2,268 results on '"K, Iijima"'
Search Results
2. An interpenetrating polymer network hydrogel with biodegradability through controlling self-assembling peptide behavior with hydrolyzable cross-linking networks
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S. Ishikawa, K. Iijima, D. Matsukuma, M. Iijima, S. Osawa, and H. Otsuka
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Chitosan ,Poly(dl-lactide) ,RADA16 peptide ,Chondrocytes ,One-pot synthesis ,In situ gelation ,Materials of engineering and construction. Mechanics of materials ,TA401-492 - Abstract
Hydrogels are used as cell culture scaffolds for tissue engineering and regeneration. These hydrogel designs are inevitably complicated because favorable scaffolds should have stiffness to sustain alignment of the cells and mimic the structure of the extracellular matrix (ECM) in the targeted tissue. However, the incorporation of biodegradability, which is an essential property for practical applications, into complex hydrogels is not easily attained. Herein, we established a new concept for constructing biodegradable hydrogels with an interpenetrating polymer network (IPN) structure, composed of a covalent cross-linked network and peptide self-assembling networks, to solve this dilemma of selecting between the complicated structure and facile biodegradability. Assuming that the diffusion of the self-assembled peptides out of the IPN hydrogel would be facilitated by the disappearance of the covalent cross-linked networks, we designed an IPN hydrogel with chitosan cross-linked with poly(ethylene glycol)-block-poly(dl-lactide)-block-poly(ethylene glycol) as the covalent cross-linked networks with hydrolysis properties and RADA16 peptides as the self-assembling networks. This IPN hydrogel showed overall degradation, based on hydrolysis of the poly(dl-lactide) domain, and was more effective as a scaffold for culturing chondrocytes to form articular cartilage tissues compared with the IPN hydrogel without the poly(dl-lactide) domain, likely owing to the promotion of ECM deposition. These results verified our strategy of constructing a hydrogel with a complicated, but biodegradable, structure.
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- 2021
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3. Real-time wave prediction for floating offshore wind turbine based on the Kalman filter
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R. Isnaini, K. Toichi, T. Akira, and K. Iijima
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- 2022
4. 1351 Construction of a three-dimensional sensory stimulus evaluation model focusing on the cellular signal pathway though activation of TRPV1
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M. Takaishi, M. Kono, H. Ikeda, K. Iijima, and M. Tominaga
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Cell Biology ,Dermatology ,Molecular Biology ,Biochemistry - Published
- 2023
5. Testing mosses exposed in bags as biointerceptors of airborne radiocaesium after the Fukushima Dai-ichi Nuclear Power Station accident
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A, Di Palma, P, Adamo, T, Dohi, K, Fujiwara, H, Hagiwara, A, Kitamura, A, Sakoda, K, Sato, K, Iijima, Di Palma, A, Adamo, P, Dohi, T, Fujiwara, K, Hagiwara, H, Kitamura, A, Sakoda, A, Sato, K, and Iijima, K
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Environmental Engineering ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Hypnum spp ,Bryophyta ,General Medicine ,General Chemistry ,Sphagnum spp ,Pollution ,Bryopsida ,(134)C ,Soil ,Japan ,(137)C ,Cesium Radioisotopes ,Radiation Monitoring ,Biomonitoring ,Fukushima Nuclear Accident ,Environmental Chemistry ,Airborne particulate matter - Abstract
Eight years after the Fukushima nuclear accident, mosses exposed in bags were used to investigate their ability to accumulate radiocaesium and therefore to act as biointerceptors of 134Cs and 137Cs in the evacuated area of the Fukushima territory. Bags were filled with 3 widely studied moss species (Sphagnum palustre, Hypnum cupressi-forme, and Hypnum plumaeforme) and exposed for 3, 6 or 9 weeks at 5 former residential sites within the Fukushima area and, for comparison, at three background sites located 700 km away. The radiocaesium activity concentrations found in moss bags were evaluated as function of exposure time, site conditions and moss species. In the Fukushima area, the moss bags accumulated 137Cs at all exposure sites and in all exposure periods, with S. palustre having the highest 137Cs accumulation ability. The 137Cs activity concentrations (from 28 to 4700 Bq kg- 1) measured in moss bags increased with the exposure time and were consistent with the decontamination status of each exposure site, highlighting the big potential of moss bags to discriminate among exposure sites. Time dependency of 137Cs activity concentrations measured in mosses allowed the calculation of location-specific and species-specific factors, which can be used to predict radiocaesium accumulation trends in future bio-monitoring surveys performed in the same area with the same experimental design. Autoradiography and electron microscopy analyses of the moss surfaces revealed a prevalence of soil-derived particulate form of radiocaesium, suggesting the use of moss bags as warning sensors of resuspended particles potentially harmful for local residents.
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- 2022
6. Poor Health Behaviors among Housebound Japanese Community-Dwelling Older Adults Due to Prolonged Self-Restraint during the First COVID-19 Pandemic: A Cross-Sectional Survey
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T. Tanaka, B.-K. Son, and K. Iijima
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General Medicine - Published
- 2022
7. P533 Relation between TL1A expression in intestinal mucosa, and endoscopic severity and clinical course in ulcerative colitis
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Y Shimodaira, T Yoshida, K Watanabe, S Takahashi, S Fukuda, S Koizumi, T Matsuhashi, and K Iijima
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Gastroenterology ,General Medicine - Abstract
Background TL1A is a TNF super family member cytokine encoded by TNFSF15 and reported to be a disease susceptibility gene for IBD. The relationship between TL1A expression and IBD pathophysiology, clinical course, endoscopic findings was not sufficiently clear. The aim of this study was to clarify the correlation between TL1A expression in the intestinal mucosa of UC and endoscopic severity, clinical severity, and clinical course. Methods The subjects were patients with UC who were visiting our hospital. Mucosal samples were biopsied from rectum with lower gastrointestinal endoscopy, and TL1A gene expression was examined by RT-PCR. We analyzed the relationship between patients’ background, clinical symptoms, blood test findings, and mucosal activity and TL1A expression. Results A total of 77 specimens obtained with individual colonoscopy from 61 cases were included. Median age was 43, 36 cases were males, duration of disease was 2 years, the number of pancolitis was 54, median partial mayo score (pMayo) was 3, and the level of CRP was 1.5 mg/L. The number with Mayo endoscopic subscore (MES) of 0, 1, 2, and 3 were 14, 27, 24, and 12, respectively, and the mean TL1A expression was 1.76-, 1.09-, and 1.17-times higher in MES 1, 2, and 3 than in MES 0, respectively. TL1A expression was significantly higher in MES 1 than in MES 0 and MES 2. TL1A expression was significantly lower in the active group (pMayo 4 or higher) compared to the clinically low disease activity group (pMayo 3 or lower). TL1A expression was significantly lower with CRP ≥0.03 compared to CRP Conclusion Relatively low activity in UC revealed higher mucosal expression of TL1A. TL1A is known to be secreted from various cell types such as macrophages and lymphocytes. It was suggested that the source of cell types and the amount of expression would alter according to the degree of inflammation.
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- 2023
8. Experimental and numerical investigation of high frequency vibrations in segmented ship model using one-way coupling of CFD and FEM
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K. Iijima, M. Fujikubo, S.K. Pal, A. Tatsumi, and T. Takami
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Coupling ,Physics ,business.industry ,Mechanics ,Computational fluid dynamics ,High frequency vibration ,business ,Finite element method - Published
- 2021
9. Computer-Assisted Scientific-Computation/Simulation-Software-Development System. Including a Visualization System.
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Shigeo Kawata, K. Iijima, C. Boonmee, and Yasuhiko Manabe
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- 1993
10. Comparison of low-dose-rate brachytherapy versus radical prostatectomy in patients with intermediate-risk prostate cancer: A propensity-matched multi-institutional study
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H. Tsumura, N. Tanaka, T. Oguchi, T. Owari, Y. Nakai, I. Asakawa, K. Iijima, H. Kato, I. Hashida, K. Tabata, T. Satoh, and H. Ishiyama
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Urology - Published
- 2022
11. Radiologic and Pathologic Features of the Transmantle Sign in Focal Cortical Dysplasia: The T1 Signal Is Useful for Differentiating Subtypes
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Naoki Ikegaya, Yoshihiko Saito, Y. Oitani, Fumio Suzuki, K. Iijima, Yutaro Takayama, Ayako Shioya, Masayuki Sasaki, Yuiko Kimura, Masaki Iwasaki, Yukio Kimura, Yoko Shigemoto, Emiko Morimoto, and Noriko Sato
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Adult ,Male ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Neuroimaging ,Fluid-attenuated inversion recovery ,Pediatrics ,030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted ,medicine ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Child ,Retrospective Studies ,Epilepsy ,High signal intensity ,business.industry ,Cortical dysplasia ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Mr imaging ,Type iib ,Gliosis ,Child, Preschool ,Malformations of Cortical Development, Group I ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,medicine.symptom ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Preoperative imaging - Abstract
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: The transmantle sign is a characteristic MR imaging finding often seen in focal cortical dysplasia type IIb. The transmantle sign is typically hyperintense on T2WI and FLAIR and hypointense on T1WI. However, in some cases, it shows T1 high signal. We evaluated the imaging and pathologic findings to identify the causes of the T1 high signal in the transmantle sign. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We retrospectively reviewed the preoperative imaging data of 141 consecutive patients with histologically proved focal cortical dysplasia. We selected 25 patients with focal cortical dysplasia with the transmantle sign and divided them into groups based on the pathologic focal cortical dysplasia subtype and T1 signal of the transmantle sign. We evaluated the clinical, radiologic, and pathologic findings, including the number of balloon cells and dysmorphic neurons and the severity of gliosis or calcifications and compared them among the groups. RESULTS: Nine of the 25 patients had a T1-high-signal transmantle sign; the other 16 patients did not. All 9 patients with a T1-high-signal transmantle sign were diagnosed as type IIb (group A). Of the 16 patients with no T1-high-signal transmantle sign, 13 were diagnosed as having type IIb (group B), and the other 3 patients, as type IIa (group C). The number of balloon cells was significantly higher in group A than in the other groups, but there were no differences regarding dysmorphic neurons, the severity of gliosis, or calcifications. CONCLUSIONS: Approximately 6% (9/141) of this patient series had a T1-high-signal transmantle sign, and all were type IIb. The signal may reflect a rich density of balloon cells. This finding could support the differentiation of subtypes, especially type IIb.
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- 2019
12. Neutron and photon dose rate distributions in linac rooms
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Akihiro Toyoda, K. Iijima, Hajime Nakamura, Koji Oishi, Kazuaki Kosako, Kazuyoshi Masumoto, and Takashi Nakamura
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Nuclear physics ,Physics ,Photon ,Neutron ,General Medicine ,Dose rate ,Linear particle accelerator - Published
- 2019
13. OP0008 A NOVEL SITE-SPECIFIC PEGYLATED IL-2 WITH POTENT AND TREG-SELECTIVE ACTIVITY IN VIVO
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M. Ikeda, S. Yamaguchi, M. Murakami, S. Takaoka, Y. Sakaguchi, S. Yasui, K. Iijima, K. Nanya, H. Onodera, and T. Amano
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Rheumatology ,Immunology ,Immunology and Allergy ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology - Abstract
BackgroundDecreased regulatory T cells (Tregs) and Treg dysfunction are hallmarks of a various autoimmune and inflammatory diseases. While low-dose IL-2 therapy induces Treg expansion in vivo and has clinical benefits in some diseases (e.g., SLE and chronic graft-versus-host disease [GvHD]), there are many concerns about adverse events due to low Treg-selectivity. Furthermore, frequent dosing is needed due to the short half-life.ObjectivesWe discovered a novel site-specific PEGylated IL-2 variant, KKC80, with high Treg selectivity and a long half-life in vivo, which overcomes the issues of low-dose IL-2 therapy.MethodsBased on the co-crystal structure of wild-type IL-2 and its heterotrimeric receptor (PBD ID: 2ERJ), amino acid residues that were to be PEGylation sites were substituted with oAzZLys, an azide-containing lysine derivative. The PEG molecule was site-specifically attached to oAzZLys-incorporated IL-2 by copper-free click chemistry. The binding property to the IL-2 receptors were measured by surface plasmon resonance (SPR). In vitro, Treg selectivity was evaluated by the IL-2-dependent proliferation activity of Tregs and NK cells from human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs). In vivo pharmacological activity after the single subcutaneous administration in cynomolgus monkeys was measured by changes in Treg count and Treg activation status in peripheral blood by flow cytometry. Pharmacokinetic parameters were calculated according to serum PEGylated IL-2 concentration. Efficacy in mouse xenogeneic GvHD model using human PBMC-transplanted NOG mice and in monkey DTH model were evaluated.ResultsA novel PEGylated IL-2, KKC80 (human IL-2 desA1/C125S /I129oAzZLys_W-shaped 80 kDa PEG) was discovered by optimizing the PEGylation site and PEG structure based on Treg selectivity and PK. SPR analysis showed that the binding affinity of KKC80 to CD25 was moderately decreased from wild-type IL-2, while binding affinity of KKC80 to IL-2Rβγ was remarkably decreased due to a significant change of the association rate constant. In vitro, wild-type IL-2 activated both Tregs and NK cells in the same concentration range, whereas KKC80 selectively activated Tregs. The Treg selectivity of KKC80 was comparable to another IL-2 mutein, Fc.IL-2 V91K. KKC80, but not Fc.IL-2 V91K, retained its biological activity, even in the presence of a large amount of recombinant soluble CD25, which mimicked the endogenous decoy receptor for IL-2. In monkeys, KKC80 selectively increased peripheral blood Tregs in a dose-dependent manner; the average maximum rate of increase of Treg count in animals treated with 0.01, 0.03, 0.1, 0.3 and 1 mg/kg was 1.5, 3.5, 28, 50 and 154-fold, respectively. In contrast to Tregs, the rates of increase of conventional CD4+ T, CD8+ T and NK cells were low. The Treg increase peaked on day 8 or 11 and lasted for over day 29. KKC80 showed a more sustained upregulation of functional Treg markers (e.g., Foxp3 and CD25) in comparison to Fc.IL-2 V91K. The half-life of KKC80 was calculated as 83.5 to 150 h. At high doses, inflammation-related adverse effects, including increased CRP (≥0.3 mg/kg) and deterioration of general conditions (1 mg/kg) were observed. In the mouse xenogenic GvHD model, KKC80 ameliorated GvHD symptoms and suppressed multiple tissue inflammation markers. Decreased soluble CD25 and IFN-γ were also confirmed, suggesting Treg-mediated anti-inflammatory effect by KKC80 administration were exerted in vivo. In the monkey DTH model, KKC80 suppressed skin inflammation and antibody production.ConclusionAmong next-generation IL-2 variants, KKC80 showed a best-in-class biological profile for Treg activation. A drastic and sustained increase of Tregs with high Treg-selectivity and anti-inflammatory effects were observed in vivo. These data suggest that in comparison to current IL-2 therapy, KKC80 provides superior therapeutic index and efficacy in patients with autoimmune and inflammatory diseases.Figure 1.Disclosure of InterestsMasahiro Ikeda Employee of: Kyowa Kirin Co., Ltd., Shinpei Yamaguchi Employee of: Kyowa Kirin Co., Ltd., Masumi Murakami Employee of: Kyowa Kirin Co., Ltd., Shigeki Takaoka Employee of: Kyowa Kirin Co., Ltd., Yasuko Sakaguchi Employee of: Kyowa Kirin Co., Ltd., Shunki Yasui Employee of: Kyowa Kirin Co., Ltd., Kousuke Iijima Employee of: Kyowa Kirin Co., Ltd., Kenichiro Nanya Employee of: Kyowa Kirin Co., Ltd., Hideyuki Onodera Employee of: Kyowa Kirin Co., Ltd., Toru Amano Employee of: Kyowa Kirin Co., Ltd.
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- 2022
14. Non-Destructive X-Ray Fluorescence (XRF) Core-Imaging Scanner, TATSCAN-F2
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T. Sakamoto, K. Kuroki, T. Sugawara, K. Aoike, K. Iijima, and S. Sugisaki
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Geology ,QE1-996.5 - Abstract
No abstract available.
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- 2006
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15. 1407P Patterns of aggravation in gastric cancer patients with peritoneal metastases who underwent paclitaxel-based intraperitoneal therapy
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R. Moku, S. Shindo, R. Honma, K. Iijima, K. Sawai, Yasushi Tsuji, and Tetsuji Takayama
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Cancer ,Hematology ,medicine.disease ,Gastroenterology ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Oncology ,Paclitaxel ,chemistry ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Intraperitoneal Therapy ,business - Published
- 2021
16. IGF2 Mutations
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Y, Masunaga, primary, T, Inoue, additional, K, Yamoto, additional, Y, Fujisawa, additional, Y, Sato, additional, Y, Kawashima-Sonoyama, additional, N, Morisada, additional, K, Iijima, additional, Y, Ohata, additional, N, Namba, additional, H, Suzumura, additional, R, Kuribayashi, additional, Y, Yamaguchi, additional, H, Yoshihashi, additional, M, Fukami, additional, H, Saitsu, additional, M, Kagami, additional, and T, Ogata, additional
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- 2020
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17. List of contributors
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C. Aloisio, J.S. Arias-Cerón, I. Baker, C.Z. Bueno, Y.E. Choonara, A. Cruz-Orea, L.C. du Toit, A. Flores-Palma, R. Flores-Ruiz, M.C. García, M. Geetha, D.A. Granada-Ramírez, J.-L. Gutiérrez-Pérez, A. Hasan, L. Hermansson, J.L. Herrera-Perez, K. Iijima, S. Ishikawa, N.K. Jain, K. Jurczyk, M.U. Jurczyk, A. Khan, H.A. Khan, U. Kishore, P. Kumar, B.-R. Li, H.-P. Lin, J.P. Luna-Arias, S. Magesh, R. Maheshwari, S. Maity, J.G. Mendoza-Álvarez, F. Moussa, S. Navarro-Suarez, A. Nayak, C.A. Oliveira, R. Onnainty, H. Otsuka, L.M. Pandey, V. Pillay, F. Quiroz, E. Ramón-Gallegos, C.O. Rangel-Yagui, M. Razavi, A. Revathi, P. Rodriguez-Fragoso, M.K. Sakharkar, T. Sun, R.K. Tekade, D. Torres-Lagares, W.M. Tsang, G. Ullio-Gamboa, F. Vázquez-Hernández, and G. Vasanth
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- 2018
18. Neurological immune-related adverse events treated with immune check point inhibitors: A single center experience
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K. Iijima, Masashiro Sugawara, Sachiko Kamada, Y. Sanpei, and A. Hanazono
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Immune system ,Neurology ,business.industry ,Internal medicine ,Medicine ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,Adverse effect ,Single Center ,Check point - Published
- 2019
19. SMA BIOMARKERS
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H. Awano, M. Nagai, T. Shirakawa, K. Osawa, T. Lee, Y. Takeshima, H. Nishio, M. Matsuo, and K. Iijima
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Neurology ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Neurology (clinical) ,Genetics (clinical) - Published
- 2019
20. Two patients with PNKP mutations presenting with microcephaly, seizure, and oculomotor apraxia
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M, Taniguchi-Ikeda, N, Morisada, H, Inagaki, Y, Ouchi, Y, Takami, M, Tachikawa, W, Satake, K, Kobayashi, S, Tsuneishi, S, Takada, H, Yamaguchi, H, Nagase, K, Nozu, N, Okamoto, H, Nishio, T, Toda, I, Morioka, H, Wada, H, Kurahashi, and K, Iijima
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Adult ,Male ,Apraxias ,Brain ,Infant ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Pedigree ,Phosphotransferases (Alcohol Group Acceptor) ,DNA Repair Enzymes ,Seizures ,Mutation ,Microcephaly ,Cogan Syndrome ,Humans ,Female ,Age of Onset ,Child - Published
- 2017
21. A numerical simulation for coupling behavior between smoothed particle hydrodynamics and structural finite element method
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C. Ma, M. Oka, and K. Iijima
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Smoothed-particle hydrodynamics ,Physics ,Coupling ,Diffuse element method ,Meshfree methods ,Smoothed finite element method ,Mechanics ,Mixed finite element method ,Finite element method ,Computational physics ,Extended finite element method - Published
- 2017
22. Accommodation in a refugee shelter as a risk factor for peptic ulcer bleeding after the Great East Japan Earthquake: a case–control study of 329 patients
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Nozomu Sano, Tooru Shimosegawa, Sho Asonuma, Tatsuya Hoshi, Hirotaka Ito, Motoki Ohyauchi, Tomoyuki Koike, Hidetomo Konishi, Norihiro Shimada, Tomoaki Atsumi, Takeshi Kanno, Yasuhiko Abe, and K. Iijima
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Peptic ,Refugee ,Logistic regression ,Sex Factors ,Japan ,Residence Characteristics ,Risk Factors ,Earthquakes ,Humans ,Medicine ,Risk factor ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Refugees ,business.industry ,Age Factors ,Gastroenterology ,Case-control study ,Middle Aged ,digestive system diseases ,Colorectal surgery ,Surgery ,Peptic Ulcer Hemorrhage ,Case-Control Studies ,Emergency medicine ,Female ,Peptic ulcer bleeding ,business ,Abdominal surgery - Abstract
We have reported that the total number of peptic ulcers (PUs) had increased 1.5-fold after the Great East Japan Earthquake compared with those of the previous year, and that hemorrhagic ulcers were more prominently increased by 2.2-fold. The aim of this study is to determine the risk factors for bleeding ulcers after the Great East Japan Earthquake. Clinical data of all peptic ulcer subjects endoscopically detected at the 7 major hospitals in the middle of the stricken area during the 3 months after the earthquake were retrospectively collected. Based on endoscopic and laboratory findings, peptic ulcer cases were divided into 227 bleeding ulcer cases and 102 non-bleeding controls. Other than ordinary risk factors for bleeding ulcers, the refugee shelter was included in the analysis as a unique confounder after the earthquake. Multiple logistic regression analyses were used to adjust for potential confounders. Eighty-seven (27 %) of 329 PUs emerged from refuge shelters, and the majority (76 of 87) of PUs occurring in such shelters was the bleeding type. Multivariate regression showed that residence in a shelter was a strong risk factor for ulcer bleeding with OR (95 % CI): 4.4 (2.1–9.6, p
- Published
- 2014
23. Measurement of radiation and radioactivity in KEK Tsukuba-campus after Fukushima No. 1 Nuclear Power Plant accident
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Akihiro Toyoda, Ken-ichi Hozumi, K. Iijima, Hajime Nakamura, and Yoshihito Namito
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Survey meter ,Radiochemistry ,General Medicine ,Radiation ,Nuclear plant ,law.invention ,Fukushima daiichi ,High energy accelerator ,law ,Soil water ,Nuclear power plant ,Environmental science ,Dose rate ,Nuclear chemistry - Abstract
The radioactivity released by the Fukushima Daiichi No.1 Nuclear Plant accident was measured at the Tsukuba-campus of the High Energy Accelerator Research Organization (KEK). The Tsukuba-campus is located ~165 km south-southwest of the Fukushima nuclear plant. We set up several measurement points in the Tsukuba-campus and measured the time variation of the radiation dose over a year by using an NaI survey meter and an LaBr3 spectrometer. We measured the radioactivity concentrations in soils and dried grasses by using a germanium semiconductor detector with In-Situ Object Calibration Software (ISOCS). On April 1, 2011, the dose rate without a roof was ~50% higher than that with a roof owing to rain. With regard to the difference on the ground surface, on April 11, 2011, the dose rate on turf was 20% higher than that on tiles. However, since the end of May 2011, it became lower than that on tiles. On March 18, 2011, the radioactivity concentration of I in dried grasses and in soils was 109 and 0.8 Bq/g, respectively. On March 18, 2011, the radioactivity concentration of Cs and Cs in soils was 0.04 and 0.03 Bq/g, respectively; on April 1, 2011, the radioactivity concentration was 0.11 and 0.11 Bq/g, respectively.
- Published
- 2014
24. DNA unwinding by Viral Protein R Initializes Complicated Cellular Responses in HIV-1 Infection: Defining the Viper’s First Bite
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K, Iijima, primary and Y, Ishizaka, additional
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- 2018
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25. Monitoring Bilirubin Binding Parameters in a Cohort of Japanese Neonates
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I, Morioka, primary, D, Kurokawa, additional, S, Iwatani, additional, K, Iijima, additional, H, Nakamura, additional, AA, Lamola, additional, VK, Bhutani, additional, RJ, Wong, additional, and DK, Stevenson, additional
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- 2018
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26. Reactive Increase in Gastric Mucus Secretion Is an Adaptive Defense Mechanism Against Low-Dose Aspirin-Induced Gastropathy
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Tomoyuki Koike, Nobuyuki Ara, Toru Shimosegawa, Yayoi Kamata, Kazuhiko Ishihara, Toshimitsu Iwabuchi, Hirohiko Shinkai, Takafumi Ichikawa, and K. Iijima
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Physiology ,Stomach Diseases ,Gastroenterology ,Asymptomatic ,Young Adult ,Gastrointestinal Agents ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Aspirin ,Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ,biology ,business.industry ,Stomach ,digestive, oral, and skin physiology ,Hepatology ,Helicobacter pylori ,biology.organism_classification ,Mucus ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Gastric Mucosa ,Concomitant ,Gastric acid ,Pentagastrin ,medicine.symptom ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Gastric mucus is considered to play an essential role in gastric mucosal defense mechanisms, especially when irritants are present in the stomach. To investigate the relationship between low-dose aspirin-induced gastropathy and gastric secretory function, especially gastric mucus secretion, in healthy volunteers. Thirty male, asymptomatic, Helicobacter pylori pylori-negative healthy volunteers were asked to take 100 mg of enteric-coated aspirin (Bayaspirin) once a day for 10 days. Endoscopic examination was performed before and 3 and 10 days after drug administration. The extent of endoscopically assessed gastric mucosal injury was semi-quantitatively evaluated according to the modified Lanza score. The pentagastrin-stimulated gastric juice was collected for 10 min during the endoscopic examination and subjected to analysis for gastric acid (mEq/10 min) or mucus (mg hexose/10 min) output. Overall, the 10-day aspirin treatment significantly increased gastric mucus secretion from 0.8 (interquartile range 1.7) to 1.6 (1.6) mg hexose/10 min (P
- Published
- 2013
27. Transformation of a system consisting of plane isotropic source and unit sphere detector into a system consisting of point isotropic source and plane detector in Monte Carlo radiation transport calculation
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Akihiro Toyoda, Syuichi Ban, K. Iijima, Hajime Nakamura, Hiroshi Iwase, Hideo Hirayama, and Yoshihito Namito
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Physics ,Unit sphere ,Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,Photon ,Plane (geometry) ,Physics::Medical Physics ,Isotropy ,Monte Carlo method ,Detector ,Computational physics ,Transformation (function) ,Nuclear magnetic resonance ,Nuclear Energy and Engineering ,Nuclide ,Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
In a nuclear power plant accident, radioactive nuclides may be released which are distributed uniformly on the ground. If estimation of dose rate from such a source by a Monte Carlo calculation is attempted, some difficulty is encountered because the calculation efficiency is very low. To solve this low efficiency problem, we show that a plane isotropic source can be transformed into a point isotropic source by changing the detector shape from a unit sphere to a plane. We verified the validity of this transformation by the numerical comparison of unscattered photon fluence. As an example of this transformation, the ambient dose rate D i was calculated from the uniform radioactive nuclide distribution on the ground using the EGS5 Monte Carlo code. We also measured the radioactivity and ambient dose rate (M) on the KEK campus within a month after the releases from the Fukushima No. 1 Nuclear Power Plant accident. Using radioactivity data and D i, we calculated the ambient dose rate (C). The calculated and m...
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- 2012
28. Development of a Current-Readout Type Neutron Monitor for Burst Neutron Fields
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Toshiya Sanami, Masayuki Hagiwara, Kiwamu Saito, Shinichi Sasaki, and K. Iijima
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inorganic chemicals ,Physics ,Neutron monitor ,Physics::Instrumentation and Detectors ,Astrophysics::High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,technology, industry, and agriculture ,Proportional counter ,General Medicine ,equipment and supplies ,Nuclear physics ,lipids (amino acids, peptides, and proteins) ,natural sciences ,Neutron ,Current (fluid) ,Nuclear Experiment ,Dose rate ,Beam (structure) - Abstract
*We report on the development of a current-readout type neutron monitor for the measurement of the dose rate of burst neutrons generated by beam loss in an accelerator that occurs within a short time span. This neutron monitor consists of a commercially available neutron proportional counter, a 6.5-cm thick polyethylene moderator, and a newly developed charge-integration circuit. The monitor was tested under mono-energetic neutron standard fields (En = 8 keV to 15 MeV) and was compared with a conventional pulse-readout type monitor. The energy response of the current-readout monitor is identical to that of the pulse-readout monitor. The current-readout monitor is able to measure neutron doses up to 4.5 mSv/h without count loss, whereas the pulse-readout monitor fails due to count loss.
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- 2011
29. Poster presentation
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W. Kwong, A. L. Neilson, R. M. Hamilton, C. C. Chiu, E. A. Stephenson, G. J. Gross, L. Soucie, J. A. Kirsh, Z. xian-hui, T. Bao-peng, L. Jin-xin, Z. Yu, Z. Yan-yi, Z. Jiang-hua, T. Hirahara, Y. Sugawara, C. Suga, J. Ako, S. Momomura, A. V. Ardashev, E. G. Zhelyakov, A. V. Konev, M. S. Rybachenko, Y. N. Belenkov, R. Bai, L. Di Biase, P. Santangeli, L. C. Saenz, A. Verma, J. Sanchez, C. Tondo, A. Natale, F. Safari, S. Hajizadeh, A. Mani, A. Khoshbaten, M. Foadoddini, S. S. Forush, G. Bayat, S.-H. Kim, D. Chong, C. K. Ching, R. Liew, null Galalardin, M. W. Khin, W. S. Teo, B. Y. Tan, T. Sakamoto, M. Al Mehairi, S. A. Al Ghamdi, K. Dagriri, A. Al Fagih, R. Selvaraj, B. Ezhumalai, S. Satheesh, A. Ajit, P. Gobu, J. Balachander, X.-q. Liu, X. Zhou, G. Yang, G.-z. Zhong, L. Shi, Y. Tian, Y.-b. Li, A.-h. Wang, X.-c. Yang, S. Takenaka, H. Ozaki, M. Nakamura, M. Otsuka, Y. Tsurumi, G. Nolker, K. J. Gutleben, G. Ritscher, A. M. Sinha, B. Muntean, J. Heintze, J. Vogt, J. Brachmann, D. Horstkotte, T. Katsuyuki, F. McGrew, E. Johnson, M. Coppess, I. Fan, S. Li, L. Zhiyu, L. Zengzhang, L. Xianbin, Y. Yuehui, L. Min, Z. Shu-long, C. Dong, Z. Zhi-tao, W. Xian-jing, D. Ying-xue, Z. Shu-Long, Z. Zhi-Tao, W. Xian-Jing, D. Ying-Xue, P. Liu, J.-H. Guo, Z. Zhang, J. Li, H.-G. Liu, H.-C. Zhang, V. Zvereva, A. Rillig, U. Meyerfeldt, W. Jung, L. Wei, G. Qi, Q. Zhang, Y. Xia, A. Doi, K. Satomi, I. Nakajima, H. Makimoto, T. Yokoyama, Y. Yamada, H. Okamura, T. Noda, T. Aiba, W. Shimizu, N. Aihara, S. Kamakura, Z. Li, Q.-y. Zhao, C.-x. Huang, C. Min-Seok, P. Jeong-Wook, H. Young-Woong, P. Sung-Eun, U. Jae-Sun, O. Yong-Seog, S. Woo-Seung, K. Ji-Hoon, J. Seong-Won, L. Man-Young, R. Tae-Ho, J.-S. Uhm, Y.-S. Oh, M.-S. Choi, J.-W. Park, Y.-W. Ha, S.-E. Park, S.-W. Jang, W.-S. Shin, J.-H. Kim, M.-Y. Lee, T.-H. Rho, J. B. Nielsen, M. S. Olesen, M. Tango, S. Haunso, A. G. Holst, J. H. Svendsen, D. Poci, A.-M. Thogersen, S. Riahi, P. Linde, N. Edvardsson, C. W. Khoo, S. Krishnamoorthy, G. Dwivedi, B. Balakrishnan, H. S. Lim, G. Y. H. Lip, S. D'Ascia, C. D'ascia, V. Marino, M. Chiariello, G. Santulli, L. Music, K. Anderson, B. S. Benzaquen, C. Saponieri, H. Yassin, V. Fridman, B. C. Vasavada, G. Turitto, N. El-Sherif, H. Prabhu, Y. Huang, M. C. Ortega, E. S.-H. Sosa, A. N. Ugalde, A. Al Jamil, M. Abu Siddique, K. M. H. S. S. Haque, S.-i. Momomura, R. Mlynarski, A. Mlynarska, G. Ilczuk, J. Wilczek, M. Sosnowski, R. Kohno, H. Abe, T. Nagatomo, Y. Oginosawa, H. Minamiguchi, Y. Otsuji, S. Ekinci, M. Yesil, S. Bayata, V. K. Vurgun, E. Arikan, N. Postaci, R. Xiaoqing, P. Jielin, Z. Shu, M. Liang, W. Fangzheng, K. Takahashi, T. Tokano, Y. Nakazato, S. Doi, T. Shiozawa, H. Konishi, M. Hiki, Y. Kato, S. Komatsu, S. Takahashi, N. Kubota, H. Tamura, S. Suwa, M. Ohki, T. Katsumata, K. Kizu, F. Bito, M. Sumiyoshi, H. D. Juntendo, T. Yukoyama, F. Perna, M. Leo, L. Leccisotti, M. Casella, G. Pelargonio, M. Lago, G. Bencardino, M. L. Narducci, E. Russo, A. Giordano, F. Bellocci, T. Song, J. Yang, C. Huang, J. Zhang, P. Wu, Y. Chen, X. Fan, T. Wang, X. Wang, Y. Tang, C.-X. Huang, X.-R. Fan, Y.-J. Chen, X.-W. Li, T. Buescher, D. Obias-Manno, C.-J. Yoo, J. Huh, H. Nakanishi, A. Hirata, M. Wada, K. Kashiwase, M. Okada, Y. Ueda, D. Su, X. L. Niu, A. Q. Song, S. Fujii, Y. Yambe, K. Shiiba, M. Sakakibara, A. Watanabe, T. Wada, Y. Koide, M. Ikeda, H. Toda, K. Hashimoto, R. Terasaka, M. Nakahama, Y. Okada, H. Mizuno, H. Ide, T. Ueno, S. Kogaki, K. Ozono, S. Nanto, C. Statescu, R. Bercea, R. A. Sascau, C. A. Georgescu, E. Athanas, N. Y. Mironov, S. A. Bakalov, E. A. Jarova, E. S. Rodionova, N. A. Mironova, J. Kim, M. S. Ahn, D. C. Han, J. T. L. Choo, C. K. Chen, T. H. Tan, K. K. Ong, R. Kam, A. Curnis, L. Bontempi, G. Coppola, M. Cerini, F. Vassanelli, A. Lipari, F. Gennaro, C. Pagnoni, N. Ashofair, L. D. Cas, V. Gourineni, K.-L. Wong, R. Davoudi, N. Hamid, T. B. Yew, C. C. Keong, T. W. Siong, E. Fuke, H. Shimizu, S. Kimura, K. Hao, R. Watanabe, J.-B. Seo, W.-Y. Chung, M.-A. Kim, Z.-H. Zo, S. Krishinan, N. A. Skuratova, L. M. Belyaeva, M. H. Bae, J. H. Lee, H. S. Lee, D. H. Yang, H. S. Park, Y. Cho, S. C. Chae, J.-E. Jun, L. V. Rychkova, V. V. Dolgikh, L. V. Zurbanova, A. V. Zurbanov, A. Aleksanyan, A. Matevosyan, G. Podosyan, P. Zelveian, H. O. Choi, G.-B. Nam, Y. R. Kim, K. H. Kim, K.-J. Choi, Y.-H. Kim, H. A. P. Pakpahan, D. Wei, T. Qizhu, Y. Xiaofei, G. Kai, F. Siting, H. Ji, A. Sato, Y. Tanabe, Y. Hayashi, T. Yoshida, E. Ito, M. Chinushi, K. Hasegawa, N. Yagihara, K. Iijima, D. Izumi, H. Watanabe, H. Furushima, Y. Aizawa, Y.-x. Dong, J. C. Burnett, H. H. Chen, S. Sandberg, Y. Zhang, P.-S. Chen, Y.-M. Cha, X.-h. Zhou, B.-p. Tang, J.-x. Li, Y.-d. Li, J.-h. Zhang, P. Arsenos, K. Gatzoulis, T. Gialernios, P. Dilaveris, S. Sideris, S. Archontakis, D. Tsiachris, S. Christodoulos, Z. Feng, S. Baogui, L. Li, L. Ming, P. Mohanty, A. B. Hesselson, E. De Ruvo, P. L. Gallagher, M. Minati, L. C. A. Natale, G. F. Tomassoni, T. Gan, B. Tang, G. Xu, J. Hosoda, T. Ishikawa, K. Matsushita, K. Matsumoto, Y. Kimura, M. Miyamoto, T. Sugano, T. Ishigami, K. Uchino, K. Kimura, S. Umemura, T. Kurita, L. Ruan, C. Zhang, S. Cai, N. Liu, Y. Ruan, X. Quan, J. K. Kang, N. Y. Kim, S. H. Park, J. E. Jun, W. H. Park, O. V. Sapelnikov, R. S. Latypov, I. R. Grishin, Y. V. Mareev, M. A. Saidova, R. S. Akchurin, G. Manis, D. Mytas, T. Papafanis, M. V. Papavasileiou, C. Stefanadis, L.-N. Ren, X.-H. Fang, Y.-q. Wang, G.-X. Qi, Q.-x. Zeng, Z.-t. Zheng, J.-q. Zhong, Y.-l. Wang, H.-z. Liu, D.-l. Liu, X.-l. Meng, J.-s. Li, G.-y. Su, J. Wang, W. B. Nicolson, S. Kundu, N. Tyagi, P. D. S. Meatcher, S. Yusuf, M. Jeilan, P. J. Stafford, A. J. Sandilands, I. Loke, G. A. Ng, Y. Solak, E. E. Gul, H. Atalay, T. Abdulhalikov, M. Kayrak, S. Turk, A. V. Pogodina, O. V. Valjavskaja, Y. X. Chen, N. S. Luo, J. F. Wang, S. Zhang, S. Ishimaru, M. Miyakawa, R. Kakinoki, M. Tadokoro, S. Kitani, T. Sugaya, K. Nishimura, T. Igarashi, H. Okabayashi, J. Furuya, Y. Igarashi, K. Igarashi, T. Su, D. Winlaw, R. Chard, I. Nicholson, G. Sholler, K. Lau, Q. Sun, K.-p. Cheng, R. Cheng, W. Hua, J.-l. Pu, C. P. Lim, L. L. Chan, L. W. Teo, B. W. K. Kwok, D. K. L. Sim, D. Moneghini, R. Cestari, H. Al Shurafa, S. Al Ghamdi, A. Al Khadra, A. Agacdiken, I. Yalug, A. Vural, U. Celikyurt, D. Ural, T. Aker, E. Schloss, A. Auricchio, C. Zeng, L. Sterns, F. Farooqi, R. Kamdar, S. Adhya, S. Bayne, T. Jackson, L. Pollock, N. Gall, F. Murgatroyd, Y. Guo, Y. Wang, T. Yang, P. Zhu, H. Liu, Y. Zhao, L. Zhang, W. Gao, and M. Gao
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Physiology (medical) ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine - Published
- 2011
30. Gastric Hyposecretion in Esophageal Squamous-Cell Carcinomas
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Toru Shimosegawa, Akira Imatani, Nobuyuki Ara, Naoki Nakaya, Kaname Uno, Tomoyuki Koike, Kiyotaka Asanuma, Hatsushi Yamagishi, Yasuaki Abe, K. Iijima, and S. Ohara
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Gastritis, Atrophic ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Esophageal Neoplasms ,Physiology ,Biopsy ,Achlorhydria ,Gastroenterology ,Endoscopy, Gastrointestinal ,Helicobacter Infections ,Gastric Acid ,Atrophy ,Pepsinogen A ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Risk factor ,Esophagus ,neoplasms ,Aged ,Helicobacter pylori ,biology ,business.industry ,Stomach ,Case-control study ,Odds ratio ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,digestive system diseases ,Logistic Models ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Case-Control Studies ,Carcinoma, Squamous Cell ,Regression Analysis ,Female ,business - Abstract
Recently, gastric fundic atrophy is reported to be an independent risk factor for esophageal squamous-cell carcinoma (ESCC). The aim of this study is to investigate the acid secretory level in ESCC in a case-control study. From April 2004 to March 2008, 100 consecutive subjects with early ESCC and 100 age- and sex-matched asymptomatic controls were prospectively enrolled. Gastrin-stimulated acid output was assessed by endoscopic gastrin test. Conditional regression analyses were used to adjust for other potential confounders. Multivariate analyses revealed a strong association between profound hypochlorhydria and ESCC with odds ratio (95% confidence interval): 6.0 (1.9-18.4). The association remained significant after adjusting for the effect of gastric atrophy as a covariate. The association became stronger as the ESCC developed more distal site of the esophagus. This study indicates that profound hypochlorhydria is a strong independent risk factor for ESCC even after adjusting for the influence of gastric atrophy.
- Published
- 2009
31. Japanese collaborative study to assess inter‐laboratory variation in factor VII activity assays
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O. Ohnuma, S Ishikawa, K. Iijima, Osamu Takamiya, Yuzo Kayamori, S. Bando, K. Higashi, and H. Suehisa
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Serial dilution ,Standard Activity ,Factor VII Deficiency ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Chromatography, Affinity ,Thromboplastin ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Japan ,hemic and lymphatic diseases ,Internal medicine ,Humans ,Medicine ,cardiovascular diseases ,Inter-laboratory ,Clinical phenotype ,Plasma samples ,Factor VII ,Clinical Laboratory Techniques ,business.industry ,Reproducibility of Results ,Hematology ,Endocrinology ,chemistry ,Chemistry, Clinical ,Calibration ,Laboratories ,business ,Factor VII Activity - Abstract
Summary. Background: The clinical phenotype manifest by patients with factor VII (FVII) deficiency correlates poorly with that predicted by laboratory tests. Despite its importance, there are no data on the variability of inter-laboratory determinations of low to very low plasma FVII activity (FVII:C).Methods: We distributed three FVII-deficient plasma samples, prepared by immunoaffinity chromatography, to 58 laboratories in Japan. All samples were assayed using standardized reference plasma as a calibrator. Recombinant thromboplastin was also supplied as a common reagent.Results: In the case of sample A, which had a very low FVII:C, the use of standardized reference plasma and thromboplastin, lowered the variability of inter-laboratory measurements, when compared with the variability observed when samples were assayed using the respective laboratory’s routine method.Conclusions: The data obtained indicated that results for samples with a very low FVII:C were greatly influenced by the number of plasma dilutions used in constructing a standard activity curve, and also by the type of calibrator and thromboplastin. Such variability was not seen for samples with moderate FVII:C. We conclude that it is necessary to develop a more sensitive and accurate FVII:C measurement system for the diagnosis and treatment of FVII deficiency.
- Published
- 2007
32. The prevalence of Helicobacter pylori infection and the status of gastric acid secretion in patients with gastroesophageal junction adenocarcinoma in Japan
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Tomoyuki Koike, Yoshifumi Inomata, K. Iijima, S. Ohara, Toru Shimosegawa, and Yasuaki Abe
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Esophageal Neoplasms ,Immunology ,Adenocarcinoma ,Gastroesophageal Junction Adenocarcinoma ,Gastroenterology ,Helicobacter Infections ,Gastric Acid ,Japan ,Stomach Neoplasms ,Internal medicine ,Prevalence ,medicine ,Humans ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Esophagus ,Reflux esophagitis ,Pharmacology ,Helicobacter pylori ,biology ,business.industry ,Reflux ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,digestive system diseases ,Early Gastric Cancer ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Gastric acid ,Esophagogastric Junction ,business - Abstract
We have previously reported that H. pylori infection prevents reflux esophagitis (RE) and Barrett's esophagus (BE) by decreasing gastric acid secretion. Gastroesophageal (GE) junction adenocarcinoma, including Barrett's adenocarcinoma, has been thought to be a complication of gastroesophageal reflux disease. However, the relationship between H. pylori infection, gastric acid secretion and GE junction adenocarcinoma had not yet been investigated in Japan. We demonstrated that the status of gastric acid secretion was higher in patients with GE junction adenocarcinoma than in patients with early gastric cancer (EGC), and that the level was the same in patients with RE and those with BE. We also found that the prevalence of H. pylori infection in patients with GE junction adenocarcinoma was significantly lower than that in patients with EGC, although not as low as that in patients with RE and BE, suggesting that preservation of gastric acid secretion may be important for the development of GE junction adenocarcinoma in Japanese people, regardless of the presence of H. pylori infection.
- Published
- 2007
33. The Antisenescence Protein Klotho Is Necessary for FGF23-Induced Phosphaturia
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I. Urakawa, Y. Yamazaki, T. Shimada, K. Iijima, H. Hasegawa, K. Okawa, T. Fujita, S. Fukumoto, and T. Yamashita
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Nephrology ,General Medicine - Published
- 2007
34. Evaluation of imaging plate technique coupled with activation detector as the passive neutron monitor
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Qingbin Wang, Akihiro Toyoda, K. Iijima, and Kazuyoshi Masumoto
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Physics ,Neutron monitor ,business.industry ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Monte Carlo method ,Detector ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Analytical chemistry ,Pollution ,Neutron temperature ,Analytical Chemistry ,Optics ,Nuclear Energy and Engineering ,Wide dynamic range ,Neutron detection ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Neutron ,business ,Spectroscopy ,Decay correct - Abstract
The spatial distribution of neutrons was measured at the muon science laboratory of KEK by the activation detector method using an imaging plate for the radioactivity measurement. It was confirmed that this method is highly sensitive to detect the average neutron dose of 10 µSv/h. The distribution of thermal and epithermal neutrons was also measured in the experimental room. The cadmium ratio inside the experimental room is one except for the neutron leakage point. The spatial distribution of neutrons inside the concrete shield of KENS was measured by the same method. Aluminum and gold foils were used for the measurement of fast and thermal neutrons, respectively. Two dimensional change of the reaction rate of the 27Al(n,α)24Na reaction shows a good agreement with the results calculated by the Monte Carlo simulation using MARS14 code. Thermal and epithermal neutron flux ratio on the beam axis was measured by the cadmium ratio method. The flux ratios were about 30 and almost constant for every slot except for the surface of the shield, because the cadmium ratio is 2. This method was very useful to measure the activity of many pieces of detector simultaneously without any efficiency and decay correction. Wide dynamic range and high sensitivity are also the merit of this method.
- Published
- 2007
35. Basophil infiltration in eosinophilic oesophagitis and proton pump inhibitor-responsive oesophageal eosinophilia
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Tetsuya Tanigawa, Tomoyuki Koike, Fumio Tanaka, T. Arakawa, Masatsugu Shiba, Yasuhiro Fujiwara, Toshio Watanabe, K. Iijima, Narika Iwakura, Kazunari Tominaga, Hirokazu Yamagami, and A. F. Walls
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pathology ,Thymic stromal lymphopoietin ,medicine.drug_class ,Proton-pump inhibitor ,chemical and pharmacologic phenomena ,Basophil ,Gastroenterology ,Leukocyte Count ,Esophagus ,Internal medicine ,Biopsy ,Eosinophilia ,medicine ,Humans ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Intestinal Mucosa ,High-power field ,Aged ,Hepatology ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,hemic and immune systems ,Proton Pump Inhibitors ,Eosinophilic Esophagitis ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Immunohistochemistry ,Basophils ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,GERD ,Gastroesophageal Reflux ,Female ,Esophagoscopy ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Infiltration (medical) - Abstract
SummaryBackground The features of proton pump inhibitor-responsive oesophageal eosinophilia (PPI-REE) are similar to those of eosinophilic oesophagitis (EoE), but PPI-REE demonstrates symptomatic and histological responses to PPI therapy. Several studies have shown that basophils play a crucial role in the pathogenesis of allergic diseases. Aim To identify and compare basophil infiltration in the oesophageal epithelium in patients with EoE, PPI-REE, gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) and normal oesophagus (controls). Methods Biopsy specimens from 43 patients, including 12 with EoE, 11 with PPI-REE, 10 with GERD and 10 normal oesophagus, were analysed. Immunohistochemistry was performed to quantify the number of basophils and mast cells in the oesophageal epithelium. Double immunofluorescence staining for thymic stromal lymphopoietin (TSLP) and basophils was performed. Patients with EoE were treated with swallowed fluticasone. Results There were no differences in clinical, endoscopic or histological features between patients with EoE and PPI-REE. There were more basophils and mast cells in patients with EoE and PPI-REE than in patients with GERD and control subjects. Basophil infiltration of the oesophageal epithelium in patients with EoE was higher than that in patients with PPI-REE (3.6 ± 2.8 per high power field vs. 1.2 ± 0.9 per high power field respectively; P = 0.02); however, there was no significant difference in mast cell infiltration between the two groups. TSLP was highly expressed in the oesophageal epithelium in areas infiltrated by basophils. Steroid therapy significantly decreased intraepithelial basophils in patients with EoE. Conclusion Basophils may play an important role in the pathogenesis of eosinophilic oesophagitis.
- Published
- 2015
36. Lattice-free finite difference method for numerical solution of inverse heat conduction problem
- Author
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K. Onishi and K. Iijima
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Distribution function ,Applied Mathematics ,Numerical analysis ,Lattice (order) ,Mathematical analysis ,General Engineering ,Finite difference method ,Boundary value problem ,Thermal conduction ,Heat kernel ,Computer Science Applications ,Mathematics ,Exponential function - Abstract
Inverse heat conduction problem consists of finding an initial temperature distribution from the knowledge of a distribution of the temperature at the present time. Here, we assume that the associated boundary conditions are known. The heat conduction problem backward in time is a typical example of ill-posed problems in the sense that the solution exists only for regular functions of some kind describing the present temperature distribution and also the solution is unstable for the present temperature distribution function. Conventional numerical methods often suffer from instability of the problem itself when high accuracy is intended in the approximation. Our aim is to create a meshless method which is applicable to the ill-posed inverse heat conduction problem. We construct a high order finite difference method in which quadrature points do not need to have a lattice structure. In order to develop our new method we show a tool in using exponential functions in Taylor's expansion. From numerical experi...
- Published
- 2006
37. Ionization yields for heavy ions in gases as a function of energy
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Kiwamu Saito, A. Fukumura, Shinichi Sasaki, Eido Shibamura, K. Iijima, Hiroko Tawara, and Toshiya Sanami
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Range (particle radiation) ,Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,Argon ,Materials science ,Spectrometer ,Analytical chemistry ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Atmospheric-pressure chemical ionization ,Function (mathematics) ,Alpha particle ,Ion source ,Ion ,Nuclear Energy and Engineering ,chemistry ,Physics::Plasma Physics ,Ionization ,Ionization chamber ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,Atomic physics ,Electron ionization ,Energy (signal processing) - Abstract
For the experimental determination of an average energy to produce an ion pair in gases, W, by heavy ions from accelerators, an apparatus consisting of a particle-energy degrader, an ionization chamber, and a time-of-flight (TOF) energy spectrometer was designed and constructed, where two types of pulse operation modes in an ionization chamber were employed. Using this system, the values of W were measured for He and C ions in pure argon and air as a function of the energy of ions. For the C ions, the energy dependence of W was clearly observed, while W for He ions was approximately constant over a wide rage of energy (the mean value was 26.5plusmn0.9 eV in argon and 34.3plusmn1.3 eV in air, respectively) and agreed well with the value for 5.49 MeV alpha particles from 241Am in each gas. The value of W for C ions obtained at the highest energy was also in good agreement with the value for 5.49 MeV alpha particles in each gas
- Published
- 2005
38. Nitrate and nitrosative chemistry within Barrett's oesophagus during acid reflux
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H Suzuki, K E L McColl, G Scobie, Valerie Fyfe, and K. Iijima
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Male ,Esophageal Neoplasms ,Microdialysis ,Nitrosation ,Ascorbic Acid ,Nitric Oxide ,Nitric oxide ,Barrett Esophagus ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Nitrate ,Humans ,Nitrite ,Saliva ,Nitrites ,Aged ,Nitrous acid ,Nitrates ,Thiocyanate ,Vitamin C ,digestive, oral, and skin physiology ,Gastroenterology ,Hydrogen-Ion Concentration ,Middle Aged ,Ascorbic acid ,Molecular biology ,digestive system diseases ,Oesophagus ,chemistry ,Biochemistry ,Gastroesophageal Reflux ,Female ,Esophagoscopy ,Precancerous Conditions ,Thiocyanates - Abstract
Background and aims: When saliva, with its high nitrite content derived from the enterosalivary recirculation of dietary nitrate, meets acidic gastric juice, the nitrite is converted to nitrous acid, nitrosative species, and nitric oxide. In healthy volunteers this potentially mutagenic chemistry is focused at the gastric cardia. We have studied the location of this luminal chemistry in Barrett’s patients during acid reflux. Methods: Ten Barrett’s patients were studied before and after administration of 2 mmol nitrate. Using microdialysis probes we measured nitrite, ascorbic acid, total vitamin C, and thiocyanate concentrations and pH simultaneously in the proximal oesophagus, Barrett’s segment, hiatal sac, proximal stomach, and distal stomach. In a subgroup, real time nitric oxide concentrations were also measured. Results: During acid reflux, Barrett’s segment was the anatomical site with maximal potential for acid catalysed nitrosation, with its median concentration of nitrite exceeding that of ascorbic acid in two of 10 subjects before nitrate and in four of nine after nitrate. Thiocyanate, which catalyses acid nitrosation, was abundant at all anatomical sites. On entering the acidic Barrett’s segment, there was a substantial fall in nitrite and the lowest ascorbic acid to total vitamin C ratio, indicative of reduction of salivary nitrite to nitric oxide at this anatomical site. Episodes of acid reflux were observed to generate nitric oxide concentrations of up to 60 μM within the Barrett’s segment. Conclusion: The interaction between acidic gastric refluxate and nitrite rich saliva activates potentially mutagenic luminal nitrosative chemistry within Barrett’s oesophagus.
- Published
- 2005
39. Activation energies of the self-diffusion of HTO, 22Na+ and 36Cl− in a highly compacted argillaceous rock (Opalinus Clay)
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L.R. Van Loon, Werner Müller, and K. Iijima
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Arrhenius equation ,Chemistry ,Diffusion ,Analytical chemistry ,Mineralogy ,Activation energy ,Atmospheric temperature range ,Pollution ,symbols.namesake ,Pore water pressure ,Viscosity ,Geochemistry and Petrology ,Phase (matter) ,symbols ,Environmental Chemistry ,Steady state (chemistry) - Abstract
The temperature dependence of the self-diffusion of HTO, 22Na+ and 36Cl− in Opalinus Clay (OPA) was studied using a through-diffusion technique, in which the temperature was gradually increased in the steady state phase of the diffusion. The measurements were done on samples from two different geological locations. The dependence of the effective diffusion coefficient on temperature was found to be of an Arrhenius type in the temperature range between 0 and 70 °C. A slight difference between the two locations could be observed. The average value of the activation energy of the self-diffusion of HTO in OPA was 21.1 ± 1.6 kJ mol−1, and 21.0 ± 3.5 and 19.4 ± 1.5 kJ mol−1 for 22Na+ and 36Cl−, respectively. The measured values for HTO are slightly higher than the values found for the bulk liquid water (HTO: 18.8 ± 0.4 kJ mol−1). This indicates that the structure of the confined water in OPA might be slightly different from that of bulk liquid water. Also for Na+ and Cl−, slightly higher values than in bulk liquid water (Na+: 18.4 kJ mol−1; Cl−: 17.4 kJ mol−1) were observed. The Stokes–Einstein relationship, based on the temperature dependency of the viscosity of bulk water, could not be used to describe the temperature dependence of the diffusion of HTO in OPA. This additionally indicates the slightly different structure of the pore water in OPA.
- Published
- 2005
40. The polymorphism interleukin 8 -251 A/T influences the susceptibility of Helicobacter pylori related gastric diseases in the Japanese population
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K. Iijima, Akira Imatani, Hitoshi Sekine, Naoki Asano, Motoki Ohyauchi, Toru Shimosegawa, A Miura, Tomoyuki Koike, Shuichi Ohara, and M Yonechi
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Spirillaceae ,Stomach Diseases ,Gastroenterology ,Helicobacter Infections ,Asian People ,Stomach Neoplasms ,Internal medicine ,Metaplasia ,medicine ,Humans ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Stomach Ulcer ,Promoter Regions, Genetic ,Stomach cancer ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Polymorphism, Genetic ,Helicobacter pylori ,biology ,business.industry ,Interleukin-8 ,Cancer ,Odds ratio ,Middle Aged ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,digestive system diseases ,Duodenal Ulcer ,Gastritis ,Female ,Gene polymorphism ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
Background: Helicobacter pylori infection is associated with variable clinical outcomes, including gastroduodenal diseases, and genetic factors may be relevant in this process. Aims: We investigated the effects of an interleukin 8 (IL-8) gene polymorphism on the risk of gastroduodenal diseases, the degree of H pylori induced gastritis, and IL-8 gene transcription. Subjects: The study was performed in 244 healthy control subjects and 690 H pylori positive patients with non-cardia gastric cancer, gastric ulcer, duodenal ulcer, or gastritis. Methods: We identified the IL-8 −251 A/T polymorphism by direct sequence analysis, and measured the gastritis score and serum pepsinogen (PG). The transcriptional promoter activity of the IL-8 gene was assessed by luciferase assay. Results: IL-8 −251A was associated with a higher risk of gastric cancer and gastric ulcer. Patients carrying IL-8 −251A showed an increased risk of gastric cancer (odds ratios (OR) 2.01 (95% confidence interval (CI) 1.38–2.92)) and gastric ulcer (OR 2.07 (95% CI 1.37–3.12)). Compared with patients younger than 49 years, atrophy and metaplasia scores in the antrum were significantly higher and the PG I/II ratio significantly lower in −251A carriers than in T/T carriers. In the in vitro assay, IL-8 −251A showed enhanced promoter activity in response to IL-1β or tumour necrosis factor α. Conclusions: The IL-8 −251A allele may be associated with progression of gastric atrophy in patients with H pylori infection, and may increase the risk of gastric cancer and gastric ulcer in Japanese people.
- Published
- 2005
41. Study on ATP Production of Lactic Acid Bacteria in Beer and Development of a Rapid Pre-Screening Method for Beer-Spoilage Bacteria
- Author
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K. Ozaki, K. Iijima, Koji Suzuki, and Hiroshi Yamashita
- Subjects
Lactobacillus brevis ,education ,food and beverages ,Lactobacillaceae ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,High-performance liquid chromatography ,Hop (networking) ,Lactic acid ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Biochemistry ,chemistry ,Lactobacillus ,behavior and behavior mechanisms ,Energy source ,human activities ,Bacteria ,Food Science - Abstract
Three beer-spoilage strains of lactic acid bacteria (LAB), Lactobacillus brevis ABBC45, L. lindneri DSM 20690 T and L. paracollinoides DSM 15502 T , exhibited strong ATP-yielding ability in beer. To investigate energy sources, these beer-spoilage strains were inoculated into beer. After the growth of the strains in beer, utilized components were determined by high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). As a result, it was shown that citrate, pyruvate, malate and arginine were consumed by beer-spoilage LAB strains examined in this study. The four components induced considerable ATP production even in the presence of hop compounds, accounting for the ATP-yielding ability of the beer-spoilage LAB strains observed in beer. We have further examined the ATP-yielding ability of other strains of bacteria in beer. Beer-spoilage bacteria, including Pectinatus frisingensis and P. cerevisiiphilus, showed strong ATP-yielding abilities, whereas species frequently isolated from brewery environments exhibited low ATP-yielding abilities. Although some of the nonspoilage LAB strains produced substantial amount of ATP in beer, the measurement of ATP-yielding ability was considered to be useful as a rapid pre-screening method for potential beer-spoilage bacteria isolated from brewery environments.
- Published
- 2005
42. A practical method for torsional strength assessment of container ship structures
- Author
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K. Iijima, Atsushi Kumano, Ryuji Miyake, and Toshiyuki Shigemi
- Subjects
Engineering ,business.industry ,Mechanical Engineering ,Ocean Engineering ,Structural engineering ,Design load ,Finite element method ,Stress (mechanics) ,Shipbuilding ,Mechanics of Materials ,Girder ,Hull ,Container (abstract data type) ,General Materials Science ,Image warping ,business - Abstract
Container ship structures are characterized by large hatch openings. Due to this structural property, they are subject to large diagonal deformations of hatch openings and warping stresses under complex torsional moments in waves. This necessitates torsional strength assessment of hull girder of container ships in their structural design stage. In this paper, a practical method for torsional strength assessment of container ship structures with transparent and consistent background is discussed based on the results from up-to-date analyses. In order to estimate the torsional response characteristics as accurately as possible, three-dimensional Rankine source method, after being validated by tank tests, is employed for estimation of wave loads on a container ship, and FE analyses are conducted on the entire-ship model under the estimated loads. Then, a dominant regular wave condition under which the torsional response of the container ship becomes maximum is specified. Design loads for torsional strength assessment that give torsional response equivalent to the long-term predicted values of torsional response are investigated based on the torsional moments on several container ships under the specified dominant wave condition. An appropriate combination of stress components to estimate the total hull girder stress is also discussed.
- Published
- 2004
43. Long-term effect of Helicobacter pylori eradication on the reversibility of acid secretion in profound hypochlorhydria
- Author
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Akira Imatani, Tomoyuki Koike, Shuichi Ohara, Toru Shimosegawa, K. Iijima, and Hitoshi Sekine
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Hepatology ,biology ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Spirillaceae ,Gastroenterology ,Cancer ,Helicobacter pylori ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Surgery ,Atrophy ,Internal medicine ,Biopsy ,medicine ,Gastric acid ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Secretion ,Risk factor ,business - Abstract
Summary Background : Although profound hypochlorhydria is considered to be an important risk factor for development of gastric cancer, long-term effect of Helicobacter pylori eradication on its reversibility remains uncertain. Aim : To clarify the change in acid secretion after eradication in a long-term follow-up over 5 years in patients with profound hypochlorhydria. Methods : Twenty-three H. pylori-positive patients with hypochlorhydria (
- Published
- 2004
44. Gastric acid secretion of normal Japanese subjects in relation to Helicobacter pylori infection, aging, and gender
- Author
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Tomoyuki Koike, Toru Shimosegawa, Hitoshi Sekine, K. Iijima, and Shuichi Ohara
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Aging ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Spirillaceae ,Rapid urease test ,Gastroenterology ,Endoscopy, Gastrointestinal ,Helicobacter Infections ,Serology ,Gastric Acid ,Japan ,Reference Values ,Stomach Neoplasms ,Internal medicine ,Gastrins ,Humans ,Medicine ,Aged ,Gastrin ,Sex Characteristics ,Helicobacter pylori ,biology ,business.industry ,Stomach ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Middle Aged ,bacterial infections and mycoses ,biology.organism_classification ,Antibodies, Bacterial ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Gastric Mucosa ,Gastritis ,Gastric acid ,Female ,business - Abstract
In Japan, where the incidence of gastric cancer is high, Helicobacter pylori infection could affect gastric acid secretion differently from that in Western countries. The aim of this study was to investigate the relationship between H. pylori infection, acid secretion, aging, and gender in normal Japanese subjects.The study comprised 193 Japanese subjects who had undergone routine endoscopy. Gastrin-stimulated acid output was performed during the routine endoscopic examination using the endoscopic method of gastric acid secretory testing (EGT: endoscopic gastrin test), which has been reported previously. H. pylori status was determined by histology, rapid urease test, and serology.Mean EGT values were 3.9 +/- 1.5 mEq/10 min in H. pylori-negative men, 1.6 +/- 2.5 in H. pylori-positive men, 2.2 +/- 0.9 in H. pylori-negative women, and 1.5 +/- 1.2 in H. pylori-positive women. Although acid secretion was lower in H. pylori-positive subjects compared with H. pylori-negative subjects in both men and women, the decrease was more marked in men with H. pylori infection. Multiple linear regression analysis showed that aging is positively associated with gastric acid secretion in the H. pylori-negative subjects, whereas a negative association was found between them in the H. pylori-positive subjects.In Japanese subjects, aging affects gastric acid secretion differently depending on the status of H. pylori infection. H. pylori infection showed a stronger inhibitory effect on the acid secretion in men than in women. This gender-related difference in the susceptibility of acid secretion to H. pylori infection may explain the higher rates of gastric cancer in men in Japan.
- Published
- 2004
45. Conditions for acid catalysed luminal nitrosation are maximal at the gastric cardia
- Author
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Kenny McElroy, Valerie Fyfe, A. Moriya, Kenneth E.L. McColl, K. Iijima, G. Scobie, and H Suzuki
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Saliva ,Adolescent ,Nitroso Compounds ,Nitrosation ,Ascorbic Acid ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Esophagus ,Nitrate ,medicine ,Humans ,Nitrite ,Nitrites ,Nitrates ,Chromatography ,Thiocyanate ,Stomach ,Gastroenterology ,Cardia ,Hydrogen-Ion Concentration ,Middle Aged ,Ascorbic acid ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemistry ,Biochemistry ,Female ,Dialysis ,Thiocyanates - Abstract
Saliva has a high nitrite concentration, derived from the enterosalivary recirculation of dietary nitrate, and is the main source of nitrite entering the acidic stomach. Acidification of nitrite in the presence of secondary amines or amides generates potentially carcinogenic N-nitroso compounds. The reaction is inhibited by ascorbic acid and catalysed by thiocyanate.To determine whether there is intragastric regional variation in the chemical conditions promoting luminal nitrosation following nitrate ingestion.Using microdialysis probes, we measured concentrations of nitrite, ascorbic acid, total vitamin C, and thiocyanate simultaneously in saliva, the distal oesophagus, cardia, and the proximal and distal stomach of 17 healthy volunteers before and following intragastric nitrate (2 mmol) administration.The median pH in the distal oesophagus, cardia, and proximal and distal stomach were 7, 2.6, 1.9, and 1.7, respectively, before, and were similar following nitrate administration. Mean nitrite concentration in the distal oesophagus was similar to that of saliva, being 29.1 micro M and 36.7 micro M, respectively, before nitrate and increasing to 181.6 micro M and 203.3 micro M after nitrate ingestion. Within the stomach, mean (SEM) nitrite concentration following nitrate was higher in the cardia (45.5 (12.7) micro M) than in the mid (7.8 (3.1)) (p0.01) or distal (0.8 (0.6)) (p0.1) stomach, and ascorbic acid concentration was lower at the cardia (13.0 (6.1)) than in the mid (51 (19.2)) (p0.02) or distal (86 (29)) (p0.01) stomach. Consequently, the median ascorbic acid to nitrite ratio was lowest at the cardia (0.3) (p0.01) versus the mid (7.8) or distal (40) stomach. Thiocyanate concentration was similar throughout the stomach.The conditions favouring luminal generation of N-nitroso compounds from dietary nitrate are maximal at the most proximal cardia region of the acidic stomach and may contribute to the high incidence of mutagenesis at this site.
- Published
- 2003
46. Supercritical Carbon Dioxide Cleaning of Low-k Material
- Author
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Kimitsugu Saito, Gary Asai, Tetsuya Yoshikawa, K. Masuda, K. Iijima, T. Iwata, D. Peters, I. Mizobata, and Y. Muraoka
- Subjects
Supercritical carbon dioxide ,Materials science ,Chemical engineering ,General Materials Science ,Nanotechnology ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics - Published
- 2003
47. The effects of lansoprazole on erosive reflux oesophagitis are influenced by CYP2C19 polymorphism
- Author
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Shuichi Ohara, Shirou Hamada, K. Iijima, Kenji Noguchi, Mitsunori Noguchi, Jin Suzuki, Toru Shimosegawa, Shoichi Kayaba, Tomoyuki Koike, and Masashi Kawamura
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Hepatology ,business.industry ,medicine.drug_class ,Esophageal disease ,Therapeutic effect ,Gastroenterology ,Lansoprazole ,Proton-pump inhibitor ,CYP2C19 ,medicine.disease ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Pharmacology (medical) ,business ,Esophagitis ,Omeprazole ,Pharmacogenetics ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Summary Background : The acid suppressive effect of lansoprazole is influenced by the P450 2C19 (CYP2C19) polymorphism. Aim : To investigate whether the CYP2C19 genotype is related to the healing of erosive reflux oesophagitis during treatment with lansoprazole. Methods : Eighty-eight Japanese patients with erosive reflux oesophagitis were treated with a daily oral dose of 30 mg lansoprazole for 8 weeks. The CYP2C19 genotype, Helicobacter pylori infection status and serum pepsinogen I/II ratio were assessed before treatment. At 4 and 8 weeks, the healing of erosive reflux oesophagitis was evaluated endoscopically. Results : The healing rates were 57.1%, 69.2% and 72.7% at 4 weeks and 77.4%, 95.0% and 100% at 8 weeks in homozygous extensive metabolizers, heterozygous extensive metabolizers and poor metabolizers, respectively. At 8 weeks, the healing rate of erosive reflux oesophagitis was significantly lower in homozygous extensive metabolizers than in the other two groups (P
- Published
- 2003
48. Studies of Nitric Oxide Generation from Salivary Nitrite in Human Gastric Juice
- Author
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Valerie Fyfe, K. Iijima, and Kenneth E.L. McColl
- Subjects
Saliva ,Time Factors ,Ascorbic Acid ,Nitric Oxide ,Nitric oxide ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,0302 clinical medicine ,Biosynthesis ,medicine ,Humans ,Nitrite ,Nitrites ,Gastric Juice ,Chromatography ,Thiocyanate ,Stomach ,Gastroenterology ,Metabolism ,Hydrogen-Ion Concentration ,Ascorbic acid ,Oxygen ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemistry ,Biochemistry ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,Thiocyanates - Abstract
Saliva contains substantial concentrations of nitrite derived from the enterosalivary recirculation of dietary nitrate.We have investigated factors in gastric juice influencing the fate of nitrite in swallowed saliva. When nitrite (100 microM) is added to human gastric juice pH 1.5 or pH 2.5 at 37 degrees C containing physiological concentrations of thiocyanate (1 mM) and ascorbic acid (200 microM), it is converted to nitric oxide within a few seconds.The reduction of nitrite to nitric oxide is slower at pH 3.5 and very little is generated at pH 4.5. The rate of nitric oxide generation at acid pH increases with increasing thiocyanate concentration. The concentration of nitric oxide generated in the above way is maintained until the ascorbic acid is depleted by the recycling of nitric oxide to nitrite. In gastric juice depleted of ascorbic acid, very little nitrite is reduced to nitric oxide at any pH.These studies indicate that in the healthy acid-secreting stomach most salivary nitrite will be reduced to nitric oxide at the gastro-oesophageal junction and gastric cardia where it first encounters gastric juice.
- Published
- 2003
49. Trial Fabrication of a Linear Synchronous Motor with a Claw Pole Structured Mover
- Author
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K. Iijima, M. Nirei, T. Sakaki, K. Shiroshita, Y. Kikuchi, Hiroyuki Wakiwaka, and K. Shimokawa
- Subjects
Transverse flux ,Physics ,Fabrication ,Stator ,Mechanical engineering ,Thrust ,Linear motor ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Chip ,Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials ,law.invention ,law ,Magnet ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,Constant (mathematics) ,Instrumentation - Abstract
This paper describes with a new linear synchronous motor (TFIP-LSM) of a transverse flux and interior permanent magnet type, which consists of an interior permanent magnet stator and a mover with a claw pole structure. The dimensional parameters of the motor and the electric efficiency were taken into careful consideration, using FEM simulations and measured values. In recent years, LSMs have been used for semiconductor product equipment, mechanical devices, and chip mounters. The trend has been to conduct research on high-efficiency miniature LSMs. To estimate the performance, thrust density Fv (N/cm3) and thrust constant density G (N2/(W cm3)) have recently been used. Within the last two years, LSMs with G = 0.66−5.1 N2/(W cm3) have been developed. TFIP-LSM is small compared with other LSMs and its thrust density motor constant is also small but the thrust constant density of 2.4 N2/(W cm3) indicates that a high performance has been obtained.
- Published
- 2003
50. Anti-titin antibody, one of the antistriational autoantibodies was found in a case of seronegative myasthenia gravis associated with anti-PD-1 therapy
- Author
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T. Inoue, A. Hanazono, Masashiro Sugawara, Y. Sanpei, H. Fukunaga, Shigeaki Suzuki, Sachiko Kamada, and K. Iijima
- Subjects
Neurology ,business.industry ,Anti pd 1 ,Immunology ,Autoantibody ,medicine ,Titin Antibody ,Neurology (clinical) ,medicine.disease ,business ,Myasthenia gravis - Published
- 2017
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