Takuya Akai
Kanazawa Medical University
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Featured researches published by Takuya Akai.
Surgical Neurology | 2002
Yuko Okada; Takuya Akai; Kazuya Okamoto; Takaaki Iida; Hisashi Takata
BACKGROUND Several surgical procedures have been reported for the treatment of chronic subdural hematoma. Whether irrigation is required is not clear. We compared the results of treatment of chronic subdural hematoma obtained with burr hole drainage and burr hole irrigation retrospectively. METHODS Forty patients with chronic subdural hematoma underwent surgery at our institution in the last 3 years. The first 20 patients were treated by burr hole irrigation (irrigation group), while the last 20 patients underwent burr hole drainage (drainage group). The rates of recurrence, changes in hematoma size, and number of days of postoperative hospitalization for the two groups were compared. No significant differences were found between the two groups in the presence of head injury, alcohol consumption, age, gender, or preoperative hematoma size. RESULTS Duration of postoperative hospitalization was 14.1 days in the drainage group and 25.5 days in the irrigation group. Recurrence was observed in 1 case (5%) in the drainage group, and in 5 cases (25%) in the irrigation group. In the drainage group, postoperative hematoma size was significantly decreased compared to preoperative hematoma size on the first postoperative day, after which change in hematoma size was minimal. On the other hand, in the irrigation group, hematoma size was decreased on the first postoperative day, but not to a significant extent. CONCLUSION For treatment of chronic subdural hematoma, postoperative hospitalization was shorter and the recurrence was less frequent with drainage than with irrigation.
Surgical Neurology | 1998
Kensuke Suzuki; Kyouichi Sugita; Takuya Akai; Tsuyoshi Takahata; Makoto Sonobe; Shinichirou Takahashi
BACKGROUND Recurrence of chronic subdural hematoma after surgery has not been eliminated. We sought to determine whether irrigation influences recurrence rate. METHODS Patients who had undergone surgery for chronic subdural hematoma were reviewed retrospectively. RESULTS Between 1986 and 1993, 186 cases of chronic subdural hematoma were treated surgically at Mito National Hospital. Recurrence was limited to six cases (3.2%). A closed drainage system without irrigation has been used since 1988 in 119 patients. Before 1988, 67 cases were treated with single burr hole irrigation and drainage. The rate of recurrence with the closed drainage system was 3.4% (four cases), compared with 3.0% (two cases) for irrigation and drainage. CONCLUSION Compared with irrigation and drainage, the closed drainage system without irrigation was safe and effective, and recurrence of chronic subdural hematoma is not influenced by irrigation.
Journal of Computer Assisted Tomography | 2000
Hisao Tonami; Maya Kamehiro; Manabu Oguchi; Kotaro Higashi; Itaru Yamamoto; Takayuki Nojima; Kazuya Okamoto; Takuya Akai
We present a case of chordoid glioma involving the third ventricle in a 42-year-old woman. CT and MR showed a homogeneously enhancing mass occupying the third ventricle, with a cystic component. Chordoid glioma should be included in the differential diagnosis of uncommon masses of the third ventricle in middle-aged women.
Pediatric Neurosurgery | 2006
Takuya Akai; Shigehiko Kawakami
Purpose: Craniosynostosis patients treated with one-stage cranioplasty often have bleeding from the dura mater, fluid collection in the extradural space, and poor wound healing due to skin overstretching. To avoid these complications, we began using distraction osteogenesis. To determine the advantages and disadvantages of the procedure, we retrospectively compared distraction osteogenesis with conventional cranioplasty. Patients and Results: We treated 24 patients with fronto-orbital advancement. Fifteen had one-stage cranioplasty; 9 received distraction osteogenesis. The one-stage operation patients averaged 25.5 months of age at surgery, 289 min of operating time, and 154 ml of intraoperative blood loss. For the distraction group, the average age was 16.6 months, average operating time was 196 min, and average blood loss was 76 ml. Conclusions: Compared with one-stage cranioplasty patients, distraction osteogenesis patients had significantly less intraoperative bleeding and shorter operating times. The disadvantages of distraction treatment were the need for multiple surgeries, prolonged hospitalization, wound infection, and dislocation of the distraction device.
Journal of Clinical Neuroscience | 2002
Emiko Hori; Takuya Akai; Masanori Kurimoto; Yutaka Hirashima; Shunro Endo
We present a case of growth hormone (GH)-secreting ectopic pituitary adenoma confined to the sphenoid sinus associated with a normal-sized empty sella. It has been well known that acromegaly is sometimes associated with an empty sella. However, such a case usually has a macroadenoma and an empty sella that is large. The authors considered the possible mechanisms of the association between a normal-sized empty sella and an ectopic pituitary adenoma in the sphenoid sinus as the following. Primary empty sella existed originally, and the pituitary adenoma developed later. The adenoma extended into the sphenoid sinus because of the pulsatile intracranial cerebrospinal fluid pressure.
Surgical Neurology | 1994
Naoya Kuwayama; Takuya Akai; Yukio Horie; Michiharu Nishijima; Shunro Endo; Akira Takaku
The authors present a rare case of dural arteriovenous fistulae (AVFs) involving both the transverse-sigmoid sinus and the foramen magnum, which was treated successfully with multi-staged endovascular procedures. The transverse-sigmoid sinus, which was thrombosed proximally and distally, was occluded by transarterial embolization followed by intraoperative embolization of the sinus using platinum coils. The dural AVF involving the foramen magnum was occluded via a transvenous approach.
Pediatric Neurosurgery | 2002
Takuya Akai; Miyuki Kishibe; Shigehiko Kawakami; Azusa Kobayashi; Tetsuo Ozawa
This paper reports a case of Beare-Stevenson cutis gyrata syndrome confirmed by DNA analysis of the patient’s fibroblast growth factor receptor (FGFR) genes. At birth, the patient had ocular proptosis, a red nevus with skin tags on her forehead and an umbilical stump. She developed craniosynostosis, craniofacial dysmorphism and hydrocephalus. Her treatment included forehead and facial advancement and a ventriculoperitoneal shunt. Analysis of the FGFR genes revealed that she was heterozygous for a missense mutation in exon 10 for the FGFR2 protein, resulting in an amino acid substitution of cysteine for tyrosine at residue 375 (Tyr375Cys). This is the fourth case of Beare-Stevenson cutis gyrata syndrome confirmed by mutation analysis of the FGFR genes.
Surgical Neurology | 1989
Michiharu Nishijima; Jun Harada; Takuya Akai; Shunro Endo; Akira Takaku
A 70-year-old woman was admitted to our hospital with complaints of severe dizziness and occipital headache. A right vertebral angiogram demonstrated a kinked, duplicated origin of the vertebral artery. Medical treatment was not effective, and an operative correction was attempted to improve the vertebral artery circulatory flow. The duplicate origin of the vertebral artery was confirmed at the time of surgery. Eight cases of duplicate origin of the vertebral artery in the literature are reviewed.
Neurosurgery | 2009
Yasuo Sasagawa; Takuya Akai; Shoutarou Itou
OBJECTIVEWe report a rare case of gamma knife radiation–induced cavernous hemangioma. CLINICAL PRESENTATIONA 35-year-old man underwent resection of a left vestibular schwannoma and gamma knife radiosurgery (maximal dose, 24 Gy; marginal dose, 12 Gy) for the residual schwannoma. Follow-up magnetic resonance images showed no tumor progression. Ten years later, he developed right hemihyperesthesia and mild hemiparesis. Magnetic resonance imaging revealed a size reduction at the resected tumor site and a newly developed lesion in the adjacent pons. No connection was observed between the new mass and the previous tumor. The T2-weighted image showed the new mass as heterogeneous and “popcorn-like” with a mixed signal intensity core and a hypointense hemosiderin rim. Two years after its appearance, the new lesion appeared hypointense on the T2-weighted image, with a hyperintense core on the T1-weighted image. These findings were compatible with cavernous hemangioma. INTERVENTIONWe diagnosed the new lesion as a radiation-induced cavernous hemangioma. Ten days after admission, symptoms improved without surgical intervention. CONCLUSIONGamma knife radiosurgery induced this rare case of cavernous hemangioma in an area that received a low dose of irradiation and was distant from the primary tumor. Because patients undergoing radiosurgery face the possibility, although small, that such neoplasms may occur, they should be followed for many years.
Thrombosis Research | 1997
Noriyasu Fujii; Toshiyuki Kaji; Takuya Akai; Fumitomo Koizumi
We investigated the alteration of heparan sulfate proteoglycans induced by thrombin in cultured vascular endothelial cells. Heparan sulfate proteoglycans, which were metabolically labeled with [3H] glucosamine and [35S] sulfate, were isolated by DEAE-Sephacel ion-exchange chromatography and characterized by molecular sieve gel filtration. Core proteins were analyzed by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of [35S] amino acids-labeled heparan sulfate proteoglycans after digestion with hepartinase. It was revealed that the high molecular weight subclass of heparan sulfate proteoglycans in the cell layer was markedly decreased by thrombin without changes of the hydrodynamic size of the molecules and the molecular weight of heparan sulfate chains. In addition, thrombin decreased the amount of large heparan sulfate proteoglycan core protein with a molecular weight of approximately 400 kDa, probably perlecan core, in the cell layer and the conditioned medium. The present data suggest that thrombin-induced decrease in the amount of heparan sulfate in vascular endothelial cell layer includes a reduction of the number of large heparan sulfate proteoglycan perlecan molecules through a suppression of the core protein synthesis.