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Featured researches published by Kanji Torizuka.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1984

Stress thallium-201 transaxial emission computed tomography: Quantitative versus qualitative analysis for evaluation of coronary artery disease

Nagara Tamaki; Yoshiharu Yonekura; Takao Mukai; Shusei Kodama; Kazunori Kadota; Hirofumi Kambara; Chuichi Kawai; Kanji Torizuka

Stress thallium-201 myocardial distribution was quantitatively evaluated by emission transaxial tomography in 104 patients who underwent coronary arteriography. The initial uptake and percent washout of thallium were assessed by the circumferential profile curves of the three short-axis sections and one middle right anterior oblique long-axis section. This quantitative tomographic analysis showed abnormal distribution in all but two patients (98%) with coronary artery disease, whereas qualitative analysis showed abnormality in 76 of the patients (93%). Quantitative analysis showed better sensitivity (91%) for detecting involved coronary vessels than qualitative analysis (80%, p less than 0.01), especially in three vessel disease (82 versus 67%, p less than 0.05). For localization of individual vessel involvement, quantitative analysis showed high sensitivity (right coronary artery: 96%, left anterior descending artery: 90% and left circumflex artery: 88%) as compared with qualitative analysis (88, 83 and 63%, respectively, p less than 0.05), while similar specificity was observed (92% for quantitative and 93% for qualitative analyses). Furthermore, in the study of patients without infarction, myocardial segments supplied by coronary vessels with moderate stenosis (51 to 75%) revealed abnormality more often with quantitative (81%) than with qualitative (56%) analysis. Thus, quantitative analysis of stress thallium emission tomography provides improved sensitivity for the detection of diseased coronary vessels in patients with three vessel disease and those with moderate stenosis. It is a valuable technique for the evaluation of coronary artery disease.


Annals of Internal Medicine | 1985

Primary Myxedema with Thyrotrophin-Binding Inhibitor Immunoglobulins: Clinical and Laboratory Findings in 15 Patients

Konishi Junji; Yasuhiro Iida; Kanji Kasagi; Takashi Misaki; Tetsuo Nakashima; Keigo Endo; Toru Mori; Shinichiro Shinpo; Yachiyo Nohara; Nobuo Matsuura; Kanji Torizuka

In a screening of 43 patients with primary myxedema, 9 patients were found to have IgG that inhibits the binding of 125I-thyrotrophin to its receptor (thyrotrophin-binding inhibitor immunoglobulins). Preparations of IgG from these patients did not stimulate thyroidal cyclic adenosine monophosphate generation and blocked thyroid stimulation by thyrotrophin in vitro. Clinical and laboratory features of 15 patients with this inhibitor, including 6 who were previously known, were compared with those of patients without the inhibitor. The patients with inhibitor, 2 men and 13 women, had onset of their hypothyroidism from age 2 to 49 years, and thyroid uptake in these patients was significantly lower than that in patients without inhibitor. Transient hypothyroidism was seen in all 5 infants born to 4 mothers having potent inhibitor immunoglobulins. These clinical findings indicate that thyrotrophin-receptor-blocking antibodies play a pathogenic role in a group of patients with primary myxedema.


Journal of Computer Assisted Tomography | 1987

Anterior and Posterior Lobes of the Pituitary Gland; Assessment by 1.5 T MR Imaging

Ichiro Fujisawa; Reinin Asato; Kazumasa Nishimura; Kaori Togashi; Kyo Itoh; Yoshihisa Nakano; Harumi Itoh; Nobuo Hashimoto; Juji Takeuchi; Kanji Torizuka

Pituitary glands of 60 normal volunteers (30 men 20–36 years old, and 30 women 18–42 years old) were studied by 1.5 T magnetic resonance (MR) imaging. The T1-weighted images (T1WI) [repetition time (TR) = 400 ms; echo time (TE) = 25 ms] were obtained in the coronal, sagittal, and axial planes. Proton density (PD)/T2-weighted images (PDW1/T2WI) (TR = 2,000 ms; TE = 25/100 ms) were obtained in the sagittal plane using 3 mm slice thickness. On T1WIs of all subjects the posterior part (PP) of the pituitary fossa showed the highest signal, which was indistinguishable from fatty tissue. This study reveals that this region of high signal intensity (PP) corresponds to the posterior lobe and not intrasellar fat because (a) its shape, size, and position are compatible with the posterior lobe; (b) its signal intensity differs from that of fatty tissue on PDWI and T2WI; (c) the absence of an intrinsic chemical shift artifact (CSA) characteristic of fat; and (d) due to CSA, a dorsum with fatty marrow is shifted relative to the PP (or may be made to merge with it). Regarding the differentiation of the two lobes of the pituitary gland on MR, the morphology of the anterior and posterior lobes was evaluated and great variation found. Appreciation of normal is particularly important in evaluating coronal images for small pituitary lesions.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1984

Stress scintigraphy using single-photon emission computed tomography in the evaluation of coronary artery disease

Ryuji Nohara; Hirofumi Kambara; Yukisono Suzuki; Shunichi Tamaki; Kazunori Kadota; Chuichi Kawai; Nagara Tamaki; Kanji Torizuka

Twenty-seven patients with angina pectoris, 24 with postmyocardial infarction angina and 7 with normal coronary arteries were examined by exercise thallium-201 emission computed tomography (SPECT) and planar scintigraphy. Exercise SPECT was compared with the reperfusion imaging obtained approximately 2 to 3 hours after exercise. The sensitivity and specificity of demonstrating involved coronary arteries by identifying the locations of myocardial perfusion defects were 96 and 87% for right coronary artery, 88 and 89% for left anterior descending artery (LAD) and 78 and 100% for left circumflex artery (LC). These figures are higher than those for planar scintigraphy (85 and 87% for right coronary artery, 73 and 89% for LAD and 39 and 100% for LC arteries). In patients with 3-vessel disease, sensitivity of SPECT (100, 88 and 75% for right coronary artery, LAD and LC, respectively) was higher than planar imaging (88, 63 and 31%, respectively), with a significant difference for LC (p less than 0.05). In 1, 2 and 0-vessel disease the sensitivity and specificity of the 2 techniques were comparable. Multivessel disease was more easily identified as multiple coronary involvement than planar imaging with a significant difference in 3-vessel disease (p less than 0.05). In conclusion, stress SPECT provides useful information for the identification of LC lesions in coronary heart disease, including 3-vessel involvement.


Radiology | 1975

Techniques, Indications and Results of Intraoperative Radiotherapy of Advanced Cancers

Mitsuyuki Abe; Masaji Takahashi; Eizo Yabumoto; Yasuto Onoyama; Kanji Torizuka; Takayoshi Tobe; Kenjiro Mori

After removing resectable lesions at operation, residual cancer nests were sterilized by irradiation before surgical closure. The great advantage of intraoperative radiotherapy lies in the treatment of lesions such as gastric cancers located near radiosensitive organs, and radioresistant tumors, such as soft-tissue sarcoma. Since the lesion is exposed directly to irradiation, a cancerocidal dose can be delivered without affecting normal structures. Clinical results have shown that cure can be expected following excision of the primary mass.


American Heart Journal | 1987

Detection of coronary artery disease with 13N-ammonia and high-resolution positron-emission computed tomography

Yoshiharu Yonekura; Nagara Tamaki; Michio Senda; Ryuji Nohara; Hirofumi Kambara; Yutaka Konishi; Harutoshi Koide; Shehbaz A. Kureshi; Hideo Saji; Toshihiko Ban; Chuichi Kawai; Kanji Torizuka

In order to evaluate the detectability of coronary artery disease (CAD) with positron-emission computed tomography (PET), we performed 13N-ammonia myocardial PET scanning at rest and with exercise loading in 20 normal subjects and 40 patients with CAD, by means of a high-resolution, multi-slice, whole-body PET scanner. Myocardial PET scanning was performed 3 minutes after injection of 13N-ammonia at rest and during exercise. The circumferential profile analysis of resting PET images revealed regional hypoperfusion in 96% of CAD patients with previous myocardial infarction and in 29% of those without infarction. Exercise PET studies showed high sensitivity (93%) in detecting CAD without myocardial infarction, whereas no abnormal hypoperfusion was detected in normal subjects. Segmental analysis of regional myocardial perfusion with exercise stress identified 67 of 75 stenosed vessels (89%). We conclude that 13N-ammonia myocardial PET with exercise loading provides high-quality tomographic images of regional myocardial perfusion and is a valuable technique for detecting CAD.


European Journal of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging | 1985

Myocardial positron computed tomography with 13N-ammonia at rest and during exercise

Nagara Tamaki; Yoshiharu Yonekura; Michio Senda; Shehbaz A. Kureshi; Hideo Saji; Shusei Kodama; Yutaka Konishi; Toshihiko Ban; Hirofumi Kambara; Chuichi Kawai; Kanji Torizuka

To assess the value of myocardial-perfusion positron computed tomography (PCT) for the evaluation of coronary artery disease (CAD), 13N-ammonia PCT using a whole-body multislice PCT device was performed at rest and during exercise in 6 normal subjects and 19 patients with angiographically documented CAD. The 13N-ammonia distribution in the myocardium was assessed both qualitatively and quantitatively. At rest and during exercise, the tracer distribution was homogeneous in the 6 normal cases. In the 19 patients with CAD, regional hypoperfusion was observed in 14 cases (74%) at rest and in 18 cases (95%) during exercise. Additional perfusion abnormalities were detecting during exercise in 12 cases. Segmental analysis of the myocardial perfusion identified 30 out of 34 stenosed vessels (88%) during exercise, with only one false-positive finding of diseased vessels (specificity, 98%). For the quantitative analysis of myocardial perfusion by PCT, the percentage of change in the tracer concentration in the same region between the rest and stress images was calculated. The concentration was slightly increased in normal myocardial segments (14.4%±5.8%; P<0.001), whereas in CAD, it was significantly decreased in segments with stenosed vesels (-18.0%±18.3%; P<0.02). We conclude that 13N-ammonia PCT at rest and during exercise provides highquality images, and is a sensitive and effective technique for detecting CAD and identifying individual stenosed vessels. Furthermore, this technique makes possible quantitative assessment of the coronary reserve function.


The Journal of Urology | 1978

Validity of 99mTc Dimercaptosuccinic Acid Renal Uptake for an Assessment of Individual Kidney Function

Juichi Kawamura; Shinichi Hosokawa; Osamu Yoshida; Fujita T; Yasushi Ishii; Kanji Torizuka

99mTc dimercaptosuccinic acid is a new renal scanning agent that provides a good quality of renal image as a result of preferential cortical accumulation and also makes feasible a quantitative assessment of separate kidney function, correlating well with renal plasma flow obtained from a 131I hippuran renogram of each kidney. By measuring the dimercaptosuccinic acid uptake, the cortical functioning nephrons can be determined independent of the activity from the urinary outflow tract. Such evaluations may replace the conventional split renal function study in which traumatic procedures, such as cystoscopy and ureteral catheterizations, are required. 99mTc dimercaptosuccinic acid scintigraphy causes less discomfort to the patient and can be performed repeatedly and routinely even in children and debilitated geriatric patients.


International Journal of Nuclear Medicine and Biology | 1985

The design of a pentavalent 99mTc− dimercaptosuccinate complex as a tumor imaging agent

Akira Yokoyama; Naotaka Hata; Kazuko Horiuchi; Hidesuke Masuda; Hideo Saji; Hitoya Ohta; Kazutaka Yamamoto; Keigo Endo; Kanji Torizuka

In our search for a technetium-tumor seeking agent, the chemical characteristic of polynuclear Ga-citrate attracted our attention. On this basis, we selected the ligand dimercaptosuccinic acid (DMS) and appropriate labeling conditions in the design of 99mTc(V)-DMS. Chemical characterization was performed by thin layer chromatography, electrophoresis, Sephadex column chromatography and spectrophotometric studies at the chemical concentration (99Tc). Biodistribution in mice bearing Ehrlich ascites tumor and scintigraphic images in VX-2 tumor-bearing rabbit, indicated the great applicability of 99mTc(V)-DMS as a new tumor imaging agent. Its distinctive characteristic, different from the kidney imaging agent (99mTc-DMSA) is demonstrated and the biological implication of hydrolytic polynucleation of pentavalent technetium, through an anionic specie Tc(V)O3-(4), in the tumor cell is discussed.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1983

Effects of coronary artery reperfusion on relation between creatine kinase-MB release and infarct size estimated by myocardial emission tomography with thallium-201 in man.

Shunichi Tamaki; Tomoyuki Murakami; Kazunori Kadota; Hirofumi Kambara; Yoshiki Yui; Hisayoshi Nakajima; Yukisono Suzuki; Ryuji Nohara; Yoshiki Takatsu; Chuichi Kawai; Nagara Tamaki; Takao Mukai; Kanji Torizuka

The quantitative relations between serum creatine kinase-MB isoenzyme (CK-MB) release and the final infarct size estimated by myocardial emission computed tomography with thallium-201 was assessed in 37 patients with a first acute transmural myocardial infarction who underwent intracoronary thrombolysis using urokinase 4.6 +/- 1.9 hours after the onset of symptoms. Serial CK-MB determinations were used to calculate the accumulated release of CK-MB (sigma CK-MB). Myocardial emission tomography with thallium-201 was performed 4 weeks after the onset, and infarct volume was measured from reconstructed tomographic images by computerized planimetry. The results are presented for two groups of patients: 11 patients with unsuccessful thrombolysis (group A) and 26 patients with successful thrombolysis (group B). An excellent linear relation was found for group A (sigma CK-MB = 6.4 X infarct volume + 47.7, r = 0.91), whereas a different linear relation was observed for group B (sigma CK-MB = 10.5 X infarct volume + 89.1, r = 0.80). Moreover, serum CK-MB activity reached a peak at 21.1 +/- 2.2 hours after the onset in group A and reached an earlier peak at 12.5 +/- 2.9 hours in group B (p less than 0.001). These data suggest that acute coronary recanalization alters the kinetics of CK-MB release, resulting in greater CK-MB release into the serum for equivalent infarct volume estimated by myocardial emission tomography with thallium-201. Thus, serum CK-MB time-activity curves after acute myocardial infarction may be influenced considerably by acute reperfusion, which is an important factor that should be incorporated in the interpretation of enzymatic estimates of infarct size in human patients.

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Takao Mukai

Kyoto College of Medical Technology

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Rikushi Morita

Shiga University of Medical Science

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Chuichi Kawai

Takeda Pharmaceutical Company

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