Publications by authors named "Hirotake Sawada"

Article Synopsis
  • This study evaluated a comprehensive program called DELTA for preventing and managing delirium in older orthopedic surgery patients, initiated in January 2019 at a Japanese hospital.
  • A retrospective analysis was performed comparing patient data before and after the program's implementation, involving 787 patients preintervention and 833 postintervention.
  • The DELTA program led to a notable decrease in the use of benzodiazepines and an increase in newer sleep medications, but it did not significantly affect the rates of falls, self-extubation, or the need for intensive medical care, despite shorter hospital stays.
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Article Synopsis
  • Nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) can lead to hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), yet there are no established treatments, and a rare syndrome known as ROHHAD(NET) can complicate this condition.
  • The case study details the oldest known autopsy of a patient with ROHHAD(NET) who developed HCC, providing insights into the syndrome's progression and its relationship with NASH and HCC.
  • The patient experienced rapid obesity and other severe symptoms since childhood, was diagnosed with cirrhosis at 17 and HCC at 20, underwent treatment, but ultimately died from complications at age 21, with autopsy findings revealing significant necrosis of the cancer.
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Following the partial revision of the enforcement regulations of the School Health and Safety Act, school health checkups incorporated growth evaluation of schoolchildren in April 2016 using growth charts. We report cases of congenital central hypothyroidism (C-CH) in siblings with a novel nonsense variant in the immunoglobulin superfamily member 1 gene (); their diagnoses were prompted by school health checkups. School checkups revealed that the older brother was overweight and had a reduced growth rate at the age of 11 yr, whereas the younger brother was overweight and had short stature at the age of 8 yr.

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Several excellent guidelines and expert opinions on congenital hypothyroidism (CH) are currently available. Nonetheless, these guidelines do not address several issues related to CH in detail. In this review, the authors chose the following seven clinical issues that they felt were especially deserving of closer scrutiny in the hope that drawing attention to them through discussion would help pediatric endocrinologists and promote further interest in the treatment of CH.

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Thyroglobulin gene abnormalities cause thyroid dyshormonogenesis. A 6-yr-old boy of consanguineous parents presented with a large goiter and mild hypothyroidism (thyroid-stimulating hormone [TSH] 7.2 μIU/mL, free T3 [FT3] 3.

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Introduction: Despite the recent global mental health movement of the transition from hospital-centred to integrated community-based services, comprehensive evidence of psychosocial interventions focusing on community-dwelling individuals with schizophrenia is still lacking. To overcome this gap in the current knowledge, we will conduct a systematic review and meta-analysis to assess the efficacy of all types of psychosocial interventions for community-dwelling (non-hospitalised) individuals with schizophrenia when compared with non-active control conditions (eg, treatment as usual).

Methods And Analysis: This study protocol has been developed according to the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis Protocols guidelines.

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Maternal-fetal calcium (Ca) transport in the placenta plays a critical role in maintaining fetal bone mineralization. Mutations in the gene encoding the transient receptor potential cation channel, subfamily V, member 6 (TRPV6) have been identified as causative mutations of transient neonatal hyperparathyroidism due to insufficient maternal-fetal Ca transport in the placenta. In this study, we found two novel mutations in subjects that have transient neonatal hyperparathyroidism.

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Newborn screening (NBS) for Fabry disease (FD) is the best way to detect FD early prior to presentation of symptoms and is currently implemented in Taiwan and several states such as Illinois, Missouri, and Tennessee in the United States of America. In this report, we provide data from the first large-scale NBS program for FD in Japan. From August 2006 to December 2018, 599,711 newborns were screened; 26 variants, including 15 pathogenic variants and 11 variants of uncertain significance (VOUS; including eight novel variants), were detected in 57 newborns.

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Background: Congenital hypothyroidism (CH) can be divided into 2 types, transient CH (T-CH) and permanent CH (P-CH), depending on the requirement of levothyroxine (LT4) for life-long treatment. Several studies have recently reported that the LT4 dosage is useful for predicting the LT4 requirement, but none of the studies followed their patients to puberty.

Objective: To determine the cutoff value for the LT4 dosage as a predictor of the LT4 requirement after puberty in patients with CH.

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Maternal-fetal transport of calcium (Ca) is important for bone mineralization in fetal development. Insufficient Ca transport causes transient neonatal hyperparathyroidism (TNHP). Transient receptor potential cation channel, subfamily V, member 6 (TRPV6), has been found to play an important role in the active transport of Ca through the placenta.

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Transient neonatal hyperparathyroidism (TNHP) is etiologically a heterogeneous condition. One of the etiologies is an insufficient maternal-fetal calcium transport through the placenta. We report six subjects with homozygous and/or compound-heterozygous mutations in the gene encoding the transient receptor potential cation channel, subfamily V, member 6 (TRPV6), an epithelial Ca-selective channel associated with this condition.

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Background/aims: We aimed to evaluate the incidence and characteristics of adrenal crisis in Japanese children with 21-hydroxylase deficiency (21-OHD).

Methods: We conducted a retrospective nationwide survey for the councilors of the Japanese Society for Pediatric Endocrinology (JSPE) regarding adrenal crisis in children under 7 years with 21-OHD, admitted to hospitals from 2011 through 2016. We defined adrenal crisis as the acute impairment of general health due to glucocorticoid deficiency with at least two of symptoms, signs, or biochemical abnormalities.

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Takenouchi-Kosaki syndrome (TKS) is a congenital malformation syndrome characterized by severe developmental delay, macrothrombocytopenia, camptodactyly, sensorineural hearing loss, and dysmorphic facial features. Recently, a heterozygous de novo mutation (p.Tyr64Cys) in the CDC42 gene, which encodes a key small GTP-binding protein of the Rho-subfamily, was identified in two unrelated patients with TKS.

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Septo-optic dysplasia (SOD) is a congenital anomaly in which agenesis of the septum pellucidum and optic nerve hypoplasia are accompanied by hypopituitarism. Typically, the symptoms develop in 3 organs, the brain, eyes, and pituitary, and approximately one third of the patients present with all of the three cardinal features. The diagnostic criteria for SOD were established in Japan in 2015.

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Background: There are few reports pertaining to Asian patients with neonatal diabetes mellitus (NDM) caused by activating mutations in the ATP-sensitive potassium channel genes (KATP-NDM).

Objectives: To elucidate the characteristics of Japanese patients with KATP-NDM.

Methods: By the amplification and direct sequencing of all exons and exon-intron boundaries of the KCNJ11 and ABCC8 genes, 25 patients with KATP-NDM were identified from a total of 70 patients with NDM.

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Background: We developed a novel, ultrasensitive enzyme immunoassay (immune complex transfer enzyme immunoassay) for determination of glutamic acid decarboxylase autoantibody concentrations in serum samples from patients with type 2 diabetes.

Methods: We developed an immune complex transfer enzyme immunoassay for glutamic acid decarboxylase autoantibody and measured glutamic acid decarboxylase autoantibody from 22 patients with type 1 diabetes, 29 patients with type 2 diabetes, and 32 healthy controls.

Results: A conventional ELISA kit identified 10 patients with type 1 diabetes and one patient with type 2 diabetes as glutamic acid decarboxylase autoantibody positive, whereas 15 patients with type 1 diabetes and six patients with type 2 diabetes were identified as glutamic acid decarboxylase autoantibody positive using immune complex transfer enzyme immunoassay.

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MSUD is a hereditary metabolic disorder that is characterized by impaired activity of the BCKADC. Liver transplantation has been approved as a treatment for some MSUD cases in which the control of BCAAs is insufficient. Although there have been several reports about DDLT for MSUD, few LDLT cases have been reported.

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Few data exists regarding the clinical impact of breastfeeding in infantile sitosterolaemic cases. We report four Japanese infantile cases of sitosterolaemia, an extremely rare inherited disease characterised by increased serum levels of plant sitosterol, presenting with severe hypercholesterolaemia and systemic xanthomas exacerbated by breastfeeding. In these four cases, genetic analyses were performed for low-density lipoprotein (LDL) receptor, proprotein convertase subtilisin/kexin type 9 (PCSK9), LDL receptor adaptor protein 1 and ATP-binding cassette (ABC) subfamily G member 5 and 8 (ABCG5 and ABCG8) genes.

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Background: There is ongoing discussion regarding the mechanisms underlying edema formation in nephrotic syndrome (NS). Many studies published in the last decade reported that primary renal sodium retention was a major factor in edema formation. However, many of the factors influencing edema formation in NS remain unclear, including the role of arginine vasopressin (AVP).

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Spondyloepimetaphyseal dysplasia with joint laxity, leptodactylic type (lepto-SEMDJL, aka SEMDJL, Hall type), is an autosomal dominant skeletal disorder that, in spite of being relatively common among skeletal dysplasias, has eluded molecular elucidation so far. We used whole-exome sequencing of five unrelated individuals with lepto-SEMDJL to identify mutations in KIF22 as the cause of this skeletal condition. Missense mutations affecting one of two adjacent amino acids in the motor domain of KIF22 were present in 20 familial cases from eight families and in 12 other sporadic cases.

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Context: Cytochrome P450 oxidoreductase (POR) deficiency is a rare autosomal recessive disorder characterized by skeletal dysplasia, adrenal dysfunction, disorders of sex development (DSD), and maternal virilization during pregnancy. Although multiple studies have been performed for this condition, several matters remain to be clarified, including the presence of manifesting heterozygosity and the underlying factors for clinical variability.

Objective: The objective of the study was to examine such unresolved matters by detailed molecular studies and genotype-phenotype correlations.

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The CT-R [calcitonin (CT) receptor] is expressed in the central nervous system and is involved in the regulation of food intake, thermogenesis, and behaviors. CT-R-stimulating peptide-1 (CRSP-1), a potent ligand for the CT-R, was recently isolated from the porcine brain. In this study, we first confirmed that porcine CRSP-1 (pCRSP-1) enhanced the cAMP production in COS-7 cells expressing recombinant rat CT-R, and then we examined the central effects of pCRSP-1 on feeding and energy homeostasis in rats.

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