Masato Taniuchi
Kyorin University
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Featured researches published by Masato Taniuchi.
American Heart Journal | 1998
Hideaki Yoshino; Hiroshi Udagawa; Hisashi Shimizu; Eisei Kachi; Tatsuto Kajiwara; Kohei Yano; Masato Taniuchi; Kyozo Ishikawa
BACKGROUND The prognosis of acute inferior myocardial infarction is worse when it is complicated by right ventricular infarction. ST elevation in the right precordial leads is one of the reliable methods for detecting acute right ventricular infarction. The purpose of the study was to examine the relation between ST elevation in the right precordial electrocardiographic leads during acute inferior infarction and the severity of right ventricular systolic dysfunction. METHODS This study analyzed the relation between ST elevation > or = 0.1 mV in V4R and the severity of right ventricular systolic dysfunction in 43 consecutive patients (men/women: 35/8; average age 62+/-9 years) with acute inferior myocardial infarction with a rapid-response Swan-Ganz catheter to measure the right ventricular ejection fraction (RVEF). RESULTS RVEF was significantly lower in patients with ST elevation (n = 18) than in those without (n = 25) (33%+/-6% vs 40%+/-9%, p = 0.010). If the infarct-related lesion was located in the proximal right coronary artery, RVEF tended to be lower than if the lesion was located in the distal right coronary artery or the left circumflex coronary artery (33%+/-10% vs 37%+/-9% vs 42%+/-9%, p = 0.101). Logistic regression analysis demonstrated that ST elevation in V4R was the only independent predictor of depressed RVEF (odds ratio = 5.31, 95% confidence interval = 1.28 to 22.1, p = 0.022). CONCLUSION ST elevation in lead V4R during acute inferior myocardial infarction predicts right ventricular systolic dysfunction.
American Journal of Cardiology | 1997
Hideaki Yoshino; Toshiaki Nitatori; Eisei Kachi; Kohei Yano; Masato Taniuchi; Junichi Hachiya; Kyozo Ishikawa
Magnetic resonance coronary angiography in 36 patients with proximal 1-vessel disease within 1 week of contrast coronary angiography was performed and the time required to complete the study was 13.4 +/- 4.2 min 13.2 +/- 8.1 minutes for the right and left coronary arteries, respectively. The sensitivity, specificity, positive and negative predictive values, and accuracy of magnetic resonance coronary angiography were 100% for right cronary artery disease, and 83%, 98%, 94%, 94%, and 94%, respectively, for left coronary artery disease.
Journal of Electrocardiology | 2000
Hideaki Yoshino; Masayuki Yotsukura; Kohei Yano; Masato Taniuchi; Eisei Kachi; Hisashi Shimizu; Hiroshi Udagawa; Tatsuto Kajiwara; Kyozo Ishikawa
This study determines the usefulness of electrocardiography in the emergency room for assessing the risk of cardiac rupture after acute anterior myocardial infarction (MI). The presence of ST segment elevation on the admission 12-lead electrocardiography was evaluated in 325 consecutive anterior MI patients. A forward-stepwise logistic regression analysis for cardiac rupture was performed with the covariates of age, gender, hypertension, history of MI, reperfusion therapy by coronary angioplasty, and ST segment elevations in leads I, aVL, V1-V6. Cardiac rupture occurred in 16 patients, including 7 with left ventricular free wall rupture (FWR) and 9 with ventricular septal perforation (VSP). For FWR, ST elevation in lead aVL was the only independent predictor (odds ratio = 12.1, P = .0215). For VSP, female gender (odds ratio = 5.32, P = .0201) was the independent predictor. In conclusion, in patients with acute anterior MI, ST segment elevation in lead aVL on the admission electrocardiography is a significant risk factor for left ventricular FWR.
American Journal of Cardiology | 1998
Hideaki Yoshino; Masato Taniuchi; Eisei Kachi; Hisashi Shimizu; Tatsuto Kajiwara; Masahisa Ohguchi; Michio Okada; Kyozo Ishikawa
There are patients in whom left ventricular (LV) wall motion decreases in the noninfarcted region and LV systolic function declines globally despite the presence of a localized myocardial infarct attributable to narrowing or occlusion of a single coronary artery. This study examines angiographic characteristics of patients with chronic hypokinesia of noninfarcted myocardium after anterior wall acute myocardial infarction (AMI) due to narrowing of a single coronary artery, namely, the left anterior descending (LAD) artery. The LV ejection fraction, abnormalities in the motion of the noninfarcted LV inferior wall (SD/chord value by Sheehans technique), the angiographic characteristics of the infarct-related coronary artery, the effect of acute reperfusion therapy, and presence of coronary risk factors were examined in 85 consecutive patients. The SD/chord value in the noninfarcted region showed a positive correlation with the LV ejection fraction (r = 0.505, p <0.0001). By multivariate analysis, hypertension (odds ratio = 0.53, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.36 to 0.80), an infarct-related narrowing proximal to the origin of the first diagonal branch (odds ratio = 0.56, 95% CI 0.38 to 0.84), and patency of the infarct-related lesion during AMI (odds ratio = 1.56, 95% CI 1.03 to 2.30) were independent predictors of wall motion in the noninfarct region. In some patients with single-vessel anterior wall AMI, the motion of the noninfarcted inferior LV wall decreases during the chronic stage and cardiac function declines severely. In most of these patients, the infarct-related narrowing or occlusion is proximal to the origin of the first diagonal branch of the LAD artery.
American Journal of Cardiology | 2000
Hiroshi Udagawa; Hideaki Yoshino; Eisei Kachi; Masato Taniuchi; Masayuki Yotsukura; Kyozo Ishikawa
Our study demonstrates that ST-segment elevation in both leads I and aVL noted on admission for an anterior acute myocardial infarction does portend a worse short-term survival. Independent predictors of short-term prognosis in an anterior acute myocardial infarction include ST elevation in both leads I and aVL, advanced age, female gender, left ventricular failure, and malignant arrhythmias.
The Cardiology | 1998
Nobuo Aoki; Atsuo Yanagisawa; Katsuya Shimoyama; Masato Taniuchi; Hiroshi Fujita; Haruyoshi Mizuno; Hideaki Yoshino; Kyozo Ishikawa
This study investigated the clinical significance of hypoxemia without apparent clinical congestive heart failure in patients with acute myocardial infarction (AMI). Sixty-two patients with AMI of the Killip group I and Forrester subset I state were stratified into a hypoxemia group and a normoxemia group. The increase in the neutrophil count and the severity of the coronary artery disease as graded by Gensini’s score were significantly higher in the hypoxemic group. The cardiac index was lower in hypoxemic than normoxemic patients. Myocardial scintigraphy revealed no acute difference in defect scores (DS) or left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) between the two groups, but DS was significantly higher (p < 0.01) and LVEF was lower (p < 0.01) in the hypoxemic group 2 years after infarction. Patients with hypoxemia have a more severe angiographic coronary pathology than normoxemic patients, and latent cardiac hypofunction occurs.
Clinical Cardiology | 2001
Kohei Yano; Hideaki Yoshino; Masato Taniuchi; Eisei Kachi; Hisashi Shimizu; Atsushi Watanuki; Kyozo Ishikawa
Clinical Cardiology | 2000
Hideaki Yoshino; Eisei Kachi; Hisashi Shimizu; Masato Taniuchi; Kohei Yano; Hiroshi Udagawa; Tatsuto Kajiwara; Katsuya Shimoyama; Kyozo Ishikawa
Japanese Circulation Journal-english Edition | 2003
Kazuhiko Miyayama; Eisei Kachi; Hideyasu Kohshoh; Wataru Kuwabara; Satoshi Kusuda; Hisashi Shimizu; Masato Taniuchi; Hideaki Yoshino; Syuji Takahashi; Toshiaki Nitatori; Junichi Hachiya
Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2002
Hideaki Yoshino; Eisei Kachi; Masato Taniuchi; Hisashi Shimizu; Kazuhiko Miyayama