JaLCDOI | 10.18926/AMO/32304 |
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FullText URL | fulltext.pdf |
Author | Mino, Yoshio| Yasuda, Nobufumi| Kanazawa, Susumu| Inoue, Shimpei| |
Abstract | In order to clarify the effects of medical education on attitudes towards mental illness among medical students, a follow-up study was conducted. All 100 students entering Kochi Medical School in 1988 were subjects. The initial questionnaire survey was conducted in 1988, and followed up in 1993. Response rate was 69% in the initial survey, and 83% in the follow-up study. By the time of the follow-up, all of the students had completed their medical education, including courses in psychiatry and mental health. Results were as follows: At the follow-up study, 1) a significantly higher percentage of students replied that they accepted the mentally ill as co-workers; 2) significantly favorable changes were observed in attitudes towards psychiatric services; 3) optimism about the effectiveness of treatment for mental illness at an early stage and prevention of mental illness had decreased; and 4) no change was observed in attitudes toward human rights of the mentally ill, except in the case of one item stating that the mentally ill should not have children in order to avoid hereditary handicaps, with which a lower percentage agreed. Conclusively, medical education can play an important role in attitudes towards mental illness. |
Keywords | attitudes towards mental illness medical education medical students follow-up study |
Amo Type | Article |
Publication Title | Acta Medica Okayama |
Published Date | 2000-06 |
Volume | volume54 |
Issue | issue3 |
Publisher | Okayama University Medical School |
Start Page | 127 |
End Page | 132 |
ISSN | 0386-300X |
NCID | AA00508441 |
Content Type | Journal Article |
language | English |
File Version | publisher |
Refereed | True |
PubMed ID | 10925737 |
Web of Science KeyUT | 000087965700005 |
JaLCDOI | 10.18926/AMO/32303 |
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FullText URL | fulltext.pdf |
Author | Ogawa, Norio| |
Abstract | Levodopa is the gold standard for the treatment of Parkinson's disease (PD) because of its outstanding clinical efficacy. However, the majority of patients experience various adverse reactions, including the wearing-off phenomenon, the on-off phenomenon, dyskinesia and psychiatric symptoms. The response to levodopa depends not only on the intrinsic responsiveness of the patients, but also on various other important factors including the type of levodopa preparation, its absorption/metabolism, the blood-brain barrier, age at onset of disease and concomitant use of anti-parkinsonian drugs. This review summarizes factors which influence the effects of levodopa in PD. To minimize levodopa-induced adverse reactions and to relieve long-term parkinsonian symptoms, levodopa therapy should be conducted by taking these factors into consideration. |
Keywords | dopamine agonist monoamine oxidase-B(MAO-B) inhibitor catechol-O-methyltransferase(COMT)inhibitor blood-brain barrier age at onset large neutral amino acids gastric acidity |
Amo Type | Review |
Publication Title | Acta Medica Okayama |
Published Date | 2000-06 |
Volume | volume54 |
Issue | issue3 |
Publisher | Okayama University Medical School |
Start Page | 95 |
End Page | 101 |
ISSN | 0386-300X |
NCID | AA00508441 |
Content Type | Journal Article |
language | English |
File Version | publisher |
Refereed | True |
PubMed ID | 10925733 |
Web of Science KeyUT | 000087965700001 |
JaLCDOI | 10.18926/AMO/32302 |
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FullText URL | fulltext.pdf |
Author | Sheng, Haiyun| Aoe, Motoi| Doihara, Hiroyoshi| Andou, Akio| Shimizu, Nobuyoshi| |
Abstract | To investigate whether an association exists between vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) expression and tumor prognosis in primary lung carcinoma, we used immunohistochemical techniques to analyze microvessel density and VEGF expression in lung carcinoma tissue from 98 patients. Tissue had been fresh-frozen at the time of operation and preserved for more than 5 years. The results indicated that VEGF expression was positive for 50 of the 98 patients (51.0%), with 27 (27.6%) being weakly positive and 23 (23.5%) being strongly positive. The microvessel density in tissue showing weakly positive and strongly positive VEGF expression was significantly higher than that in VEGF-negative tumor tissue (P < 0.05: negative vs. weakly positive, P < 0.01: negative vs. strongly positive), we showed demonstrating that VEGF expression was significantly associated with intratumoral microvessel density. The 5-year survival rates were 8.7% for strongly VEGF-positive patients, 43.9% for weakly VEGF-positive patients and 79.2% for VEGF-negative patients, respectively (P < 0.01: negative vs. weakly positive or strongly positive). Furthermore, multivariate analysis employing multiple regression analysis indicated that VEGF expression correlates highly with the overall survival rates of patients with primary lung carcinoma. Two variables, N status and VEGF expression, were found to be significant prognostic factors (P < 0.01). The results of this study suggest that VEGF expression is associated with intratumoral microvessel density. VEGF expression may constitute important independent prognostic evidence that can help us in predicting the outcomes of patients with primary lung carcinomas. |
Keywords | prognostic value vascular endothelial growth factor neoangiogenesis multivariate analysis primary lung carcinoma |
Amo Type | Article |
Publication Title | Acta Medica Okayama |
Published Date | 2000-06 |
Volume | volume54 |
Issue | issue3 |
Publisher | Okayama University Medical School |
Start Page | 119 |
End Page | 126 |
ISSN | 0386-300X |
NCID | AA00508441 |
Content Type | Journal Article |
language | English |
File Version | publisher |
Refereed | True |
PubMed ID | 10925736 |
Web of Science KeyUT | 000087965700004 |
JaLCDOI | 10.18926/AMO/32301 |
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FullText URL | fulltext.pdf |
Author | Endo, Ryutaro| Murakami, Shinichiro| Masuda, Yu| Taguchi, Takehito| Ohtsuka, Aiji| Nishizaki, Kazunori| Murakami, Takuro| |
Abstract | The present study showed that many neurons in the adult rat brain possessed a perineuronal sulfated proteoglycan surface coat which reacted to cationic iron colloid and aldehyde fuchsin. This surface coat was stained supravitally with Ehrlich's methylene blue and doubly stained with Ehrlich's methylene blue and aldehyde fuchsin. The surface coat was also stained with Gomori's ammoniacal silver and doubly stained with Gomori's ammoniacal silver and cationic iron colloid. The surface coat was usually expressed together with a nerve cell surface glycoprotein net detectable with lectin Wisteria floribunda agglutinin. These findings indicate that the perineuronal proteoglycan surface coat is identical to Cajal's superficial reticulum and contains some collagenous elements. It was further demonstrated that collagenase digestion erased Gomori's ammoniacal silver impregnation within the perineuronal proteoglycan surface coat. |
Keywords | brain extracellular matrix perineuronal proteoglycans cell surface glycoproteins |
Amo Type | Article |
Publication Title | Acta Medica Okayama |
Published Date | 2000-06 |
Volume | volume54 |
Issue | issue3 |
Publisher | Okayama University Medical School |
Start Page | 111 |
End Page | 118 |
ISSN | 0386-300X |
NCID | AA00508441 |
Content Type | Journal Article |
language | English |
File Version | publisher |
Refereed | True |
PubMed ID | 10925735 |
Web of Science KeyUT | 000087965700003 |
JaLCDOI | 10.18926/AMO/32300 |
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FullText URL | fulltext.pdf |
Author | Nakamura, Koki| Irie, Hiroyuki| Fujisawa, Emi| Yoshioka, Hidekatsu| Ninomiya, Yoshifumi| Sakuma, Isao| Sano, Shunji| |
Abstract | While heat shock protein (HSP) 72 is known as a stress protein, there have been no reports of HSP 72 expression in patients who have undergone surgery for congenital heart disease. Fourteen patients (7 males and 7 females) who had undergone surgery for congenital heart disease were studied. The ages of the patients ranged from 2 months to 43 years old (mean 6.5 +/- 10.8 years old; median 3.0 years old). The diagnoses were Tetralogy of Fallot in seven, pulmonary atresia with ventricular septal defect (VSD) in three, complex anomalies in three, and VSD in one patient. Histological study and HSP analysis using Western blots and immunostaining with anti-HSP 72 monoclonal antibody were performed for right ventricular muscle samples resected during the surgery. The histological findings showed hypertrophic changes of ventricular cardiomyocytes in all samples studied. Western blots detected HSP 72 expression of various degrees in all specimens. Immunostaining using monoclonal antibody against HSP 72 showed that the protein was present in the nuclei and cytoplasm of cardiomyocytes. In conclusion, although it is difficult to determine the cause of the "stress" that triggers HSP 72 expression in cardiomyocytes, low O2 saturation and pressure overload might act as a "stress", and the only common factor that induced HSP 72 in every sample was hypertrophy. |
Keywords | heat shock protein 72 (HSP 72) human heart congentional cardiac surgery hypertrophy |
Amo Type | Article |
Publication Title | Acta Medica Okayama |
Published Date | 2000-06 |
Volume | volume54 |
Issue | issue3 |
Publisher | Okayama University Medical School |
Start Page | 103 |
End Page | 109 |
ISSN | 0386-300X |
NCID | AA00508441 |
Content Type | Journal Article |
language | English |
File Version | publisher |
Refereed | True |
PubMed ID | 10925734 |
Web of Science KeyUT | 000087965700002 |
JaLCDOI | 10.18926/AMO/32299 |
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FullText URL | fulltext.pdf |
Author | Okada, Shigeru| Taketa, Kazuhisa| Ishikawa, Takatoshi| Koji, Takehiko| Swe, Than| Win, Ne| Win, Khin Maung| Mra, Rai| Myint, Thein Thein| |
Abstract | We conducted Myanmar-Japan cooperation studies on hepatitis B and hepatitis C virus markers in patients with thalassemias and those with liver diseases. Among the 102 patients with liver diseases, 92% had a history of hepatitis B virus infection (antibody to hepatitis B core antigen positive), 35% were hepatitis B surface antigen positive, 39% were positive for anti-HCV. Among 28 patients with hepatocellular carcinoma, 46% had hepatitis B surface antigen, 21.4% had antibody to hepatitis C virus, and 7% were positive for both hepatitis B surface antigen and anti hepatitis C virus. The history of HCV infection among blood recipients at the Haematology Department of the Yangon General Hospital and at the Yangon Children's Hospital was found to be 55.5% and 46.7%, respectively, which is comparable to the history of hepatitis B infection (66.7% and 46.7%, respectively). This preliminary survey also encountered 2 cases positive for anti-HCV among 34 voluntary blood donors. This survey is the first one to report that hepatitis C is at the epidemic stage in Myanmar. As there is no effective treatment for hepatitis C in this country, a screening program for blood used in transfusion should be started immediately. |
Keywords | hepatitis C Myanmar (Burma) thalassemia hepatitis B |
Amo Type | Article |
Publication Title | Acta Medica Okayama |
Published Date | 2000-06 |
Volume | volume54 |
Issue | issue3 |
Publisher | Okayama University Medical School |
Start Page | 137 |
End Page | 138 |
ISSN | 0386-300X |
NCID | AA00508441 |
Content Type | Journal Article |
language | English |
File Version | publisher |
Refereed | True |
PubMed ID | 10925739 |
Web of Science KeyUT | 000087965700007 |
JaLCDOI | 10.18926/AMO/32298 |
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FullText URL | fulltext.pdf |
Author | Tasova, Yesim| Sahin, Berksoy| Koltas, Soner| Paydas, Semra| |
Abstract | The effect of Blastocystis hominis (B. hominis) in both immunocompetent and immunocompromised subjects has been the subject of debate in recent years, mostly in response to its unknown pathogenicity and frequency of occurrence. We performed a non-randomised, open labelled, single institute study in our hospital in order to investigate the clinical significance and frequency of B. hominis in patients suffering from hematological malignancy (HM) who displayed symptoms of gastrointestinal diseases during the period of chemotherapy-induced neutropenia. The presence and potential role of other intestinal inclusive of parasites were also studied. At least 3 stool samples from each of 206 HM patients with gastrointestinal complaints (the HM group) were studied. These were compared with stool samples from a control group of 200 patients without HM who were also suffering from gastrointestinal complaints. Samples were studied with saline-lugol, formalin-ether, and trichome staining methods. Groups were comparable in terms of gender, age and type of gastrointestinal complaints. In the HM group, the most common parasite was B. hominis. In this group, 23 patients (13%) had B. hominis, while in the control group only 2 patients (1%) had B. hominis. This difference was statistically significant (P < 0.05). Symptoms were non-specific for B. hominis or other parasites in the HM group. The predominant symptoms in both groups were abdominal pain (87-89.5%), diarrhea (70-89.5%), and flatulence (74-68.4%). Although all patients with HM were symptom-free at the end of treatment with oral metranidazol (1,500 mg per day for 10 days) 2 patients with HM had positive stool samples containing an insignificant number of parasites (< 5 cells per field). In conclusion, it appears that B. hominis is not rare and should be considered in patients with HM who have gastrointestinal complaints while being treated with chemotherapy. Furthermore, metranidazol appears to be effective in treating B. hominis infection. |
Keywords | Blastocystis hominis gastrointestinal disorders hematological malignancy |
Amo Type | Article |
Publication Title | Acta Medica Okayama |
Published Date | 2000-06 |
Volume | volume54 |
Issue | issue3 |
Publisher | Okayama University Medical School |
Start Page | 133 |
End Page | 136 |
ISSN | 0386-300X |
NCID | AA00508441 |
Content Type | Journal Article |
language | English |
File Version | publisher |
Refereed | True |
PubMed ID | 10925738 |
Web of Science KeyUT | 000087965700006 |