Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Shigeru Otaguro is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Shigeru Otaguro.


Hepatology Research | 2007

Transient elastography for patients with chronic hepatitis B and C virus infection: Non-invasive, quantitative assessment of liver fibrosis.

Eiichi Ogawa; Norihiro Furusyo; Kazuhiro Toyoda; Hiroaki Takeoka; Shigeru Otaguro; Maki Hamada; Masayuki Murata; Yasunori Sawayama; Jun Hayashi

Aim/Methods:  The aim of the present study was to compare the diagnostic performance of transient elastography (FibroScan) with that of serum fibrosis markers and stages of hepatic fibrosis by biopsy in 68 patients with chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV) and in 161 patients with hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection.


Journal of Infection and Chemotherapy | 2008

Chronic Helicobacter pylori infection is associated with peripheral arterial disease

Yasunori Sawayama; Maki Hamada; Shigeru Otaguro; Shinji Maeda; Hachiro Ohnishi; Yayoi Fujimoto; Yuji Taira; Jun Hayashi

It is reported that Helicobacter pylori infection is associated with coronary atherosclerosis both epidemiologically and pathogenetically, but no conclusions have yet been reached. Therefore, we investigated the relationship between H. pylori infection and peripheral arterial disease (PAD). Sixty-nine patients with PAD attending Harasanshin General Hospital (Fukuoka, Japan) were compared with 143 controls (age-matched asymptomatic outpatients with hyperlipidemia). H. pylori infection was diagnosed by the detection of IgG antibodies, the 13C-urea breath test, and histological examination. Multiple logistic regression analysis was used to assess the data. The 69 PAD patients and 143 controls were aged from 50 to 92 years. According to the Fontaine classification, 43/69 PAD patients (62.3%) were grade I, 25 (36.2%) were grade II, and 1 (0.14%) was grade III. The prevalence of H. pylori infection was higher in the PAD patients than in the controls (79.7% versus 44.8%; P < 0.01). Stepwise logistic regression analysis revealed that H. pylori infection and hypertension had a significant influence on the occurrence of PAD. Our results suggest that chronic H. pylori infection may be one of the risk factors for PAD.


Journal of Infection and Chemotherapy | 2008

Intravenous immunoglobulin therapy for severe arthritis associated with human parvovirus B19 infection

Eiichi Ogawa; Shigeru Otaguro; Masayuki Murata; Mosaburo Kainuma; Yasunori Sawayama; Norihiro Furusyo; Jun Hayashi

Symptoms caused by acute human parvovirus B19 (HPV-B19) infection can vary considerably, from asymptomatic to severely symptomatic. A 39-year-old Japanese woman complained of sudden, severe arthralgia with edematous limbs coincident with an outbreak of HPV-B19 infection at the elementary school attended by her daughter. A diagnosis of acute HPV-B19 infection was made by the detection of serum antibody to HPV-B19 IgM and HPV-B19 DNA. Magnetic resonance imaging revealed bilateral synovitis of the cubital joints. The patient was immunocompetent and suffered from severe arthralgia associated with persistent HPV-B19 viremia for more than 4 months after the diagnosis of acute HPV-B19 infection. The administration of high-dose intravenous immunoglobulin resulted in remission, with little change in the serum HPV-B19 DNA level. Even in our immunocompetent patient, severe and prolonged arthritis was found to be associated with persistent viremia.


BMC Gastroenterology | 2010

Excellent superiority and specificity of COBAS TaqMan HCV assay in an early viral kinetic change during pegylated interferon alpha-2b plus ribavirin treatment

Eiichi Ogawa; Norihiro Furusyo; Kazuhiro Toyoda; Hiroaki Taniai; Shigeru Otaguro; Mosaburo Kainuma; Masayuki Murata; Yasunori Sawayama; Jun Hayashi

BackgroundAn early virological response (EVR) after the start of interferon (IFN) treatment for chronic hepatitis C leads to a successful virological outcome. To analyze an association between sustained virological response (SVR) and EVR by comparing TaqMan with Amplicor assays in HCV genotype 1-infected patients treated with pegylated (PEG)-IFN alpha-2b plus ribavirin (RBV).MethodsWe retrospectively analyzed a total of 80 HCV genotype 1 patients (39 SVR and 41 non-SVR patients), who received an enough dosage and a complete 48-week treatment of PEG-IFN alpha-2b plus RBV. Serum HCV RNA levels were measured by both TaqMan and Amplicor assays for each patients at Weeks 2, 4, 8 and 12 after the start of the antiviral treatment.ResultsOf the 80 patients with undetectable HCV RNA by Amplicor, 17 (21.3%) patients were positive for HCV RNA by TaqMan at Weeks 12. The quantification results showed that no significant difference in the decline of HCV RNA level between TaqMan and Amplicor 10-fold method assays within the initial 12 weeks of the treatment was found. However, the qualitative analysis showed significant differences of the positive predictive rates for SVR were found between TaqMan (100% at weeks 4 and 100% at weeks 8) and Amplicor (80.0% and 69.6%, respectively).ConclusionsThe COBAS TaqMan HCV assay is very useful for monitoring HCV viremia during antiviral treatment to predict a SVR in HCV genotype 1 patients.


Journal of Infection and Chemotherapy | 2009

Protein-losing enteropathy during highly active antiretroviral therapy in a patient with AIDS-related disseminated Mycobacterial avium complex infection

Eiichi Ogawa; Masayuki Murata; Mami Unno; Shigeru Otaguro; Mosaburo Kainuma; Yasunori Sawayama; Norihiro Furusyo; Shunichi Yanai; Takayuki Matsumoto; Jun Hayashi

Protein-losing enteropathy (PLE) is defined as a condition in which excess protein loss into the gastrointestinal lumen, due to various causes, is severe enough to produce hypoproteinemia and hypoalbuminemia. We report a 28-year-old Japanese woman with PLE. She had been diagnosed with AIDS and disseminated Mycobacterium avium complex (MAC) infection at age 26. Although highly active antiretroviral and antimycobacterial treatments helped her overcome this critical situation, 2 years after initiation of the treatments, she was readmitted to our hospital because of hypoalbuminemia and edema of the lower extremities, and she was diagnosed, by the use of double-balloon enteroscopy, with PLE due to intestinal lymphangiectasia (IL). The etiology was thought to be obstruction of the mesenteric and retroperitoneal lymphatic drainage systems by MAC lymphadenitis. Even with intensive antimycobacterial treatment, octreotide treatment as a long-acting somatostatin analogue, and a low-fat diet enriched with medium-chain triglyceride, IL was not cured during the follow-up period. In patients with AIDS, complete clinical remission of MAC (especially disseminated MAC) infection is very difficult.


Journal of Infection and Chemotherapy | 2007

HIV infection with concomitant cerebral toxoplasmosis and disseminated histoplasmosis in a 45-year-old man

Masayuki Murata; Norihiro Furusyo; Shigeru Otaguro; Shigeki Nabeshima; Iwao Ariyama; Jun Hayashi

Although disseminated histoplasmosis is a common opportunistic infection in HIV patients in endemic areas, it is not widely known in Japan. We report a rare case of a man from Ghana infected with HIV who was hospitalized in Japan and who suffered from coinfection with cerebral toxoplasmosis and disseminated histoplasmosis. The diagnosis of cerebral toxoplasmosis was confirmed by a brain biopsy, and the therapy for the disease resulted in almost complete resolution of the brain lesion. However, fever of unknown origin continued for 2 weeks, and disseminated histoplasmosis was diagnosed by examination of a blood smear and by the detection of the histoplasma genome in the peripheral blood by means of polymerase chain reaction. The isolate was confirmed to be Histoplasma capsulatum var. duboisii. Therapy with amphotericin B was initiated, and no histoplasma genome in the peripheral blood was detected 3 days later. Unfortunately, the patient died after 10 days from acute respiratory syndrome. This case highlights that histoplasmosis should be included in the differential diagnosis of opportunistic infections in AIDS patients when patients have a history of travel to or arrival from endemic areas.


Hukuoka acta medica | 2006

Impact of peripheral arterial disease and acute ischemic stroke.

Yasunori Sawayama; Maki Hamada; Shigeru Otaguro; Shinji Maeda; Hachiro Ohnishi; Yuuji Taira; Jun Hayashi

Peripheral arterial disease (PAD) is associated with coronary artery disease (CAD) and stroke, but data on the relationship between PAD and acute ischemic stroke are lacking. Therefore, we investigated this relationship. A total of 101 patients were enrolled on admission to Harasanshin General Hospital (Fukuoka, Japan) with their first ischemic stroke. All 101 patients underwent cranial CT and/or brain magnetic resonance imaging, duplex ultrasonography of the extracranial carotid arteries, and transthoracic echocardiography. The subjects were aged 41 to 92 years. PAD was present in 81/101 patients (80.2%), including 57/73 (78.1%) with small artery occlusion, 11/13 (84.6%) with large artery occlusion, and 13/15 (86.7%) with cardiogenic embolism. In 42 of these 81 patients (51.9%), PAD was asymptomatic. Serum apoprotein A1 levels were significantly higher and the intima-media thickness was significantly greater in the patients with PAD than in those without PAD. The modified Rankin scale score was significantly higher on admission in patients with PAD than in those without PAD. Stepwise logistic regression analysis revealed that the apoprotein A1 level and the modified Rankin scale score on admission were strongly associated with the occurrence of stroke in patients with PAD. Our results suggest that PAD is frequently associated with acute ischemic stroke. It may be important to perform screening for PAD in patients who have suffered an ischemic stroke.


Atherosclerosis | 2005

Association between chronic Helicobacter pylori infection and acute ischemic stroke: Fukuoka Harasanshin Atherosclerosis Trial (FHAT).

Yasunori Sawayama; Iwao Ariyama; Maki Hamada; Shigeru Otaguro; Takao Machi; Yuji Taira; Jun Hayashi


Internal Medicine | 2005

Amelioration of Extrapontine Myelinolysis and Reversible Parkinsonism in a Patient with Asymptomatic Hypopituitarism

Kyoko Okada; Masatoshi Nomura; Norihiro Furusyo; Shigeru Otaguro; Shigeki Nabeshima; Jun Hayashi


Journal of Infection and Chemotherapy | 2003

A patient in whom only hepatitis B virus (HBV) was thought to have been contracted, by kissing, from a same-sex partner coinfected with HBV and human immunodeficiency virus-1

Norihiko Kubo; Norihiro Furusyo; Yasunori Sawayama; Shigeru Otaguro; Shigeki Nabeshima; Fuminaka Sugauchi; Masashi Mizokami; Seizaburo Kashiwagi; Jun Hayashi

Collaboration


Dive into the Shigeru Otaguro's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge