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Featured researches published by Yasushi Asari.


Annals of Surgery | 1997

Serum amylase level on admission in the diagnosis of blunt injury to the pancreas: its significance and limitations.

Tsunemasa Takishima; Katsuhiko Sugimoto; Mitsuhiro Hirata; Yasushi Asari; Takashi Ohwada; Akira Kakita

OBJECTIVE The objective of this study was to elucidate the significance and limitations of serum amylase levels in the diagnosis of blunt injury to the pancreas. SUMMARY BACKGROUND DATA Several recently published reports of analyses of patients with blunt abdominal trauma have indicated that determination of the serum amylase level on admission seemed to be of little value in the diagnosis of acute injury to the pancreas. Few previous reports have described clearly the significance and the limitations of the serum amylase level in diagnosing injury to the pancreas. METHODS Retrospective analysis of 73 patients with blunt injury to the pancreas during 16-year period from February 1980 to January 1996 was performed. The factors analyzed in the current study included age, gender, time elapsed from injury to admission, hypotension on admission, type of injury to the pancreas, intra-abdominal- and intracranial-associated injuries, and death. RESULTS The serum amylase level was found to be abnormal in all patients admitted more than 3 hours after trauma. Various comparisons between patients with elevated (n = 61, 83.6%) and nonelevated (n = 12, 16.4%) serum amylase levels showed the statistical significance solely of the time elapsed from injury to admission (7 +/- 1.5 hours vs. 1.3 +/- 0.2 hour, p < 0.001). The major factor that influences the serum amylase level on admission appeared to be the time elapsed from injury to admission. Determination of the serum amylase level is not diagnostic within 3 hours or fewer after trauma, irrespective of the type of injury. CONCLUSIONS To avoid failure in the detection of pancreatic injury, the authors advocate determination of serum amylase levels more than 3 hours after trauma.


Journal of Trauma-injury Infection and Critical Care | 1993

Endoscopic retrograde cholangiography in the nonsurgical management of blunt liver injury

Katsuhiko Sugimoto; Yasushi Asari; Tetsuaki Sakaguchi; Takashi Owada; Kazuhiko Maekawa

Injury to the intrahepatic bile duct has not been routinely examined in patients with blunt liver injury, despite the risk of formation of a biloma and hemobilia. In this study we examined the role of endoscopic retrograde cholangiography (ERC) in the evaluation of blunt liver injuries. Sixty-four of 106 (60.3%) patients with blunt hepatic injuries, admitted from April 1986 through March 1992, were managed nonsurgically; ERC was performed in conjunction with computed tomographic (CT) scanning to rule out injury to the bile duct in 28 patients. Injury to the bile duct was detected in six patients (21.4%), five of whom developed a biloma. Patients with hepatic parenchymal injuries that were observed on the CT scans were at greatest risk for injury to the intrahepatic bile duct, and our data suggested that the incidence of injury to the intrahepatic bile duct after blunt hepatic trauma is higher than previously reported. Patients with serious hepatic parenchymal injuries who are candidates for nonsurgical management should be considered for ERC to exclude the possibility of injury to the bile duct.


Journal of Pediatric Surgery | 1996

Characteristics of pancreatic injury in children: A comparison with such injury in adults

Tsunemasa Takishima; Katsuhiko Sugimoto; Yasushi Asari; Takaaki Kikuno; Mitsuhiro Hirata; Akira Kakita; Takashi Ohwada; Kazuhiko Maekawa

A retrospective study of eight pediatric patients (under 15 years of age) who had pancreatic injuries was undertaken. Comparisons were made with 59 adult patients who sustained pancreatic injuries over the same 15-year period. All the pediatric injuries and 96.6% of the adult resulted from blunt abdominal trauma. Bicycle accidents (children, 75.0%; adults, 0%; P < .001) and automobile accidents (children, 0%; adults, 61.0%; P < .01) were the most common causes of pancreatic injury in the two groups. There was no significant difference in the incidence of abdominal pain or peritoneal irritation between the groups. However, abdominal pain in the adults was poorly localized. Isolated pancreatic injuries were noted in 62.5% of the pediatric patients and in 15.3% of the adult patients (P < .05). Associated intraabdominal injuries were present in 25.0% of the children and in 69.5% of the adults (P < .05). The duodenum was injured in two (25.0%) pediatric patients and in 10 (16.9%) adult patients. Whereas the duodenal injuries in pediatric patients were intramural hematomas without perforation in both cases, all but one of these injuries in adults were perforations or transections (P < .05). There was a significant difference in the type of pancreatic injury between the two groups (P < .05). Surgery was performed in 12.5% of the pediatric cases and in 78.0% of the adult cases (P < .01). There were no deaths among the pediatric patients, but 8.5% of the adults died in the hospital. The difference with respect to clinical course might be related to the differences in cause of injury.


Shock | 1996

Release site of TNF alpha after intravenous and intraperitoneal injection of LPS from Escherichia coli in rats.

Yasushi Asari; Masataka Majima; Katsuhiko Sugimoto; Makoto Katori; Takashi Ohwada

Lipopolysaccharide (LPS) concentrations in the portal vein after intraperitoneal (i.p.) injection were slightly higher than those in the arteries. The tumor necrosis factor (TNFα) levels in arterial serum were higher after i.p. injection than after i.v. injection and rose to a peak at 90 min after some delay. Infusion of LPS into the portal vein increased the TNFα levels in the arterial serum. Pretreatment with indomethacin further increased the arterial levels of TNFα after portal infusion, but did not alter them after i.p. injection, because of the reduction by indomethacin of LPS absorption after i.p. injection of LPS. TNFa was also generated in the peritoneal cavity after i.p. injection of LPS. The TNFα concentrations in the arterial serum and in the peritoneal cavity were accelerated by mast cell degradation. In conclusion, TNFα was generated mainly in the liver, but also in the peritoneal cavity, after i.p. injection of LPS, and was negatively regulated by prostaglandins.


Prehospital and Disaster Medicine | 2000

Analysis of medical needs on day 7 after the tsunami disaster in Papua New Guinea.

Yasushi Asari; Yuichi Koido; Ken Nakamura; Yasuhiro Yamamoto; Muneo Ohta

INTRODUCTION Because of great intervening distances, international medical relief activities in catastrophic, sudden-onset disasters often do not begin until days 5-7 after the precipitating event. The medical needs of those affected and what public health problems exist in the community in the week after the tsunami disaster in Papua New Guinea(PNG) were investigated. METHODS The Japan Medical Team for Disaster Relief (JMTDR) conducted investigative hearings at the District Office responsible for the management of the disaster, the Care Center, and the Hospitals in Aitape, Vanimo, and Wewak in PNG. RESULTS The numbers of in-patients in the Aitape, Vanimo, and Wewak Hospitals, and in the Care Center in Aitape were 291, > 300, 68, and 104, respectively. The exact number of people affected was unknown at the Aitape District Office. There was no lack of medical supplies and drugs in the hospital, but the Care Center in Aitape did not have sufficient quantities of antibiotics. No outbreak of communicable disease occurred, despite the presence of risk factors such as the dense concentration of affected people and the constant prevalence of malaria and diarrhea. The water at Wewak General Hospital contained chlorine and was suitable for drinking, but that elsewhere contained bacteria. CONCLUSIONS On about the 7th day after the event, the available information still was incomplete, and it was a time to shift from initial emergency activities to specialized medical care. Although no outbreak of communicable disease actually occurred, there was much anxiety about it because of the risk factors present. For effective medical care at this stage, it is essential to conduct a survey of actual medical needs that also include epidemiological factors.


Injury-international Journal of The Care of The Injured | 2016

Hybrid treatment combining emergency surgery and intraoperative interventional radiology for severe trauma

Yuichi Kataoka; Hiroaki Minehara; Fumie Kashimi; Tasuku Hanajima; Tatsuhiro Yamaya; Hiroshi Nishimaki; Yasushi Asari

OBJECT To evaluate the efficacy of hybrid treatment combining emergency surgery and intraoperative interventional radiology (IVR) for severe trauma. PATIENTS AND METHODS The records of 63 severely injured patients who underwent concurrent emergency surgery and IVR at our emergency centre from 1999 through 2013 were retrospectively reviewed. Mobile digital subtraction angiography device was used in the operating room when performing IVR. Patients undergoing hybrid treatment combining intraoperative IVR and emergency surgery (intraoperative IVR group) were compared with those undergoing IVR in the angiography suite before or after emergency surgery (control group). RESULTS Thirteen patients underwent hybrid treatment (intraoperative IVR group). Of these 13 patients, 7 underwent treatment for abdominal organ injuries, and 6 for multiregional injuries. Emergency operations were laparotomy (n=12), thoracotomy (n=1), craniotomy (n=1), and haemostasis of the lower extremities (n=1). Five patients underwent damage control surgery. IVR included transarterial embolisation (n=12), endovascular stent or stent-graft placement (n=2), and embolisation of a portal vein by laparotomy (n=2). The mean ISS was 40. The actual overall survival rate was 85%, and the probability of survival (Ps) was 62%. The control group included 45 patients. Five patients who met exclusion criteria were not included in the control group. Age, ISS, RTS, Ps, pH and base excess on arrival, and blood transfusion volume during operation and IVR did not differ significantly between the groups. Total time during operation and IVR was significantly shorter in the intraoperative IVR group than in the control group (229 [SD 72]min vs. 355 [SD 169]min; p=0.007). The mortality were 15 (95% CI 2-45) % in the intraoperative IVR group vs. 36 (95% CI 22-51) % in the control group. CONCLUSION Hybrid treatment combining emergency surgery and intraoperative IVR can be a novel treatment strategy for severe trauma, and it will improve patient outcomes due to reduction of the time for resuscitation.


Injury-international Journal of The Care of The Injured | 1998

The diagnostic problem associated with blunt traumatic azygous vein injury: delayed appearance of right haemothorax after blunt chest trauma

Katsuhiko Sugimoto; Yasushi Asari; Mitsuhiro Hirata; Hiroshi Imai; Takashi Ohwada

Azygous vein injury (AVI) associated with blunt chest trauma is rare, but it can become a very serious problem if diagnosis and treatment are delayed. However, in 13 reported cases of AVI, including the present case, right hemothorax was not found on the initial chest X-ray film, even though its delayed appearance was confirmed in 3 out of 13 patients (23.1%). Thus, the diagnosis of AVI can be hampered because of delayed right hemothorax (DRH).


Journal of Trauma-injury Infection and Critical Care | 1996

Role of repeat computed tomography after emergency endoscopic retrograde pancreatography in the diagnosis of traumatic injury to pancreatic ducts

Tsunemasa Takishima; Shigeharu Horiike; Katsuhiko Sugimoto; Yasushi Asari; Mitsuhiro Hirata; Takaaki Kikuno; Akira Kakita; Takashi Owada; Kazuhiko Maekawa

Endoscopic retrograde pancreatography (ERP) is performed on patients with pancreatic injury after abdominal trauma. To delineate pancreatic ductal injuries more accurately, we performed repeat computed tomography (CT) shortly after completion of ERP. We describe our experiences with six patients to demonstrate the feasibility and utility of this method. In our cases, the diagnosis of pancreatic ductal injury was made with certainty on the basis of the presence of extravasated contrast medium. This protocol is useful for reaffirmation of injuries noted on ERP, for diagnosis of injuries not noted on ERP, and for exclusion of injuries in patients with equivocal results of ERP. Moreover, the protocol is easy to implement because it involves only the transfer of the patient from the endoscopy to the CT suite. The technique can be used to clarify potentially confusing situations.


Clinical Toxicology | 2000

Pulse steroid therapy in adult respiratory distress syndrome following petroleum naphtha ingestion.

Yoshito Kamijo; Kazui Soma; Yasushi Asari; Takashi Ohwada

Case Report: A suicide attempt by a 23-year-old woman involved ingestion of 1000 mL of petroleum naphtha. Early chemical pneumonitis was complicated by life-threatening, diffuse interstitial lung consolidation with pneumatoceles. Pulse steroid therapy beginning on day 17 was associated with remarkable resolution of interstitial consolidation, although an enlarging secondarily infected pneumatocele ruptured to produce a bronchopleural fistula. Thoracic surgery and antibiotic therapy resulted in improvement of the patients respiratory condition, and she was discharged with no residual respiratory symptoms. High-dose corticosteroid therapy appears to be a useful addition to aggressive supportive treatment in late adult respiratory distress syndrome following hydrocarbon ingestion.


Clinical Toxicology | 1998

Survival after massive arsenic poisoning self-treated by high fluid intake

Yoshito Kamijo; Kazui Soma; Yasushi Asari; Takashi Ohwada

CASE REPORT A 23-year-old male pharmacist ingested 1040 mg arsenic trioxide (788 mg trivalent arsenic, 13 mg/kg). After 7 asymptomatic hours, frequent vomiting and diarrhea occurred. Fearing death from shock, he drank 5 L of water over 5 hours. When he was brought to our hospital with chief complaint of constricted vision about 20 hours after ingestion, the major abdominal symptoms had already subsided. Despite a lethal plasma arsenic on admission, all toxic symptoms including hepatic dysfunction, erythematous dermal eruption, and peripheral neuropathy improved during his hospital stay with no treatment except for dimercaptopropanol.

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