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Dive into the research topics where Taihei Yamada is active.

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Featured researches published by Taihei Yamada.


World Journal of Emergency Surgery | 2013

Successful treatment of a 14-year-old patient with intestinal malrotation with laparoscopic Ladd procedure: case report and literature review

Yuka Nakajima; Hiroyuki Sakata; Tomohiro Yamaguchi; Norichika Yoshie; Taihei Yamada; Takaaki Osako; Mariko Terashima; Naomi Mambo; Ryuta Saka; Satoko Nose; Takashi Sasaki; Hiroomi Okuyama; Atsunori Nakao; Joji Kotani

Midgut malrotation is an anomaly of intestinal rotation that occurs during fetal development and usually presents in the neonatal period. We present a rare case of malrotation in a 14-year-old patient who presented with cramping, generalized right abdominal pain, and vomiting for a duration of one day. A computed tomography abdominal scan and upper gastrointestinal contrast studies showed malrotation of the small bowel without volvulus. Laparoscopy revealed typical Ladd’s bands and a distended flabby third and fourth duodenal portion extrinsically obstructing the misplaced duodeno-jejunal junction. The Ladd procedure, including widening of the mesenteric base and appendectomy, was performed. Symptoms completely resolved in a half-year follow up period. Patients with midgut malrotation may present with vague abdominal pain, intestinal obstruction, or intestinal ischemia. The laparoscopic Ladd procedure is feasible and safe, and it appears to be as effective as the standard open Ladd procedure in the diagnosis and treatment of teenage or adult patients with intestinal malrotation.


Medical gas research | 2014

Can carbon monoxide-poisoned victims be organ donors?

Noritomo Fujisaki; Atsunori Nakao; Takaaki Osako; Takeshi Nishimura; Taihei Yamada; Keisuke Kohama; Hiroyuki Sakata; Michiko Ishikawa-Aoyama; Joji Kotani

The increasing demand for organ allografts to treat end-stage organ failure has driven changes in traditional donor criteria. Patients who have succumbed to carbon monoxide (CO) poisoning, a common cause of toxicological mortality, are usually rejected as organ donors. To fulfill the increasing demand, selection criteria must be expanded to include CO-poisoned donors. However, the use of allografts exposed to high CO concentrations is still under debate. Basic research and literature review data suggest that patients with brain death caused by CO poisoning should be considered appropriate organ donors. Accepting organs from CO-poisoned victims could increase the number of potential donors and lower the death rate of patients on the waiting lists. This review and reported cases may increase awareness among emergency department physicians, as well as transplant teams, that patients dying of CO exposure may be acceptable organ donors.


European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery | 2014

Recipient hyperbilirubinaemia protects cardiac graft in rat heterotopic heart transplantation

Sungsoo Lee; Taihei Yamada; Donna B. Stolz; Masanori Abe; Kenneth R. McCurry; Noriko Murase; Joji Kotani; Atsunori Nakao

OBJECTIVES Since bilirubin is a known powerful antioxidant, this study examined whether recipient hyperbilirubinaemia protected heart grafts from ischaemia/reperfusion (I/R) injury and chronic rejection associated with rat cardiac transplantation. METHODS Heterotopic heart transplantation (HTx) was performed using congenitally hyperbilirubinaemic GUNN (j/j) and normobilirubinaemic GUNN (+/+) rats. Syngenic grafts from +/+ rats were transplanted into +/+ or j/j rats with 6 or 18 h cold storage in University of Wisconsin solution to study I/R injury. To evaluate the effect on chronic rejection, Brown Norway rat heart grafts were transplanted into +/+ or j/j rats under short-course tacrolimus immunosuppression. RESULTS The +/+ grafts in j/j rats demonstrated significantly lower serum creatine phosphokinase and higher left ventricular developed pressures and had smaller infarct areas than +/+ rats at 3 h after reperfusion. Graft survival with 18 h cold storage increased from 0% in +/+ rats to 41.7% in j/j rats. Malondialdehyde (a marker of lipid peroxidation), mRNA of the inflammatory mediators and phosphorylation of ERK1/2 were significantly decreased in the grafts transplanted into j/j rats compared with those transplanted into +/+ rats 1-3 h after reperfusion. The mean allograft survival in j/j recipients was prolonged to a median survival of 150 days from 84 days in +/+ recipients and was associated with less macrophage infiltrates and less intragraft inflammatory cytokine mRNA at d60. In vitro T-cell proliferation was significantly inhibited in the presence of bilirubin. CONCLUSIONS Recipient hyperbilirubinaemia ameliorated cardiac I/R injury, as well as chronic allograft rejection following HTx via regulation of inflammatory responses or T-cell proliferation.


Acute medicine and surgery | 2014

Application of carbon monoxide for treatment of acute kidney injury

Atsunori Nakao; Taihei Yamada; Keisuke Kohama; Norichika Yoshie; Noritomo Fujisaki; Joji Kotani

Acute kidney injury in critically ill patients is common and associated with a substantial increase in morbidity and mortality. Even with aggressive medical care and renal replacement therapy, acute kidney injury remains a significant health care concern. Recent published reports offer new strategies for the prevention and amelioration of acute kidney injury using carbon monoxide. Although considered a toxic environmental gas, carbon monoxide has recently aroused scientific and clinical interest, as its beneficial effects and mechanisms of action have been substantially defined in various in vitro and in vivo experiments. The exogenous application of carbon monoxide can confer cytoprotection by modulating intracellular signaling pathways through its anti‐inflammatory, anti‐apoptotic, vasodilative, antithrombotic and antiproliferative properties. Thus, evidence is accumulating to support the notion of carbon monoxide treatment for acute kidney disease. In this review, we focus on the extensively analyzed advantageous value of treatment with inhaled/soluble carbon monoxide in the context of kidney injury. Mechanisms such as signaling pathways, as well as an expanded view regarding toxicity and side‐effects, are described broadly. In addition, we discuss the clinical applicability of carbon monoxide as a promising therapeutic strategy for the treatment of patients with acute kidney disease based on translating basic experimental findings into clinical application.


Acute medicine and surgery | 2014

Non-surgical pneumoperitoneum associated with mechanical ventilation

Ayana Okamoto; Atsunori Nakao; Kenichi Matsuda; Taihei Yamada; Takaaki Osako; Hiroyuki Sakata; Yoshimichi Yamaguchi; Mariko Terashima; Jinka Iwano; Joji Kotani

Dear Editor, Non-surgical pneumoperitoneum from an intrathoracic route is the most frequently reported cause in non-surgical peritoneal air collection. The true incidence of pneumoperitoneum associated with mechanical ventilation is unknown, but current estimates range from rare to 7% of intubated patients in the intensive care unit. This complication may lead to unnecessary laparotomy, however, if correctly diagnosed, it can be observed successfully without surgical intervention. We experienced a patient with subcutaneous emphysema, mediastinal emphysema, and pneumoperitoneum in whom coughing may have had a causative role, which was recognized and was managed without laparotomy. A 40-year-old female was transferred to our hospital due to loss of consciousness following a suicide attempt (hanging) and an overdose of anti-anxiety medicine. Although her vital signs were stable at admission, the patient was intubated, sedated, and ventilated in the intensive care unit, as her Glasgow Coma Scale score was 3 (E1, V1, and M1). Assisted ventilation was used with a fractional inspired oxygen concentration (FiO2) of 0.4 and a positive airway pressure of 5 cm H2O or less. On the second day of admission, she was alert with strong spontaneous breathing on the ventilator. Routine chest and abdominal X-ray revealed pneumothorax and pneumoperitoneum. Computed tomography scan of the chest and abdomen confirmed the presence of free intraperitoneal air without free fluid (Fig. 1). The patient was not symptomatic and had no fever or dyspnea. The abdomen was soft and flat without guarding or distension. Leukocytosis was present, with a white cell count of


Journal of Clinical Biochemistry and Nutrition | 2012

A secure “double-check” technique of bedside post pyloric feeding tube placement using transnasal endoscopy

Atsunori Hashimoto; Munehiko Oya; Mika Iwano; Chisako Fuse; Tomoko Inoue; Taihei Yamada; Mariko Terashima; Takaaki Osako; Takahiro Ueda; Isamu Yamada; Atsunori Nakao; Joji Kotani

Enteral feeding has become an important means of providing nutritional support to seriously ill patients. Placement of the feeding tube through the pyloric ring and past the ligament of Treitz into the proximal jejunum is critical to reduce the risk of gastroesophageal regurgitation and microaspiration. We started utilizing transnasal endoscopy for intestinal feeding tube placement, placing enteral tubes for 40 patients between March 2008 and February 2009. Although we achieved a high success rate comparable to previous reports, we experienced several cases of failure, which was corrected with repeated endoscopy. Based on these experiences, we modified our method by adding a ”double-check” transnasal endoscopy through the other nasal passage. After April 2010, we have placed the feeding tube by ”double-check” method for all patients (more than 40 patients) who required transnasal endoscopic feeding tube placement. We have not experienced any misplacement in all these patients after 24 h later with 100% successful rate since the introduction of ”double-check” procedure. We describe our experience with ”double-check” transnasal endoscopic feeding tube placement, which we found to be a helpful adjunct, for patients in intensive care unit.


Acute medicine and surgery | 2014

Role of endogenous IL-18 in the lung during endotoxin-induced systemic inflammation

Miki Takahara; Katsuhito Shuno; Chisato Yamauhi; Makoto Miyoshi; Noriaki Maeshige; Makoto Usami; Taihei Yamada; Takaaki Osako; Atsunori Nakao; Joji Kotani

Overactivated neutrophils are causes of acute lung injury, which is a major clinical problem with significant morbidity and mortality in sepsis. Serum interleukin (IL)‐18 levels correspond to severity of systemic inflammation.


Medical gas research | 2016

Donor pretreatment with carbon monoxide prevents ischemia/reperfusion injury following heart transplantation in rats

Noritomo Fujisaki; Keisuke Kohama; Takeshi Nishimura; Hayato Yamashita; Michiko Ishikawa; Akihiro Kanematsu; Taihei Yamada; Sungsoo Lee; Tetsuya Yumoto; Kohei Tsukahara; Joji Kotani; Atsunori Nakao

Because inhaled carbon monoxide (CO) provides potent anti-inflammatory and antioxidant effects against ischemia reperfusion injury, we hypothesized that treatment of organ donors with inhaled CO would decrease graft injury after heart transplantation. Hearts were heterotopically transplanted into syngeneic Lewis rats after 8 hours of cold preservation in University of Wisconsin solution. Donor rats were exposed to CO at a concentration of 250 parts per million for 24 hours via a gas-exposure chamber. Severity of myocardial injury was determined by total serum creatine phosphokinase and troponin I levels at three hours after reperfusion. In addition, Affymetrix gene array analysis of mRNA transcripts was performed on the heart graft tissue prior to implantation. Recipients of grafts from CO-exposed donors had lower levels of serum troponin I and creatine phosphokinase; less upregulation of mRNA for interleukin-6, intercellular adhesion molecule-1, and tumor necrosis factor-α; and fewer infiltrating cells. Although donor pretreatment with CO altered the expression of 49 genes expressly represented on the array, we could not obtain meaningful data to explain the mechanisms by which CO potentiated the protective effects.Pretreatment with CO gas before organ procurement effectively protected cardiac grafts from ischemia reperfusion-induced injury in a rat heterotopic cardiac transplant model. A clinical report review indicated that CO-poisoned organ donors may be comparable to non-poisoned donors.


Acute medicine and surgery | 2016

Hemorrhagic shock due to ruptured left and right gastric artery aneurysm

Takeshi Nishimura; Hiroyuki Sakata; Taihei Yamada; Takaaki Osako; Keisuke Kohama; Yasukazu Kako; Sachiko Achiwa; Yoshitaka Furukawa; Atsunori Nakao; Joji Kotani

We report a case of hemorrhagic shock due to a ruptured gastric artery aneurysm successfully treated with transarterial embolization. A 72‐year‐old woman with cholangitis presented with hemoperitoneum following a ruptured aneurysm of the gastric artery.


Acute medicine and surgery | 2015

Iatrogenic subcutaneous emphysema and pneumomediastinum following a high-speed air drill dental treatment procedure

Takeshi Nishimura; Tatsuo Sawai; Kanenori Kadoi; Taihei Yamada; Norichika Yoshie; Takahiro Ueda; Atsunori Nakao; Joji Kotani

A patient was transported to our hospital with swelling in his right face and neck after restorative dental treatment. Subcutaneous emphysema and pneumomediastinum were discovered using computed tomography scans.

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Joji Kotani

Hyogo College of Medicine

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Takaaki Osako

Hyogo College of Medicine

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Keisuke Kohama

Hyogo College of Medicine

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Takahiro Ueda

Hyogo College of Medicine

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Hiroyuki Sakata

Hyogo College of Medicine

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