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Featured researches published by Tomoe Mizutani.


Critical Care Medicine | 2001

An enhanced fibrinolysis prevents the development of multiple organ failure in disseminated intravascular coagulation in spite of much activation of blood coagulation

Hidesaku Asakura; Yasuo Ontachi; Tomoe Mizutani; Minori Kato; Masanori Saito; Ichiro Kumabashiri; Eriko Morishita; Masahide Yamazaki; Keiji Aoshima; Shinji Nakao

Objectives To investigate the relationship between fibrinolytic enhancement and the development of multiple organ failure (MOF) in disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC). To detect the useful prognostic index for outcome in DIC. Design Case-control study. Setting A department of internal medicine in a university hospital, a clinical division for diagnosis and treatment, mainly of respiratory diseases, hematologic diseases, DIC, and other diseases requiring critical care medicine. Patients A total of 69 DIC patients, 31 with MOF. Interventions None. Measurement and Main Results The DIC patients with MOF had more elevated levels of tissue plasminogen activator antigen (t-PA) and plasminogen activator inhibitor antigen (PAI), and more depressed levels of plasmin-&agr;2 plasmin inhibitor complex (PIC) and fibrin/fibrinogen degradation products than those without MOF, although no significant difference in thrombin-antithrombin complex (TAT) levels was observed. A fibrinolytic enhancement (shown by PIC) was parallel to an activation of blood coagulation (shown by TAT) in DIC patients without MOF, although no such fibrinolytic enhancement was provoked even by much activation of blood coagulation in DIC patients with MOF. Whereas all the patients without MOF were restored from DIC, 14 of 31 patients with MOF were unable to be restored from DIC and died. A significant increase in plasma levels of t-PA and PAI under the condition of sustained hemostatic activation was observed in the patients who died. Conclusion Enhanced fibrinolysis was considered to be the important defense mechanism in preventing the development of MOF in DIC. The increases in plasma levels of t-PA and PAI were poor prognostic markers in DIC. Further careful study may be useful to clarify whether the fibrinolytic therapy is beneficial in clinical DIC patients with MOF.


European Journal of Haematology | 2001

Decreased plasma activity of antithrombin or protein C is not due to consumption coagulopathy in septic patients with disseminated intravascular coagulation

Hidesaku Asakura; Yasuo Ontachi; Tomoe Mizutani; Minori Kato; Takako Ito; Masanori Saito; Eriko Morishita; Masahide Yamazaki; Keiji Aoshima; Akiyoshi Takami; Tomotaka Yoshida; Yukio Suga; Ken-ichi Miyamoto; Shinji Nakao

Abstract: We investigated whether depressed plasma antithrombin and protein C activity, considered as a specific finding of disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC), is due to consumption coagulopathy in septic patients with DIC. An analysis of hemostatic parameters was performed in 139 septic patients (68 with DIC and 71 without DIC). Plasma activity of antithrombin and protein C tended to be significantly decreased in septic patients with DIC but not in those without DIC (p < 0.001). However, when the septic patients were classified into three groups according to the albumin (or choline esterase) level, no significant differences in antithrombin activity or protein C activity were observed between the patients with and without DIC in any of the subgroups. Notably, neither the plasma activity of antithrombin nor protein C was decreased even in septic patients with DIC who had normal plasma levels of albumin (or choline esterase). No significant correlation was observed between plasma levels of thrombin–antithrombin complex (TAT) and antithrombin activity, or between plasma levels of TAT and protein C activity either in septic patients with DIC or without DIC. It is reasonable to conclude that the markedly reduced plasma activity of antithrombin and protein C is not due to consumption coagulopathy in septic patients with DIC.


Blood Coagulation & Fibrinolysis | 2003

Pathophysiology of disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) progresses at a different rate in tissue factor-induced and lipopolysaccharide-induced DIC models in rats

Hidesaku Asakura; Yukio Suga; Tomotaka Yoshida; Yasuo Ontachi; Tomoe Mizutani; Minori Kato; Takako Ito; Eriko Morishita; Masahide Yamazaki; Ken-ichi Miyamoto; Shinji Nakao

&NA; Tissue factor (TF) and lipopolysaccharide (LPS) are frequently used to induce disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) in experimental animal models. Although the pathophysiology of DIC may differ depending on which agent is used for induction, previous studies on models of DIC have not distinguished which DIC‐inducing agent was used. In the present paper, we evaluate the characteristics of TF‐induced and LPS‐induced DIC using two types of DIC models, with special reference to selected hemostatic parameters and pathological findings within the kidney. Male Wistar rats were administered TF (3.75 U/kg; sustained infusion for 4 h) or LPS (30 mg/kg; sustained infusion for 4 h) via the tail vein, and blood sampling was performed at 0, 1, 3, 4, 5, 7, 9, 11, and 28 h. Judging from changes in the levels of thrombin‐antithrombin complex, fibrinogen levels, and platelet counts, it is reasonable to conclude that the severity of both types of experimental DIC is similar with regard to hemostatic activation and consumption coagulopathy. A marked elevation in the level of D‐dimer was noted without any organ dysfunction or much fibrin deposition in the kidney upon administration of TF. However, a markedly prolonged period of elevation in plasminogen activator inibitor activity, a prolonged depression in antithrombin III activity, severe organ failure, and a markedly prolonged period of fibrin deposition in the kidney was observed following LPS administration. A modest number of the rats from the TF‐induced DIC model died during the experimental period, whereas a large number of rats died during LPS‐induced DIC, especially after 9 h. Since the time course of the pathophysiology differed remarkably among the TF‐induced and LPSinduced DIC models in rats, we recommend that TFinduced and LPS‐induced DIC be approached as distinct models in order to determine the implications of their experimental and clinical use. Blood Coagul Fibrinolysis 14:221‐228


Critical Care Medicine | 2002

Marked difference in pathophysiology between tissue factor- and lipopolysaccharide-induced disseminated intravascular coagulation models in rats

Hidesaku Asakura; Yukio Suga; Keiji Aoshima; Yasuo Ontachi; Tomoe Mizutani; Minori Kato; Masanori Saito; Eriko Morishita; Masahide Yamazaki; Akiyoshi Takami; Ken-ichi Miyamoto; Shinji Nakao

Objective Tissue factor and lipopolysaccharide frequently have been used to induce disseminated intravascular coagulation in experimental animal models. Although the pathophysiology of disseminated intravascular coagulation may differ according to the agents used to induce it, these previous models have not distinguished between the use of different disseminated intravascular coagulation-inducing agents. In this study, we attempted to evaluate the characteristic features of these agents in two types of disseminated intravascular coagulation models, with special reference to selected hemostatic parameters and pathologic findings in the kidney. Design Prospective, comparative, experimental study. Setting Laboratory at a university hospital. Subjects Twenty-seven male Wistar rats, age 6–7 wks, weighing 160–170 g. Interventions Three groups of animals were studied: a control group (n = 8) receiving physiologic saline, a tissue factor-treated group (n = 11) receiving tissue factor 3.75 units/kg, and a lipopolysaccharide-treated group (n = 8) receiving lipopolysaccharide 30 mg/kg; each group sustained infusion for 4 hrs via the tail vein. Measurements and Main Results The degree of hemostatic activation in both types of experimental disseminated intravascular coagulation was identical, based on the results of thrombin-antithrombin III complex levels. Markedly elevated D-dimer concentrations were observed without organ dysfunction or fibrin deposition in the kidney on administration of tissue factor, whereas markedly elevated plasminogen activator inhibitor activity, decreased antithrombin III activity, severe organ failure, and marked fibrin deposition in the kidney were observed for lipopolysaccharide administration. Conclusion Because pathophysiology differed remarkably between the tissue factor- and lipopolysaccharide-induced disseminated intravascular coagulation models in rats, we recommend that they be assessed carefully as distinct entities to determine implications of their experimental and clinical use.


Blood Coagulation & Fibrinolysis | 2001

Elevated levels of free tissue factor pathway inhibitor antigen in cases of disseminated intravascular coagulation caused by various underlying diseases.

Hidesaku Asakura; Yasuo Ontachi; Tomoe Mizutani; Minori Kato; Masanori Saito; Eriko Morishita; Masahide Yamazaki; Yukio Suga; Akiyoshi Takami; Ken-ichi Miyamoto; Shinji Nakao

Tissue factor pathway inhibitor (TFPI) is primarily synthesized by vascular endothelial cells and is foundin vivoin association with endothelial cells, lipoproteins, or in free form. Free TFPI is the most potent and important type, because it is released from endothelial cells following an injection of heparin, or as a result of pathological stimuli. In order to study the role of TFPI in disease, the concentration of free form TFPI was measured in the plasma of 114 patients suffering from disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC), as the result of several underlying diseases. Plasma antigen levels of free TFPI were significantly higher even in those patients not exhibiting DIC than in normal healthy subjects. These levels were even higher among patients exhibiting DIC, especially those with acute promyelocytic leukemia or cancer, receiving continuous heparin drip infusions. A significant correlation was observed between the plasma antigen levels of free form TFPI and those of fibrin/fibrinogen degradation products, and free form TFPI and plasmin inhibitor complex (r= 0.428,P< 0.0001 andr= 0.329,P< 0.0001, respectively) among 114 DIC patients. There were no significant differences between the plasma levels of free TFPI in DIC patients with or without multiple organ failure. It has been suggested that the plasma levels of free TFPI are closely related to the levels of fibrinolysis occurring in DIC patients, although further study is required to clarify the degree to which TFPI is expressed by endothelial cells during DIC.


Atherosclerosis | 2001

Elevated plasma levels of free-form of TFPI antigen in hypercholesterolemic patients

Eriko Morishita; Hidesaku Asakura; Masanori Saito; Masahide Yamazaki; Yasuo Ontachi; Tomoe Mizutani; Minori Kato; Tamotsu Matsuda; Shinji Nakao

Several studies have previously reported high levels of total tissue factor pathway inhibitor (TFPI) antigen in patients with hypercholesterolemia. The relationship between serum lipid concentrations and total and free-form TFPI antigen in 32 patients with primary type II hypercholesterolemia and 38 age- and gender-matched normolipemic control subjects was studied (Study Group I). Plasma concentrations of total TFPI (tTFPI) antigen, free-form TFPI (fTFPI) antigen, tissue factor antigen, factor VII activity (FVIIc), and prothrombin fragment 1+2 (F1+2) were measured. The median levels of tTFPI, fTFPI, FVIIc, and F1+2 were higher in hyperlipidemic patients compared with those in healthy subjects. The effect of lowering total cholesterol on hypercoagulability in 25 patients with type II hyperlipoproteinemia (Study Group II) were also studied. The median levels of tTFPI, FVIIc, and F1+2 decreased significantly after 6 months of 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl coenzyme A (HMG-CoA) reductase inhibitor therapy in the hypercholesterolemic patients. On the other hand, fTFPI did not change after therapy. Plasma tTFPI was strongly correlated with total cholesterol and low density lipoprotein (LDL)-cholesterol in hyperlipidemic patients. In contrast to the strong correlation between tTFPI and total cholesterol, the correlation between plasma fTFPI and total cholesterol was relatively poor. These results suggest that the activation of the anticoagulant system as well as the activation of the coagulation system may occur in association with hypercholesterolemia. Furthermore, the results of this study may suggest that lowering of total cholesterol in hyperlipidemic patients reduces the thrombin generation in plasma and that down-regulation of LDL does not affect the anticoagulant potency of TFPI in plasma.


Blood Coagulation & Fibrinolysis | 1999

Prednisolone inhibits endotoxin-induced disseminated intravascular coagulation and improves mortality in rats : importance of inflammatory cytokine suppression

Masahide Yamazaki; Keiji Aoshima; Tomoe Mizutani; Yasuo Ontachi; Masanori Saito; Eriko Morishita; Hidesaku Asakura; Tamotsu Matsuda; Triplett Da

In order to determine whether prednisolone has a protective effect against the development of disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC), we measured the effect of prednisolone on changes in hemostatic parameters and plasma levels of inflammatory cytokines in endotoxin-treated rats. Decreases in platelet count and fibrinogen levels, prolongation of prothrombin time, and increases in the plasma fibrin degradation products and levels of thrombin-antithrombin III (TAT) complex following the administration of endotoxin, all of which are associated with DIC, were significantly suppressed by the administration of prednisolone. Heparin administration significantly suppressed changes in all these parameters except for the decrease in platelet count. The combination of prednisolone and heparin was more effective than either treatment alone. In order to determine whether these effects of prednisolone are correlated with the suppression of inflammatory cytokine production, we examined the relationship between changes in plasma levels of cytokine, the hemostatic parameters listed above, and mortality using a number of intervention regimens designed to alter events of the experimentally induced DIC. Changes in hemostatic parameters associated with DIC following 30 mg/kg per 4 h of endotoxin infusion were significantly suppressed by treatment with 1 mg/kg prednisolone 30 min before beginning endotoxin infusion, followed by administration of 250 U/kg heparin 2 h after the start of endotoxin infusion (prednisolone-endotoxin-heparin regimen). The heparin and prednisolone were administrated subcutaneously. The administration of prednisolone and heparin in the reverse order (i.e. heparin first and prednisolone second: heparin-endotoxin-prednisolone regimen) also suppressed changes in hemostatic parameters, albeit to a smaller degree. Cytokine production was also significantly suppressed by the first treatment, but was not affected by the regimen in which heparin was administered first. Administration of prednisolone alone or heparin alone 30 min before endotoxin significantly reduced the number of renal glomeruli with fibrin thrombi. Plasma levels of creatinine and alanine transferase were reduced only by prednisolone. Increased plasma levels of interleukin-1beta, tissue necrosis factor-alpha and interleukin-6 were suppressed by prednisolone but not by heparin, and there were significant correlations between plasma levels of TAT and cytokines. Prednisolone was more effective than heparin in reducing mortality at 24 h after 100 mg/kg over 4 h of endotoxin infusion (four of 20 versus 15 of 20 deaths for prednisolone and heparin, respectively). These findings suggest that prednisolone inhibits the development of endotoxin-induced DIC and reduces mortality by a different mechanism than heparin, possibly through suppressing the production of inflammatory cytokines. Prednisolone may be efficacious in preventing DIC and multiple organ dysfunction caused by endotoxin.


Osteoporosis International | 2001

Vitamin K Administration to Elderly Patients with Osteoporosis Induces No Hemostatic Activation, Even in Those with Suspected Vitamin K Deficiency

Hidesaku Asakura; S. Myou; Yasuo Ontachi; Tomoe Mizutani; Minori Kato; Masanori Saito; Eriko Morishita; Masahide Yamazaki; Shinji Nakao

Abstract: The administration of menaquinone-4 (MK-4), one of subclasses of vitamin K2, significantly reduces bone loss in postmenopausal osteoporotic women. However, concerns have been raised about whether vitamin K administration alters the hemostatic balance by inducing a thrombotic tendency. We investigated here whether the administration of vitamin K in the form of MK-4 induced a thrombotic tendency in 29 elderly patients with osteoporosis (5 men, 24 women; age range 78.7±5.1 years). Patients were administered 45 mg/day (three times a day, 30 min after each meal) of MK-4 for 12 weeks. Blood samples were obtained from the patients at 0, 4 and 12 weeks after the start of MK-4 administration. A number of hemostatic parameters remained stable under the markedly increased plasma levels of MK-4. However, in patients with suspected vitamin K deficiency, whose plasma levels of vitamin K or factor VII were low, vitamin-K-dependent clotting factors such as factor VII and prothrombin were gradually increased after administration of MK-4. No changes in the sensitive molecular markers such as TAT and F1+2, which reflect the amount of thrombin generated in the blood stream, were observed, even in those patients with suspected vitamin K deficiency. These results indicate that MK-4 can be administered safely, with regard to maintaining the hemostatic balance, to osteoporotic patients receiving no anticoagulant therapy.


Blood Coagulation & Fibrinolysis | 2001

All-trans retinoic acid is partially effective against lipopolysaccharide-induced but not against tissue-factor-induced disseminated intravascular coagulation in rat models.

Hidesaku Asakura; Keiji Aoshima; Ichino T; Yukio Suga; Masanori Saito; Eriko Morishita; Masahide Yamazaki; Yasuo Ontachi; Tomoe Mizutani; Minori Kato; Ken-ichi Miyamoto; Shinji Nakao

All-trans retinoic acid (ATRA) has been introduced to the management of acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL) as a differentiation treatment. This drug not only causes complete remission, but also improves disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) without adding anticoagulants in APL. We have attempted to determine whether ATRA is effective against DIC in rat models induced by tissue factor (TF) or lipopolysaccharide (LPS), because the anticoagulant effect of ATRA has been considered to induce thrombomodulin upregulation and TF downregulation on endothelial cells as well as on APL cells. In male Wistar rats, DIC was induced by a 4-h infusion of thromboplastin (3.75 U/kg) or lipopolysaccharide (30 mg/kg). The rats were given ATRA orally each day at a dose of 100 mg/kg per day for 1 week before the injection of TF or LPS in ATRA treatment groups, or given low molecular weight heparin (LMWH) 10 min before the injection of TF or LPS (200 U/kg, bolus intravenously) in LMWH treatment groups. No significant changes in hemostatic parameters or markers of organ dysfunction were caused by the ATRA administration, while DIC was significantly improved by LMWH in the TF-induced model. DIC was significantly improved by both ATRA and LMWH in the LPS-induced model. These findings suggested that ATRA was useful for treating DIC only in the LPS-induced model, and that drug efficacy should be carefully assessed because the agents used to induce DIC considerably influenced the outcome.


Blood Coagulation & Fibrinolysis | 2002

Beneficial effect of JTV-803, a new synthetic inhibitor of activated factor X, against both lipopolysaccharide-induced and tissue factor-induced disseminated intravascular coagulation in rat models.

Hidesaku Asakura; Ichino T; Tomotaka Yoshida; Yukio Suga; Yasuo Ontachi; Tomoe Mizutani; Minori Kato; Takako Ito; Masahide Yamazaki; Keiji Aoshima; Eriko Morishita; Masanori Saito; Ken-ichi Miyamoto; Shinji Nakao

We examined whether JTV-803, a specific activated factor X inhibitor independent of antithrombin III (ATIII), is effective against disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) in rat models induced by tissue factor (TF) or lipopolysaccharides (LPS). In male Wistar rats, DIC was induced by a 4 h infusion of thromboplastin (3.75 U/kg) or LPS (50 mg/kg). The rats were given JTV-803 (0.3 or 3 mg/kg, bolus intravenously) (JTV-803 groups) or low molecular weight heparin (LMWH groups) (200 U/kg, bolus intravenously) prior to an injection of TF or LPS. The results showed that JTV-803 was dose-dependently effective against DIC in both TF-induced and LPS-induced rat models. This anti-DIC effect of JTV-803 at higher doses was almost equivalent to that of LMWH in both types of DIC. Plasma ATIII activity was more prominent in the group treated with JTV-803 than in that treated with LMWH. None of rats died in the TF-induced DIC model with or without drug administration. On the contrary, seven of 22 rats died (mortality rate, 31.8%) in the LPS-induced DIC model without drug administration. Although the mortality rate of rats induced with LPS and treated with LMWH was quite high (6/16, 37.5%), none of the LPS-induced rats treated with JTV-803 died. These findings suggested that JTV-803 can treat both TF-induced and LPS-induced DIC models, and that this drug has greater potential in preserving ATIII and in improving the prognosis of DIC.

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