Hideaki Takenaka
Nara Medical University
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Featured researches published by Hideaki Takenaka.
Nutrition | 2001
Takahiro Yoneda; Masanori Yoshikawa; Akihiro Fu; Katsuhiko Tsukaguchi; Yukinori Okamoto; Hideaki Takenaka
Plasma levels of amino acids were measured by ion-exchange, high-pressure liquid chromatography in 30 ambulatory patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD; mean +/- SD: age 64 +/- 13 y and forced expiratory volume in 1 s [FEV1] 0.85 +/- 0.25 L) and 30 age- and sex-matched healthy control subjects with regard to nutritional status, resting energy expenditure (REE), and pulmonary function. The ratio of branched-chain amino acids to aromatic amino acids was significantly (P < 0.001) decreased in COPD patients and was significantly correlated with percentage of ideal body weight (r = 0.403, P < 0.05), percentage of arm-muscle circumference (r = 0.492, P < 0.01), and %FEV1 (r = 0.467, P < 0.05). Plasma levels of alanine and cysteine were decreased, whereas levels of glutamine, aspartic acid, serine, and ornithine were elevated in COPD patients as opposed to control subjects. The ratio of resting energy expenditure to predicted resting energy expenditure was negatively correlated with the ratio of branched-chain to aromatic amino acids (r = -0.716, P < 0.01), percentage of arm-muscle circumference (r = -0.770, P < 0.05), %FEV1 (r = -0.839, P < 0.01), and the maximal inspiratory pressure (r = -0.803, P < 0.001). Underweight COPD patients also exhibited a greater degree of hyperinflation (percentage of residual volume = 205 +/- 15 for underweight patients and 156 +/- 8 for normal-weight patients). In conclusion, a decrease in plasma levels of branched-chain amino acids in relation to hypermetabolism, possibly resulting from the severity of COPD and respiratory muscle weakness, and various disturbances in plasma amino-acid levels were found in underweight COPD patients.
Lung | 2000
Atsushi Kobayashi; Takahiro Yoneda; Masanori Yoshikawa; Masashi Ikuno; Hideaki Takenaka; Atsuhiko Fukuoka; Nobuhiro Narita; Kunimoto Nezu
To assess the factors determining maximum exercise performance in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), we examined nutritional status with special reference to body composition and pulmonary function in 50 stable COPD patients. Nutritional status was evaluated by body weight and body composition, including fat mass (FM) and fat-free mass (FFM) assessed by bioelectrical impedance analysis (BIA). Exercise performance was evaluated by maximum oxygen uptake (Vo2max) on a cycle ergometer. A total of 50 patients (FEV1= 0.98 L) was divided randomly into either a study group (group A, n= 25) or validation group (group B, n= 25). Stepwise regression analysis was performed in group A to determine the best predictors of Vo2max from measurements of pulmonary function and nutritional status. Stepwise regression analysis revealed that Vo2max was predicted best by the following equation in group A: Vo2max (mL/min) = 10.223 × FFM (kg) + 4.188 × MVV (L/min) + 9.952 × DLco (mL/min/mmHg) − 127.9 (r= 0.84, p < 0.001). This equation was then cross-validated in group B: Measured Vo2max (mL/min) = 1.554 × Predicted Vo2max (mL/min) − 324.0 (r= 0.87, p < 0.001). We conclude that FFM is an important factor in determining maximum exercise performance, along with pulmonary function parameters, in patients with COPD.
Lung | 2000
Kunimoto Nezu; Masanori Yoshikawa; Takahiro Yoneda; Keiji Kushibe; Takeshi Kawaguchi; Motoaki Yasukawa; Atsushi Kobayashi; Hideaki Takenaka; Atsuhiko Fukuoka; Nobuhiro Narita; Shigeki Taniguchi
Abstract. The aim of this study was to examine the short-term effect of lung volume reduction surgery (LVRS) on body composition and other nutritional indicators in 28 patients with emphysema underwent thoracoscopic LVRS. Functional tests, body weight (BW), and body composition were measured before and 6 months after surgery. Mean daily caloric intake (CI) was estimated by 3-day dietary record as well. Fat-free mass (FFM) and fat mass (FM) were assessed by bioelectrical impedance analysis (BIA). FEV1.0 and Vo2max have improved after LVRS by 35.2% and 23.8%, respectively. Preoperatively, 75% of patients were underweight (% ideal body weight (%IBW) <90) with the mean %IBW at 84.5%. BW, CI, and FFM increased significantly after LVRS, whereas FM was unchanged. The change in BW correlated significantly with the change in FEV1.0, MVV, and Vo2max (p < 0.01) but not with CI. Bilateral LVRS results in an increase in FFM and functional improvement for underweight patients with severe emphysema, and it may contribute to the improvement in maximal exercise capacity.
Internal Medicine | 2017
Yumi Iwasa; Asuka Okada; Hideaki Takenaka; Terukazu Takahashi; Nobuo Koguchi; Kumiko Katayama; Shinsuke Murakami; Sumito Choh; Koichi Tomoda; Hiroshi Kimura
An 84-year-old woman presented to our hospital with dyspnea on exertion and left back pain. Chest X-ray and chest computed tomography (CT) revealed an irregular pleural mass invading her left chest wall with rib destruction and pleural effusion. CT-guided needle biopsy revealed diffuse large B-cell lymphoma. Low-dose oral etoposide produced a complete response, and she continued oral chemotherapy for one year after the diagnosis and maintained good performance status. We herein report a very rare case of non-pyothorax-associated lymphoma that nonetheless resulted in great recovery.
Internal Medicine | 2016
Nobuo Koguchi; Asuka Okada; Sumito Choh; Kumiko Katayama; Hideaki Takenaka; Koichi Tomoda; Hiroshi Kimura
A 75-year-old woman was referred to our hospital with the chief symptom of dyspnea. Chest computed tomography revealed lymphadenopathy, emphysema, and honeycombing. Sarcoidosis was diagnosed due to an elevated serum ACE level and the findings of a lymph-node biopsy. Her smoking history, radiography findings, and impaired gas exchange indicated combined pulmonary fibrosis and emphysema (CPFE). Raynauds phenomenon gradually appeared, and we also diagnosed her with systemic sclerosis (SSc). Right heart catheterization revealed pulmonary hypertension (PH). Smoking was assumed to be the chief cause, but SSc may also induce the development of CPFE. Severe PH induced by CPFE or SSc was present, but the influence of sarcoidosis also could not be ignored.
Internal Medicine | 2006
Norihiko Matsumura; Hideaki Takenaka; Sumito Cho; Kazuo Yamamoto
A 55-year-old woman on maintenance hemodialysis presented with a recurrent cough, hemoptysis and productive purulent sputum. She had undergone a tracheoplasty with her own rib for stenosis of the trachea six years earlier. A chest radiograph showed infiltrative shadows in the left lung field. A computed tomographic (CT) scan of the chest showed a stick-like structure in the left main bronchus, and consolidation of the left lower lobe (Fig. 1). Fiberoptic bronchoscopy disclosed a foreign body covered with mucus in the left main bronchus (Fig. 2). Simultaneous removal of the bronchoscope and the object, firmly grasped with foreign body forceps, was attempted. The object was successfully retrieved. It was identified as a piece of rib. Taking the disappearance of the rib at the latest CT film into consideration, the rib must have migrated into the airway or dropped because of thinning of the mucosa of the trachea. Although the precise process is not known, the fragility of the trachea as scaffolding might result in lodgment of a foreign body.
American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine | 2004
Takefumi Itoh; Noritoshi Nagaya; Masanori Yoshikawa; Atsuhiko Fukuoka; Hideaki Takenaka; Yoshito Shimizu; Yoshinori Haruta; Hideo Oya; Masakazu Yamagishi; Hiroshi Hosoda; Kenji Kangawa; Hiroshi Kimura
Chest | 2001
Masanori Yoshikawa; Takahiro Yoneda; Hideaki Takenaka; Atsuhiko Fukuoka; Yukinori Okamoto; Nobuhiro Narita; Kunimoto Nezu
Kekkaku(Tuberculosis) | 1997
Katsuhiko Tsukaguchi; Hideo Okamura; M Ikuno; Atsushi Kobayashi; Atsuhiko Fukuoka; Hideaki Takenaka
Chest | 1999
Masanori Yoshikawa; Takahiro Yoneda; Atsushi Kobayashi; Akihiro Fu; Hideaki Takenaka; Nobuhiro Narita; Kunimoto Nezu