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Featured researches published by Tsuneya Nakajima.


International Archives of Allergy and Immunology | 2008

Chronic Rhinosinusitis: Risk Factors for the Recurrence of Chronic Rhinosinusitis Based on 5-Year Follow-Up after Endoscopic Sinus Surgery

Yoshinori Matsuwaki; Tetsushi Ookushi; Daiya Asaka; Eri Mori; Tsuneya Nakajima; Takuto Yoshida; Junya Kojima; Shintaro Chiba; Nobuyoshi Ootori; Hiroshi Moriyama

Background: Chronic rhinosinusitis (CRS) is one of the most frequent chronic diseases in the US, and little is understood about its pathogenesis. This study was conducted to characterize, retrospectively, the clinical, objective and immunological parameters that accompany recurrence of CRS during long-term follow-up after surgery. Methods: Fifty-six patients with CRS who had undergone endoscopic sinus surgery were followed up for 5 years after the surgery. The CRS parameters chosen were as follows: history of asthma and/or allergic rhinitis, peripheral eosinophilia of at least 520 cells/µl, peripheral eosinophil count, total IgE, presence of polyps, CT score, presence of fungi (positive fungal culture or stain), mucus or mucosal eosinophilia, mucosal eosinophil count, presence of acute infection after surgery, gender and age. Individual correlations and stepwise regression were performed. Results: Patients with a total peripheral eosinophil count of 520/µl or more and those with asthma were likely to experience recurrence of CRS within 5 years after surgery. Furthermore, patients with mucus or mucosal eosinophilia who were diagnosed as having eosinophilic CRS (ECRS) showed a high incidence of recurrence within 5 years. The parameter of mucus or mucosal eosinophilia (diagnosis of ECRS) had a positive predictive value of 85.7%. Conclusions: Surgeons should always examine the inflammatory infiltrate of nasal polyps or the paranasal mucosa, and patients with ECRS require anti-inflammatory medications, such as steroids, for a long time after surgery. Long-term follow-up is also essential.


Journal of Laryngology and Otology | 1992

Studies on mucocoeles of the ethmoid and sphenoid sinuses: Analysis of 47 cases

Hiroshi Moriyama; Tsuneya Nakajima; Yoshio Honda

Forty-seven mucocoeles of the ethmoid and/or sphenoid sinuses (33 males, 14 females) were operated on during the 10-years period from 1980 through 1989. Thirty-seven cases were post-operative mucocoele, while the remaining 10 were so-called primary mucocoeles. None of the cases had a history of facial trauma. In the majority of post-operative cases, the mucocoele develops 15-24 years after initial surgery. Paranasal sinus surgery in young patients (teenagers) may lead to a mucocoele due to post-operative scarring in the surgical wound. The principal symptoms include globe displacement, double vision, headache, deep orbital pain, a mass in the supero-medial quadrant of the orbit, visual disturbance, etc. Sufficient opening of the mucocoele wall by the endonasal approach is recommended for surgical treatment of ethmoidal and sphenoidal mucocoeles.


Journal of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery | 2011

Effect of Maxillomandibular Advancement on Morphology of Velopharyngeal Space

Tetsushi Okushi; Morio Tonogi; Takehiro Arisaka; Sayuri Kobayashi; Yusuke Tsukamoto; Hitoshi Morishita; Kazumichi Sato; Chiemi Sano; Shintaro Chiba; Gen-yuki Yamane; Tsuneya Nakajima

PURPOSE The objectives of the present study were to assess the changes in upper airway morphology and function in response to advancement of the maxilla and mandible. PATIENTS AND METHODS Orthognathic surgery was performed. During the surgery, the maxilla and mandible were each advanced as a maxillomandibular advancement simulation. A total of 18 patients with a chief complaint of malocclusion were studied. The distance in jaw advancement and the anteroposterior and left-right diameters of the velopharyngeal space before and after jaw advancement were measured. After the anteroposterior and left-right dilation rates and area enlargement rates were calculated, we compared advancement of the maxilla with that of the mandible. RESULTS Each of the jaw advancements resulted in statistically significant increases in the anteroposterior and left-right diameters of the velopharyngeal space, and the area was significantly enlarged. The anteroposterior dilation rate was significantly greater after advancement of the maxilla, and the left-right dilation rate was significantly greater after advancement of the mandible. The velopharyngeal space area enlargement rate was significantly greater with advancement of the maxilla. CONCLUSIONS These data suggest that the mode of dilation of the velopharyngeal space differs between maxillary advancement and mandibular advancement. Jaw advancement affects the soft palate muscles, and the velopharyngeal space is expanded 3-dimensionally by each of those muscles. The difference in the pattern of expansion of the velopharyngeal space was related to differences in the functions of the soft palate muscles.


Clinical Case Reports | 2017

Surfer's ear

Yumi Okuyama; Akira Baba; Hiroya Ojiri; Tsuneya Nakajima

Exostosis in external auditory canal is common among surfers. Common symptoms are decreased hearing or loss of hearing, ear infection, and/or plugging sensation. Repeated exposure to cold water is a key clinical history to suspect this condition. Based on symptoms and existence of infection, surgical removal of the exostosis is recommended.


Drug discoveries and therapeutics | 2017

Validation of a sheet-shaped body vibrometer for screening of obstructive sleep apnea

Takamasa Kogure; Mina Kobayashi; Takashi Okawa; Tsuneya Nakajima; Yuichi Inoue

We assessed the validity of using a sheet-shaped body vibrometer (SBV) as a portable monitoring device for obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) screening. Seventy consecutive patients with suspected OSA underwent simultaneous in-laboratory polysomnography (PSG) and SBV. We evaluated the screening accuracy of the respiratory event index (REI) obtained with the SBV, using the REI based on either the estimated total sleep time (REI_eTST) or time in bed (REI_TIB); these were compared to the apnea-hypopnea index (AHI) obtained via PSG. Bland-Altman plots indicated that the mean difference between REI_eTST and AHI was lower than that between REI_TIB and AHI (1.2 ± 19.8 vs. 6.5 ± 16.8). For AHI ≥ 15, the sensitivity and specificity at an optimal REI_eTST of 17.0 were 90.9% and 76.9%, whereas those at an optimal REI_TIB of 15.9 were 86.4% and 80.8%, respectively; moreover, for AHI ≥ 30, these values at an optimal REI_eTST of 26.0 were 89.5% and 88.2%, whereas those at an optimal REI_TIB of 23.8 were 84.2% and 92.2%, respectively. The optimal cutoff values of REIs for AHI of ≥ 5 were markedly different from those for AHI obtained via PSG (REI_eTST, 14.9; REI_TIB, 15.0), but close to those for AHI of ≥ 15; both had good sensitivities and specificities. REIs obtained via SBV performed well in moderate-to-severe, but not mild, OSA screening; REI_eTST showed a slightly higher sensitivity and a relatively closer value to the AHI obtained via PSG when compared to REI_TIB. We consider the SBV less acceptable for screening mild cases than more severe cases.


Dental Traumatology | 2005

Can mouthguards prevent mandibular bone fractures and concussions? A laboratory study with an artificial skull model.

Tomotaka Takeda; Keiichi Ishigami; Sanae Hoshina; Toru Ogawa; Jun Handa; Kazunori Nakajima; Atsushi Shimada; Tsuneya Nakajima; Connell Wayne Regner


Auris Nasus Larynx | 2013

Risk factors for olfactory dysfunction in chronic rhinosinusitis

Eri Mori; Yoshinori Matsuwaki; Chieko Mitsuyama; Tetsushi Okushi; Tsuneya Nakajima; Hiroshi Moriyama


The Japanese Journal of Jaw Deformities | 2007

Examination of Change in Sleep-disordered Breathing before and after Orthognatic Surgery-Part 1 Change of the Apnea Hypopnea Index-

Morio Tonogi; Takehiro Arisaka; Yusuke Tsukamoto; Kazumichi Sato; Gen-yuki Yamane; Tetsushi Ohkushi; Tsuneya Nakajima


Nippon Jibiinkoka Gakkai Kaiho | 2002

Allergic fungal sinusitis

Yoshinori Matsuwaki; Kiyoshi Yanagi; Tsuneya Nakajima; Hiroshi Moriyama


Nippon Jibiinkoka Gakkai Kaiho | 2001

A Case Report of Allergic Fungal Sinusitis Caused by Penicillium sp. and Cladosporium sp.

Yoshinori Matsuwaki; Tsuneya Nakajima; Makoto Iida; Osamu Nohara; Shinniti Haruna; Hiroshi Moriyama

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Hiroshi Moriyama

Jikei University School of Medicine

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Daiya Asaka

Jikei University School of Medicine

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Shintaro Chiba

Jikei University School of Medicine

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