1.A structural equation modeling of exercise and physical competence influence on body composition among Japanese high school students
Keiji Ota ; Keisuke Takano ; Kazutoshi Kudo ; Kyoko Kotani ; Kazuhiko Kawabata
Japanese Journal of Physical Fitness and Sports Medicine 2014;63(1):197-204
Exercise is important for body composition promotion. Although many studies have indicated that physical competence promotes exercise participation, there are relatively few studies examining the relationships among these factors. The purpose of the present study was to model the relationships among body composition, exercise habits and physical competence by using structural equation modeling. The subjects were 223 Japanese male and female high school students. Height, lean bone mass and bone area ratio were measured. Exercise habits and physical competence scale including three subscales (perceived physical competence, feeling of control and peer and teacher acceptance) were assessed by self-administered questionnaires. Data were analyzed using structural equation modeling. The model showed acceptable fit indices (GFI = .905, AGFI = .863 CFI = .954, RMSEA = .069). The path from peer and teacher acceptance to exercise habit was significant (β = 0.51, p < .001). Moreover, the path from exercise habits and from perceived physical competence to body composition was significant (respectively β = 0.53; p < .001, β = 0.47, p < .001). We could model the relationships among body composition, exercise habits and physical competence. These results indicate that not only exercise habits but also physical competence promoting exercise participation influence on body composition promotion.
2.Significance of Surgical Treatment for Metastatic Brain Tumor in a Patient with Terminal Cancer
Takahisa KANO ; Yoshinobu MORITOKI ; Ikuo TAKAHASHI ; Keisuke OTA ; Hirotada KATAOKA ; Tomomi KAWAGUCHI ; Takahiro SUZUKI ; Kota HIRAGA ; Hikaru TSUZUKI
Journal of the Japanese Association of Rural Medicine 2020;69(4):399-
We performed gamma knife treatment for multiple brain metastases including a left frontal lobe lesion in a patient in his 60s who had renal cell carcinoma. After treatment, the left frontal lobe lesion initially shrank but then began to grow again, resulting in extensive edema, right hemiparesis, impaired activities of daily living (ADL), and decreased motivation. Although the renal cell carcinoma was in the terminal stage, we judged that recovery of ADL could be expected by removing the left frontal lobe lesion and therefore performed craniotomy tumor removal. As a result, the patient’s motivation and right hemiplegia markedly improved and ADL dramatically improved. Although the period from craniotomy tumor removal to death was as short as 2 months, significant improvement of ADL during this time was achieved by removing the tumor. Tumor resection for metastatic brain tumors is rarely performed in the setting of end-stage cancer. However, this case highlights the potential of brain tumor resection as palliative treatment that can be considered for improving ADL even in patients with terminal cancer.