Chikako Arakawa
Nihon University
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Featured researches published by Chikako Arakawa.
Brain & Development | 2010
Shun Munakata; Chikako Arakawa; Ryutaro Kohira; Yukihiko Fujita; Tatsuo Fuchigami; Hideo Mugishima
A five year old girl was admitted to the hospital for evaluation of intermittent ataxia. She had undergone serial resections of the small intestine after birth, resulting in short bowel syndrome. Lactomin was prescribed for watery diarrhea at twice the regular dose 2 weeks before the onset of neurologic symptoms. D-lactic acidosis was diagnosed on the basis of a plasma D-lactate level of 5.537 mmol/l. Lactomin was discontinued, and she was treated with sodium bicarbonate and oral antibiotics. The probiotics the patient had taken were likely the cause of D-lactic acidosis and should therefore be avoided in patients with short bowel syndrome.
Pediatric Emergency Care | 2012
Tatsuo Fuchigami; Yuki Imai; Maki Hasegawa; Wakako Ishii; Ayumi Endo; Chikako Arakawa; Ryutaro Kohira; Koji Hashimoto; Yukihiko Fujita; Yasuji Inamo; Hideo Mugishima
Objectives In April 2009, a novel influenza A (H1N1) pdm virus was identified in Mexico and spread quickly around the world. However, the clinical features of acute encephalopathy associated with 2009 pandemic influenza have not yet been elucidated. Methods We treated 8 patients (3 boys and 5 girls) aged 4 to 11 years (average age, 8 y 3 months) with influenza virus–associated encephalopathy, who presented at our 2 hospitals between July 2009 and March 2010. We investigated the clinical characteristics, treatments, and outcomes in the patients. Results In all patients, brain computed tomography showed mild to severe diffuse cerebral edema, and electroencephalography revealed diffuse high-voltage slow waves. They were all treated with oseltamivir and methylprednisolone pulse therapy. Six patients recovered without any sequelae; however, the remaining 2 had residual neurological sequelae. These 2 patients presented with severe disturbance of consciousness, and their central nervous system symptoms appeared within 12 hours after the onset of fever. One patient had periventricular leukomalacia and symptomatic epilepsy by perinatal brain hypoxia, and the other patient had 1 complex febrile and 2 febrile seizures. Conclusions This study showed that patients with influenza-associated encephalopathy caused by influenza A (H1N1) pdm infection were all older than those with seasonal influenza. Underlying neurological disease or history may be associated with poor prognosis.
Journal of Infection and Chemotherapy | 2014
Fumie Hanzawa; Tatsuo Fuchigami; Wakako Ishii; Sonoko Nakajima; Yuki Kawamura; Ayumi Endo; Chikako Arakawa; Ryutaro Kohira; Yukihiko Fujita; Shori Takahashi
Mycoplasma pneumoniae is a common cause of respiratory tract illness in children. Among the most common extrapulmonary manifestations are disorders of the central nervous system, including meningitis, meningoencephalitis, cerebellitis, polyneuropathy, acute disseminated encephalomyelitis, and Guillain-Barré syndrome. Guillain-Barré syndrome, also known as acute inflammatory demyelinating polyradiculoneuropathy, is an acute-onset, immune-mediated disorder of the peripheral nervous system. The central nervous system is usually intact in patients with Guillain-Barré syndrome. However, there have been some reports of an association of Guillain-Barré syndrome with central nervous system involvement in children. We report a 3-year-old boy with M. pneumoniae infection associated with Guillain-Barré syndrome and encephalitis. Both serum anti-GM1 ganglioside (IgG and IgM) and anti-galactocerebroside IgG antibodies were detected in our patient: the former in the earlier stage of the disease, and the latter in the later stage. We speculate that anti-GM1 ganglioside was associated more with encephalitis, and anti-galactocerebroside antibody was associated more with GBS in our case. Our patient is the youngest report of Guillain-Barré syndrome with central nervous system involvement, and the first report of a pediatric patient with associated M. pneumoniae infection. Such cases are rarely reported, but highlight the need for awareness of the association of the infection with Guillain-Barré syndrome with central nervous system involvement.
American Journal of Medical Genetics | 2014
Kaeko Ogura; Kenzo Takeshita; Chikako Arakawa; Keiko Shimojima; Toshiyuki Yamamoto
Patients with 2q37 deletions manifest brachydactyly mental retardation syndrome (BDMR). Recent advances in human molecular research have revealed that alterations in the histone deacetylase 4 gene (HDAC4) are responsible for the clinical manifestations of BDMR. Here, we report two male patients with 2q37.3 deletions. One of the patients showed a typical BDMR phenotype, and HDAC4 was included in the deletion region. HDAC4 was preserved in the other patient, and he showed a normal intelligence level with the delayed learning of complex motor skills. Detailed neuropsychological examinations revealed similar neuropsychological profiles in these two patients (visuo‐spatial dyspraxia) that suggested developmental dyspraxia. These observations suggested that some other candidate genes for neuronal development exist in the telomeric region of HDAC4.
Clinical Laboratory | 2017
Ngan Thi Kim Pham; Hiroshi Ushijima; Aksara Thongprachum; Quang Trinh; Pattara Khamrin; Chikako Arakawa; Wakako Ishii; Shoko Okitsu; Shihoko Komine-Aizawa; Satoshi Hayakawa
BACKGROUND Acute encephalitis is a serious neurological condition having a high mortality rate and affecting both children and adults. This study aimed to develop a multiplex PCR method for the simultaneous screening of clinical samples for the presence of the 10 viruses presently considered as the major viral causes of acute encephalitis/ encephalopathy in Asia. METHODS Using previously published primers that have been widely used to screen for herpes virus-6, influenza A virus, human parechovirus, herpes simplex viruses 1 and 2, Japanese encephalitis virus, group A rotavirus, enterovirus, adenovirus, and dengue virus in clinical samples, a single-tube multiplex PCR assay was developed and was tested for its sensitivity and specificity. The method was then applied to screen 57 clinical samples, consisting of 13 fecal samples, 5 throat swabs, 3 post-nasal swabs, 18 serum samples, and 18 cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) samples, collected from 18 hospitalized Japanese children with suspected viral encephalitis/encephalopathy for the target viruses, and the results were compared with those of a monoplex PCR method. RESULTS Positive viral controls of the 10 viruses were correctly typed using this multiplex PCR method. The multiplex PCR method showed high specificity with no unspecific amplification to non-target viruses. The results of applying this PCR method for screening clinical samples showed that 6 fecal samples, 2 serum samples, and 1 CSF sample collected from 7 patients were positive for a virus, specifically group A rotavirus (4 patients, 22.2%), enterovirus (2 patients, 11.1%), or adenovirus (1 patient, 5.6%). In comparison with monoplex PCR, for group A rotavirus, enterovirus, and adenovirus, the sensitivity of this multiplex PCR method decreased for serum, cerebrospinal fluid, and throat swab samples. CONCLUSIONS This newly developed multiplex PCR method is a simple, rapid diagnostic tool and can be used to screen clinical samples for viruses causing acute encephalitis/encephalopathy in children in Asian countries.
Brain & Development | 2011
Yukihiko Fujita; Yuki Imai; Wakako Ishii; Ayumi Endo; Chikako Arakawa; Ryutaro Kohira; Tatsuo Fuchigami; Osami Okubo; Hideo Mugishima
In this study, we report 11 patients with intractable childhood epilepsy that improved following acute viral infection. The patients were 8 boys and 3 girls. Six of the 11 children were diagnosed as West syndrome (5 of the symptomatic type and 1 of the cryptogenic type). The remaining 5 children were myoclonic seizures. The patients became seizure free within 6 days following acute viral infections without an exchange or addition of antiepileptic drugs (AEDs). The types of acute viral infections were Exanthema subitum (Roseola infantum) in 5 patients, Rotavirus gastroenteritis in 2 patients, Measles infection in 2 patients, Herpetic stomatitis in 1 patient and Common cold in the remaining patient. Salaam seizures and/or tonic spasms disappeared within 6 days after the onset of viral infections, and hypsarrhythmia evolved to localized spikes on electroencephalography (EEG) in the patients with West syndrome. Epileptic seizures disappeared rapidly and EEG gradually normalized or improved in patients with myoclonic seizures. Four patients became seizure free for 5 years to 20 years. In 6 patients, seizures relapsed within 14 days to 1 month after the disappearance of seizures. One child remained seizure free for 12 months after viral infection. Common factors in 4 children who were continuously seizure free include (1) normal or almost normal findings of brain CT/MRI, (2) normal development prior to the onset of epileptic seizures, and (3) a short time interval between the onset of seizures and the acute viral infection. We propose several hypotheses including an immunological effect for the improvement of intractable childhood epilepsy following acute viral infection. Further study may provide important information concerning the mechanism of seizure control and the applicable to treatment for intractable childhood epilepsy.
Brain & Development | 2009
Tatsuo Fuchigami; Osami Okubo; Yukihiko Fujita; Ryutaro Kohira; Chikako Arakawa; Ayumi Endo; Wakako Haruyama; Yuki Imai; Hideo Mugishima
To evaluate auditory spatial cognitive function, age correlations for event-related potentials (ERPs) in response to auditory stimuli with a Doppler effect were studied in normal children. A sound with a Doppler effect is perceived as a moving audio image. A total of 99 normal subjects (age range, 4-21 years) were tested. In the task-relevant oddball paradigm, P300 and key-press reaction time were elicited using auditory stimuli (1000 Hz fixed and enlarged tones with a Doppler effect). From the age of 4 years, the P300 latency for the enlarged tone with a Doppler effect shortened more rapidly with age than did the P300 latency for tone-pips, and the latencies for the different conditions became similar towards the late teens. The P300 of auditory stimuli with a Doppler effect may be used to evaluate auditory spatial cognitive function in children.
Brain & Development | 2012
Chikako Arakawa; Ayumi Endo; Ryutaro Kohira; Yukihiko Fujita; Tatsuo Fuchigami; Hideo Mugishima; Akira Ohtake; Kei Murayama; Masato Mori; Rie Miyata; Yoshiho Hatai
We report on a 4-year-old boy who died from influenza encephalopathy. The clinical course and microscopic findings of the autopsied liver were compatible with Reyes syndrome. We examined the mitochondrial respiratory chain function by blue native polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (BN-PAGE), western blotting, and respiratory chain enzyme activity assays. The activity of liver respiratory chain complex (CO) I was markedly decreased (7.2% of the respective control activity); whereas, the other respiratory chain complex activities were substantially normal (CO II, 57.9%; CO III, 122.3%; CO IV, 161.0%). The activities of CO I-IV in fibroblasts were normal (CO I, 82.0%; CO II, 83.1%; CO III, 72.9%; CO IV, 97.3%). The patient was diagnosed with liver-specific complex I deficiency. This inborn disorder may have contributed to the fatal outcome. We propose that relying only on fibroblast respiratory chain complex activities may lead to the misdiagnosis of liver-specific complex I deficiency.
Japanese Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2009
Bisei Liu; Yukihiko Fujita; Chikako Arakawa; Ryutaro Kohira; Tatsuo Fuchigami; Hideo Mugishima; Mitsutaka Kuzuya
Japanese Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2011
Chikako Arakawa; Yukihiko Fujita; Yuki Imai; Wakako Ishii; Ryutaro Kohira; Tatsuo Fuchigami; Hideo Mugishima; Hiroyuki Izumi; Mitsutaka Kuzuya