Publications by authors named "Chihiro Ishizawa"

Adenomyosis often causes dysmenorrhea in women of reproductive age. Progestins such as levonorgestrel intrauterine system (LNG-IUS) are often used for treatment, but some patients experience progesterone resistance, showing poor treatment response. However, the clinical characteristics of progesterone-resistant and progesterone-sensitive patients with symptomatic adenomyosis remain unclear.

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Chronic endometritis (CE) and endometrial dysbiosis (ED) are major causes of recurrent implantation failure (RIF). CE is diagnosed via hysteroscopy or the endometrial CD138 test; ED is examined using endometrial microbiome testing with next-generation sequencing. ED is characterized by a reduction in Lactobacillus species.

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Uterine adenomyosis is a common disease in women of reproductive age that causes dysmenorrhea, abnormal uterine bleeding, infertility, and obstetric complications. Rarely, adenomyosis can lead to abscess formation, which is refractory to antibiotics and occasionally requires surgical treatment, such as hysterectomy. However, hysterectomy should be avoided in patients who seek to preserve fertility.

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Embryo implantation is crucial for successful pregnancy, requiring appropriate uterine responses to implantation-competent blastocysts. Molecular communication at the maternal-fetal junction governs this process. Leukemia inhibitory factor (Lif) plays a pivotal role in implantation across species.

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Article Synopsis
  • Embryo implantation is essential for a healthy pregnancy and is influenced by changes in gene expression and metabolism in the uterus, which respond to hormones and embryo signals.
  • Researchers used spatial transcriptomic analysis to identify that lipid metabolism, particularly pathways related to arachidonic acid, is important in the uterus during implantation.
  • The study found that the COX2 enzyme plays a crucial role in successful implantation, while the absence of COX1 or COX2 leads to impaired pregnancy or infertility, highlighting the distinct functions of each enzyme in this process.*
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Background: Adenomyosis is a common gynecological disease in women of reproductive age and causes various symptoms such as dysmenorrhea and heavy menstrual bleeding. However, the influence of pregnancy on the progression of adenomyosis remains unclear. The insight into whether the size of adenomyosis is increased, decreased, or unchanged during pregnancy is also undetermined.

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Background: The efficacy of adjuvant therapy for patients with cervical cancer with intermediate risk (CC-IR) remains controversial. We examined the impact of adjuvant therapy on survival outcomes in patients with CC-IR and evaluated the heterogeneous treatment effects (HTEs) of adjuvant therapies based on clinicopathologic characteristics.

Methods: We retrospectively analyzed a previous Japanese nationwide cohort of 6192 patients with stage IB-IIB cervical cancer who underwent radical hysterectomy.

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Infertility occurs in 15% of couples worldwide. Recurrent implantation failure (RIF) is one of the major problems in in vitro fertilization and embryo transfer (IVF-ET) programs, and how to manage patients with RIF to achieve successful pregnancy outcomes remains unresolved. Here, a uterine polycomb repressive complex 2 (PRC2)-regulated gene network was found to control embryo implantation.

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Article Synopsis
  • - The study investigated the effects of post-operative radiation therapy (RT) on 112 intermediate-risk cervical cancer patients who underwent radical hysterectomy, focusing on overall survival (OS), progression-free survival (PFS), and adverse events.
  • - Results showed no significant differences in OS or PFS between patients receiving RT and those who did not, but the RT group experienced higher rates of adverse events and recurrent risk factors.
  • - Subgroup analyses revealed that while RT did not significantly affect the SCC group, non-SCC patients seemed to have poorer outcomes with RT, indicating a need for careful assessment of RT eligibility based on cancer subtypes.
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Levonorgestrel-releasing intrauterine system (LNG-IUS) relieves dysmenorrhea and heavy menstrual bleeding (HMB) in adenomyosis. However, its efficacy on health-related quality of life (HR-QOL) in patients with symptomatic adenomyosis remains unclear. The menorrhagia multi-attribute scale (MMAS), which measures HR-QOL improvement through the treatment of HMB, has never been used for evaluating menorrhagia-specific HR-QOL in patients with symptomatic adenomyosis.

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Purpose: The receptive endometrium is critical for blastocyst implantation. In mice, after blastocysts enter the uterine cavities on day 4 of pregnancy (day 1 = vaginal plug), blastocyst attachment is completed within 24 h, accompanied by dynamic interactions between the uterine luminal epithelium and the blastocysts. Any failures in this process compromise subsequent pregnancy outcomes.

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Adenomyosis is a benign uterine disease that causes dysmenorrhea, heavy menstrual bleeding, and infertility; however, its pathophysiology remains unclear. Since signal transducer and activator of transcription 3 (STAT3) is crucial for endometrial regeneration, we hypothesized that STAT3 participates in adenomyosis pathophysiology. To investigate the influence of STAT3 on adenomyosis development, this study was performed using a novel mouse model of adenomyosis and human specimens of eutopic endometria and adenomyosis lesions.

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Recurrent implantation failure is a major problem in assisted reproductive technology (ART). Although ART systems have evolved rapidly over the decades, it is still difficult to diagnose uterine conditions suitable for embryo transfer (ET) without the use of invasive endometrial procedures. Previous studies in mice showed that leukemia inhibitory factor (LIF) is a well-known endometrial biomarker for uterine implantation capacity, also known as uterine receptivity.

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We here describe a case of the prolapse of pedunculated submucosal leiomyoma through the cervix during the treatment of a gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) antagonist relugolix. We also present the literature review of the cases of leiomyoma prolapse during GnRH modulators. A 55-year-old woman with atypical vaginal bleeding diagnosed submucosal uterine fibroid 6 cm in diameter, and daily oral administration of relugolix was conducted.

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