1.Warming of one hand causes sustained increases in skin surface temperature and water content of the contralateral forearm
Ruriko Okada ; Kanji Matsukawa ; Toshio Kobayashi ; Yukiko Miyakoshi
Japanese Journal of Physical Fitness and Sports Medicine 2013;62(4):315-321
This study aimed to develop a new method of increasing water content in the cutaneous stratum corneum under a dry skin condition. For this purpose, the experiments were performed using 10 healthy women (age: 20 ± 5 years, height: 158 ± 4 cm, weight: 50 ± 6 kg) in winter to ensure the dry condition. The subjects immersed the right hand into a 42˚C bath for 10 min. Skin surface temperature and water content in the stratum corneum of the left forearm were simultaneously measured during and for 1 h after the hand warming. The skin surface temperature began to increase (P<0.05) 15 min after the hand warming and thereafter remained increased for 1 h. Similarly, the water content in the stratum corneum began to increase immediately after the hand warming and remained increased throughout the experiment. The present results suggest that warming of one hand is effective in enhancing skin moisture in the other forearm and thereby maintaining barrier function of the skin.
2.Occurrence of Sleep-Disordered Breathing (SDB) in Examinees of Thorough Medical Checkup
Akemi TAKAMIZAWA ; Mitsuyo OKADA ; Toshio SHIMIZU ; Miyuki HAYASHI ; Junko KOMATSU
Journal of the Japanese Association of Rural Medicine 2005;54(6):879-886
The estimated prevalence of sleep-disordered breathing (SDB) with an apnea-hypopnea index (AHI) of 5 or higher was 24 percent for men, and 4 percent of men in the middle-aged work force meet the minimal diagnostic criteria for the sleep apnea syndrome (SAS) (SDB with daytime hypersomnolence). However, there are few published data about this problem in our country.A random sample of 208 men 30 to 76 years old who were staying overnight for a complete physical examination were the subjects of this study. A portable sleep data acquisition device was used to determine the frequency of episodes of apnea and hypa-pnea in them. The prevalence of SDB was worked out and the clinical significance was discussed.The estimated prevalence of SDB was 76.4 percent and that of SAS was 12.5 percent. Compared with subjects with lower AHI values, those with higher levels of SDB and AHI included a significantly large number of individuals of advanced age and with hypertension, although their body mass index, Epworth sleepiness scale, and values of total cholesterol and triglycerides were not significantly high.These data revealed a remarkable high incidence of SDB in our country and suggested an association of SDB with risk factors of cardio-vascular events. We need a regular screening for sleep disorders by polysomnography or the portable device at least.
percent
;
Prevalence aspects
;
Sleep Apnea Syndromes
;
Male population group
;
SAS
3.Studies on the Relationship between Bone Strength and Bone Quality in Rats Fed with a Low-magnesium Diet
Toshio Okada ; Yusuke Kozai ; Ryota Kawamata ; Takashi Sakurai ; Isamu Kashima
Oral Science International 2006;3(1):21-27
The relationship between bone strength and bone quality in rats fed with a low-magnesium (low-Mg) diet was examined. Twenty four-week-old male Wistar rats were divided into a control group (n = 10) and a low-Mg group (n = 10). Each group was fed with a conventional diet or a low-Mg diet (Mg, 6 mg/100 g diet) for 8 weeks, respectively. After the rats were sacrificed, bone strength, bone mineral content (BMC) and three-dimensional (3D) trabecular structure of the lumbar vertebra were measured, respectively. The results showed that the values of the BMC were almost the same between the control and the low-Mg diet groups. On the other hand, the bone strength of the low-Mg diet group was significantly lower than that of the control group (p < 0.01). 3D trabecular structure analysis showed a significant decrease (p < 0.05 or 0.01) in the trabecular structure of the low-Mg diet group as compared to the control group. These findings suggest that the bone strength in this model is not affected by the BMC but is strongly affected by the trabecular structure. The low-Mg diet model is considered to be an excellent model for examining bone quality.
4.Effect of Long-Term Exercise on Walking Ability in Elderly People.
JUNDONG KIM ; TOSHIO OHSHIMA ; SHINO BABA ; TOSHIHIRO YASUDA ; KAZUTAKA ADACHI ; SHIGERU KATSUTA ; MORIHIKO OKADA ; SHINYA KUNO
Japanese Journal of Physical Fitness and Sports Medicine 2001;50(1):149-158
In order to clarify the effect of exercise on the walking performance and the muscle volume in lower limbs, elderly athletes long continuing to be trained and untrained elderly were compared with regard to their muscle cross-sectional area (CSA) of m. psoas major, thigh muscle and crus muscle and their walking ability. The subjects used consisted of thirty-six 80's-aged male and 70's-aged female elderly athletes and twenty-four elders having no regular exercise (control male group : CM, control female group : CF) . The elderly athletes were further divided into two groups in accordance with their results of Japan Fitness Test (high performance male group : HPM, low performance male group : LPM, high performance female group : HPF, low performance female group : LPF) . The walking performance was evaluated by analyzing their walking speed, stride-length and step rate during walking along a 15 m-strip of passage at normal and fast paces using videotaping. The muscle CSA was determined at m. psoas major, thigh muscle (extensors and flexors) and crus muscle (m. tibialis anterior and m. triceps surae) using MRI. As for the walking speed and stride-length at the normal pace, only HPM and HPF showed significantly higher values than CM and CF (male : p<0.05, female : p<0.01) . Meanwhile at the faster pace, HPF and LPF showed significantly higher values than CF in female (HPF : p<0.01, LPF : p<0.05) and in the case of males, only HPM have a higher value only of the walking speed than CM (p<0.05) . The CSA of m. psoas major in HPM and HPF significantly higher than that in CM and CF (all p<0.05), while in CSAs of knee extensor muscles and m. triceps surae, the statistical differences were not consistent among male and female groups. The results suggested that greater muscle mass of m. psoas major could influence higher walking speed in elderly people, and might be affected by regular exercise training.
5.Do multiple personal roles promote working energetically in female nurses? A cross-sectional study of relevant factors promoting work engagement in female nurses.
Nagisa OKADA ; Kosuke YABASE ; Toshio KOBAYASHI ; Hitoshi OKAMURA
Environmental Health and Preventive Medicine 2019;24(1):56-56
BACKGROUND:
Like most women, female nurses in the workforce experience life events such as marriage, childbirth, and child-rearing, and carry out numerous personal roles. This may result in an increase in various demands for nurses, and coping with these roles may promote work engagement. However, few studies have focused on work engagement or spillover effects, including those in the family domain, in female nurses with multiple roles. In the present study, we aimed to examine work engagement in female nurses and investigate its relationship with factors such as the presence or absence of multiple personal roles.
METHODS:
The subjects of this study were 1225 female nurses working at three general hospitals, each with at least 200 hospital beds in Fukuoka Prefecture, Japan. The cross-sectional design of the study used anonymous self-administered questionnaires. Responses were received from 650 nurses (response rate 53.1%), of which 612 were valid (valid response rate 50.0%). Multiple regression analysis was performed on the 612 responses regarding associations between work engagement and the presence or absence of multiple roles (role as a wife or mother), spillover effects, coping characteristics, job demands, and job resources.
RESULTS:
In general, the work engagement of female nurses was low, as is the case with other female workers in Japan, but work engagement was higher among female nurses with multiple roles than among those without. The regression analysis showed that factors associated with better work engagement in female nurses were family-to-work positive spillover, job resources, coping strategies including "changing a point of view," "active solution for problems," "avoidance and suppression," and the presence of multiple roles.
CONCLUSIONS
The results indicate that in addition to resources in the work domain, a family-to-work positive spillover effect, which is a variable in the non-work domain, may also promote energetic work among female nurses. Therefore, it is necessary for nurses to receive support at work and use effective coping strategies.