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Featured researches published by Kiyoshi Haneda.


The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery | 1994

Experimental study of cerebral autoregulation during cardiopulmonary bypass with or without pulsatile perfusion

Mitsuaki Sadahiro; Kiyoshi Haneda; Hitoshi Mohri

Twenty-four adult mongrel dogs were divided into four equal groups according to the following method of cardiopulmonary bypass: normothermic continuous (so-called nonpulsatile) perfusion, normothermic pulsatile perfusion, hypothermic continuous perfusion, and hypothermic pulsatile perfusion. Cerebral blood flow was determined by measuring the volume of sagittal sinus venous blood outflow with a transit-time ultrasonic flowmeter. Cardiopulmonary bypass was initiated at a flow rate of 80 ml/kg per minute. Cerebral temperature was maintained at 37 degrees C in the normothermic groups and at 25 degrees C in the hypothermic groups. Arterial pH and carbon dioxide were maintained within the physiologic range by alpha-stat acid-base regulation. Mean cerebral perfusion pressure and blood flow were not affected during 90 minutes of the bypass. The respective values were 67.1 mm Hg and 37.1 ml/100 gm brain per minute with normothermic continuous perfusion, 72.8 mm Hg and 39.0 ml/100 gm per minute with nonpulsatile perfusion, 98.0 mm Hg and 23.0 ml/gm per minute with hypothermic continuous perfusion, and 86.8 mm Hg and 22.3 ml/100 gm per minute with hypothermic pulsatile perfusion. Pump flow rates were altered from 10 to 120 ml/kg per minute in a stepwise fashion to obtain graded changes of perfusion pressure. Cerebral blood flow, however, was not changed significantly by cerebral perfusion pressure so long as perfusion pressure was greater than 50 mm Hg. Conversely, cerebral blood flow changed proportionally with cerebral perfusion pressure at a pressure less than 50 mm Hg. The correlation between cerebral blood flow and perfusion pressure was described as two separate lines determined by linear regression. The slope of the regression line relating cerebral blood flow to perfusion pressure was 0.16 +/- 0.08 for a cerebral perfusion pressure above 50 mm Hg and 0.68 +/- 0.11 below 50 mm Hg in the normothermic continuous perfusion group; 0.14 +/- 0.09 and 0.32 +/- 0.09 with normothermic pulsatile perfusion; 0.10 +/- 0.04 and 0.62 +/- 0.18 with hypothermic continuous perfusion; 0.09 +/- 0.08 and 0.39 +/- 0.04 in the hypothermic pulsatile perfusion group. The slope above 50 mm Hg was significantly smaller and closer to zero in all groups than it was at a perfusion pressure below 50 mm Hg (p < 0.05).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)


Vascular | 1996

Effects of Cardiac Surgery on Intellectual Function in Infants and Children

Kiyoshi Haneda; Takashi Itoh; Takao Togo; Mikio Ohmi; Hitoshi Mohri

Intellectual function was evaluated by Gesells developmental quotient (DQ) and Binets intelligence quotient (IQ) in 161 infants and children (61 ventricular septal defects, 49 tetralogies of Fallot, 15 transpositions of the great arteries, seven atrial septal defects, five complete atrioventricular canals, five double outlet right ventricles and 19 shunt cases; average age 3.6 years) before and after cardiac surgery. There were no significant differences in preoperative DQs and IQs among the patient groups. Although average DQ scores in 21 infants with hypothermic (13–24°C) total circulatory arrest (36-70min) were not significantly different from the preoperative values, 13 patients with an arrest time >50 min showed a significant decrease in DQ scores. The postoperative DQ and IQ scores in patients without circulatory arrest or in shunt cases were not significantly impaired after surgery. It was concluded that cardiac surgery did not impair intellectual function in infants and children. although cerebral dysfunction might occur if circulatory arrest was >50 min. Copyright


Cardiovascular Surgery | 1996

Effects of cardiac surgery on intellectual in and children

Kiyoshi Haneda; Takashi Itoh; Takao Togo; Mikio Ohmi; Hitoshi Mohri

Abstract Intellectual function was evaluated by Gesells developmental quotient (DQ) and Binets intelligence quotient (IQ) in 161 infants and children (61 ventricular septal defects, 49 tetralogies of Fallot, 15 transpositions of the great arteries, seven atrial septal defects, five complete atrioventricular canals, five double outlet right ventricles and 19 shunt cases; average age 3.6 years) before and after cardiac surgery. There were no significant differences in preoperative DQs and IQs among the patient groups. Although average DQ scores in 21 infants with hypothermic (13–24 °C) total circulatory arrest (36–70 min) were not significantly different from the preoperative values, 13 patients with an arrest time >50 min showed a significant decrease in DQ scores. The postoperative DQ and IQ scores in patients without circulatory arrest or in shunt cases were not significantly impaired after surgery. It was concluded that cardiac surgery did not impair intellectual function in infants and children, although cerebral dysfunction might occur if circulatory arrest was >50 min.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 1993

Protection of the brain during hypothermic perfusion

Hitoshi Mohri; Mituaki Sadahiro; Hiroji Akimoto; Kiyoshi Haneda; Koichi Tabayashi; Mikio Ohmi

The adequacy of the circuits for brain perfusion has been explored by hemodynamic assessment using the ability of the brain to autoregulate blood flow as an indicator, and by morphologic observation using carbon black or Evans blue infusion into the brain perfused antegradely or retrogradely. It is concluded that the safe pressure of cerebral perfusion needed to maintain cerebral integrity is between 40 and 50 mm Hg in both normothermic and hypothermic perfusions, a pressure that can be generated by nonpulsatile pump flows through the pump greater than 40 mL.kg-1 x min-1. Morphologic studies revealed development of focal infarctions in the brain and destruction of the blood-brain barrier by retrograde cerebral perfusion. The retrograde approach, therefore, is definitely inferior to the antegrade method. Antegrade perfusion for 90 minutes, however, produced minimal cerebral edema, suggesting the need for further improvement even in techniques of antegrade perfusion.


Heart and Vessels | 1994

Pulmonary arterial changes in patients dying after a modified Fontan procedure following pulmonary artery banding

Shigeo Yamaki; Hiroshi Ajiki; Kiyoshi Haneda; Yoshinori Takanashi; Toshihiko Ban; Tohru Takahashi

SummaryPulmonary arterial changes were histometrically analyzed in four cases of postoperative death following a modified Fontan procedure in which pulmonary artery banding had previously been performed because of pulmonary hypertension. Case 1 was a 3-year-old girl with corrected transposition of the great arteries (TGA), ventricular septal defect, and double-inlet left ventricle; case 2 was a 6-year-old girl with single ventricle (SV) and complete TGA; case 3 was a 25-month-old boy with SV and doubleoutlet right ventricle; and case 4 was a 21-year-old man with tricuspid atresia. The cause of death in cases 1, 2, and 3 was pulmonary hypertensive crisis due to postoperative vasoconstriction of the small pulmonary arteries. Medial hypertrophy remained in half of the preacinar small pulmonary arteries although it was not observed in all the intraacinar arteries in cases 1 and 2, even after banding. The postoperative course of case 4 was uneventful despite multiple thromboembolism in the small pulmonary arteries. However, the patient died due to a thrombosed artificial valve. The results suggest that residual medial hypertrophy of the small pulmonary arteries was a major risk factor in these cases. Lung biopsy is recommended to determine the indications for the Fontan procedure in these hemodynamically critical cases.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 1992

Permanent pacemaker implantation in premature infants less than 2,000 grams of body weight

Mikio Ohmi; Motohisa Tofukuji; Kaori Sato; Takahiko Nakame; Naoshi Sato; Kiyoshi Haneda; Hitoshi Mohri

Pacemaker implantation in premature infants presents technical problems because of the relatively larger size of the pulse generator compared with their bodies. A new technique with which successful generator implantation was performed in 2 premature infants less than 2,000 g of body weight is described. The generator is wrapped in a Gore-Tex surgical membrane. A piece of membrane overlying the electrical contact surface of the generator is removed, and the generator is fixed to the abdominal wall in the peritoneal cavity. The technique is simple to perform and would give relative ease in generator exchange.


Heart and Vessels | 1990

Indications for open lung biopsy in patients with ventricular septal defect and/or patent ductus arteriosus with pulmonary hypertension

Shigeo Yamaki; Hiroshi Ogata; Kiyoshi Haneda; Hitoshi Mohri

SummaryIn a previous paper, it was stated that open lung biopsy for determination of operative indications could be recommended if pulmonary vascular resistance (PVR) were higher than 8 units · m2 in patients with ventricular septal defect (VSD) and/or patent ductus arteriosus (PDA) with severe pulmonary hypertension. In the present study, oxygen inhalation or Tolazoline administration tests with or without occlusion of ductus arteriosus were performed during cardiac catheterization in 47 patients with VSD and/or PDA with severe pulmonary hypertension. The results obtained were compared with the operability based on our histopathological diagnostic criteria. There was no correlation between the oxygen, Tolazoline, or ductus occlusion hemodynamics and the baseline hemodynamics for better prediction of the biopsy results. It was concluded that open lung biopsy should be performed for the determination of operative indication when patients with VSD and/or PDA have a PVR higher than 8 units.m2, and if the PVR is greater than 4 units.m2 with the oxygen inhalation test or 7 units.m2 with the Tolazoline test.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 1978

Surgical Treatment of Annuloaortic Ectasia: Experience in 7 Consecutive Patients

Seiji Koizumi; Hitoshi Mohri; Yuzuru Kagawa; Komei Saji; Kiyoshi Haneda; Osamu Kahata; Takashi Itoh; Atsushi Yokoyama; Mikio Ohmi; Togo Horiuchi

Seven patients with annuloaortic ectasia were treated according to the method described by Bentall and De Bono. A Björk-Shiley valve in a composite graft was the prosthesis of choice and was used in all patients except 1, who received a Starr-Edwards valve. Profound topical cooling without selective coronary perfusion was applied in 5 patients for myocardial preservation during aortic occlusion. The was 1 operative death and 1 late death, the latter from cerebral thromboembolism. Five survivors have been followed from 1 year 5 months to 2 years 10 months with an average follow-up of 2 years. Excellent results were obtained in all survivors, their physical capabilities putting them in Class I of the New York Heart Association Functional Classification. Postoperative aortograms showed no signs of kinking or compression of vascular prostheses nor abnormalities of prosthetic calves. A modified technique to secure graft fixation is discussed.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 1988

Double-Outlet Left Atrium with Intact Ventricular Septum

Yasuyuki Suzuki; Yukio Hamada; Makoto Miura; Kiyoshi Haneda; Togo Horiuchi; Hiroshi Ogata

The clinical course and surgical repair of double-outlet left atrium with intact ventricular septum in a 13-year-old girl are presented. The only outlet of the right atrium was a secundum atrial septal defect, and the left atrium drained into both ventricles through two atrioventricular valves. To our knowledge, there has been only one other published report of repair of double-outlet left atrium.


Asian Cardiovascular and Thoracic Annals | 2003

Conservative management of persistent pleural effusion using somatostatin.

Kiyoshi Haneda; Yoshimi Shoji; Tsunenori Katakura; Shuichiro Abe; Yuki Ogata; Michio Makabe

Persistent pleural effusion developed in an 81-year-old man with acute pulmonary edema due to myocardial dysfunction. Daily chest tube drainage was 1,000 to 1,400 mL. Despite total parenteral nutrition and albumin supplementation, drainage did not decrease. However, continuous infusion of a somatostatin analog was effective in controlling the effusion.

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