1.Permission of Foods for Specified Health Use (FOSHU)
Hirotaka HAYASHI ; Satoshi OHNO ; Yasuyuki OHTA ; Takanari ARAI ; Nobutaka SUZUKI
Japanese Journal of Complementary and Alternative Medicine 2007;4(3):103-112
The category “Food with Health Claim” contains “Food with Nutrient Function Claim” and “Food for Specified Health Use (FOSHU)”. The definition of “Food with Nutrient Function Claim” is “food used to supplement nutritional factors such as vitamins and minerals”. Once certain standards have been met, public sale of the item is possible. In concrete terms these requirements specify that the daily intake of the aforementioned nutritional factors must be within a certain range, as well as the display of health claims and warning labels.
At the same time, because FOSHU possess components capable of affecting physiological function, and their application is essentially as specific health foods, each food to be sold as FOSHU requires authorization from the Japanese Ministry of Health. In this article we focus on the various tests required for approval.
2.Preferred and Actual Place of Living Among Cancer Patients Who Received Home Care-Considering Changes in Preference While Receiving Home Care-
Yasuyuki ARAI ; Takao SUZUKI ; Koji NAGASHIMA ; Masahiko FUKUCHI ; Yoshimichi KOSAKA ; Hideki OHTA
An Official Journal of the Japan Primary Care Association 2019;42(3):150-157
Objectives: This study examined whether cancer patients who received home care lived in the places they and their families preferred, and whether their preferences changed while receiving home care.Methods: We conducted a medical record survey of 111 cancer patients who received home care provided by a clinic in Japan, and examined the patients' and their families' preferred places to live in the case of their condition deteriorate (the patients and their families were asked when they began to receive home care, and whenever their and their families' conditions changed), and the actual places where the patients lived out their lives.Results: Among those who preferred home at the beginning of receiving home care, 95.6% of patients and 96.8% of families preferred home in the last survey period. Of those who did not prefer home at the beginning, 87.9% of patients and 84.8% of families preferred home by the last survey period. For 97.4% of patients and 97.2% of families, the actual places where the patients lived out their lives were consistent with their preferred places.Conclusion: We found that cancer patients receiving home care provided by the clinic and their families who preferred home from the beginning often still preferred home until the end of their lives, and that those who did not prefer home at the beginning often preferred home by the last survey period. Thus, most of the patients lived out their lives in the places they and their families preferred.
3.Acute Oral Toxicity Test of Hot Water Extract of Coix lacryma-jobi L. var. ma-yuen Stapf in Rats
Hirotaka HAYASHI ; Yasuyuki OHTA ; Takanari ARAI ; Yasuko SHIMANO ; Fumihide TAKANO ; Jeffry Michael STRONG ; Toshiki ENOMOTO ; Kazuo UEBABA ; Tomihisa OHTA ; Nobutaka SUZUKI
Japanese Journal of Complementary and Alternative Medicine 2009;6(2):105-110
Coix lacryma-jobi L. var.ma-yuen Stapf (Coix seed) is a grass crop that has long been used in traditional medicine as a nourishing food. However, high-intake safety of the extract of the husks, pellicles and astringent skin of Coix seed has rarely been evaluated. We performed a safety test of hot water extract of all parts of Coix seed (CRD extract) in rats. CRD extract showed no significant toxicity on body weight, blood analyses, urinalysis and histopathological examination in acute toxicity tests.
4.28-day Repeated Dose Oral Toxicity Test of Coix lacryma-jobi L. var. ma-yuen Stapf in Rats
Hirotaka HAYASHI ; Takanari ARAI ; Jeffry M. STRONG ; Harukuni TOKUDA ; Yasuko SHIMANO ; Yasuyuki OHTA ; Toshiki ENOMOTO ; Kazuo UEBABA ; Tomihisa OHTA ; Nobutaka SUZUKI
Japanese Journal of Complementary and Alternative Medicine 2009;6(3):131-135
Coix lacryma-jobi L. var.ma-yuen Stapf (coix seed) is a grass crop that has long been used in traditional medicine as a nourishing food. However, high-intake safety of the extract of the husks, pellicles and astringent skin of coix seed has rarely been evaluated. We performed a 28-day repeated dose oral toxicity test of hot water extract of all parts of Coix seed in rats. The extract showed no significant toxicity on body weight, blood analyses, urinalysis and histopathological examination in acute toxicity tests.
5.Effectiveness of Mao-bushi-saishin-to in Treating Common Cold Syndrome. Controlled Comparative Study Using the Sealed Envelope Method.
Yukihiko HOMMA ; Kazuo TAKAOKA ; Hirokazu YOZAWA ; Yoshimitsu KATAOKA ; Soichiro GOTO ; Masanori SENJO ; Nobuaki MIZUSHIMA ; Kazuyuki TSUJI ; Sumio IMAI ; Yasuyuki MIZUTANI ; Kenji KAKUYA ; Yoshikazu ONDA ; Eiji NIIDA ; Shinji ARAI ; Toshiyuki NEGISHI ; Kohei ETIZENYA ; Katsuhiro FUJITA ; Mitsuaki MIYAMOTO ; Toshiyuki KOSEKI
Kampo Medicine 1996;47(2):245-252
To investigate the effectiveness of Maobushisaishin-to (traditional Japanese herbal medicine; Tsumura TJ-127) in treating the common cold, a clinical comparison between Maobushisaishin-to and a general common cold drug was conducted using the sealed envelope method. The study involved 83 patients in the TJ-127 group and 88 patients in the general cold drug group. No differences in age, gender or the period from the onset of the disease to the beginning of treatment were observed between the two groups.
The results indicated greater than moderate improvement in 81.9% of the TJ-127 group, compared with 60.3% of the compound cold drug group (p<0.01). Further analysis of symptom diaries kept by the patients indicated that TJ-127 provided more rapid relief for symptoms such as fever, feeling feverish, coughing and phlegm than did the general cold drug. No side effects were observed for the TJ-127. These results suggest that TJ-127 is effective in the treatment of the common cold.
6.Association between physical function and long-term care in community-dwelling older and oldest people: the SONIC study.
Werayuth SRITHUMSUK ; Mai KABAYAMA ; Kayo GODAI ; Nonglak KLINPUDTAN ; Ken SUGIMOTO ; Hiroshi AKASAKA ; Yoichi TAKAMI ; Yasushi TAKEYA ; Koichi YAMAMOTO ; Saori YASUMOTO ; Yasuyuki GONDO ; Yasumichi ARAI ; Yukie MASUI ; Tatsuro ISHIZAKI ; Hiroshi SHIMOKATA ; Hiromi RAKUGI ; Kei KAMIDE
Environmental Health and Preventive Medicine 2020;25(1):46-46
BACKGROUND:
Preventing the need for long-term care (LTC) by identifying physical function risk factors are important to decrease the LTC burden. The objective of this study was to investigate whether grip strength and/or walking speed, which are components of the frailty definition, are associated with LTC in community-dwelling older and oldest people.
METHODS:
The participants were 1098 community-dwelling older and oldest people who had not received LTC at the baseline. The endpoint was receiving LTC after the baseline survey. The independent variables were grip strength and walking speed, and participants were divided into two groups based on these variables. The confounding factors were age, sex, the Japanese version of the Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA-J), hypertension, diabetes mellitus, stroke, joint diseases, living alone, body mass index, and serum albumin. We calculated the hazard ratio of receiving LTC using the Cox proportional hazard model.
RESULTS:
Among the 1098 participants, 107 (9.7%) newly received LTC during the follow-up. Regarding the physical function, only slow walking speed was significantly correlated with LTC after adjusting for all confounding factors except the MoCA-J score (HR = 1.74, 95% CI = 1.10-2.75, P = .018). However, slow walking speed was still a risk factor for LTC after adjusting for the MoCA-J score and other confounding factors (HR = 1.64, 95% CI = 1.03-2.60, P = .037).
CONCLUSIONS
The findings from this study may contribute to a better understanding of slow walking speed as a factor related to LTC, which might be a criterion for disability prevention and could serve as an outcome measure for physical function in older people.
Aged
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Aged, 80 and over
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Exercise
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Female
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Humans
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Independent Living
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statistics & numerical data
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Japan
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Long-Term Care
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statistics & numerical data
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Male
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Proportional Hazards Models