Publications by authors named "Hideaki Naganuma"

Background: Delayed endolymphatic hydrops (DEH) is an inner ear disease that causes recurrent vertigo in the ipsilateral ear or fluctuating hearing in the contralateral ear due to endolymphatic hydrops secondary to preceding deafness. There are few reports of large, multicentre studies investigating the clinical-epidemiological characteristics of DEH.

Objective: This study aimed to clarify the characteristics of DEH in Japan.

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Deep neck abscesses are relatively rare in children compared with adults. Diagnosis can be difficult in pediatric patients because of the various clinical symptoms, therefore, it is important to correctly understand the pathology. We report herein on a rare pediatric case of a deep neck abscess that caused multiple instances of cranial nerve palsy.

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Objective: This study was conducted to evaluate the relationship between hearing and cochlear histopathology after arginine vasopressin administration in rats.

Methods: A total of 30 Wistar rats were injected with either 0.02 unit/g of arginine vasopressin or the same amount of isotonic saline solution.

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Conclusion: Similarly to almost all delayed endolymphatic hydrops (DEH) cases with both precedent sudden deafness and mumps deafness, two-thirds of DEH cases with precedent deafness of unknown cause with onset in early childhood developed DEH symptoms within 40 years after the precedent deafness. In spite of the diagnosis of precedent deafness, viral labyrinthitis may build up the late endolymphatic hydrops in most DEH cases up to four decades.

Objective: To clarify the characteristics of DEH in Japan.

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Otolaryngologists typically perform diagnoses and offer medical treatment for vestibular dysfunction. This vestibular dysfunction manifests as benign paroxysmal positional vertigo (BPPV), Ménière's disease, vestibular neuronitis, and so on. The etiology of BPPV is still not clear, so in this article we discuss inner-ear function, etiology, and factors related to BPPV.

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IQ-ArfGEF/BRAG1 is a guanine nucleotide exchange factor for ADP ribosylation factors (Arfs), which are implicated in membrane trafficking and actin cytoskeleton dynamics. In this study, we examined the immunohistochemical localization of IQ-ArfGEF/BRAG1 in the adult mouse retina using light and electron microscopy. IQ-ArfGEF/BRAG1 was distributed in a punctate manner and colocalized well with RIBEYE in both the outer and inner plexiform layers.

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Symptoms such as vertigo and unsteady gait occur in various diseases and are among the relatively common chief complaints. Even at present, the mechanisms underlying these disorders are unclear. We considered the possibility of peripheral vestibular disorders correlating with lifestyle-related illnesses.

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Symptoms such as vertigo and unsteady gait occur in various diseases and are among the relatively common chief complaints. Even at present, the mechanisms underlying these disorders are unclear. We report a significant correlation between a prolonged period of resolution of benign paroxysmal positional vertigo (BPPV) and histories of lifestyle-related illnesses.

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Objectives/hypothesis: We examined whether sufficient water intake is effective in the long-term control of vertigo and hearing activity in patients with Meniere disease (MD) for whom conventional therapy has proven unsuccessful.

Study Design: The authors conducted a time-series study with historical control.

Methods: Eighteen patients with MD in group 1 drank 35 mL/kg per day of water for 2 years.

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Objectives: Equations for estimating the planar relationships of the human semicircular canals were devised by Blanks et al from a dissected bony labyrinth in a human skull. However, a similar study on the membranous semicircular canal planes has never been published.

Methods: In this study, the angle between each membranous canal plane and Reid's stereotactic horizontal plane was measured on serial histologic sections of 7 temporal bones from Japanese adults.

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The 3-dimensional shape of the human utricular macula and its orientation in the skull are quantitated in this report, which is one of a series. The semicircular canals and utricular macula were reconstructed in 3 dimensions on a computer from 3 human temporal bones. The 238 to 279 triangles in the entire area of the utricular macula were made by drawing lines between 2 adjacent points every 200-microm width of the utricular macula in each section.

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In order to obtain relatively simple and useful parameters to estimate the severity of obstructive sleep apnea syndrome (OSAS), cephalometric and fiberoptic studies were performed in 64 clinical cases previously diagnosed with either OSAS or snoring. Fourteen cephalometric parameters, 13 parameters derived from physical examination and 18 fiberoptic parameters were compared with the apnea index (AI), the apnea-hypopnea index and lowest SaO2 values. Statistically significant correlations were found between the Al and the shortest linear distance from the posterior line of the soft palate to the posterior pharyngeal wall measured along a line parallel to the supramentale-Gonion line (PAS-epipharynx distance), the distance from the mandibular plane to the most anterior and superior point on the body of the hyoid bone obtained from cephalometry (MP-H distance) and the degree of redundancy of mucosa in the arytenoid/aryepiglottic fold obtained from videoendoscopy.

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