医学部

Masanori Nomura

  (野村 雅則)

Profile Information

Affiliation
School of Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Fujita Health University
Degree
Doctor of Medicine(Nagoya University)

J-GLOBAL ID
200901000155588479
researchmap Member ID
1000254942

External link

Research Areas

 1

Awards

 1

Misc.

 11
  • J Ishii, M Nomura, M Ito, H Naruse, Y Mori, JH Wang, T Ishikawa, H Kurokawa, T Kondo, Y Nagamura, K Ezaki, Y Watanabe, H Hishida
    CLINICA CHIMICA ACTA, 301(1-2) 19-30, Nov, 2000  
    The purpose of this study was to evaluate whether the plasma brain natriuretic peptide (BNP) concentration is a useful marker of right ventricular (RV) overload and whether it has prognostic value as a predictor or death in patients with chronic respiratory disease (CRD). We measured the plasma BNP and atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) concentrations in 31 consecutive patients with CRD who underwent right-heart catheterization to evaluate pulmonary hypertension. All patients were followed for > 12 months. The plasma BNP concentration closely correlated with the mean pulmonary artery pressure and pulmonary vascular resistance (r=0.62, P<0.0005 and r=0.85, P<0.0001), and showed a weak linear correlation with cardiac output (r= -0.36, P<0.05). During the follow-up period, 5 (16%) end-stage CRD deaths (4 RV heart failure and 1 respiratory infection) and 2 non-end-stage CRD deaths occurred. In a stepwise multivariate Cox proportional-hazards regression analysis including age, sex, BNP, ANP, hemodynamic variables and the ratio of PaO2 to fraction of inspired oxygen, only BNP (P<0.05) was an independent predictor of end-stage CRD death. The upward and leftward shift in the receiver operating characteristic curve between patients with end-stage CRD death and those without was greater for BNP than for ANP. Our findings suggest that the plasma BNP concentration may be an inexpensive, simple and useful marker of RV overload and end-stage CRD death in CRD patients. These preliminary results need to be confirmed in a large series of CRD patients. (C) 2000 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.
  • Masatsugu Iwase, Shin Koie, Ayako Nagasaka, Miyuki Kimura, Kazuo Hasegawa, Hiroyuki Matsuyama, Masanori Nomura, Hitoshi Hishida
    Jpn Circ J, 64(9) 672-678, 2000  
  • J Ishii, JH Wang, H Naruse, S Taga, M Kinoshita, H Kurokawa, M Iwase, T Kondo, M Nomura, Y Nagamura, Y Watanabe, H Hishida, T Tanaka, K Kawamura
    CLINICAL CHEMISTRY, 43(8) 1372-1378, Aug, 1997  
    We compared the diagnostic utility of serum concentrations of human heart-type cytoplasmic fatty acid-binding protein (H-FABPc), myoglobin, and their ratio for the early diagnosis of acute myocardial infarction (AMI) in 104 healthy volunteers and 165 patients at admission within 6 h of the onset of chest pain. The ROC curves of the H-FABPc [0.946, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.913-0.979] and myoglobin (0.895, 95% CI = 0.846-0.944) between patients with AMI and healthy volunteers were significantly greater than the area under the ratio of myoglobin to H-FABPc (0.823, 95% CI = 0.765-0.881), In 165 patients, the sensitivity (81.8%, 95% CI = 74.2-89.4%), specificity (86.4%, 95% CP = 78.1-94.6%), and predictive accuracy (83.6%, 95% CI = 78.0-89.3%) of H-FABPc >12 mu g/L in diagnosing AMI were significantly high er than those of myoglobin, and were similar to those of the combination of H-FABPc >12 mu g/L and the ratio less than or equal to 14, We conclude that H-FABPc is a more sensitive and specific marker than myoglobin for the early diagnosis of AMI, and that their ratio cannot give a clear advantage over the measurement of H-FABPc alone.