1.Approach to Functional Therapy for Eating
Keiko CHIDA ; Toshimitsu SATO ; Kaori FUJIWARA
Journal of the Japanese Association of Rural Medicine 2013;62(1):34-40
It has recently become a practice to focus attention on the necessity of therapies for the functions of eating, including exercises for swallowing and training for eating, for patients with difficulties in eating or swallowing. With the remunerations for healthcare under the National Health Insurance Scheme revised in April 2006, the limits put on the frequency of computation for patients in less than three months after onset were removed, and it became a practice to assess the degrees of devotion to inpatients. With our ward designed for specific types of rehabilitation, we have thus far provided functional therapies for eating to patients with disorders in eating or swallowing. But those therapies have been provided to them in a self-centered and haphazard manner because of a lack of knowledge on the part of caregivers while the methods were not standardized. On the basis of a fact-finding survey recently conducted on consciousness about therapies for the functions of eating, we have analyzed the present situation and formulated a record which would enumerate methods and steps to cope with items about which staffers feel apprehensive and the items on which attention should be focused. We also held study meetings on techniques for salivary gland, intraoral and facial massage, compiled an illustrated booklet designed to introduce those steps, and made it accessible in an exclusively designed van. As a consequence, it became feasible to make perpetual use of a standardized functional therapy for dysphagia, and this methodology made it possible to continuously provide a standardized functional therapy for dysphagia, eventually leading to the recovery of the intraoral environment and the maintenance and recovery of intraoral functions, and enabling patients with disorders in their eating or swallowing to enhance their pleasure of eating food and enhance their confidence.
2.Component elements of daily walking activities among the residents of a care-house for female aged people.
YUJI YANAGIMOTO ; TOSHIMITSU EBISU ; YOSHIRO HATANO ; YUZO SATO
Japanese Journal of Physical Fitness and Sports Medicine 1997;46(5):489-499
The purpose of this study was to clarify various components of walking activities among the high aged people, in relation with physique and heart rates at rest and post exercise recovery period. Subjects are 53 female residents of a care house in Hyogo Prefecture, whose average age being 78.9±0.9 years were tested in various parameters that are relevant to the study, such as height, weight, BMI, resting heart rate, total amount of weekly walking steps (recorded twice, i, e., in September and in October), walking velocity, walking stride, time length for climbing 15 step stairs and self-rate health. the major findings are summarized as follows
(1) Various physical functions that are related to daily activities and therefore related to muscular strength and neuromuscular coordination, were found to decrease significantly upon aging, such as walking velocity and time length for climbing stairs.
(2) The result of multiple correlation regression analysis, taking total amount of weekly walking steps with self-rated health, time length spent for 15 steps of climbing stairs and age were existent.
(3) Walking velocity, walking steps size and stair climbing velocity of good walkers (upper 25% in total amount of weekly walking steps) and it was found that the good walkers walked faster with greater steps size and climbed the stairs faster than the less walking subjects.
(4) The total amount of daily walking steps of various days of the week were compared each other and it was found that the good walkers recorded significantly less amount of walking steps on Thursday than others days. the fact that a large scale shopping center which is located near by the care-house closes on Thursday every week suggests that the amount of walking steps are influenced by social factors, such as shopping behavior.
(5) In terms of the going out behavior outside of care-house, visiting the large scale shopping center (40% of subjects), and hospitals and alike (25%) were recognized. The results suggest that there are certain common elements in the motivation and behavior of out-of- care-house activities.
The above results suggest that the study of walking behavior of the high aged people would be extremely variable not only in assessing the fitness level and physical function of the residents, but also in possible evaluation of efficiencies of the care-house location.
3.Occurrence of Child Peptic Ulcer in A Rural Community
Waichi Sato ; Kanji Komatsu ; Norihiko Moriai ; Chiyuki Nakanome ; Masayoshi Sasaki ; Hideo Yamazaki ; Naoaki Tanno ; Toshimitsu Akazawa ; Toshihiro Okamura ; Hiroaki Sato ; Kazuhiro Haginoya ; Yasushi Akimoto
Journal of the Japanese Association of Rural Medicine 1982;31(4):656-659
During the 18-month period from January 1, 1981 to June 30, 1082, we encountered a total of 11 cases of child peptic ulcer-three gastric ulcer and eight duodenal ulcer casen.
There is every indication that the incidence of child peptic ulcer will increase in a rural area like Yuri, which is situated in Japan's northeastern prefecture of Akita.
To be noted is the fact that 10 cases out of 11 of peptic ulcer were found in three-year lower secondary schoolchildren and the remaining one was found in a sixth grader of six-year elementary school. The incidence as well as the number of visits to our clinics went up as the age advances and reached a peak in third graders of lower secondary school.
The reason why third graders of lower secondary school were attacked most by peptic ulcer is probably that they, at puberty, are under psychic or psychogenic stress with anxiety over high school entrance examinations, mental strain from forced attendance at a cramming school, trouble in getting along with friends, and dissatisfaction with parents.
Therefore, child peptic ulcer should not be treated as a disease of the digestive organ alone but as a disorder in the autonomic nervous system with an aid of psychosomatic medicine and psychiatry. For the prevention of the disease, it would also be necessary to take account of socio-cultural factors.
4.Efficacy and safety of glecaprevir and pibrentasvir combination therapy in old-aged patients with chronic hepatitis C virus infection
Shunji WATANABE ; Naoki MORIMOTO ; Kouichi MIURA ; Toshimitsu MUROHISA ; Toshiyuki TAHARA ; Takashi SATO ; Shigeo TANO ; Yukimura FUKAYA ; Hidekazu KURATA ; Yukishige OKAMURA ; Norikatsu NUMAO ; Keita UEHARA ; Kozue MURAYAMA ; Katsuyuki NAKAZAWA ; Hitoshi SUGAYA ; Hiroaki YOSHIZUMI ; Makoto IIJIMA ; Mamiko TSUKUI ; Takuya HIROSAWA ; Yoshinari TAKAOKA ; Hiroaki NOMOTO ; Hiroshi MAEDA ; Rie GOKA ; Norio ISODA ; Hironori YAMAMOTO
Journal of Rural Medicine 2020;15(4):139-145
Objective: Combination therapy with glecaprevir and pibrentasvir (G/P) has been shown to provide a sustained virologic response (SVR) rate of >97% in patients with chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection in the first published real-world Japanese data. However, a recently published study showed that the treatment was often discontinued in patients ≥75 years old, resulting in low SVR in intention-to-treat (ITT) analysis. Thus, our aim was to evaluate real-world data for G/P therapy in patients ≥75 years of age, the population density of which is high in “rural” regions.Patients and Methods: We conducted a multicenter study to assess the efficacy and safety of G/P therapy for chronic HCV infection, in the North Kanto area in Japan.Results: Of the 308 patients enrolled, 294 (95.5%) completed the treatment according to the protocol. In ITT and per-protocol analyses, the overall SVR12 rate was 97.1% and 99.7%, respectively. The old-aged patients group consisted of 59 participants, 56 of whom (94.9%) completed the scheduled protocol. Although old-aged patients tended to have non-SVR factors such as liver cirrhosis, history of HCC, and prior DAA therapies, the SVR12 rates in old-aged patients were 98.3% and 100% in the ITT and PP analyses, respectively. Of 308 patients enrolled, adverse events were observed in 74 patients (24.0%), with grade ≥3 events in 8 patients (2.6%). There was no significant difference in any grade and grade ≥3 adverse events between the old-aged group and the rest of the study participants. Only one patient discontinued the treatment because of adverse events.Conclusion: G/P therapy is effective and safe for old-aged patients.