10 results on '"Yuri Tamura"'
Search Results
2. Establishing a Pharmacy-Based Patient Registry System: A Pilot Study for Evaluating Pharmacist Intervention for Patients with Long-Term Medication Use
- Author
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Manabu Akazawa, Akiko Mikami, Yuri Tamura, Natsuyo Yanagi, Shinichi Yamamura, and Hiroyasu Ogata
- Subjects
community pharmacy ,patient registry ,pharmacist intervention ,chronic condition ,long-term medication ,Pharmacy and materia medica ,RS1-441 - Abstract
Background: In Japan, an increasing number of patients are prescribed a large amount of long-term medications by large hospitals that are then dispensed by a community pharmacy. This practice often leads to considerable wastage of medicine. As part of their professional role, community pharmacists are expected to contribute more to the appropriate use of medication by patients. Using a prospective cohort, we aimed to evaluate pharmacists’ role in the community. Methods: We created a patient registry system for community pharmacies to monitor long-term medication use by patients with chronic conditions. Patient drug adherence and potential problems were monitored through regular home visits or telephone calls by the pharmacist at least once a month between patient hospital visits. Patient data were collected and stored in an internet-based system. Results: Over a one-year follow-up, 28 out of 37 registered patients from 14 community pharmacies were continuously monitored. In total, we extracted 19 problems relating to medication use, 17 to physical complaints, eight to patient concerns, and two others. Conclusion: The registry system was useful for identifying medication-related problems as well as patient concerns and changes in their condition. Pharmacists might play a key role in improving patient care in the community.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Two cases of atypical femoral fracture in cancer patients administered with bone-modifying agents
- Author
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Hideto Furuoka, Hiroaki Kimura, Kohji Suzuki, Yuri Tamura, and Yusuke Fuchioka
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Callus formation ,business.industry ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,atypical femoral fracture ,Bone metastasis ,Cancer ,Case Report ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,law.invention ,Bone remodeling ,Intramedullary rod ,Prostate cancer ,Breast cancer ,law ,medicine ,bone-modifying agent ,cancer patients ,business ,bone metastasis - Abstract
Objective: We report two cases of atypical femoral fracture (AFF) in patients with cancer. Patients: Two patients, a 53-year-old woman with breast cancer and a 77-year-old man with prostate cancer, could not walk after being injured in a fall. They used bone-modifying agents (BMA) for the prevention of bone metastasis for three and four years, respectively. Results: Intramedullary nails were placed to fix the femoral fractures in each patient. Neither of them had pathological metastatic femoral fractures based on fracture site specimens; however, severe suppression of bone turnover at the fracture site was suspected. Both patients could ambulate with a T-cane and were free of hip pain after surgery. Radiographs showed no callus formation at the fracture site. Conclusion: Based on the two cases of AFF in patients with cancer related to BMA use, we should consider that the incidence of AFF may be associated with long-term BMA use.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Massive Hemoptysis Due to the Rupture of Thoracic Aortic Aneurysm Caused by Leukemic Cell Infiltration in a Patient With Chronic Myelomonocytic Leukemia
- Author
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Miki Murakami, Ayaka Kume, Hiroaki Tanaka, Ryo Shimizu, Haruhisa Saito, Mizuki Yano, Chihiro Kuwabara, Yuri Tamura, and Yoshio Suzuki
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Hemoptysis ,Chronic myelomonocytic leukemia ,Case Report ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Rupture of aneurysm ,Thoracic aortic aneurysm ,03 medical and health sciences ,Pseudoaneurysm ,0302 clinical medicine ,White blood cell ,hemic and lymphatic diseases ,medicine ,Myeloproliferative neoplasm ,Lung ,business.industry ,Mediastinum ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Leukemia ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Radiology ,business - Abstract
Hemoptysis is occasionally experienced in patients with hematological malignancies who have respiratory tract infection and severe thrombocytopenia. Thrombocytopenia due to hematological disease is one cause of hemoptysis. Chronic myelomonocytic leukemia (CMML) is a clonal hematopoietic malignancy characterized by both a myeloproliferative neoplasm and a myelodysplastic syndrome. This malignancy often infiltrates various extramedullary organs and has a poor prognosis. An 84-year-old Japanese man with CMML was suffered from hemoptysis and dyspnea. When he arrived at the emergency room, hemoptysis stopped. His white blood cell count was 866 × 109/L with 3.5% blast cells and 36.5% monocytes; hemoglobin was 6.7 g/dL; platelets count was 19 × 109/L; and C-reactive protein was 16.23 mg/dL. Chest X-ray examination revealed an invasion shadow near the mediastinum in the left upper lung field. Chest computed tomography revealed a tumorous lesion in the left upper lobe, which had progressed to the mediastinum and formed an infiltration shadow around it. He was administered the antibiotics and the hemostatic agents under hospitalization. He also received blood transfusion for anemia and thrombocytopenia. Rapid improvement in oxygenation was observed along with a rapid decrease in blood levels in the sputum. On the eighth days of hospitalization, however, the patient newly developed massive hemoptysis and died. Autopsy revealed rupture of a thoracic pseudoaneurysm due to infiltration of leukemia cells in the tunica media and lung. Clinicians should consider thoracic aortic aneurysms as a possible cause of hemoptysis even in cases with small hemoptysis. It should be noted that in CMML patients, direct infiltration of leukemia cells in the vascular wall can cause aneurysm formation.
- Published
- 2019
5. Similar impressions of humanness for human and artificial singing voices in autism spectrum disorders
- Author
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Tamami Nakano, Miki Igarashi, Nobumasa Kato, Yuri Tamura, and Shinji Kuriki
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Auditory perception ,Linguistics and Language ,Autism Spectrum Disorder ,Voice Quality ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Emotions ,Singing ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,050105 experimental psychology ,Language and Linguistics ,Developmental psychology ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Perception ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,medicine ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Human voice ,media_common ,Social perception ,05 social sciences ,medicine.disease ,Acoustic Stimulation ,Social Perception ,Feeling ,Autism spectrum disorder ,Auditory Perception ,Autism ,Female ,Psychology ,Music ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
People with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) exhibit impairments in the perception of and orientation to social information related to humans, and some people with ASD show higher preference toward human-like robots than other humans. We speculated that this behavioural bias in people with ASD is caused by a weakness in their perception of humanness. To address this issue, we investigated whether people with ASD detect a subtle difference between the same song sung by human and artificial voices even when the lyrics, melody and rhythm are identical. People without ASD answered that the songs sung by a human voice evoked more impressions of humanness (human-likeness, animateness, naturalness, emotion) and more positive feelings (warmth, familiarity, comfort) than those sung by an artificial voice. In contrast, people with ASD had similar impressions of humanness and positive feelings for the songs sung by the human and artificial voices. The evaluations of musical characteristics (complexity, regularity, brightness) did not differ between people with and without ASD. These results suggest that people with ASD are weak in their ability to perceive psychological attributes of humanness.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Differential Regulation of Thermodynamic Binding Forces of Levocetirizine and (S)-Cetirizine by Lys191 in Human Histamine H1 Receptors
- Author
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Chizuru Akatsu, Chihiro Kobayashi, Shigeru Hishinuma, Yuri Tamura, and Masaru Shoji
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Stereochemistry ,Mepyramine ,Plasma protein binding ,Histamine H1 receptor ,Catalysis ,Levocetirizine ,Inorganic Chemistry ,lcsh:Chemistry ,03 medical and health sciences ,enthalpy ,medicine ,histamine H1 receptor ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Receptor ,Molecular Biology ,lcsh:QH301-705.5 ,Spectroscopy ,Alanine ,Chemistry ,Organic Chemistry ,levocetirizine ,General Medicine ,Cetirizine ,Computer Science Applications ,Dissociation constant ,030104 developmental biology ,lcsh:Biology (General) ,lcsh:QD1-999 ,affinity ,entropy ,(S)-cetirizine ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Cetirizine is a zwitterionic second-generation antihistamine containing R- and S-enantiomers, levocetirizine, and (S)-cetirizine. Levocetirizine is known to have a higher affinity for the histamine H1 receptors than (S)-cetirizine; ligand-receptor docking simulations have suggested the importance of the formation of a salt bridge (electrostatic interaction) between the carboxylic group of levocetirizine and the Lys191 residue at the fifth transmembrane domain of human histamine H1 receptors. In this study, we evaluated the roles of Lys191 in the regulation of the thermodynamic binding forces of levocetirizine in comparison with (S)-cetirizine. The binding enthalpy and entropy of these compounds were estimated from the van ‘t Hoff equation, by using the dissociation constants obtained from their displacement curves against the binding of [3H]mepyramine to the membrane preparations of Chinese hamster ovary cells expressing wild-type human H1 receptors and their Lys191 mutants to alanine at various temperatures. We found that the higher binding affinity of wild-type H1 receptors for levocetirizine than (S)-cetirizine was achieved by stronger forces of entropy-dependent hydrophobic binding of levocetirizine. The mutation of Lys191 to alanine reduced the affinities for levocetirizine and (S)-cetirizine, through a reduction in the entropy-dependent hydrophobic binding forces of levocetirizine and the enthalpy-dependent electrostatic binding forces of (S)-cetirizine. These results suggested that Lys191 differentially regulates the binding enthalpy and entropy of these enantiomers, and that Lys191 negatively regulates the enthalpy-dependent electrostatic binding forces of levocetirizine, contrary to the predictions derived from the ligand-receptor docking simulations.
- Published
- 2018
7. Differential Regulation of Thermodynamic Binding Forces of Levocetirizine and (
- Author
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Shigeru, Hishinuma, Yuri, Tamura, Chihiro, Kobayashi, Chizuru, Akatsu, and Masaru, Shoji
- Subjects
Histamine H1 Antagonists, Non-Sedating ,Entropy ,Lysine ,Communication ,levocetirizine ,CHO Cells ,histamine H1 receptor ,(S)-cetirizine ,Cetirizine ,Cricetulus ,enthalpy ,Animals ,Humans ,Thermodynamics ,affinity ,Receptors, Histamine H1 ,Protein Binding - Abstract
Cetirizine is a zwitterionic second-generation antihistamine containing R- and S-enantiomers, levocetirizine, and (S)-cetirizine. Levocetirizine is known to have a higher affinity for the histamine H1 receptors than (S)-cetirizine; ligand-receptor docking simulations have suggested the importance of the formation of a salt bridge (electrostatic interaction) between the carboxylic group of levocetirizine and the Lys191 residue at the fifth transmembrane domain of human histamine H1 receptors. In this study, we evaluated the roles of Lys191 in the regulation of the thermodynamic binding forces of levocetirizine in comparison with (S)-cetirizine. The binding enthalpy and entropy of these compounds were estimated from the van ‘t Hoff equation, by using the dissociation constants obtained from their displacement curves against the binding of [3H]mepyramine to the membrane preparations of Chinese hamster ovary cells expressing wild-type human H1 receptors and their Lys191 mutants to alanine at various temperatures. We found that the higher binding affinity of wild-type H1 receptors for levocetirizine than (S)-cetirizine was achieved by stronger forces of entropy-dependent hydrophobic binding of levocetirizine. The mutation of Lys191 to alanine reduced the affinities for levocetirizine and (S)-cetirizine, through a reduction in the entropy-dependent hydrophobic binding forces of levocetirizine and the enthalpy-dependent electrostatic binding forces of (S)-cetirizine. These results suggested that Lys191 differentially regulates the binding enthalpy and entropy of these enantiomers, and that Lys191 negatively regulates the enthalpy-dependent electrostatic binding forces of levocetirizine, contrary to the predictions derived from the ligand-receptor docking simulations.
- Published
- 2018
8. Characteristics and prognosis of patients with non-immunoglobulin-M monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance: a retrospective study
- Author
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Rie Iwai, Hiroaki Tanaka, Chihiro Kuwabara, Yuri Tamura, Ryo Shimizu, Akihiro Ishii, Yukie Sakuma, and Ayaka Kume
- Subjects
Oncology ,Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Population ,Monoclonal Gammopathy of Undetermined Significance ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Sex Factors ,Asian People ,hemic and lymphatic diseases ,Gammopathy ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Cumulative incidence ,education ,Neoplasms, Plasma Cell ,Screening procedures ,Multiple myeloma ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,Retrospective cohort study ,Hematology ,Plasma cell neoplasm ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Prognosis ,Survival Analysis ,Immunoglobulin M ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Disease Progression ,Female ,business ,Monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance ,030215 immunology - Abstract
Non-immunoglobulin (Ig)-M monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance (MGUS) is a precursor lesion with the potential to evolve into a malignant plasma cell neoplasm. The prevalence of MGUS differs by ethnicity and is lower in the Japanese population than in the Western population. However, there is limited evidence about the clinical course of MGUS in Asian races. The present study aims at elucidating the clinical course and prognosis of Japanese patients with non-IgM MGUS in the clinical setting. We retrospectively examined 1009 patients with non-IgM MGUS identified by screening procedures. The median overall survival of these patients was > 20 years, and only one-fifth patients died of plasma cell neoplasms. The cumulative incidence of plasma cell neoplasms requiring treatment was 19%. Multivariate analysis revealed that immunoparesis and female gender were independent factors affecting treatment requirement. Although the characteristics and clinical course of patients with non-IgM MGUS obtained in this study were found to be essentially similar to those of previous studies, we report here for the first time that female gender is a significant independent factor for requiring treatment.
- Published
- 2018
9. Establishing a Pharmacy-Based Patient Registry System: A Pilot Study for Evaluating Pharmacist Intervention for Patients with Long-Term Medication Use
- Author
-
Akiko Mikami, Natsuyo Yanagi, Hiroyasu Ogata, Shinichi Yamamura, Yuri Tamura, and Manabu Akazawa
- Subjects
Chronic condition ,MEDLINE ,Pharmacist ,lcsh:RS1-441 ,Pharmacy ,chronic condition ,030226 pharmacology & pharmacy ,Article ,lcsh:Pharmacy and materia medica ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,patient registry ,Medicine ,community pharmacy ,Pharmacology (medical) ,030212 general & internal medicine ,General Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics ,Prospective cohort study ,Pharmacist intervention ,Medication use ,Patient registry ,business.industry ,long-term medication ,medicine.disease ,pharmacist intervention ,Medical emergency ,business - Abstract
Background: In Japan, an increasing number of patients are prescribed a large amount of long-term medications by large hospitals that are then dispensed by a community pharmacy. This practice often leads to considerable wastage of medicine. As part of their professional role, community pharmacists are expected to contribute more to the appropriate use of medication by patients. Using a prospective cohort, we aimed to evaluate pharmacists’ role in the community. Methods: We created a patient registry system for community pharmacies to monitor long-term medication use by patients with chronic conditions. Patient drug adherence and potential problems were monitored through regular home visits or telephone calls by the pharmacist at least once a month between patient hospital visits. Patient data were collected and stored in an internet-based system. Results: Over a one-year follow-up, 28 out of 37 registered patients from 14 community pharmacies were continuously monitored. In total, we extracted 19 problems relating to medication use, 17 to physical complaints, eight to patient concerns, and two others. Conclusion: The registry system was useful for identifying medication-related problems as well as patient concerns and changes in their condition. Pharmacists might play a key role in improving patient care in the community.
- Published
- 2017
10. Involvement of the left insula in the ecological validity of the human voice
- Author
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Tamami Nakano, Shinji Kuriki, and Yuri Tamura
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Ecological validity ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Article ,Discrimination Learning ,Young Adult ,Rhythm ,medicine ,Cluster Analysis ,Humans ,Discrimination learning ,Human voice ,media_common ,Multidisciplinary ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Brain ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Sound ,Acoustic Stimulation ,Feeling ,Voice ,Female ,Singing ,Psychology ,Functional magnetic resonance imaging ,Insula ,psychological phenomena and processes ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
A subtle difference between a real human and an artificial object that resembles a human evokes an impression of a large qualitative difference between them. This suggests the existence of a neural mechanism that processes the sense of humanness. To examine the presence of such a mechanism, we compared the behavioral and brain responses of participants who listened to human and artificial singing voices created from vocal fragments of a real human voice. The behavioral experiment showed that the song sung by human voices more often elicited positive feelings and feelings of humanness than the same song sung by artificial voices, although the lyrics, melody and rhythm were identical. Functional magnetic resonance imaging revealed significantly higher activation in the left posterior insula in response to human voices than in response to artificial voices. Insular activation was not merely evoked by differences in acoustic features between the voices. Therefore, these results suggest that the left insula participates in the neural processing of the ecological quality of the human voice.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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