1.Prevalence of Complementary and Alternative Medicine Use in Ambulatory Patients with Urologic Disorders
Akiko MARUTANI ; Sachie MATUKI ; Rie HATTA ; Yoshie SAITO ; Tae HASHIMOTO ; Kazumi MIZUNO ; Hiromi TAKEUCHI ; Shizue TOMITA ; Satoshi OHNO ; Kazuto KOMATSU ; Mikio NAMIKI
Japanese Journal of Complementary and Alternative Medicine 2005;2(1):67-73
Objective: The prevalence of complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) in patients with various urologic disorders is unknown. We conducted the survey to determine the prevalence of CAM use in ambulatory patients.
Methods: We distributed questionnaires to 331 ambulatory patients with various urologic disorders in our department from March 10 to 31, 2004.
Results: One in third (30.5%) patients reported the use of at least one CAM. Patient age and gender were not associated with the frequency of the use of CAM. Although not statistically significant, patients with malignant disease showed a higher frequency of CAM use compared with patients with benign disease; 36.2% vs 27.0%, P=0.08. Among the CAM users, only 16 patients (15.8%) informed health care staff of their CAM use.
Conclusion: This result shows the current situation of CAM use in patients with urologic disorders. Because of the high prevalence, health care professionals should ask about patients' use of CAM.
2.Early high-fat feeding improves histone modifications of skeletal muscle at middle-age in mice
Toshihiro YOSHIE ; Chiharu SAITO ; Fuminori KAWANO
Laboratory Animal Research 2020;36(3):197-207
The purpose of the present study was to investigate how the effects of high-fat diet feeding on the skeletal muscle persisted during aging using mice. Post-weaned male mice were fed a high-fat diet between 1- and 3-mo-old followed by return to supply a normal diet until 13-mo-old. Monthly physical tests demonstrated that age-related glucose intolerance that was generally developed after 10-mo-old in the control mice was significantly improved in mice fed a high-fat diet. Interestingly, mRNA expressions of Pdk4 , Ucp3, and Zmynd17 were up-regulated by high-fat feeding and persisted in the tibialis anterior muscle until 13-mo-old. At Pdk4 and Ucp3 loci, enhanced distributions of active histone modifications were noted in the high-fat-fed mice at 13-mo-old. In contrast, age-related accumulation of histone variant H3.3 at these loci was suppressed. These results indicated that epigenetic modifications caused by early nutrition mediated the changes in skeletal muscle gene expression during aging.