1.Thyroid grand screening in the Aizu district, Fukushima prefecture Report II: Comparison with findings in other districts.
Ikuo HIGUCHI ; Mitsuo SUGIMOTO ; Mikio OIKAWA
Journal of the Japanese Association of Rural Medicine 1986;35(2):147-151
Over the past 10 months, we have performed mass screenings for thyroid diseases on the inhabitants of Aizu, Fukushima Prefecture, in cooperation with the women's department of the local agricultural cooperative. The number of examinees so far has reached a total of 2, 481 persons-2, 025 women and 456 men.
By palpation, goiter has been found in 208 (8.4%) persons-204 women and 4 men. The detection ratio was low when compared with the percentage recorded in Kamaishi, and higher than those in Kofu and Chiba.
Out of the 208 persons, 152 men and women underwent further examination, with the result that simple goiter was found in 35 persons; subacute thyroiditis in one person; chronic thyroiditis in 44; Basedow's disease in 8; and nodular goiter in 64.
Aizu stood highest next only to Kamaishi on the list in the chronic thyroiditis detection ratio. Kofu and Chiba followed in that order. As regards adenoma and adenomatous goiter in the thyroid grand, Aizu was on a par with Kamaishi, outdistancing Kofu and Chiba. Thyroid cancer was found less in Aizu than in Kamaishi and Kofu, but more or less at the same ratio with Chiba. As for Basedow's disease, Aizu ranked first.
2.EFFECTS OF CARBONATED AND NONCARBONATED BEVERAGE INTAKES IN RESPONSE TO PROLONGED CYCLE ERGOMETER EXERCISE
TAEWOONG OH ; MITSURU HIGUCHI ; KAZUYUKI KANOSUE ; CHIYOKO USUI ; ISAO MURAOKA ; SHIZUO SAKAMOTO ; IKUO SHIBUICHI ; HIROMICHI MITSUDA
Japanese Journal of Physical Fitness and Sports Medicine 2006;55(Supplement):S205-S208
Athletes have been instructed to refrain from taking carbonated beverages in the sports world, but the mechanism has not been clear. The purpose of this study was to clarify how physiological and biochemical evaluation are affected by taking a 10% CHO carbonated beverage after cycle ergometer (60 min, 60% VO2max). Seven subjects consumed a carbonated or noncarbonated (10% carbohydrate) beverage after exercise. No differences were observed in concentration of glucose, insulin, free fatty acids, K and Na in serum from carbonated beverage compared with noncarbonated beverage intakes after exercise.These results indicate that carbonated beverage did not affect the changes of physiological and biochemical parameter after prolonged exercise, and it could be more refreshing and stimulate taste rather than noncarbonated beverage, but seemed to be hard to drink immediately after exercise because it made subjects feel as if having drunk more than they did.