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Featured researches published by Takaaki Nakatsu.


Hypertension Research | 2007

Use of Plasma B-Type Natriuretic Peptide Level to Identify Asymptomatic Hypertensive Patients with Abnormal Diurnal Blood Pressure Variation Profiles: Nondippers, Extreme Dippers, and Risers

Takaaki Nakatsu; Ryoko Shinohata; Keiichi Mashima; Yoko Yuki; Aya Nishitani; Shinji Toyonaga; Hiroko Ogawa; Satoshi Hirohata; Shinichi Usui; Shozo Kusachi

We examined the relationship between plasma B-type natriuretic peptide (BNP) level and diurnal variability pattern of blood pressure (BP). Twenty-four-hour ambulatory BP monitoring was performed in 98 patients with asymptomatic essential hypertension, and the patients were classified into four groups according to their circadian BP variation profiles: dippers (n=29), nondippers (n=36), extreme dippers (n=19), and risers (n=14). Plasma BNP was measured by enzyme immunoassay. Based on the distribution pattern of BNP values, the values were analyzed after logarithmic transformation. Significant differences in plasma BNP levels among the types of circadian BP variations were demonstrated by analysis of variance (p<0.0005). Nondippers and risers showed significantly higher plasma BNP levels (mean [range: −1 SD and +1 SD]: 16.1 [6.3, 41.6] pg/mL and 29.2 [15.9, 53.4] pg/mL, respectively) than dippers (8.4 [3.7, 19.1] pg/mL). The area under the receiver operating characteristics curve for distinguishing patients with abnormal circadian BP variation from those with normal variation was 0.72, indicating that plasma BNP levels were useful for distinguishing between these patients. Specificity of 69% and sensitivity of 72% were obtained with a cut-off value of 10.5 pg/mL (log plasma BNP, 1.02) for distinguishing the abnormal diurnal BP profile group from the normal group. In conclusion, hypertensive patients with abnormal diurnal BP variation patterns (nondippers, extreme dippers, and risers) showed higher plasma BNP levels than those with normal circadian BP variation (dippers). Plasma BNP level is clinically useful for the identification of hypertensive patients who have abnormal circadian BP variability, which increases the risk of cardiovascular events.


Journal of Cardiovascular Pharmacology and Therapeutics | 2000

Effects of cilostazol on heart rate and its variation in patients with atrial fibrillation associated with bradycardia.

Shinji Toyonaga; Takaaki Nakatsu; Takashi Murakami; Shozo Kusachi; Keiichi Mashima; Youkou Tominaga; Shinichi Yamane; Tadahisa Uesugi; Hideaki Kanai; Takao Tsuji

Background: Heart-rate (HR) variability is an important predictor of mortality in patients with heart disease. We examined the effects of cilostazol, a quinolinone derivative, on HR and HR variability in patients with chronic atrial fibrillation associated with bradycardia episodes. Patients and Methods: Thirteen patients with chronic atrial fibrillation associated with bra dycardia episodes (minimal HR <40/min and/or pauses, ie, episodes with an RR interval > 2.5 sec) received cilostazol (100 or 200 mg/day) orally for at least 2 months and 24-hour Holter electrocardiography was performed before and after the start of cilostazol administration. Results: Minimal HR was significantly increased, by an average of 14 beats/min (bpm), at 3.3 ± 0.8 weeks (mean ± SD) after the start of cilostazol treatment. The number of pauses was significantly decreased. As a consequence, mean HR was increased by an average of 18 bpm. Maximal HR was also increased by an average of 19 bpm. The circadian variation of the HR, determined by cosine fitting, was not changed by cilostazol treatment. The time-domain HR variabilities, ie, the SD of the mean RR interval and the SD of the 5-minute mean RR intervals, were also unchanged. New York Heart Association functional class was signifi cantly improved and the plasma atrial natriuretic polypeptide level was significantly de creased after the initiation of cilostazol treatment. Conclusion: Cilostazol improves the slow HR episodes associated with chronic atrial fibril lation and maintains the HR circadian variation and time-domain variability, indicating that cilostazol has therapeutic utility for the treatment of the slow HR associated with chronic atrial fibrillation.


Heart Rhythm | 2009

Abnormal transmural repolarization process in patients with Brugada syndrome

Mutsuko Sangawa; Hiroshi Morita; Takaaki Nakatsu; Nobuhiro Nishii; Daiji Miura; Aya Miura; Takeshi Tada; Masato Murakami; Shigeki Hiramatsu; Satoshi Nagase; Kazufumi Nakamura; Takefumi Oka; Shinji Toyonaga; Keiichi Mashima; Shozo Kusachi; Kazuhide Yamamoto; Tohru Ohe; Kengo Kusano

BACKGROUND Repolarization abnormality, especially during bradycardia, might be critical for initiation of ventricular fibrillation (VF) in patients with Brugada syndrome (BrS), but the contribution of the rate-dependent repolarization dynamics to the occurrence of VF is still unknown. OBJECTIVE The aim of our study was to determine the differences in rate-dependent repolarization dynamics between BrS with and without spontaneous VF and between BrS with and without SCN5A mutation. METHODS The subjects were 37 BrS patients with VF (VF(+) group: 10 male subjects) and without VF (VF(-) group: 27 male subjects) and 20 control subjects. Genetic analysis of SCN5A was performed in all 37 BrS patients. The relationships between QT, QTp, Tp-e, and RR intervals were obtained from Holter recordings as first linear regression lines, and the slopes of QT/RR, QTp/RR, and Tp-e/RR linear regression lines as the sensitivity of rate-dependent repolarization dynamics were compared. RESULTS QT/RR and Tp-e/RR slopes showed loss of a rate-dependent property in the VF(+) group compared with those in the VF(-) and control groups. There was no significant difference in QTp/RR slope among the VF(+), VF(-) and control groups. The Tp-e interval had a negative correlation with the RR interval in the VF(+) group and a positive correlation with the RR interval in the VF(-) and control groups. There was no significant difference in QT/RR, QTp/RR, and Tp-e/RR slopes between BrS patients with SCN5A mutation and those without SCN5A mutation. CONCLUSIONS Loss of rate-dependent QT dynamics may be associated with occurrence of VF in BrS.


Journal of Hypertension | 2008

Association of augmentation index of radial pressure wave form with diurnal variation pattern of blood pressure in untreated patients with essential hypertension.

Ryoko Shinohata; Takaaki Nakatsu; Yoko Yuki; Aya Nishitani; Keiichi Mashima; Shinji Toyonaga; Hiroko Ogawa; Satoshi Hirohata; Shinichi Usui; Tomoki Kitawaki; Shozo Kusachi

Objectives The augmentation index of the radial pulse wave has been reported to be a sensitive aortic stiffness marker in relatively young but not in older individuals. We studied the relationship between augmentation index and the diurnal blood pressure profiles. Patients and methods Twenty-four-hour ambulatory blood pressure monitoring was performed in 90 untreated patients with uncomplicated essential hypertension. The patients were classified into four groups: dippers, extreme dippers, nondippers, and risers. Augmentation index was calculated as the percentage of the second systolic peak relative to the first systolic peak. Results No significant differences in the averaged whole 24-h systolic or diastolic blood pressure were observed in the whole set of patients or in subgroup patients with age 60 years or under. In the whole set of patients (58.7 ± 12.9 years), there were significant differences in augmentation index between patients with abnormal (other than dippers) and normal diurnal blood pressure profiles (dippers). In subgroup patients with age 60 years or below (49.1 ± 9.1 years, n = 48), the abnormal diurnal blood pressure profile group showed significantly higher augmentation index (89.6 ± 10.3%) than dippers (80.5 ± 11.8%). The area under the curve in the receiver operating characteristics curve for distinguishing between dippers than other dippers was 0.73 (P < 0.01). Multivariate analysis demonstrated that abnormal diurnal blood pressure profile was independently associated with increase in augmentation index. In contrast, these relationships were not significant in the over 60 years subgroup patients (69.8 ± 5.6 years old, n = 42). Conclusions The present study revealed that augmentation index was associated with dipping blood pressure patterns in untreated hypertensive patients aged 60 years or younger. Augmentation index determination would be useful for initial assessment in connection with possible abnormal diurnal blood pressure variability in patients with age 60 years or younger.


Clinical and Experimental Hypertension | 2008

Heart Rate Variability for Evaluating Surgical Stress and Development of Postoperative Complications

Takafumi Ushiyama; Takaaki Nakatsu; Shinichi Yamane; Hiroe Tokutake; Hisao Wakabayashi; Ken Ishimura; Hajime Maeta

Heart rate variability (HRV) has recently been used to detect autonomic nerve tone, which is affected by various stresses. To test out hypothesis that HRV can determine surgical stress, we examined perioperative HRV in 30 patients with surgical treatment. Relations between HRV and factors of surgical stresses, such as duration of the operation, amount of blood loss at the operation, and developments of complications, were evaluated. Mean heart rate (HR) increased and other HRV indices decreased postoperatively. Most indices correlated significantly to the duration of the operation and amount of blood loss at the operation on postoperative day 1. Only the standard deviation of normal to normal RR intervals (SDNN) and HRV triangular index showed significantly low values in complicated patients. HRV measurement in the perioperative period showed a significant relation to surgical stress. The present results indicated that HRV may provide useful information with respect to surgical stress.


Journal of Electrocardiology | 1998

Double-Sector Lorenz Plot Scattering in an R-R Interval Analysis of Patients With Chronic Atrial Fibrillation Incidence and Characteristics of Vertices of the Double- Sector Scattering

Takefumi Oka; Takaaki Nakatsu; Shozo Kusachi; Youkou Tominaga; Shinji Toyonaga; Hiromichi Ohnishi; Makoto Nakahama; Issei Komatsubara; Masahiiro Murakami; Takao Tsuji

Abstract Animal experiments have demonstrated that the minimum R-R interval during atrial fibrillation is proportional to the functional refractory period of the atrioventricular node. On Lorenz plots, atrial fibrillation is characterized by sector-shaped scattering; the vertex of the sector (ie, the minimum R-R interval) represents the functional refractory period. According to the atrioventricular nodal dual-pathway theory, it was hypothesized that the dual atrioventricular nodal pathways associated with chronic atrial fibrillation represent two vertices with two sectors. Detection of two-sector Lorenz plot scattering was attempted in 48 patients with chronic atrial fibrillation who underwent 24-hour ambulatory electrocardiography. Lorenz plot scattering was constructed by means of a computer. Two sectors, suggesting dual pathways, were detected in 19 (40%) of the 48 patients. The two vertices, located at 388 ± 61 ms (mean ± SD) and 580 ± 60 ms were considered to represent the functional refractory periods of the fast and slow pathways, respectively. The vertex indicating the fast pathway showed greater circadian variation than that indicating the slow pathway. In one patient with dual-sector Lorenz plot scattering, whose atrial fibrillation spontaneously converted to sinus rhythm, an electrophysiologic study demonstrated dual atrioventricular nodal pathways. Thus, the Lorenz plot analysis identified two sectors, indicating the dual pathways, in approximately 40% of the patients with chronic atrial fibrillation, and the characteristics of the functional refractory periods of both pathways were estimated from the characteristics of the vertices. Although this study did not provide direct evidence of the dual atrioventricular nodal pathways, the analysis of Lorenz plot scattering may be clinically useful for studying the effects of drugs and/or ablation on the ventricular response in patients with atrial fibrillation based on the dual atrioventricular nodal pathway theory.


Clinical and Experimental Hypertension | 2003

Exponential-exponential cosine fitting of blood pressure decay induced by a long-acting calcium blocker, amlodipine, using home blood pressure measurement

Keiichi Mashima; Takaaki Nakatsu; Takashi Murakami; Shozo Kusachi; Youkou Tominaga; Shinnichi Yamane; Tadahisa Uesugi; Eriko Mayumi; Takashi Mitsuda; Takao Tsuji

Blood pressure (BP) decay data obtained from home BP measurements in six patients with uncomplicated essential hypertension treated with a calcium blocker, amlodipine, were fitted to an exponential–exponential cosine function to determine the characteristic BP‐lowering effects of amlodipine. An exponential–exponential cosine function fitted the morning and night systolic BP (sBP) decay data better than a simple exponential function. From the coefficients of the equation, the estimated BP lowering, time constant for BP decay and BP oscillation induced by amlodipine for morning and night sBP were approximately 23 and 25 mmHg, 10 and 6 days, and 12 and 12 mmHg, respectively. Diastolic BP showed a similar fitting though the fitting was weaker. The fitting results indicate that the BP decay, especially the sBP decay, induced by amlodipine occurred in an oscillative fashion, and the present analysis using home BP data may provide clinically useful information about the characteristic effects of amlodipine.


Pflügers Archiv: European Journal of Physiology | 1990

Autoregulation by the right coronary artery in dogs with open chests; comparison with the left coronary artery

Hideki Tani; Daiji Saito; Shozo Kusachi; Takaaki Nakatsu; Kazuyoshi Hina; Masayuki Ueeda; Hirofumi Watanabe; Shoichi Haraoka; Takao Tsuji

Experiments were conducted to study autoregulatory responses of the right and left coronary arteries in dogs with open chests. The right and left circumflex coronary artery were cannulated and perfused with blood from the femoral artery via a pressurized reservoir. The perfusion pressure was varied in steps over a wide range and coronary blood flow rates were measured. Both the right and left coronary arteries exhibited autoregulation but the pressure at the lower end of the autoregulatory range was lower in the right (39.8±9.1 mm Hg) than in the left circumflex coronary artery (57.6±14.5 mm Hg). The slope of the pressure-flow relationship in the autoregulatory range was less steep in the right than the left circumflex coronary artery. The closed-loop gain when the perfusion pressure was less than 100 mm Hg was greater in the right than in the left circumflex coronary artery. Increases in the right ventricular afterload produced by pulmonary artery constriction decreased the closed-loop gain, shifted the autoregulatory range upward and to the right, and made the slope steeper. These results indicate that more effective autoregulation is carried out by the right than the left circumflex coronary artery.


Clinical and Experimental Hypertension | 2008

Increased Blood Pressure Levels Relative to Subjective Feelings of Intensity of Exercise Determined with the Borg Scale in Male Patients with Hypertension

Eriko Mayumi; Aya Nishitani; Yoko Yuki; Takaaki Nakatsu; Shinji Toyonaga; Keiichi Mashima; Hiroko Ogawa; Satoshi Hirohata; Shinichi Usui; Ryoko Shinohata; Kousaku Sakaguchi; Shozo Kusachi

We examined the hemodynamic responses to exercise and symptoms in 37 male patients with untreated essential hypertension, and compared the findings with those in 32 age-matched healthy male volunteers by performing a graded symptom-limited exercise test using a bicycle ergometer. The subjective feeling of intensity of exercise was determined using the Borg scale. In the relationship between Borg scores and blood pressure (BP), patients with hypertension showed higher systolic BP and diastolic BP relative to the Borg scores than the controls. Consequently, patients with hypertension showed significantly higher systolic BP with Borg scores ≤ 3 (subjective symptoms ≤ moderately hard) than the controls (177.8 ± 27.0 vs. 143.7 ± 17.9 mmHg, p < 0.0001). Similarly, significantly higher diastolic BP with Borg scores ≤ 3 was observed in patients with hypertension than in the controls (101.6 ± 12.0 vs. 82.6 ± 11.6 mmHg, p < 0.0001). The pulse pressure with Borg scores ≤ 3 was also significantly higher in patients with hypertension than in the controls (76.2 ± 20.6 vs. 61.0 ± 13.6 mmHg, p < 0.0001). Hypertensive patients showed a decrease in the high-frequency power of heart rate variability at initial low-load exercise. In conclusion, the present study revealed that there was a greater BP response relative to the Borg score in patients with hypertension than in the controls. Autonomic nerve activity may contribute to some extent to these different relations. A determination of the relationship between the subjective feeling of intensity of the exercise and BP levels caused by a given intensity of load is essential before exercise training in patients, at least in males, with hypertension to avoid increasing the risk of cardiovascular events in association with excessive exercise training.


Clinical and Experimental Hypertension | 2002

CORRELATION OF LORENZ SCATTERPLOTS WITH FREQUENCY-DOMAIN HEART RATE VARIABILITY

Toshiyuki Ueda; Takaaki Nakatsu; Shinichi Yamane; Sekiko Kurazono; Takashi Murakami; Keiichi Mashima; Youkou Tominaga; Naoki Mukouhara; Shozo Kusachi; Takao Tsuji

Heart rate (HR) variability is important with respect to disease prognosis and the effects of drugs. Lorenz scatterplots provide a simple way to evaluate HR variability visually. The relation of Lorenz scatterplots to frequency-domain HR variability was examined in 75 Holter recordings and in simulated HR trends. The length of Lorenz scatterplots was double-exponentially correlated with total frequency and very-low frequency powers, with correlation coefficients (r) of 0.88. The width of Lorenz scatterplots was highly correlated with the high frequency power (r = 0.98). The sum of the width and length of Lorenz scatterplots was highly correlated with the total frequency power (r = 0.92). Identical results were obtained when simulated HR trends were used. In conclusion, Lorenz scatterplots provide a simple way to estimate the frequency-domain HR variability.

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