8,796 results on '"Sakamoto, K."'
Search Results
52. High-resolution HNC 3-2 SMA observations of Arp220
- Author
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Aalto, S., Wilner, D., Spaans, M., Wiedner, M. C., Sakamoto, K., Black, J. H., and Caldas, M.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present high resolution (0."4) observations of HNC J=3-2 with the SubMillimeter Array (SMA). We find luminous HNC 3-2 line emission in the western part of Arp220, centered on the western nucleus, while the eastern side of the merger shows relatively faint emission. A bright (36 K), narrow (60 km/s) emission feature emerges from the western nucleus, superposed on a broader spectral component. A possible explanation is weak maser emission through line-of-sight amplification of the background continuum source. There is also a more extended HNC 3-2 emission feature north and south of the nucleus. This feature resembles the bipolar OH maser morphology around the western nucleus. Substantial HNC abundances are required to explain the bright line emission from this warm environment. We discuss this briefly in the context of an X-ray chemistry and radiative excitation. We conclude that the luminous and possibly amplified HNC emission of the western nucleus of the Arp220 merger reflects the unusual, and perhaps transient, environment of the starburst/AGN activity there. The faint HNC line emission towards Arp220-east reveals a real difference in physical conditions between the two merger nuclei., Comment: 7 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysics
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- 2008
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53. Current status of venous thromboembolism development during the perioperative period for colorectal cancer, its prevention with enoxaparin, and monitoring methods
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Aoki J, Sakamoto K, Takahashi R, Niwa K, Ishiyama S, Sugimoto K, Kamiyama H, Takahashi M, Kojima Y, Goto M, Tomiki Y, and Iba T
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Venous thromboembolism ,enoxaparin ,D-dimer ,anti-Xa activity ,colorectal cancer ,Therapeutics. Pharmacology ,RM1-950 - Abstract
Jun Aoki,1 Kazuhiro Sakamoto,1 Rina Takahashi,1 Koichiro Niwa,1 Shun Ishiyama,1 Kiichi Sugimoto,1 Hirohiko Kamiyama,1 Makoto Takahashi,1 Yutaka Kojima,1 Michitoshi Goto,1 Yuichi Tomiki,1 Toshiaki Iba21Department of Coloproctological Surgery, Juntendo University, Faculty of Medicine, Tokyo, Japan; 2Department of Emergency and Disaster Medicine, Juntendo University, Faculty of Medicine, Tokyo, JapanBackground: There is a high incidence of venous thromboembolism (VTE) during the perioperative period for cancer. Therefore, there is an urgent need to elucidate the perioperative onset and appropriate prophylaxis for VTE.Purpose: VTE during the perioperative period for colorectal cancer was evaluated by lower limb venous ultrasonic examinations (lower limb echo) under enoxaparin prophylaxis. We also examined the relationship between hemorrhagic adverse events and anti-Xa factor activity.Patients and methods: Eighty-three subjects who underwent lower limb echo during the perioperative period for colorectal cancer were prospectively included. Enoxaparin was administered for 5 days, from day 1 to day 5 after surgery. Lower limb echo was performed before surgery and on day 5 after surgery. The activated partial thromboplastin time, D-dimer levels, and anti-Xa factor activity were measured before surgery and on days 1, 3, 5, 7, and 9 after surgery.Results: VTEs before surgery were observed on lower limb echo for 16 patients (19.2%). Three patients (3.6%) had a new thrombus during the perioperative period. The preoperative D-dimer level was an independent prognostic factor for newly formed postoperative VTEs (p=0.0036; odds ratio, 19.37). Three patients (3.6%) had hemorrhagic events; however, there was no significant trend for anti-Xa factor activity.Conclusion: VTE prevention using enoxaparin was relatively safe, and D-dimer measurements before surgery were useful for predicting perioperative VTE.Keywords: postoperative complications, pulmonary thromboembolism, deep vein thrombosis, D-dimer, anti-Xa factor activity
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- 2019
54. Electronic Structures of Fe$_{3-x}V$_x$Si Probed by Photoemission Spectroscopy
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Cui, Y. T., Kimura, A., Miyamoto, K., Sakamoto, K., Xie, T., Qiao, S., Nakatake, M., Shimada, K., Taniguchi, M., Fujimori, S. -i., Saitoh, Y., Kobayashi, K., Kanomata, T., and Nashima, O.
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Condensed Matter - Materials Science ,Condensed Matter - Other Condensed Matter - Abstract
The electronic structures of the Heusler type compounds Fe$_{3-x}V$_x$Si in the concentration range between x = 0 and x = 1 have been probed by photoemission spectroscopy (PES). The observed shift of Si 2p core- level and the main valence band structres indicate a chemical potential shift to higher energy with increasing x. It is also clarified that the density of state at Fermi edge is owing to the collaboration of V 3d and Fe 3d derived states. Besides the decrease of the spectral intensity near Fermi edge with increasing x suggests the formation of pseudo gap at large x., Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures, 5 references
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- 2008
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55. SMA High Angular Resolution Imaging of the Lensed Quasar APM08279+5255
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Krips, M., Peck, A. B., Sakamoto, K., Petitpas, G. B., Wilner, D. J., Matsushita, S., and Iono, D.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present Submillimeter Array observations of the z=3.91 gravitationally lensed broad absorption line quasar APM08279+5255 which spatially resolve the 1.0mm (0.2mm rest-frame) dust continuum emission. At 0.4" resolution, the emission is separated into two components, a stronger, extended one to the northeast (46+/-5mJy) and a weaker, compact one to the southwest (15+/-2mJy). We have carried out simulations of the gravitational lensing effect responsible for the two submm components in order to constrain the intrinsic size of the submm continuum emission. Using an elliptical lens potential, the best fit lensing model yields an intrinsic (projected) diameter of ~80pc, which is not as compact as the optical/near-infrared (NIR) emission and agrees with previous size estimates of the gas and dust emission in APM08279+5255. Based on our estimate, we favor a scenario in which the 0.2mm (rest-frame) emission originates from a warm dust component (T_d=150-220K) that is mainly heated by the AGN rather than by a starburst (SB). The flux is boosted by a factor of ~90 in our model, consistent with recent estimates for APM08279+5255., Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publication in ApJL, in emulateApJ format
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- 2007
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56. Phase Closure at 691 GHz using the Submillimeter Array
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Hunter, T. R., Schinckel, A. E. T., Peck, A. B., Christensen, R. D., Blundell, R., Camacho, A., Patt, F., Sakamoto, K., and Young, K. H.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
Phase closure at 682 GHz and 691 GHz was first achieved using three antennas of the Submillimeter Array (SMA) interferometer located on Mauna Kea, Hawaii. Initially, phase closure was demonstrated at 682.5 GHz on Sept. 19, 2002 using an artificial ground-based "beacon" signal. Subsequently, astronomical detections of both Saturn and Uranus were made at the frequency of the CO(6-5) transition (691.473 GHz) on all three baselines on Sept. 22, 2002. While the larger planets such as Saturn are heavily resolved even on these short baselines (25.2m, 25.2m and 16.4m), phase closure was achieved on Uranus and Callisto. This was the first successful experiment to obtain phase closure in this frequency band. The CO(6-5) line was also detected towards Orion BN/KL and other Galactic sources, as was the vibrationally-excited 658 GHz water maser line toward evolved stars. We present these historic detections, as well as the first arcsecond-scale images obtained in this frequency band., Comment: 13 pages, 11 figures, originally presented as a poster at the 201st AAS meeting held in Seattle, WA in January 2003
- Published
- 2007
57. Magneto-optical trapping of radioactive atoms for test of the fundamental symmetries
- Author
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Kawamura, Hirokazu, Ando, S., Aoki, T., Arikawa, H., Harada, K., Hayamizu, T., Inoue, T., Ishikawa, T., Itoh, M., Kato, K., Köhler, L., Mathis, J., Sakamoto, K., Uchiyama, A., Sakemi, Y., Wada, Michiharu, editor, Schury, Peter, editor, and Ichikawa, Yuichi, editor
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- 2017
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58. Development of calorimetry methodology for beam current measurement of the Linear IFMIF Prototype Accelerator (LIPAc)
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Nishiyama, K., Knaster, J., Okumura, Y., Marqueta, A., Pruneri, G., Scantamburlo, F., Sakamoto, K., Sugimoto, M., Kasugai, A., Hirata, Y., Kondo, K., Ikeda, Y., Maebara, Sunao, Ichimiya, R., Shinya, T., Ihara, A., Kitano, T., Beauvais, Pierre-Yves, Gobin, R., and Bolzon, B.
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- 2018
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59. SMA CO(J=3-2) interferometric observations of the central region of M51
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Matsushita, S., Sakamoto, K., Kuo, C. -Y., Hsieh, P. -Y., Dinh-V-Trung, Mao, R. -Q., Iono, D., Peck, A. B., Wiedner, M. C., Liu, S. -Y., Ohashi, N., and Lim, J.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the first interferometric CO(J=3-2) observations (beam size of 3.9"x1.6" or 160pc x 65pc) with the Submillimeter Array (SMA) toward the center of the Seyfert 2 galaxy M51. The image shows a strong concentration at the nucleus and weak emission from the spiral arm to the northwest. The integrated intensity of the central component in CO(J=3-2) is almost twice as high as that in CO(J=1-0), indicating that the molecular gas within an ~80 pc radius of the nucleus is warm (>~100 K) and dense (~10^4 cm^-3). Similar intensity ratios are seen in shocked regions in our Galaxy, suggesting that these gas properties may be related to AGN or starburst activity. The central component shows a linear velocity gradient (~1.4 km/s/pc) perpendicular to the radio continuum jet, similar to that seen in previous observations and interpreted as a circumnuclear molecular disk/torus around the Seyfert 2 nucleus. In addition, we identify a linear velocity gradient (~0.7 km/s/pc) along the jet. Judging from the energetics, the velocity gradient can be explained by supernova explosions or energy and momentum transfer from the jet to the molecular gas via interaction, which is consistent with the high intensity ratio., Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in ApJL
- Published
- 2004
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60. Experimental Limit to Interstellar 244Pu Abundance
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Paul, M., Valenta, A., Ahmad, I., Berkovits, D., Bordeanu, C., Ghelberg, S., Hashimoto, Y., Hershkowitz, A., Jiang, S., Nakanishi, T., and Sakamoto, K.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
Short-lived nuclides, now extinct in the solar system, are expected to be present in the interstellar medium (ISM). Grains of ISM origin were recently discovered in the inner solar system and at Earth orbit and may accrete onto Earth after ablation in the atmosphere. A favorable matrix for detection of such extraterrestrial material is presented by deep open-sea sediments with very low sedimentation rates (0.8-3 mm/kyr). We report here on the measurement of Pu isotopic abundances in a 1-kg deep-sea dry sediment collected in 1992 in the North Pacific. Our measured value of (3+-3)x10^5 244Pu atoms in the Pu-separated fraction of the sample shows no excess over the expected stratospheric nuclear fallout content and under reasonable assumptions we derive a limit of 2x10^-11 g-244Pu/g-ISM for the abundance of 244Pu in ISM., Comment: 10 p, 1 fig, LateX(AASTeX) Accepted for publication in ApJL, aug 2, 2001
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- 2001
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61. Effective Vector Meson Masses in a Cutoff Field Theory
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Sakamoto, K., Nakai, M., Kouno, H., Hasegawa, A., and Nakano, M.
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Nuclear Theory - Abstract
Based on quantum hadrodynamics with a finite cutoff, the effective masses of vector mesons(\omega, \rho) in nuclear medium are calculated. We use a low-energy effective Lagrangian which is obtained by integrating high-energy quantum fluctuations. Although we use an artificial cutoff, the cutoff-dependence can be removed order by order. It is shown that there is a strong correlation between the effective \omega -meson mass and the effective nucleon mass at the normal density. It is also found that the effective \rho-meson mass m_\rho^* decreases as density increases. The rate of the decrease becomes smaller at high density. As a result, at the normal density, the m^*_\rho/m_\rho is 0.85 \sim 0.95., Comment: 15 pages, LateX, 7 eps figures. Email: 98td22@edu.cc.saga-u.ac.jp
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- 1999
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62. Bar-driven Transport of Molecular Gas to Galactic Centers and Its Consequences
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Sakamoto, K., Okumura, S. K., Ishizuki, S., and Scoville, N. Z.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We study the characteristics of molecular gas in the central regions of spiral galaxies on the basis of our CO(J=1-0) imaging survey of 20 nearby spiral galaxies using the NRO and OVRO millimeter arrays. Condensations of molecular gas at galactic centers with sizescales < 1 kpc and CO-derived masses M_gas(R<500pc) = 10^8 - 10^9 M_sun are found to be prevalent in the gas-rich L^* galaxies. Moreover, the degree of gas concentration to the central kpc is found to be higher in barred systems than in unbarred galaxies. This is the first statistical evidence for the higher central concentration of molecular gas in barred galaxies, and it strongly supports the theory of bar-driven gas transport. It is most likely that more than half of molecular gas within the central kpc of a barred galaxy was transported there from outside by the bar. The supply of gas has exceeded the consumption of gas by star formation in the central kpc, resulting in the excess gas in the centers of barred systems. The mean rate of gas inflow is statistically estimated to be larger than 0.1 - 1 M_sun/yr. The correlation between gas properties in the central kpc and the type of nuclear spectrum (HII, LINER, or Seyfert) is investigated. A correlation is found in which galaxies with larger gas-to-dynamical mass ratios tend to have HII nuclear spectra, while galaxies with smaller ratios show spectra indicating AGN. Also, the theoretical prediction of bar-dissolution by condensation of gas to galactic centers is observationally tested. It is suggested that the timescale for bar dissolution is larger than 10^8 - 10^10 yr, or a bar in a L^* galaxy is not destroyed by a condensation of 10^8 - 10^9 M_sun gas in the central kpc., Comment: AASTeX, 20 pages, 8 eps figs, ApJ in press (10 Nov. 1999 issue)
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- 1999
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63. Dispersion relations in quantum hadrodynamics with a finite cutoff
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Sakamoto, K., Kouno, H., Hasegawa, A., and Nakano, M.
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Nuclear Theory - Abstract
The dispersion relations in the real and imaginary parts of the meson self-energies are studied to check the consistency of the "renormalization" in cutoff field theory. It is shown that the dispersion relations are preserved by the "renormalization"even if the finite cutoff and regulator are introduced in the calculation by hand., Comment: 21 pages, LateX, 9 eps figures. Submitted for publication
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- 1999
64. Radial Transport of Molecular Gas to the Nuclei of Spiral Galaxies
- Author
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Sakamoto, K., Okumura, S. K., Ishizuki, S., and Scoville, N. Z.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
The NRO/OVRO imaging survey of molecular gas in 20 spiral galaxies is used to test the theoretical predictions on bar-driven gas transport, bar dissolution, and bulge evolution. In most galaxies in the survey we find gas condensations of 10^8-10^9 M_sun within the central kiloparsec, the gas masses being comparable to those needed to destroy bars in numerical models. We also find a statistically significant difference in the degree of gas concentration between barred and unbarred galaxies: molecular gas is more concentrated to the central kiloparsec in barred systems. The latter result supports the theories of bar-driven gas transport. Moreover, it constrains the balance between the rate of gas inflow and that of gas consumption (i.e., star formation, etc.), and also constrains the timescale of the possible bar dissolution. Namely, gas inflow rates to the central kiloparsec, averaged over the ages of the bars, must be larger than the mean rates of gas consumption in the central regions in order to cause and maintain the higher gas concentrations in barred galaxies. Also, the timescale for bar dissolution must be longer than that for gas consumption in the central regions by the same token., Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures (LaTeX, cupconf.sty), To appear in the proceedings ``When and How do Bulges Form and Evolve?'', Workshop held at STScI, Oct. 5-7 1998, (Cambridge:CUP). Eds. C. M. Carollo, H. C. Ferguson, and R. F. G. Wyse
- Published
- 1999
65. Successful salvage of allograft dysfunction triggered by transplant renal vein thrombosis immediately after kidney transplantation: a case report
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Hori S, Miyamoto T, Sakamoto K, Shimizu T, Ichikawa K, Morizawa Y, Gotoh D, Nakai Y, Miyake M, Yoneda T, Tanaka N, Yoshida K, and Fujimoto K
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kidney transplantation ,surgical exploration ,transplant renal vein thrombosis ,thrombectomy ,Diseases of the genitourinary system. Urology ,RC870-923 - Abstract
Shunta Hori, Tatsuki Miyamoto, Keiichi Sakamoto, Takuto Shimizu, Kazuki Ichikawa, Yosuke Morizawa, Daisuke Gotoh, Yasushi Nakai, Makito Miyake, Tatsuo Yoneda, Nobumichi Tanaka, Katsunori Yoshida, Kiyohide Fujimoto Department of Urology, Nara Medical University, Kashihara, Nara 634-8522, Japan Background: Transplant renal vein thrombosis (TRVT) is a severe vascular complication and is caused by various factors, including recipient factors, donor factors, immunosuppression regimens, and surgical techniques. Despite adequate interventions, including thrombolytic therapy or surgical thrombectomy, successful salvage of the allograft is often difficult. We observed a case of TRVT induced by compression of the renal vein immediately after intraoperative abdominal closure.Case presentation: A 41-year-old male underwent ABO-compatible living kidney transplantation. The donor was his 45-year-old sister, and her right kidney was donated. The allograft had a single artery and vein. One of the preoperative recipient problems was obesity (body mass index, 33.4 kg/m2). Intraoperative Doppler ultrasonography (US) revealed sufficient blood flow throughout the allograft, and urine output was also observed. After surgery, hematuria was observed; the urine output decreased and serum creatinine levels increased to 7.0 mg/dL. Doppler US showed a decrease in diastolic flow and an elevated resistive index, which were similar findings to those noted in acute rejection. Although steroid pulse therapy was initiated, allograft dysfunction was worsening. On postoperative day 4, surgical exploration revealed TRVT; consequently, thrombectomy was performed. The urine output increased, and serum creatinine levels decreased to 1.8 mg/dL. The cause of TRVT development may be that the transplant renal vein was relatively short, due to the right kidney being compressed by surrounding tissues after abdominal closure, and that TRVT was gradually developing due to stagnant blood flow.Conclusion: Although TRVT is induced by multiple factors, an accurate diagnosis is often difficult. Understanding these factors, including obesity, and considering TRVT as a cause of allograft dysfunction are important during the pre-, peri-, and postoperative periods. Knowledge of TRVT can lead to early and accurate diagnosis and intervention, resulting in better outcomes for the patients with allograft dysfunction. Keywords: kidney transplantation, surgical exploration, transplant renal vein thrombosis, thrombectomy
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- 2018
66. Impact of mild to moderate COPD on feasibility and prognosis in non-small cell lung cancer patients who received chemotherapy
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Omote N, Hashimoto N, Morise M, Sakamoto K, Miyazaki S, Ando A, Nakahara Y, and Hasegawa Y
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Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease ,Non-small cell lung cancer ,Prognosis ,Chemotherapy ,Feasibility ,Diseases of the respiratory system ,RC705-779 - Abstract
Norihito Omote, Naozumi Hashimoto, Masahiro Morise, Koji Sakamoto, Shinichi Miyazaki, Akira Ando, Yoshio Nakahara, Yoshinori Hasegawa Department of Respiratory Medicine, Nagoya University Graduate School of Medicine, Nagoya, Japan Background: Non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) is the predominant cause of death in patients with COPD, and the severity of COPD in NSCLC patients is classified mainly as mild to moderate. Most advanced NSCLC patients with mild to moderate COPD are treated with chemotherapy; however, the feasibility for and prognosis after chemotherapy of these patients are not well understood. The aim of this study was to elucidate the impact of mild to moderate COPD on the feasibility for and prognosis after chemotherapy in NSCLC patients.Patients and methods: A retrospective review was performed on 268 NSCLC patients who received first-line chemotherapy from 2009 to 2014 in our institution. Finally, 85 evaluable patients were included in this study. The clinical characteristics, toxicity profile, objective response rate, and prognosis were analyzed and compared between patients with mild to moderate COPD and those without COPD (non-COPD).Results: Forty-three patients were classified as COPD (27 cases mild and 16 cases moderate) and 42 patients as non-COPD. The COPD group were older and had fewer never-smokers than the non-COPD group. The objective response rate did not differ between groups (p=0.14). There was no significant difference in overall survival between COPD and non-COPD groups (15.0 and 17.0 months, log-rank test p=0.57). In the multivariate Cox’s proportional hazard model, the adjusted hazard ratio (HRadj) was statistically significant for male sex (HRadj =5.382, 95% CI: 1.496–19.359; p=0.010), pathological diagnosis of adenocarcinoma (HRadj =0.460, 95% CI: 0.223–0.948; p=0.035), and epithelial growth factor receptor negative mutation (HRadj =6.040, 95% CI: 1.158–31.497; p=0.033), but not for the presence of COPD (HRadj =0.661, 95% CI: 0.330–1.325; p=0.24). Toxicity profile in COPD group was favorable, as in the non-COPD group.Conclusion: Mild to moderate COPD did not have a significant deleterious impact on toxicity and prognosis in NSCLC patients. Keywords: toxicity, survival, prognostic factors
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- 2017
67. Counterrotating Nuclear Disks in Arp 220
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Sakamoto, K., Scoville, N. Z., Yun, M. S., Crosas, M., Genzel, R., and Tacconi, L. J.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
The ultraluminous infrared galaxy Arp 220 has been observed at 0.5" resolution in CO(2-1) and 1 mm continuum using the newly expanded Owens Valley Millimeter Array. The CO and continuum peaks at the double nuclei and the surrounding molecular gas disk are clearly resolved. We find steep velocity gradients across each nucleus (dV ~ 500 km/s within r= 0.3") whose directions are not aligned with each other and with that of the outer gas disk. We conclude that the double nuclei have their own gas disks (r ~ 100 pc). They are counterrotating with respect to each other and embedded in the outer gas disk (r ~ 1 kpc) rotating around the dynamical center of the system. The masses of each nucleus are M_dyn > 2* 10^9 M_sun based on the CO kinematics. Although there is no evidence of an old stellar population in the optical or near infrared spectroscopy of the nuclei (probably due to the much brighter young population), it seems likely that these nuclei were 'seeded' from the pre-merger nuclei in view of their counterrotating gas kinematics. The gas disks probably constitute a significant fraction (~ 50 %) of the mass in each nucleus. The CO and continuum brightness temperatures imply that the nuclear gas disks have high area filling factors (~ 0.5-1) and have extremely high visual extinctions (Av ~ 1000 mag). The molecular gas must be hot (>= 40 K) and dense (>= 10^4-5 cm^-3), given the large mass and small scale-height of the nuclear disks. The continuum data suggest that the large luminosity (be it starburst or AGN) must originate within 100 pc of the two nuclear gas disks which were presumably formed through concentration of gas from the progenitor outer galaxy disks., Comment: 20 pages, 5 figures. Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal
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- 1998
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68. Conventional facilities of the linear IFMIF prototype accelerator (LIPAc)
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Pruneri, G., Cara, P., Heidinger, R., Kasugai, A., Knaster, J., Ohira, S., Okumura, Y., and Sakamoto, K.
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- 2017
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69. Antiproton Production in p+d Reaction at Subthreshold Energies
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Hasegawa, A., Iwasaki, Y., Sakamoto, K., Noda, N., Kouno, H., and Nakano, M.
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Nuclear Theory - Abstract
An enhancement of antiprotons produced in p+d reaction in comparison with ones in p+p elementary reaction is investigated. In the neighborhood of subthreshold energy the enhancement is caused by the difference of available energies for antiproton production. The cross section in p+d reaction, on the other hand, becomes just twice of the one in elementary p+p reaction at the incident energy far from the threshold energy when non-nucleonic components in deuteron target are not considered., Comment: LaTeX,7 pages with 5 eps figures
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- 1998
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70. Diamond Blackfan anemia is mediated by hyperactive Nemo-like kinase
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Wilkes, M. C., Siva, K., Chen, J., Varetti, G., Youn, M. Y., Chae, H., Ek, F., Olsson, R., Lundbäck, T., Dever, D. P., Nishimura, T., Narla, A., Glader, B., Nakauchi, H., Porteus, M. H., Repellin, C. E., Gazda, H. T., Lin, S., Serrano, M., Flygare, J., and Sakamoto, K. M.
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- 2020
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71. Properties of nuclear matter in cut-off field theory and renormalization group methods
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Kouno, H., Mitsumori, T., Iwasaki, Y., Sakamoto, K., Noda, N., Koide, K., Hasegawa, A., and Nakano, M.
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Nuclear Theory - Abstract
The properties of nuclear matter are studied in the cut-off field theory. It is found that, under the Hartree approximation, the small cut-off makes the equations of state hard, especially at higher densities. The theory is modified in the framework of the renormalization group methods with arbitrary cut-off $\Lambda^\prime$. It is found that the expansion in terms of the $\sigma$ meson field is more favorable than the naive expansion of the inverse of $\Lambda^\prime$, when we do not use very large $\Lambda^\prime$., Comment: PACS numbers, 21.65.+f
- Published
- 1996
72. Tensile Strength of Al-PULGFRP Adhesively Bonded Joints
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Osaka, K., primary, Fukuda, T., additional, Sakamoto, K., additional, and Kobayashi, M., additional
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- 2019
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73. Successful bipolar ablation for ventricular tachycardia with potential substrate identification by pre-procedural cardiac magnetic resonance imaging
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Sakamoto K, Nozoe M, Tsutsui Y, Suematsu N, Kubota T, Okabe M, and Yamamoto Y
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cardiac sarcoidosis ,VT ,MRI ,bipolar ablation ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Kazuo Sakamoto, Masatsugu Nozoe, Yoshitomo Tsutsui, Nobuhiro Suematsu, Toru Kubota, Masanori Okabe, Yusuke Yamamoto Division of Cardiology, Cardiovascular and Aortic Center, Saiseikai Fukuoka General Hospital, Fukuoka, Japan Abstract: Cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is a useful tool for detecting the arrhythmogenic substrate in cardiac sarcoidosis. We herein present a case of bipolar radiofrequency catheter ablation for ventricular tachycardia (VT) complicated with cardiac sarcoidosis, guided by pre-procedural cardiac MRI. Neither echocardiography nor endocardial voltage mapping suggested a septal VT substrate. However, MRI alone detected intramural lesions in the septum. Although application of endocardial energy failed to treat the VT, bipolar ablation targeting the potential substrate identified by MRI successfully eliminated the VT. Even when no abnormalities are depicted on echocardiography and endocardial voltage mapping, intramural scar tissue identified by cardiac MRI could be critical for VT. Keywords: cardiac sarcoidosis, VT, MRI, bipolar ablation
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- 2017
74. 425 A retrospective analysis of the efficacy of corticosteroid pulse therapy and lymphocytic infiltration around eccrine glands in acquired idiopathic generalized anhidrosis
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Kageyama, R., primary, Sakamoto, K., additional, Shimauchi, T., additional, Fujiyama, T., additional, Ito, T., additional, and Honda, T., additional
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- 2023
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75. 483 A study of cataract complications in patients with atopic dermatitis attending our ophthalmology department
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Maeno, M., primary, Tamagawa-Mineoka, R., additional, Onozuka, D., additional, Ikai, H., additional, Tanaka, H., additional, Sakamoto, K., additional, Arakawa, Y., additional, Masuda, K., additional, and Katoh, N., additional
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- 2023
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76. 1335 Artemisia capillaris flower extract protects hyaluronic acid from degradation by HYBID in human dermal fibroblasts
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Biswas, K., primary, Kawai, Y., additional, Sakamoto, K., additional, Masutani, T., additional, Inoue, S., additional, and Iddamalgoda, A., additional
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- 2023
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77. 937 Disruption of the innate lymphoid cell network alters the hair cycle during induced anagen
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Sakamoto, K., primary, Ayush, O., additional, Jin, S., additional, Goel, S., additional, Sekiguchi, A., additional, Honda, T., additional, and Nagao, K., additional
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- 2023
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78. 1583 Degos disease is characterized by cytotoxic transcriptome centering on CD8 T cells
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Goel, S., primary, Cudrici, C., additional, Jin, S., additional, Sakamoto, K., additional, Sekiguchi, A., additional, Segre, J., additional, Cowen, E., additional, Kong, H.H., additional, Boehm, M., additional, and Nagao, K., additional
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- 2023
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79. 切除不能・再発食道扁平上皮癌に対するNivolumab療法におけるCRP/albumin比の意義
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Maruyama, S., primary, Okamura, A., additional, Kanie, Y., additional, Kuriyama, K., additional, Sakamoto, K., additional, Kanamori, J., additional, Imamura, Y., additional, Osumi, H., additional, Nakayama, I., additional, Ogura, M., additional, Takahari, D., additional, Oki, A., additional, Chin, K., additional, and Watanabe, M., additional
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- 2023
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80. Current Status and Future Perspective of Genomic Medicine for Esophageal Cancer
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Imamura, Y., primary, Fukada, I., additional, Hayashi, N., additional, Kanie, Y., additional, Sakamoto, K., additional, Kuriyama, K., additional, Maruyama, S., additional, Okamura, A., additional, Kanamori, J., additional, and Watanabe, M., additional
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- 2023
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81. Introduction of Perioperative Management Team to Prevent Postoperative Pneumonia after Esophagectomy
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Okamura, A., primary, Maruyama, S., additional, Kanie, Y., additional, Kuriyama, K., additional, Sakamoto, K., additional, Kanamori, J., additional, Imamura, Y., additional, and Watanabe, M., additional
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- 2023
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82. Interaction between clay minerals and organics in asteroid Ryugu
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Viennet, J.-C., primary, Roskosz, M., additional, Nakamura, T., additional, Beck, P., additional, Baptiste, B., additional, Lavina, B., additional, Alp, E.E., additional, Hu, M.Y., additional, Zhao, J., additional, Gounelle, M., additional, Brunetto, R., additional, Yurimoto, H., additional, Noguchi, T., additional, Okazaki, R., additional, Yabuta, H., additional, Naraoka, H., additional, Sakamoto, K., additional, Tachibana, S., additional, Yada, T., additional, Nishimura, M., additional, Nakato, A., additional, Miyazaki, A., additional, Yogata, K., additional, Abe, M., additional, Okada, T., additional, Usui, T., additional, Yoshikawa, M., additional, Saiki, T., additional, Tanaka, S., additional, Terui, F., additional, Nakazawa, S., additional, Watanabe, S.-I., additional, and Tsuda, Y., additional
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- 2023
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83. High bone turnover elevates the risk of denosumab-induced hypocalcemia in women with postmenopausal osteoporosis
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Ishikawa K, Nagai T, Sakamoto K, Ohara K, Eguro T, Ito H, Toyoshima Y, Kokaze A, Toyone T, and Inagaki K
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denosumab ,hypocalcemia ,bone turnover ,bone turnover marker ,Therapeutics. Pharmacology ,RM1-950 - Abstract
Koji Ishikawa,1 Takashi Nagai,1 Keizo Sakamoto,1 Kenji Ohara,2 Takeshi Eguro,1,2 Hiroshi Ito,1 Yoichi Toyoshima,1 Akatsuki Kokaze,3 Tomoaki Toyone,1 Katsunori Inagaki1 1Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Showa University School of Medicine, Tokyo, 2Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Yamanashi Red Cross Hospital, Yamanashi, 3Department of Public Health, Showa University School of Medicine, Tokyo, Japan Abstract: Hypocalcemia is the most common major adverse event in patients with osteoporosis receiving the bone resorption inhibitor denosumab; however, limited information is available regarding risk factors of hypocalcemia. Therefore, this study aimed to identify the risk factors of hypocalcemia induced by denosumab treatment for osteoporosis. We retrospectively reviewed the records of patients who had received initial denosumab supplemented with activated vitamin D for osteoporosis. Serum levels of the following bone turnover markers (BTMs) were measured at baseline: bone-specific alkaline phosphatase (BAP), total N-terminal propeptide of type 1 procollagen (P1NP), tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase 5b (TRACP-5b), and urinary cross-linked N-telopeptide of type 1 collagen (NTX). Of the 85 denosumab-treated patients with osteoporosis studied, 22 (25.9%) developed hypocalcemia. Baseline serum total P1NP, TRACP-5b, and urinary NTX were significantly higher in patients with hypocalcemia than in those with normocalcemia following denosumab administration (all P76.5 µg/L, TRACP-5b >474 mU/dL, or urinary NTX >49.5 nmol bone collagen equivalent/mmol creatinine had a higher risk of hypocalcemia (P
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- 2016
84. The CANDLES experiment for the study of Ca-48 double beta decay
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Iida, T., Kishimoto, T., Nomachi, M., Ajimura, S., Umehara, S., Nakajima, K., Ichimura, K., Yoshida, S., Suzuki, K., Kakubata, H., Wang, W., Chan, W.M., Trang, V.T.T., Doihara, M., Ishikawa, T., Tanaka, D., Tanaka, M., Maeda, T., Ohata, T., Tetsuno, K., Tamagawa, Y., Ogawa, I., Tomita, S., Fujita, G., Kawamura, A., Harada, T., Inukai, Y., Sakamoto, K., Yoshizawa, M., Fushimi, K., Hazama, R., Nakatani, N., Osumi, H., and Okada, K.
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- 2016
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85. Assessment of platelet‐derived thrombogenicity with the total thrombus‐formation analysis system in coronary artery disease patients receiving antiplatelet therapy
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Arima, Y., Kaikita, K., Ishii, M., Ito, M., Sueta, D., Oimatsu, Y., Sakamoto, K., Tsujita, K., Kojima, S., Nakagawa, K., Hokimoto, S., and Ogawa, H.
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- 2016
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86. Ziritaxestat, a novel autotaxin inhibitor, and lung function in idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis
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Maher, TM, Ford, P, Brown, KK, Costabel, U, Cottin, V, Danoff, SK, Groenveld, I, Helmer, E, Jenkins, RG, Milner, J, Molenberghs, G, Penninckx, B, Randall, MJ, Van Den Blink, B, Fieuw, A, Vandenrijn, C, Rocak, S, Seghers, I, Shao, L, Taneja, A, Jentsch, G, Watkins, TR, Wuyts, WA, Kreuter, M, Verbruggen, N, Prasad, N, Wijsenbeek, MS, Chambers, D, Chia, M, Corte, T, Glaspole, I, Goh, N, Holmes, M, Malouf, M, Thien, F, Veitch, E, Bondue, B, Dahlqvist, C, Froidure, A, Slabbynck, H, Wuyts, W, Cartagena Salinas, C, Feijoó Seoane, R, Martínez, V, Maturana, R, Pavie Gallegos, J, Rosenblut, A, Silva, R, Undurraga Pereira, A, Doubkova, M, Pauk, N, Plackova, M, Sterclova, M, Bendstrup, E, Shaker, SB, Titlestad, I, Budweiser, S, Grohé, C, Koschel, D, Prasse, A, Weber, M, Wirtz, H, Antoniou, K, Daniil, Z, Gaga, M, Papakosta, D, Izumi, S, Okamoto, M, Guerreros Benavides, A, Iberico Barrera, C, Peña Villalobos, AM, Campo Ezquibela, A, Cifrian Martinez, JM, Fernandez Fabrellas, E, Leiro, V, Molina-Molina, M, Nieto Barbero, A, Sellares Torres, J, Valenzuela, C, Cheng, S-L, Kuo, P-H, Lee, K-Y, Sheu, C-C, Gunen, H, Mogulkoc Bishop, N, Nayci, S, Adamali, H, Bianchi, S, Chaudhuri, N, Gibbons, M, Hart, S, Molyneaux, P, Parfrey, H, Saini, G, Spencer, LG, Wiscombe, S, Antin-Ozerkis, D, Bascom, R, Belperio, J, Britt, E, Fitzgerald, J, Gomez Manjarres, D, Gotfried, M, Gupta, N, Hotchkin, D, Kaye, M, Kreider, M, Kureishy, S, Lacamera, P, Lancaster, L, Lasky, J, Lorch, D, Mannem, H, Morrow, L, Moua, T, Nambiar, A, Raghu, G, Raj, R, Ramaswamy, M, Reddy, R, Russell, T, Scholand, MB, Shea, B, Suliman, S, Swigris, J, Thavarajah, K, Tolle, L, Tomic, R, Warshoff, N, Wesselius, L, Yung, G, Bergna, M, De Salvo, M, Fernandez Acquier, M, Rodriguez, A, Saez Scherbovsky, P, Assayag, D, Dhar, A, Khalil, N, Morisset, J, Provencher, S, Ryerson, C, Shapera, S, Bourdin, A, Crestani, B, Lebargy, F, Reynaud-Gaubert, M, Bonella, FT, Claussen, M, Hammerl, P, Karagiannidis, C, Keller, C, Randerath, W, Stubbe, B, Csánky, E, Medgyasszay, B, Muller, V, Adir, Y, Bar-Shai, A, Berkman, N, Fink, G, Kramer, M, Shitrit, D, Bargagli, E, Gasparini, S, Harari, S, Ravaglia, C, Richeldi, L, Vancheri, C, Ebina, M, Fujita, M, Ichikado, K, Inoue, Y, Ishikawa, N, Kato, M, Kawamura, T, Kondoh, Y, Nishioka, Y, Ogura, T, Owan, I, Saito, T, Sakamoto, N, Sakamoto, K, Shirai, M, Suda, T, Tomii, K, Chung, MP, Jeong, SH, Park, CS, Park, JS, Song, JW, Uh, S-T, Chavarria Martinez, U, Montano Gonzalez, E, Ramirez, A, Selman Lama, ME, Bresser, P, Kramer, H, Mostard, R, Nossent, E, Veltkamp, M, Wijsenbeek, M, Beckert, L, Chang, CL, Veale, A, Wilsher, M, Bednarek, M, Gasior, G, Jasieniak-Pinis, G, Jassem, E, Mroz, R, Piotrowski, W, Abdullah, I, Ambaram, A, Irusen, E, Van der Linden, M, Van Zyl-Smit, R, Williams, P, Allen, J, Averill, F, Belloli, E, Brown, A, Case, A, Chaudhary, S, Criner, G, DeBoer, K, Dilling, D, Dorf, J, Enelow, R, Ettinger, N, Feldman, J, Gibson, K, Golden, J, Hamblin, M, Hunninghake, G, Karunakara, R, Kim, H, Luckhardt, T, Menon, P, Morrison, L, Oldham, J, Patel, N, Schmidt, S, Strek, M, Summer, R, Sussman, R, Tita, J, Veeraraghavan, S, Whelan, T, and Zibrak, J
- Abstract
Importance There is a major need for effective, well-tolerated treatments for idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF). Objective To assess the efficacy and safety of the autotaxin inhibitor ziritaxestat in patients with IPF. Design, Setting, and Participants The 2 identically designed, phase 3, randomized clinical trials, ISABELA 1 and ISABELA 2, were conducted in Africa, Asia-Pacific region, Europe, Latin America, the Middle East, and North America (26 countries). A total of 1306 patients with IPF were randomized (525 patients at 106 sites in ISABELA 1 and 781 patients at 121 sites in ISABELA 2). Enrollment began in November 2018 in both trials and follow-up was completed early due to study termination on April 12, 2021, for ISABELA 1 and on March 30, 2021, for ISABELA 2. Interventions Patients were randomized 1:1:1 to receive 600 mg of oral ziritaxestat, 200 mg of ziritaxestat, or placebo once daily in addition to local standard of care (pirfenidone, nintedanib, or neither) for at least 52 weeks. Main Outcomes and Measures The primary outcome was the annual rate of decline for forced vital capacity (FVC) at week 52. The key secondary outcomes were disease progression, time to first respiratory-related hospitalization, and change from baseline in St George’s Respiratory Questionnaire total score (range, 0 to 100; higher scores indicate poorer health-related quality of life). Results At the time of study termination, 525 patients were randomized in ISABELA 1 and 781 patients in ISABELA 2 (mean age: 70.0 [SD, 7.2] years in ISABELA 1 and 69.8 [SD, 7.1] years in ISABELA 2; male: 82.4% and 81.2%, respectively). The trials were terminated early after an independent data and safety monitoring committee concluded that the benefit to risk profile of ziritaxestat no longer supported their continuation. Ziritaxestat did not improve the annual rate of FVC decline vs placebo in either study. In ISABELA 1, the least-squares mean annual rate of FVC decline was –124.6 mL (95% CI, −178.0 to −71.2 mL) with 600 mg of ziritaxestat vs –147.3 mL (95% CI, −199.8 to −94.7 mL) with placebo (between-group difference, 22.7 mL [95% CI, −52.3 to 97.6 mL]), and –173.9 mL (95% CI, −225.7 to −122.2 mL) with 200 mg of ziritaxestat (between-group difference vs placebo, −26.7 mL [95% CI, −100.5 to 47.1 mL]). In ISABELA 2, the least-squares mean annual rate of FVC decline was –173.8 mL (95% CI, −209.2 to −138.4 mL) with 600 mg of ziritaxestat vs –176.6 mL (95% CI, −211.4 to −141.8 mL) with placebo (between-group difference, 2.8 mL [95% CI, −46.9 to 52.4 mL]) and –174.9 mL (95% CI, −209.5 to −140.2 mL) with 200 mg of ziritaxestat (between-group difference vs placebo, 1.7 mL [95% CI, −47.4 to 50.8 mL]). There was no benefit with ziritaxestat vs placebo for the key secondary outcomes. In ISABELA 1, all-cause mortality was 8.0% with 600 mg of ziritaxestat, 4.6% with 200 mg of ziritaxestat, and 6.3% with placebo; in ISABELA 2, it was 9.3% with 600 mg of ziritaxestat, 8.5% with 200 mg of ziritaxestat, and 4.7% with placebo. Conclusions and Relevance Ziritaxestat did not improve clinical outcomes compared with placebo in patients with IPF receiving standard of care treatment with pirfenidone or nintedanib or in those not receiving standard of care treatment. Trial Registration ClinicalTrials.gov Identifiers: NCT03711162 and NCT03733444
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- 2023
87. <Advanced Energy Generation Division> Advanced Atomic Energy Research Section
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Konishi, S., Yagi, J., Mukai, K., Sakamoto, K., and Bakr, M.
- Abstract
3-1. Research Activities in 2021
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- 2022
88. Longitudinal Vortex Wind Turbine: Effect of the Blade Lengths
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Hemsuwan, W., primary, Sakamoto, K., additional, and Takahashi, T., additional
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- 2018
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89. Parity-Nonconserving Interaction-Induced Light Shifts in the $$ \mathbf{{7S}}_{\mathbf{1/2}} $$ – $$ \mathbf{6 D}_{\mathbf{3/2}} $$ Transition of the Ultracold $$ ^{\mathbf{210}}{\mathbf{Fr}} $$ Atoms to Probe New Physics Beyond the Standard Model
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Aoki, T., primary, Torii, Y., additional, Sahoo, B. K., additional, Das, B. P., additional, Harada, K., additional, Hayamizu, T., additional, Sakamoto, K., additional, Kawamura, H., additional, Inoue, T., additional, Uchiyama, A., additional, Ito, S., additional, Yoshioka, R., additional, Tanaka, K. S., additional, Itoh, M., additional, Hatakeyama, A., additional, and Sakemi, Y., additional
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- 2018
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90. Formation and evolution of carbonaceous asteroid Ryugu: Direct evidence from returned samples
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Nakamura, T., primary, Matsumoto, M., additional, Amano, K., additional, Enokido, Y., additional, Zolensky, M. E., additional, Mikouchi, T., additional, Genda, H., additional, Tanaka, S., additional, Zolotov, M. Y., additional, Kurosawa, K., additional, Wakita, S., additional, Hyodo, R., additional, Nagano, H., additional, Nakashima, D., additional, Takahashi, Y., additional, Fujioka, Y., additional, Kikuiri, M., additional, Kagawa, E., additional, Matsuoka, M., additional, Brearley, A. J., additional, Tsuchiyama, A., additional, Uesugi, M., additional, Matsuno, J., additional, Kimura, Y., additional, Sato, M., additional, Milliken, R. E., additional, Tatsumi, E., additional, Sugita, S., additional, Hiroi, T., additional, Kitazato, K., additional, Brownlee, D., additional, Joswiak, D. J., additional, Takahashi, M., additional, Ninomiya, K., additional, Takahashi, T., additional, Osawa, T., additional, Terada, K., additional, Brenker, F. E., additional, Tkalcec, B. J., additional, Vincze, L., additional, Brunetto, R., additional, Aléon-Toppani, A., additional, Chan, Q. H. S., additional, Roskosz, M., additional, Viennet, J.-C., additional, Beck, P., additional, Alp, E. E., additional, Michikami, T., additional, Nagaashi, Y., additional, Tsuji, T., additional, Ino, Y., additional, Martinez, J., additional, Han, J., additional, Dolocan, A., additional, Bodnar, R. J., additional, Tanaka, M., additional, Yoshida, H., additional, Sugiyama, K., additional, King, A. J., additional, Fukushi, K., additional, Suga, H., additional, Yamashita, S., additional, Kawai, T., additional, Inoue, K., additional, Nakato, A., additional, Noguchi, T., additional, Vilas, F., additional, Hendrix, A. R., additional, Jaramillo-Correa, C., additional, Domingue, D. L., additional, Dominguez, G., additional, Gainsforth, Z., additional, Engrand, C., additional, Duprat, J., additional, Russell, S. S., additional, Bonato, E., additional, Ma, C., additional, Kawamoto, T., additional, Wada, T., additional, Watanabe, S., additional, Endo, R., additional, Enju, S., additional, Riu, L., additional, Rubino, S., additional, Tack, P., additional, Takeshita, S., additional, Takeichi, Y., additional, Takeuchi, A., additional, Takigawa, A., additional, Takir, D., additional, Tanigaki, T., additional, Taniguchi, A., additional, Tsukamoto, K., additional, Yagi, T., additional, Yamada, S., additional, Yamamoto, K., additional, Yamashita, Y., additional, Yasutake, M., additional, Uesugi, K., additional, Umegaki, I., additional, Chiu, I., additional, Ishizaki, T., additional, Okumura, S., additional, Palomba, E., additional, Pilorget, C., additional, Potin, S. M., additional, Alasli, A., additional, Anada, S., additional, Araki, Y., additional, Sakatani, N., additional, Schultz, C., additional, Sekizawa, O., additional, Sitzman, S. D., additional, Sugiura, K., additional, Sun, M., additional, Dartois, E., additional, De Pauw, E., additional, Dionnet, Z., additional, Djouadi, Z., additional, Falkenberg, G., additional, Fujita, R., additional, Fukuma, T., additional, Gearba, I. R., additional, Hagiya, K., additional, Hu, M. Y., additional, Kato, T., additional, Kawamura, T., additional, Kimura, M., additional, Kubo, M. K., additional, Langenhorst, F., additional, Lantz, C., additional, Lavina, B., additional, Lindner, M., additional, Zhao, J., additional, Vekemans, B., additional, Baklouti, D., additional, Bazi, B., additional, Borondics, F., additional, Nagasawa, S., additional, Nishiyama, G., additional, Nitta, K., additional, Mathurin, J., additional, Matsumoto, T., additional, Mitsukawa, I., additional, Miura, H., additional, Miyake, A., additional, Miyake, Y., additional, Yurimoto, H., additional, Okazaki, R., additional, Yabuta, H., additional, Naraoka, H., additional, Sakamoto, K., additional, Tachibana, S., additional, Connolly, H. C., additional, Lauretta, D. S., additional, Yoshitake, M., additional, Yoshikawa, M., additional, Yoshikawa, K., additional, Yoshihara, K., additional, Yokota, Y., additional, Yogata, K., additional, Yano, H., additional, Yamamoto, Y., additional, Yamamoto, D., additional, Yamada, M., additional, Yamada, T., additional, Yada, T., additional, Wada, K., additional, Usui, T., additional, Tsukizaki, R., additional, Terui, F., additional, Takeuchi, H., additional, Takei, Y., additional, Iwamae, A., additional, Soejima, H., additional, Shirai, K., additional, Shimaki, Y., additional, Senshu, H., additional, Sawada, H., additional, Saiki, T., additional, Ozaki, M., additional, Ono, G., additional, Okada, T., additional, Ogawa, N., additional, Ogawa, K., additional, Noguchi, R., additional, Noda, H., additional, Nishimura, M., additional, Namiki, N., additional, Nakazawa, S., additional, Morota, T., additional, Miyazaki, A., additional, Miura, A., additional, Mimasu, Y., additional, Matsumoto, K., additional, Kumagai, K., additional, Kouyama, T., additional, Kikuchi, S., additional, Kawahara, K., additional, Kameda, S., additional, Iwata, T., additional, Ishihara, Y., additional, Ishiguro, M., additional, Ikeda, H., additional, Hosoda, S., additional, Honda, R., additional, Honda, C., additional, Hitomi, Y., additional, Hirata, N., additional, Hayashi, T., additional, Hayakawa, M., additional, Hatakeda, K., additional, Furuya, S., additional, Fukai, R., additional, Fujii, A., additional, Cho, Y., additional, Arakawa, M., additional, Abe, M., additional, and Tsuda, Y., additional
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- 2023
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91. Development of a proto-flight model of LEO satellite MIMO component for 920MHz band IoT sensing platform
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Itokawa, K., primary, Goto, D., additional, Kojima, Y., additional, Sakamoto, K., additional, Fujino, Y., additional, Yamashita, F., additional, Kato, C., additional, Nakadai, M., additional, Yajima, M., additional, and Iwata, T., additional
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- 2023
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92. Search for Neutrino-less Double Beta Decay with CANDLES
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Umehara, S., Kishimoto, T., Nomachi, M., Ajimura, S., Iida, T., Nakajima, K., Ichimura, K., Matsuoka, K., Saka, M., Ishikawa, T., Tanaka, D., Tanaka, M., Maeda, T., Yoshida, S., Suzuki, K., Ito, G., Kakubata, H., Wang, W., Trang, V.T.T., Chan, W.M., Takemoto, J., Doihara, M., Ohata, T., Tetsuno, K., Tamagawa, Y., Ogawa, I., Ueno, T., Maeda, S., Yamamoto, A., Tomita, S., Fujita, G., Kawamura, A., Harada, T., Inukai, Y., Sakamoto, K., Yoshizawa, M., Fushimi, K., Hazama, R., Nakatani, N., Ohsumi, H., and Okada, K.
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- 2015
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93. Development of a pulsed neutron three-dimensional imaging system using a highly sensitive image-intensifier at J-PARC
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Segawa, M., Ooi, M., Kai, T., Shinohara, T., Kureta, M., Sakamoto, K., and Imaki, T.
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- 2015
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94. 58: SARS-COV-2 ANTIBODY CHARACTERISTICS OF SALIVA FROM VACCINATED INDIVIDUALS
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Ota, K., primary, Mitsumoto-Kaseida, F., additional, Sakamoto, K., additional, Kosai, K., additional, Hasegawa, H., additional, Yamamoto, K., additional, Izumikawa, K., additional, Mukae, H., additional, Kohno, S., additional, and Yanagihara, K., additional
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- 2022
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95. Parity-nonconserving interaction-induced light shifts in the 210 Fr atoms to probe new physics beyond the standard model
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Aoki, T., Torii, Y., Sahoo, B. K., Das, B. P., Harada, K., Hayamizu, T., Sakamoto, K., Kawamura, H., Inoue, T., Uchiyama, A., Ito, S., Yoshioka, R., Tanaka, K. S., Itoh, M., Hatakeyama, A., and Sakemi, Y.
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- 2017
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96. Small molecule inhibition of cAMP response element binding protein in human acute myeloid leukemia cells
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Mitton, B, Chae, H -D, Hsu, K, Dutta, R, Aldana-Masangkay, G, Ferrari, R, Davis, K, Tiu, B C, Kaul, A, Lacayo, N, Dahl, G, Xie, F, Li, B X, Breese, M R, Landaw, E M, Nolan, G, Pellegrini, M, Romanov, S, Xiao, X, and Sakamoto, K M
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- 2016
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97. Load History Dependency of Plastic Collapse Behavior of Cracked Piping
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Suzuki, R., Matsubara, M., Suzuki, M., Shiraishi, T., Yanagihara, S., Sakamoto, K., Izawa, S., Ventura, Carlos E., editor, Crone, Wendy C., editor, and Furlong, Cosme, editor
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- 2013
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98. Mitsubishi Latest Coal Fired USC Boiler Technology (CFE Pacifico 700 MW)
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Hashimoto, T., Sakamoto, K., Fujitab, M., Qi, Haiying, editor, and Zhao, Bo, editor
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- 2013
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99. A single-center, prospective, randomized, open-label, clinical trial of ceramide 2-containing hydrocolloid dressings versus polyurethane film dressings for pressure ulcer prevention in high-risk surgical patients
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Kohta M, Sakamoto K, Kawachi Y, and Oh-i T
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Pressure ulcer prevention ,operating room ,wound dressing ,friction ,skin protection ,Medical emergencies. Critical care. Intensive care. First aid ,RC86-88.9 - Abstract
Masushi Kohta,1 Kazumi Sakamoto,2 Yasuhiro Kawachi,3 Tsunao Oh-i4 1Medical Engineering Laboratory, ALCARE Co, Ltd, Tokyo, 2Department of Nursing, 3Department of Dermatology, Tokyo Medical University Ibaraki Medical Center, Ibaraki, 4Department of Dermatology, Tokyo Medical University Hachioji Medical Center, Tokyo, Japan Purpose: There have been previous clinical studies regarding the impact of dressings on the prevention of pressure ulcer development. However, it remains unclear whether one type of dressing is better than any other type for preventing ulcer development during surgery. Therefore, we compared the effects of ceramide 2-containing hydrocolloid dressing with film dressings in high-risk patients with regard to reducing the incidence of pressure ulcer development during surgery. Patients and methods: A prospective, randomized, open-label, clinical trial was conducted involving patients who were at a high risk of developing pressure ulcers at a Japanese hospital. The intervention group received ceramide 2-containing hydrocolloid dressings (n=66), and the control group received film dressings (n=64). The primary end point was the incidence rate of pressure ulcer development in both groups; skin damage, such as blanchable erythema, skin discoloration, contact dermatitis, and stripped skin, was recorded as the secondary end point. The relative risk (RR) and 95% confidence interval (CI) were assessed to compare the probability ratios of pressure ulcer development between the groups. Results: There were significantly fewer patients who developed pressure ulcers in the intervention group than in the control group (RR, 0.37; 95% CI, 0.05–0.99; P=0.04). In the post hoc subgroup analysis, the superiority of the intervention group was more marked when patients had a lower body mass index (P=0.02), lower albumin values (P=0.07), and operation time of 3 hours or more and less than 6 hours (P=0.03). There was no evidence of any statistically significant differences in the types of skin damage reported. Conclusion: Application of ceramide 2-containing hydrocolloid dressing reduced the risk of pressure ulcer development in patients who were at a high risk during surgery compared with film dressings. Keywords: operating room, wound dressing, friction, skin protection, shear
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- 2015
100. Polyurethane film dressings and ceramide 2-containing hydrocolloid dressing reduce the risk of pressure ulcer development in high-risk patients undergoing surgery: a matched case-control study
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Kohta M, Sakamoto K, and Oh-i T
- Subjects
Pressure ulcer prevention ,operating room ,wound dressing ,friction ,Medical emergencies. Critical care. Intensive care. First aid ,RC86-88.9 - Abstract
Masushi Kohta,1 Kazumi Sakamoto,2 Tsunao Oh-i31Medical Engineering Laboratory, ALCARE Co, Ltd, Sumida-ku, Tokyo, 2Department of Nursing, 3Department of Dermatology, Tokyo Medical University Ibaraki Medical Center, Ami, Ibaraki, JapanBackground: Numerous clinical challenges regarding adhesive dressings have shown that using an adhesive dressing could minimize or prevent superficial skin loss in patients at risk of developing pressure ulcers. However, evidence that polyurethane film dressings and ceramide 2-containing hydrocolloid dressing can reduce the risk of pressure ulcer development in high-risk patients undergoing surgery is limited. Therefore, we assessed the effects of application of these dressings for reducing the risk of pressure ulcer development in these patients and identified other risk factors.Methods: A matched case-control study was conducted involving 254 patients at high risk for pressure ulcer development at one acute care hospital in Japan. No patients in this study had a pressure ulcer at the start of the study. Thirty-one patients developed a pressure ulcer during surgery, and these patients were defined as cases. Controls were randomly matched for sex and age (±4 years), from which 62 patients were selected. Medical records were obtained for preoperative factors, including age, sex, body mass index, diabetes mellitus, albumin, total protein, C-reactive protein, white cell count, red cell count, and hemoglobin, and for intraoperative factors, including dressing application, operation time, body position, and surgery type. The odds ratio (OR) and 95% confidence interval (CI) were determined to identify risk factors for pressure ulcer development in patients undergoing surgery.Results: By multiple logistic regression analysis, there was a significantly reduced risk of pressure ulcer development for patients who had dressing applications as compared with those without dressing applications (OR 0.063; 95% CI 0.012–0.343; P=0.001). Prone position (OR 8.791; 95% CI 1.630–47.400; P=0.01), prolonged operation time (OR 1.684; 95% CI 1.189–2.385, P=0.003), and reduced body mass index (OR 0.774; 95% CI 0.584–0.948; P=0.02) were also significant predictive risk factors for development of a pressure ulcer.Conclusion: Application of film dressing and ceramide 2-containing hydrocolloid dressing reduced the risk of pressure ulcer development in high-risk patients undergoing surgery.Keywords: pressure ulcer prevention, operating room, wound dressing, friction
- Published
- 2015
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