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Dive into the research topics where Kiyokazu Fukui is active.

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Featured researches published by Kiyokazu Fukui.


Journal of Arthroplasty | 2009

Minimum ten-year results of a porous acetabular component for Crowe I to III hip dysplasia using an elevated hip center.

Ayumi Kaneuji; Tanzo Sugimori; Toru Ichiseki; Kengo Yamada; Kiyokazu Fukui; Tadami Matsumoto

We conducted a retrospective study of the placement of porous-coated acetabular components using screws at more than 20 mm above the teardrop without structural bone graft for dysplastic hips to determine long-term outcome. Thirty hips (29 patients) were monitored for a mean of 15.2 years (range, 10.4-18.3 years) after surgery. Compared with 12 contralateral normal hips, the distance of the hip center from the teardrop was significantly high (26.8 +/- 4.8 and 13.4 +/- 2.7 mm P < .001); however, it was not laterally different (31. 5 +/- 5.1 and 31.7 +/- 5.0 mm). No acetabular components showed loosening. One metal shell was revised for wear and osteolysis. Morselized bone grafted in 25 hips was incorporated in all cases. Slight elevation of the hip center without lateralization in cementless cups fixed with screws was well tolerated for dysplastic hips.


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery-british Volume | 2015

Arthroscopy of the hip for patients with mild to moderate developmental dysplasia of the hip and femoroacetabular impingement: Outcomes following hip arthroscopy for treatment of chondrolabral damage

Kiyokazu Fukui; Christiano A.C. Trindade; Karen K. Briggs; Marc J. Philippon

The purpose of this study was to determine patient-reported outcomes of patients with mild to moderate developmental dysplasia of the hip (DDH) and femoroacetabular impingement (FAI) undergoing arthroscopy of the hip in the treatment of chondrolabral pathology. A total of 28 patients with a centre-edge angle between 15° and 19° were identified from an institutional database. Their mean age was 34 years (18 to 53), with 12 female and 16 male patients. All underwent labral treatment and concomitant correction of FAI. There were nine reoperations, with two patients requiring revision arthroscopy, two requiring periacetabular osteotomy and five needing total hip arthroplasty. Patients who required further major surgery were more likely to be older, male, and to have more severe DDH with a larger alpha angle and decreased joint space. At a mean follow-up of 42 months (24 to 89), the mean modified Harris hip score improved from 59 (20 to 98) to 82 (45 to 100; p < 0.001). The mean Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Osteoarthritis Index score improved from 30 (1 to 61) to 16 (0 to 43; p < 0.001). Median patient satisfaction was 9.0/10 (1 to 10). Patients reported excellent improvement in function following arthroscopy of the hip. This study shows that with proper patient selection, arthroscopy of the hip can be successful in the young patient with mild to moderate DDH and FAI.


Journal of Orthopaedic Science | 2010

Prevention of steroid-induced osteonecrosis by intravenous administration of vitamin E in a rabbit model

Tomoaki Mikami; Toru Ichiseki; Ayumi Kaneuji; Yoshimichi Ueda; Tanzo Sugimori; Kiyokazu Fukui; Tadami Matsumoto

BackgroundWe focused on vitamins with marked antioxidant potency to see whether their use might prevent the development of steroid-induced osteonecrosis.MethodsFifteen Japanese white rabbits weighing about 3.5 kg were injected once into the right gluteal muscle with methylpred-nisolone (MPSL) 40 mg/kg (S group). In addition, 10 other rabbits received consecutive daily intravenous injections of vitamin E 50 mg/kg, starting from the day of MPSL administration (E group). All animals were killed 2 weeks after MPSL administration, and femurs were extracted and stained with H&E. Blood levels of reduced glutathione (GSH) were also measured.ResultsIn the S group the osteonecrosis development rate was 93%, in contrast to 0% in the E group (P < 0.01). Also, GSH levels in the S group abruptly decreased from the first day after MPSL administration, whereas in the E group, the decline in GSH levels was significantly suppressed on days 1 and 3 after MPSL administration (P< 0.05).ConclusionsVitamin E administration significantly inhibited steroid-induced oxidative stress. The results of this study suggest that the administration of vitamin E may be a novel and simple method to prevent the development of steroid-induced osteonecrosis.


Arthritis & Rheumatism | 2011

Osteonecrosis Development in a Novel Rat Model Characterized by a Single Application of Oxidative Stress

Toru Ichiseki; Ayumi Kaneuji; Yoshimichi Ueda; Shintaro Nakagawa; Tomoaki Mikami; Kiyokazu Fukui; Tadami Matsumoto

OBJECTIVE To investigate the relationship between transient oxidative stress and the development of osteonecrosis in a rat model. METHODS A total of 160 male Wistar rats (24 weeks old) were injected only once with the pro-oxidant DL-buthionine-(S,R)-sulfoximine (BSO) (500 mg/kg given intraperitoneally) and were killed 12 hours (group A), 1 day (group B), 3 days (group C), 4 days (group D), 5 days (group E), 7 days (group F), or 14 days (group G) after administration (n = 20 per group). Twenty untreated rats were used as a control group (group N). Femurs were examined histopathologically for the presence of osteonecrosis, and reduced glutathione (GSH) in liver tissue was measured as an index of oxidative stress. RESULTS GSH decreased rapidly after BSO administration. Significant decreases were noted in groups A and B as compared to group N (P < 0.0001 and P = 0.0007, respectively), confirming the development of transient extreme oxidative stress soon after BSO administration. The histopathologic study revealed osteonecrosis in 10% of the rats in group E, 35% of the rats in group F, and 40% of the rats in group G. CONCLUSION Transient extreme oxidative stress was confirmed to induce osteonecrosis in this model. Since preparation of this model is extremely simple and because rats are well suited to genetic studies, this model may be of use in elucidating the pathophysiology of femoral head osteonecrosis in future studies.


Journal of Arthroplasty | 2013

Wear Comparison Between Conventional and Highly Cross-Linked Polyethylene Against a Zirconia Head A Concise Follow-Up, at an Average 10 Years, of a Previous Report

Kiyokazu Fukui; Ayumi Kaneuji; Tanzo Sugimori; Toru Ichiseki; Tadami Matsumoto

We previously reported the results of wear comparison at a minimum of 5 years between highly cross-linked polyethylene (HXLPE) and conventional polyethylene (PE) against a zirconia femoral head. We now report the mean wear at 10 years for 52 patients (56 hips) of the original cohort of 61 patients (65 hips) who had undergone primary total hip arthroplasty at our hospital between November 1999 and August 2000. The mean steady-state linear wear rate of HXLPE was 0.045 mm/y, compared with 0.080 mm/y for conventional PE (P=.0003). The incidence of osteolysis was 25% in the conventional PE group compared with 0% in the HXLPE group. Our study demonstrated that the steady-state wear rate for HXLPE remains significantly lower than that for conventional PE against a zirconia femoral head at a mean of 10 years after implantation.


Journal of Arthroplasty | 2011

Wear comparison between a highly cross-linked polyethylene and conventional polyethylene against a zirconia femoral head: minimum 5-year follow-up.

Kiyokazu Fukui; Ayumi Kaneuji; Tanzo Sugimori; Toru Ichiseki; Kenji Kitamura; Tadami Matsumoto

Highly cross-linked polyethylene (HXLPE) was developed to reduce wear of articular bearing surface in total hip arthroplasty patients. Several studies have shown reduced wear of HXLPE compared with conventional polyethylene; however, these studies had used HXLPE in combination with a Co-Cr metal head. The purpose of this study was to compare the 5-year in vivo wear of HXLPE with that of conventional PE using a zirconia femoral head. Forty-five hips with a Trilogy HXLPE (Zimmer, Warsaw, Ind) were matched and compared with a control group of 20 conventional Trilogy PE hips. The 2-dimensional linear wear rate was significantly less in the HXLPE group between 1 and 5 years postoperation (P < .001). The results show that HXLPE reduces short-term polyethylene wear against not only a Co-Cr head but also a zirconia head.


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, American Volume | 2015

Rotational Acetabular Osteotomy for Osteoarthritis with Acetabular Dysplasia: Conversion Rate to Total Hip Arthroplasty within Twenty Years and Osteoarthritis Progression After a Minimum of Twenty Years

Ayumi Kaneuji; Tanzo Sugimori; Toru Ichiseki; Kiyokazu Fukui; E. Takahashi; Tadami Matsumoto

BACKGROUND We investigated the rate of conversion to total hip arthroplasty by twenty years and radiographic findings at a minimum of twenty years after rotational acetabular osteotomy. METHODS Between June 1986 and August 1991, we performed 172 rotational acetabular osteotomies in 168 patients with acetabular dysplasia. Of those, ninety-three hips (ninety-one patients), including twenty-three hips with pre-osteoarthritis, twenty-nine with initial osteoarthritis, and forty-one with advanced osteoarthritis, had clinical and radiographic findings available. The mean age of the patients was 32.4 years (range, twelve to forty-nine years). The duration of follow-up was a mean of twenty-three years (range, twenty to twenty-seven years) for seventy-six hips, excluding hips that underwent conversion to total hip arthroplasty. RESULTS Conversion to total hip arthroplasty by twenty years after surgery was performed in one hip (4%) with pre-osteoarthritis, two hips (7%) with initial osteoarthritis, and fourteen hips (34%) with advanced osteoarthritis. The hips with advanced osteoarthritis had a significantly higher rate of conversion to total hip arthroplasty than hips in the other stages did (p = 0.0005). At the latest follow-up or at conversion to total hip arthroplasty, the disease stage had not progressed in seventeen hips (74%) with pre-osteoarthritis, nineteen (66%) with initial osteoarthritis, and twenty-six (63%) with advanced osteoarthritis. CONCLUSIONS The progression of osteoarthritis after rotational acetabular osteotomy was not detected for at least twenty years in most hips with either pre-osteoarthritis or initial osteoarthritis in this cohort. Rotational acetabular osteotomy may delay conversion to total hip arthroplasty in advanced osteoarthritis. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE Therapeutic Level IV. See Instructions for Authors for a complete description of levels of evidence.


Arthroscopy techniques | 2015

Arthroscopic Capsule Reconstruction in the Hip Using Iliotibial Band Allograft

Christiano A.C. Trindade; Gregory A. Sawyer; Kiyokazu Fukui; Karen K. Briggs; Marc J. Philippon

The hip capsule has been identified as an important static stabilizer of the hip joint. Despite the intrinsic bony stability of the hip socket, the capsule plays a key role in hip stability, particularly at the extremes of motion, and the iliofemoral ligament is the most important stabilizer in extension and external rotation. Patients who do not undergo capsular closure or plication may continue to complain of hip pain and dysfunction postoperatively, likely because of microinstability or muscle invagination into the capsular defect, and high-resolution magnetic resonance imaging or magnetic resonance arthrography will identify the capsular defect. Seen primarily in the revision setting, capsular defects can cause recurrent stress at the chondrolabral junction. An attempt at secondary closure can be challenging because of capsular limb adherence to the surrounding soft tissues. Therefore reconstruction may be the only possible surgical solution for this problem. We describe our new surgical technique for arthroscopic hip capsular reconstruction using iliotibial band allograft.


International Journal of Surgery Case Reports | 2015

Early MRI and intraoperative findings in rapidly destructive osteoarthritis of the hip: A case report

Kiyokazu Fukui; Ayumi Kaneuji; Mana Fukushima; Tadami Matsumoto

Highlights • Magnetic resonance imaging of our rapidly destructive hip osteoarthritis case showed a bone-marrow edema pattern not only in the femoral head but also in the acetabulum.• The concentration of stress on the subchondral bone due to inversion of the acetabular labrum may lead to fracture of the femoral head and acetabulum beneath the cartilage.• Inversion of the acetabular labrum may be a mechanism of rapidly destructive hip OA.


Journal of Arthroplasty | 2014

Inversion of the Acetabular Labrum Triggers Rapidly Destructive Osteoarthritis of the Hip: Representative Case Report and Proposed Etiology

Kiyokazu Fukui; Ayumi Kaneuji; Mana Fukushima; Tadami Matsumoto

The pathophysiology of rapidly destructive osteoarthritis (OA) of the hip is unknown. This study documented cases of inversion of the acetabular labrum, which has clinicoradiologic features similar to those of initial-stage rapidly destructive hip OA. Our study was based on a prospective review of data for 9 patients with rapidly destructive hip OA. Intraoperative findings showed that the anterosuperior portion of the acetabular labrum had inverted into the articular space, along with many fragments of articular cartilage, in all patients. Subchondral insufficiency fractures of the femoral heads were seen just under the inverted labra in 8 of the 9 patients. Inversion of the acetabular labrum may be involved in rapid joint-space narrowing and subchondral insufficiency fracture in rapidly destructive hip OA.

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Ayumi Kaneuji

Kanazawa Medical University

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Tadami Matsumoto

Kanazawa Medical University

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Toru Ichiseki

Kanazawa Medical University

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Tanzo Sugimori

Kanazawa Medical University

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E. Takahashi

Kanazawa Medical University

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Kengo Yamada

Kanazawa Medical University

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Kenji Kitamura

Kanazawa Medical University

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Norio Kawahara

Kanazawa Medical University

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