The present study examined the effects of onion peel tea (OPT) in a mouse model of high-fat-diet-induced obesity. BALB/c mice were fed a high-fat diet for three weeks, followed by a normal diet with or without OPT for 28 days. OPT suppressed the increases in body weight and level of epididymal fat tissue; it also significantly reduced the serum concentrations of total cholesterol on day 14 and those of glucose and leptin on day 28. The results indicate that OPT has anti-obesity effects in an experimental mouse model of high-fat-diet-induced obesity.
Primary cardiac lymphoma is a rare cardiac tumor, and usually originates from B cells and involves the right side of the heart. We present an extremely rare case of primary cardiac T-cell lymphoma involving the mitral valve alone. A 58-year-old woman who was positive for human T-cell leukemia virus 1 underwent mitral valve replacement because of severe mitral regurgitation. The postoperative pathologic diagnosis of the mitral valve was T-cell lymphoma. Further evaluation revealed no malignancy, except for the mitral valve. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first case of primary cardiac T-cell lymphoma localized in the mitral valve.
Japan Cardiac surgery for very-low-birth-weight infants is rarely reported, especially for a triplet. We herein report the successful staged repair of a premature triplet accompanied with transposition of the great arteries. During pregnancy, the fetuses were diagnosed as dichorionic diamniotic triplets, and the mother entered a hospital for maternal protection and health care from 25 weeks gestation. The triplets were delivered by Caesarean section at 33 weeks and 5 days of gestation because of intrauterine growth retardation. One of the infants, weighing 1,336 g, was diagnosed with transposition of the great arteries type II . Since he was deemed unable to endure an intracardiac repair, he received balloon atrial septostomy on the 27th day of life and then bilateral pulmonary artery banding on the 29th day of life. However, further balloon atrial septostomy on day 69 and left pulmonary arterial de-banding on day 73 post-birth were needed because of the progression of hypoxia. He received prolonged intubation and inotropic support after temporary cardiopulmonary stability, and we ultimately decided to perform arterial switch operation on day 110, when he weighed 1,838 g. The patient showed a good recovery. In the field of pediatric cardiac surgery, we occasionally select staged strategies for patients who cannot undergo radical operations all at once because of their general condition or low body weight. However, there are no established guidelines concerning the timing of palliative or radical operations in low-birthweight infants. At present, we select medical strategies ourselves, on a case-by-case basis. In the present case, although our medical strategy had to be adapted, we still obtained a good recovery for this triplet with extremely low birth weight. We herein report this case with some references from the literature. Jpn. J. Cardiovasc. Surg. 46 : 212 216 2017 transposition of the great arteries ; triplet ; very-low-birth-weight infants ; arterial switch operation
A 76-year-old male patient had undergone aortic valve replacement with a 19-mm Carpentier–Edwards Perimount valve 12 years prior and underwent laryngopharyngo-esophagectomy for hypopharyngeal carcinoma followed by permanent tracheostomy and tracheoesophageal shunt creation 2 years later. Echocardiography showed exacerbated structural valve deterioration of the bioprosthesis, necessitating redo surgery. A permanent tracheostoma, located just above the upper edge of the sternum, seemed to be at high risk of serious infections when median resternotomy was performed. To minimize the risk of infection, we performed implantation of a Perceval prosthesis via the right anterior minithoracotomy after sufficient anatomical assessments. There was no evidence of mediastinitis or wound infection during the follow-up period. This report highlights that the less invasive Perceval implantation strategically allowed reduction in the resternotomy-associated infection risks in this patient.
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