Yasuaki Kamikawa
Okayama University
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Featured researches published by Yasuaki Kamikawa.
Scandinavian Journal of Gastroenterology | 1997
Ryuhan Shin; Yoshio Naomoto; Yasuaki Kamikawa; Norimitsu Tanaka; Kunzo Orita
BACKGROUND Suramin disrupts several kinds of growth factor receptors. Since human esophageal squamous cell carcinoma expresses abundant epidermal growth factor receptors (EGFR) and proliferates in an autocrine and paracrine manner, it was expected that suramin inhibits tumor growth by disrupting EGFR. METHODS We studied the effect of suramin on the human esophageal squamous cell carcinoma cell line KEsC-II in vitro and in an animal model. RESULTS Cell proliferation was stimulated at a low concentration and inhibited at a high concentration of suramin in vitro. Since autophosphorylation of EGFR was stronger at the low concentration and weaker at the high concentration of suramin compared with the control, the effect of suramin was thought to be via phosphorylation of receptors. In the animal model tumor growth was significantly stimulated in the suramin-treated group compared with the control group, and the BrdU labeling index was also higher in the suramin-treated group. CONCLUSIONS As it was impossible to increase the dose of suramin intravenously because of side effects, administration of suramin by another method, such as subcutaneous injection around the tumor, may increase the concentration of suramin in the tumor tissue and promote the anti-tumor effect of suramin.
Acta Medica Okayama | 1996
Junji Matsuoka; Noriaki Tanaka; Kazushi Kojima; Kenichi Takai; Kazuo Hamaya; Akira Gochi; Yasuaki Kamikawa; Kunzo Orita
We experienced a patient with traumatic neuroma of the gallbladder with no history of gallbladder surgery or cholelithiasis. A 74-year-old man was referred to our department after a gallbladder tumor was incidentally discovered during a preoperative screening examination for prostate hypertrophy. Ultrasonography, MRI, CT and endoscopic retrograde cholangiography revealed a protuberant lesion of the gallbladder. Laparoscopic cholecystectomy was attempted but adhesion between the liver and duodenum forced us to convert to open laparotomy. Cholecystectomy and adjacent liver tissue resection was performed. Diagnosis was made by frozen histology during operation. It revealed no malignancy. Postoperative pathological examination revealed traumatic neuroma associated with inflammation. To our knowledge, this is the first reported case of gallbladder neuroma without a history of gallstones or surgery in the English and Japanese literature since 1980. This traumatic neuroma should be considered in a differential diagnosis in treating gallbladder neoplasm, even in the absence of an operative history or cholelithiasis.
Surgery Today | 1997
Takahito Yagi; Koichi Nakagawa; Hiroshi Sadamori; Masaaki Hashimoto; Yasuaki Kamikawa; Noriaki Tanaka
We herein report the findings of a 72-year-old man with gangrenous multivisceral necrosis following an operation for abdominal aortic aneurysm. The region of necrosis, which accompanied infarction of the left kidney, included the entire ileum and the ascending, descending, and sigmoid colon. An end ileostomy and transverse colostomy were performed subsequent to massive bowel resection in a second operation. After the second operation, he was managed with total parenteral nutrition and recovered uneventfully except for end-jejunostomy syndrome. A third operation was performed to reconstruct the interrupted bowel. To minimize abandoned bowel, antiperistaltic transverse colostomy was used for jejunocolonal reconstruction. The antiperistaltic colostomy improved the symptoms of end-jejunostomy syndrome and normalized the patients vitamin B12 and bile acid levels. An antiperistaltic colostomy is thus considered to be useful for preventing short bowel syndrome after a massive bowel resection.
Annals of Gastroenterological Surgery | 2018
Shinji Kuroda; Yasuhiro Choda; Shinya Otsuka; Satoshi Ueyama; Norimitsu Tanaka; Atsushi Muraoka; Shinji Hato; Toshikazu Kimura; Kohji Tanakaya; Satoru Kikuchi; Shunsuke Tanabe; Kazuhiro Noma; Masahiko Nishizaki; Shunsuke Kagawa; Yasuhiro Shirakawa; Yasuaki Kamikawa; Toshiyoshi Fujiwara
As a result of the difficulty in effective prevention of gastroesophageal reflux, no standard reconstruction procedure after proximal gastrectomy (PG) has yet been established. The double‐flap technique (DFT), or Kamikawa procedure, is an antireflux reconstruction procedure in esophagogastrostomy. The efficacy of DFT has recently been reported in several studies. However, these were all single‐center studies with a limited number of cases.
Molecular and Clinical Oncology | 2017
Toshio Nishikawa; Masahiko Takahashi; Masanobu Mori; Yasuaki Kamikawa; Fumiyuki Inoue
We herein report a rare case of solitary splenic metastasis of a pulmonary carcinoid, for which hand-assisted laparoscopic splenectomy was performed. A 73-year-old man was admitted to the Inoue Hospital (Fukuyama, Japan) in March 2015 with an abnormal shadow of the spleen. The patient had a history of right upper lobectomy with lymph node dissection for a pulmonary typical carcinoid (pT1N0M0 stage IA) 7 years earlier. Plain abdominal computed tomography (CT) revealed a low-density area in the spleen. Enhanced abdominal CT revealed a mass in the spleen measuring 3×3 cm. Blood tests and tumor marker analysis revealed no abnormalities. Abdominal magnetic resonance imaging revealed a mass that was low-intensity on T1- and high-intensity on T2-weighted images, and positron emission tomography revealed abnormal fluorodeoxyglucose accumulation in the mass. Hand-assisted laparoscopic splenectomy was performed for diagnosis and treatment. The resected specimen included a reddish-brown mass. On immunohistochemistry, the mass was positive for chromogranin A, synaptophysin and CD56, which was similar to the resected pulmonary carcinoid tumor; thus, splenic metastasis of pulmonary carcinoid was diagnosed. The postoperative course was uneventful and the patient is currently under observation and remains recurrence-free, with no adjuvant chemotherapy.
Surgery Today | 1991
Shigeo Shiiki; Sadanori Fuchimoto; Fumiyuki Inoue; Yasuaki Kamikawa; Akira Gouchi; Fumihiro Hamada; Kouji Taguchi; Shinichiro Tanaka; Kunzo Orita
A case of primary malignant lymphoma of the breast in a 52 year old woman is described herein. She presented with a painless tumor of the right breast, which was elastic-hard and measured 2×1 cm, although there was no lymphadenopathy noted in the axilla or any other regions. Both the biopsy carried out prior to surgery and frozen sections revealed evidence of malignancy, however, histologically, it was difficult to differentiate between malignant lymphoma and carcinoma until staining with the monoclonal antibody MB1 was performed. This allowed a diagnosis of B cell malignant lymphoma of the diffuse large-cell type to be made. The patient remains alive and well 24 months after her mastectomy.
Japanese Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1998
Yoshio Naomoto; Jose Antonio Perdomo; Yasuaki Kamikawa; Minoru Haisa; Tomoki Yamatsuji; Arakawa Kenzo; Koji Taguchi; Kyoko Hara; Noriaki Tanaka
Japanese Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1996
Madoka Hamada; Yoshio Naomoto Toshiyoshi Fujiwara; Yasuaki Kamikawa; Tanaka Noriaki
Japanese Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1999
Yoshio Naomoto; Minoru Haisa; Tomoki Yamatsuji; Yasuhiro Shirakawa; Tomoyoshi Muramatsu; Hiroshi Isozaki; Yasuaki Kamikawa; Noriaki Tanaka
Japanese Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2000
Kaori Shigemitsu; Yoshio Naomoto; Minoru Haisa; Tomoki Yamatsuji; Hirofumi Noguchi; Masafumi Kataoka; Yasuaki Kamikawa; Noriaki Tanaka