Publications by authors named "Masafumi Nishino"

We describe a case of a 47-year-old male patient with initially unresectable intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma of the right liver lobe with tumor thrombi extending from the right bile duct to the common and left bile ducts. Conventional chemotherapy with gemcitabine and cisplatin for 19 months resulted in progressive disease. Subsequently, a comprehensive genome profile revealed fibroblast growth factor receptor 2 rearrangement, and hence, pemigatinib administration was initiated.

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  • - A 68-year-old woman was admitted to the hospital with acute cholangitis, and imaging tests showed issues like dilated common bile duct and a tumor in the gallbladder.
  • - The patient was diagnosed with pancreaticobiliary maljunction causing biliary dilation and gallbladder cancer, leading to surgery for liver and bile duct reconstruction.
  • - Pathological analysis revealed that the gallbladder tumor contained sarcoma, and the thickened wall had adenocarcinoma, resulting in a diagnosis of gallbladder carcinosarcoma.
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A 61-year-old man present to us with continued abdominal pain without abdominal tenderness for 1 month. Blood testing showed elevated biliary enzymes and inflammation. Contrast-enhanced computed tomography (CT) revealed thickening of the transverse colon with relatively strong enhancement but no bile duct dilatation.

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  • Clinicians should be aware of both metallic foreign bodies and nicotine poisoning when diagnosing cases of accidental heated tobacco ingestion.
  • *Ingested foreign bodies, especially in children, can often pass through the digestive tract naturally, even if they are relatively sharp or large.
  • *In instances where the foreign body is small (like a 12-mm metal piece), natural elimination might be preferable to invasive procedures like endoscopic removal.*
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Background: Screening esophagogastroduodenoscopy plays an important role in the early detection of upper gastrointestinal cancer. To provide more opportunities for patients with pancreaticobiliary disease to undergo this screening, we have performed esophagogastroduodenoscopy prior to endoscopic ultrasonography. However, the usefulness of this protocol is not elucidated.

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The urea breath test (UBT) is often used to diagnose infection and for its eradication. However, this text can give positive results even for other urease-active bacteria other than . Even after the successful eradication , the presence of other urease-active bacteria in the gut and oral cavity can lead to positive UBT results in patients with decreased gastric acid secretion.

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Peroral cholangioscopy-guided lithotripsy is highly effective in clearing difficult bile duct stones. It can cause adverse events, such as cholangitis and pancreatitis; however, gallbladder perforation is extremely rare. Herein, we describe the case of a 77-year-old woman who developed gallbladder perforation following peroral cholangioscopy -guided lithotripsy.

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In vitro vascular wall bilayer models for drug testing and disease modeling must emulate the physical and biological properties of healthy vascular tissue and its endothelial barrier function. Both endothelial cell (EC)-vascular smooth muscle cell (SMC) interaction across the internal elastic lamina (IEL) and blood vessel stiffness impact endothelial barrier integrity. Polymeric porous track-etched membranes (TEM) typically represent the IEL in laboratory vascular bilayer models.

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For gastric lesions in a patient with a history of breast cancer, it is essential to distinguish between primary gastric cancer and gastric metastasis from breast cancer. However, gastric metastasis from breast cancer often mimics primary linitis plastica, and histological diagnosis may be difficult with conventional endoscopic biopsies. Herein, we describe the case of a 75-year-old woman who presented at our hospital with epigastralgia and vomiting.

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Human diplogonoporiasis caused by the tapeworm Diplogonoporus balaenopterae has been rarely reported in Japan in the last decade. A 38-year-old man complained of a fever, diarrhea, intermittent abdominal pain, and worm excretion. He had a history of consuming raw juvenile Japanese anchovy one month earlier.

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Drug-induced vascular injury (DIVI) in preclinical animal models often leads to candidate compound termination during drug development. DIVI has not been documented in human clinical trials with drugs that cause DIVI in preclinical animals. A robust human preclinical assay for DIVI is needed as an early vascular injury screen.

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Objectives: Post-ERCP pancreatitis (PEP) after self-expandable metallic stent (SEMS) insertion across the papilla of Vater is an important adverse event that affects the patient's quality of life (QOL). We examined the predictive factors of PEP after SEMS insertion to treat obstructive jaundice due to malignancy.

Methods: Ninety patients who underwent biliary SEMS insertion for biliary obstruction due to malignancy at Iwata City Hospital between 2010 and 2018 were reviewed.

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In vitro transport studies across cells grown on culture inserts are widely used for evaluating pharmacokinetic characteristics such as intestinal membrane permeability. However, measurements of the apparent permeability coefficient of highly lipophilic compounds are often limited by transport across the membrane filters, not by transport across the cultured cells. To overcome this concern, we have investigated the utility of a high-porosity membrane honeycomb film (HCF) for transcellular transport studies.

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Rationale: Lymphatic vasculature constitutes a second vascular system essential for immune surveillance and tissue fluid homeostasis. Maturation of the hierarchical vascular structure, with a highly branched network of capillaries and ducts, is crucial for its function. Environmental cues mediate the remodeling process, but the mechanism that underlies this process is largely unknown.

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  • Low doses of proton pump inhibitors (PPIs) can help prevent gastrointestinal bleeding from aspirin and are common in Japan for patients on anti-platelet drugs.
  • A study involving 41 healthy Japanese volunteers tested the effects of different PPIs on the effectiveness of clopidogrel, a medication used to prevent blood clots, showing that when taken together, PPIs significantly reduced the anti-platelet activity of clopidogrel.
  • Notably, taking rabeprazole 4 hours after clopidogrel resulted in comparable effectiveness to clopidogrel alone, indicating a potential strategy to reduce negative interactions between these medications.
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Background And Aim: Spinal kyphotic deformity occasionally results in gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD). The effects of acid reflux on the esophagus in kyphotic patients are unclear, however, and it is unknown whether acid reflux, endoscopic GERD, and reflux-related symptoms improve following surgical spinal correction in these patients. Herein, we investigated the characteristics of GERD in kyphotic patients and the improvement in GERD following surgical correction.

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Introduction: The aim of therapeutic regimens using proton pump inhibitors (PPIs) in patients with acid-related diseases is to potently inhibit acid secretion for the full 24 h. However, optimum treatment is still unclear because the pharmacodynamics of PPIs differ among CYP2C19 genotypes and most of the previous studies have had loss of sample power.

Methods: Using pH monitoring, we compared acid inhibition at standard dosage of omeprazole (20 mg, 50 times), lansoprazole (30 mg, 68 times), and rabeprazole (10 mg, 65 times) in Helicobacter pylori-negative healthy young Japanese volunteers.

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Anti-platelet drug-induced gastric mucosal injury correlates with intragastric pH. Our aim was to investigate prophylaxis effects of famotidine, one of the representative histamine-2 receptor antagonists (H2RA), on gastric mucosal injury induced by dual therapy with low-dose aspirin and clopidogrel in relation to Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) infection and CYP2C19 genotypes.

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Backgrounds: Quinolone-based regimens have been used as the rescue for eradication of Helicobacter pylori. Sitafloxacin is known to have low minimum inhibitory concentration for H. pylori.

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Introduction: The antiplatelet effects of low-dose aspirin (LDA) vary between individuals. Here, we investigated the relationship between the incidence of LDA-induced mucosal injury, antiplatelet effects of LDA, and intragastric pH.

Methods: We evaluated gastric injury severity and platelet function using the VerifyNow® System before and after administration of 100 mg aspirin for 7 days to 18 young healthy subjects (study 1).

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Background: In esophagus whether antiplatelet drugs, such as low-dose aspirin (LDA) and clopidogrel, induce mucosal injury by pH changes or by acid reflux is unclear. We designed to clarify which mechanism was responsible.

Methods: In study 1, 80 patients taking LDA and 80 age- and sex-matched subjects who underwent endoscopy for dyspeptic symptoms or for a health check-up were evaluated the endoscopic incidence of esophageal mucosal injury and severity.

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