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Featured researches published by Yusuke Kojima.


Auris Nasus Larynx | 2013

Olfactory changes after endoscopic sinus surgery in patients with chronic rhinosinusitis

Hideki Oka; Kenzo Tsuzuki; Hironori Takebayashi; Yusuke Kojima; Takashi Daimon; Masafumi Sakagami

OBJECTIVE To address the controversy over whether olfactory function is improved or not after endoscopic sinus surgery (ESS) in patients with eosinophilic (ECRS) and non-eosinophilic chronic rhinosinusitis (non-ECRS). METHODS Between June 2006 and March 2012, 89 adult patients with CRS underwent ESS at Hyogo College of Medicine. There were 55 men and 34 women with a mean age of 53 years old, ranging from 23 to 79 years. The average follow-up period was 10.7 months (3-24) after ESS. Peripheral blood examination, sinonasal CT imaging, and four kinds of olfaction tests [self-administered olfaction test (SAOQ), visual analog scale (VAS), T&T recognition threshold tests (T&T) and intravenous olfaction test using prosultiamine] were performed. We diagnosed ECRS when (i) symptoms of nasal congestion and olfactory disorder, (ii) bilateral chronic rhinosinusitis with nasal polyps (CRSwNPs), (iii) peripheral blood eosinophilia (>7.0%), and (iv) ethmoid sinus dominant opacification in preoperative CT findings (i.e. ethmoid sinuses (E) were more bilaterally occupied than those of maxillary sinuses (M), E/M≥1), were completely fulfilled. We divided the patients into two groups of ECRS (group A) and non-ECRS (group B). Olfaction tests before operation, and at the 3rd, 6th, 12th, and 24th month postoperation were analyzed. The severity and therapeutic evaluation of olfaction were based on criteria of T&T recognition thresholds. RESULTS The mean SAOQ and VAS scores showed significant improvement within 6 months after ESS in both group A and group B. In total, the improvement rates were 52.0% (26/50) at 3 months, 58.5% (24/41) at 6 months, 40.5% (15/37) at 12 months, and 41.2% (7/17) at 24 months. The significant improvement of T&T recognition thresholds in group B was maintained for 24 months, whereas those in group A, showing transient improvement, deteriorated after 12 months or more. A significant difference in postoperative T&T recognition between groups A and B was found at the 12th postoperative month. In both A and B, 84% of patients had a response to prosultiamine (positive group) in the preoperative stage. T&T thresholds in the positive group were significantly better that those in the negative groups in the postoperative stage. CONCLUSION Olfactory disorders due to ECRS showed transient improvement that deteriorated as time passed after surgery. The olfaction in the non-ECRS patients recovered comparatively well. Postoperative olfactory results were unfavorable in patients without a preoperative reaction to prosultiamine.


Auris Nasus Larynx | 2014

Novel endoscopic scoring system after sinus surgery.

Kenzo Tsuzuki; Yasuyuki Hinohira; Hironori Takebayashi; Yusuke Kojima; Yoriko Yukitatsu; Takashi Daimon; Masafumi Sakagami

OBJECTIVE To propose a simple post-operative endoscopic scoring system for use after endoscopic sinus surgery (ESS) in patients with chronic rhinosinusitis (CRS), and to demonstrate the usefulness of this approach. METHODS Subjects comprised 116 patients (84 men, 32 women; mean age, 54 years) with CRS who were analyzed endoscopically and radiologically after ESS between 2006 and 2012. The study was designed as a case series with planned data collection in the setting of university medical centers. Patients were followed-up for ≥ 6 months after ESS (mean, 13.1 months). Both pre- and post-operative computed tomography (CT) findings of each sinus and olfactory cleft (OC) were scored according to the Lund-Mackay scoring system: 0, normal; 1, partially; or 2, completely occupied. CT score represents the total score expressed as a percentage of the maximum possible score (12 points per side). Post-operative endoscopic score (E score, %) was calculated as the maximum score according to physical findings on each operated sinus and OC: 0, normal; 1, partially diseased; or 2, completely closed. Post-operative course using E score was verified by comparison with the Lund-Kennedy (L-K) scoring system. RESULTS E score was easily and quickly determined. Interclass correlation coefficient among 10 otolaryngologists indicated high-level inter-rater reliability (0.922). E score correlated strongly with both CT score (n=116, p<0.0001, rs=0.755) and L-K score (n=79, p<0.0001, rs=0.723). CONCLUSION Endoscopic evaluation using E score for sinuses and OCs after ESS is a useful method, together with L-K score for the nasal cavity and radiological study.


Allergology International | 2013

Therapeutic Evaluation of Outpatient Submucosal Inferior Turbinate Surgery for Patients with Severe Allergic Rhinitis

Yusuke Kojima; Kenzo Tsuzuki; Hironori Takebayashi; Hideki Oka; Masafumi Sakagami

BACKGROUND Surgical treatment for inferior turbinate (IT) is selected to treat severe allergic rhinitis (AR) that is unresponsive to conservative treatment. This study aimed to determine the clinical effects of outpatient submucosal IT surgery (OSITS) on patients with severe AR. METHODS Between January 2008 and August 2012, 95 patients with severe AR who underwent OSITS at the Department of Otolaryngology, Hyogo College of Medicine, were retrospectively analyzed. There were 53 men and 42 women. Their mean age was 27 years (11-75 years). OSITS was bilaterally performed using a bipolar radiofrequency electrocautery under local anesthesia. Symptoms, QOL, and physical findings were evaluated using scores from both pre- and postoperative periods (average: 12.4 months), according to Practical Guideline for the Management of AR in Japan 2009. RESULTS In perennial AR, all mean scores of nasal symptoms, QOL, and physical findings significantly improved after OSITS (p < 0.05, n = 83). Nasal obstruction, sleep problems, and IT congestion were the most strongly affected. Eye symptoms were not influenced by OSITS. OSITS also showed significant effects on nasal obstruction and IT congestion in seasonal AR (p < 0.05, n = 12), but not sneezing, nasal discharge, and QOL. In terms of the efficacy, OSITS was beneficial in 90% of perennial AR cases and 75% of seasonal AR cases. Epistaxis (1%), vestibulitis (1%), and IT atrophy (4%) were observed after OSITS. CONCLUSIONS These data indicate that OSITS using radiofrequency electrocautery could be a beneficial therapeutic option in patients with severe AR.


Operations Research Letters | 2015

Clinical Features of Patients Treated with Endoscopic Sinus Surgery for Posttraumatic Paranasal Sinus Mucocele

Yusuke Kojima; Kenzo Tsuzuki; Yoriko Yukitatsu; Hideki Oka; Hironori Takebayashi; Masafumi Sakagami

Aim: The purpose of this study was to analyze the clinical features of patients with posttraumatic paranasal sinus mucocele (PSM). Subjects and Methods: Between 2009 and 2013, we performed endoscopic sinus surgery (ESS) on 68 patients with PSM at the Department of Otolaryngology - Head and Neck Surgery at Hyogo College of Medicine. Five male patients (age range, 45-76 years) with posttraumatic PSM were analyzed retrospectively. Diagnosis was based on the history of injury and radiological findings. Results: Posttraumatic PSM was found in 7% (5/68) of patients. The mean interval from injury to diagnosis was 28.4 years. All patients had frontal sinus mucocele. Four patients had symptoms of headache, diplopia, visual field defect, and forehead swelling, and 1 patient was asymptomatic. ESS was performed under general anesthesia in all cases, and the symptoms improved postoperatively. Reoperation was required in 1 patient (20%) because headache developed with obstruction of the frontal drainage route 7 months after ESS. Conclusions: Posttraumatic PSM was the least frequent form of PSM and was located predominantly in the frontal sinus, causing symptoms long after the forehead injury. The important lessons to be learned for treating posttraumatic PSM are to obtain a detailed history and to enlarge the route to the cyst to avoid its recurrence.


Cell and Tissue Research | 2013

Decreased expression of VE-cadherin and claudin-5 and increased phosphorylation of VE-cadherin in vascular endothelium in nasal polyps.

Yoriko Yukitatsu; Masaki Hata; Koji Yamanegi; Naoko Yamada; Hideki Ohyama; Keiji Nakasho; Yusuke Kojima; Hideki Oka; Kenzo Tsuzuki; Masafumi Sakagami; Nobuyuki Terada

VE-cadherin and claudin-5 are major components of adherens and tight junctions of vascular endothelial cells and a decrease in their expression and an increase in the tyrosine-phosphorylation of VE-cadherin are associated with an increase in endothelial paracellular permeability. To clarify the mechanism underlying the development of edema in nasal polyps, we studied these molecules in polyp microvessels. Normal inferior turbinate mucosal tissues and nasal polyps from patients treated with or without glucocorticoid were stained for VE-cadherin or claudin-5 and CD31 by a double-immunofluorescence method and the immunofluorescence intensities were graded 1–3 with increasing intensity. To correct for differences in fluorescence intensity attributable to a different endothelial area being exposed in a section or to the thickness of a section, the relative immunofluorescence intensity was estimated by dividing the grade of VE-cadherin or claudin-5 by that of CD31 in each microvessel. Tyrosine-phosphorylation of VE-cadherin was examined by Western blot analysis. The relative intensities of VE-cadherin and claudin-5 in the CD31-positive microvessels significantly decreased in the following order; inferior turbinate mucosa, treated polyps and untreated polyps. The ratio of tyrosine-phosphorylated VE-cadherin to VE-cadherin was significantly higher in untreated polyps than in the inferior turbinate mucosa and treated polyps, between which no significant difference in the ratio was seen. Thus, in nasal polyps, the barrier function of endothelial adherens and tight junctions is weakened, although glucocorticoid treatment improves this weakened barrier function.


Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery | 2012

Inferior Turbinate Surgery for Severe Allergic Rhinitis

Yusuke Kojima; Kenzo Tsuzuki; Hideki Oka; Hironori Takebayashi; Masafumi Sakagami

Objective: Inferior turbinate surgery, an outpatient surgery, is used to treat severe allergic rhinitis that is unresponsive to medication. The purpose of this study was to determine the clinical effects of outpatient inferior turbinate surgery (OITS) on patients with severe allergic rhinitis. Method: Between January 2008 and December 2011, we performed OITS bilaterally under local anesthesia for 216 patients with severe allergic rhinitis. Two kinds of cautery device, high-frequency electrocautery and argon plasma coagulation, were used. Nasal symptoms and intranasal findings were evaluated pre- and postoperatively at 3 months or more after OITS. Results: On average, scores for sneezing, nasal discharge, and nasal obstruction significantly improved from 1.3 to 0.8, from 1.7 to 1.1, and from 2.6 to 1.2 (P < .001, n = 216), respectively. Overall, improvement of symptoms was found in 73% (157/216 patients) postoperatively. Congestion of inferior turbinates also improved in 74% (160/216 patients). Conclusion: These data indicate that the OITS had an effect on more than 70% of patients with severe allergic rhinitis.


European Archives of Oto-rhino-laryngology | 2018

Usefulness of our proposed olfactory scoring system during endoscopic sinus surgery in patients with chronic rhinosinusitis

Ken Okazaki; Kenzo Tsuzuki; Kengo Hashimoto; Hiroki Nishikawa; Hironori Takebayashi; Hideki Oka; Yusuke Kojima; Yoriko Yukitatsu; Yasuo Mishiro; Masafumi Sakagami


Practica oto-rhino-laryngologica | 2017

Evaluation of a Simplified Nasal Symptoms Questionnaire

Ken Okazaki; Kenzo Tsuzuki; Kengo Hashimoto; Hironori Takebayashi; Hideki Oka; Yusuke Kojima; Yoriko Yukitatsu; Yasuo Mishiro; Masafumi Sakagami


Japanese Journal of Rhinology | 2016

Comparison of Olfactory Disorders between Patients with Allergic Rhinitis and Those with Chronic Rhinosinusitis

Kengo Hashimoto; Kenzo Tsuzuki; Yoriko Yukitatsu; Hironori Takebayashi; Hideki Oka; Yusuke Kojima; Masafumi Sakagami


Japanese Journal of Rhinology | 2016

Study on Diagnostic Criteria of the Eosinophilic Chronic Rhinosinusitis—Criteria by the JESREC and Our Department—

Kengo Hashimoto; Kenzo Tsuzuki; Yoriko Yukitatsu; Hironori Takebayashi; Hideki Oka; Yusuke Kojima; Masafumi Sakagami

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Kenzo Tsuzuki

Hyogo College of Medicine

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Hideki Oka

Hyogo College of Medicine

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Kengo Hashimoto

Hyogo College of Medicine

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Toshihiko Muto

Hyogo College of Medicine

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Yasuo Mishiro

Hyogo College of Medicine

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Ken Okazaki

Hyogo College of Medicine

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Naoki Saka

Hyogo College of Medicine

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