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Dive into the research topics where Takanobu Hase is active.

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Featured researches published by Takanobu Hase.


Surgery Today | 1999

Handlebar hernia with intra-abdominal extraluminal air presenting as a novel form of traumatic abdominal wall hernia : Report of a case

Hisanori Shiomi; Takanobu Hase; Shuichi Matsuno; Masahumi Izumi; Takeshi Tatsuta; Fumito Ito; Akihiro Kishida; Tohru Tani; Masashi Kodama

An 18-year-old male was admitted to our Emergency Department with a traumatic abdominal wall hernia (TAWH) of the left lower quadrant (LLQ) after suffering hypogastric blunt injury and urogenital lacerations in a motorcycle accident. Upright chest X-ray showed a small amount of right infradiaphragmatic free air, and a computed tomographic (CT) scan demonstrated an abdominal wall hernia. At surgery, no impairment was found in the digestive tract, and an abdominal herniorrhaphy was performed. It is suggested that the free air had passed through a connection between the scrotal laceration and the contralateral abdominal defect via the subcutaneous space and was palpated as emphysema. This is a new type of TAWH, which suggests that blunt abdominal trauma may result in negative pressure in the subcutaneous and peritoneal cavity, and this could reflect the pathophysiology of TAWH.


Cell and Tissue Research | 1986

Glucagon-related peptides in the rat hypothalamus

Akira Inokuchi; Yasunobu Tomida; Chizuko Yanaihara; Ryogo Yui; Yutaka Oomura; Hiroshi Kimura; Takanobu Hase; Tomoaki Matsumoto; Noboru Yanaihara

SummaryImmunohistochemically, nerve fibers and terminals reacting with anti-N-terminal-specific but not with anti-C-terminal-specific glucagon antiserum were observed in the following rat hypothalamic regions: paraventricular nucleus, supraoptic nucleus, anterior hypothalamus, arcuate nucleus, ventromedial hypothalamic nucleus and median eminence. Few fibers and terminals were demonstrated in the lateral hypothalamic area and dorsomedial hypothalamic nucleus. Radioimmunoassay data indicated that the concentration of gut glucagon-like immunoreactivity was higher in the ventromedial nucleus than in the lateral hypothalamic area. In food-deprived conditions, this concentration increased in both these parts. This was also verified in immunostained preparations in which a marked enhancement of gut glucagon-like immunoreactivity-containing fibers and terminals was observed in many hypothalamic regions. Several immunoreactive cell bodies were found in the ventromedial and arcuate nuclei of starved rats. Both biochemical and morphological data suggest that glucagon-related peptides may act as neurotransmitters or neuromodulators in the hypothalamus and may be involved in the central regulatory mechanism related to feeding behavior and energy metabolism.


Journal of Pediatric Surgery | 1995

Successful Management of Infantile Hepatic Hilar Hemangioendothelioma With Obstructive Jaundice and Consumption Coagulopathy

Takanobu Hase; Masashi Kodama; Akihiro Kishida; Mikiko Matsushita; Yoshimasa Kurumi; Tomoyuki Mizukuro; Hidetoshi Okabe; Masaaki Uno; Shigeru Ohta; Morimi Shimada

A 4-month-old boy with benign hemangioma of the porta hepatis is described. Obstructive jaundice and consumption coagulopathy developed, which were treated by percutaneous transhepatic drainage (PTHD), without resection of the tumor or bypass surgery. Because of tumor regression, the patient has remained free of symptoms even after the PTHD tube was removed. Because juvenile hemangioma is a benign tumor and occasional spontaneous regression is known to occur (as in our case and other reports), it is suggested that complete resection or bypass surgery is not necessary for juvenile hemangioendothelioma, even with obstructive jaundice, if bile drainage is adequately maintained.


Pediatric Surgery International | 2001

Techniques available for the management of massive sacrococcygeal teratomas

Takanobu Hase; Masashi Kodama; Akihiro Kishida; Shin'ichi Shimadera; H. Aotani; Morimi Shimada; Y. Yamamoto; Y. Noda; H. Okabe

Abstract An infant born in the 34th week of gestation weighing 5,355 g with a massive sacrococcygeal (SC) tumor was delivered by elective cesarean section. An ultrasonographic examination showed solid and cystic components in the tumor. Resection was successfully undertaken with insertion of a Nélaton catheter into the rectum to avoid unnecessary impairment of the viscera. The tumor weighed 2,380 g, measured 25 × 14 × 11 cm, and was clinicopathologically diagnosed to be a SC teratoma. This experience and other publications show that several considerations including control of hemorrhage and coagulopathies, visceral protection, and avoidance of wound infection are necessary to facilitate the surgical management of massive SC tumors. Several suggestions are made concerning the pre- and intraoperative management of this rare tumor.


Pediatric Surgery International | 2002

Outcome of infants with neuroblastoma detected by mass screening and surgically treated in Shiga Prefecture, Japan: what is the role of surgery?

Takanobu Hase; Shigeru Ohta; Tohru Tani; Tomoyuki Mizukuro; Eizi Mekata; Hiroyuki Naitoh; Shin'ichi Shimadera; Syouzou Fujino; Takashi Taga

Abstract.To investigate retrospectively the clinical and biological features that influence the outcome of infants with neuroblastoma (NB) detected by mass screening (NBMS), and to construct surgical strategies to deal with NBMS, 20 infants diagnosed as having either NB or ganglioneuroblastoma (GNB) between 1986 and 1998 were enrolled in a study. They comprised 15 boys and 5 girls ranging in age from 7 to 14 months. The following factors were analyzed by multivariate analysis: age, stage according to the Japanese staging system at the time of diagnosis, site of the primary tumor, histologic findings, preoperative urinary vanillylmandelic acid (VMA) and homovanillic acid (HVA) levels, VMA/HVA ratio, lactate dehydrogenase, neuron-specific enolase, Shimadas histologic classification, amplification of the N-myc oncogene by Southern blot analysis, nuclear content, and chromosomal abnormality. The 2-year survival was 95.0% (19/20). The site of the primary tumor was the adrenal gland in 12 cases, retroperitoneum in 6, and retrothoracic space in 2. Four infants had stage I, 6 stage II, 3 stage III, 3 stage IVB, and 4 stage IV disease. Complete resection was achieved in all cases except for 1 retroperitoneal GNB. Histologic examination showed that 8 patients had NB. Of the 12 GNBs, 8 were poorly-differentiated and 1 was well-differentiated. Only 1 of the 14 examined tumors showed amplification of N-myc (20 copies). The infant with N-myc-positive NB (stage II) died 23 months after surgery in spite of aggressive postoperative chemotherapy. Multivariate analysis revealed the plasma NSE level to be a significant predictor of survival (p < 0.0143). This suggests that N-myc amplification and plasma NSE level could be closely related to the survival of infants with NBMS. The N-myc-positive NB case implies that even in locoregional NB detected by NBMS, surgical excision should play a central role in the diagnosis of its oncogenic characteristics and indicate any subsequent therapy.


Surgery Today | 1998

The application of radio-opaque markers prior to ileostomy in an infant with chronic intestinal pseudo-obstruction: Report of a case

Takanobu Hase; Masashi Kodama; Akihiro Kishida; Nariyuki Naka; Shin'ichi Shimadera; Tomoko Egawa; Masaki Ohno; Morimi Shimada

We report the case of a 6-month-old boy who developed chronic intestinal pseudo-obstruction soon after birth. A rectal biopsy demonstrated immaturity of the neuronal cells in the enteral ganglion. His clinical course was stressful, with remission and exacerbation despite conservative treatment with daily bowel irrigation, prokinetic agents, and parenteral nutrition. Since the infant developed serious enterocolitis associated with the increased severity of his bowel obstruction, and no substantial gain in body weight was observed, a loopileostomy was performed based on X-ray findings with radio-opaque markers, which were employed to evaluate the whole gut transit time. The radio-opaque markers proved extremely useful for determining which loop of the ileum should be utilized for the ileostomy.


Pediatrics International | 1999

A mechanism for shock following stomach rupture in the newborn

Masakatsu Goto; Toyokazu Yoshioka; Takanobu Hase; Tohru Tani; W Patrick Zeller

Abstract Background: Stomach rupture often leads to shock and death within a short period, but the mechanism for this is not well‐known. Shock may be due, in part, to endotoxin translocation and endotoxemia.


Pediatric Surgery International | 1998

Manual reduction with the index finger for infantile intussusception: A modification of Hutchinson's maneuver

Takanobu Hase; Masashi Kodama; Tomoyuki Mizukuro; Akihiro Kishida; Shin'ichi Shimadera; Masaki Ohno; Morimi Shimada

Abstract Manual reduction with the index finger (modified Hutchinsons maneuver) enabling simple and safe manual reduction of infantile intussusception is described. The procedure was used in four patients, two boys and two girls, ranging in age from 2 to 15 months, as greater than normal compression was necessary and/or serosal splitting occurred during conventional reduction. The technique is as follows: in addition to the proximal bowel compression with Hutchinsons maneuver, the surgeon inserts his index finger into the intussusceptum via its neck. The finger enables the surgeon to sound a wider space between the intussusceptum and intussuscipiens, which is most likely to be responsive to bowel compression. Although the intussusceptions in the four patients were categorized as ileo-ileo-colic (three cases) and ileo-ileal (one case) types, this manual reduction technique was successful in all cases, no bowel rupture occurred, and hospitalization was no longer than with the conventional procedure. We conclude that this modified Hutchinsons maneuver may contribute to successful surgical reduction of infantile intussusception.


Journal of Clinical Gastroenterology | 1997

Three-dimensional helical computed tomography with intravenous cholangiography for sclerosing cholangitis manifested as postcholecystectomy symptom.

Takanobu Hase; Masashi Kodama; Junsuke Shibata; Yoshimasa Kurumi; Akihiro Kishida; Akira Kawaguchi; Humitaka Ishigami; Hidetoshi Okabe

A 46-year-old woman who had upper abdominal pain 10 years after cholecystectomy, and who had incidental sclerosing cholangitis (SC), was investigated by three-dimensional helical computed tomographic (3-DHCT) cholangiography with contrast medium, because endoscopic retrograde cholangiography (ERC) was unsuccessful and a second ERC was not permitted by the patient. The cholangiogram demonstrated annular strictures of the bilateral hepatic duct at the confluence of the common hepatic duct, and dilatation of the left intrahepatic biliary duct. Although we could not clarify the cause of the biliary tract deformity at the time of the 3-DHCT, the tentative diagnosis of postcholecystectomy deformity of the biliary tree led to successful treatment by right liver lobectomy and hepaticojejunostomy. Histologic findings were compatible with SC. From this experience and the literature, we suggest that 3-DHCT cholangiography with contrast medium can contribute to the preoperative diagnosis of morphological changes in the biliary tree in patients with postcholecystectomy symptoms.


Surgery Today | 1997

Development of black gallstones after the nonsurgical management of splenic injury: Report of a case

Takanobu Hase; Masashi Kodama; Kazuyoshi Hanazawa; Yoshimasa Kurumi; Satoshi Domasu; Masato Fujita; Kiyone Nakamura; Kazuhiko Morita; Kiyotaka Nakamura

A 22-year-old man was admitted to our Emergency Department after suffering splenic injury in a traffic accident. His intraabdominal bleeding was treated nonsurgically by the administration of total parenteral nutrition (TPN) and blood transfusions of packed red cells. He presented again 2 months after his discharge, being 3 months after the injury, for right hypochondralgia, at which time a gallstone was demonstrated on ultrasound (US) and computed tomography (CT). After endoscopic laparoscopic cholecystectomy, his symptoms disappeared and he has remained well since. The clinical course of this patient indicates that hemolytic hyperbilirubinemia can cause black gallstones as a late complication of the nonsurgical management of abdominal blunt trauma.

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Masashi Kodama

Shiga University of Medical Science

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Akihiro Kishida

Shiga University of Medical Science

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Hiroshi Kimura

Shiga University of Medical Science

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Morimi Shimada

Shiga University of Medical Science

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Tohru Tani

Shiga University of Medical Science

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Tomoyuki Mizukuro

Shiga University of Medical Science

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Shigeru Ohta

Shiga University of Medical Science

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Shin'ichi Shimadera

Shiga University of Medical Science

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Yoshimasa Kurumi

Shiga University of Medical Science

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