Masato Murata
Gunma University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Masato Murata.
Shock | 2016
Mineji Hayakawa; Daisuke Kudo; Shinjiro Saito; Shigehiko Uchino; Kazuma Yamakawa; Yusuke Iizuka; Masamitsu Sanui; Kohei Takimoto; Toshihiko Mayumi; Kota Ono; Takeo Azuhata; Fumihito Ito; Shodai Yoshihiro; Katsura Hayakawa; Tsuyoshi Nakashima; Takayuki Ogura; Eiichiro Noda; Yoshihiko Nakamura; Ryosuke Sekine; Yoshiaki Yoshikawa; Motohiro Sekino; Keiko Ueno; Yuko Okuda; Masayuki Watanabe; Akihito Tampo; Nobuyuki Saito; Yuya Kitai; Hiroki Takahashi; Iwao Kobayashi; Yutaka Kondo
ABSTRACT Supplemental doses of antithrombin (AT) are widely used to treat sepsis-induced disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) in Japan. However, evidence on the benefits of AT supplementation for DIC is insufficient. This multicenter retrospective observational study aimed to clarify the effect of AT supplementation on sepsis-induced DIC using propensity score analyses. Data from 3,195 consecutive adult patients admitted to 42 intensive care units for severe sepsis treatment were retrospectively analyzed; 1,784 patients were diagnosed with DIC (n = 715, AT group; n = 1,069, control group). Inverse probability of treatment-weighted propensity score analysis indicated a statistically significant association between AT supplementation and lower in-hospital all-cause mortality (n = 1,784, odds ratio [95% confidence intervals]: 0.748 [0.572–0.978], P = 0.034). However, quintile-stratified propensity score analysis (n = 1,784, odds ratio: 0.823 [0.646–1.050], P = 0.117) and propensity score matching analysis (461 matching pairs, odds ratio: 0.855 [0.649–1.125], P = 0.263) did not show this association. In the early days after intensive care unit admission, the survival rate was statistically higher in the propensity score-matched AT group than in the propensity score-matched control group (P = 0.007). In DIC patients without concomitant heparin administration, similar results were observed. In conclusion, AT supplementation may be associated with reduced in-hospital all-cause mortality in patients with sepsis-induced DIC. However, the statistical robustness of this connection was not strong. In addition, although the number of transfusions needed in patients with AT supplementation increased, severe bleeding complications did not.
Journal of Trauma-injury Infection and Critical Care | 2013
Shuichi Hagiwara; Kiyohiro Oshima; Makoto Aoki; Masato Murata; Koichi Ishihara; Minoru Kaneko; Kazumi Furukawa; Takuro Nakamura; Yoshio Ohyama; Jun'ichi Tamura
PURPOSE: To evaluate the usefulness of the levels of fibrin degradation products (FDPs) and d‐dimer (DD) in blood for reflecting the severity of trauma. PATIENTS AND METHODS: We reviewed medical records of trauma patients who were transferred to the emergency department of Gunma University Hospital between January 2010 and December 2010. The relationships among Injury Severity Score, mean blood pressure, heart rate, hemoglobin, hematocrit, platelet count, fibrinogen, international normalized ratio of prothrombin time, activated partial thromboplastin time, FDP, and DD on arrival were examined in those patients. RESULTS: A total of 122 patients were included in this study. The coefficients of correlation of FDP (r = 0.710) and DD (r = 0.636) with Injury Severity Score were higher than those of other parameters. In addition, the areas under the receiver operating characteristic curve of FDP and DD were larger than those of other parameters (0.757 and 0.756, respectively). The cutoff value of FDP from the Youden index was 4.70 &mgr;g/mL, and the sensitivity and specificity values were 75.9% and 68.4%, respectively. The cutoff value of DD from the Youden index was 2.55 &mgr;g/mL, and the sensitivity and specificity values were 75.9% and 73.7%, respectively. There were four patients requiring more than 10 U of red blood cell transfusion within 24 hours after trauma (a unit of red blood cell transfusion is made from 200 mL of whole blood in Japan). In those four patients, the mean values of FDP and DD were 90.8 &mgr;g/mL (range, 5.7–160 &mgr;g/mL) and 45.3 &mgr;g/mL (range, 3.2–66.4 &mgr;g/mL), respectively, and those data were much higher than the mean of all patients. The mean values of FDP and DD in four patients who died were 244.6 &mgr;g/mL (range, 158.4–420 &mgr;g/mL) and 102.8 &mgr;g/mL (range, 32.8–240 &mgr;g/mL), respectively. Both FDP and DD in patients who died were remarkably elevated immediately after trauma. CONCLUSION: FDP and DD levels may be useful parameters for initial evaluation of the severity of trauma, massive blood transfusion, and mortality. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: Prognostic/epidemiological study, level III
Injury-international Journal of The Care of The Injured | 2016
Makoto Aoki; Shuichi Hagiwara; Hiroyuki Tokue; Kei Shibuya; Minoru Kaneko; Masato Murata; Jun Nakajima; Yusuke Sawada; Yuta Isshiki; Yumi Ichikawa; Kiyohiro Oshima
PURPOSE To evaluate the usefulness of coagulation biomarkers, which are easy and quick to analyze in emergency settings, for prediction of arterial extravasation due to pelvic fracture. PATIENTS AND METHODS The medical records of pelvic fracture patients transferred to the emergency department of Gunma University Hospital between December 2009 and May 2015 were reviewed. Patients were divided into two groups, those with (Extra(+)) and without (Extra(-)) arterial extravasation on enhanced CT or angiography. Levels of fibrin degradation products (FDP), D-dimer, fibrinogen, the ratio of FDP to fibrinogen, the ratio of D-dimer to fibrinogen, systolic blood pressure, heart rate, the Glasgow Coma Scale, pH, base excess, hemoglobin and lactate levels, the pattern of pelvic injury, and injury severity score were measured at hospital admission, and compared between the two groups. Parameters with a significant difference between the two groups were used to construct receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves. RESULTS The study included 29 patients with pelvic fracture. FDP, D-dimer, the ratio of FDP to fibrinogen and the ratio of D-dimer to fibrinogen were the most useful parameters for predicting arterial extravasation due to pelvic fracture. FDP, D-dimer, the ratio of FDP to fibrinogen, the ratio of D-dimer to fibrinogen, and hemoglobin and lactate levels were significantly higher in the Extra(+) group than in the Extra(-) group (FDP, 354.8μg/mL [median] versus 96.6μg/mL; D-dimer, 122.3μg/mL versus 42.1μg/mL; the ratio of FDP to fibrinogen, 3.39 versus 0.42; the ratio of D-dimer to fibrinogen, 1.14 versus 0.18; hemoglobin, 10.5g/dL versus 13.5g/dL; lactate, 3.5mmol/L versus 1.7mmol/L). The area under the ROC curves for FDP, D-dimer, the ratio of FDP to fibrinogen, the ratio of D-dimer to fibrinogen, hemoglobin and lactate levels were 0.900, 0.882, 0.918, 0.900, 0.815 and 0.765, respectively. CONCLUSION Coagulation biomarkers, and hemoglobin and lactate levels could be useful to predict the existence of arterial extravasation due to pelvic fracture. The ratio of FDP to fibrinogen and the ratio of D-dimer to fibrinogen were the most accurate markers. Coagulation biomarkers may enable more rapid and specific treatment for pelvic fracture.
Acute medicine and surgery | 2014
Shuichi Hagiwara; Masato Murata; Minoru Kaneko; Makoto Aoki; Masahiko Kanbe; Yoshio Ohyama; Jun'ichi Tamura; Kiyohiro Oshima
We evaluated the usefulness of fibrin degradation products and D‐dimer levels in blood to predict return of spontaneous circulation in patients with cardiopulmonary arrest on arrival compared with anion gap and albumin‐corrected anion gap.
Acute medicine and surgery | 2015
Shuichi Hagiwara; Kiyohiro Oshima; Masato Murata; Minoru Kaneko; Makoto Aoki; Masahiko Kanbe; Takuro Nakamura; Yoshio Ohyama; Jun'ichi Tamura
To determine the formula that predicts the injury severity score from parameters that are obtained in the emergency department at arrival.
Acute medicine and surgery | 2014
Koichi Ishihara; Shuichi Hagiwara; Makoto Aoki; Masato Murata; Minoru Kaneko; Masahiko Kanbe; Kiyohiro Oshima
We evaluated the relation between general status on arrival and prognosis in patients aged 90 years and older who were admitted to our department through the emergency room, with the aim of assisting the development of a treatment policy for elderly people.
American Journal of Emergency Medicine | 2017
Shuichi Hagiwara; Makoto Aoki; Masato Murata; Minoru Kaneko; Yumi Ichikawa; Jun Nakajima; Yuta Isshiki; Yusuke Sawada; Jun'ichi Tamura; Kiyohiro Oshima
Purpose To find factors that predict the requirement of packed red blood cells (pRBC) transfusion in patients with blunt trauma on arrival at the hospital. Methods We conducted blood tests in trauma patients whose trauma severity was suspected as being 3 and over in the Abbreviated Injury Scale. Patients were divided into the blood transfusion (BT) and control groups according to the requirement of pRBC transfusion within 24 h after arrival. Results We analyzed 347 patients (BT group, n = 14; control group, n = 333). On univariate analysis, there were significant differences in Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS), rate of positive FAST (focused assessment with sonography for trauma) finding, hematocrit, international normalized ratio of prothrombin time, activated partial thromboplastin time, fibrinogen (Fib), and level of fibrin degradation products (FDP). On multivariable analysis, positive FAST finding, GCS, Fib, and FDP influenced the requirement of pRBC transfusion. In the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve analysis, Fib and FDP were markers that predicted the requirement of pRBC transfusion. The FDP/Fib ratio had a better correlation with the requirement of pRBC transfusion than FDP or Fib. Conclusions The FDP/Fib ratio can be easily measured and may be a predictor of the need for pRBC transfusion.
Acute medicine and surgery | 2016
Rumi Okazaki; Shuichi Hagiwara; Takao Kimura; Yutaka Tokue; Masahiko Kambe; Masato Murata; Makoto Aoki; Minoru Kaneko; Kiyohiro Oshima; Masami Murakami
A 92‐year‐old female resident at a nursing home was transported to the emergency department unconscious, hypotensive, and febrile. Chest X‐rays and computed tomography revealed a permeation shadow in the right lung. The patient was diagnosed with sepsis due to pneumonia. At the time of admission, she had not received antibiotics or treatment using medical devices over the past 6 months. Two sets of samples were taken for blood and sputum cultures, and Klebsiella pneumoniae was isolated from all cultures. The strain was identified as metallo‐β‐lactamase‐producing K. pneumoniae, and the patient was successfully treated with tazobactam–piperacillin. This case indicates that metallo‐β‐lactamase‐producing K. pneumoniae infection occurred in a non‐hospital environment.
Open Medicine | 2018
Masato Murata; Makoto Aoki; Shuichi Hagiwara; Masao Sekihara; Takayuki Kohri; Kei Shibuya; Norimasa Koike; Dai Miyazaki; Kiyohiro Oshima
Abstract An 85-year-old female suffered pelvic fracture, multiple rib fractures, right hemopneumothorax, and blunt abdominal aortic injury in a traffic accident. After transfer to our hospital, transcatheter arterial embolization (TAE) was performed immediately for hemorrhage from the bilateral internal iliac arteries. Enhanced computed tomography (CT) after TAE showed an increase of hematoma and extravasation at the bifurcation of the abdominal aorta. Therefore, emergency abdominal endovascular aortic repair was performed on the same day. On the 3rd day after transfer, metabolic acidosis worsened suddenly, and enhanced CT revealed intestinal necrosis. Emergency surgery for the intestinal necrosis was performed. The patient was transferred to the previous hospital on the 31st day after transfer. Endovascular treatment is useful for elderly patients with severe trauma. However, the preservation and/or reconstruction of the blood flow to important organs should be monitored.
Internal Medicine | 2018
Shuichi Hagiwara; Minoru Kaneko; Makoto Aoki; Masato Murata; Yumi Ichikawa; Jun Nakajima; Yuta Isshiki; Yusuke Sawada; Jun'ichi Tamura; Kiyohiro Oshima
Objective Almost no Japanese elderly patients have an advance directive (AD). Our aim was to determine whether or not the wish to receive intensive care in elderly patients with respiratory tract infection could be predicted from the prehospital data. Methods In this retrospective study, we reviewed patients ≥65 years of age with respiratory tract infection who had been transferred to our hospital by ambulance between September 2014 and August 2016. The patients were divided into two groups according to whether or not they wished to receive intensive treatment. We placed patients without a wish to receive intensive treatments (WITs) in Group A and patients with a WITs in Group B. We then analyzed parameters that could be determined in the prehospital phase and compared the findings between the groups. Results Thirty-seven patients were in Group A, and 67 patients were in Group B. None of the patients in this study had an AD. There were significant differences in the age, rate of residence in an extended care facility, frequency of inability to care for oneself fully, frequency of dementia, number of prescribed drugs, and Glasgow coma scale (GCS) on a univariate analysis. A logistic regression analysis showed that the inability to care for oneself fully [odds ratio (OR): 4.521, 95% confidence interval (CI): 2.024-10.096, p<0.001] and a low GCS (OR 0.885, 95%CI 0.838-0.935, p<0.001) were related to a WITs. Conclusion Elderly patients who are unable to care for themselves and who have a low GCS in the prehospital stage are likely not to want intensive treatment.