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Dive into the research topics where Hisaki Shimada is active.

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Featured researches published by Hisaki Shimada.


Pharmacology | 1993

Comparative Free Radical Scavenging Action of Angiotensin-Converting Enzyme Inhibitors with and without the Sulfhydryl Radical

Satoru Suzuki; Hirokazu Sato; Hisaki Shimada; Noriko Takashima; Masaaki Arakawa

The free radical scavenging effects of an angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitor containing sulfhydryl (SH; captopril) were compared with those of ACE inhibitors not containing SH (enalapril, enalaprilat, delapril and its de-esterified products). Electron spin resonance (ESR) using 5,5-dimethyl-1-pyrroline-N-oxide (DMPO) as the spin trap showed that enalapril and delapril (0.6-4.8 mmol/l) inhibited hydroxyl radicals concentration-dependently. Captopril (2.4-10 mmol/l), enalaprilat and the de-esterified product of delapril (1.2-4.8 mmol/l) also inhibited hydroxyl radicals in a concentration-dependent manner. The effects of captopril and enalapril (2.4-4.8 mmol/l) on the scavenging of superoxide anion radical were also concentration-dependent. Delapril, its de-esterified product, and enalaprilat weakly inhibited superoxide anion radical. These results indicate that both SH- and non-SH-containing ACE inhibitors scavenge hydroxyl radical more strongly than the superoxide anion radical and that the free radical scavenging action of ACE inhibitors is probably not related only to the presence of the SH radical.


Nephron | 1998

Requiring Higher Doses of Erythropoietin Suggests Pregnancy in Hemodialysis Patients

Hiroki Maruyama; Hisaki Shimada; Hiroaki Obayashi; Tsukasa Nakamaru; Yoshikazu Miyakawa; Shin Goto; Tadahisa Ogihara; Koichi Takakuwa; Kenichi Tanaka; Hidefumi Kishimoto; Yasuko Yuasa; Shinji Sakai; Hideo Okajima; Satoru Suzuki; Masaaki Arakawa

Background/Aims: Pregnancy in hemodialysis (HD) patients tends to be diagnosed late because of its infrequency and the lack of validity of urine pregnancy tests, and because these patients tend to have menstrual irregularities. The outcome is influenced by pregnancy-related anemia. We investigated the characteristics of pregnancy-related anemia and whether it is a useful diagnostic clue to pregnancy in HD patients. Methods: We retrospectively investigated six pregnancies of 5 HD patients (mean age 30 years), including 4 patients treated with recombinant human erythropoietin (rHuEpo) and a transfusion-dependent patient with two pregnancies in the pre-rHuEpo era. Results: The mean duration of HD was 6 years, the mean duration of the patients’ marriages at the time of pregnancy was 6 years, and the mean gestational age at diagnosis was 11 weeks and 4 days. The progression of anemia (an 8% decrease in the hematocrit) was detected by 8 weeks of gestation in all patients. The prepregnancy hematocrit was stable in 5 pregnancies, facilitating the detection of changes, but during one of the pregnancies of the transfusion-dependent patient the hematocrit was low and was influenced by the transfusions. The amount of rHuEpo required to attain a target hematocrit of 30% increased gradually or rapidly until delivery. Conclusions: The progression of anemia or hyporesponsiveness to rHuEpo was a useful early diagnostic clue to pregnancy in HD patients. However, the prepregnancy hematocrit should be stabilized with rHuEpo, so that decreases can be easily detected. The precise mechanisms of hyporesponsiveness to rHuEpo, which progressed during pregnancy and subsided after delivery, remain to be clarified.


Nephron | 1997

Histological Localization of Advanced Glycosylation End Products in the Progression of Diabetic Nephropathy

Naofumi Imai; Shin Ichi Nishi; Yoshiki Suzuki; Ryou Karasawa; Mitsuhiro Ueno; Hisaki Shimada; Shinji Kawashima; Tsukasa Nakamaru; Yoshikazu Miyakawa; Norie Araki; Seikoh Horiuchi; Fumitake Gejyo; Masaaki Arakawa

We studied the immunohistochemical localization of advanced glycosylation end products (AGEs) in the progression of diabetic nephropathy. Fourteen NIDDM patients with diabetic nephropathy were evaluated: 2 patients with normoalbuminuria, 4 with microalbuminuria (MA) and 8 with overt proteinuria (OP). Three patients with minor glomerular abnormalities were used as nondiabetic controls. Immunoreactivity to a monoclonal anti-AGE antibody (6D12) was recognized on the internal elastic membranes of arterial walls in every diabetic group. Hyaline lesions of arterioles of the MA and OP groups demonstrated strong reactions with 6D12. A portion of the nodular and exudative lesions in glomeruli of OP group patients also revealed immunoreactivity to 6D12. No immunoreactivity to 6D12 was observed in nondiabetic control specimens. We confirm that the accumulation of AGEs began in arterial walls of the early stage and presented in glomerular lesions of the late stage of the progression of diabetic nephropathy.


Acta Oto-laryngologica | 2004

A clinicopathological study on the long-term efficacy of tonsillectomy in patients with IgA nephropathy.

Shinichi Nishi; Yuansheng Xie; Mitsuhiro Ueno; Naofumi Imai; Yasushi Suzuki; Seitaro Iguchi; Sachiko Fukase; Honami Mori; Bassam Alchi; Hisaki Shimada; Masaaki Arakawa; Fumitake Gejyo

Our study evaluated the clinical efficacy of tonsillectomy on the long-term renal survival in patients with primary IgA nephropathy (IgAN). Forty-six patients underwent tonsillectomy, and 74 patients did not. The mean of follow-up duration of all patients was 197.0±29.3 months (61–339 months). The baseline clinical and histological data at renal biopsy were not statistically different between the two groups with and without tonsillectomy. Five (10.9%) of the tonsillectomy group reached end stage renal failure (ESRF), whereas 19 (25.8%) of the non-tonsillectomy group did. The chi-square test between the two groups showed a significant difference (p<0.05). The renal survival of the tonsillectomy group was significantly higher than that of the non-tonsillectomy group by the Kaplan-Meier method with log-rank test (p<0.05). The Cox regression model also revealed that tonsillectomy had a significant favorable impact on the renal survival in long-term follow-up duration (p<0.05). Although our study was done by retrospective analyses, all the results proved that tonsillectomy had significant favorable effects on the long-term renal survival in patients with IgAN.


Clinical and Experimental Nephrology | 2004

Renal function at the time of renal biopsy as a predictor of prognosis in patients with primary AL-type amyloidosis

Yutaka Osawa; Kazuko Kawamura; Daisuke Kondo; Naofumi Imai; Mitsuhiro Ueno; Shinichi Nishi; Noriaki Iino; Masami Okada; Yasushi Suzuki; Satoshi Hoshino; Hajime Yamazaki; Hidefumi Kishimoto; Hisaki Shimada; Tsuyoshi Yamagishi; Takeshi Ishiyama; Ichiei Narita; Fumitake Gejyo

BackgroundAmyloid light-chain (AL)-type amyloidosis is a plasma cell disorder with a poor prognosis for survival. Although prognostic factors, such as the number of organs involved and heart function or failure in respond to therapy have been clarified based on studies including a large series of patients, there are large interindividual differences in the prognosis of patients with primary AL-type renal amyloidosis.MethodsTo clarify the prognostic factors of AL-type renal amyloidosis, we retrospectively investigated the clinical manifestations, histopathological data, and prognosis of 21 patients with amyloidosis, who had been diagnosed by renal biopsy.ResultsEleven patients died, at a mean observational time of 21.7 months after renal biopsy, whereas the mean observational time was 51.0 months for the 10 patients who survived. The creatinine clearance rate was significantly higher, and the serum creatinine concentration and the grade of interstitial damage were significantly lower in surviving patients (P < 0.05). The presence of amyloid fibrils in organs other than the kidney did not influence prognosis for survival. However, the intraventricular septum was thinner in surviving patients (P < 0.1). Thirteen patients had undergone melphalan-prednisolone therapy, but it did not affect prognosis for survival. Cox proportional hazard regression analysis revealed that the renal function at the time of diagnosis was a significant and independent prognostic factor for survival.ConclusionsOur study demonstrated that renal function at the time of biopsy and renal interstitial damage are the best predictors of survival in AL-type renal amyloidosis.


Journal of Cardiology | 2016

Clinical characteristics of hemodialysis patients with atrial fibrillation: The RAKUEN (Registry of atrial fibrillation in chronic kidney disease under hemodialysis from Niigata) study

Wataru Mitsuma; Taku Matsubara; Katsuharu Hatada; Shunsuke Imai; Noriko Saito; Hisaki Shimada; Shigeru Miyazaki

BACKGROUND Clinical characteristics, management, and outcomes in hemodialysis patients with atrial fibrillation (AF) remain unclear. METHODS AND RESULTS We studied 423 Japanese patients undergoing maintenance hemodialysis (age 65.2±12.4 years, male 70%, mean duration of hemodialysis 139±124 months). AF was present in 19% (n=82) and was independently related to increased age (odds ratio 1.070, 95% confidence interval 1.043-1.098), longer hemodialysis duration (odds ratio 1.006, 95% confidence interval 1.004-1.008), and congestive heart failure (odds ratio 2.749, 95% confidence interval 1.546-4.891). During observations lasting a mean of 36 months, the incidences of all-cause death, cardiovascular death, and major bleeding, in particular gastrointestinal bleeding, were significantly higher in the AF (n=82) than the non-AF (n=341) patients (p<0.001, p=0.004, p=0.002, p=0.027, respectively), but the incidence of ischemic stroke/systemic embolism was similar in the AF and non-AF patients. AF was independently associated with all-cause death (hazard ratio 1.728, 95% confidence interval 1.123-2.660) and major bleeding (hazard ratio 1.984, 95% confidence interval 1.010-3.896). Warfarin was prescribed in 33% of the AF patients, but the rates of all-cause death, ischemic stroke, and major bleeding during the study period were not significantly different between warfarin (n=27) and non-warfarin (n=55) groups. CONCLUSIONS In our hemodialysis patients, AF was a common comorbidity and was independently associated with all-cause death and major bleeding, but not with increased risk of ischemic stroke.


Clinical Transplantation | 2001

Intratubular calcification in a post-renal transplanted patient with secondary hyperparathyroidism

Seitaro Iguchi; Shinnichi Nishi; Junnichi Shinbo; Noriaki Iino; J Junichiro Kazama; Hisaki Shimada; Mitsuhiro Ueno; Kazuhide Saitou; Toshiki Tanigawa; K Takahashi; Fumitake Gejyo

Iguchi S, Nishi S, Shinbo J, Iino N, Kazama JJ, Shimada H, Ueno M, Saitou K, Tanigawa T, Takahashi K, Gejyo F. Intra‐tubular calcification in a post‐renal transplanted patient with secondary hyperparathyroidism. Clin Transplantation 2001: 15 (Supplement 5): 51–54. ©Munksgaard, 2001


Nephrology | 1997

A clinicopathological study of adult Japanese IgA nephropathy patients: Early stage cases and cases with exacerbation

Hisaki Shimada; Naofumi Imai; Yoshikazu Miyakawa; Tukasa Nakamaru; Ryo Karasawa; Yutaka Osawa; Mitsuhiro Ueno; Shinichi Nishi; Yasushi Suzuki; Masaaki Arakawa

Summary: Most cases of adult type IgA nephropathy (IgAN) have an insidious onset and asymptomatic course. However, some patients reveal recurrent macroscopic haematuria following episodes of respiratory or urinary tract infections. In order to clarify the correlation between clinical features and histological alterations or prognosis, 42 cases of early stage IgAN and 40 cases with acute exacerbation episodes were investigated and compared with a control group. Early stage cases were defined as having had a renal biopsy within 1 year after the first detection of urinary abnormalities, and had normal urinary findings within the 12 months before the first detection of urinary abnormalities. Acute exacerbation cases were defined as macroscopic haematuria or worsening of urinary abnormalities after acute infectious episodes and undergoing a renal biopsy within 120 days after the onset of these episodes. the early stage cases had better renal function and lower systolic and diastolic blood pressure than that of control group. They also showed milder changes in mesangial cell proliferation, mesangial matrix increase, totally sclerotic glomeruli, and tubulo‐interstitial changes. However, it is important to note that glomerular and interstitial sclerotic changes were observed even in early stage cases. Endothelial detachment was noticed more frequently in the early stage cases. Acute exacerbation cases revealed lesions of endocapillary proliferation, mesangiolysis and endothelial detachment more frequently, although these changes were segmental in each glomerulus. There was no statistical difference in disease prognosis between cases with and without acute exacerbation. These data indicated that there are characteristic histological changes in early stage cases and acute exacerbation cases of IgAN.


Nephron | 2001

Membranoproliferative Glomerulonephritis Associated with Hypocomplementemic Urticarial Vasculitis after Complete Remission of Membranous Nephropathy

Takako Saeki; Mitsuhiro Ueno; Hisaki Shimada; Shinichi Nishi; Naoshi Imai; Shouji Miyamura; Fumitake Gejou; Masaaki Arakawa

A 49-year-old-man developed proteinuria in 1978. He was diagnosed as having membranous nephropathy by renal biopsy and was treated with prednisolone. The proteinuria disappeared completely and the treatment was stopped. In 1995, after complete remission, he developed nephrotic syndrome with chronic urticaria and hypocomplementemia. Renal biopsy revealed membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis (type I) and skin biopsy showed leukocytoclastic vasculitis, which was compatible with hypocomplementemic vasculitis syndrome. Steroid therapy was very effective.


Clinical and Experimental Nephrology | 2003

Patient with diffuse mesangial and endocapillary proliferative glomerulonephritis with hypocomplementemia and elevated anti-streptolysin O treated with prednisolone, angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor, and angiotensin II receptor antagonist.

Satoshi Ito; Hideyuki Kuriyama; Noriaki Iino; Seitaro Iguchi; Hisaki Shimada; Mitsuhiro Ueno; Ichiei Narita; Masaaki Nakano; Shinichi Nishi; Ryo Karasawa; Fumitake Gejyo

A 24-year-old woman was admitted to Toyosaka Hospital with proteinuria, hematuria, lymphopenia, hypocomplementemia, positive anti-nuclear antibody (ANA), and elevation of anti-streptolysin O (ASO). Renal biopsy specimen revealed diffuse mesangial and endocapillary glomerulonephritis with crescent formation and duplication of the capillary loop on light microscopic examination. Mild to moderate proliferation of mesangial matrix and cells were observed. On immunofluorescence (IF) examination, deposition of IgG, IgA, IgM, C1q, C3, and C4 to the mesangium and capillary wall were observed. By electron microscopy (EM), mesangial, subendothelial, and subepithelial deposits were recognized. However, microtubular structure in glomerular endothelial cells, fingerprint structures, and circumferential mesangial interposition were not observed by EM. The patient was referred to our hospital, but there was no change in her proteinuria 3 weeks after admission. The elevation of ASO, hypocomplementemia, and endocapillary proliferation suggested acute glomerulonephritis, while lymphocytopenia, positive ANA, the persistent hypocomplementemia, and various deposits detected by IF and EM suggested lupus nephritis; however, she did not fulfill the classification criteria of systemic lupus erythematosus. We started prednisolone (40 mg/day) with the diagnosis of chronic glomerulonephritis revealing diffuse mesangial and endocapillary proliferative glomerulonephritis, but it was not effective for the proteinuria. Quinapril (10 mg/day) and losartan (25 to 50 mg/day) were administered and the proteinuria decreased. It is possible that this use of an angiotensin converting-enzyme inhibitor and an angiotensin II receptor antagonist was effective in reducing the proteinuria in this patient.

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Mitsuhiro Ueno

Joetsu University of Education

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