Tsuneo Nagai
Niigata University
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Tsuneo Nagai.
Pathology International | 2007
Iwao Emura; Hiroyuki Usuda; Toshio Fujita; Katsuya Ebe; Tsuneo Nagai
To evaluate the utility of the scavenger receptor A (SRA) index (no. SRA+ monocytes observed in 10 high‐power fields of peripheral blood (PB) smear samples, normal upper limit <30) as the indication of disrupted, fissured, or eroded plaque, 225 patients with acute myocardial infarction (AMI), 79 with unstable angina (UA) and 91 with stable angina (SA) were examined. Thrombus was gathered from 95 of 205 sequential AMI patients (46.3%), and classified into platelets, mixed, and two kinds of residual mural thrombus (RMT). RMT was observed in 56 of 169 (33.1%) AMI patients with SRA index ≥30 at hospitalization. The SRA index of 82.4% of AMI, and 75.9% of UA, and 70.3% of SA patients was ≥30 at hospitalization. For 36 AMI patients who initially had an SRA index of <30 at hospitalization, it exceeded 30 within 2 days, and the SRA index rapidly increased in most AMI patients after hospitalization. SRA+ monocytes were considered to differentiate from SRA– monocytes in PB. An abnormally high SRA index is considered to be a useful indication of disrupted or fissured or eroded plaque.
International Heart Journal | 2015
Nobumasa Ohara; Masanori Kaneko; Hirohiko Kuwano; Katsuya Ebe; Toshio Fujita; Tsuneo Nagai; Tatsuo Furukawa; Yoshifusa Aizawa; Kyuzi Kamoi
A 35-year-old Japanese woman was admitted with coma following flu-like symptoms. She was diagnosed with diabetic ketoacidosis and fulminant type 1 diabetes (FT1D) and received intravenous infusion of insulin and saline. The next day, the ketoacidosis disappeared, and she recovered consciousness. However, extensive ST-segment elevations in the electrocardiogram appeared with a positive troponin test, and the patient developed pulmonary edema on day 3. An echocardiogram showed globally reduced wall motion of the left ventricle and mild pericardial effusion. Despite medical therapy with intravenous furosemide, carperitide, and catecholamines, her cardiac function deteriorated rapidly, with the left ventricular ejection fraction decreasing to 26% within 7 hours, and progressed to cardiogenic shock that afternoon. The patient received mechanical circulatory support for 4 days with intra-aortic balloon pumping and percutaneous cardiopulmonary support, and recovered fully from circulatory failure. A paired serum antibody test showed a significantly elevated titer against parainfluenza-3 virus, indicating a diagnosis of fulminant viral myocarditis. She was discharged on multiple daily insulin injection therapy, and her subsequent clinical course has been uneventful. In summary, we present a case of concurrent FT1D and fulminant viral myocarditis. Parainfluenza-3 viral infection was confirmed serologically and was considered to be a cause of both the FT1D and fulminant myocarditis.
Pathology International | 2011
Iwao Emura; Hiroyuki Usuda; Toshio Fujita; Katsuya Ebe; Tsuneo Nagai
To examine the relationship between the scavenger receptor A (SRA) index (the number of SRA+ cells observed in 10 high power fields of peripheral blood (PB) smear samples; normal upper limit <30) and coronary thrombus, 389 thrombi obtained from 393 patients with acute ST elevation myocardial infarction were examined. Thrombi were classified into platelets (PT), mixed (MT), fibrin‐rich (FT) and organizing thrombi (OT); 387, 269, 57 and 29 cases were detected, respectively. Patients were divided into group A (PT only, 89 cases), B (containing MT and PT but not FT, 243 cases), and C (containing FT, 57 cases). SRA+ cells had infiltrated into all FT cases and 147 of the 269 MT, but no PT. At hospitalization, the SRA index exceeded 30 in 276 patients. PT was observed in 274 cases, and MT and FT (residual mural thrombus; RMT) observed in 230. Infarct‐related coronary artery was thought to be totally and rapidly occluded by PT that had formed as a result of severe stenosis due to extrusion of plaque content or growth of RMT. An abnormal increase of SRA+ cells is considered to be a useful finding to detecting the presence of PT and, probably, RMT.
JAMA | 2005
Hiroshi Watanabe; Makoto Kodama; Yuji Okura; Yoshifusa Aizawa; Naohito Tanabe; Masaomi Chinushi; Yuichi Nakamura; Tsuneo Nagai; Masahito Sato; Masaaki Okabe
Circulation | 2006
Masahito Sato; Satoru Fujita; Atushi Saito; Yoshio Ikeda; Hitoshi Kitazawa; Minoru Takahashi; Junji Ishiguro; Masaaki Okabe; Yuichi Nakamura; Tsuneo Nagai; Hiroshi Watanabe; Makoto Kodama; Yoshifusa Aizawa
Japanese Circulation Journal-english Edition | 1989
Tsuneo Nagai
Japanese Circulation Journal-english Edition | 1986
Kenichi Watanabe; Yoichi Hirokawa; Akihiro Yokoyama; Hirotaka Oda; Hideaki Ohtsuka; Kazuo Maeda; Tsuneo Nagai; Takashi Tsuda; Senji Hayashi; Yoshimitsu Yazawa; Yutaka Arai; Akira Shibata
Japanese Circulation Journal-english Edition | 1984
Yoshimitsu Yazawa; Eiji Ohtaki; Tsuneo Nagai; Senji Hayashi; Osamu Hosokawa; Kenichi Watanabe; Akira Shibata; Naoyuki Takasawa
Internal Medicine | 1995
Takayuki Inomata; Yutaka Igarashi; Katsuya Ebe; Tsuneo Nagai; Akira Shibata
Japanese Heart Journal | 1985
Yoshimitsu Yazawa; Tsuneo Nagai; Senji Hayashi; Akira Shibata; Nobuyuki Miyatani; Naoyuki Takasawa
Collaboration
Dive into the Tsuneo Nagai's collaboration.
Niigata University of Pharmacy and Applied Life Sciences
View shared research outputs