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Featured researches published by Shintaro Tsuge.


Case reports in orthopedics | 2013

Spontaneous Symptomatic Pseudoarthrosis at the L2-L3 Intervertebral Space with Diffuse Idiopathic Skeletal Hyperostosis: A Case Report

Keiji Hasegawa; Hiroshi Takahashi; Yasuaki Iida; Yuichirou Yokoyama; Katsunori Fukutake; Ryo Takamatsu; Kazumasa Nakamura; Daisuke Suzuki; Wataru Shishikura; Shintaro Tsuge; Masayuki Sekiguchi; Akihito Wada

Pseudoarthrosis at the intervertebral space in patients with ankylosing spondylitis has occasionally been reported, but symptomatic pseudoarthrosis at the intervertebral disc level is rare in patients with diffuse idiopathic skeletal hyperostosis (DISH). Here, we report a case of symptomatic pseudoarthrosis at the L2-L3 intervertebral space that was diagnosed based on clinical history. We first performed L1–L5 fixation, but back-out of the pedicle screw occurred in the early postoperative phase and may have been caused by a short fixation range and concomitant Parkinsons disease. However, the prognosis of the case was favorable after a second surgery. This case indicates that a fixation range of at least 3 above and 3 below is necessary for bone fracture of a thoracolumbar vertebra and pseudoarthrosis in patients with DISH.


Case reports in orthopedics | 2016

Solitary Spinal Epidural Metastasis from Gastric Cancer

Taisei Sako; Yasuaki Iida; Yuichirou Yokoyama; Shintaro Tsuge; Keiji Hasegawa; Akihito Wada; Tetsuo Mikami; Hiroshi Takahashi

Solitary epidural space metastasis of a malignant tumor is rare. We encountered a 79-year-old male patient with solitary metastatic epidural tumor who developed paraplegia and dysuria. The patient had undergone total gastrectomy for gastric cancer followed by chemotherapy 8 months priorly. The whole body was examined for suspected metastatic spinal tumor, but no metastases of the spine or important organs were observed, and a solitary mass was present in the thoracic spinal epidural space. The mass was excised for diagnosis and treatment and was histopathologically diagnosed as metastasis from gastric cancer. No solitary metastatic epidural tumor from gastric cancer has been reported in English. Among the Japanese, 3 cases have been reported, in which the outcome was poor in all cases and no definite diagnosis could be made before surgery in any case. Our patient developed concomitant pneumonia after surgery and died shortly after the surgery. When a patient has a past medical history of malignant tumor, the possibility of a solitary metastatic tumor in the epidural space should be considered.


Spine Surgery and Related Research | 2018

Use of intrawound vancomycin powder against postoperative infection after spine surgery

Hiroshi Takahashi; Yasuaki Iida; Yuichirou Yokoyama; Keiji Hasegawa; Shintaro Tsuge; Katsunori Fukutake; Kazumasa Nakamura; Akihito Wada

Local application of vancomycin has recently become widely used in spine surgery. However, local application is not included in the indication and has not been approved by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA). Thus, we searched for reports with “intra wound-vancomycin” and “SSI” as keywords in the MEDLINE database, and investigated the efficacy, problems with use, and future prospects based on these reports. Intrawound vancomycin was described as effective in most of the reports, but was found to have no effect or to aggravate the condition in some reports. A toxic effect on osteoblasts due to a high local concentration was described in some reports, whereas local application was found to be safe in other studies. The amount of vancomycin used and the administration method varied among the reports. Overall, the results suggest that intrawound vancomycin is clinically effective, but this has yet to be established in a randomized controlled trial. There is a need to identify cases that should be selected for this treatment and to investigate the dose and optimum concentration of vancomycin for clinical use.


Journal of Infection and Chemotherapy | 2016

Evaluation of antimicrobial prophylaxis against postoperative infection after spine surgery: Limit of the first generation cephem.

Yasuaki Iida; Yasuhiro Inoue; Keiji Hasegawa; Shintaro Tsuge; Yuichirou Yokoyama; Kazumasa Nakamura; Ryoichi Fukano; Ryo Takamatsu; Akihito Wada; Hiroshi Takahashi

In our department, first-generation cephem (CEZ) are generally administered for 2 days as antimicrobial prophylaxis (AMP) for spinal surgery. However, the incidence of surgical site infection (SSI) has recently increased, particularly cases involving coagulase-negative Staphylococci (CNS) as an etiologic agent. The objective was to elucidate the problems with the current AMP and the risk factors of SSI through a retrospective investigation of affected cases. The subjects were patients who underwent spine surgery at our department between August 2007 and June 2013. The subjects were divided into those who developed SSI (S group) and who did not develop SSI (non-SSI (N) group), patients who developed CNS infection in the S group was subdivided as C group, and the risk factors were investigated. The significance of each factor was analyzed using cross tabulation, and multivariate logistic regression analyses were performed with 22 of the investigation factors as explanatory variables. The incidence of SSI was 2.55%, and the etiologic agent was CNS in 17 patients. Upon comparison between the S and N groups, the presence of 3 or more underlying diseases and blood loss were extracted as significant risk factors. Upon comparison between the C and N groups, emergency surgery and intra- and postoperative steroid administration were extracted as significant risk factors, in addition to the presence of 3 or more underlying diseases and blood loss. The effect of the current AMP using first generation cephem is limited, and reconsideration of the protocol may be necessary.


Open Journal of Orthopedics | 2013

Successful Treatment of Spine Fracture for Diffuse Idiopathic Skeletal Hyperostosis with Teriparatide—A Report of Two Cases

Yasuaki Iida; Hiroshi Takahashi; Yuichiro Yokoyama; Yasuhiro Inoue; Daisuke Suzuki; Keiji Hasegawa; Shintaro Tsuge; Wataru Shishikura; Katsunori Fukutake; Ryo Takamatsu; Kazumasa Nakamura; Masayuki Sekiguchi; Akihito Wada


Open Journal of Orthopedics | 2018

Spontaneous Extracranial Vertebral Artery Dissociation: A Case Report and Review of the Literature

D. Kamakura; Yasuaki Iida; Keiji Hasegawa; Shintaro Tsuge; Katsunori Fukutake; Kazumasa Nakamura; Hiroshi Takahashi; Akihito Wada


Open Journal of Orthopedics | 2017

Femoral Nerve Pulsy due to Iliopsoas Muscle Hematoma: A Mini Literature Review

Taisei Sako; Yuichirou Yokoyama; Keiji Hasegawa; Shintaro Tsuge; Kazumasa Nakamura; Akihito Wada; Hiroshi Takahashi


Open Journal of Orthopedics | 2017

A Patient with Malignant Spinal Epidural Lymphoma with Initial Rapidly Aggravating Paraplegia

Taihei Go; Yasuaki Iida; Hideyuki Aoki; Shintaro Tsuge; Keiji Hasegawa; Yuichiro Yokoyama; Akihito Wada; Yuri Akishima-Fukasawa; Hiroshi Takahashi


Open Journal of Orthopedics | 2014

A Case of Acute Cauda Equina Syndrome for Combined Lumbar Ossification of the Posterior Longitudinal and Yellow Ligament

Kazumasa Nakamura; Yuichirou Yokoyama; Akihito Wada; Yasuhiro Inoue; Keiji Hasegawa; Shintaro Tsuge; Hiroshi Takahashi; Yasuaki Iida


Open Journal of Orthopedics | 2013

Evaluation of Conservative Treatment of Acute Fracture of the Odontoid Process of Axis with a Halo-Vest *

Yuichiro Yokoyama; Hiroshi Takahashi; Yasuaki Iida; Yasuhiro Inoue; Keiji Hasegawa; Daisuke Suzuki; Shintaro Tsuge; Wataru Shishikura; Katsunori Fukutake; Ryo Takamatsu; Kazumasa Nakamura; Akihito Wada

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