2.Quality of life improvement in patients diagnosed with hormone refractory prostate cancer with bone metastasis as a result of chemotherapy and the administration of zoledronic acid
Maki Arakawa ; Hiroko Saito ; Takaaki Hasegawa ; Yasuto Kato ; Kiyohito Ishikawa
Palliative Care Research 2008;3(2):308-315
Bone metastases occur in patients who have developed prostate cancer, and severely compromise the patient's quality of life. Here, we evaluated the quality of life in our inpatients diagnosed with prostate cancer with multiple bone metastases and bone pain. In our study, we evaluated pain using a pain diary, investigated the palliative effects of opioid dose, and assessed the quality of life using SF-36. The administration of chemotherapy and zoledronic acid (ZA) resulted in pain palliation, an anti tumor effect and improvements in the quality of life. We suggest that the administration of ZA might be an effective clinical strategy for multimodality advanced solid cancer therapy. We conclude that a 'combined' examination, in which a pain diary evaluating pain is considered in association with an SF-36 assessment evaluating quality of life is crucial to patient care. Palliat Care Res 2008 ; 3(2) : 308-315
3.Effect of Saiko-ka-ryukotsu-borei-to on the Monoamine-Related Substances in Several Regions of Mouse Brain.
Tadanobu ITO ; Shigeo MURAI ; Hiroko SAITO ; Maki ITO ; Junichi ODASHIMA ; Seisuke MICHIJIRI ; Nobutaka HASHIMOTO
Kampo Medicine 1994;45(1):97-106
We studied the effect of Saiko-ka-ryukotsu-borei-to (crude extract powder for research purposes) on central monoamine-related substances in mice. The formulation was given in a dose of 50mg/kg or 400mg/kg and was administered once or repeatedly (twice a day for seven days). The brain was removed and segmented in the conventional method. The monoamine-related substances were measured by a method using HPLC-ECD. The main results were as follows. The single or repeated administration of 50mg/kg increased DOPAC and HVA contents in the cerebral cortex. In the hypothalamus, the single 50mg/kg treatment decreased NE, and the repeated 50mg/kg treatment decreased NE but increased DOPA. In the corpus striatum, the single 50mg/kg administration increased DA, DOPAC, HVA, and 5-HIAA while the repeated administration increased NE and MHPG as well. In this region, the single 400mg/kg treatment increased NE and 5-HIAA, and the repeated treatment increased NE. In the hyppocampus, the repeated 50mg/kg treatment increased MHPG, and the repeated 400mg/kg treatment decreased HVA. These results indicate that the effect of this formulation on murine brain monoamines is greater at 50mg/kg than at 400mg/kg and that the effect varies among the regions of the brain.
4.Carpal Tunnel Syndrome Successfully Treated with Kakkonto : Two Case Reports
Yuzo FUKUSHIMA ; Hiroko FUKUSHIMA ; Ryosuke FUJITA ; Hidefumi MIYAGAWA ; Hiroshi TOGI ; Maki MITSUHASHI
Kampo Medicine 2020;71(3):224-227
Carpal tunnel syndrome is a common condition caused by compression of the median nerve. Patients usually present with numbness and pain along the distribution of the median nerve in the hand. We report 2 cases of carpal tunnel syndrome successfully treated with kakkonto after their pattern diagnosis. We treated a 57-year-old women and a 59-year-old man. Two patients presented with hand pain and numbness and were diagnosed with carpal tunnel syndrome. Kakkonto treatment was successfully in two cases. We observed that median nerve compression persisted in these patients even after disappearance of numbness and pain ; therefore, we recommended operative management. The 2 patients underwent an operation for carpal tunnel syndrome. Kakkonto can be considered useful palliative treatment before considering operative management for numbness and pain in the patients with carpal tunnel syndrome.
5.Associations between nutritional status among school children and social determinants of health of their parents in Kaski district, Nepal
Maki KANZAKI ; Janak POUDEL ; Prakash ACHARYA ; Rina KAWATA ; Yoko ODA ; Hiroko OKUGAWA ; Kenji KIMUR ; Hiroko SAKAI
Journal of International Health 2021;36(2):49-62
Background This study explored the association of residence, caste, social determinants of health (SDH) of parents, and daily junk food intake with the nutritional status of school children living in different residential areas of a district in Nepal. Methods A survey was conducted from December 2017 to March 2019, including 331 school children aged 6 to 12 years as well as their parents, in the primary village for Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA) support and the surrounding area in the Machapuchare Administrative Region of Kaski District, Gandagi Province, Nepal. In this study, the body mass index for age z-score (BMIZ), a criterion used by the WHO for assessing malnutrition, was used for determining underweight; BMIZ <−2 SD was defined as underweight. The children’s anthropometric data were measured to assess their nutritional status, and a survey on children’s daily junk food intake and parents' SDH was conducted among parents. The responses were analyzed by logistic regression analysis.Results Of the children who participated in the survey, 31 (9.4%) were underweight. An association between parents’ SDH and children’s underweight was found after adjusting for mothers’ age at marriage, number of siblings, and daily junk food intake, and the results showed that lower caste (OR=0.241, p=0.001), lower education of mothers (OR=3.879, p=0.011) and non-literacy of fathers (OR=2.790, p=0.023) had statistically significant effects on BMIZ.Conclusions In this study, BMIZ, indicating underweight in Nepalese school children, was associated with higher caste and a mother’s level of educational attainment and father’s of non-literacy. To understand the factors influencing children’s health, it is necessary to evaluate sociodemographic parameters of parents as childcare providers, including culture, education, employment, living conditions, and diet, and to conduct surveys that capture data on the SDH of parents from various perspectives.