Toshinobu Yamamoto
Nagoya City University
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Featured researches published by Toshinobu Yamamoto.
Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2001
Haru Kato; Naoki Kato; Kunitomo Watanabe; Toshinobu Yamamoto; Kanzo Suzuki; Shiomi Ishigo; Seiko Kunihiro; Isao Nakamura; George Killgore; Shinichi Nakamura
ABSTRACT Clostridium difficile isolates recovered from patients with C. difficile-associated diarrhea (CDAD) at three hospitals located in diverse areas of Japan were analyzed by three typing systems, PCR ribotyping, pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE), and Western immunoblotting. At the three hospitals examined, a single PCR ribotype strain (type smz) was predominant and accounted for 22 (65%) of 34, 18 (64%) of 28, and 11 (44%) of 25 isolates, respectively. All of the 51 isolates that represented PCR ribotype smz were nontypeable by PFGE because of DNA degradation. Since the type smz strain did not react with any of the antisera against 10 different serogroups (A, B, C, D, F, G, H, I, K, and X), we prepared a new antiserum against a type smz isolate. All 51 type smz isolates presented identical banding patterns, reacting with the newly prepared antiserum (designated subserogroup JP-0 of serogroup JP). These results were compared with those of a strain from a hospital outbreak that occurred in New York, which has been identified as type J9 by restriction enzyme analysis and type 01/A by arbitrarily primed PCR but was nontypeable by PFGE because of DNA degradation. This strain was reported to be epidemic at multiple hospitals in the United States. The J9 strain represented a PCR ribotype pattern different from that of a type smz strain and was typed as subserogroup G-1 of serogroup G by immunoblot analysis. A single outbreak type causing nosocomial CDAD in Japan was found to be different from the strain causing multiple outbreaks in the United States, even though the outbreak strains from the two countries were nontypeable by PFGE because of DNA degradation.
The Journal of the Japanese Association for Infectious Diseases | 1995
Toshinobu Yamamoto; Kanzou Suzuki; Masahiro Yamakoshi
A study based on clinical analysis was conducted regarding the 125 episodes in the elderly 112 patients of sepsis who were 70 (average 83.8 +/- 7.5) years old at Nagoyashi-Koseiin Geriatric Hospital from 1985 through 1994. 1) The backgrounds of the elderly patients with sepsis were as follows: bedridden (72.8%), urinary catheter in place (61.2%), central venous catheter in place (48.8%), and prior antibiotic use (40.8%). All patients had an underlying disease. 2) Organisms isolated were Escherichia coli (21.2%), Staphylococcus aureus (18.4%); Coagulase-negative staphylococci (CNS) (17.4%) and Candida albicans (6.1%). Chronologically, the quantity of gram-positive cocci increased while that of gram-negative bacilli decreased. As the age of the patients increased, the frequency of infections by Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), E. coli, and/or multiple bacteria increased, while that of infections by CNS and gram-negative bacilli excluding E. coli decreased. 3) The primary infected sites were the urinary tract system (24.8%), central venous catheter (21.6%) and unknown (31.2%). 4) The primary clinical observations were fever exceeding 38.0 degrees C (88.0%), tachycardia (60.8%), shivering (44.0%) and cyanosis (32.8%). 5) Complications were multiple organ failure (33.6%), septic shock (26.4%) and disseminated intravascular coagulation (22.4%). 6) The prognosis indicated that 65.6% were survivors, and 34.4% were nonsurvivors. At the onset of sepsis, weight, blood pressure, serum albumin, and total cholesterol in the nonsurvivors were significantly lower than those in the survivors, whereas heart rate, GOT, LDH, and BUN in the nonsurvivors were significantly higher than those in the survivors.
Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 1998
Haru Kato; Naoki Kato; Kunitomo Watanabe; Iwai N; Haruhi Nakamura; Toshinobu Yamamoto; Kanzo Suzuki; Shin-Moo Kim; Yunsop Chong; Eddy Bagus Wasito
Fems Microbiology Letters | 2000
Naoki Kato; Cheng-Xu Liu; Haru Kato; Kunitomo Watanabe; Yasunori Tanaka; Toshinobu Yamamoto; Kanzo Suzuki; Kazue Ueno
The Journal of the Japanese Association for Infectious Diseases | 1999
Masahiro Yamakoshi; Kanzou Suzuki; Toshinobu Yamamoto; Nagao Shinagawa; Takasi Nakakita; Noriko Goto; Yasuo Yamada; Makoto Itoh
The Journal of the Japanese Association for Infectious Diseases | 1996
Toshinobu Yamamoto; Masahiro Yamakoshi; Kanzou Suzuki; Nagao Shinagawa; Ariga K
Japanese journal of geriatrics | 2000
Yoshiya Hasegawa; Toshinobu Yamamoto; Toshiaki Inagaki; Kanzou Suzuki
The Journal of the Japanese Association for Infectious Diseases | 1996
Toru Matsuura; Satoru Adachi; Kanzo Suzuki; Masahiro Yamakoshi; Toshinobu Yamamoto; Toshiyuki Yamamoto; Ariga K; Fumitomo Odawara
The Journal of the Japanese Association for Infectious Diseases | 1995
Masahiro Yamakoshi; Toshinobu Yamamoto; Kanzou Suzuki
The Journal of the Japanese Association for Infectious Diseases | 1995
Toshinobu Yamamoto; Kanzou Suzuki; Masahiro Yamakoshi; Ariga K