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Featured researches published by Itsuko Sato.


Brain & Development | 2015

Serum unbound bilirubin as a predictor for clinical kernicterus in extremely low birth weight infants at a late age in the neonatal intensive care unit

Ichiro Morioka; Hajime Nakamura; Tsubasa Koda; Hitomi Sakai; Daisuke Kurokawa; Masahiko Yonetani; Takeshi Morisawa; Yoshinori Katayama; Hiroshi Wada; Masahisa Funato; Akihiro Takatera; Akihisa Okumura; Itsuko Sato; Seiji Kawano; Kazumoto Iijima

BACKGROUND This study aimed to evaluate peak serum total bilirubin (TB) and unbound bilirubin (UB) levels in preterm infants with clinical kernicterus (KI) who were diagnosed by clinical findings during infancy. DESIGN/SUBJECTS For this multicenter retrospective study, 18 Japanese extremely low birth weight (ELBW) infants with clinical KI were included. Clinical KI was diagnosed based on the presence of motor developmental impairment with/without athetosis, and abnormal magnetic resonance imaging or brainstem auditory evoked potential findings during infancy. High and low TB or UB levels were defined as serum TB levels ⩾ and <15 mg/dL or serum UB levels ⩾ and <0.8 μg/dL, respectively. The clinical characteristics of KI preterm infants were analyzed. The proportion of infants with high or low serum TB levels and with high or low serum UB levels was then investigated. Sensitivity and specificity were calculated. RESULTS In 18 KI infants, the median age when serum TB levels peaked was 28 days after birth. In eight KI infants with low serum TB levels, 88% of them had high serum UB levels. For comparison of the number of infants who had high or low serum TB and UB levels, the sensitivity was 90% and specificity was 13%. CONCLUSIONS Serum TB and UB levels peak at a later age than expected. Chronic serum UB monitoring may be helpful for identifying ELBW infants at risk for developing KI, even when they do not have high serum TB levels.


Pediatrics International | 2013

Novel treatment strategy for Japanese newborns with high serum unbound bilirubin

Tomoyuki Yokota; Ichiro Morioka; Takayuki Kodera; Takeshi Morisawa; Itsuko Sato; Seiji Kawano; Tsubasa Koda; Kiyomi Matsuo; Kazumichi Fujioka; Satoru Morikawa; Akihiro Miwa; Akio Shibata; Naoki Yokoyama; Masahiko Yonetani; Hideto Yamada; Hajime Nakamura; Kazumoto Iijima

Serum unbound bilirubin (UB) is a measure of bilirubin not bound to albumin, and has been reported to be better than total bilirubin level at identifying infants at risk of developing bilirubin‐induced neurotoxicity, including auditory abnormalities. A detailed treatment strategy for newborns with high serum UB has not been established. The aim of this study was to assess auditory outcomes in newborns with serum UB ≥1.00 μg/dL who were treated according to a novel treatment protocol.


Lipids in Health and Disease | 2012

Fasting remnant lipoproteins can predict postprandial hyperlipidemia.

Tomoki Nagata; Daisuke Sugiyama; Takako Kise; Satomi Tsuji; Hideo Ohira; Itsuko Sato; Mari Yamamoto; Hitomi Kohsaka; Seiji Kawano; Shizuya Yamashita; Yuichi Ishikawa; Yoshio Fujioka

BackgroundHypertriglyceridemia and postprandial hyperlipidemia is thought to play an important role in atherosclerosis, but to select patients at high-risk for cardiovascular diseases is difficult with triglycerides (TG) alone in these patients.MethodsTo predict postprandial hyperlipidemia without inconvenient test meal loading, we examined lipid concentrations before and after test meal loading and fasting adiponectin, and investigated which of these other than TG were significant during the fasting period in 45 healthy individuals (men: women, 26:19).ResultsTG, remnant-like particle-cholesterol and -triglyceride (RemL-C, RLP-C, and RLP-TG), and TG/apolipoprotein(apo)B were significantly elevated after loading and fasting values significantly and positively correlated with incremental area under the curve (iAUC) (r=0.80, r=0.79, r=0.63, r=0.58, r=0.54; p<0.0001). Fasting adiponectin positively correlated with fasting high-density lipoprotein-cholesterol (r=0.43, p<0.005) and apoA-I (r=0.34, p<0.05), and negatively correlated with iAUC of TG, RemL-C, RLP-C, RLP-TG, and TG/apoB (r=−0.37, r=−0.41, r=−0.37, r=−0.36, r=−0.37; p<0.05). We constructed the model of multivariable linear regression analysis without fasting TG. In the sex-, BMI-, age-, and waist circumference-adjusted analysis of postprandial TG elevation 2 h after test meal loading in all participants, RemL-C, RLP-C, RLP-TG, and TG/apoB were significant factors, but adiponectin was not.ConclusionFasting triglyceride-rich lipoprotein-related values, especially RemL-C, RLP-C, RLP-TG, and TG/apoB are useful predictors of postprandial hyperlipidemia in young healthy individuals. Although fasting adiponectin concentration correlated with the iAUCs for TG, RemL-C, RLP-C, RLP-TG, and TG/apoB, it was not a significant predictor of postprandial hyperlipidemia in multivariable linear regression analysis.


Circulation: Genomic and Precision Medicine | 2018

Cardiac Dysfunction in Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy Is Less Frequent in Patients With Mutations in the Dystrophin Dp116 Coding Region Than in Other Regions

Tetsushi Yamamoto; Hiroyuki Awano; Zhujun Zhang; Mio Sakuma; Shoko Kitaaki; Masaaki Matsumoto; Masashi Nagai; Itsuko Sato; Takamitsu Imanishi; Nobuhide Hayashi; Masafumi Matsuo; Kazumoto Iijima; Jun Saegusa

Background: Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD), the most common inherited muscular disease in childhood, is caused by dystrophin deficiency because of mutations in the DMD gene. Although DMD is characterized by fatal progressive muscle wasting, cardiomyopathy is the most important nonmuscle symptom threatening the life of patients with DMD. The relationship between cardiac involvement and dystrophin isoforms has not been analyzed. Methods and Results: The results of 1109 echocardiograms obtained from 181 Japanese DMD patients with confirmed mutations in the DMD gene were retrospectively analyzed. Patients showed an age-related decline in left ventricular ejection fraction. Patients were divided by patterns of dystrophin isoform deficiency into 5 groups. The cardiac dysfunction-free survival was significantly higher in the group with mutations in the Dp116 coding region than the others, whereas no significant differences in the other 3 groups. At age 25 years, the cardiac dysfunction-free rate was 0.6 in the Dp116 group, but only 0.1 in others. PCR amplification of Dp116 transcript in human cardiac muscle indicated promoter activation. Conclusions: Left ventricular ejection fraction in DMD declined stepwise with age. Cardiac dysfunction was less frequent in Dp116-deficient than other patients with DMD. Dp116 transcript was identified in human cardiac muscle for the first time. These results indicate that Dp116 is associated with cardiac involvement in DMD.


Annals of Clinical Biochemistry | 2014

Postnatal serum concentrations of endogenous free fatty acids in newborns admitted to the neonatal intensive care unit: effects on unbound bilirubin

Tsubasa Koda; Ichiro Morioka; Tomoyuki Yokota; Daisuke Kurokawa; Kaori Fujita; Miwako Nagasaka; Kiyomi Matsuo; Akio Shibata; Itsuko Sato; Seiji Kawano; Hideto Yamada; Hajime Nakamura; Kazumoto Iijima

Background Few studies have reported the characterization of postnatal serum concentrations of endogenous free fatty acids (FFAs) in high-risk newborns and their effects on unbound bilirubin (UB). Methods Serum concentrations of FFA, albumin (Alb), UB and total bilirubin (TB) were measured in 713 samples obtained within 5 days after birth from 439 newborns without intravenous lipid supplementation admitted to the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU). Serum FFA was reported as the day-specific percentile-based curve. Serum FFA and FFA/Alb ratios were compared in term and preterm patients. To assess the impact of FFA on UB, daily changes in FFA/Alb and UB/TB ratios were compared in term patients without receiving phototherapy or any drugs, and linear regression analysis was performed between FFA/Alb ratio and serum UB concentration or UB/TB ratio using 140 sera with hyperbilirubinemia of term and preterm patients. Results A percentile-based curve showed that serum FFA peaked at 1 day of age and progressively decreased. Serum FFA and the FFA/Alb ratio were significantly higher in term than in preterm patients at birth and 1 and 3 days of age. FFA/Alb ratio significantly changed over 5 days after birth, but UB/TB ratio remained constant. FFA/Alb ratio did not correlate with serum UB concentration or UB/TB ratio in sera with hyperbilirubinemia. Conclusions We assessed postnatal concentrations of serum FFA in a large number of high-risk newborns admitted to the NICU. The concentration of endogenous FFAs in newborns admitted to the NICU was not rising until it influenced UB.


Annals of Clinical Biochemistry | 2018

ANNALS EXPRESS: Fetal hemoglobin level at postmenstrual age is unaffected by gestational age at birth

Yuki Watanabe; Kayo Osawa; Itsuko Sato; Sota Iwatani; Ruri Kono; Ikuyo Hayakawa; Nobuhide Hayashi; Kazumoto Iijima; Jun Saegusa; Ichiro Morioka

Background Our aim was to determine whether the postnatal age or postmenstrual age is a more appropriate criterion for evaluating foetal haemoglobin concentrations. Methods Blood samples (n = 1095) were obtained from 394 infants and were divided into two groups based on gestational age at birth: <37 weeks (n = 491) and ≥37 weeks (n = 604). (1) Foetal haemoglobin concentrations divided by one month at age after birth were compared between the groups. (2) Foetal haemoglobin concentrations divided into ≤9 months from last menstruation and one month thereafter were compared between the groups. Results In samples from infants ≥37 weeks’ gestational age at birth, the median foetal haemoglobin concentrations were 69.5%, 21.4% and 3.6% at 0–1 month, 2–3 months and ≥5 months after birth, respectively. The median foetal haemoglobin concentrations in infants <37 weeks’ gestational age at birth were 75.5%, 62.7% and 5.1% at 0–1 month, 2–3 months and ≥5 months after birth, respectively. The median foetal haemoglobin concentrations in infants <37 weeks’ gestational age at birth were significantly higher than that in infants ≥37 weeks’ gestational age at birth at all postnatal age points. (2) There was no significant difference between the groups at all age points after nine months of postmenstrual age: 72.5 and 75.3% at 9–10 months, 25.1 and 26.6% at 11–12 months and 5.5 and 4.6% at >13 months after last menstruation in infants ≥37 and <37 weeks’ gestational age at birth, respectively. Conclusions Evaluation of foetal haemoglobin concentrations at postmenstrual age is unaffected by gestational age at birth.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Age-specific percentile-based reference curve of serum procalcitonin concentrations in Japanese preterm infants

Noriko Fukuzumi; Kayo Osawa; Itsuko Sato; Sota Iwatani; Ruri Ishino; Nobuhide Hayashi; Kazumoto Iijima; Jun Saegusa; Ichiro Morioka

Procalcitonin (PCT) levels are elevated early after birth in newborn infants; however, the physiological features and reference of serum PCT concentrations have not been fully studied in preterm infants. The aims of the current study were to establish an age-specific percentile-based reference curve of serum PCT concentrations in preterm infants and determine the features. The PCT concentration peaked in infants at 1 day old and decreased thereafter. At 1 day old, serum PCT concentrations in preterm infants <34 weeks’ gestational age were higher than those in late preterm infants between 34 and 36 weeks’ gestational age or term infants ≥37 weeks’ gestational age. Although the 50-percentile value in late preterm and term infants reached the adult normal level (0.1 ng/mL) at 5 days old, it did not in preterm infants. It took 9 weeks for preterm infants to reach it. Serum PCT concentrations at onset in late-onset infected preterm infants were over the 95-percentile value. We showed that the physiological feature in preterm infants was significantly different from that in late preterm infants, even in those <37 weeks’ gestational age. To detect late-onset bacterial infection and sepsis, an age-specific percentile-based reference curve may be useful in preterm infants.


Lipids in Health and Disease | 2014

Correction: fasting remnant lipoproteins can predict postprandial hyperlipidemia

Tomoki Nagata; Daisuke Sugiyama; Takako Kise; Satomi Tsuji; Hideo Ohira; Itsuko Sato; Mari Yamamoto; Hitomi Kohsaka; Seiji Kawano; Shizuya Yamashita; Yuichi Ishikawa; Yoshio Fujioka

After publication of this article[1], we noted formatting errors in Table 2. Elapsed time (h) columns at lines 25 to 43 were out of alignment and the true 8h data were missing. The corrected version of table 2 is below (Table 1).


Journal of Atherosclerosis and Thrombosis | 2009

Significance of measuring serum concentrations of remnant lipoproteins and apolipoprotein B-48 in fasting period.

Itsuko Sato; Yuichi Ishikawa; Ai Ishimoto; Shiho Katsura; Atsushi Toyokawa; Fujio Hayashi; Seiji Kawano; Yoshio Fujioka; Shizuya Yamashita; Shunichi Kumagai


Journal of Atherosclerosis and Thrombosis | 2006

The Lipoprotein Fraction between VLDL and LDL Detected by Biphasic Agarose Gel Electrophoresis Reflects Serum Remnant Lipoprotein and Lp(a) Concentrations

Itsuko Sato; Takahiro Taniguchi; Yuichi Ishikawa; Mari Kusuki; Fujio Hayashi; Masahiko Mukai; Seiji Kawano; Shinichi Kondo; Shizuya Yamashita; Shunichi Kumagai

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