13 results on '"Kirino, Y."'
Search Results
2. SURVEY OF INFORMAL MILK RETAILERS IN NAIROBI, KENYA AND PREVALENCE OF AFLATOXIN M1 IN MARKETED MILK.
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Kirino Y., Makita K., Grace D., and Lindahl, J.
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AFLATOXINS , *MILK contamination , *RAW milk - Abstract
Aflatoxins are toxic by-products of fungi contaminating maize and other crops; they can be carried over into milk, meat and eggs when livestock eat aflatoxin-contaminated feed or fodder. People who consume such animal products are exposed to the toxins. To assess the aflatoxin contamination status in marketed raw milk and associated risk factors in peri-urban Nairobi, we conducted a census of raw milk retailers in Dagoretti Division, Nairobi, Kenya. Structured questionnaires were filled in by face-to-face interviews with all retailers who agreed to participate in this study. Small portions of milk were purchased from each respondent and tested for aflatoxin M1 (AFM1) using competitive enzymelinked immunosorbent assay (cELISA) tests. Geographic coordinates of each eligible retailer were recorded. A total of 350 milk retailers were visited and 344 were plotted on a map. Of these, 250 retailers answered the questionnaire and a milk sample from each of 200 retailers underwent cELISA analysis for AFM1. Four types of businesses were found: kiosks (71%), dairy shops (21%), street or mobile vendors (3%) and grocery stands (1%); for 4% the business type was not identified. Milk was mainly sourced directly from dairy farms (59%) or from intermediate distributors (35%). Most retailers sold less than 20 litres per day of raw milk. The mean daily milk consumption of the milk retailers' households was 940 ml for adults and 729 ml for children. Although 58% of retailers had heard about aflatoxins and the majority of them agreed that aflatoxins could be present in milk, only 29% believed that "milk safety cannot be solely judged by sight or taste" and only 6% that "milk is not completely safe even after boiling". The cELISA test found the mean concentration of AFM1 was 128.7 parts per trillion (ppt) (median=49.9; 95% confidence interval=3.0-822.8) with a maximum of 1675 ppt. Overall, 55% of samples exceeded the European Union maximum level of 50 ppt and 6% exceeded the recommended maximum level of the United States Food and Drug Administration of 500 ppt. Compared to milk from street vendors, a significantly higher amount of AFM1 was detected in milk from kiosks and dairy shops, especially when the milk was sourced from farms without an intermediate distributor. Our findings indicate the need to better understand and manage aflatoxin in milk in Nairobi. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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3. Increase of Clostridium perfringens in association with Eimeria in haemorrhagic enteritis in Japanese beef cattle.
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Kirino, Y., Tanida, M., Hasunuma, H., Kato, T., Irie, T., Horii, Y., and Nonaka, N.
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CLOSTRIDIUM toxins , *CLOSTRIDIUM , *HEMORRHAGIC fever , *EIMERIA , *EIMERIIDAE - Abstract
A coprological survey with detailed clinical observation of naturally occurring haemorrhagic enteritis (HE) cases was conducted to understand the pathophysiology of HE by clarifying the infection status of Eimeria and enteropathogenic bacteria in cattle. Faecal samples from 55 cases of HE and 26 clinically normal animals were collected, and a quantitative examination of Eimeria and potential enteropathogenic bacteria was performed. The number of Eimeria species oocysts per gram of faeces (OPG) exceeded 10,000 in 69.1 per cent of HE cases with a maximum of 1,452,500 OPG and Eimeria zuernii was found to be overwhelmingly dominant. A significant increase in faecal coliform count was observed in HE cases compared with clinically normal animals. Among the animals shedding >10,000 OPG, 42.9 per cent showed a remarkable increase in Clostridium perfringens abundance (>104 CFU/g) in the faeces. In the cases with C. perfringens detected, its abundance was positively correlated with Eimeria OPG and high C. perfringens abundance was always accompanied by high Eimeria OPG. E. zuernii is likely to play a crucial role in massive multiplication of C. perfringens in HE in cattle. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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4. Environmental compound technology for tyres.
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Hara, Y. and Kirino, Y.
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TIRE equipment , *AUTOMOTIVE fuel consumption , *PREVENTION of global warming , *DEFORMATIONS (Mechanics) , *ENERGY dissipation - Abstract
The article focuses on the development of fuel efficient tyre technology and new materials technology aiming to improve vehicle fuel consumption for the prevention of global warming. It states that the technologies were employed to prevent deformation energy that was acquired during travel from thermal energy dissipation. It also discusses component materials of the technologies such as new-material inner liners.
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- 2013
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5. Noncontact energy level analysis of metallic impurities in silicon crystals.
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Kirino, Y., Buczkowski, A., Radzimski, Z. J., Rozgonyi, G. A., and Shimura, F.
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IMPURITY distribution in semiconductors , *SILICON , *ENERGY levels (Quantum mechanics) , *DEEP level transient spectroscopy - Abstract
Noncontact laser/microwave deep level transient spectroscopy (LM-DLTS) based on the measurement of microwave reflection power as a function of temperature has been developed and applied to Czochralski silicon crystals intentionally contaminated with selected metals during crystal growth. The energy levels related to these metallic impurities in p-type silicon have been obtained on bare silicon for the first time without any electrode contact or special sample preparation. The data agree in very satisfactory fashion with results obtained by conventional DLTS. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 1990
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6. Adamantiades‐Behçet's disease (Behçet's disease) and COVID‐19.
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Zouboulis, C.C., van Laar, J.A.M., Schirmer, M., Emmi, G., Fortune, F., Gül, A., Kirino, Y., Lee, E.‐S., Sfikakis, P.P., Shahram, F., and Wallace, G.R.
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BEHCET'S disease , *COVID-19 , *MEDICAL personnel , *COVID-19 pandemic , *SARS-CoV-2 - Abstract
The authors acknowledge the contribution of Prof. Dorian O. Haskard, National Heart and Lung Institute, Imperial College London, Hammersmith Campus, London, UK during the consensus procedure and thank the Associazione Sindrome e Malattia di Behçet e Behçet-like odv, Dr. Andreas Altenburg and Sophie den Otter for support on data collection. Two patients were admitted to the ICU and a patient, not been on treatment for ABD before getting COVID-19, died.9 COVID-19 symptoms were mild in the nine patients who survived, and three patients reported exacerbations of their ABD-associated oral ulcers or arthralgia. Moreover, among 2135 consecutive COVID-19 patients presented to the Hospital Clínic (Barcelona, Spain), four (0.19%) were co-diagnosed with ABD and three were hospitalized.7 In all four patients, ABD activity during the first COVID-19 symptoms was low. [Extracted from the article]
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- 2021
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7. Campylobacter and Salmonella are prevalent in broiler farms in Kyushu, Japan: results of a 2-year distribution and circulation dynamics audit.
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Yamazaki, W., Uemura, R., Sekiguchi, S., Dong, J.‐B., Watanabe, S., Kirino, Y., Mekata, H., Nonaka, N., Norimine, J., Sueyoshi, M., Goto, Y., Horii, Y., Kurogi, M., Yoshino, S., and Misawa, N.
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CAMPYLOBACTER , *SALMONELLA , *DISEASE prevalence , *AGRICULTURE , *GENOTYPES - Abstract
Aim To elucidate the distribution and circulation dynamics of Campylobacter and Salmonella in Japanese chicken broiler flocks. Methods and Results A 2-year investigation of the distribution of Campylobacter and Salmonella was conducted in 25 broiler flocks at nine farms in Japan from 2013 to 2014. Campylobacter and Salmonella tested positive in 11 (44·0%) and 24 (96·0%) broiler flocks respectively. One hundred and ninety-five Campylobacter and 184 Salmonella isolates were characterized into 12 Campylobacter (including two novel genotypes) and three Salmonella MLST genotypes. Only Salmonella isolation between caecal and environmental samples were significantly correlated. Further, one litter sample tested positive for Salmonella before new chicks were introduced. The Campylobacter strains rapidly lost culturability within 2-18 days; in contrast, the Salmonella strains survived from 64-211 days in artificially inoculated water samples. Conclusion No persistent circulation-mediated Campylobacter contamination was observed. In contrast, circulation of Salmonella in broiler houses was seen, apparently due to the litter excreted from broiler flocks, as well as Salmonella-contaminated water and feed. Significance and Impact of the Study This paper provides the distribution, genotypic data and circulation dynamics of Campylobacter and Salmonella as recently observed in Japanese chicken broiler farms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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8. Polypharmacy of medications and fall-related fractures in older people in Japan: a comparison between driving-prohibited and driving-cautioned medications.
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Iihara, N., Bando, Y., Ohara, M., Yoshida, T., Nishio, T., Okada, T., and Kirino, Y.
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RISK factors of fractures , *RISK factors of falling down , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *RESEARCH funding , *STATISTICAL sampling , *LOGISTIC regression analysis , *CROSS-sectional method , *POLYPHARMACY , *ODDS ratio , *OLD age - Abstract
What is known and objective Polypharmacy is a risk factor for fall-related fractures. However, it is unclear whether polypharmacy itself is a direct risk factor. The aim of this study was to assess the association between the risk of fall-related fractures and polypharmacy of driving-prohibited and driving-cautioned medications in older outpatients. Methods We conducted a cross-sectional study of outpatients aged ≥65 years receiving any medication, using two sampling data sets from the October 2011 and October 2012 national insurance claims in Japan. Using logistic regression models, we analysed the association between the numbers of driving-prohibited or driving-cautioned medications administered or dispensed to patients and the occurrence of fall-related fractures. Results and discussion In both analysis populations ( n = 303 311 and n = 326 219), the adjusted odds ratio of driving-prohibited medications for the occurrence of fall-related fractures significantly increased as the number of these medications per patient increased (95% confidence interval: 0, 1-2, 3-4, 5-6, 7-8 and ≥9 medications; reference, 0·95-1·24, 1·18-1·79, 1·47-2·96, 1·26-5·21 and 1·50-15·2 in October 2011 and reference, 1·11-1·42, 1·39-2·03, 1·33-2·72, 1·53-5·49 and 1·30-13·0 in October 2012). The association was maintained even for sensitivity analyses restricted to medications administered orally or orally and by injection. However, a similar association was not observed for driving-cautioned medications. What is new and conclusion Medication class is a more important risk factor for fall-related fractures rather than polypharmacy alone with no regard to medication class. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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9. Comparing patient dissatisfaction and rational judgment in intentional medication non-adherence versus unintentional non-adherence.
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Iihara, N., Nishio, T., Okura, M., Anzai, H., Kagawa, M., Houchi, H., and Kirino, Y.
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CONFIDENCE intervals , *DRUGS , *EPIDEMIOLOGY , *HEALTH behavior , *PATIENT-professional relations , *PATIENT compliance , *PATIENT satisfaction , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *RESEARCH funding , *U-statistics , *DATA analysis , *CROSS-sectional method , *DATA analysis software , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
What is known and objective Patients' poor adherence to medications is reported to be related to the individual patients' beliefs and cognitions and their trust of the medical staff. However, the causes of the two forms of non-adherence, intentional and unintentional behaviours, have yet to be clarified. This study compared psychological latent factors associated with intentional and unintentional non-adherence to chronic medication regimens, focusing on the potential effects of (i) patients' dissatisfaction with treatment and their relationships with the medical staff and (ii) patients' subliminal rational thinking processes, which weighed the positive values such as their expectations of benefits from treatment against negative values such as their dissatisfaction. Methods Two cross-sectional surveys were undertaken of patients given medications for chronic diseases, using a questionnaire developed and validated in this study. One survey was undertaken in three hospitals and the other survey, online throughout Japan. We scored the individual latent factors using the questionnaire and calculated the differential score between two negatively correlated latent factors to quantify patients' subliminal rational thinking process. We compared the adjusted odds ratio ( OR) of latent factors between intentional and unintentional non-adherence to medication in both surveys. Results and discussion Of the eligible subjects, 149 hospitalized patients and 524 survey participants completed the questionnaire. Intentional non-adherence was associated with patient dissatisfaction with treatment including interpersonal relationships with medical staff in both hospitalized patients and online survey participants (95% confidence interval of adjusted OR for Dissatisfaction, 1·20-16·26 in the hospital-based survey and 1·33-3·45 in the online survey). In both surveys, intentional non-adherence was significantly associated with the differential score between two negatively correlated latent factors, Willingness and Dissatisfaction ( P = 0·02 in the hospital-based survey and P < 0·001 in the online survey). However, these associations were not evident in unintentionally non-adherent patients. What is new and conclusions Patients' dissatisfaction and their resulting rational judgments are unique, consistent determinants of intentional non-adherence to medications, but not of unintentional non-adherence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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10. Involvement of brain oxidation in the cognitive impairment in a triple transgenic mouse model of Alzheimer's disease: Noninvasive measurement of the brain redox state by magnetic resonance imaging.
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Ishihara, Y., Itoh, K., Mitsuda, Y., Shimada, T., Kubota, T., Kato, C., Song, S. Y., Kobayashi, Y., Mori-Yasumoto, K., Sekita, S., Kirino, Y., Yamazaki, T., and Shimamoto, N.
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COGNITION disorders , *BRAIN diseases , *TRANSGENIC mice , *ALZHEIMER'S disease , *NONINVASIVE diagnostic tests , *OXIDATION-reduction reaction , *MAGNETIC resonance imaging , *OXIDATIVE stress - Abstract
Oxidative stress is considered to be related to the onset and/or progression of Alzheimer's disease (AD), but there is insufficient evidence of its role(s). In this study, we evaluated the relationships between the brain redox state and cognitive function using a triple transgenic mouse model of AD (3 × Tg-AD mouse). One group of 3 × Tg-AD mice started to receive an α-tocopherol-supplemented diet at 2 months of age and another group of 3 × Tg-AD mice was fed a normal diet. The levels of α-tocopherol, reduced glutathione, oxidized glutathione, and lipid peroxidation were decreased in the cerebral cortex and hippocampus at 4 months of age in the 3 × Tg-AD mice fed a normal diet. These reductions were abrogated by the supplementation of α-tocopherol in the diet. During Morris water maze testing, the 3 × Tg-AD mice did not exhibit cognitive impairment at 4 months of age, but started to show cognitive dysfunction at 6 months of age, and α-tocopherol supplementation suppressed this dysfunction. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) using 3-hydroxymethyl-proxyl as a probe showed decreases in the signal intensity in the brains of 3 × Tg-AD mice at 4 months of age, and this reduction was clearly attenuated by α-tocopherol supplementation. Taken together, these findings suggest that oxidative stress can be associated with the cognitive impairment in 3 × Tg-AD mice. Furthermore, MRI might be a powerful tool to noninvasively evaluate the increases in reactive radicals, especially those occurring during the early stages of AD. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2013
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11. N-methyl-d-aspartate receptors play important roles in acquisition and expression of the eyeblink conditioned response in glutamate receptor subunit δ2 mutant mice
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Kato, Y., Takatsuki, K., Kawahara, S., Fukunaga, S., Mori, H., Mishina, M., and Kirino, Y.
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HABITUATION (Neuropsychology) , *PSYCHOLOGY of learning , *NEUROTRANSMITTERS , *NEUROTRANSMITTER receptors - Abstract
Abstract: Classical eyeblink conditioning has been known to depend critically on the cerebellum. Apparently consistent with this, glutamate receptor subunit δ2 null mutant mice, which have serious morphological and functional deficiencies in the cerebellar cortex, are severely impaired in delay paradigm. However, these mutant mice successfully learn in trace paradigm, even in ‘0-trace paradigm,’ in which the unconditioned stimulus starts just after the conditioned stimulus terminates. Our previous studies revealed that the hippocampus and the muscarinic acetylcholine receptors play crucial roles in 0-trace paradigm in glutamate receptor subunit δ2 null mutant mice unlike in wild-type mice, suggesting a large contribution of the forebrain to 0-trace conditioning in this type of mutant mice. In the present study, we investigated the role of N-methyl-d-aspartate receptors in 0-trace eyeblink conditioning in glutamate receptor subunit δ2 null mutant mice. Mice were injected intraperitoneally with the noncompetitive N-methyl-d-aspartate receptor antagonist (+)MK-801 (0.1mg/kg) or saline, and conditioned with 350-ms tone conditioned stimulus followed by 100-ms periorbital shock unconditioned stimulus. Glutamate receptor subunit δ2 null mutant mice that received (+)MK-801 injection exhibited a severe impairment in acquisition of the conditioned response, compared with the saline-injected glutamate receptor subunit δ2 null mutant mice. In contrast, wild-type mice were not impaired in acquisition of 0-trace conditioned response by (+)MK-801 injection. After the injection solution was changed from (+)MK-801 to saline, glutamate receptor subunit δ2 null mutant mice showed a rapid and partial recovery of performance of the conditioned response. On the other hand, when the injection solution was changed from saline to (+)MK-801, glutamate receptor subunit δ2 null mutant mice showed a marked impairment in expression of the pre-acquired conditioned response, whereas impairment of the expression was small in wild-type mice. Injection of (+)MK-801 had no significant effects on spontaneous eyeblink frequency or startle eyeblink frequency to the tone conditioned stimulus in either glutamate receptor subunit δ2 null mutant mice or wild-type mice. These results suggest that N-methyl-d-aspartate receptors play critical roles both in acquisition and expression of the conditioned response in 0-trace eyeblink conditioning in glutamate receptor subunit δ2 null mutant mice. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2005
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12. Chemical induction of HO-1 suppresses lupus nephritis by reducing localiNOS expression and synthesis of anti-dsDNA antibody.
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TAKEDA, Y., TAKENO, M., IWASAKI, M., KOBAYASHI, H., KIRINO, Y., UEDA, A., NAGAHAMA, K., AOKI, I., and ISHIGATSUBO, Y.
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NITRIC oxide , *HEME oxygenase , *OXYGENASES , *INTERSTITIAL nephritis , *SYSTEMIC lupus erythematosus , *GLOMERULONEPHRITIS , *INTERFERONS - Abstract
There is accumulating evidence that haem oxygenase (HO)-1 plays a protective role in various disorders. The beneficial efficacy of HO-1 induction therapy has been shown in renal diseases such as glomerulonephritis, interstitial nephritis and drug induced nephrotoxicity. However, involvement of HO-1 in the development of autoimmune renal diseases remains uncertain. To assess the clinical efficacy of HO-1 induction therapy for lupus glomerulonephritis, MRL/ lprmice were intraperitoneally injected with 100 µmol/kg hemin, a potent HO-1 inducer, or PBS as controls, once a week from 6 weeks of age to 21–24 weeks-old. We found that treatment with hemin led to a significant reduction of proteinuria and remarkable amelioration of glomerular lesions accompanied by decreased immune depositions. In addition, the circulating IgG anti-double-stranded DNA antibody level was significantly decreased in hemin treated mice when compared with controls. A single intraperitoneal injection with hemin resulted in reduction of inducible nitric oxide synthase expression in the kidney and spleen, and serum interferon-γ level. Our results suggest that HO-1 induction therapy ameliorates lupus nephritis by suppressing nitric oxide (NO) dependent inflammatory responses and attenuating production of pathogenic autoantibodies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2004
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13. Successful treatment of refractory lupus-associated haemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis with infliximab.
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IDEGUCHI, H., OHNO, S., TAKASE, K., HATTORI, H., KIRINO, Y., TAKENO, M., and ISHIGATSUBO, Y.
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LETTERS to the editor , *SYSTEMIC lupus erythematosus , *INFLIXIMAB - Abstract
A letter to the editor is presented describing the case of a 24-year-old Japanese woman with systemic lupus erythematous who developed lupus associated-haemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis and was successfully treated with infliximab.
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- 2007
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