Tokuichiro Sugimoto
Memorial Hospital of South Bend
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Featured researches published by Tokuichiro Sugimoto.
Molecular and Cellular Biochemistry | 2006
Atsuko Kamijo; Takeshi Sugaya; Akihisa Hikawa; Masaya Yamanouchi; Yasunobu Hirata; Toshihiko Ishimitsu; Atsushi Numabe; Masao Takagi; Hiroshi Hayakawa; Fumiko Tabei; Tokuichiro Sugimoto; Naofumi Mise; Masao Omata; Kenjiro Kimura
Background: We reported that urinary L-FABP reflected the progression of chronic kidney disease (CKD). This study is aimed to evaluate the clinical significance of urinary liver type fatty acid binding protein (L-FABP) as a biomarker for monitoring CKD. Methods: Urinary L-FABP was measured using human L-FABP ELISA kit (CMIC.Co., Ltd., Tokyo, Japan). The relations between urinary L-FABP and clinical parameters were evaluated in non-diabetic CKD (n = 48) for a year. In order to evaluate the influence of serum L-FABP derived from liver upon urinary L-FABP, both serum and urinary L-FABP were simultaneously measured in patients with CKD (n = 73). Results: For monitoring CKD, the cut-off value in urinary L-FABP was determined as 17.4 μg/g.cr. by using a receiver operating characteristics (ROC) curve. Renal function deteriorated significantly more in patients with ‘high’ urinary L-FABP (n = 36) than in those with ‘low’ L-FABP (n = 12). The decrease in creatinine clearance was accompanied by an increase in urinary L-FABP, but not in urinary protein. Serum L-FABP in patients with CKD was not correlated with urinary L-FABP. Conclusion: Urinary excretion of L-FABP increases with the deterioration of renal function. Serum L-FABP did not influence on urinary L-FABP. Urinary L-FABP may be a useful clinical biomarker for monitoring CKD.
Therapeutic Apheresis and Dialysis | 2006
Kazutaka Kukita; Seiji Ohira; Izumi Amano; Hidemune Naito; Nakanobu Azuma; Kiyoshi Ikeda; Yutaka Kanno; Takashi Satou; Shinji Sakai; Tokuichiro Sugimoto; Yoshiaki Takemoto; Hiroaki Haruguchi; Jun Minakuchi; Akira Miyata; Noriyoshi Murotani; Hideki Hirakata; Tadashi Tomo; Tadao Akizawa
Abstract: The guideline committee of Japanese Society for Dialysis Therapy (JSDT), chaired by Dr Ohira, has published an original Japanese guideline, ‘Guidelines for Vascular Access Construction and Repair for Chronic Hemodialysis’. The guideline was created mainly because of the existence of numerous factors characteristic of Japanese hemodialysis therapy, which are described in this report, and because we recognized the necessity for standardization in vascular access‐related surgeries. This guideline consists of 10 chapters, each of which includes guidelines, explanations or comments and references. The first chapter discusses informed consent of vascular access (VA)‐related surgeries, which often resulted in trouble between dialysis staff and patients. The second chapter describes the fundamentals of VA construction and timing of the introduction of hemodialysis with emphasis on the avoidance of catheter indwelling if at all possible. In the third chapter, arteriovenous fistula (AVF) construction and management are discussed from the viewpoint of the most preferable type of VA. The fourth chapter deals with arteriovenous grafts (AVG) which has recently increased in clinical applications. The factors which improve the AVG patency rate are discussed and postoperative management methods are emphasized to avoid possible complications. The fifth chapter deals with short and long‐term vascular catheters. It is emphasized that these methods are definitely effective but, at the same time, are apt to be associated with several serious complications and might result in vascular damage. In the sixth chapter, superficialization of an artery is explained. This was originally for emergency use or backup but has been used permanently in 2–3% of Japanese hemodialysis patients. In the seventh chapter, methods for the use of VA are described and the buttonhole method is referred to as one of the options for patients who complain of intense pain at every cannulation. In the eighth chapter, the importance of continuous monitoring is stressed for maintaining appropriate function of VA. As a rule, the internal shunt type VA (AVF, AVG) places a burden on cardiac function. Thus, in the ninth chapter, it is stressed that VA construction, maintenance and repair should always be carried out with consideration of cardiac function which is not constant but variable. The 10th chapter forms one of the cores of this guideline and deals with repair and timing of VA. It is shown how to select a surgical or interventional repair method. In the final 11th chapter, VA types and resultant morbidity and mortality of hemodialysis patients are reviewed.
American Journal of Nephrology | 2007
Tetsuya Babazono; Hidetomo Nakamoto; Kenji Kasai; Satoru Kuriyama; Tokuichiro Sugimoto; Masaaki Nakayama; Chieko Hamada; Ryuichi Furuya; Hirofumi Hasegawa; Masato Kasahara; Misaki Moriishi; Tadashi Tomo; Masanobu Miyazaki; Manaka Sato; Noriaki Yorioka; Yoshindo Kawaguchi
Aim: Icodextrin reduces glucose absorption from the peritoneal dialysate. We conducted this prospective, open-labeled, multicenter study to determine the effects of icodextrin on glycemic and lipid parameters in diabetic patients undergoing continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis (PD) or automated PD. Methods: Patients were recruited from 15 institutions in Japan, and a total of 51 patients (15 women and 36 men, mean age: 59 ± 10 years, median duration of PD: 13 months) were enrolled. The patients were administered an overnight or daytime dwell of 1.5 or 2.0 l of 7.5% icodextrin-containing solution. At baseline and 3, 6, 9 and 12 months after the start of icodextrin, nonfasting blood was drawn for measurement of glycated hemoglobin (HbA1C) and serum lipids. Results: During icodextrin treatment, there was no change in overall HbA1C levels compared to baseline values; however, for those with baseline HbA1C ≧6.5% (n = 22), significant decreases in HbA1C were observed. Mean total/LDL cholesterol and triglycerides were decreased significantly during icodextrin treatment, with greater decreases for patients with baseline total cholesterol ≧220 mg/dl, LDL cholesterol ≧120 mg/dl or triglycerides ≧150 mg/dl. HDL cholesterol did not differ at any time point; however, values for patients with baseline HDL cholesterol <40 mg/dl tended to increase with marginal significance. Conclusions: In the current study, switching from glucose-containing dialysis solution to icodextrin resulted in improved lipid profiles and possibly a favorable metabolic profile, particularly in patients with poor glycemic control. These hypotheses remain to be proven in controlled clinical trials.
Clinical Science | 1999
Akihiro Matsumoto; Yasunobu Hirata; Masao Kakoki; Daisuke Nagata; Shin ichi Momomura; Tokuichiro Sugimoto; Hitoshi Tagawa; Masao Omata
Nitric oxide exerts multiple effects on renal function. It remains unclear whether endogenous nitric oxide production is increased or decreased in patients with chronic renal failure. To evaluate endogenous nitric oxide production in these patients we studied exhaled nitric oxide output by an ozone chemiluminescence method and plasma NO2(-)/NO3(-) levels by the Griess method in 40 patients with end-stage chronic renal failure who underwent regular continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis (n=30) or haemodialysis (n=10), and in 28 healthy subjects. Patients with chronic renal failure had a higher exhaled nitric oxide concentration [39+/-3 versus 19+/-1 parts per billion, (mean+/-S.E.M.), P<0.0001], a greater nitric oxide output (177+/-11 versus 96+/-7 nl.min-1.m-2, P<0.001) and a higher plasma NO2(-)/NO3(-) concentration (96+/-14 versus 33+/-4 micromol, P<0.01) than controls. These values did not differ between patients on haemodialysis and those on continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis. Patients with chronic renal failure had significantly higher plasma concentrations of both interleukin-1beta and interferon-gamma than controls. The exhaled nitric oxide output did not correlate with plasma NO2(-)/NO3(-) or with peritoneal dialysate NO2(-)/NO3(-), but plasma NO2(-)/NO3(-) correlated with dialysate NO2(-)/NO3(-) in patients who underwent continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis (r=0.77, P<0.01). Haemodialysis for 4 h acutely decreased plasma NO2(-)/NO3(-) (92+/-17 versus 50+/-8 micromol, P<0.05) and cGMP concentration (16.5+/-4.3 versus 5.1+/-1. 7 pmol/ml, P<0.01), but did not decrease exhaled nitric oxide output. The increase in exhaled nitric oxide with the simultaneous increase in circulating cytokines suggests that nitric oxide synthase seems to be induced significantly in patients with chronic renal failure. Increased endogenous nitric oxide production may have a pathophysiological role in patients with uraemia.
Therapeutic Apheresis and Dialysis | 2015
Kazutaka Kukita; Seiji Ohira; Izumi Amano; Hidemune Naito; Nakanobu Azuma; Kiyoshi Ikeda; Yutaka Kanno; Takashi Satou; Shinji Sakai; Tokuichiro Sugimoto; Yoshiaki Takemoto; Hiroaki Haruguchi; Jun Minakuchi; Akira Miyata; Noriyoshi Murotani; Hideki Hirakata; Tadashi Tomo; Tadao Akizawa
Abstract: The guideline committee of Japanese Society for Dialysis Therapy (JSDT), chaired by Dr Ohira, has published an original Japanese guideline, ‘Guidelines for Vascular Access Construction and Repair for Chronic Hemodialysis’. The guideline was created mainly because of the existence of numerous factors characteristic of Japanese hemodialysis therapy, which are described in this report, and because we recognized the necessity for standardization in vascular access-related surgeries. This guideline consists of 10 chapters, each of which includes guidelines, explanations or comments and references. The first chapter discusses informed consent of vascular access (VA)-related surgeries, which often resulted in trouble between dialysis staff and patients. The second chapter describes the fundamentals of VA construction and timing of the introduction of hemodialysis with emphasis on the avoidance of catheter indwelling if at all possible. In the third chapter, arteriovenous fistula (AVF) construction and management are discussed from the viewpoint of the most preferable type of VA. The fourth chapter deals with arteriovenous grafts (AVG) which has recently increased in clinical applications. The factors which improve the AVG patency rate are discussed and postoperative management methods are emphasized to avoid possible complications. The fifth chapter deals with short and long-term vascular catheters. It is emphasized that these methods are definitely effective but, at the same time, are apt to be associated with several serious complications and might result in vascular damage. In the sixth chapter, superficialization of an artery is explained. This was originally for emergency use or backup but has been used permanently in 2–3% of Japanese hemodialysis patients. In the seventh chapter, methods for the use of VA are described and the buttonhole method is referred to as one of the options for patients who complain of intense pain at every cannulation. In the eighth chapter, the importance of continuous monitoring is stressed for maintaining appropriate function of VA. As a rule, the internal shunt type VA (AVF, AVG) places a burden on cardiac function. Thus, in the ninth chapter, it is stressed that VA construction, maintenance and repair should always be carried out with consideration of cardiac function which is not constant but variable. The 10th chapter forms one of the cores of this guideline and deals with repair and timing of VA. It is shown how to select a surgical or interventional repair method. In the final 11th chapter, VA types and resultant morbidity and mortality of hemodialysis patients are reviewed.
American Journal of Kidney Diseases | 2009
Sen Yachi; Kengo Tanabe; Shuzou Tanimoto; Jiro Aoki; Gaku Nakazawa; Hirosada Yamamoto; Shuji Otsuki; Atsuhiko Yagishita; Satoru Kishi; Masataka Nakano; Masahiro Taniwaki; Shunsuke Sasaki; Hiroyoshi Nakajima; Naofumi Mise; Tokuichiro Sugimoto; Kazuhiro Hara
BACKGROUND Percutaneous coronary intervention for hemodialysis patients has been hampered by the high rate of adverse cardiac events. Our aim was to investigate whether sirolimus-eluting stents (SESs) improve clinical outcomes of hemodialysis patients compared with bare-metal stents (BMSs). STUDY DESIGN Retrospective study. SETTING & PARTICIPANTS 123 consecutive patients on hemodialysis therapy treated with either an SES or BMS. There were 56 patients with 68 lesions treated with SESs between August 2004 and April 2006 (SES group) and 67 patients with 71 lesions treated with BMSs 4 years before approval of SESs in Japan (BMS group). PREDICTOR SES and BMS implantation for hemodialysis patients with coronary artery disease. OUTCOMES & MEASUREMENTS Follow-up angiography was performed at 6 to 8 months and clinical follow-up was obtained at 9 months after the procedure. Late lumen loss and major adverse cardiac events, including all-cause death, myocardial infarction, and target-lesion revascularization, were investigated. RESULTS Clinical follow-up was obtained in all patients. Angiographic follow-up was obtained in 50 patients (89.3%) in the SES group and 50 patients (74.6%) in the BMS group. The SES group had more complex lesions than the BMS group. Quantitative angiographic analysis showed a significant difference for in-stent late lumen loss (SES, 0.62 +/- 0.75 mm; BMS, 1.07 +/- 0.75 mm; P = 0.003). Of angiographic restenosis lesions analyzed, a focal restenotic pattern was observed more frequently in the SES group than the BMS group (SES, 87.5%; BMS, 23.8%; P < 0.001). The rate of major adverse cardiac events was significantly lower in the SES group (n = 14; 25.0%) than the BMS group (n = 26; 38.9%; log-rank P = 0.02). LIMITATIONS Retrospective study design, small sample size, and a single-center study. CONCLUSIONS Clinical and angiographic data in the present study suggest that SESs are more effective than BMSs in hemodialysis patients.
American Journal of Kidney Diseases | 2013
Masao Moroi; Nagara Tamaki; Masato Nishimura; Kazuo Haze; Tsunehiko Nishimura; Eiji Kusano; Takashi Akiba; Tokuichiro Sugimoto; Hiroki Hase; Kazuhiro Hara; Tomoaki Nakata; Shin-ichiro Kumita; Yoji Nagai; Akiyoshi Hashimoto; Mitsuru Momose; Keiko Miyakoda; Naoyuki Hasebe; Kenjiro Kikuchi
BACKGROUND Detecting myocardial ischemia in hemodialysis patients is crucial given the high incidence of silent ischemia and the high cardiovascular mortality rates. Abnormal myocardial fatty acid metabolism as determined by imaging with (123)I-labeled BMIPP (β-methyl iodophenyl-pentadecanoic acid) might be associated with cardiac-derived death in hemodialysis patients. STUDY DESIGN Prospective observational study. SETTING & PARTICIPANTS Asymptomatic hemodialysis patients with one or more cardiovascular risk factors, but without known coronary artery disease, were followed up for 3 years at 48 Japanese hospitals (406 men, 271 women; mean age, 64 years). PREDICTOR Baseline BMIPP summed scores semiquantified using a 17-segment 5-point system (normal, 0; absent, 4). OUTCOMES Cardiac-derived death, including cardiac and sudden death. MEASUREMENTS HRs were estimated using a Cox model for associations between BMIPP summed scores and cardiac-derived death, adjusting for potential confounders of age, sex, body mass index, dialysis duration, and cardiovascular risk factors. RESULTS Rates of all-cause mortality and cardiac-derived death were 18.5% and 6.8%, respectively. Cardiac-derived death (acute myocardial infarction [n = 10], congestive heart failure [n = 13], arrhythmia [n = 2], valvular heart disease [n = 1], and sudden death [n = 20]) accounted for 36.8% of all-cause deaths. Cardiac-derived death (n = 46) was associated with age, history of heart failure, and BMIPP summed scores of 4 or higher (HR, 2.9; P < 0.001). Three-year cardiac-derived death-free survival rates were 95.7%, 90.6%, and 78.8% when BMIPP summed scores were 3 or lower, 4-8, and 9 or higher, respectively. BMIPP summed score also was a predictor of all-cause death (HR, 1.6; P = 0.009). LIMITATIONS Sudden death of unknown cause was considered to have been cardiac derived, although a coronary origin was not confirmed. CONCLUSIONS Abnormal myocardial fatty acid metabolism is associated with cardiac-derived death in hemodialysis patients. BMIPP single-proton emission computed tomography appears clinically useful for predicting cardiac-derived death in this population.
Gastroenterology | 1985
Akira Shibuya; Tadao Unuma; Tokuichiro Sugimoto; Minoru Yamakado; Hitoshi Tagawa; Kazumi Tagawa; Tanaka S; Riichiro Takanashi
A 31-yr-old Japanese woman who was on chronic hemodialysis for 3 yr died of intractable congestive heart failure. Three years before death, the patient was in a state of shock for 48 h due to ventricular tachycardia and gastrointestinal bleeding, which was followed by marked elevation of serum transaminase. Four months later, abdominal plain radiography demonstrated diffuse hepatic calcification. At autopsy, microscopic examination of the liver revealed parenchymal necrosis and tiny calcifications in the central to midzonal area of the lobule. Calcification in the degenerative area of the hepatic lobule occurred subsequent to parenchymal ischemia after overt shock that lasted for 2 days. Although a definitive explanation for the calcification was not obtained, it may be related to the disturbances of intracellular Ca2+ homeostasis as a result of ischemic liver injury or it may be related to an elevated calcium-phosphorus product in the uremic state.
Therapeutic Apheresis and Dialysis | 2011
Noriaki Kurita; Naobumi Mise; Shinji Tanaka; Mototsugu Tanaka; Keiko Sai; Takahiro Nishi; Sumio Miura; Ikutaro Kigawa; Takeshi Miyairi; Tokuichiro Sugimoto
Arteriovenous dialysis access may impose a burden on the cardiac system. The objective of this study is to examine the usefulness of access closure in hemodialysis patients with refractory heart failure and to identify possible factors associated with symptomatic improvements. The study population comprised 33 hemodialysis patients with symptomatic heart failure (New York Heart Association [NYHA] class ≥II), who underwent arteriovenous access closure (30 fistulas and three grafts) between 1991 and 2008. In all patients, heart failure was refractory to all possible medical and surgical treatments, and persisted after optimal dry weight control. First, short‐term changes in hemodynamics, clinical symptoms and echocardiographic morphology were examined. Second, clinical and echocardiographic parameters were compared between responders (N = 23), who demonstrated NYHA class improvement after access closure, and non‐responders (N = 10). After access closure, systolic blood pressure rose and the heart rate decreased significantly. Body weight and echocardiographic parameters did not change significantly. Twenty‐three patients (70%) demonstrated NYHA class improvement and were designated as responders. In responders, the duration from access creation to closure was significantly shorter and fewer had ischemic heart disease, compared with non‐responders. Access flow, cardiac output and ejection fraction were comparable between the two groups. Although the five‐year survival was 20.2% in all patients, responders showed better early survival than non‐responders. Arteriovenous access closure improved clinical symptoms in 70% of patients with refractory heart failure. This improvement was especially likely to be achieved in patients without ischemic heart disease and those who developed heart failure within a relatively short time after access creation.
Nephrology | 2010
Imari Mimura; Hiroshi Nishi; Naobumi Mise; Masaya Mori; Tokuichiro Sugimoto
Aim: In end‐stage renal disease (ESRD) patients, left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) is common and a risk for cardiovascular events. LVH is geometrically classified into two major groups, concentric and eccentric, and accumulating evidence suggests eccentric LVH has a more negative effect than concentric LVH on ESRD outcome. However, there have been very few studies on the cardiac findings from ESRD patient autopsy in which the relationship between LVH geometry and mortality was analyzed.