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Dive into the research topics where Tomoaki Hinohara is active.

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Featured researches published by Tomoaki Hinohara.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1993

A comparison of directional atherectomy with coronary angioplasty in patients with coronary artery disease

Eric J. Topol; Ferdinand Leya; Cass A. Pinkerton; Patrick L. Whitlow; B. Höfling; Charles A. Simonton; Ronald Masden; Patrick W. Serruys; Martin B. Leon; David O. Williams; Spencer B. King; Daniel B. Mark; Jeffrey M. Isner; David R. Holmes; Stephen G. Ellis; Kerry L. Lee; Gordon Keeler; Lisa G. Berdan; Tomoaki Hinohara; Robert M. Califf

BACKGROUND Directional coronary atherectomy is a new technique of coronary revascularization by which atherosclerotic plaque is excised and retrieved from target lesions. With respect to the rate of restenosis and clinical outcomes, it is not known how this procedure compares with balloon angioplasty, which relies on dilation of the plaque and vessel wall. We compared the rate of restenosis after angioplasty with that after atherectomy. METHODS At 35 sites in the United States and Europe, 1012 patients were randomly assigned to either atherectomy (512 patients) or angioplasty (500 patients). The patients underwent coronary angiography at base line and again after six months; the paired angiograms were quantitatively assessed at one laboratory by investigators unaware of the treatment assignments. RESULTS Stenosis was reduced to 50 percent or less more often with atherectomy than with angioplasty (89 percent vs. 80 percent; P < 0.001), and there was a greater immediate increase in vessel caliber (1.05 vs. 0.86 mm, P < 0.001). This was accompanied by a higher rate of early complications (11 percent vs. 5 percent, P < 0.001) and higher in-hospital costs (


Circulation Research | 1993

Proliferation in primary and restenotic coronary atherectomy tissue. Implications for antiproliferative therapy.

Edward R. O'Brien; Charles E. Alpers; Douglas K. Stewart; Marina S. Ferguson; Nam T. Tran; David Gordon; Earl P. Benditt; Tomoaki Hinohara; John B. Simpson; Stephen M. Schwartz

11,904 vs


Jacc-cardiovascular Interventions | 2011

Predicting Successful Guidewire Crossing Through Chronic Total Occlusion of Native Coronary Lesions Within 30 Minutes : The J-CTO (Multicenter CTO Registry in Japan) Score as a Difficulty Grading and Time Assessment Tool

Yoshihiro Morino; Mitsuru Abe; Takeshi Morimoto; Takeshi Kimura; Yasuhiko Hayashi; Toshiya Muramatsu; Masahiko Ochiai; Yuichi Noguchi; Kenichi Kato; Yoshisato Shibata; Yoshikazu Hiasa; Osamu Doi; Takehiro Yamashita; Tomoaki Hinohara; Hiroyuki Tanaka; Kazuaki Mitsudo; J-Cto Registry Investigators

10,637; P = 0.006). At six months, the rate of restenosis was 50 percent for atherectomy and 57 percent for angioplasty (P = 0.06). However, the probability of death or myocardial infarction within six months was higher in the atherectomy group (8.6 percent vs. 4.6 percent, P = 0.007). CONCLUSIONS Removing coronary artery plaque with atherectomy led to a larger luminal diameter and a small reduction in angiographic restenosis, the latter being confined largely to the proximal left anterior descending coronary artery. However, atherectomy led to a higher rate of early complications, increased cost, and no apparent clinical benefit after six months of follow-up.


Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology | 1994

Osteopontin is synthesized by macrophage, smooth muscle, and endothelial cells in primary and restenotic human coronary atherosclerotic plaques.

Edward R. O'Brien; Michael Garvin; Douglas K. Stewart; Tomoaki Hinohara; John B. Simpson; Stephen M. Schwartz; Cecilia M. Giachelli

On the basis of animal models of arterial injury, smooth muscle cell proliferation has been posited as a dominant event in restenosis. Unfortunately, little is known about this proliferation in the human restenotic lesion. The purpose of this study was to determine the extent and time course of proliferation in primary and restenotic coronary atherectomy-derived tissue. Primary (n = 118) and restenotic (n = 100) coronary atherectomy specimens were obtained from 211 nonconsecutive patients. Immunocytochemistry for the proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) was used to gauge proliferation in the atherectomy specimens. The identity of PCNA-positive cells was then determined using immunohistochemical cell-specific markers. Eighty-two percent of primary specimens and 74% of restenotic specimens had no evidence of PCNA labeling. The majority of the remaining specimens had only a modest number of PCNA-positive cells per slide (typically < 50 cells per slide). In the restenotic specimens, PCNA labeling was detected over a wide time interval after the initial procedure (eg, 1 to 390 days), with no obvious proliferative peak. Cell-specific immunohistochemical markers identified primary and restenotic PCNA-positive cells as smooth muscle cells, macrophages, and endothelial cells. In conclusion, the findings were as follows: (1) Proliferation in primary and restenotic coronary atherectomy specimens, as indicated by PCNA labeling, occurs infrequently and at low levels. (2) The response to injury in existing animal models of angioplasty may follow a very different course of events from the clinical reality in human atherosclerotic coronary arteries and may help explain why current approaches to restenosis therapy have been ineffective.


Jacc-cardiovascular Interventions | 2010

In-Hospital Outcomes of Contemporary Percutaneous Coronary Intervention in Patients With Chronic Total Occlusion: Insights From the J-CTO Registry (Multicenter CTO Registry in Japan)

Yoshihiro Morino; Takeshi Kimura; Yasuhiko Hayashi; Toshiya Muramatsu; Masahiko Ochiai; Yuichi Noguchi; Kenichi Kato; Yoshisato Shibata; Yoshikazu Hiasa; Osamu Doi; Takehiro Yamashita; Takeshi Morimoto; Mitsuru Abe; Tomoaki Hinohara; Kazuaki Mitsudo; J-Cto Registry Investigators

OBJECTIVES This study sought to establish a model for grading lesion difficulty in interventional chronic total occlusion (CTO) treatment. BACKGROUND Owing to uncertainty of success of the procedure and difficulties in selecting suitable cases for treatment, performance of interventional CTO remains infrequent. METHODS Data from 494 native CTO lesions were analyzed. To eliminate operator bias, the objective parameter of successful guidewire crossing within 30 min was set as an end point, instead of actual procedural success. All observations were randomly assigned to a derivation set and a validation set at a 2:1 ratio. The J-CTO (Multicenter CTO Registry of Japan) score was determined by assigning 1 point for each independent predictor of this end point and summing all points accrued. This value was then used to develop a model stratifying all lesions into 4 difficulty groups: easy (J-CTO score of 0), intermediate (score of 1), difficult (score of 2), and very difficult (score of ≥ 3). RESULTS The set end point was achieved in 48.2% of lesions. Independent predictors included calcification, bending, blunt stump, occlusion length >20 mm, and previously failed lesion. Easy, intermediate, difficult, and very difficult groups, stratified by J-CTO score, demonstrated stepwise, proportioned, and highly reproducible differences in probability of successful guidewire crossing within 30 min (87.7%, 67.1%, 42.4%, and 10.0% in the derivation set and 92.3%, 58.3%, 34.8%, and 22.2% in the validation set, respectively). Areas under receiver-operator characteristic curves were comparable (derivation: 0.82 vs. validation: 0.76). CONCLUSIONS This model predicted the probability of successful guidewire crossing within 30 min very well and can be applied for difficulty grading.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1985

Evaluation of a QRS scoring system for estimating myocardial infarct size V. Specificity and method of application of the complete system

Nancy B. Hindman; Douglas D. Schocken; Mark Widmann; William D. Anderson; Richard D. White; Sousin Leggett; Raymond E. Ideker; Tomoaki Hinohara; Ronald H. Selvester; Galen S. Wagner

How an atherosclerotic plaque evolves from minimal diffuse intimal hyperplasia to a critical lesion is not well understood. Cellular proliferation is a relatively infrequent and modest event in both primary and restenotic coronary atherectomy specimens, leading us to believe that other processes, such as the formation of extracellular matrix, cell migration, neovascularization, and calcification might be more important for lesion formation. The investigation of proteins that are overexpressed in plaque compared with the normal vessel wall may provide clues that will help determine which of these processes are key to lesion pathogenesis. One such molecule, osteopontin (OPN), is an arginine-glycine-aspartate-containing acidic phosphoprotein recently shown to be a novel component of human atherosclerotic plaques and selectively expressed in the rat neointima following balloon angioplasty. Using in situ hybridization and immunohistochemical methods, we demonstrate that in addition to macrophages, smooth muscle and endothelial cells synthesize OPN mRNA and protein in human coronary atherosclerotic plaque specimens obtained by directional atherectomy. In contrast, OPN mRNA and protein were not detected in nondiseased vessel walls. Furthermore, extracellular OPN protein collocalized with sites of early calcification in the plaque that were identified with a sensitive modification of the von Kossa staining technique. These findings, combined with studies showing that OPN has adhesive, chemotactic, and calcium-binding properties, suggest that OPN may contribute to cellular accumulations and dystrophic calcification in atherosclerotic plaques.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1990

Primary peripheral arterial stenoses and restenoses excised by transluminal atherectomy: a histopathologic study.

Danna E. Johnson; Tomoaki Hinohara; Matthew R. Selmon; Lissa J. Braden; John B. Simpson

OBJECTIVES Our aim was to investigate in-hospital outcomes of percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) of chronic total occlusion (CTO) using contemporary techniques. BACKGROUND Despite its increasing popularity and technical complexity, clinical outcomes of PCI for CTO using contemporary techniques have not been adequately evaluated. METHODS The J-CTO registry (multicenter CTO registry in Japan) is a large scale, multicenter registry enrolling consecutive patients undergoing PCI for CTO from 12 Japanese centers. In-hospital clinical outcomes were evaluated in 498 patients with 528 CTO lesions. RESULTS Multiple wiring strategies were frequently attempted (parallel wiring 31% and retrograde approach 25%) with relatively long guidewire manipulation time (median 30 min). Utilizing these complex strategies, high procedural success rates (88.6% in the first attempt cases and 68.5% in the retry cases) were accomplished. In-hospital adverse event rates were strikingly low (cardiac death 0.2%, Q-wave myocardial infarction 0.2%, and stroke 0%). Potential disadvantages of these procedures, including a large amount of contrast volume (median 293 ml) and long fluoroscopic time (median 45 min), were not associated with serious clinical sequelae (contrast induced nephropathy 1.2% and radiation dermatitis 0%). Although coronary perforations were documented frequently by angiography (antegrade 7.2% and retrograde 13.6%), clinically significant perforation resulting in cardiac tamponade was rare (0.4%). CONCLUSIONS Most CTO lesions can be safely and successfully treated with PCI utilizing contemporary advanced techniques. Invasiveness and potential risks of these strategies, which have been the greatest concerns of CTO treatment, may be acceptable in the majority of cases considering the actual incidences of related adverse events and the procedural success rates.


American Journal of Cardiology | 2000

Suture-mediated closure of the femoral access site after cardiac catheterization: results of the suture to ambulate aNd discharge (STAND I and STAND ii) trials

Donald S. Baim; William Knopf; Tomoaki Hinohara; Donald E. Schwarten; Richard A. Schatz; Cass A. Pinkerton; Donald E. Cutlip; Michelle Fitzpatrick; Kalon K.L. Ho; Richard E. Kuntz

The specificity of a previously developed 57-criteria/32-point QRS scoring system for estimating myocardial infarct (MI) size is evaluated in an extensive control population and the method of application of this system for determining a QRS score from a standard 12-lead electrocardiogram is described. Points are accumulated from Q- and R-wave durations, R- and S-wave amplitudes, R/Q- or R/S-amplitude ratios and the presence of R-wave notching, with each point representing approximately 3% of the left ventricle. The subjects were selected because of the minimal likelihood of their having had myocardial infarcts or other sources of QRS modification. There were 500 consecutively selected normal Caucasian subjects, aged 20 to 69 years, with 50 women and 50 men in each of the 5 decades. Specificity for the 57 individual criteria ranged from 89 to 100%. Fifty-one criteria met the required standard of at least 95% specificity; of the 6 that failed, 3 were successfully modified to achieve this standard and 3 were eliminated. In the resultant 54-criteria/32-point complete system, the total population, as well as both women and men, required more than 3 points to attain at least 95% specificity. Subjects in each of the 5 decades met the specificity standard either at or below the level of more than 3 points. The point score at which 95% or greater specificity was attained for the 10 age/sex subsets varied.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1991

Effect of lesion characteristics on outcome of directional coronary atherectomy

Tomoaki Hinohara; Michael H. Rowe; Gregory C. Robertson; Matthew R. Selmon; Lissa J. Braden; James Leggett; James W. Vetter; John B. Simpson

Atherectomy is a new therapeutic intervention for the treatment of peripheral arterial disease, and permits the controlled excision and retrieval of portions of stenosing lesions. The gross and light microscopic features of 218 peripheral arterial stenoses resected from 100 patients by atherectomy were studied. One hundred seventy of these lesions were primary stenoses and 48 were restenoses subsequent to prior angioplasty or atherectomy. Microscopically, primary stenoses were composed of atherosclerotic plaque (150 lesions), fibrous intimal thickening (15 lesions) or thrombus alone (5 lesions). Atherosclerotic plaques had a variable morphology and, in one-third of cases, were accompanied by abundant surface thrombus that probably added to the severity of stenosis. Most patients with fibrous intimal thickening or thrombus alone had typical atherosclerotic plaque removed elsewhere from within the same artery. Intimal hyperplasia, with or without underlying residual plaque, was found at 36 sites of restenosis, the remaining 12 consisting of plaque only. Intimal hyperplasia had a distinctive histologic appearance and was due to smooth muscle cell proliferation within a loosely fibrous stroma. Superimposed thrombus may have contributed to arterial narrowing in 25% of hyperplastic and 8% of atherosclerotic restenoses (p = 0.41). Pathologic examination of tissues recovered by peripheral atherectomy is an important adjunct that may provide insight into the efficacy of vascular interventions and the phenomenon of postintervention restenosis.


Circulation | 1988

Coronary perfusion during acute myocardial infarction with a combined therapy of coronary angioplasty and high-dose intravenous streptokinase.

Richard S. Stack; Christopher M. O'Connor; Daniel B. Mark; Tomoaki Hinohara; Harry R. Phillips; M M Lee; N M Ramirez; William G. O'Callaghan; Charles A. Simonton; Eric B. Carlson

Despite advances in other aspects of cardiac catheterization, manual or mechanical compression followed by 4 to 8 hours of bed rest remains the mainstay of postprocedural femoral access site management. Suture-mediated closure may prove to be an effective alternative, offering earlier sheath removal and ambulation, and potentially a reduction in hemorrhagic complications. The Suture To Ambulate aNd Discharge trial (STAND I) evaluated the 6Fr Techstar device in 200 patients undergoing diagnostic procedures, with successful hemostasis achieved in 99% of patients (94% with suture closure only) in a median of 13 minutes, and 1% major complications. STAND II randomized 515 patients undergoing diagnostic or interventional procedures to use of the 8Fr or 10Fr Prostar-Plus device versus traditional compression. Successful suture-mediated hemostasis was achieved in 97.6% of patients (91.2% by the device alone) compared with 98.9% of patients with compression (p = NS). Major complication rates were 2.4% and 1.1%, and met the Blackwelders test for equivalency (p <0.05). Median time to hemostasis (19 vs 243 minutes, p <0.01) and time to ambulation (3.9 vs 14.8 hours, p <0.01) were significantly shorter for suture-mediated closure. Suture-mediated closure of the arterial puncture site thus affords reliable immediate hemostasis and shortens the time to ambulation without significantly increasing the risk of local complications.

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James W. Vetter

Medical College of Wisconsin

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Donald S. Baim

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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