Publications by authors named "Sasajima T"

A very rare case of perianeurysmal fibrosis was presented. A 65-year old man was admitted with the complaint of abdominal pulsatile mass and intermittent claudication of right lower limb. Aortography revealed fusiform, calcified aneurysm of the infrarenal abdominal aorta and severe stenosis of right common iliac artery.

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We report a case of large, invasive ACTH-producing pituitary adenoma with PET study. In CT scans, an intra- and supra-sellar mass diminished after replacement therapy for primary hypoadrenalism. Two years and seven months later, the tumor grew and extended into the neighboring structures.

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Regional hemocirculation and metabolism were evaluated in five patients with meningiomas using positron emission tomography (PET). Histological diagnoses were: two cases of meningotheliomatous type, one hemangiopericytic type, one fibroblastic type, and one transitional type. Regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF), blood volume (rCBV), oxygen extraction fraction (rOEF), and metabolic rates of oxygen (rCMRO2) and glucose (rCMRG1) were measured with 15O2, C15O.

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We tested clinical significance of hemocirculatory and metabolic values and ratios as determined by positron emission tomography (PET) in twenty-three patients with cerebral gliomas. Regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF), blood volume (rCBV), oxygen extraction fraction (rOEF), and metabolic rates of oxygen (rCMRO2) and glucose (rCMRGl) were measured prior to treatment using PET with 15O2, C15O, 15O2, and 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose tracers. For the quantitative analysis, regions of interest were delineated on tumor regions including peak activity, the contralateral gray and white matter.

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A high resolution positron emission tomography (PET), HEADTOME III, has enabled us to visualize heterogeneous parts, i.e. viable, necrotic, and edematous portions in malignant gliomas, and to quantify regional hemocirculation and metabolism of the tumors using 15O and 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose tracers.

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The aim of this study was to evaluate effects of radiochemotherapy on blood flow and metabolism using C15O2, C15O, 15O2, and 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography (PET). Conventional, external radiotherapy (180-200 cGy/5 fractions/week) using 60Co or a 10 MV linear accelerator was given in conjunction with chemotherapy of nimustine hydrochloride (ACNU) and tegafur (FT-207) in eight patients with gliomas. Regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF), blood volume (rCBV), oxygen extraction fraction (rOEF), oxygen consumption (rCMRO2), and glucose consumption (rCMRG1) were longitudinally examined before the treatment, and at an early stage (within one month) and a late stage (three to thirty-one months with a mean of 12 months) after radiochemotherapy.

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A case of neuro-Behcet's syndrome is presented with sequential positron emission tomography (PET) studies. Regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) and oxygen consumption (rCMRO2) were decreased in the brain lesion; however, on follow-up studies 3 months after steroid therapy rCBF and rCMRO2 had increased in the lesion, which demonstrated the reversibility of this disease. Such monitored improvement may accurately reflect the early stage of the disease and its response to steroid therapy.

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We have studied changes in the (11C-methyl)-L-methionine (C-11 Met) uptake index in six glioma cases subsequent to radiotherapy, using positron emission tomography (PET) to evaluate the effects of radiotherapy on the amino acid metabolism of the tumor. The uptake index of the tumor represented as a percentage of the total count in the atrial blood recorded during a period of 45 min, showed an average of 0.037% and 0.

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The author has studied glutaraldehyde stabilized human umbilical cord vessels (PHUV) both experimentally and clinically since Nov. 1976. The experimental findings showed that the PHUV is not organized and its patency depends on the blood compatibility of the fibrin net and blood flow.

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Fifty-six reconstructions using Biograft were performed in 45 cases with peripheral arterial occlusion. These consisted of 11 femoro-popliteal bypasses above the knee, 19 femoro-popliteal below the knee, 10 femoro-tibial or peroneal and 16 other miscellaneous procedures including aorto-femoral and extra-anatomic bypasses. Overall patency rates for each type of procedure were 81.

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Colloid osmotic pressure (COP) of blood from the great cardiac vein was continuously measured by the use of a membrane colloid osmometer during reactive hyperemia resulting from temporary occlusion of the anterior descending branch of left coronary artery. The COP increased sharply but transit was concluded that a measurable amount of water moved from the capillary blood into the myocardial tissue and then flowed back slowly into the capillary blood.

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Local oxygen partial pressure in terms of O2-availability and pulsatile intramyocardial pressure of the left ventricular myocardium of anaesthetized open-chest dogs have been measured simultaneously by means of a piezoelectric ceramic and a platinum electrode. The tissue PO2 decreases more slowly than the pulsatile intramyocardial pressure during a transient acute occlusion of the anterior descending branch of the coronary artery. The slow decrease in the tissue PO2 seems to be explicable by the assumption that the local myocardial contractile force decreases quickly due to an unknown factor during the acute coronary occlusion and that the O2-consumption of the local myocardial tissue is reduced in accordance with the rapid decrease in the contractile force.

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A method using piezoelectric ceramics was newly devised which permitted measurements of intramyocardial pressure. In open-chest dogs, a directional non-uniformity of the intramyocardial pressure was observed, which may be attributable to the variation in the myocardial fibre orientation.

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A directional nonuniformity of the intramyocardial pressure (IMP) was observed in anesthetized open-chest dogs using a piezoelectric pressure sensor implanted in the left ventricular myocardium. The nonuniformity seemed to be attributable to the variation in myocardial fiber orientation. The IMP, which developed in a direction parallel to the base-apex line, was measured in the deep portion of the myocardium, simultaneously with local O2 availability.

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