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Dive into the research topics where Youichirou Sakanoue is active.

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Featured researches published by Youichirou Sakanoue.


Diseases of The Colon & Rectum | 1992

Steroid complications in patients with ulcerative colitis

Masato Kusunoki; Gabriela Möeslein; Yasutsugu Shoji; Shinsuke Fujita; Hidenori Yanagi; Youichirou Sakanoue; Naoaki Saito

Physicians treating patients with ulcerative colitis are confronted with the difficult task of deciding whether medical or surgical treatment is best for their patients. There are no definitive criteria to indicate when medical therapy should be exchanged for definitive surgery. Even in patients who respond well to glucocorticoid treatment, the side effects of these drugs may necessitate surgery. We reviewed the steroid complications of our operative cases retrospectively. Although ulcerative colitis was usually in remission, severe steroid complications were no longer tolerable and definitive surgery was required. We also reviewed the literature regarding the adverse effects of steroid. Because of advances in sphincter-preserving surgery, re-evaluation of the treatment of ulcerative colitis is necessary. Although conservative treatment remains the first choice, tolerance of irreversible side effects (especially in children) no longer seems to be justified. In such patients, early definitive surgery may offer more than it appears to sacrifice.


Scandinavian Journal of Gastroenterology | 1992

Protein Kinase C Activity of Colonic Mucosa in Ulcerative Colitis

Youichirou Sakanoue; Takuya Hatada; T. Horai; Yasutsugu Shoji; Masato Kusunoki

Protein kinase C (PKC) activity was measured in the inflamed colonic mucosa of 24 patients with ulcerative colitis and in the normal colonic mucosa of 10 patients with other benign diseases. The particulate fraction activity in ulcerative colitis mucosa was significantly increased compared with that of normal mucosa (320 +/- 47 versus 200 +/- 30 pmol/min/mg protein; p less than 0.05). Inflamed ulcerative colitis mucosa also showed significantly increased total PKC activity in the particulate fractions compared with normal mucosa (147 +/- 26 versus 37 +/- 8 pmol/min/mg tissue; p less than 0.05). Mucosal samples from ulcerative colitis patients were divided into 12 with mild and 12 with severe inflammation by histologic examination. The particulate PKC activity of severely inflamed mucosa was significantly lower than that of mildly inflamed mucosa (p less than 0.05). These results indicate that colonic inflammation in ulcerative colitis may be associated with altered cellular PKC activity.


American Journal of Surgery | 1991

Hemodynamics in the prone jackknife position during surgery

Takuya Hatada; Masato Kusunoki; Tooru Sakiyama; Youichirou Sakanoue; Takehira Yamamura; Ryu Okutani; Katsuakira Kono; Hiroatsu Ishida

We examined the hemodynamic changes occurring with prone jackknife positioning during colorectal surgery. The operative procedure was restorative proctocolectomy with ileal J-pouch anal anastomosis in five patients with adenomatosis coli and six patients with ulcerative colitis and anoabdominal resection of the rectum with colonic J-pouch anal anastomosis in eight patients with rectal cancer. Nineteen patients (10 men and 9 women aged 41 +/- 19 years) were monitored with arterial and Swan-Ganz catheters during positioning. Measurements were obtained in the supine and prone positions (1 minute, 3 minutes), and the jackknife position (1, 3, 5, and 10 minutes), as well as before and after adoption of the Lloyd-Davies position (1, 3, 5, and 10 minutes). Turning the patient from the supine position to the prone position resulted in a significant decrease in the cardiac index (CI). However, following head-down rotation, the CI increased and returned to the value seen in the supine position (p less than 0.05). Heart rate (HR) slowed and mean arterial pressure (MAP) increased in the prone jackknife position. We concluded that the extent of the changes in cardiac function presented no serious problems.


Diseases of The Colon & Rectum | 1991

Disappearance of hyperplastic polyposis after resection of rectal cancer

Masato Kusunoki; Shinsuke Fujita; Youichirou Sakanoue; Yasutsugu Shoji; Hidenori Yanagi; Takehira Yamamura

Since 1980, when the first description of hyperplastic polyposis of the colon appeared, 18 cases of hyperplastic polyposis have been reported in the literature. Only two of them bore colonic cancer. Here we add two cases of hyperplastic polyposis accompanying rectal carcinoma following cancer resection, in which residual hyperplastic polyps disappeared after resection.


Cancer | 1992

Protein kinase C activity in human thyroid carcinoma and adenoma

Takuya Hatada; Youichirou Sakanoue; Masato Kusunoki; Akira Kobayashi

Protein kinase C (PKC) activity was examined in the cytosolic and particulate fractions of homogenates obtained from 12 papillary thyroid carcinomas, 12 follicular thyroid adenomas, and the adjacent normal thyroid tissue. Particulate PKC activity was elevated significantly in thyroid carcinomas compared with normal thyroid tissue (P < 0.01) and adenomas (P < 0.05). By contrast, cytosolic PKC activity of carcinomas and adenomas was lower significantly than that of normal thyroid tissue (P < 0.01). The percentage of particulate PKC activity in carcinoma and adenoma was higher than in normal thyroid tissue (carcinoma, P < 0.001; adenoma, P < 0.01). The average particulate PKC activity of carcinomas more than 3 cm in diameter was significantly lower than that of carcinomas less than or equal to 3 cm in diameter (P < 0.05). The average cytosolic PKC activity of carcinomas more than 3 cm also was lower significantly than that of smaller carcinomas (P < 0.05). These results suggest that alterations in PKC activity may be important in the development of papillary thyroid cancer.


American Journal of Surgery | 1992

Lipocortin-Present Perforating and Lipocortin-Absent Nonperforating Crohn's Disease

Youichirou Sakanoue; Takao Horai; Tomoaki Okamoto; Takuya Hatada; Yasutsugu Shoji; Shinsuke Fujita; Masato Kusunoki

To investigate whether Crohns disease has two different clinical forms, a relatively aggressive perforating type and a more indolent nonperforating type, we compared the concentrations of lipocortin and prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) in the inflamed mucosa of 12 patients with strictly controlled Crohns disease with those found in histologically normal mucosa of control subjects. The inflamed mucosa obtained from eight patients with nonperforating Crohns disease did not react with antilipocortin antibody on immune blot analysis. In contrast, the inflamed mucosa from four patients with perforating Crohns disease, as well as that obtained from histologically normal controls, contained lipocortins. In addition, higher concentrations of intramucosal ileal and colonic PGE2 were found in patients with nonperforating Crohns disease (902 +/- 454 pg/wet weight [WW] mg and 1,268 +/- 567 pg/WW mg, respectively) compared with normal controls (90.2 +/- 43.1 pg/WW mg and 173 +/- 76.5 pg/WW mg, respectively) (p less than 0.01). The difference in intramucosal ileal and colonic PGE2 levels between patients with perforating Crohns disease (109.6 +/- 16.7 pg/WW mg and 252 +/- 34.4 pg/WW mg, respectively) and normal controls was not significant. These findings indicate that there may be two distinct patterns of Crohns disease that differ in the amount of lipocortin present in the intestinal mucosa.


Diseases of The Colon & Rectum | 1990

Passage of a colon ‘cast’ after anoabdominal rectal resection

Youichirou Sakanoue; Masato Kusunoki; Yasutsugu Shoji; Kiyoshi Kusuhara; Takehira Yamamura

The authors report a case of the passage of a total colonic J-pouch “cast” per anus after anoabdominal rectal resection and colonic J-pouch-anal anastomosis. This occurred without development of cuff abscess and was not due to occlusion of the inferior mesenteric artery. This was successfully treated, with preservation of anal function, with resection of the colonic J-pouch by transanal approach.


Scandinavian Journal of Gastroenterology | 1992

Increased Protein Tyrosine Kinase Activity of the Colonic Mucosa in Ulcerative Colitis

Youichirou Sakanoue; Takuya Hatada; T. Horai; Tomoaki Okamoto; Masato Kusunoki

The protein tyrosine kinase (PTK) activity was measured in the inflamed colonic mucosa of 12 patients with ulcerative colitis and in the normal colonic mucosa of 12 control patients with colon cancer. The specific PTK activity in the particulate fraction obtained from ulcerative colitis mucosa was significantly increased compared with that of normal mucosa (5.10 +/- 0.60 pmol/min/mg versus 2.12 +/- 0.44 pmol/min/mg protein; p less than 0.05). Inflamed ulcerative colitis mucosa also showed a significantly higher total PTK activity in the particulate fraction than normal mucosa (2.60 +/- 0.42 pmol/min/g versus 0.91 +/- 0.16 pmol/min/g tissue; p less than 0.05). Mucosal samples from ulcerative colitis patients were divided into those with mild and those with severe inflammation on histologic examination (n = 6 each). The particulate PTK activity of severely inflamed mucosa was significantly higher than that of mildly inflamed mucosa (p less than 0.05). These results suggest that colonic inflammation in ulcerative colitis is associated with alterations in cellular PTK activity.


Digestive Surgery | 1993

Review of 200 Stapled Functional End-to-End Anastomoses

Masato Kusunoki; Hidenori Yanagi; Youichirou Sakanoue; Yasutsugu Shoji; Kazuhiko Nakagawa; Takehira Yamamura

A consecutive series of 200 cases of functional end-to-end anastomosis performed using linear stapling devices was reviewed. We employed three types of operation: a closed luminal two-stage method (ty


Archive | 1993

Histopathological Assessment in Rectal Carcinoma with Preoperative High -Dose- Rate Intraluminal Brachytherapy

Hidenori Yanagi; Masato Kusunoki; Youichirou Sakanoue; Masafumi Noda; Yasutsugu Shoji; Hiroki Ikeuchi; Norihiko Kamikonya; Yoshio Hishikawa; Takehira Yamamura

We investigated the histopathological effects of preoperative high-dose-rate intraluminal brachytherapy (HDRIBT) in 76 rectal carcinomas to know whether pathologic findings about the qualitive and quantitive assessment reflect local recurrence. The down-staging of invasion after HDRIBT was shown in 27 tumors (36.0%). There was, however, no significant difference about local recurrence rate between with and without downstaging. The proportion of residual tumor nest to stroma, which was analyzed by image analyzing system (IBAS-20, Zeis, Germany) could be better predictive factor of local recurrence than qualitive assessment in our series. When the proportion of residual tumors to stroma was less than 33%, a good local control for rectal cancer might be achieved after preoperative HDRIBT.

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Masato Kusunoki

Hyogo College of Medicine

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Yasutsugu Shoji

Hyogo College of Medicine

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Hidenori Yanagi

Hyogo College of Medicine

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Takuya Hatada

Hyogo College of Medicine

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Shinsuke Fujita

Hyogo College of Medicine

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Tooru Sakiyama

Hyogo College of Medicine

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Tomoaki Okamoto

Hyogo College of Medicine

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M. Kusonoki

Hyogo College of Medicine

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