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Featured researches published by Shigeo Ichihashi.


CardioVascular and Interventional Radiology | 2007

Magnetic Resonance Angiography of Uterine Artery: Changes with Embolization Using Gelatin Sponge Particles Alone for Fibroids

Tetsuya Katsumori; Toshiyuki Kasahara; Yoko Kin; Shigeo Ichihashi

PurposeTo assess uterine artery recanalization, together with tumor devascularization, after embolization using gelatin sponge particles alone for fibroids.MethodsTwenty-seven patients underwent uterine artery embolization (UAE) for fibroids using only gelatin sponge particles. The angiographic endpoint of embolization was defined as near stasis of contrast medium in the ascending segment of the uterine artery. All patients underwent contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance angiography (MRA) before and 4 months after UAE, and contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (CE-MRI) before, 1 week after, and 4 months after UAE. The visualization of the uterine arteries before and 4 months after UAE was assessed using MRA. The infarction rates of the largest tumor were assessed using CE-MRI 1 week after UAE.ResultsMRA 4 months after UAE showed 100% (53/53) of the descending and transverse segments, and 88% (43/49) of the ascending segments that had been noted on baseline MRA. The visualization of the ascending segments on MRA 4 months after UAE was identical to that on baseline MRA in 20 of 27 patients (74%). CE-MRI showed complete infarction of the largest tumor in 22 of 27 patients (81%), and 90–99% infarction of the largest tumor in the remaining 5 of 27 patients (19%).ConclusionBased on the MR study, in most cases uterine artery recanalization occurred, together with sufficient devascularization of fibroids, after UAE using gelatin sponge particles alone.


Hypertension Research | 2014

Validation study of automated oscillometric measurement of the ankle-brachial index for lower arterial occlusive disease by comparison with computed tomography angiography.

Shigeo Ichihashi; Tomoko Hashimoto; Shinichi Iwakoshi; Kimihiko Kichikawa

The ankle-brachial index (ABI) determined by the oscillometric method has been shown to reliably detect peripheral arterial disease (PAD), with highly correlations with the Doppler method. However, most of these studies were shown in cohorts with a small number of PAD patients, and no imaging studies have been performed. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the diagnostic accuracy and optimal threshold of oscillometric ABI for detecting PAD using computed tomography angiography (CTA) as a gold standard in a cohort that consists mostly of PAD patients. This retrospective study included 108 consecutive patients with 216 limbs. ABI measured by an oscillometric device was compared with CTA. The diagnostic accuracy of oscillometric ABI to detect ⩾50% and ⩾75% stenosis confirmed by CTA and the optimal ABI cutoff values were evaluated using receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve analysis. The oscillometric ABI could not be measured in nine limbs. The mean ABI was 0.72±0.31. The areas under the ROC curves (AUCs) for detecting ⩾50% and ⩾75% stenosis with oscillometric ABI were 0.919 and 0.918, respectively. The optimal ABI cutoff values to detect these levels of stenosis were 0.99 (sensitivity, 90%: specificity, 85%) and 0.87 (sensitivity, 84%: specificity, 89%), respectively. If patients with diabetes mellitus (DM) were analyzed separately, the AUC for detecting ⩾75% stenosis was 0.888. Oscillometric ABI had a high diagnostic accuracy to detect PAD using CTA as a gold standard. The diagnostic ability of ABI to detect PAD could be impaired by the presence of DM.


Hypertension Research | 2016

Combination of pulse volume recording (PVR) parameters and ankle-brachial index (ABI) improves diagnostic accuracy for peripheral arterial disease compared with ABI alone.

Tomoko Hashimoto; Shigeo Ichihashi; Shinichi Iwakoshi; Kimihiko Kichikawa

The ankle–brachial index (ABI) measurement is widely used as a screening tool to detect peripheral arterial disease (PAD). With the advent of the oscillometric ABI device incorporating a system for the measurement of pulse volume recording (PVR), not only ABI but also other parameters, such as the percentage of mean arterial pressure (%MAP) and the upstroke time (UT), can be obtained automatically. The purpose of the present study was to compare the diagnostic accuracy for PAD with ABI alone with that of a combination of ABI, %MAP and UT. This study included 108 consecutive patients on whom 216 limb measurements were performed. The sensitivity, specificity and positive and negative predictive values of ABI, %MAP, UT and their combination were evaluated and compared with CT angiography that was used as a gold standard for the detection of PAD. The diagnostic accuracy as well as the optimal cutoff values of %MAP and UT were evaluated using receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve analysis. The combination of ABI, %MAP and UT achieved higher sensitivity, negative predictive value and accuracy than ABI alone, particularly for mild stenosis. The areas under the ROC curve for the detection of 50% stenosis with UT and %MAP were 0.798 and 0.916, respectively. The optimal UT and %MAP values to detect ≧50% stenosis artery were 183 ms and 45%, respectively. The combination of ABI, %MAP and UT contributed to the improvement of the diagnostic accuracy for PAD. Consideration of the values of %MAP and UT in addition to ABI may have a significant impact on the detection of early PAD lesions.


Therapeutics and Clinical Risk Management | 2014

Role of the latest endovascular technology in the treatment of intermittent claudication

Shigeo Ichihashi; Kimihiko Kichikawa

Intermittent claudication is a serious symptom in patients with peripheral arterial disease, and severely limits activities of daily living. Conservative treatment (optimal medical therapy and exercise rehabilitation programs) and revascularization procedures (endovascular treatment [EVT] or open bypass surgery) can relieve intermittent claudication. Among these treatment options, EVT has developed dramatically during the past decade, and has enabled physicians to offer less invasive treatment options with increasing durability. EVT for aortoiliac lesions has matured, and its long-term patency now approaches that of open bypass surgery. The latest EVT technologies include drug-eluting stents, stent grafts, drug-coated balloons, and bioresorbable stents. The recently reported patency of stent grafts in the femoropopliteal lesions was comparable with that of the prosthetic bypass graft. In the course of the paradigm shift from bypass surgery to EVT, evidence of any long-term benefit of EVT compared with supervised exercise is still inconclusive. EVT could improve walking performance in the short-term, while supervised exercise could improve walking performance more efficiently in the long-term. Combined treatment with EVT and exercise may offer the most sustainable and effective symptom relief. This paper reviews the relevant literature on the treatment of intermittent claudication, focusing on the latest EVT technologies, and outlines a strategy for achieving long-term benefits.


Tissue Engineering Part B-reviews | 2018

Bio-based covered stents: the potential of biologically-derived membranes

Shigeo Ichihashi; Alicia Fernández-Colino; Frederic Wolf; Diana M. M. Rojas González; Kimihiko Kichikawa; Stefan Jockenhoevel; Thomas Schmitz-Rode; Petra Mela


Archive | 2018

PRINCIPE DE DÉTECTION D'UN ANÉVRISME AORTIQUE ABDOMINAL (AAA) À PARTIR DE FORMES D'ONDE DE POULS DE BRAS ET DE JAMBE

Miki Imamura; 今村 美貴; Yukiya Sawanoi; 澤野井 幸哉; Toshihiko Ogura; 小椋 敏彦; Hideo Utsuno; 宇津野 秀夫; Kimihiko Kichikawa; 吉川 公彦; Shigeo Ichihashi; 市橋 成夫; Shinichi Iwakoshi; 岩越 真一


Archive | 2018

PRINCIPLE OF DETECTING ABDOMINAL AORTIC ANEURYSM (AAA) FROM PULSE WAVEFORMS OF ARM AND LEG

Miki Imamura; 今村 美貴; Yukiya Sawanoi; 澤野井 幸哉; Toshihiko Ogura; 小椋 敏彦; Hideo Utsuno; 宇津野 秀夫; Kimihiko Kichikawa; 吉川 公彦; Shigeo Ichihashi; 市橋 成夫; Shinichi Iwakoshi; 岩越 真一


CardioVascular and Interventional Radiology | 2017

In Vitro Quantification of Luminal Denudation After Crimping and Balloon Dilatation of Endothelialized Covered Stents

Shigeo Ichihashi; Frederic Wolf; Thomas Schmitz-Rode; Kimihiko Kichikawa; Stefan Jockenhoevel; Petra Mela


The Japanese Journal of Phlebology | 2015

Retrieval of Optional Inferior Vena Cava Filters: A Single Institute Experience and Proposing the Protocol for Assured Retrieval

Hiroshi Anai; Kimihiko Kichikawa; Toshihiro Tanaka; Hideyuki Nishiofuku; Hirofumi Ito; Shigeo Ichihashi; Shinsaku Maeda; Takeshi Sato; Tetsuya Masada; Shinichi Iwakoshi; Yutaka Yoshiyama


Archive | 2014

A Decade of Outcomes and Predictors of Sac Enlargement after Endovascular Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm Repair Using Zenith Endografts in a

Shinichi Iwakoshi; Shigeo Ichihashi; Wataru Higashiura; Hirofumi Itoh; Shoji Sakaguchi; Nobuoki Tabayashi; Hideo Uchida; Kimihiko Kichikawa

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