9 results on '"Mizukura I"'
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2. Data acquisition and analysis for the field test of the Home Healthcare Network in Japan.
- Author
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Mizukura, I. and Tamura, T.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Personalized heart rate management through data-driven dynamic exercise control.
- Author
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Sato T, Nishino T, Kawaguchi N, Mori H, Uchida H, Murotani K, Kimura Y, Mizukura I, Kobashi S, and Arrieta O
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Female, Adult, Exercise Test methods, Young Adult, Heart Rate physiology, Exercise physiology
- Abstract
Maximizing healthy life expectancy is essential for enhancing well-being. Optimal exercise intensity is crucial in promoting health and ensuring safe rehabilitation. Since heart rate is related to exercise intensity, the required exercise intensity is achieved by controlling the heart rate. This study aims to control heart rate during exercise by dynamically adjusting the load on a bicycle ergometer using a proportional-integral (PI) control. The choice of PI parameters is very important because the PI parameters significantly affect the performance of heart rate control. Since the dynamic characteristics of heart rate relative to work rate vary widely from subject to subject, the PI parameters for each subject must be determined individually. In this study, PI parameters are optimized directly from exercise data using a data-driven design approach. Thus, the proposed method does not require excessive exercise of the subject to model heart rate dynamics. Using the proposed method, the heart rate can be controlled to follow a designed reference model so that the heart rate is safely increased to the desired value. The quantitative evaluation of the control results of fifteen healthy volunteers confirmed that the proposed method improved the control error of the target heart rate trajectory by approximately 40%, regardless of gender or age. In addition, it was shown that control parameters from the exercise experiment also indicate that females are more likely than males to have an elevated heart rate at the same load., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Monitoring and evaluation of blood pressure changes with a home healthcare system.
- Author
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Tamura T, Mizukura I, Sekine M, and Kimura Y
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Exercise physiology, Exercise Therapy methods, Female, Humans, Japan, Male, Middle Aged, Multivariate Analysis, Regression Analysis, Sleep physiology, Blood Pressure physiology, Blood Pressure Monitoring, Ambulatory methods
- Abstract
We investigated changes in blood pressure with exercise, including walking and ergometer training, sleep, and body weight. Blood pressure was monitored over a period of about 1 year in 61 subjects in Osaka, Japan. The morning systolic blood pressures were analyzed using multivariate regression analysis, and the correlations between systolic blood pressure and the above parameters were determined. The systolic blood pressure distribution was classified into improved, stable, and ingravescence groups. In the improved group, exercise intensity and total calories were important factors controlling the systolic blood pressure. More than 300 kcal per day was needed to improve the systolic blood pressure. In the stable and ingravescence groups, body weight control was also an important factor in maintaining blood pressure. An increase of 1 kg in body weight was associated with systolic blood pressure increases of 3 and 6 mm Hg in the stable and ingravescence groups, respectively. The long-term repeated use of home blood pressure testing may be a good self-care strategy for monitoring daily health.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. New Application of IEEE 11073 to Home Health Care.
- Author
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Mizukura I, Tamura T, Kimura Y, and Yu W
- Abstract
We propose a new home health care network for the acquisition and transmission of data from ordinary home health care appliances based on IEEE11073. In this study, we develop a standard protocol for data collection and a simple interface to accommodate different monitoring systems that make use of different data protocols. The system provides for one-way data transmission, thus saving power and conforming to Japanese pharmaceutical law. Our standardized protocol was verified during a 1-year field test involving 20 households in Japan. Data transmission errors between home health care devices and the home gateway were 4.21 per a day with our newly developed standard protocol. Over a 1 year period, we collected and analyzed data from 241,000 separate sources associated with healthy, home-based patients and chronically ill, clinic-based patients, the latter through physician intervention. We evaluate some of the possible applications for collecting daily health care data and introduce some of our findings relating primarily to body weight and blood pressure monitoring for elderly subjects in their own homes.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Intralimb and Interlimb Incoordination: Comparative Study between Patients with Parkinsonism and with Cerebellar Ataxia.
- Author
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Matsuo Y, Asai Y, Nomura T, Sato S, Inoue S, Mizukura I, Yoneda T, Miki A, Sakoda S, and Abe K
- Abstract
Dysfunction of limb coordination may be divided into two categories; intra and inter-limb incoordination. To make clear differential character in these two limb incoordination, we measured 13 patients mainly with cerebellar ataxia and 27 patients mainly with parkinsonism during pedaling of an ergometer with left and right pedals that can be rotated independently. As a result, interlimb incoordination was predominantly observed in patients with parkinsonism, while patients with cerebellar ataxia showed relatively preserved interlimb coordination but intralimb incoordination. We concluded that impairment of intralimb coordination was a character in patients with cerebellar ataxia, while impairment of interlimb coordination was a character in patients with parkinsonism.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Intralimb incoordination in patients with ataxia.
- Author
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Matsuo Y, Asai Y, Nomura T, Sato S, Inoue S, Mizukura I, Yoneda T, Miki A, and Abe K
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Cerebellar Ataxia diagnosis, Diagnosis, Differential, Disease Progression, Exercise Test, Extremities innervation, Female, Functional Laterality physiology, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Parkinson Disease diagnosis, Parkinson Disease physiopathology, Predictive Value of Tests, Reference Values, Cerebellar Ataxia physiopathology, Extremities physiopathology, Motor Skills physiology, Movement physiology
- Abstract
Intralimb incoordination needs to be distinguished from interlimb incoordination, which is observed in Parkinson's disease (PD). With this aim, intra and inter-limb coordination impairment in the lower limbs were measured in 13 patients with cerebellar ataxia during pedaling of an ergometer with left and right pedals that can be rotated independently. Intralimb incoordination in patients with cerebellar ataxia was compared with interlimb incoordiation in patients with PD. We concluded that impairment of intralimb coordination in ataxia patients leads to inability to maintain pedaling amplitude and speed, but unlike in PD, right and left coordination was roughly preserved. Our method may be useful for assessing the severity of ataxia and detecting hidden parkinsonism in ataxic patients.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Classifying lower limb dynamics in Parkinson's disease.
- Author
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Abe K, Asai Y, Matsuo Y, Nomura T, Sato S, Inoue S, Mizukura I, and Sakoda S
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Biomechanical Phenomena, Cluster Analysis, Exercise physiology, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Motor Skills, Neuropsychological Tests, Parkinson Disease complications, Psychomotor Performance, Time Factors, Leg, Movement Disorders etiology, Parkinson Disease classification
- Abstract
To classify lower limb dynamics in patients with Parkinson's disease (PD), we conducted a clinical study by using pedaling exercise.Twenty-seven patients with idiopathic PD were included in this study. We measured rotational velocities of pedals during pedaling movements with a newly developed ergometer. The velocity waveforms exhibited different characteristics among patients, which could be categorized into four different clusters. In cluster 1, the amplitude on each side was constant and the relative phase was locked at 180 degrees. The pattern was the same as seen in normal subjects. In cluster 2, the amplitude on each side was constant, but the relative phase was locked at 90 degrees. In cluster 3, the amplitude on each side was modulated, and the relative phase drifted monotonously from 0 to 360 degrees during pedaling cycles. In cluster 4, the amplitude on each side was synchronously and irregularly modulated, and the relative phase fluctuated with intermittent spike-like decrement. In order to evaluate, the correlation between pattern and severity of PD, we divided 13 patients, who underwent measurement of pedaling patterns more than three times, into three groups, and found that the abnormal coordination pattern correlated with the presence of freezing phenomenon in patients with PD. Our clinical analysis may contribute in analyzing and classifying the dynamics of PD.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. A coupled oscillator model of disordered interlimb coordination in patients with Parkinson's disease.
- Author
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Asai Y, Nomura T, Sato S, Tamaki A, Matsuo Y, Mizukura I, and Abe K
- Subjects
- Exercise Test, Functional Laterality, Humans, Movement physiology, Nonlinear Dynamics, Oscillometry, Ataxia physiopathology, Models, Neurological, Parkinson Disease physiopathology
- Abstract
Coordination between the left and right limbs during cyclic movements, which can be characterized by the amplitude of each limb's oscillatory movement and relative phase, is impaired in patients with Parkinson's disease (PD). A pedaling exercise on an ergometer in a recent clinical study revealed several types of coordination disorder in PD patients. These include an irregular and burst-like amplitude modulation with intermittent changes in its relative phase, a typical sign of chaotic behavior in nonlinear dynamical systems. This clinical observation leads us to hypothesize that emergence of the rhythmic motor behaviors might be concerned with nonlinearity of an underlying dynamical system. In order to gain insight into this hypothesis, we consider a simple hard-wired central pattern generator model consisting of two identical oscillators connected by reciprocal inhibition. In the model, each oscillator acts as a neural half-center controlling movement of a single limb, either left or right, and receives a control input modeling a flow of descending signals from higher motor centers. When these two control inputs are tonic-constant and identical, the model has left-right symmetry and basically exhibits ordered coordination with an alternating periodic oscillation. We show that, depending on the intensities of these two control inputs and on the difference between them that introduces asymmetry into the model, the model can reproduce several behaviors observed in the clinical study. Bifurcation analysis of the model clarifies two possible mechanisms for the generation of disordered coordination in the model: one is the spontaneous symmetry-breaking bifurcation in the model with the left-right symmetry. The other is related to the degree of asymmetry reflecting the difference between the two control inputs. Finally, clinical implications by the model's dynamics are briefly discussed.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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