Tomoaki Kinoshita
Chiba University
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Featured researches published by Tomoaki Kinoshita.
Spine | 2009
Seiji Ohtori; Tomoaki Kinoshita; Masaomi Yamashita; Gen Inoue; Kazuyo Yamauchi; Takana Koshi; Munetaka Suzuki; Sumihisa Orita; Yawara Eguchi; Shin-ichiro Nakamura; Masatsune Yamagata; Masashi Takaso; Nobuyasu Ochiai; Shunji Kishida; Yasuchika Aoki; Kazuhisa Takahashi
Study Design. Randomized, controlled study. Objective. To evaluate the diagnosis of discogenic low back pain (LBP) with discography and discoblock. Summary of Background Data. Discogenic LBP is usually diagnosed by magnetic resonance imaging and discography. However, the reliability of discography is controversial. Previously, we reported the usefulness of discoblock with bupivacaine for diagnosis, and discoblock improved the results of anterior interbody fusion surgery. However, that study was not a randomized, controlled study. Therefore, the purpose of the current study was to compare the results of surgery after diagnosis of LBP by discography and discoblock. Methods. Patients (n = 42) with severe LBP showing L4–L5 or L5–S1 disc degeneration on magnetic resonance imaging were evaluated by discography (1.5 mL of contrast medium) or discoblock (intradisc injection of 0.75 mL of 0.5% bupivacaine). We randomized the patients in turn. Anterior discectomy and interbody fusion were performed in patients who responded to the diagnostic procedures. The visual analogue scale score (0, no pain; 100, worst pain), Japanese Orthopedic Association Score (0, worst pain; 3, no pain), Oswestry Disability Index, and patient satisfaction before and 3 years after surgery were recorded and compared between groups. Results. Twelve patients did not show pain provocation by discography or pain relief by discoblock and were excluded. Fifteen patients who showed pain provocation by discography and 15 patients who experienced pain relief with discoblock were evaluated. Rates of improvement in the visual analogue scale score, Japanese Orthopedic Association Score, and Oswestry Disability Index score in the discoblock group were significantly higher than those in the discography group (P < 0.05) from baseline to 3 years after surgery. Three patients were dissatisfied with surgery after discography compared with one patient after discoblock. Conclusion. Pain relief after injection of a small amount of bupivacaine into the painful disc was a useful tool for the diagnosis of discogenic LBP compared with discography.
Journal of Clinical Neuroscience | 2010
Seiji Ohtori; Tsutomu Akazawa; Yasuaki Murata; Tomoaki Kinoshita; Masaomi Yamashita; Koichi Nakagawa; Gen Inoue; Junichi Nakamura; Sumihisa Orita; Nobuyasu Ochiai; Shunji Kishida; Masashi Takaso; Yawara Eguchi; Kazuyo Yamauchi; Munetaka Suzuki; Yasuchika Aoki; Kazuhisa Takahashi
Elderly postmenopausal women who have osteoporosis sometimes experience low back pain, however, the relationship between low back pain and osteoporosis in the absence of vertebral fractures remains unclear. We examined the relationship between bone mineral density (BMD), bone resorption and low back pain in elderly female patients who did not have osteoporotic vertebral fractures. The average BMD was 0.675 g/cm(2) when assessed by dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DEXA). Patients were excluded from the study if they had vertebral fractures revealed by radiography, CT scans or MRI. Bisphosphonate (risedronate) was administered for 4 months. The visual analogue scale (VAS) pain score, Roland Morris Disability Questionnaire (RDQ), Short Form-36 (SF-36) questionnaire, BMD and N-terminal telopeptide of type I collagen (NTx; a marker for bone resorption) were examined before and after treatment. DEXA did not increase significantly, but serum and urinary NTx were decreased (-51.4% and -62.0%, respectively) after 4 months of risedronate treatment (p<0.01). The assessment was repeated using the VAS score, RDQ and SF-36, which revealed an improvement after risedronate treatment (p<0.01). A decrease in serum and urinary NTx was associated with improvement of low back pain, suggesting that despite the absence of vertebral fractures, bone resorption due to osteoporosis may cause low back pain.
Journal of Orthopaedic Science | 2010
Seiji Ohtori; Toshinori Ito; Masaomi Yamashita; Yasuaki Murata; Tatsuo Morinaga; Jiro Hirayama; Tomoaki Kinoshita; Hiromi Ataka; Takana Koshi; Toshihiko Sekikawa; Masayuki Miyagi; Takaaki Tanno; Munetaka Suzuki; Yasuchika Aoki; Takato Aihara; Shin-ichiro Nakamura; Kiyoshi Yamaguchi; Toshiyuki Tauchi; Kenji Hatakeyama; Keiichi Takata; Hiroaki Sameda; Tomoyuki Ozawa; Eiji Hanaoka; Hirohito Suzuki; Tsutomu Akazawa; Kaoru Suseki; Hajime Arai; Masahiro Kurokawa; Yawara Eguchi; Miyako Suzuki
BackgroundThe Japanese Orthopaedic Association (JOA) has investigated the JOA Back Pain Evaluation Questionnaire (JOABPEQ) to evaluate several aspects of low back pain in patients. The score includes five categories (25 items) selected from the Roland Morris Disability Questionnaire and Short Form 36, and a visual analogue scale. Japanese physicians have recently used these scores to evaluate back pain; however, the efficacy has not been fully explored in large-scale studies. In the current study, we used the JOABPEQ to evaluate lumbar spinal disease in 555 patients (with lumbar disc herniation, lumbar spinal stenosis, and lumbar disc degeneration/spondylosis) in multiple spine centers and compared the results based on age, sex, and type of disease.MethodsA total of 555 patients who had low back or leg pain were selected in 22 hospitals in Chiba Prefecture. Spine surgeons diagnosed their disease type based on symptoms, physical examination, radiography images, and magnetic resonance imaging. In all, 486 patients were diagnosed with spinal stenosis (239 patients), disc degeneration/spondylosis (143 patients), or disc herniation (104 patients). The other 69 patients were diagnosed with spondylolysis (16 patients) or other diseases (53 patients). The pain score in all patients was evaluated using the JOABPEQ (from 0 to 100, with 0 indicating the worst pain).ResultsThe age of the patients was 56.1 ± 13.3 years (mean ± SD); the age of patients in the disc herniation and disc degeneration/spondylosis group was significantly lower than that in the spinal stenosis group. The average JOABPEQ scores in all patients were, for low back pain, 47.1; lumbar function, 53.6; walking ability, 54.8; social life function, 48.7; and mental health, 48.3. The low back pain score in men was significantly worse than that in women. In contrast, the mental health score in women was significantly higher than that in men. The low back pain score in patients <40 years old and the walking ability score in patients >65 years old were significantly lower than those scores in other patients. Based on the disease type, low back pain, lumbar function, social life function, and mental health scores for patients with disc herniation were significantly worse than for those with spinal stenosis.ConclusionJOABPEQ scores were evaluated for several lumbar diseases. The average of five categories of JOABPEQ scores in all patients was similarly distributed. However, the average scores in the five categories were significantly different depending on age, sex, and type of disease. Compared with prior mass data (baseline data on the observational cohort of the Spine Patient Outcomes Research Trial in the United States), many data were similar based on the type of disease in the current study. Furthermore, the JOABPEQ is easy to use compared with the SF-36. Hence, we concluded that the JOABPEQ could be used worldwide as a tool for evaluating low back pain.
Virus Research | 1996
Tomoaki Kinoshita; Hiroshi Shirasawa; Yuji Shino; Kumiko Shimizu; Hideshige Moriya; Bunsiti Simizu
Using a differential hybridization technique, we have identified a mouse cellular gene, high mobility group protein HMG-I(Y), whose expression is up-regulated by the E6 protein of human papillomavirus (HPV) type 16. This gene was overexpressed in E6-expressing mouse 10T1/2 cells, but not in G418-resistant 10T1/2 cells. The expression of the HMG-I(Y) gene was up-regulated by the transient expression of E6 from a zinc-inducible human metallothionein-IIA gene promoter. Expression was found to be more efficient at a confluent cell density than at a subconfluent cell density. The up-regulation of HMG-I(Y) gene expression by E6, in particular at a confluent cell density, may be part of an altered genetic program in host cells infected with HPV-16.
Journal of Clinical Neuroscience | 2016
Masao Koda; Takeo Furuya; Tomoaki Kinoshita; Tomohiro Miyashita; Mitsutoshi Ota; Satoshi Maki; Yasushi Ijima; Junya Saito; Kazuhisa Takahashi; Masashi Yamazaki; Masaaki Aramomi; Chikato Mannoji
Dropped head syndrome (DHS) is characterized by apparent neck extensor muscle weakness and difficulty extending the neck to raise the head against gravity. The aim of the present study was to elucidate possible risk factors for DHS after cervical laminoplasty. Five patients who developed DHS after cervical laminoplasty (DHS group) and twenty age-matched patients who underwent laminoplasty without DHS after surgery (control group) were compared. The surgical procedure was single-door laminoplasty with strut grafting using resected spinous processes or hydroxyapatite spacers from C3 to C6 or C7. Analyses of preoperative images including the C2-C7 angle, C7-T1 kyphosis, T1 tilt, center of gravity line from the head-C7 sagittal vertical axis (CGH-C7 SVA) were performed on lateral plain cervical spine radiographs. Preoperative T2-weighted MRI at the C5 vertebral level was used to measure the cross-sectional area of the deep extensor muscles. Widths of the lateral gutters were assessed postoperatively using CT scans of the C5 vertebral body. The average preoperative C2-C7 angle was significantly smaller in the DHS group compared with the control group. The average preoperative C7-T1 angle was significantly larger in the DHS group compared with the control group. The average preoperative CGH-C7 SVA was significantly larger in the DHS group compared with the control group. In conclusion, patients with more pronounced preoperative C2-C7 kyphosis, C7-T1 kyphosis, and CGH-C7 SVA are more likely to develop DHS following laminoplasty.
Yonsei Medical Journal | 2014
Seiji Ohtori; Masaomi Yamashita; Yasuaki Murata; Yawara Eguchi; Yasuchika Aoki; Hiromi Ataka; Jiro Hirayama; Tomoyuki Ozawa; Tatsuo Morinaga; Hajime Arai; Masaya Mimura; Hiroto Kamoda; Sumihisa Orita; Masayuki Miyagi; Tomohiro Miyashita; Yuzuru Okamoto; Tetsuhiro Ishikawa; Hiroaki Sameda; Tomoaki Kinoshita; Eiji Hanaoka; Miyako Suzuki; Munetaka Suzuki; Takato Aihara; Toshinori Ito; Gen Inoue; Masatsune Yamagata; Tomoaki Toyone; Gou Kubota; Yoshihiro Sakuma; Yasuhiro Oikawa
Purpose To examine the effects of conservative and surgical treatments for nocturnal leg cramps in patients with lumbar spinal stenosis (LSS). Nocturnal leg cramps is frequently observed in patients with peripheral neuropathy. However, there have been few reports on the relationship between nocturnal leg cramps and LSS, and it remains unknown whether conservative or surgical intervention has an impact on leg cramps in patients with LSS. Materials and Methods The subjects were 130 LSS patients with low back and leg pain. Conservative treatment such as exercise, medication, and epidural block was used in 66 patients and surgical treatment such as decompression or decompression and fusion was performed in 64 patients. Pain scores and frequency of nocturnal leg cramps were evaluated based on self-reported questionnaires completed before and 3 months after treatment. Results The severity of low back and leg pain was higher and the incidence of nocturnal leg cramps was significantly higher before treatment in the surgically treated group compared with the conservatively treated group. Pain scores improved in both groups after the intervention. The incidence of nocturnal leg cramps was significantly improved by surgical treatment (p=0.027), but not by conservative treatment (p=0.122). Conclusion The findings of this prospective study indicate that the prevalence of nocturnal leg cramps is associated with LSS and severity of symptoms. Pain symptoms were improved by conservative or surgical treatment, but only surgery improved nocturnal leg cramps in patients with LSS. Thus, these results indicate that the prevalence of nocturnal leg cramps is associated with spinal nerve compression by LSS.
Yonsei Medical Journal | 2013
Seiji Ohtori; Masaomi Yamashita; Yasuaki Murata; Yawara Eguchi; Yasuchika Aoki; Hiromi Ataka; Jiro Hirayama; Tomoyuki Ozawa; Tatsuo Morinaga; Hajime Arai; Masaya Mimura; Hiroto Kamoda; Sumihisa Orita; Masayuki Miyagi; Tomohiro Miyashita; Yuzuru Okamoto; Tetsuhiro Ishikawa; Hiroaki Sameda; Tomoaki Kinoshita; Eiji Hanaoka; Miyako Suzuki; Munetaka Suzuki; Takato Aihara; Toshinori Ito; Gen Inoue; Masatsune Yamagata; Tomoaki Toyone; Gou Kubota; Yoshihiro Sakuma; Yasuhiro Oikawa
Purpose The pathological mechanism of lumbar spinal stenosis is reduced blood flow in nerve roots and degeneration of nerve roots. Exercise and prostaglandin E1 is used for patients with peripheral arterial disease to increase capillary flow around the main artery and improve symptoms; however, the ankle-brachial index (ABI), an estimation of blood flow in the main artery in the leg, does not change after treatment. Lumbar spinal nerve roots contain somatosensory, somatomotor, and unmyelinated autonomic nerves. Improved blood flow by medication with prostaglandin E1 and decompression surgery in these spinal nerve roots may improve the function of nerve fibers innervating muscle, capillary, and main vessels in the lower leg, resulting in an increased ABI. The purpose of the study was to examine whether these treatments can improve ABI. Materials and Methods One hundred and seven patients who received conservative treatment such as exercise and medication (n=56) or surgical treatment (n=51) were included. Low back pain and leg pain scores, walking distance, and ABI were measured before treatment and after 3 months of conservative treatment alone or surgical treatment followed by conservative treatment. Results Low back pain, leg pain, and walking distance significantly improved after both treatments (p<0.05). ABI significantly increased in each group (p<0.05). Conclusion This is the first investigation of changes in ABI after treatment in patients with lumbar spinal stenosis. Improvement of the spinal nerve roots by medication and decompression surgery may improve the supply of blood flow to the lower leg in patients with lumbar spinal stenosis.
Asian Spine Journal | 2016
Masao Koda; Chikato Mannoji; Masazumi Murakami; Tomoaki Kinoshita; Jiro Hirayama; Tomohiro Miyashita; Yawara Eguchi; Masashi Yamazaki; Takane Suzuki; Masaaki Aramomi; Mitsutoshi Ota; Satoshi Maki; Kazuhisa Takahashi; Takeo Furuya
Study Design Retrospective case-control study. Purpose To determine whether kissing spine is a risk factor for recurrence of sciatica after lumbar posterior decompression using a spinous process floating approach. Overview of Literature Kissing spine is defined by apposition and sclerotic change of the facing spinous processes as shown in X-ray images, and is often accompanied by marked disc degeneration and decrement of disc height. If kissing spine significantly contributes to weight bearing and the stability of the lumbar spine, trauma to the spinous process might induce a breakdown of lumbar spine stability after posterior decompression surgery in cases of kissing spine. Methods The present study included 161 patients who had undergone posterior decompression surgery for lumbar canal stenosis using a spinous process floating approaches. We defined recurrence of sciatica as that resolved after initial surgery and then recurred. Kissing spine was defined as sclerotic change and the apposition of the spinous process in a plain radiogram. Preoperative foraminal stenosis was determined by the decrease of perineural fat intensity detected by parasagittal T1-weighted magnetic resonance imaging. Preoperative percentage slip, segmental range of motion, and segmental scoliosis were analyzed in preoperative radiographs. Univariate analysis followed by stepwise logistic regression analysis determined factors independently associated with recurrence of sciatica. Results Stepwise logistic regression revealed kissing spine (p=0.024; odds ratio, 3.80) and foraminal stenosis (p<0.01; odds ratio, 17.89) as independent risk factors for the recurrence of sciatica after posterior lumbar spinal decompression with spinous process floating procedures for lumbar spinal canal stenosis. Conclusions When a patient shows kissing spine and concomitant subclinical foraminal stenosis at the affected level, we should sufficiently discuss the selection of an appropriate surgical procedure.
Gene | 1995
Hiroshi Shirasawa; Tomoaki Kinoshita; Yuji Shino; Kohji Mori; Kumiko Shimizu; Bunsiti Simizu
Using a differential hybridization technique, the murine farnesyltransferase alpha (FTA)-encoding cDNA was cloned from a mouse 10T1/2 cell line which expresses the human papillomavirus type 16 (HPV16) E6 gene. Sequence analysis revealed that the murine 1647-bp FTA cDNA encoded 377 amino acid (aa). The murine and human sequences showed 83.2% nucleotide and 92.6% aa sequence identity.
Spine | 2008
Seiji Ohtori; Tomoaki Kinoshita; Shin-ichiro Nakamura; Takana Koshi; Kazuyo Yamauchi; Masatsune Yamagata
Introduction: Diagnosis of discogenic low back pain is usually made by MRI and discography. However, the reliability of discography has been controversial. We have previously reported the usefulness of discoblock using bupivacaine for diagnosis of discogenic low back pain, and discoblock improved the results of anterior interbody fusion surgery. However, the previous study was not a randomized control study. So the purpose of the current study was to compare the surgical result using discography and discoblock. Methods: 37 severe low back pain patients showing L4/5 or L5/S1 disc degeneration on MRI were evaluated. Randomized discography (1.5ml of contrast medium) or discoblock (injection of 0.75ml of 0.5% bupivacaine into disc) were performed. Anterior discectomy and interbody fusion were performed in patients to respond to the procedure. Visual analogue scale (VAS: 0, no pain; 100, worst pain), Japanese Orthopedic Association Score (JOAS: 0, worst pain; 3, no pain), and patient’s satisfaction before and 3 years after surgery were recorded, and compared between the results of discography and discoblock. Results: Seven patients did not show pain provocation by discography or pain relief by discoblock, and the patients were excluded in this study. Fifteen patients (pain provocation by discography) and 15 patients (pain relief by discoblock) were evaluated. Rate of improvement of VAS was 69% (discography) vs. 83% (discoblock) (p 0.05), that of JOAS was 75% (discography) vs. 93% (discoblock) (p 0.05) between before and 3 years after surgery; there was significant improvement in the discoblock group. Dissatisfaction with surgery occurred in three cases after discography compared with one case in the discoblock group. Discussion: In the current study, we showed that pain relief after injection of a small amount of bupivacaine into the painful disc was a useful tool for diagnosis of discogenic low back pain compared with discography. The procedure improved the surgical results. I N T E R N A T I O N A L S O C I E T Y F O R T H E S T U D Y O F L U M B A R S P I N E