Publications by authors named "Chisako Masumura"

Children often experience impalement trauma when they fall while holding objects in their mouths. While most cases heal without complications, here we report a case of buccal abscess formation after toothbrush trauma. A two-year-old boy fell while running with a toothbrush in his mouth, which punctured his right buccal mucosa.

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Article Synopsis
  • The report details a case of an 11-year-old girl diagnosed with forceful eyelid closure syndrome (FECS), who experienced a click sound in her left ear while blinking.
  • Various tests (including CT and MRI) showed normal results, but an impedance audiometry revealed slight compliance reduction during eye blinking.
  • After ineffective treatment with an anticonvulsant for tinnitus and side effects like drowsiness, behavioral therapy significantly reduced her symptoms within 7 months, suggesting it's a better option than surgery or medication for such cases.
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It has generally been reported that patients with COVID-19 show a fever, cough, and/or respiratory failure as the most common clinical symptoms but some have unusual symptoms, such as anosmia, diarrhea, and throat pain. We herein report a 26-year-old woman with chief complaints of lymphadenopathy and a fever. First, she underwent a laboratory examination, which showed a high proportion of atypical lymphocytes (19%) and an increase in hepatic enzyme activities, and was then hospitalized with a diagnosis of infectious mononucleosis (IM).

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Background: Due to spatial disorientation reported in space, spatial memory and navigation performances could be more largely impaired by gravity changes. Hippocampus, a key structure for spatial memory, receives inputs from gravity-sensing otolith organs.

Objective: To determine the key molecules in the rat hippocampus that contribute to an adaptation to altered gravity in terms of spatial memory performance.

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Conclusion: A 30 s observation of geotropic positional nystagmus is sufficient to distinguish persistent geotropic positional nystagmus (PGPN) from transient geotropic positional nystagmus (TGPN) in patients with horizontal canal type of benign paroxysmal positional vertigo (H-BPPV) in ENT office.

Objective: As a canalith repositioning procedure effectively treats H-BPPV with TGPN, but not PGPN, the differentiation between patients with PGPN and with TGPN is essential. The purpose of this study is to determine the observation period enough to distinguish TGPN from PGPN.

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  • This study developed a new scoring system to diagnose benign paroxysmal positional vertigo (BPPV) using an interview with patients.
  • The scoring system is based on answers to four key questions about dizziness and vertigo, with a total score determining the diagnosis.
  • The new method showed an 81% sensitivity and 69% specificity for diagnosing BPPV, indicating it can effectively identify patients with the condition.
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A 33-year-old Japanese man was admitted with severe edema, and a renal biopsy confirmed minimal change nephrotic syndrome (MCNS). CT revealed his severe chronic sinusitis, and he first received antimicrobial therapy, which resulted in decreased proteinuria. The surgical operation for sinusitis resulted in the complete disappearance of proteinuria without corticosteroid or immunosuppressant therapy within one week.

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Thyroid-stimulating hormone-secreting ectopic pituitary adenoma of the nasopharynx is highly unusual, with only three reported cases in the world literature. We describe the clinical presentation and radiologic findings in one patient with such rare lesions. A 46-year-old male with typical symptoms of Grave's disease was found to have a mass on magnetic resonance imaging.

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Conclusion: Because nystagmus induced by ampullopetal inhibition of the posterior semicircular canal (PSCC) rotates around the axis perpendicular to the plane of the anterior semicircular canal (ASCC) of the other side, when free-floating debris is initially located at the distal portion of the PSCC, a patient showing positional nystagmus appears to have the ASCC type of benign paroxysmal positional nystagmus. We name this 'pseudo-anterior canalolithiasis'.

Objective: We report on pseudo-anterior canalolithiasis originating in the PSCC and discuss the differential findings between pseudo-anterior and true anterior canalolithiasis by means of three-dimensional (3D) analysis of the positional nystagmus.

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Introduction: Benign paroxysmal positional vertigo (BPPV) is the most common vestibular disorder. However, BPPV in children has been studied less extensively than in the adult population. This is because the observation of benign paroxysmal positional nystagmus (BPPN) in children is technically very difficult and BPPV is rare in children.

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Ampakines are a class of putative nootropic drug designed to positively modulate the AMPA receptor and have been investigated as a potential treatment for cognitive disorders such as Alzheimer's Disease. Nonetheless, some ampakines such as CX717 have been incompletely characterized in behavioural pharmacological studies. Therefore, in this study, we attempted to further characterize the effects of the ampakine, CX717 (20 mg/kg s.

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Neurogenesis is known to occur in response to injury in the brain, for example, as a result of neurodegenerative diseases. However, there have been few investigations into how the brain responds to damage to peripheral sensory nerves, in other areas such as the brainstem. Here, we report that bilateral surgical lesions of the cochlea result in increased incorporation of the DNA replication marker, bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU), in cells of the brainstem cochlear nucleus (CN) of the adult rat, suggesting either cell proliferation or DNA repair.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigated cell proliferation and survival in the vestibular nucleus complex of adult rats after bilateral vestibular deafferentation (BVD), using a method called bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) injection.
  • Results showed that cell proliferation was significantly higher in the BVD group compared to sham surgery controls, peaking at 48 hours after treatment.
  • However, by one month, the survival rate of newly formed cells was similar between both the BVD and sham groups, raising questions about the functional importance of the increased cell proliferation after vestibular damage.
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Peripheral lesions of the vestibular system have been associated with spatial memory deficits in animals and humans; however, no study to date has investigated the effects of such lesions on attention. In this study, we used a 5-choice serial reaction time task (5-CSRTT) to determine whether rats with bilateral vestibular deafferentation (BVD) had attention deficits at 5 months post-op. compared to sham controls.

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A prospective, open-label clinical trial was conducted for two aims: first, to evaluate the role of fluvoxamine, one of selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors, in the treatment of dizziness for the first time and to investigate its effective mechanisms. Second, to test the hypothesis that dizziness in patients without abnormal neuro-otologic findings would be induced by psychiatric disorders rather than by unnoticed neuro-otologic diseases. Nineteen patients with neuro-otologic diseases (Group I) and 22 patients in whom standard vestibular tests revealed no abnormal findings (Group II) were treated by fluvoxamine (200 mg/day) for eight weeks.

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Inquiries into the neurochemical mechanisms of vestibular compensation, a model of lesion-induced neuronal plasticity, reveal the involvement of both voltage-gated Ca(2+) channels (VGCC) and intracellular Ca(2+) signaling. Indeed, our previous microarray analysis showed an up-regulation of some calcium signaling-related genes such as the alpha2 subunit of L-type calcium channels, calcineurin, and plasma membrane Ca(2+) ATPase 1 (PMCA1) in the ipsilateral vestibular nuclear complex (VNC) following unilateral vestibular deafferentation (UVD). To further elucidate the role of calcium signaling-related molecules in vestibular compensation, we used a quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction (PCR) method to confirm the microarray results and investigated changes in expression of these molecules at various stages of compensation (6 h to 2 weeks after UVD).

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Objective: To look for factors relating to the vertigo control and hearing changes after intratympanic injections of gentamicin (GM).

Study Design: Prospective.

Setting: Tertiary referral medical center.

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To investigate the molecular background of vestibular compensation, a model of lesion-induced plasticity, we used a microarray analysis to examine genes that show asymmetrical expression between the bilateral vestibular nucleus complexes (VNCs) 6 h following unilateral vestibular deafferentation (UVD). Asymmetrical gene expression was then validated by a real-time quantitative PCR. Among the 88 genes for which the ipsilateral (ipsi) : contralateral (contra) was > 1.

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Pleomorphic adenoma arising from the external auditory canal is a very rare neoplasm, and there has been no report on magnetic resonance (MR) imaging of pleomorphic adenoma of the external auditory canal. We report here a case of 65-year-old male with this tumour, measuring 12 mm in a diameter. Histopathology was confirmed from the specimen obtained at the surgical excision.

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To elucidate the role of the GABAergic neuronal system in the recovery from peripheral vestibular damage (unilateral labyrinthectomy), we used a real-time quantitative reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction method to investigate the mRNA expression of GAD65, GAD67, the GABAA receptor alpha1 subunit, the GABAB R1 subunit, and the GABA transporter GAT1, in the vestibular nucleus complex of the rat 6 and 50 h following the lesion GAD65 and GAD67 gene expression were also measured in the flocculus. The GABAA alpha 1 subunit mRNA was up-regulated in the ipsilateral vestibular nucleus 6 h post-lesion but decreased in expression thereafter. GAD65 mRNA was up-regulated in the vestibular nuclei bilaterally 50 h after the lesion.

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