医学部
Profile Information
- Affiliation
- School of Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Fujita Health University
- Degree
- (BLANK)
- J-GLOBAL ID
- 200901091938690280
- researchmap Member ID
- 1000254958
Research Interests
6Research Areas
3Education
4Misc.
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AMERICAN JOURNAL OF CHINESE MEDICINE, 29(1) 37-45, 2001Breech presentation was successfully corrected by stimulating acupuncture points with moxibustion or low-frequency electrical current. Only patients with breech pregnancies at the 28th week or later were entered into the study. With moxibustion treatment, the control group had a spontaneous correction rate of 165/224 (73.66%), and the treatment group had a correction rate of 123/133 (92.48%) (P<0.0001, x(2) test). With low-frequency percutaneous electrical stimulation, the correction rate was 20/941 (83.87%) in the control group and 171/191 (89.52%) in the treatment group (P=0.094, x(2) test), The controls in the moxibustion study did no exercises and received no external manipulation to correct breech presentation whereas those in the electrical stimulation study experienced both. Acupuncture stimulation, especially with moxibustion, is expected to serve as a safe and effective modality in the management of breech presentation in a clinical setting.
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J. Jpn. Soc. Clin. Cytol., 39(5) 323-326, 2000Background: The occurrence of clear-cell adenocarcinoma (CCAC) in the uterine cervix is very rare. We report a case of CCAC diagnosed by preoperatively cervical smears.<BR>Case: The patient was a 74-year-old woman whose endometrial smears were diagnosed as positive at another hospital. When she was referred to our hospital, she had some atypical genital bleeding. Her cervical smears showed CCAC. Simple total hysterectomy and adnexectomy were conducted based on her general condition. Cervical smears demonstrated varied tumor cells with remarkable cytoplasm, large nuclei, and bare nuclei-often large bare nuclei having lost cytoplasm and hobnail cells. Histologically, tumor cells showed a papillary structure with hobnail cells, solid nests, and composite areas.<BR>Conclusion: CCAC of the uterine cervix difficult to diagnose in the absence of hobnail cells in smears. It becomes ever more difficult when other tumor cells appear independently in smears. Since CCAC prognosis is generally dismal, it is important that preoperative differential diagnosis be done carefully to derermine the most appropriate surgical procedure.
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J. Jpn. Soc. Clin. Cytol., 39(5) 323-326, 2000Background: The occurrence of clear-cell adenocarcinoma (CCAC) in the uterine cervix is very rare. We report a case of CCAC diagnosed by preoperatively cervical smears.<BR>Case: The patient was a 74-year-old woman whose endometrial smears were diagnosed as positive at another hospital. When she was referred to our hospital, she had some atypical genital bleeding. Her cervical smears showed CCAC. Simple total hysterectomy and adnexectomy were conducted based on her general condition. Cervical smears demonstrated varied tumor cells with remarkable cytoplasm, large nuclei, and bare nuclei-often large bare nuclei having lost cytoplasm and hobnail cells. Histologically, tumor cells showed a papillary structure with hobnail cells, solid nests, and composite areas.<BR>Conclusion: CCAC of the uterine cervix difficult to diagnose in the absence of hobnail cells in smears. It becomes ever more difficult when other tumor cells appear independently in smears. Since CCAC prognosis is generally dismal, it is important that preoperative differential diagnosis be done carefully to derermine the most appropriate surgical procedure.