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Dive into the research topics where Jaime Moriguchi is active.

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Featured researches published by Jaime Moriguchi.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1995

Effect of Pravastatin on Outcomes after Cardiac Transplantation

J. Kobashigawa; Steven Katznelson; Hillel Laks; Jay Johnson; Lawrence A. Yeatman; Xiu Ming Wang; David Chia; Paul I. Terasaki; Alejandro Sabad; Gregory A. Cogert; Kevin D. Trosian; Michele A. Hamilton; Jaime Moriguchi; N. Kawata; Antoine Hage; Davis C. Drinkwater; Lynne Warner Stevenson

BACKGROUND Hypercholesterolemia is common after cardiac transplantation and may contribute to the development of coronary vasculopathy. Pravastatin, a 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl coenzyme A (HMG-CoA) reductase inhibitor, has been shown to be effective and safe in lowering cholesterol levels after cardiac transplantation. Cell-culture studies using inhibitors of HMG-CoA reductase have suggested an immunosuppressive effect. METHODS Early after transplantation, we randomly assigned consecutive patients to receive either pravastatin (47 patients) or no HMG-CoA reductase inhibitor (50 patients). RESULTS Twelve months after transplantation, the pravastatin group had lower mean (+/- SD) cholesterol levels than the control group (193 +/- 36 vs. 248 +/- 49 mg per deciliter, P < 0.001), less frequent cardiac rejection accompanied by hemodynamic compromise (3 vs. 14 patients, P = 0.005), better survival (94 percent vs. 78 percent, P = 0.025), and a lower incidence of coronary vasculopathy in the transplant as determined by angiography and at autopsy (3 vs. 10 patients, P = 0.049). There was no difference between the two groups in the incidence of mild or moderate episodes of cardiac rejection. In a subgroup of study patients, intracoronary ultrasound measurements at base line and one year after transplantation showed less progression in the pravastatin group in maximal intimal thickness (0.11 +/- 0.09 mm, vs. 0.23 +/- 0.16 mm in the control group; P = 0.002) and in the intimal index (0.05 +/- 0.03 vs. 0.10 +/- 0.10, P = 0.031). In a subgroup of patients, the cytotoxicity of natural killer cells was lower in the pravastatin group than in the control group (9.8 percent vs. 22.2 percent specific lysis, P = 0.014). CONCLUSIONS After cardiac transplantation, pravastatin had beneficial effects on cholesterol levels, the incidence of rejection causing hemodynamic compromise, one-year survival, and the incidence of coronary vasculopathy.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1997

Impact of a comprehensive heart failure management program on hospital readmission and functional status of patients with advanced heart failure.

Gregg C. Fonarow; Lynne Warner Stevenson; Julie A. Walden; Nancy Livingston; Anthony Steimle; Michele A. Hamilton; Jaime Moriguchi; Jan H. Tillisch; Mary A. Woo

OBJECTIVES To assess the impact of a comprehensive heart failure management program, functional status, hospital readmission rate and estimated hospital costs were determined and compared for the 6 months before and the 6 months after referral. BACKGROUND The course of advanced heart failure is characterized by progressive clinical deterioration reflected in frequent hospital admissions, which comprise the major financial cost. METHODS Over a 3-year period, 214 patients were accepted for heart transplantation and discharged after evaluation, which included adjustments in medical therapy and intensive patient education. Patients were in New York Heart Association functional class III or IV (94 and 120 patients, respectively), with a mean left ventricular ejection fraction of 0.21, peak oxygen consumption of 11 ml/kg per min and a total of 429 hospital admissions in the previous 6 months (average 2.0 per patient). Changes in the medical regimen included a 98% increase in angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor dose and a flexible diuretic regimen after 4.2-liter net diuresis, with counseling also regarding diet and progressive exercise. RESULTS During the 6 months after referral, there were only 63 hospital readmissions (85% reduction), with 0.29/patient (p < 0.0001). Functional status improved as assessed by functional class (p < 0.0001) and peak oxygen consumption (15.2 vs. 11.0 ml/kg per min, p < 0.001). The same results were seen after excluding the 35 patients without full 6-month follow-up (9 deaths, 14 urgent transplant procedures during hospital readmission, 12 elective transplant procedures from home); 34 hospital admissions occurred after referral, compared with 344 before referral. Even when adding in the initial hospital admission after referral for these 179 patients, there was a 35% decrease in total hospital admissions in the 6-month period. The estimated savings in hospital readmission costs after subtracting the initial hospital costs for management was


American Journal of Cardiology | 1990

Importance of hemodynamic response to therapy in predicting survival with ejection fraction ≤20% secondary to ischemic or nonischemic dilated cardiomyopathy

Lynne Warner Stevenson; Jan H. Tillisch; Michele A. Hamilton; Michael Luu; Catherine Chelimsky-Fallick; Jaime Moriguchi; J. Kobashigawa; Julie A. Walden

9,800 per patient. CONCLUSIONS Comprehensive heart failure management led to improved functional status and an 85% decrease in the hospital admission rate for transplant candidates discharged after evaluation. The potential to reduce both symptoms and costs suggests that referral to a heart failure program may be appropriate not only for potential heart transplantation, but also for medical management of persistent functional class III and IV heart failure.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1999

A Controlled Trial of Exercise Rehabilitation after Heart Transplantation

J. Kobashigawa; David A. Leaf; Nancy Y. Lee; Michael P. Gleeson; HongHu Liu; Michele A. Hamilton; Jaime Moriguchi; N. Kawata; K. Einhorn; Elise Herlihy; Hillel Laks

To identify patients with left ventricular ejection fractions less than 20% who are likely to survive on tailored medical therapy after referral to transplantation, this study of 152 patients addressed the hypotheses that (1) severely elevated filling pressures initially measured at referral would not necessarily predict poor outcome, (2) survival would be best when low pulmonary wedge pressures could be achieved with therapy tailored for hemodynamic goals, and (3) coronary artery disease would be an independent risk factor for early mortality. Despite an average initial ejection fraction of 0.15, cardiac index of 2.0 liters/min/m2 and pulmonary artery wedge pressure of 28 mm Hg, the actuarial survival with tailored therapy was 63% at 1 year, with 34 of 41 (83%) deaths occurring suddenly. Survival was not related to initial filling pressure elevation, but was best predicted by the pulmonary artery wedge pressures during therapy; patients achieving pressure of less than or equal to 16 mm Hg had 1-year survival of 83 vs 38% (p = 0.0001). The other independent predictors were serum sodium and coronary artery disease. Patients with high filling pressures during therapy and coronary artery disease had 21% survival at 1 year. Survival after referral to transplantation with an ejection fraction less than or equal to 20% is better than previously described. Patients in whom left ventricular filling pressures cannot be adequately reduced by tailored therapy, particularly if coronary artery disease is present, should be considered for early transplantation.


Circulation | 1990

Exercise capacity for survivors of cardiac transplantation or sustained medical therapy for stable heart failure.

Lynne Warner Stevenson; K Sietsema; Jan H. Tillisch; Virginia Lem; Julie A. Walden; J. Kobashigawa; Jaime Moriguchi

BACKGROUND In patients who have received a cardiac transplant, the denervated donor heart responds abnormally to exercise and exercise tolerance is reduced. The role of physical exercise in the treatment of patients who have undergone cardiac transplantation has not been determined. We assessed the effects of training on the capacity for exercise early after cardiac transplantation. METHODS Twenty-seven patients who were discharged within two weeks after receiving a heart transplant were randomly assigned to participate in a six-month structured cardiac-rehabilitation program (exercise group, 14 patients) or to undergo unstructured therapy at home (control group, 13 patients). Each patient in the exercise group underwent an individualized program of muscular-strength and aerobic training under the guidance of a physical therapist, whereas control patients received no formal exercise training. Cardiopulmonary stress testing was performed at base line (within one month after heart transplantation) and six months later. RESULTS As compared with the control group, the exercise group had significantly greater increases in peak oxygen consumption (mean increase, 4.4 ml per kilogram of body weight per minute [49 percent] vs. 1.9 ml per kilogram per minute [18 percent]; P=0.01) and workload (mean increase, 35 W [59 percent] vs. 12 W [18 percent]; P=0.01) and a greater reduction in the ventilatory equivalent for carbon dioxide (mean decrease, 13 [20 percent] vs. 6 [11 percent]; P=0.02). The mean dose of prednisone, the number of patients taking antihypertensive medications, the average number of episodes of rejection and of infection during the study period, and weight gain did not differ significantly between the groups. CONCLUSIONS When initiated early after cardiac transplantation, exercise training increases the capacity for physical work.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 2014

Complications of Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation for Treatment of Cardiogenic Shock and Cardiac Arrest: A Meta-Analysis of 1,866 Adult Patients

Richard Cheng; Rory Hachamovitch; M. Kittleson; J. Patel; F. Arabia; Jaime Moriguchi; F. Esmailian; Babak Azarbal

Cardiac transplantation is predicted to improve survival for patients with severe symptoms of heart failure and ejection fraction of 20% or less, but the exercise capacity after cardiac transplantation is less than normal. Patients responding to vasodilators and diuretics have progressive improvement in exercise capacity despite low ejection fraction. We hypothesized that among patients currently considered appropriate for transplantation who could nonetheless subsequently be stabilized on medical therapy tailored to hemodynamic goals, survivors after 6 months of sustained medical therapy would demonstrate exercise capacity comparable to that of survivors of transplantation. Of 146 patients referred, 118 (81%) were discharged on tailored therapy without transplantation, and 88 (60%) were stable for at least 1 month. Stability after discharge was more likely in patients with lower right atrial pressures and better renal function on therapy. Of the 88 stable patients, 45 patients were listed for transplant, and 43 were ineligible or unwilling. From these patients, 42 survivors for more than 6 months follow-up after cardiac transplantation or tailoring of medical therapy underwent exercise testing. Baseline functional and hemodynamic status and left ventricular ejection fraction (15 +/- 4%) were not different between the transplant and sustained medical survivor groups at the time of initial evaluation. After 14 +/- 6 months, left ventricular ejection fraction had increased to 62 +/- 7% after transplantation (p less than 0.01) and only 22 +/- 9% after sustained medical therapy (p less than 0.05). However, there were no significant differences in the maximum workload, oxygen uptake, anaerobic threshold, or maximum oxygen pulse between survivors of cardiac transplantation and survivors on sustained medical therapy.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


American Journal of Cardiology | 1993

Impact of left ventricular cavity size on survival in advanced heart failure.

Thomas H. Lee; Michele A. Hamilton; Lynne Warner Stevenson; Jaime Moriguchi; Gregg C. Fqnarow; John S. Child; Hillel Laks; Julie A. Walden

BACKGROUND Venoarterial extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) has been used successfully for treatment of cardiogenic shock or cardiac arrest. The exact complication rate is not well understood, in part because of small study sizes. In the absence of large clinical trials, performance of pooled analysis represents the best method for ascertaining complication rates for ECMO. METHODS A systematic PubMed search was conducted on ECMO for treatment of cardiogenic shock or cardiac arrest in adult patients only, updated to November 2012. Studies with more than 10 patients published in the year 2000 or later that reported complication rates for ECMO were included. Specific complications analyzed included lower extremity ischemia, fasciotomy or compartment syndrome, amputation, stroke, neurologic complications, acute kidney injury, renal replacement therapy, major or significant bleeding, rethoracotomy for bleeding or tamponade, and significant infection. For studies that included overlapping patients, the largest study was included and the others excluded. Cochrans Q and I-squared were calculated. A more conservative random-effects model was chosen for all analyses. RESULTS Twenty studies were included in the analyses encompassing 1,866 patients. Seventeen studies reported survival to hospital discharge, with a cumulative survival rate of 534 of 1,529, and a range of 20.8% to 65.4%. Analyses encompassed 192 to 1,452 patients depending on the specific complication analyzed. The pooled estimate rates of complications with 95% confidence intervals were as follows: lower extremity ischemia, 16.9% (12.5% to 22.6%); fasciotomy or compartment syndrome, 10.3% (7.3% to 14.5%); lower extremity amputation, 4.7% (2.3% to 9.3%); stroke, 5.9% (4.2% to 8.3%); neurologic complications, 13.3% (9.9% to 17.7%); acute kidney injury, 55.6% (35.5% to 74.0%); renal replacement therapy, 46.0% (36.7% to 55.5%); major or significant bleeding, 40.8% (26.8% to 56.6%); rethoracotomy for bleeding or tamponade in postcardiotomy patients, 41.9% (24.3% to 61.8%); and significant infection, 30.4% (19.5% to 44.0%). CONCLUSIONS Although ECMO can improve survival of patients with advanced heart disease, there is significant associated morbidity with performance of this intervention. These findings should be incorporated in the risk-benefit analysis when initiation of ECMO for cardiogenic shock is being considered.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1998

Safety and Hemodynamic Effects of Intravenous Triiodothyronine in Advanced Congestive Heart Failure

Michele A. Hamilton; Lynne Warner Stevenson; Gregg C. Fonarow; Anthony Steimle; Joshua I. Goldhaber; John S. Child; Inder J. Chopra; Jaime Moriguchi; Antoine Hage

Although left ventricular (LV) dilation has been assumed to be deleterious, the physiologic significance of severe LV dilation in advanced heart failure and its impact on survival have not been defined. LV end-diastolic dimension was measured by M-mode echocardiography in 382 patients with class III or IV heart failure symptoms (mean LV ejection fraction 20 +/- 8%) referred for evaluation for cardiac transplantation. All patients underwent right-sided heart catheterization, and received vasodilator and diuretic therapy adjusted to hemodynamic goals. Although 183 patients with massive LV dilation by LV index > 4 cm/m2 (LV index = LV end-diastolic dimension/estimated body surface area) had a similar severity of hemodynamic impairment to that of 199 patients with only moderate dilation (LV index < or = 4 cm/m2), with baseline mean cardiac index of 2 liters/m/m2 and mean pulmonary arterial wedge pressure of 26 mm Hg in both groups, their actuarial 2-year survival without transplantation was much lower (49 vs 75%; p = 0.004). In the Cox proportional-hazards model, LV index predicted total and sudden death, independent of etiology of heart failure, ejection fraction and other parameters of disease severity. Follow-up echocardiograms (mean 13 +/- 6 months) in 80 heart failure survivors without transplantation showed an increase in mean LV ejection fraction (22 +/- 8% to 26 +/- 13%), but no change in mean LV index in either the massive or moderately dilated groups. Thus, massive LV dilation is an independent contributor to poor outcome in patients with advanced heart failure, and may be stabilized by aggressive vasodilator and diuretic therapy.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1995

Improvement in exercise capacity of candidates awaiting heart transplantation

Lynne Warner Stevenson; Anthony Steimle; Gregg C. Fonarow; Michael Kermani; Donna Kermani; Michele A. Hamilton; Jaime Moriguchi; Julie A. Walden; Jan H. Tillisch; Davis C. Drinkwater; Hillel Laks

Most patients with advanced congestive heart failure have altered thyroid hormone metabolism. A low triiodothyronine level is associated with impaired hemodynamics and is an independent predictor of poor survival. This study sought to evaluate safety and hemodynamic effects of short-term intravenous administration of triiodothyronine in patients with advanced heart failure. An intravenous bolus dose of triiodothyronine, with or without a 6- to 12-hour infusion (cumulative dose 0. 1 5 to 2.7 microg/kg), was administered to 23 patients with advanced heart failure (mean left ventricular ejection fraction 0.22 +/- 0.01). Cardiac rhythm and hemodynamic status were monitored for 12 hours, and basal metabolic rate by indirect calorimetry, echocardiographic parameters of systolic function and valvular regurgitation, thyroid hormone, and catecholamine levels were measured at baseline and at 4 to 6 hours. Triiodothyronine was well tolerated without episodes of ischemia or clinical arrhythmia. There was no significant change in heart rate or metabolic rate and there was minimal increase in core temperature. Cardiac output increased with a reduction in systemic vascular resistance in patients receiving the largest dose, consistent with a peripheral vasodilatory effect. Acute intravenous administration of triiodothyronine is well tolerated in patients with advanced heart failure, establishing the basis for further investigation into the safety and potential hemodynamic benefits of longer infusions, combined infusion with inotropic agents, oral triiodothyronine replacement therapy, and new triiodothyronine analogs.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1992

Effect of direct vasodilation with hydralazine versus angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibition with captopril on mortality in advanced heart failure: The Hy-C trial

Gregg C. Fonarow; Catherine Chelimsky-Fallick; Lynne Warner Stevenson; Michael Luu; Michele A. Hamilton; Jaime Moriguchi; Jan H. Tillisch; Julie A. Walden; Elaine Albanese

OBJECTIVES This study determined the frequency of improvement in peak oxygen uptake and its role in reevaluation of candidates awaiting heart transplantation. BACKGROUND Ambulatory candidates for transplantation usually wait > 6 months to undergo the procedure, and during this period symptoms may lessen, and peak oxygen uptake may improve. Whereas initial transplant candidacy is based increasingly on objective criteria, there are no established guidelines for reevaluation to determine who can leave the active waiting list. METHODS All ambulatory transplant candidates with initial peak oxygen uptake < 14 ml/kg per min were identified. Of 107 such patients listed, 68 survived without early deterioration or transplantation to undergo repeat exercise. A strategy of reevaluation using specific clinical criteria and exercise performance was tested to determine whether patients with improved oxygen uptake could safely be followed without transplantation. RESULTS In 38 of the 68 patients, peak oxygen uptake increased by > or = 2 ml/kg per min to a level > or = 12 ml/kg per min after 6 +/- 5 months, together with an increase in anaerobic threshold, peak oxygen pulse and exercise heart rate reserve and a decrease in heart rate at rest. Increased peak oxygen uptake was accompanied by stable clinical status without congestion in 31 of 38 patients, and these 31 were taken off the active waiting list. At 2 years, their actuarial survival rate was 100%, and the survival rate without relisting for transplantation was 85%. CONCLUSION Reevaluation of exercise capacity and clinical status allowed removal of 31 (29%) of 107 ambulatory transplant candidates from the waiting list with excellent early survival despite low peak oxygen uptake on initial testing. The ability to increase peak oxygen uptake, particularly with increased peak oxygen pulse, may indicate improved prognosis as well as functional capacity and, in combination with stable clinical status, may be an indication to defer transplantation in favor of more compromised candidates.

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J. Kobashigawa

Cedars-Sinai Medical Center

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J. Patel

Cedars-Sinai Medical Center

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A. Ardehali

University of California

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M. Kittleson

Cedars-Sinai Medical Center

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Hillel Laks

University of California

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F. Esmailian

Cedars-Sinai Medical Center

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M. Kawano

University of California

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