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Dive into the research topics where Shiro Nagasawa is active.

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Featured researches published by Shiro Nagasawa.


Neurosurgery | 1999

Asymptomatic familial cerebral aneurysms.

Masayuki Kojima; Shiro Nagasawa; Young-Eun Lee; Yasuhiro Takeichi; Eimei Tsuda; Nobuhisa Mabuchi

PURPOSE We evaluated the prevalence and features of cerebral aneurysms in the family members of people with asymptomatic aneurysms among 8680 participants undergoing magnetic resonance angiography. METHODS Of the 8680 participants, 380 had family histories of aneurysms and 8300 did not. The prevalence and features of asymptomatic aneurysms were compared in these two subgroups. In addition, the prevalence in all living first- or second-degree relatives was evaluated in 20 families. RESULTS The prevalence of asymptomatic aneurysms was 7.0% (606 of 8680 participants) overall and 10.5% (40 of 380 participants) and 6.8% (566 of 8300 participants) in the subgroups with and without family histories of aneurysms, respectively. The prevalence in the female participants with family histories of aneurysms (12.3%, 28 of 228 participants) was higher than that in the male participants with family histories of aneurysms (7.9%, 12 of 152 participants) (P < 0.0001). Compared with the entire group, this subgroup more commonly showed aneurysms situated at the junction of the internal carotid and posterior communicating arteries (P < 0.0005) and at the middle cerebral artery (P < 0.0001). The prevalence of aneurysms in 115 members of the 20 families was 33.9%. Although the members of 14 families with aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage showed higher prevalence of ruptured and asymptomatic aneurysms (42.1%) than did the members of 6 families with only asymptomatic aneurysms (17.9%), the former had very low prevalence of asymptomatic aneurysms. CONCLUSION The prevalence of aneurysms is significantly elevated in family members of people with asymptomatic aneurysms. It is suggested that familial asymptomatic aneurysms are more likely to rupture in families having members with aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage than in those without.


Neurological Research | 1999

Effects of ebselen on cerebral ischemia and reperfusion evaluated by microdialysis.

Susumu Kondoh; Shiro Nagasawa; Masahiro Kawanishi; Kazunobu Yamaguchi; Sachiko Kajimoto; Tomio Ohta

Since ebselen is known to have glutathione peroxidase-like activity and inhibitory effects on lipoxygenase and cyclo-oxygenase, we investigated its protective effects against cerebral ischemia in the rat using microdialysis. Ebselen was given through a gastric tube 30 min before occlusion in the experimental groups. Ischemia was induced using 4-vessel occlusion either transiently (20-min occlusion of the arteries followed by reperfusion), or over a prolonged period (120-min occlusion). Extracellular lactate, pyruvate and purine catabolites were sampled using microdialysis and measured by high performance liquid chromatography. During ischemia, the level of lactate, adenosine, inosine and hypoxanthine in the control group increased markedly. The lactate: pyruvate ratio increased during ischemia and decreased after reperfusion. Although the level of lactate and adenosine decreased immediately after reperfusion, those of inosine and hypoxanthine showed delayed decrease. Ebselen reduced the maximum values of lactate and purine catabolites significantly and markedly in transient ischemia. Although it reduced the values significantly in prolonged ischemia, the decrements were less marked than those in transient ischemia. Based on these results we consider ebselen to protect against ischemic metabolic changes and to accelerate the recovery during reperfusion.


Neurosurgery | 1992

Selective cooling of brain using profound hemodilution in dogs.

Tomio Ohta; Ichiro Sakaguchi; Liu Wei Dong; Shiro Nagasawa; Akihiro Yasuda

A new method of selective cooling of the brain was studied under profound hemodilution in 17 dogs. The carotid and vertebral arteries were bilaterally exposed, and the right vertebral artery was destroyed to provide an infusion route for cold solution for brain cooling. After the other three cerebral arteries were clamped simultaneously in the neck under low-dose heparinization, cold Ringers lactate solution was immediately perfused into the right vertebral artery. Brain temperatures fell gradually in two dogs, and the experiments were terminated. In 10 dogs, the brain temperature fell to 28 degrees C within 4.4 +/- 1.5 minutes and was maintained at 27.0 +/- 1.0 degrees C for 60 minutes. During this interval, the body temperature was 33.9 +/- 1.6 degrees C, the stump pressure of the vertebral artery was 58 +/- 15 mm Hg, and the hematocrit value of cerebral venous blood was 7.2 +/- 4.2%. Inspection of the brain during infusion revealed paleness of the cortical vessels and no evidence of swelling. All animals survived in good condition until the time of death at 10 weeks. Histological examination of the brain revealed no evidence of ischemic injury. In a control study of five dogs, Ringers solution at 38 degrees C was infused in the same manner as the cold solution. None of these dogs recovered from anesthesia. It is concluded that selective cooling of the brain under profound hemodilution has a protective effect on cerebral ischemia and provides a relatively bloodless operative field.


Neurological Research | 1996

SURGICAL RESULTS AND THE RELATED TOPOGRAPHIC ANATOMY IN PARACLINOID INTERNAL CAROTID ARTERY ANEURYSMS

Shiro Nagasawa; Tomio Ohta; Eimei Tsuda

Paraclinoid internal carotid artery aneurysms arising between the roof of the cavernous sinus and the origin of the posterior communicating artery are of considerable interest with regard to their anatomical variations and technical surgical challenges. Twenty-seven patients with 30 paraclinoid aneurysms were treated surgically through pterional intradural approach. Neck clipping was performed in 22 (73%) of the 30 aneurysms, coating in seven, and trapping in one. The surgical outcome was excellent in 24 patients (24/27, 89%), with two patients showing ipsilateral partial visual field defect (2/27, 7%). There was one death (4%) due to infarction after unintended carotid artery trapping. The characteristic topographic anatomical features which we considered to pose technical difficulties and to be responsible for the complications or failure in neck clipping were aneurysmal dome extending into the anterior clinoid process, atheroma at the neck, multiple paraclinoid aneurysms, ophthalmic artery originating at the neck, and marked supero-medial shift of the C2 segment of the carotid artery. pre-operative depiction of the topographical anatomy around the paraclinoid aneurysm is essential but not always possible on the basis of conventional angiography. Magnetic resonance or three-dimensional computerized tomographic angiography, and their axial source imaging, were useful in delineating the topography with unusual aneurysmal growth, overlap of aneurysm with the parent artery, and uncommon variations of the surrounding structures.


Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism | 1996

Hemodynamic Simulation Study of Cerebral Arteriovenous Malformations. Part 2. Effects of Impaired Autoregulation and Induced Hypotension

Shiro Nagasawa; Masahiro Kawanishi; Susumu Kondoh; Sachiko Kajimoto; Kazunobu Yamaguchi; Tomio Ohta

The hemodynamic changes occurring during obliteration procedures for arteriovenous malformations (AVM) have not been fully elucidated. Therefore, we undertook a simulation study using a compartmental flow model to investigate the role of altered autoregulatory conditions in the development of hyperperfusion during obliteration of large high-flow AVM. Induced hypotension was also simulated to evaluate its usefulness in reducing the incidence and severity of the event. As the AVM flow was decreased during the obliteration procedures, feeder pressure increased and drainer pressure decreased, with a concomitant increase in the perfusion pressure in the brain tissue surrounding the AVM. Cerebral blood flow (CBF) remained constant at 50 ml 100 g−1 min−1 in the presence of autoregulation and increased to 67 ml 100 g−1 min−1 in its absence. When the lower limit of the autoregulatory pressure range (LAR) was shifted from 60 to 50 or 40 mm Hg, the flow volume increased markedly from 67 to 77 ml 100 g−1 min−1 or to 92 ml 100 g−1 min−1 after complete obliteration. Decrease in LAR would be a cause of the hyperperfusion. Induced systemic hypotension was found to be effective in reducing the magnitude of these hemodynamic changes, when induction was appropriately performed in a stepwise fashion. A simulation study is useful in clarifying the various hemodynamic changes that develop during the treatment of AVM.


Neurological Research | 2000

Intra-operative measurement of cortical arterial flow volumes in posterior circulation using Doppler sonography.

Shiro Nagasawa; Masahiro Kawanishi; Yuichi Tada; Shinji Kawabata; Tomio Ohta

Abstract Little has been reported on the flow volume of cortical arteries in the posterior circulation. During craniotomy in 28 patients, we measured the flow velocity of the arteries using microvascular Doppler sonography and recorded their arterial radii and the insonation angle. The flow velocities and radii were 25.7 cm sec–1 and 0.11 cm for the posterior cerebral artery (PCA), 19.5 cm sec–1 and 0.07 cm for the superior cerebellar artery (SCA), 19.6 cm sec–1 and 0.04 cm for the anterior inferior cerebellar artery (AICA), 14.9 cm sec–1 and 0.05 cm for the posterior inferior cerebellar artery (PICA), 28.3 cm sec–1 and 0.18 cm for the basilar artery, and 18.5 cm sec–1 and 0.16 cm for the vertebral artery, respectively. Since the flow velocities of these arteries were confined in a narrow range compared to the cross-sectional areas, the latter was considered to be the primary determinant for flow volume in these arteries. Based on certain assumptions, we estimated the flow volume of the PCA, SCA, AICA and ICA to be 60, 20, 10 and 10 ml min–1, respectively, which could be regarded as the current reference values for the arterial flow volumes. [Neurol Res 2000; 22: 194-196]


Neuroradiology | 1997

Topographic anatomy of paraclinoid carotid artery aneurysms: usefulness of MR angiographic source images

Shiro Nagasawa; Jun Deguchi; M. Arai; Hideo Tanaka; Masahiro Kawanishi; Tomio Ohta

Abstract We evaluated the usefulness of magnetic resonance angiography (MRA) for showing the topography of paraclinoid carotid artery aneurysms in 27 patients with 30 paraclinoid aneurysms undergoing conventional angiography, three-dimensional time-of-flight MRA and surgery. The anatomy shown on the axial MRA source images was consistent with that found at surgery. The neck of the aneurysm could always be identified on the source images, while it could not be analysed exactly on conventional angiography in 3 cases (10 %). The optic nerves, including those displaced by the aneurysm, were recognised in all patients. The anterior clinoid process was shown as a low-intensity rim or area contiguous with the cortical bone. The source images were of great value in understanding the topography of paraclinoid carotid artery aneurysms.


Neurological Research | 1993

Haemodynamic study of arteriovenous malformations using a hydraulic model

Shiro Nagasawa; Masahiro Kawanishi; Hideo Tanaka; Tomio Ohta; Shinji Nagayasu; Haruhiko Kikuchi

Despite the accumulation of intraoperative data on arteriovenous malformations (AVMs), details of the haemodynamics have not yet been elucidated. A hydraulic model was constructed from silicone and glass tubes to simulate a high-flow AVM. During stepwise obliteration of the nidus, haemodynamic changes were continuously measured in residual parts of the AVM and in the surrounding brain. The flow in the residual AVM decreased nonlinearly with the advance of obliteration. The feeder pressure increased markedly from 37 mmHg to 94 mmHg, while the drainer pressure decreased gradually. The flow volume in the surrounding brain increased markedly from 40 ml/min to 100 ml/min at an occlusion ratio of 60%, where the pressure gradient across the nidus reached 60 mmHg. In the presence of autoregulation, further obliteration showed no change in the flow volume with the increased pressure gradient to 93.7 mmHg. Under dysautoregulatory conditions the flow volume increased to 122 ml/min, although the pressure gradient was 8.3 mmHg lower than that under autoregulatory conditions. Simulation study is useful in understanding haemodynamic changes during the treatment of AVMs.


Surgical Neurology | 1994

Giant neurinoma occupying the holocervical and upper thoracic regions: Case report

Shiro Nagasawa; Tomio Ohta; Yoshinaga Kajimoto; Jyun Aoki; Toshinobu Onomura; Yoshiki Miyaji

We report a case with a giant spinal neurinoma located between the foramen magnum and fifth thoracic levels. The patient did not develop any neurologic symptoms until 16 years after the onset of hydrocephalus. The latter, successfully treated with a ventriculoperitoneal shunt, was associated with a cerebrospinal fluid protein of 400 mg/dL and was in all probability the first sign of the spinal cord tumor.


Neurological Research | 1994

Simulation study on therapeutic vertebral artery occlusion for VA-PICA giant aneurysm

Masahiro Kawanishi; Shiro Nagasawa; Tomio Ohta; Sachiko Kajimoto; Susumu Kondoh

We investigated haemodynamic effects of therapeutic vertebral artery (VA) occlusion on giant aneurysms at the bifurcation of the VA-posterior inferior cerebellar artery (PICA). An hydraulic model of the human vertebro-basilar artery was manufactured from glass and silicone tubes. Glass-spheres 2.5 cm in diameter were placed at the bifurcation as model aneurysms with respective distances of 8.5, 7.5, 6.5 and 5.5 mm between the VA union and aneurysmal neck. A 40% glycerol solution was perfused in this system and the half-life of the dye injected into aneurysms was regarded as an index of intra-aneurysmal stagnation. Flow conditions in aneurysms depended on the presence or absence of the effect of contralateral VA flow as well as the PICA flow. The half-life increased significantly after VA occlusion proximal to the PICA when the aneurysmal neck was more than 7.5 mm away from the VA union and PICA flow volume was less than 12 ml min-1. The half-life in aneurysms located within 6.5 mm from the union changed little after VA occlusion regardless of the PICA flow volumes. The haemodynamic simulation study would be helpful in speculating on the efficacy of this treatment.

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