start of the correction, and the refraction, amblyopia and presence of fusion (10 or 11 years) were almost equal among the three groups. We conclude that some children with fully refractive accommodative esotropia associated with amblyopia at the age of 3 or 4 years may be predisposed to developing consecutive exotropia.