1.EFFECT OF HEAT STRESS ON DESMIN EXPRESSION IN ATROPHIED SOLEUS MUSCLE
TAKAO SUGIURA ; TSUBASA SHIBAGUCHI ; TOSHINORI YOSHIHARA ; YUKI YAMAMOTO ; KATSUMASA GOTO ; HISASHI NAITO ; TOSHITADA YOSHIOKA
Japanese Journal of Physical Fitness and Sports Medicine 2010;59(1):167-174
In the present study, we investigated the effect of heat stress on disuse atrophy from changes in the muscle protein levels of desmin and calpain. Wistar strain female rats (6-8 months old) were randomly assigned to two experimental groups: control (C) and heat stress (H). One hindlimb of all animals was immobilized in plantar flexion with plaster. Before immobilization, animals in H group were placed in a heat chamber (42°C for 60 min). Following 6 days of immobilization, the soleus muscles were removed and analyzed. Although immobilization resulted in significant muscle atrophy in all experimental animals, the soleus weight-to-body weight ratio in immobilized limbs of H group was significantly higher compared to that of C group. Expression of desmin and HSP72 in the atrophied soleus muscle from C group was significantly lower compared with the contralateral muscle; but this was not the case in H group. Further, in C group, the ratio of autolyzed calpains I increased significantly in the atrophied muscle compared to the contralateral muscle. These results show that the effect of heat stress on disuse skeletal muscle atrophy is attributed to the decreasing degradation of desmin by suppressing the activation of calpain.
2.EFFECTS OF COMBINATION OF HEAT STRESS AND ASTAXANTHIN SUPPLEMENTATION ON DISUSE MUSCLE ATROPHY
TOSHINORI YOSHIHARA ; TAKAO SUGIURA ; TSUBASA SIBAGUCHI ; YUKI YAMAMOTO ; KATSUMASA GOTO ; TOMOMI ISOYAMA ; HISASHI NAITO ; DAIJIRO OHMORI ; TOSHITADA YOSHIOKA
Japanese Journal of Physical Fitness and Sports Medicine 2010;59(3):303-312
The purpose of this study was to examine the effects of combination of a heat stress and astaxanthin supplementation, known as a potent anti-oxidative nutrient, on muscle protein degradation and disuse muscle atrophy. Fifty-two male Wistar rats (261.7±1.17 g) were divided into five groups: control (Cont, n=10), suspension (Sus, n=11), heat stress and suspension (Heat, n=10), astaxanthin and suspension (Ax, n=10), and heat stress, astaxanthin and suspension (H+A, n=11). There were no significant differences in Cu,Zn-SOD, cathepsin L and caspase-3 levels among the Heat, Ax and H+A groups in the soleus and plantaris muscles. Although levels of calpain 2 and ubiquitinated protein in the myofibrillar fraction in the soleus muscle were not significantly different among the Heat, Ax and H+A groups, levels in the H+A group were significantly (p<0.05) lower than Sus. Concerning atrophied plantaris muscles, the H+A group significantly (p<0.05) suppressed the expression of calpain 1 in the myofibrillar fraction, but there were no marked changes of proteolytic indexes. These data indicate that the combination of the heat stress and astaxanthin supplementation could be effective in inhibiting muscle protein degradation in disuse atrophy of the soleus.
3.The ideal focus of the study in the drug information sciences
Yasuhiko Yamada ; Yasufumi Sawada ; Koujirou Yamamoto ; Takashi Iikubo ; Hisakazu Ohtani ; Naoki Kamimura ; Yoshihiro Abe ; Keiko Uehara ; Takafumi Ohta ; Takao ORII ; Toshiko Kishimoto ; Mitsuo Saito ; Keiko Butatsu ; Hiroyuki Taruno ; Youhei Chikazawa ; Hiromitsu Nakasa ; Masayuki Hashiguchi ; Satoko HORI ; Toshinori Yamamoto
Japanese Journal of Drug Informatics 2009;11(2):76-87
In 2008, Japanese Society of Drug Informatics (JASDI) organized the Future Vision Committee (the Committee) to propose the essential focus of drug informatics. To explore a future vision about the drug information sciences, it was necessary to collect a variety of opinions widely from researchers. Therefore, at the 11th annual meeting of JASDI in July 5-6, 2008, the Committee convened a workshop to extract problems in the researches of drug informatics by using KJ method and evaluated the contents. The major problems raised were “the field of drug informatics is too broad” and “there is no definition and/or no system of the drug informatics”. Related problems raised are the shortness of the history and lack of originality in the study. From different viewpoints, it was also pointed out that the methodology of the research is not well established and no systematic education is provided. Taken together, major problems in drug informatics are concluded to be the lack of definition and the lack of systematizations, and will be solved to a certain extent by defining the outcome of the researches in drug informatics.
4.A Practical Grading Scale for Predicting Outcomes of Radiosurgery for Dural Arteriovenous Fistulas: JLGK 1802 Study
Hirotaka HASEGAWA ; Masahiro SHIN ; Jun KAWAGISHI ; Hidefumi JOKURA ; Toshinori HASEGAWA ; Takenori KATO ; Mariko KAWASHIMA ; Yuki SHINYA ; Hiroyuki KENAI ; Takuya KAWABE ; Manabu SATO ; Toru SERIZAWA ; Osamu NAGANO ; Kyoko AOYAGI ; Takeshi KONDOH ; Masaaki YAMAMOTO ; Shinji ONOUE ; Kiyoshi NAKAZAKI ; Yoshiyasu IWAI ; Kazuhiro YAMANAKA ; Seiko HASEGAWA ; Kosuke KASHIWABARA ; Nobuhito SAITO ;
Journal of Stroke 2022;24(2):278-287
Background:
and Purpose To assess the long-term outcomes of intracranial dural arteriovenous fistula (DAVF) treated with stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) alone or embolization and SRS (Emb-SRS) and to develop a grading system for predicting DAVF obliteration.
Methods:
This multi-institutional retrospective study included 200 patients with DAVF treated with SRS or Emb-SRS. We investigated the long-term obliteration rate and obliteration-associated factors. We developed a new grading system to estimate the obliteration rate. Additionally, we compared the outcomes of SRS and Emb-SRS by using propensity score matching.
Results:
The 3- and 4-year obliteration rates were 66.3% and 78.8%, respectively. The post-SRS hemorrhage rate was 2%. In the matched cohort, the SRS and Emb-SRS groups did not differ in the rates of obliteration (P=0.54) or post-SRS hemorrhage (P=0.50). In multivariable analysis, DAVF location and cortical venous reflux (CVR) were independently associated with obliteration. The new grading system assigned 2, 1, and 0 points to DAVFs in the anterior skull base or middle fossa, DAVFs with CVR or DAVFs in the superior sagittal sinus or tentorium, and DAVFs without these factors, respectively. Using the total points, patients were stratified into the highest (0 points), intermediate (1 point), or lowest (≥2 points) obliteration rate groups that exhibited 4-year obliteration rates of 94.4%, 71.3%, and 60.4%, respectively (P<0.01).
Conclusions
SRS-based therapy achieved DAVF obliteration in more than three-quarters of the patients at 4 years of age. Our grading system can stratify the obliteration rate and may guide physicians in treatment selection.
5.Management of Leftover Medicine Associated with the Change of Prescription Form through Collaboration between General Practitioners and Community Pharmacists : A Research Survey
Sayuri SETO ; Hajime KATO ; Noriko KOHYAMA ; Yasuna KOBAYASHI ; Toshinori YAMAMOTO ; Mari KOGO
Japanese Journal of Social Pharmacy 2018;37(1):19-26
The purpose of this study was to explore issues arising from the promotion of collaboration between general practitioners (GPs) and community pharmacists in the management of leftover medicine. The 2016 Revision of Medical Fee newly added the check boxes in the prescription form in which a physician requests the correspondence of a pharmacy when confirming leftover medicine. In this study, we conducted a questionnaire survey among GPs in three wards of Tokyo in the month of November 2016. Of the 1,256 clinics queried, 283 responded to the survey. Among those GPs responding, 86.6% were concerned about leftover medicine of their patients, while 29.3% used the check boxes. GPs who received an explanation about the change of the prescription form demonstrated a significant increase in the use of the check boxes, compared to GPs who did not (p<0.01). Of the GPs surveyed, 71.0% thought that the check boxes were an advantage in recognizing medicines that the patients did not take. An overall 67.5% of the GPs who used the check boxes revised prescriptions based on the information from pharmacists. The study suggests that by increasing collaboration between GPs and pharmacists, the information from pharmacists could be utilized to revise prescriptions and lead optimization of drug treatment.
6.Effect of a combination of astaxanthin supplementation, heat stress, and intermittent reloading on satellite cells during disuse muscle atrophy.
Toshinori YOSHIHARA ; Takao SUGIURA ; Nobuyuki MIYAJI ; Yuki YAMAMOTO ; Tsubasa SHIBAGUCHI ; Ryo KAKIGI ; Hisashi NAITO ; Katsumasa GOTO ; Daijiro OHMORI ; Toshitada YOSHIOKA
Journal of Zhejiang University. Science. B 2018;19(11):844-852
We examined the effect of a combination of astaxanthin (AX) supplementation, repeated heat stress, and intermittent reloading (IR) on satellite cells in unloaded rat soleus muscles. Forty-nine male Wistar rats (8-week-old) were divided into control, hind-limb unweighting (HU), IR during HU, IR with AX supplementation, IR with repeated heat stress (41.0-41.5 °C for 30 min), and IR with AX supplementation and repeated heat stress groups. After the experimental period, the antigravitational soleus muscle was analyzed using an immunohistochemical technique. Our results revealed that the combination of dietary AX supplementation and heat stress resulted in protection against disuse muscle atrophy in the soleus muscle. This protective effect may be partially due to a higher satellite cell number in the atrophied soleus muscle in the IR/AX/heat stress group compared with the numbers found in the other groups. We concluded that the combination treatment with dietary AX supplementation and repeated heat stress attenuates soleus muscle atrophy, in part by increasing the number of satellite cells.
Animals
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Body Weight
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Dietary Supplements
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Fibrinolytic Agents/pharmacology*
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Heat-Shock Response
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Hindlimb
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Hot Temperature
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Immunohistochemistry
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Male
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Muscle, Skeletal
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Muscular Atrophy/drug therapy*
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Oxidative Stress
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Rats
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Rats, Wistar
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Satellite Cells, Skeletal Muscle/cytology*
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Xanthophylls/pharmacology*