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Dive into the research topics where Senri Hirakawa is active.

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Featured researches published by Senri Hirakawa.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1992

Age-related increase in systolic fraction of pulmonary vein flow velocity-time integral from transesophageal doppler echocardiography in subjects without cardiac disease

Michio Arakawa; Shigeru Akamatsu; Etsuji Terazawa; Shuji Dohi; Hiroshi Miwa; Kensaku Kagawa; Kazuhiko Nishigaki; Yoshimi Ito; Senri Hirakawa

The pulmonary vein flow velocity-time profile would be equivalent to the pulmonary vein flow volume-time profile, provided that the cross-sectional area of the pulmonary vein remains unchanged during 1 cardiac cycle. The systolic fraction of the pulmonary vein flow velocity-time integral, a ratio of velocity-time integral of the S wave to the sum of velocity-time integrals of the S and D waves, represents the ratio of left atrial storage volume to left ventricular stroke volume. This systolic fraction may help early filling of the left ventricle through an appropriate storage of blood and generation of driving pressure in the left atrium. Because early filling of the left ventricle is progressively impaired with age, it was hypothesized that this systolic fraction is increased with age. Forty-four noncardiac surgical patients (age range 17 to 70 years) who underwent transesophageal Doppler echocardiography under general anesthesia were studied, and left upper pulmonary vein flow and mitral inflow velocities were recorded. The ratio of peak velocity of the E wave to that of the A wave of mitral inflow velocity-time profile (y) decreased with age (y = -0.0245 x age + 2.41; r = -0.672, p < 0.01). Systolic fraction (y) increased with age (y = 0.00373 x age + 0.514; r = 0.656, p < 0.01). The age-related increase in the systolic fraction of pulmonary vein flow velocity-time integral may account for the compensation for impaired early filling of the left ventricle in elderly patients.


American Heart Journal | 1995

Modulation of noradrenaline release through presynaptic α2-adrenoceptors in congestive heart failure

Shinya Minatoguchi; Hiroyasu Ito; Koji Ishimura; Hiroko Watanabe; Masatoshi Koshiji; Kiyoji Asano; Senri Hirakawa; Hisayoshi Fujiwara

Stimulation of presynaptic alpha 2-adrenoceptors inhibits the release of noradrenaline from sympathetic nerve endings; however, the extent to which it operates in patients with congestive heart failure is still unknown. To investigate the degree of negative feedback to the release of noradrenaline via presynaptic alpha 2-adrenoceptors at sympathetic nerve endings, we measured plasma noradrenaline levels before and after the injection of phentolamine (i.e., plasma noradrenaline concentration at rest, plasma noradrenaline concentration after phentolamine injection [NAph], and the phentolamine-induced increase in plasma noradrenaline [delta NAph]). Plasma noradrenaline concentration at rest, NAph, and delta NAph increased in a stepwise manner from New York Heart Association class I to class III. A positive correlation was found between the plasma noradrenaline at rest and delta Naph (n = 123, r = 0.697, p < 0.001). These results suggest that the enhanced release of plasma noradrenaline is substantially buffered by the mechanism of noradrenaline release-inhibitory presynaptic alpha 2-adrenoceptors in patients with congestive heart failure, and this buffer serves to protect organs such as the heart from excess sympathetic stimulation.


Heart and Vessels | 1989

Diastolic compliance of the left atrium in man: A determinant of preload of the left ventricle

Toshihiko Nagano; Michio Arakawa; Tsutomu Tanaka; Masato Yamaguchi; Tadatake Takaya; Toshiyuki Noda; Hiroshi Miwa; Kensaku Kagawa; Senri Hirakawa

SummaryDuring the ventricular slow-filling period, both the left atrium and left ventricle fill passively, and their respective internal pressures equalize, becoming evenly elevated. If the diastolic chamber compliance of the left atrium is smaller than that of the left ventricle, we expect the inflowing blood to be distributed more to the left ventricle than to the left atrium during this period. We examined the magnitude of the diastolic compliance of the left atrium and the left ventricle at the end of the slow-filling period.We studied 10 patients, mostly with a mild degree of coronary artery disease, in whom hemodynamic variables were almost within normal limits. To estimate the compliance of the left atrium, we recorded the left atrial pressure directly (by the Brockenbrough technique) and determined the left atrial volume by biplane cineatriography. We determined the diastolic compliance of the left atrium from the pressure-volume relations between the nadir of the x trough and the peak of the v wave by fitting them to an exponential equation, P=b · eaV (P = pressure, V = volume, a, b = constants). The diastolic compliance of the left ventricle was determined from the pressure-volume relations during the ventricular slow-filling period.The compliances of the left atrium and the left ventricle at the pressure at the end of the ventricular slow-filling period were 1.60±0.41 (mean ± SD) ml · mmHg−1 · m−2 and 4.22±1.12, respectively. The ratio of compliance of the left ventricle to that of the left atrium was 2.60±0.71.Since the diastolic compliance of the left ventricle is 2–3 times larger than that of the left atrium, we suggest that during the slow-filling period, the interaction between the left atrial and left ventricular diastolic compliances provides preferential delivery of blood to the left ventricle and acts as a determinant of volume at the end of the slow-filling period of the left ventricle.


Pacing and Clinical Electrophysiology | 1989

Intermittent Oversensing due to Internal Insulation Damage of Temperature Sensing Rate Responsive Pacemaker Lead in Subclavian Venipuncture Method

Michio Arakawa; Kenjiro Kambara; Hiroyasu Ito; Senri Hirakawa; Shougo Umeda; Hajime Hirose

A 49‐year‐old male patient developed sensing failure (oversensing) 6 months after the implantation of a temperature sensing rate responsive pacemaker by the subclavian venipuncture method. Intermittent oversensing appeared in the sitting position, but did not appear in the supine position. Temperature telemetry showed an excessive fluctuation of the temperature data points while sitting and while doing a treadmill exercise test. Internal insulation damage was found approximately 33 cm from the distal tip of the expianted lead. The electrical resistance between one thermistor coil and the pacing coil changed from 9 kiloohms to 40 ohms when moderate pressure was applied to the outside lead in the fault area. This electrical shunt resulted from internal insulation damage that resulted from compression of the pacemaker lead between the first rib and the clavicle.


Cortex | 1991

Disturbances of cross-localization of fingertips in a callosal patient

Kazuo Satomi; Yoshitoshi Kinoshita; Senri Hirakawa

If defective cross-localization of fingertips (CLF) in callosal patients is due to a deficit in the interhemispheric transfer of somesthetic information, when the patients eyes are open, CLF should be affected when the stimulated hand is excluded from vision, not when the responding hand is excluded from vision. In order to investigate this hypothesis, a patient with a callosal lesion was subjected to CLF with eyes closed and open. With eyes closed, the CLF score in the left-to-right direction was significantly lower than that in the right-to-left direction. With eyes open, the CLF performance in the right-to-left direction was impaired when it was the responding hand to be excluded from vision, not when it was the stimulated hand to be excluded from vision. It would, therefore, appear that the patients CLF disturbance was not due to a somesthetic transfer deficit, but to left unilateral apraxia for the right-to-left direction errors and to left tactile finger anomia for the left-to-right direction errors.


Respiration | 1997

Mechanism of Posturally Induced Crackles as Predictor of Latent Congestive Heart Failure

Norio Yasuda; Kohshi Gotoh; Yasuo Yagi; Kenshi Nagashima; Toshiyuki Sawa; Masumi Nomura; Senri Hirakawa; Hisayoshi Fujiwara

We investigated the role of changes in pulmonary function in posturally induced crackles (PIC) in 76 patients with various heart diseases. Regional ventilation was evaluated by spirometric gated ventilation scanning using 133Xe in 23 of these patients and its relationship to PIC was analyzed. A change from the sitting to the supine position was associated with a significant decrease in the percent functional residual capacity (FRC, p < 0.01) and significant increases in closing volume (CV), CV/vital capacity (VC) and closing capacity (CC)/FRC (p < 0.01) in the PIC-positive subjects. CV, CV/VC and CC/FRC did not differ significantly between PIC-positive (n = 37) and PIC-negative (n = 39) subjects in the sitting position, but in the supine position, these values were significantly higher in the PIC-positive group than in the PIC-negative group (CV: p < 0.05, CV/VC and CC/FRC: p < 0.01). These results suggest that airway closure was markedly increased in PIC-positive subjects in the supine position compared with PIC-negative subjects. Regional ventilation (V) was assessed in the sitting and the supine position from right lateral images divided into 9 segments from the base to the apex of the lung using spirometric gated ventilation scanning. There was no significant difference in regional ventilation in the sitting position between PIC-negative (n = 11) and PIC-positive (n = 12) subjects; in the supine position, regional ventilation decreased significantly at the base in the PIC-positive group. Findings suggest that PIC at the base of the lungs may be related to airway closure at the base of the lungs in the supine position in PIC-positive subjects.


Annals of Nuclear Medicine | 1993

Thallium-201 myocardial SPECT findings at rest in sarcoidosis

Noritaka Yamamoto; Kohshi Gotoh; Yasuo Yagi; Yasushi Terashima; Kenshi Nagashima; Toshiyuki Sawa; Fumiko Deguchi; Masumi Nawada; Haruhito Tanaka; Tatsuo Tsukamoto; Senri Hirakawa

In 41 patients with sarcoidosis (diagnosed according to criteria recommended by the Committee on Diffuse Pulmonary Disease, Ministry of Health and Welfare, Japan 1988), thallium-201 (201Tl) myocardial SPECT was performed to investigate: (1) the ability of201Tl SPECT to detect cardiac involvement of sarcoidosis with images recorded at rest and 2 hours later, and (2) the relationships between201Tl myocardial SPECT findings and the activity of sarcoidosis or endomyocardial biopsy findings. As to the abnormal findings in201Tl myocardial SPECT, (1) a low density area was seen in 13 of 41 cases (31.7%) and non-uniform uptake was found in 17 cases (41.5%), (2) the mean washout ratio (n=39) was 16.5±7.4%, which is significantly (p < 0.05) lower than that found in normal subjects, 23.9±7.5 % (n=10). Of the 19 patients judged visually to be normal, 5 patients had a reduced mean washout ratio less than 12%. Thus, the incidence of abnormal findings including all types of abnormality, on201Tl myocardial SPECT in sarcoidosis was 63.4% (26/41 cases). In studying the relationship between201Tl myocardial SPECT findings and the activity of sarcoidosis (as measured by the serum ACE (angiotensin converting enzyme) or lysozyme level, or the presence of more than 30% symphocyte fraction in BALF (broncho-alveolar lavage fluid)), 20 (80%) of 25 cases with201Tl abnormality were judged to be active sarcoidosis, while only 6 (37.5%) of 16 cases with normal findings on201Tl SPECT were judged to be active. This suggests that there is a significant (p < 0.01) relationship between the presence or absence of an abnormal finding on201Tl myocardial SPECT and the activity of sarcoidosis. Among 13 patients examined by endomyocardial biopsy, 10 patients had abnormal findings on201Tl myocardial SPECT and 7 of these 10 patients had no histological evidence of cardiac sarcoidosis. In all of these 7 patients, however, sarcoidosis was judged to be active. This suggest that endomyocardial biopsy is of limited value in the diagnosis of cardiac sarcoidosis.


Clinical and Experimental Pharmacology and Physiology | 1992

Enalapril decreases plasma noradrenaline levels during the cold pressor test in human hypertensives.

Shinya Minatoguchi; Hiroyasu Ito; Masatoshi Koshiji; Kakami Masao; Senri Hirakawa; Henryk Majewski

1. The effects of the angiotensin‐converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitor enalapril on the responses of blood pressure and plasma catecholamine levels to the cold pressor test in human hypertensives were examined.


Annals of Nuclear Medicine | 1993

Usefulness of resting thallium-201 delayed imaging for detecting myocardial viability in patients with previous myocardial infarction

Tatsuo Tsukamoto; Kohshi Gotoh; Yasuo Yagi; Hisato Takatsu; Yasushi Terashima; Kenshi Nagashima; Noritaka Yamamoto; Senri Hirakawa

To test the feasibility of resting thallium-201 (201Tl) initial and delayed scintigraphy for detecting the area of viable myocardium, we performed single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) in 57 patients with previous myocardial infarction (MI). All had received coronary arteriography (CAG) and left ventriculography (LVG). Initial and delayed myocardial imagings were carried out 10 min and 2 hours, respectively, after the injection of201Tl at rest. Redistribution was judged by visual interpretation and/or the circumferential profile curve, and found in the infarcted or its adjacent area in 40 of the 57 cases (70.2%). A negative washout (net increase of201Tl uptake in delayed image) was detected in 17 of these 40 cases. In 10 of the 57 patients, both exercise and rest-injected201Tl myocardial images were obtained at exercise and rest, and compared visually. The areas of abnormal perfusion were smaller in the resting delayed images than those seen after exercise in 9 of the 10 cases, and were equal in one case. Thus, resting201Tl delayed myocardial scintigraphy appears to reduce the underestimation of the size of the viable myocardium by the usual201Tl images obtained after exercise or by single initial images obtained at rest in patients with previous MI.


Blood Pressure | 1995

Plasma Adrenaline Modulates aL1-adrenoceptor Mediated Pressor Responses and the Baroreflex Control in Patients with Borderline Hypertension

Shinya Minatoguchi; Hiroyasu Ito; Koji Ishimura; Takahiko Suzuki; Naoki Tonai; Miharu Mori; Senri Hirakawa; Hisayoshi Fujiwara

Plasma level of adrenaline has been reported to be elevated in borderline hypertension. However, its role in developing and maintaining hypertension is still not completely understood. This study aimed to estimate the role of plasma adrenaline in developing hypertension. Ten patients with borderline hypertension (BHT) and 10 age-matched normotensive subjects were included. We infused at least three graded doses of phenylephrine, an alpha-adrenoceptor agonist, into the antecubital vein of subjects lying quietly in a supine position. Mean blood pressure was measured continuously through the right radial artery. Cardiac output was measured by the thermodilution method before and after the administration of each dose of phenylephrine infusion. We obtained dose-response curves for mean blood pressure and total peripheral resistance to phenylephrine. Baroreflex sensitivity was calculated by plotting the longest R-R intervals against the elevated peak mean blood pressure after the infusion of each dose of phenylephrine. Plasma noradrenaline and adrenaline concentrations at rest were measured by high performance liquid chromatography coupled with trihydroxyindole fluorimetric detection. The plasma adrenaline level at rest was higher in patients with BHT than in normotensive subjects. With graded infusion of phenylephrine, both the pressor responses and the changes in total peripheral resistance were greater in patients with BHT than in normotensive subjects. The plasma adrenaline level was positively correlated with the slope of dose response curves for the increments of mean blood pressure to phenylephrine (r = 0.60, p < 0.01). Baroreflex sensitivity was reduced in patients with BHT as compared with normotensive subjects.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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