24 research outputs found

    Effectiveness of a Remote Monitoring-Based Home Training System for Preventing Frailty in Older Adults in Japan: A Preliminary Randomized Controlled Trial

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    This study examined whether SUKUBARAÂź, a remotely managed training system that we developed, could improve skeletal muscle mass and muscle strength in community-dwelling older adults. SUKUBARAÂź is a composite exercise program that combines lower-load resistance training and balance exercises. Participants were instructed to exercise while watching individually assigned videos on YouTube, such that the research administrators could verify the viewing records of each participant. Fifteen participants (69 ± 4 years) were randomly assigned to the intervention (eight participants; the RT group) or the control group (seven participants; the CO group). The primary endpoint was a change in fat-free mass (FFM; kg), whereas the secondary endpoints included a change in knee extension strength (KES; Nm/kg). Correlation analyses were conducted to examine the relationship between FFM and KES. During the 12-week intervention period, significant differences were observed between the RT and CO groups in the changes in FFM (0.5 ± 0.5 vs. −0.1 ± 0.5) and KES (0.20 ± 0.22 vs. 0.02 ± 0.13), and significant positive correlations were found between the changes. Thus, SUKUBARAÂź-based interventions have the potential to improve muscle hypertrophy and enhance muscle strength among community-dwelling older adults. Thus, SUKUBARAÂź -based interventions show promise in improving muscle hypertrophy and enhance muscle strength among community-dwelling older adults. However, appropriately powered future research is needed to replicate these findings

    Postoperative Acute-Phase Gait Training Using Hybrid Assistive Limb Improves Gait Ataxia in a Patient with Intradural Spinal Cord Compression Due to Spinal Tumors

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    Sensory ataxia due to posterior cord syndrome is a relevant, disabling condition in nontraumatic spinal cord dysfunction. Ataxic gait is a common symptom of sensory ataxia that restricts activities of daily living. A 70-year-old woman with severe sensory disturbance was diagnosed with intradural extramedullary spinal cord tumors found in the thoracic spine region (T8). Surgical management of the tumors was performed. The patient received gait training 20 days after surgery (postoperative acute phase) using a hybrid assistive limb (HAL). HAL is a wearable exoskeleton cyborg that provides real-time assistance to an individual for walking and limb movements through actuators mounted on the bilateral hip and knee joints. Walking ability was assessed using the 10 m walking test, which included evaluating walking speed, step length, and cadence in every session. To evaluate the immediate effects of HAL training, walking speed and step length were measured before and after the training in each session. During the 10 m walking test, gait kinematics and lower muscle activity were recorded using a motion capture system and wireless surface electromyography before the first session and after completion of all HAL sessions. After the HAL training sessions, improvement in the patient’s gait performance was observed in the gait joint angles and muscle activity of the lower limb. After 10 training sessions, we observed the following changes from baseline: walking speed (from 0.16 m/s to 0.3 m/s), step length (from 0.19 m to 0.37 m), and cadence (from 50.9 steps/min to 49.1 steps/min). The average standard deviations of the knee (from right, 7.31; left, 6.75; to right, 2.93; p < 0.01, left, 2.63; p < 0.01) and ankle joints (from right, 6.98; left, 5.40; to right, 2.39; p < 0.01, left, 2.18; p < 0.01) were significantly decreased. Additionally, walking speed and step length improved immediately after completing all the HAL training sessions. This suggests that HAL gait training might be a suitable physical rehabilitation program for patients with sensory ataxia causing dysfunctional movement of the lower limb

    Report of a case with a spontaneous mesenteric hematoma that ruptured into the small intestine

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    AbstractIntroductionA spontaneous mesenteric hematoma is a rare condition. Furthermore, it is extremely rare that the mesenteric hematoma caused gastrointestinal bleeding with an unknown etiology. We experienced a case with a spontaneous mesenteric hematoma that ruptured into the jejunum.Presentation of caseA 75-year-old man was referred to our hospital because of anal bleeding and anemia. Abdominal computed tomography (CT) showed a low density mass measuring 3.0cm in diameter, including an enhanced spot. This finding suggested that a pseudo-aneurysm or mesenteric hematoma caused active bleeding into the jejunum. He underwent emergent laparotomy and partial resection of the jejunum and the mesentery including the tumor. A histological examination of the jejunum indicated no pathogenic findings causing active bleeding. And there were no findings suggesting the mesenteric aneurysm had developed.The patient had no history related to the development of a mesenteric hematoma, such as trauma, labor, surgery, or anticoagulant treatment. Therefore, we finally diagnosed that a spontaneous mesenteric hematoma had ruptured into the jejunum.Discussion and conclusionWe reported extremely rare condition that the mesenteric hematoma was developed and ruptured into the jejunum without definitive etiology

    Report of a case with gallbladder carcinoma: P53 expression of the peritumor epithelium might predict biliary tract recurrence

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    Introduction: The over-expression of P53 protein in gallbladder carcinoma is a biomarker correlating with a poor survival. However, the significance of P53 expression in peritumor tissues is unknown. We experienced a case of gallbladder carcinoma where the operative specimen showed over-expression of P53 on the peritumor epithelium, and early recurrence developed at the biliary tract. Presentation of case: A 74-year-old female patient was referred to our hospital due to wall thickening of the gallbladder on ultrasonography. Radiographic examinations revealed wall thickening at the fundus of gallbladder and no abnormalities of the biliary tract or surrounding lymph nodes. We performed open cholecystectomy and lymph node dissection without extrahepatic bile duct resection, as a frozen section of the surgical stump of the cystic duct was cancer-free. However, a pathological examination revealed over-expression of P53 protein in the epithelium of the peritumor to the cystic duct, which were diagnosed as normal on hematoxylin eosin staining. The patient developed bile duct metastases, two and half years after the operation. She underwent endoscopic stenting for the obstruction of bile duct with no additional therapy, and died 6 months later. Discussion and conclusion: The immunohistochemical staining of the GB wall or surgical stump for a surgical specimen of GBC may be crucial to predict the bile duct recurrence

    Development of a New Ankle Joint Hybrid Assistive Limb

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    Foot and ankle disabilities (foot drop) due to common peroneal nerve palsy and stroke negatively affect patients’ ambulation and activities of daily living. We developed a novel robotics ankle hybrid assistive limb (HAL) for patients with foot drop due to common peroneal nerve palsy or stroke. The ankle HAL is a wearable exoskeleton-type robot that is used to train plantar and dorsiflexion and for voluntary assistive training of the ankle joint of patients with palsy using an actuator, which is placed on the lateral side of the ankle joint and detects bioelectrical signals from the tibialis anterior (TA) and gastrocnemius muscles. Voluntary ankle dorsiflexion training using the new ankle HAL was implemented in a patient with foot drop due to peroneal nerve palsy after lumbar surgery. The time required for ankle HAL training (from wearing to the end of training) was approximately 30 min per session. The muscle activities of the TA on the right were lower than those on the left before and after ankle HAL training. The electromyographic wave of muscle activities of the TA on the right was slightly clearer than that before ankle HAL training in the resting position immediately after ankle dorsiflexion. Voluntary ankle dorsiflexion training using the novel robotics ankle HAL was safe and had no adverse effect in a patient with foot drop due to peroneal nerve palsy

    Prognostic Value of Coronary Sinus Flow Quantification by Cardiac Magnetic Resonance Imaging in Patients With Acute Myocardial Infarction

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    Background This study aimed to evaluate the prognostic value of hyperemic coronary sinus flow (h‐CSF) and global coronary flow reserve (g‐CFR) obtained by phase‐contrast cine‐magnetic resonance imaging in patients with acute myocardial infarction (MI). Methods and Results This retrospective study analyzed patients with acute MI (n=523) who underwent primary (ST‐segment–elevation MI) or urgent (non–ST‐segment–elevation MI) percutaneous coronary intervention. Absolute coronary sinus blood flow (CSF) at rest and during vasodilator stress hyperemia was quantified at 30 days (24–36 days) after the index infarct‐related lesion percutaneous coronary intervention and revascularization of functionally significant non–infarct‐related lesions. We used Cox proportional hazards regression modeling to examine the association between h‐CSF, g‐CFR, and major adverse cardiac events defined as all‐cause death, nonfatal MI, hospitalization for congestive heart failure, and stroke. Finally, 325 patients with ST‐segment–elevation MI (62.1%) and 198 patients with non–ST‐segment–elevation MI (37.9%) were studied over a median follow‐up of 2.5 years. The rest CSF, h‐CSF, and g‐CFR were 0.94 (0.68–1.26) mL/min per g, 2.05 (1.42–2.73) mL/min per g, and 2.17 (1.54–3.03), respectively. Major adverse cardiac events occurred in 62 patients, and Cox proportional hazards analysis showed that h‐CSF and g‐CFR were independent predictors of major adverse cardiac events (h‐CSF: hazard ratio [HR], 0.64; 95% CI, 0.47–0.88; P=0.005; g‐CFR: HR, 0.62; 95% CI, 0.47–0.82; P=0.001). When stratified by h‐CSF and g‐CFR, cardiac event‐free survival was the worst in patients with concordantly impaired h‐CSF (<1.6 mL/min per g) and g‐CFR (<1.7) (P<0.001). Conclusions Global coronary sinus flow quantification using phase‐contrast cine‐magnetic resonance imaging provided significant prognostic information independent of infarction size and conventional risk factors in patients with acute MI undergoing revascularization

    A newly developed upper limb single-joint HAL in a patient with elbow flexion reconstruction after traumatic brachial plexus injury: A case report

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    We report a case in which elbow flexion exercises using the upper limb single-joint Hybrid Assistive Limb (upper limb HAL-SJ) were implemented in a patient 13 months postoperatively following elbow flexion reconstruction with intercostal nerve transfer after a traumatic brachial plexus injury. Treatment using the upper limb HAL-SJ was administered once a week for 10 sessions from 13 to 16 months after surgery. Exercises using the upper limb HAL-SJ supported elbow motion by detecting bioelectric signals through surface electrodes on the biceps and triceps brachii. No adverse events were observed during treatment with the upper limb HAL-SJ. Improvements in elbow flexion strength were observed during treatment. Treatment with the upper limb HAL-SJ can be performed safely and effectively following elbow flexion reconstruction by intercostal nerve transfer after a traumatic brachial plexus injury

    Sex Differences in Long-Term Outcomes in Patients With Deferred Revascularization Following Fractional Flow Reserve Assessment: International Collaboration Registry of Comprehensive Physiologic Evaluation

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    Background Sex-specific differences may influence prognosis after deferred revascularization following fractional flow reserve (FFR) measurement. This study sought to investigate the sex differences in long-term prognosis of patients with deferred revascularization following FFR assessment. Methods and Results A total of 879 patients (879 vessels) with deferred revascularization with FFR >0.75 who underwent FFR and coronary flow reserve measurements were enrolled from 3 countries (Korea, Japan, and Spain). Long-term outcomes were assessed in 649 men and 230 women by the patient-oriented composite outcome (POCO, a composite of any death, any myocardial infarction, and any revascularization). We applied inverse-probability weighting based on propensity scores to account for differences at baseline between women and men (age, hyperlipidemia, diabetes mellitus, diameter stenosis, lesion length, multivessel disease, FFR, coronary flow reserve. The median follow-up duration was 1855 days (745-1855 days). Median FFR values were 0.88 (0.83-0.93) in men and 0.89 (0.85-0.94) in women, respectively. The occurrences of POCO were significantly high in men compared with that in women (10.5% versus 4.2%, P=0.007). Kaplan-Meier analysis revealed that women had a significantly lower risk of POCO (χ2=7.2, P=0.007). Multivariate COX proportional hazards regression analysis revealed that age, male, diabetes mellitus, diameter stenosis, lesion length, and coronary flow reserve were independent predictors of POCO. After applying IPW, the hazard ratio of males for POCO was 2.07 (95% CI, 1.07-4.04, P=0.032). Conclusions This large multinational study reveals that long-term outcome differs between women and men in favor of women after FFR-guided revascularization deferral. Clinical Trial Registration URL: http://www.ClinicalTrials.gov. Unique identifier: NCT02186093.S
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