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Dive into the research topics where Nobuhiko Hirai is active.

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Featured researches published by Nobuhiko Hirai.


Radiology | 2008

Prospective versus Retrospective ECG-gated 64-Detector Coronary CT Angiography: Assessment of Image Quality, Stenosis, and Radiation Dose

Nobuhiko Hirai; Jun Horiguchi; Chikako Fujioka; Masao Kiguchi; Hideya Yamamoto; Noriaki Matsuura; Toshiro Kitagawa; Hiroki Teragawa; Nobuoki Kohno; Katsuhide Ito

PURPOSE To show that prospective electrocardiographically (ECG)-triggered coronary computed tomographic (CT) angiography (hereafter, prospective CT angiography) is at least as effective as retrospective ECG-gated coronary CT angiography (hereafter, retrospective CT angiography). MATERIALS AND METHODS Institutional review committee approval and informed consent were obtained. Sixty patients with heart rates of less than 75 beats per minute who were referred for coronary CT angiography were enrolled. Both prospective and retrospective CT angiography were performed with a 64-detector scanner. Data acquisition times were recorded. Two independent cardiac radiologists evaluated subjective image quality (1, excellent; 4, poor) and severity of stenosis (0% occlusion, 1%-49% occlusion, 50%-75% occlusion, and >75% occlusion) with the 17-segment American Heart Association classification model. Discrepancies were settled by consensus. Effective radiation doses of prospective and retrospective CT angiography were calculated with volume CT dose index. Data regarding acquisition time and radiation exposure for prospective and retrospective CT angiography were compared. The Student t test was performed, and kappa statistics were calculated. RESULTS Mean data acquisition time of prospective CT angiography was shorter than that of retrospective CT angiography (5.6 seconds +/- 1.1 [standard deviation] vs 6.7 seconds +/- 1.1, respectively; P < .01). Consensus-determined image quality in coronary artery branches was similar between prospective CT angiography and retrospective CT angiography (1.15 vs 1.13, respectively; P = .992). Excellent agreement between prospective CT angiography and retrospective CT angiography was observed in the detection of significant (>or=50% occlusion) coronary artery stenoses per segment (kappa = 0.882) and in the grading of stenoses per patient (kappa = 0.829). Calculated effective dose with prospective CT angiography was 79% lower than that with retrospective CT angiography (4.1 mSv +/- 1.8 vs 20.0 mSv +/- 3.5, respectively; P < .001). CONCLUSION Prospective CT angiography can reduce radiation dose below that of retrospective CT angiography with dose modulation, while maintaining image quality and the ability to assess luminal obstructions in patients with heart rates of less than 75 beats per minute.


CardioVascular and Interventional Radiology | 2005

Radiofrequency Ablation Therapy Combined with Cementoplasty for Painful Bone Metastases: Initial Experience

Naoyuki Toyota; Akira Naito; Hideaki Kakizawa; Masashi Hieda; Nobuhiko Hirai; Toshihiro Tachikake; Tomoki Kimura; Hideki Fukuda; Katsuhide Ito

The purpose of this study was to assess the efficacy and safety of percutaneous radiofrequency (RF) ablation therapy combined with cementoplasty under computed tomography and fluoroscopic guidance for painful bone metastases. Seventeen adult patients with 23 painful bone metastases underwent RF ablation therapy combined with cementoplasty during a 2-year period. The mean tumor size was 52 × 40 × 59 mm. Initial pain relief, reduction of analgesics, duration of pain relief, recurrence rate of pain, survival rate, and complications were analyzed. The technical success rate was 100%. Initial pain relief was achieved in 100% of patients (n = 17). The mean VAS scores dropped from 63 to 24 (p < 0.001) (n = 8). Analgesic reduction was achieved in 41% (7 out of 17 patients). The mean duration of pain relief was 7.3 months (median: 6 months). Pain recurred in three patients (17.6%) from 2 weeks to 3 months. Eight patients died and 8 patients are still alive (a patient was lost to follow-up). The one-year survival rate was 40% (observation period: 1–30 months). No major complications occurred, but one patient treated with this combined therapy broke his right femur 2 days later. There was transient local pain in most cases, and a hematoma in the psoas muscle (n = 1) and a hematoma at the puncture site (n = 1) occurred as minor complications. Percutaneous RF ablation therapy combined with cementoplasty for painful bone metastases is effective and safe, in particular, for bulky tumors extending to extraosseous regions. A comparison with cementoplasty or RF ablation alone and their long-term efficacies is needed.


Journal of Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance | 2003

Rapid Evaluation Of Right And Left Ventricular Function And Mass Using Real-time True-fisp Cine Mr Imaging Without Breath-hold: Comparison With Segmented True-fisp Cine Mr Imaging With Breath-hold

Yoshiro Hori; Naoaki Yamada; Masahiro Higashi; Nobuhiko Hirai; Satoshi Nakatani

PURPOSE To evaluate the accuracy of cardiac function measured with real-time true fast imaging with steady-state precession (True-FISP) cine without breath-hold compared with those measured from segmented True-FISP cine with breath-hold. METHODS Eighteen consecutive patients and six healthy volunteers were enrolled in the study group. Both real-time multislice True-FISP cine imaging without breath-hold and single-slice segmented True-FISP cine imaging with multiple breath-holds were performed in short-axis imaging sections to encompass the entire ventricles. Vertical long-axis cine imaging using real-time True-FISP cine sequence without breath-hold was performed to evaluate heart motion during respiration in 13 subjects. Ventricular volume and mass were evaluated by four observers independently with manual tracing. RESULTS Real-time True-FISP cine quality was sufficient for contour detection in all 24 subjects. Cardiodynamic measurements based on real-time True-FISP cine correlated well with those based on segmented True-FISP cine [left ventricular (LV) end-diastolic volume: r = 0.98; LV end-systolic volume: r = 0.98; LV ejection fraction: r = 0.91; LV mass: r = 0.96; right ventricular (RV) end-diastolic volume: r = 0.89; RV end-systolic volume: r = 0.94; RV ejection fraction: r = 0.79]. Intra- and interobserver variability were sufficiently small in real-time True-FISP cine without breath-hold. Heart motion during respiration along the long axis of the left ventricle (2.2 mm to 3.7 mm) was much less than the slice interval (10 mm), confirming that misregistration of slice position during respiration was low. CONCLUSION Real-time True-FISP cine without breath-hold has high reproducibility and is applicable to patients with severe cardiac dysfunction and/or arrhythmias.


Atherosclerosis | 2009

Visceral fat accumulation as a predictor of coronary artery calcium as assessed by multislice computed tomography in Japanese patients

Norihiko Ohashi; Hideya Yamamoto; Jun Horiguchi; Toshiro Kitagawa; Nobuhiko Hirai; Katsuhide Ito; Nobuoki Kohno

The impact of visceral adiposity on subclinical coronary atherosclerosis is unclear in Japanese patients. We investigated the sex-specific relationship between the amount of visceral fat and coronary artery calcium (CAC) using multislice computed tomography (MSCT). This is a cross-sectional study of 321 consecutive Japanese patients (213 men and 108 women) who underwent MSCT scanning for the examination of coronary heart disease. CAC score, visceral fat area (VFA), subcutaneous fat area (SFA), and waist circumference (WC) were determined by MSCT for all patients. The prevalence of detectable CAC was 73% and 57% in men and women, respectively. Using a multivariable logistic and ordinal regression analyses adjusting for traditional cardiovascular risk factors and adiposity measurements, VFA represented an independent predictor of the presence and extent of CAC (odds ratio (95% confidence interval) per one-unit-standard deviation increase in VFA: 2.48 (1.23-6.05) in logistic regression analysis; 2.05 (1.18-3.98) in ordinal regression analysis). Similar relationships were observed across the gender. We further assessed the sex-specific cut-off levels of VFA and WC to predict the presence of CAC. The results of receiver operator characteristic analysis indicated that the VFA cut-off level in men was 116cm(2); and in women, it was 82cm(2), corresponding to WC values of 87.7cm in men and 82.6cm in women. In conclusion, we found that visceral adiposity measured by MSCT is significantly associated with the presence and extent of CAC as a marker of subclinical atherosclerosis in Japanese patients.


American Journal of Roentgenology | 2005

Electron Beam CT Versus 16-MDCT on the Variability of Repeated Coronary Artery Calcium Measurements in a Variable Heart Rate Phantom

Jun Horiguchi; Yun Shen; Yuji Akiyama; Nobuhiko Hirai; Kousuke Sasaki; Minoru Ishifuro; Tadashi Nakanishi; Katsuhide Ito

OBJECTIVE High reproducibility of coronary artery calcium (CAC) scoring is a key requirement for monitoring the progression of coronary atherosclerosis. The purposes of this study were to compare electron beam CT and 16-MDCT scanners in the variability of repeated CAC measurements and to assess the factors influencing this variability. MATERIALS AND METHODS CAC models of different sizes attached to a cardiac phantom with a programmable variable heart rate were scanned three times, and interscan variability of the CAC measurement was calculated each time. For helical CT, different slice-thickness images of either retrospective ECG-gated or prospective ECG-triggering reconstruction were obtained. The detection of small amounts of calcium, variability of the Agatston score, and CAC measurement algorithms (Agatston, volume, and mass scores) were compared between CT scanners and protocols. RESULTS All 1-mm-sized calcium models were detected on 0.625- and 1.25-mm helical CT, whereas some were missed on electron beam CT and 2.5-mm helical CT. Retrospective ECG-gated thin-slice helical CT showed the lowest variability. Reduction of variability by volume and mass scoring algorithms was less effective on 0.625- and 1.25-mm-thickness CT. CONCLUSION Retrospective ECG-gated thin-slice helical CT has the potential to be a useful tool for monitoring coronary atherosclerosis.


American Journal of Roentgenology | 2006

Variability of Repeated Coronary Artery Calcium Measurements on Low-Dose ECG-Gated 16-MDCT

Jun Horiguchi; Hideya Yamamoto; Nobuhiko Hirai; Yuji Akiyama; Chikako Fujioka; Kazushi Marukawa; Hiroshi Fukuda; Katsuhide Ito

OBJECTIVE High reproducibility on coronary artery calcium (CAC) scoring is a key requirement in monitoring the progression of coronary atherosclerosis. Retrospective ECG-gated helical CT has been shown to be superior to prospective gating helical CT in the reproducibility of CAC measurements. However, it brings with it a high level of radiation exposure. The purpose of this study was to compare low- and standard-dose protocols in the variability of CAC scores and in image quality, thereby assessing the feasibility of low-dose retrospective ECG-gated helical CT in CAC measurements. SUBJECTS AND METHODS Eighty-six patients with CAC were scanned using a tube current setting of 100 mA once and then a tube current setting equivalent to the patients body weight twice. CAC scores (Agatston and volume) and interscan variability were evaluated. The mean and SD of the CT attenuation values in regions of interest in the aorta were measured, and the value (mean + 2 x SD) was obtained. RESULTS A high correlation of log(10) (Agatston score + 1) was observed between sequential helical CT scans (r = 0.998). The variability in CAC measurements ranged from 11% to 12% for both the Agatston and volume scores. With the tube current equivalent to body weight, the value (mean + 2 x SD) did not exceed a CT attenuation value of 130 H. CONCLUSION Low-dose retrospective ECG-gated helical CT-yielding low variability and achieving the level of image quality needed to measure CAC-can be used to monitor patients with coronary atherosclerosis.


European Radiology | 2008

Variability of repeated coronary artery calcium measurements by 1.25-mm- and 2.5-mm-thickness images on prospective electrocardiograph-triggered 64-slice CT

Jun Horiguchi; Noriaki Matsuura; Hideya Yamamoto; Nobuhiko Hirai; Masao Kiguchi; Chikako Fujioka; Toshiro Kitagawa; Nobuoki Kohno; Katsuhide Ito

High reproducibility on coronary artery calcium scoring is a key requirement in monitoring the progression of coronary atherosclerosis. The purpose of this prospective study is to assess the reproducibility of 1.25-mm- and 2.5-mm-thickness images on prospective electrocardiograph-triggered 64-slice CT with respect to 2.5-mm-thickness images on spiral overlapping reconstruction. One hundred patients suspected of coronary artery disease were scanned twice repeatedly, both on prospective electrocardiograph-triggered step-and-shoot and retrospective electrocardiograph-gated spiral scans. Using 1.25-mm-thickness collimation, 1.25-mm- and 2.5-mm-thickness image sets on prospective scans and 2.5-mm-thickness image sets with 1.25-mm increment (overlapping) on retrospective scans were obtained. Coronary artery calcium scores, interscan variability and interobserver variability were evaluated. The mean interscan variability in coronary artery calcium measurement on 1.25-mm prospective/2.5-mm prospective/2.5-mm overlapping retrospective scans were Agatston: 10%/18%/12%, volume: 10%/12%/10% and mass: 8%/13%/11% for observer 1 and Agatston: 8%/14%/10%, volume: 7%/9%/10% and mass: 7%/10%/9% for observer 2, respectively. The mean interobserver variability was 5% to 14%. In conclusion, prospective electrocardiograph-triggered 64-slice CT using the 1.25-mm prospective scan shows the lowest variability. The 2.5-mm prospective scan on volume or mass scoring shows variability of around 10%, comparable to 2.5-mm-thickness spiral overlapping reconstruction images.


European Radiology | 2007

The impact of motion artifacts on the reproducibility of repeated coronary artery calcium measurements

Jun Horiguchi; Hiroshi Fukuda; Hideya Yamamoto; Nobuhiko Hirai; Farzana Alam; Hideaki Kakizawa; Masashi Hieda; Toshihiro Tachikake; Kazushi Marukawa; Katsuhide Ito

The purpose of this study is, using a 16-section multidetector-row helical computed tomography (MDCT) scanner with retrospective reconstruction, to compare variability in repeated coronary calcium scoring and qualitative scores of the motion artifacts. One hundred forty-four patients underwent two subsequent scans using MDCT. According to Agatston and volume algorithms, the coronary calcium scores during mid-diastole (the center corresponding to 70% of the R-R cycle) were calculated and the inter-scan variability was obtained. Motion artifacts from coronary artery calcium were subjectively evaluated and classified using a 5-point scale: 1, excellent; no motion artifacts; 2, fine, minor motion artifacts; 3, moderate, mild motion artifacts; 4, bad, severe motion artifacts; 5, poor, doubling or discontinuity. Each reading was done by vessels (left main, left descending, left circumflex and right coronary arteries) and the motion artifact score (mean of the scales) was determined per patient. The variability in the low (1.2±0.2) and high (2.4±0.6) motion artifact score groups was 7±6 (median, 6)% and 19±15 (16)% on the Agatston score (P<0.01) and 7±7 (6)% and 16±13 (14)% on the volume score (P<0.01), respectively. In conclusion, motion has a significant impact on the reproducibility of coronary calcium scoring.


American Journal of Roentgenology | 2008

Optimal Cardiac Phase for Coronary Artery Calcium Scoring on Single-Source 64-MDCT Scanner : Least Interscan Variability and Least Motion Artifacts

Noriaki Matsuura; Jun Horiguchi; Hideya Yamamoto; Nobuhiko Hirai; Tetsuji Tonda; Nobuoki Kohno; Katsuhide Ito

OBJECTIVE The purpose of our study was to investigate the cardiac phase with the least interscan variability and motion artifacts on coronary artery calcium studies using a 64-MDCT scanner. SUBJECTS AND METHODS Ninety-one patients with suspected coronary artery disease were scanned twice on retrospective ECG-gated helical scans. Images with 2.5-mm thickness and 1.25-mm interval at nine cardiac phases (center of cardiac phase: 40-80% in 5% increments) were reconstructed. The interscan variability of coronary artery scores (Agatston, volume, and mass) per patient and motion artifact scores per branch, subjectively assigned by motion artifact grading (1, none; 2, minor; and 3, major), were compared between cardiac phases for all patients, low (< 65 beats per minute [bpm]) and high (>or= 65 bpm) heart rate patient groups. RESULTS For all patients, two-factor factorial analysis of variance revealed that the interscan variability was different between cardiac cycles (p < 0.01); however, this was not statistically significant between scoring algorithms (p = 0.46). The least variability was obtained at 70% on Agatston (8%) and volume (7%) and at 75% on mass (7%). Adjacent categories logit model analysis revealed that the motion artifact score was the least at 75% (left anterior descending coronary artery, 1.3; left circumflex coronary artery, 1.4; and right coronary artery, 1.9 in all patients) and that a smaller difference in calcium scores between the scans led to a smaller motion artifact score (p < 0.05). CONCLUSION Middiastole reconstruction (center of cardiac phase: 70-75%), with the least interscan variability and the least motion artifacts, is recommended on 64-MDCT.


Radiation Medicine | 2007

Traumatic mesenteric bleeding managed solely with transcatheter embolization

Hideaki Kakizawa; Naoyuki Toyota; Masashi Hieda; Makoto Ishida; Taku Takeda; Kanji Matsuura; Nobuhiko Hirai; Toshihiro Tachikake; Noriaki Matsuura; Shingo Kohno; Takao Yananoue; Katsuhide Ito

We report a rare case of mesenteric bleeding following blunt abdominal trauma successfully treated solely with transcatheter arterial embolization (TAE) of the right colic marginal artery. A 56-year-old woman presented with mesenteric bleeding after being involved in a car accident. Computed tomography (CT) showed a large mesenteric hematoma and hemoperitoneum with no associated major injuries to other organs. There was a pseudoaneurysm with extravasation inside the hematoma. TAE was attempted to control bleeding during the preparation for surgical laparotomy. A superior mesenteric angiogram revealed a right colic marginal artery pseudoaneurysm. After successful TAE with microcoils, the affected colon perfusion was preserved via collateral circulation from the ileocolic artery. No ischemic gastrointestinal complications have occurred, and laparotomy has not been necessary during the 6 months after TAE. In isolated mesenteric injury cases, TAE may be a reasonable alternative to emergency laparotomy.

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