Yoshiaki Otake
Osaka Medical College
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Featured researches published by Yoshiaki Otake.
American Heart Journal | 1997
Michihiro Suwa; Yoshiaki Otake; Ayaka Moriguchi; Takahide Ito; Yuzo Hirota; Keishiro Kawamura; Itaru Adachi; Isamu Narabayashi
This study was performed to evaluate whether iodine-123 metaiodobenzylguanidine (MIBG) myocardial scintigraphy could predict the response to beta-blocker therapy in patients with nonischemic dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM). Beta-Blocker therapy is effective in some patients with DCM. MIBG myocardial scintigraphy has also been suggested to be useful in evaluating the severity of myocardial damage in DCM. However, no data exist on whether MIBG imaging can be used to predict which patients with DCM will respond to beta-blocker therapy. We prospectively evaluated whether MIBG myocardial imaging was useful in predicting responses to beta-blocker therapy in patients with DCM. MIBG imaging was performed in 45 patients with DCM (35 men, 10 women, aged 13 to 68 years) before the start of bisoprolol. The heart to mediastinum (H/M) MIBG uptake ratio was evaluated on initial and delayed images, and the percent washout rate of myocardial MIBG was also obtained from these data. Of the 45 patients, 30 (67%) responded to beta-blocker therapy, whereas 2 were resistant and 13 showed progression of heart failure or died of heart failure. By logistic regression analysis, the H/M uptake ratio on delayed images was seen to be a good predictor of the response to beta-blocker therapy with a threshold of 1.7 (sensitivity = 91%, specificity = 92%, accuracy = 91%, positive and negative predictive value = 97% and 80%, respectively). These results indicate that an H/M ratio > 1.7 on the delayed MIBG myocardial scintigraphic images provides a useful indication of whether patients with DCM will respond to beta-blocker therapy.
American Heart Journal | 1996
Takahide Ito; Michihiro Suwa; Yuzo Hirota; Yoshiaki Otake; Ayaka Moriguchi; Keishiro Kawamura
Information regarding the relation of left atrial (LA) function to transmitral and pulmonary venous (PV) flow is limited. Using transesophageal echocardiography, we analyzed this relation in 23 patients with dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) and 25 patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM). Left atrial appendage (LAA) function was assessed as a substitute for overall LA function. Transmitral and PV flow-velocity variables, the LAA emptying flow velocity (LAA-A), and the LAA ejection fraction (LAA-EF) were determined. Each patient group was divided into two subgroups with a normal ( < 15 mm Hg) or elevated ( > or = 15 mm Hg) mean pulmonary wedge pressure (PWP). Transmitral and PV flow patterns as well as LA function were similar in the two subgroups with a normal PWP (11 patients with DCM and 14 patients with HCM). For the subgroups with an elevated PWP, however, the peak velocity ratio of the early filling wave (E) to atrial contraction wave (A) was higher in DCM patients (n = 12) than in HCM patients (n = 11) (2.1 +/- 0.7 vs 1.3 +/- 0.2; p < 0.01). This difference mostly resulted from a lower A velocity in the DCM group than in the HCM group (30 +/- 10 cm/sec vs 43 +/- 7 cm/sec; p < 0.05). In addition, the reverse flow velocity at atrial contraction in the PV was lower in the DCM group than in the HCM group (19 +/- 8 cm/sec vs 37 +/- 8 cm/sec; p < 0.01). These findings were associated with poorer LA systolic function in the DCM group (LAA-A, 35 +/- 13 cm/sec vs 60 +/- 11 cm/sec; LAA-EF, 37% +/- 12% vs 55% +/- 15%, p < 0.05, respectively). Our data suggest that a restrictive transmitral flow pattern develops more easily in DCM than in HCM because LA dysfunction is present in DCM, and that LA contractility plays an important role in determining the atrial contraction wave of transmitral and PV flows with elevated LA pressure.
Journal of The American Society of Echocardiography | 1997
Takahide Ito; Michihiro Suwa; Yoshiaki Otake; Ayaka Moriguchi; Yuzo Hirota; Keishiro Kawamura
This study attempted to examine the relation of left ventricular filling patterns to hemodynamic status and left atrial function in dilated cardiomyopathy. Transesophageal echocardiography and cardiac catheterization were performed in 41 patients with dilated cardiomyopathy (six with an ischemic origin). Transmitral, left atrial appendage, and pulmonary venous flow velocities were recorded with the pulsed Doppler method. Left atrial systolic function was assessed by the peak velocity of the left atrial appendage emptying wave and pulmonary venous flow reversal during atrial systole. Patients were classified into three groups according to their left ventricular filling patterns. Group 1 showed an abnormal relaxation pattern (E wave/A wave ratio <1, n = 17), group 2 had a normal or pseudonormal pattern (1 < or = E/A < 2, n = 11), and group 3 had a restrictive pattern (E/A > or = 2, n = 13). No differences were found among the groups with regard to age, gender, heart rate, and M-mode echocardiographic indices of left ventricular function. Compared with patients in group 1, those in groups 2 and 3 had more symptoms (New York Heart Association functional class III or IV) and had higher left ventricular filling pressures. The sensitivity of an E/A ratio > or = 1 for predicting a pulmonary capillary wedge pressure > or = 15 mm Hg was 75% and the specificity was 94%. Despite a similar increase of filling pressures, group 3 patients had a lower left atrial appendage emptying velocity, pulmonary venous flow reversal velocity, and mitral A velocity than did group 2 patients. The sensitivity and specificity of an E/A ratio > or = 22 for detecting left atrial dysfunction (left atrial appendage emptying velocity < or = 40 cm/sec) was 85% and 86%, respectively. In conclusion, among patients with dilated cardiomyopathy, those who had a restrictive or pseudonormal filling pattern were in a higher functional class and had higher filling pressures. Further studies are needed to determine the therapeutic and prognostic significance of left atrial dysfunction, which was common in patients with a restrictive pattern.
American Heart Journal | 1998
Takahide Ito; Michihiro Suwa; Yoshiaki Otake; Ayaka Kobashi; Yuzo Hirota; Hironobu Ando; Keishiro Kawamura
Although several flow patterns in the left atrial appendage have been described, mechanical determinants of its function have not been elucidated in human beings. We attempted to investigate changes in left atrial appendage function after cardioversion of atrial fibrillation and examine the potential relation between appendage function and left atrial mechanical function. Twenty patients without mitral valvular disease underwent transesophageal and transthoracic echocardiography at 24 hours and 1 week after cardioversion of atrial fibrillation. Left atrial appendage function was assessed by the pulsed Doppler measurements of left atrial appendage emptying and filling velocities corresponding to early and late ventricular diastole, respectively. Left atrial mechanical function was evaluated by the transmitral A-wave velocity, percent atrial contribution of the total left ventricular filling (percent atrial filling), and the pulmonary venous A-wave velocity. Left ventricular function was also estimated with conventional M-mode echocardiography. The late appendage emptying and filling velocities markedly increased during 1 week after cardioversion (p < 0.0001, respectively). This finding was associated with an increase in left atrial mechanical function. Changes in the late emptying and filling velocities significantly correlated with changes in the transmitral A-wave velocity (r = 0.59, p < 0.01), percent atrial filling (r = 0.61, p < 0.005), and the pulmonary venous A-wave velocity (r = 0.56, p < 0.05). In contrast, little change was observed in the early emptying and filling velocities. There was no relation between the indexes of left ventricular function and those of appendage function. In conclusion, unless there was an alteration of the loading conditions, left atrial appendage function improved over several days after cardioversion, and its function was related to left atrial mechanical function.
Japanese Circulation Journal-english Edition | 1998
Ayaka Kobashi; Michihiro Suwa; Takahide Ito; Yoshiaki Otake; Yuzo Hirota; Keishiro Kawamura
Japanese Circulation Journal-english Edition | 1996
Michihiro Suwa; Takahide Ito; Yoshiaki Otake; Ayaka Moriguchi; Yuzo Hirota; Keishiro Kawamura
Japanese Circulation Journal-english Edition | 2000
Takahide Ito; Michihiro Suwa; Ayaka Kobashi; Hatsumi Yagi; Yoshiaki Otake; Yuzo Hirota
American journal of noninvasive cardiology | 1994
Michihiro Suwa; Yoshiaki Otake; Takahide Ito; Ayaka Moriguchi; Yuzo Hirota; Keishiro Kawamura
Japanese Circulation Journal-english Edition | 1997
Takahide Ito; Michihiro Suwa; Yuzo Hirota; Yoshio Kita; Yoshiaki Otake; Ayaka Moriguchi; Haruhiko Onaka; Keishiro Kawamura
Japanese Circulation Journal-english Edition | 1995
Michihiro Suwa; Jyunya Kusukawa; Yuzo Hirota; Yoshiaki Otake; Takahide Ito; Keishiro Kawamura