Tohru Shibazaki
Gunma University
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Featured researches published by Tohru Shibazaki.
Stereotactic and Functional Neurosurgery | 1999
Hiroshi K. Inoue; Hideaki Kohga; M. Hirato; Tomio Sasaki; J. Ishihara; Tohru Shibazaki; C. Ohye; Y. Andou
The clinical outcome of 122 patients with pituitary adenomas treated by microsurgery and/or Gamma Knife radiosurgery (GKRS) was analyzed to evaluate patient selection criteria and the role of GKRS. Sixty-six resections were performed in 59 patients. All tumors were macroadenomas, except for 5 ACTH-producing adenomas. Twenty-four of the 31 hypersecreting adenomas showed normal serum hormone values after treatment. Postoperative complications were rhinorrhea, cranial nerve palsies, and a small thalamic infarct. GKRS was performed on 18 of the operated patients because of residual tumors, mostly in the cavernous sinus. Thirty-five of the 63 patients treated by GKRS were followed for more than 2 years. All adenomas except 2 were stable or had decreased in size. Eleven of 17 functioning adenomas showed normal serum hormone values after treatment. It is concluded that tumors that compress the optic pathway should be removed and that residual tumors in the cavernous sinus are good indications for radiosurgery.
Journal of Neurosurgery | 2009
Chihiro Ohye; Tohru Shibazaki; Junji Ishihara; Jie Zhang
The purpose of this paper was to note a potential source of error in magnetic resonance (MR) imaging. Magnetic resonance images were acquired for stereotactic planning for GKS of a vestibular schwannoma in a female patient. The images were acquired using three-dimensional sequence, which has been shown to produce minimal distortion effects. The images were transferred to the planning workstation, but the coronal images were rejected. By examination of the raw data and reconstruction of sagittal images through the localizer side plate, it was clearly seen that the image of the square localizer system was grossly distorted. The patient was returned to the MR imager for further studies and a metal clasp on her brassiere was identified as the cause of the distortion.A-60-year-old man with medically intractable left-sided maxillary division trigeminal neuralgia had severe cardiac disease, was dependent on an internal defibrillator and could not undergo magnetic resonance imaging. The patient was successfully treated using computerized tomography (CT) cisternography and gamma knife radiosurgery. The patient was pain free 2 months after GKS. Contrast cisternography with CT scanning is an excellent alternative imaging modality for the treatment of patients with intractable trigeminal neuralgia who are unable to undergo MR imaging.The authors describe acute deterioration in facial and acoustic neuropathies following radiosurgery for acoustic neuromas. In May 1995, a 26-year-old man, who had no evidence of neurofibromatosis Type 2, was treated with gamma knife radiosurgery (GKS; maximum dose 20 Gy and margin dose 14 Gy) for a right-sided intracanalicular acoustic tumor. Two days after the treatment, he developed headache, vomiting, right-sided facial weakness, tinnitus, and right hearing loss. There was a deterioration of facial nerve function and hearing function from pretreatment values. The facial function worsened from House-Brackmann Grade 1 to 3. Hearing deteriorated from Grade 1 to 5. Magnetic resonance (MR) images, obtained at the same time revealed an obvious decrease in contrast enhancement of the tumor without any change in tumor size or peritumoral edema. Facial nerve function improved gradually and increased to House-Brackmann Grade 2 by 8 months post-GKS. The tumor has been unchanged in size for 5 years, and facial nerve function has also been maintained at Grade 2 with unchanged deafness. This is the first detailed report of immediate facial neuropathy after GKS for acoustic neuroma and MR imaging revealing early possibly toxic changes. Potential explanations for this phenomenon are presented.In clinical follow-up studies after radiosurgery, imaging modalities such as computerized tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance (MR) imaging are used. Accurate determination of the residual lesion volume is necessary for realistic assessment of the effects of treatment. Usually, the diameters rather than the volume of the lesion are measured. To determine the lesion volume without using stereotactically defined images, the software program VOLUMESERIES has been developed. VOLUMESERIES is a personal computer-based image analysis tool. Acquired DICOM CT scans and MR image series can be visualized. The region of interest is contoured with the help of the mouse, and then the system calculates the volume of the contoured region and the total volume is given in cubic centimeters. The defined volume is also displayed in reconstructed sagittal and coronal slices. In addition, distance measurements can be performed to measure tumor extent. The accuracy of VOLUMESERIES was checked against stereotactically defined images in the Leksell GammaPlan treatment planning program. A discrepancy in target volumes of approximately 8% was observed between the two methods. This discrepancy is of lesser interest because the method is used to determine the course of the target volume over time, rather than the absolute volume. Moreover, it could be shown that the method was more sensitive than the tumor diameter measurements currently in use. VOLUMESERIES appears to be a valuable tool for assessing residual lesion volume on follow-up images after gamma knife radiosurgery while avoiding the need for stereotactic definition.This study was conducted to evaluate the geometric distortion of angiographic images created from a commonly used digital x-ray imaging system and the performance of a commercially available distortion-correction computer program. A 12 x 12 x 12-cm wood phantom was constructed. Lead shots, 2 mm in diameter, were attached to the surfaces of the phantom. The phantom was then placed inside the angiographic localizer. Cut films (frontal and lateral analog films) of the phantom were obtained. The films were analyzed using GammaPlan target series 4.12. The same procedure was repeated with a digital x-ray imaging system equipped with a computer program to correct the geometric distortion. The distortion of the two sets of digital images was evaluated using the coordinates of the lead shots from the cut films as references. The coordinates of all lead shots obtained from digital images and corrected by the computer program coincided within 0.5 mm of those obtained from cut films. The average difference is 0.28 mm with a standard deviation of 0.01 mm. On the other hand, the coordinates obtained from digital images with and without correction can differ by as much as 3.4 mm. The average difference is 1.53 mm, with a standard deviation of 0.67 mm. The investigated computer program can reduce the geometric distortion of digital images from a commonly used x-ray imaging system to less than 0.5 mm. Therefore, they are suitable for the localization of arteriovenous malformations and other vascular targets in gamma knife radiosurgery.
Journal of Neurosurgery | 2005
Chihiro Ohye; Tohru Shibazaki; Sumito Sato
OBJECT The authors studied the effects of gamma knife thalamotomy (GKT) on Parkinson disease-related tremor and essential tremor before and after reloading of radioactive cobalt. METHODS Based on experience in stereotactic thalamotomy aided by depth microrecording, the target was located at the lateral border of the thalamic ventralis intermedius nucleus (VIM). For more precise targeting, the percentage representation of the thalamic VIM in relation to the entire thalamic length is useful. The location of the target was determined on magnetic resonance (MR) imaging and computerized tomography scanning. A maximum dose of 130 Gy was delivered to the target by using a single isocenter with the 4-mm collimator. In more recent cases, a systematic follow-up examination was performed at 3, 6, 12, 18, and 24 months after GKT. Since 1993, the authors have treated 70 patients with PD. Throughout the series the same dosimetric technique has been used. The course after GKT was compared between the 25 cases with PD treated before reloading and the 35 cases treated after reloading. In the majority (80-85%) treated after reloading, tremor and rigidity were reduced around 6 months after GKT. In the cases treated before reloading this effect took approximately 1 year. The thalamic reaction on MR imaging showed the same two lesion types in both series: a restricted and a diffuse. After reloading the restricted lesion was more frequent and the lesion volume was smaller. CONCLUSIONS The shorter delay in clinical improvement and smaller lesion size may be related to an increased radiation dose.
Stereotactic and Functional Neurosurgery | 1989
C. Ohye; Tohru Shibazaki; T. Hirai; Masaru Matsumura; Yasuhiro Kawashima; Masafumi Hirato
Use of microrecording technique in stereotactic selective thalamotomy, and in stereotactic biopsy for deep-seated lesions and in tumor removal was briefly described. For selective thalamotomy, the microrecording gives ample information to delineate thalamic subnuclei. Thus, the ventrointermedius (Vim) nucleus is identified by high-amplitude background activity and large-spike discharge, some of which responds solely to contralateral natural stimuli of kinesthetic modality. A small coagulation including this thalamic Vim point resulted in permanent arrest of the various kinds of tremor. As the normal brain tissue, whether the gray or white matter, is electrically active, the microrecording is useful to delineate the brain tumor from its surroundings. Stereotactic diagnostic biopsy and removal of the brain tumor were facilitated by this adjuvant method.
Stereotactic and Functional Neurosurgery | 1996
Chihiro Ohye; Tohru Shibazaki; Masafumi Hirato; Hiroshi K. Inoue; Y. Andou
On the basis of our experiences with selective ventralis intermedius thalamotomy with microrecording, certain cases of tremor with Parkinsons disease (PD, six cases), intentional tremor (one case) and essential tremor (one case) were treated by Gamma Knife. In all cases, 140-150 Gy were irradiated using 4-mm collimators. Three different strategies were used. (1) Gamma thalamotomy as the primary surgical treatment. (2) As a secondary treatment, irradiation of the symmetric point of the contralateral selective thalamotomy. (3) Extension of the previous thalamotomy. For the first three cases (all PD), a special plug pattern (100 plugs) was used, but was not employed for the later cases. No acute untoward effects were noted, and overall there appeared to be a reduction in tremor. The time course of tremor reduction varied from case to case, from about 5-6 months to 1 year.
Behavioural Brain Research | 1988
C. Ohye; Tohru Shibazaki; T. Hirai; H. Wada; Yasuhiro Kawashima; Masafumi Hirato; Masaru Matsumura
The neural mechanisms underlying spontaneous tremor were investigated in monkeys. Tremor-producing ventromedial tegmental (VMT) lesions involve at least three major neural elements. (1) Parvocellular division of the red nucleus (RNpc); (2) cerebellothalamic fibers passing through the red nucleus, and, (3) nigrostriatal fibers. These three elements were destroyed stereotaxically in areas remote from the VMT area separately and/or in various combinations, and correlation between the site of lesions and tremor was made. Lesion-induced tremor appeared only when the three elements were destroyed. A possible, particular role of the RNpc in the production of the spontaneous tremor is discussed.
Stereotactic and Functional Neurosurgery | 1996
Masafumi Hirato; Hiroshi K. Inoue; Akira Zama; Chihiro Ohye; Tohru Shibazaki; Y. Andou
The effects of relatively low dose Gamma Knife irradiation on acoustic schwannoma were evaluated in 29 patients followed over 2 years after treatment. The mean dose delivered to the tumor periphery was 12.1 Gy. Lowering of the magnetic resonance signal intensity in the tumor center appeared in 69% and signs of tumor shrinkage appeared in 59% of cases. The cyst in the tumor enlarged in 3 cases, and 2 cases developed hydrocephalus. The percentage of pure-tone hearing preservation was 82% at 3 months, 73% at 6 months, 68% at 12 months. 64% at 18 months and 59% at 24 months in 22 out of 29 cases. Relatively low dose Gamma Knife radiosurgery was effective in suppressing tumor growth, with preservation of hearing.
Stereotactic and Functional Neurosurgery | 1993
C. Ohye; Tohru Shibazaki; T. Hirai; Yasuhiro Kawashima; Masafumi Hirato; Masaru Matsumura
The thalamic zone mediating the rhythmic burst activity related to the contralateral tremor was studied by microelectrodes in clinical cases with tremor and in monkeys with experimental tremor. The rhythmic burst time-locked with the tremor was found in a restricted area of the ventrointermedius nucleus (Vim) in humans and also in VPLo nucleus in monkeys. In both cases, only the lateral and ventrocaudal part of each nucleus, which was defined as the kinesthetic zone, was involved. A possible tremor-mediating neural circuit is postulated.
Stereotactic and Functional Neurosurgery | 1990
C. Ohye; Tohru Shibazaki; Masafumi Hirato; Yasuhiro Kawashima; Masaru Matsumura
Our routine procedure for stereotactic selective Vim thalamotomy is described briefly. Preoperative steps identify the tremor qualitatively and quantitatively. The highlight of the procedure is the use of intraoperative microrecording to determine tremor time-locked rhythmic discharge in the presumed Vim nucleus. Results of the operation are also estimated quantitatively.
Acta neurochirurgica | 1991
Masafumi Hirato; Yasuhiro Kawashima; Tohru Shibazaki; Tohru Shibasaki; C. Ohye
In 15 patients with central pain (thalamic pain) after stroke, CT, PET scan and intraoperative thalamic microrecordings were performed. The results are considered together to evaluate a possible role of thalamic intralaminar nuclei in the genesis of central pain, especially of superficial pain. In the non-thalamic lesion group (deep pain dominant), thalamic background neural activity (BNA) was relatively high in Vim but low in CL. Conversely, in the thalamic lesion group (superficial pain dominant), thalamic BNA was higher in CL than in Vim, and markedly decreased in VC. In this group, regional cerebral oxygen consumption (rCMRO2) was relatively maintained, and regional oxygen extraction ratio (raOEF) and the relative value of regional cerebral glucose utilization (CMRGL), compared to rCMRO2, was increased in the cerebral cortex around the central sulcus. The genesis of superficial pain is discussed.