result 476 件
| Author | Ishida, Shusaku| |
|---|---|
| Published Date | 1957-08-30 |
| Publication Title | 岡山医学会雑誌 |
| Volume | volume69 |
| Issue | issue8 |
| Content Type | Journal Article |
| JaLCDOI | 10.18926/OER/41861 |
|---|---|
| Title Alternative | The Seattle Union Record and Japanese Problem, 1907-1913 |
| FullText URL | oer_023_4_123_138.pdf |
| Author | Kurokawa, Katsutoshi| |
| Publication Title | 岡山大学経済学会雑誌 |
| Published Date | 1992-02-26 |
| Volume | volume23 |
| Issue | issue4 |
| Start Page | 123 |
| End Page | 138 |
| ISSN | 0386-3069 |
| language | Japanese |
| File Version | publisher |
| NAID | 120002722848 |
| Author | Matsuo, Nobushige| |
|---|---|
| Published Date | 1998-09-10 |
| Publication Title | 岡山大学経済学会雑誌 |
| Volume | volume30 |
| Issue | issue2 |
| Content Type | Article |
| Author | Oda, Munehiro| |
|---|---|
| Published Date | 1989-08-31 |
| Publication Title | 岡山医学会雑誌 |
| Volume | volume101 |
| Issue | issue7-8 |
| Content Type | Journal Article |
| JaLCDOI | 10.18926/OER/40518 |
|---|---|
| FullText URL | oer_037_4_001_012.pdf |
| Author | Kurokawa, Katsutoshi| |
| Abstract | The aim of this article is to examine the change of the relationship between the American labor movement and Japanese communities in the Pacific Northwest in the 1930s. The relationship between the American labor movement and Japanese communities in the Pacific Northwest in the early 1930s was not a friendly one. Most labor organizations continued to reject Japanese workers. White workers, suffering as a result of the Great Depression, were often hostile to the Japanese. The attitudes of Japanese communities toward the labor movement were also not favorable ones. However, some people : Kazue Miyata, Yoshiaki Yamane, Gentaro Oe, and many other unknown activists, continued to believe in the importance of the organization of Japanese workers and committed themselves to the cause of the labor movement in this difficult situation. The situation began to change in the mid−1930s. The start of the NIRA regime made Japanese communities reconsider the significance of the organization of workers in the United States. The development of the CIO lowered barriers for Japanese workers to join unions throughout the United States. Moreover, the general development of the labor movement in the United States, which was stimulated by the enactment of the NIRA and the Wagner Act, of course, affected Japanese communities too. In response to such conditions, the Japanese Restaurant Workers’ Union was organized in around 1936 in Seattle. In the canned−salmon industry in which many Asians were working, the Cannery Workers and Farm Laborers Union was organized in 1933. This union was organized by Filipino workers, but, before long, Japanese and Chinese workers also took part in it. By the beginning of the 1940s, as Daisho Miyagawa stated later, "the union idea was no longer novel or especially provocative of tension and controversy in the Seattle Japanese community". |
| Publication Title | 岡山大学経済学会雑誌 |
| Published Date | 2006-03-10 |
| Volume | volume37 |
| Issue | issue4 |
| Start Page | 1 |
| End Page | 12 |
| ISSN | 0386-3069 |
| Related Url | http://www.e.okayama-u.ac.jp/gakkai/ |
| language | English |
| File Version | publisher |
| NAID | 120002576140 |
| JaLCDOI | 10.18926/AMO/40505 |
|---|---|
| FullText URL | 64_5_299.pdf |
| Author | Sanomura, Takayuki| Ikeda, Fusao| Katoh, Tsutomu| Hosokawa, Kazue| Suzuki, Seiyuu| Nishiyama, Yoshihiro| |
| Abstract | Tumor protrusion in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is one of the risk signs of tumor rupture. Despite curative tumor treatments, HCC recurrences sometimes occur with rapidly growing humped or ruptured HCC in small sized tumors. The aim of this study was to clarify the characteristics of humped HCC clinically and radiologically associated with tumor progression, liver damage, and treatment. The subjects were 179 consecutive HCC patients who underwent angiographic examination. Dynamic studies, using helical computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging were assessed, and the HCC area were measured. The tumor-node-metastasis (TNM) stage differed significantly between the humped and non-humped HCC groups. Humped HCC was more frequently observed in the right lobe (29.3% of right-lobe HCCs) than in the left (10.1%;p=0.003). Analysis of recurrent HCC revealed that patients with multiple treatments of >4 sessions had more humped HCC (33.8%) than those with 1-3 sessions (16.7%;p=0.042). Multivariate regression analysis revealed that tumor invasion in the portal vein, rather than large tumor size, was significantly associated with tumor protrusion. HCC recurrence with humped HCC occurs often in patients with multiple treatments. Tumor factors of the TNM classification, especially tumor invasion in the portal vein, might be associated with the mechanisms of tumor protrusion. |
| Keywords | humped HCC tumor protrusion |
| Amo Type | Original Article |
| Publication Title | Acta Medica Okayama |
| Published Date | 2010-10 |
| Volume | volume64 |
| Issue | issue5 |
| Publisher | Okayama University Medical School |
| Start Page | 299 |
| End Page | 305 |
| ISSN | 0386-300X |
| NCID | AA00508441 |
| Content Type | Journal Article |
| language | English |
| Copyright Holders | CopyrightⒸ 2010 by Okayama University Medical School |
| File Version | publisher |
| Refereed | True |
| PubMed ID | 20975763 |
| Web of Science KeyUT | 000283563300005 |
| Author | Asaumi, Jun-ichi| Yanagi, Yoshinobu| Konouchi, Hironobu| Hisatomi, Miki| Matsuzaki, Hidenobu| Shigehara, Hiroshi| Kishi, Kanji| |
|---|---|
| Published Date | 2004-9 |
| Publication Title | European Journal of Radiology |
| Volume | volume51 |
| Issue | issue3 |
| Content Type | Journal Article |
| Author | Okuda, Kiyoshi| Sakumoto, Ryosuke| |
|---|---|
| Published Date | 2003-11 |
| Publication Title | Reproductive Biology and Endocrinology |
| Content Type | Journal Article |
| Author | Yoshida, Kenta| Morimoto, Ichiro| Mitsudo, Koichi| Tanaka, Hideo| |
|---|---|
| Published Date | 2008-06-23 |
| Publication Title | Tetrahedron |
| Volume | volume64 |
| Issue | issue24 |
| Content Type | Journal Article |
| Author | Kondo, Kazuo| Watanabe, Keiji| Abe, Yuji| Haji, Junko| Shimizu, Masaru| |
|---|---|
| Published Date | 2005-08 |
| Publication Title | Journal of the Electrochemical Society |
| Volume | volume152 |
| Issue | issue10 |
| Content Type | Journal Article |
| Author | Hachisuka, Hidekazu| Awaga, Kunio| Yokoyama, Toshihiko| Kubo, Takeji| Goto, Takao| Nojiri, Hiroyuki| |
|---|---|
| Published Date | 2004-9 |
| Publication Title | Physical Review B |
| Volume | volume70 |
| Issue | issue10 |
| Content Type | Journal Article |
| Author | Yamamoto, Yoshitake| Shirai, Kiyoko| Goda, Noriko| Nakamura, Takao| Kusuhara, Toshimasa| Okuda, Hiroyuki| |
|---|---|
| Published Date | 2003-10 |
| Publication Title | IEEE EMBS Asian-Pacific Conference on Biomedical Engineering |
| Content Type | Conference Paper |
| Author | Yokoo, Masaki| Tienthai, Paisan| Kimura, Naoko| Niwa, Koji| Sato, Eimei| Rodriguez-Martinez, Heriberto| |
|---|---|
| Published Date | 2002-07-25 |
| Publication Title | Zygote |
| Volume | volume10 |
| Issue | issue4 |
| Content Type | Journal Article |
| JaLCDOI | 10.18926/AMO/32876 |
|---|---|
| FullText URL | fulltext.pdf |
| Author | Cui, Ranji| Li, Bingjin| Suemaru, Katsuya| Araki, Hiroaki| |
| Abstract | In the present study, we investigated the acute effects of 2 different kinds of stress, namely physical stress (foot shock) and psychological stress (non-foot shock) induced by the communication box method, on the sleep patterns of rats. The sleep patterns were recorded for 6 h immediately after 1 h of stress. Physical and psychological stress had almost opposite effects on the sleep patterns: In the physical stress group, hourly total rapid eye movement (REM) sleep and total non-REM sleep were significantly inhibited, whereas psychological stress enhanced hourly total REM sleep but not total non-REM sleep. Further results showed that total REM sleep, total non-REM sleep, total sleep and the total number of REM sleep episodes in 5 h were reduced, and that sleep latency was prolonged compared to the control group. On the other hand, in the psychological stress group, the total REM sleep in 5 h was increased significantly due to the prolongation of the average duration of REM sleep episodes and reduced REM sleep latency. In addition, the plasma of corticosterone increased significantly after physical stress but not after psychological stress. These results suggested that the sleep patterns, particularly the patterns of REM sleep following physical and psychological stress, are probably regulated by 2 different pathways. |
| Keywords | psychological stress physical stress REM sleep EEG |
| Amo Type | Original Article |
| Publication Title | Acta Medica Okayama |
| Published Date | 2007-12 |
| Volume | volume61 |
| Issue | issue6 |
| Publisher | Okayama University Medical School |
| Start Page | 319 |
| End Page | 327 |
| ISSN | 0386-300X |
| NCID | AA00508441 |
| Content Type | Journal Article |
| language | English |
| File Version | publisher |
| Refereed | True |
| PubMed ID | 18183076 |
| Web of Science KeyUT | 000251943800002 |
| JaLCDOI | 10.18926/AMO/32856 |
|---|---|
| FullText URL | fulltext.pdf |
| Author | Sumiyoshi, Kazuko| Kawata, Chieko| Shikata, Kenichi| Makino, Hirofumi| |
| Abstract | The aim of this study was to clarify the factors influencing the dietary behavior of patients with diabetic nephropathy. One hundred twenty-two patients with type 2 diabetes were recruited from the outpatients of Okayama University Hospital in Okayama, Japan. We performed a cross-sectional study using a questionnaire including 206 items among 18 categories as follows:background factors, coping behavior (coping scale), degree of uncertainty in illness (uncertainty scale), and dietary behavior. The data were analyzed by correlation analysis, t-test, one-way analysis of variance, Pearson correlation analysis, and multiple regression analysis. We found that those patients with microalbuminuria alone tended to recognize more mild about their kidney status than those with macroalbuminuria and chronic renal failure. We also found that common factors influencing the dietary behavior of diabetic patients with and without nephropathy are as follows:1. coping with the problem (beta0.342, p0.01);2. anxiety about prognosis (beta0.344, p0.01);3. sex (beta0.234, p0.05);4. uncertainty regarding treatment (beta0.377, p0.01);5. negative coping (beta0.354, p0.01);and 6. employment status (beta0.367, p0.01). Coping and uncertainty in illness had a significant relation to positive support and lack of support. To maintain appropriate dietary behavior in diabetic patients, medical staff need to determine what the social supports are important for the patient, and also to ensure good communication among healthcare personnel as well as positive support for patients and families. |
| Keywords | diabetic nephropathy dietary behavior coping uncertainty in illness social support |
| Amo Type | Original Article |
| Publication Title | Acta Medica Okayama |
| Published Date | 2010-02 |
| Volume | volume64 |
| Issue | issue1 |
| Publisher | Okayama University Medical School |
| Start Page | 39 |
| End Page | 47 |
| ISSN | 0386-300X |
| NCID | AA00508441 |
| Content Type | Journal Article |
| language | English |
| File Version | publisher |
| Refereed | True |
| PubMed ID | 20200583 |
| Web of Science KeyUT | 000274868300006 |
| JaLCDOI | 10.18926/AMO/32849 |
|---|---|
| FullText URL | fulltext.pdf |
| Author | Kawaura, Akihiko| Tanida, Noritoshi| Kamitani, Masato| Akiyama, Junichi| Mizutani, Masatoshi| Tsugawa, Naoko| Okano, Toshio| Takeda, Eiji| |
| Abstract | We examined the effect of leg hyperthermia on oxidative stress in bedridden subjects with type 2 diabetes mellitus using 15-min sessions of far infrared rays over a two-week period. Four subjects (male 1, female 3) incapacitated by a stroke were recruited for this study. All patients were admitted to Takahashi Central Hospital and ate the same hospital meals. Fasting plasma glucose, HbA1c, tumor necrosis factor (TNF)alpha, free fatty acid, leptin, adiponectin and plasma 8-epi-prostaglandin F2alpha (8-epi-PGF2alpha) levels as a marker of oxidative stress were measured on admission, just before and 2 weeks after local heating of the leg. Results showed that plasma total 8-epi-PGF2alpha levels were decreased significantly while TNFalpha levels were increased significantly. On the other hand, glucose, HbA1c, free fatty acid, leptin and adiponectin levels were not changed during the study period. These results suggest that repeated leg hyperthermia may protect against oxidative stress. |
| Keywords | type 2 diabetes mellitus leg hyperthermia oxidative stress 8-epi-prostaglandin F2? |
| Amo Type | Case Report |
| Publication Title | Acta Medica Okayama |
| Published Date | 2010-04 |
| Volume | volume64 |
| Issue | issue2 |
| Publisher | Okayama University Medical School |
| Start Page | 143 |
| End Page | 147 |
| ISSN | 0386-300X |
| NCID | AA00508441 |
| Content Type | Journal Article |
| language | English |
| File Version | publisher |
| Refereed | True |
| PubMed ID | 20424670 |
| Web of Science KeyUT | 000276996900009 |
| JaLCDOI | 10.18926/AMO/32496 |
|---|---|
| FullText URL | fulltext.pdf |
| Author | Matsuo, Nobuhiko| Matsuo, Hidehiko| Hasegawa, Eiichi| Obuchi, Yoshiko| |
| Abstract | A case of arteriosclerotic retinopathy associated with retinal venous thrombosis was treated with Anginin and the following results obtained: 1) Visual acuity was improved from 0.03 to 0.7. 2) Retinal hemorrhages were absorbed and pipe-stem sheathing of the branch of retinal artery decrease, with white sheathing remaining partially. 3) It was therefore considered that the pipe-stem sheathing was decreased because Anginin removed venous spasm and improved the blood stream of the branch of the artery, and that the organic changes already established on the arterial wall would remain as white sheathing. 4) Anginin could not prevent retinal veins from changing into white lines. 5) Consequently the authors considered that Anginin may be a drug effectively used for retinal arteriosclerosis and retinal venous thrombosis associated therewith. |
| Amo Type | Article |
| Publication Title | Acta Medicinae Okayama |
| Published Date | 1967-04 |
| Volume | volume21 |
| Issue | issue2 |
| Publisher | Okayama University Medical School |
| Start Page | 59 |
| End Page | 66 |
| NCID | AA00041342 |
| Content Type | Journal Article |
| language | English |
| File Version | publisher |
| Refereed | True |
| PubMed ID | 4229454 |
| NAID | 120002311838 |
| JaLCDOI | 10.18926/AMO/32109 |
|---|---|
| FullText URL | fulltext.pdf |
| Author | Sato, Kyoko| Kawakami, Norito| Ohtsu, Tadahiro| Tsutsumi, Akizumi| Miyazaki, Shougo| Masumoto, Takeshi| Horie, Seichi| Haratani, Takashi| Kobayashi, Fumio| Araki, Shunichi| |
| Abstract | Previous in vitro and animal experiments have shown that sulforaphane, which is abundant in broccoli, inhibits Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) infection and blocks gastric tumor formation. This suggests that broccoli consumption prevents chronic atrophic gastritis (CAG) introduced by H. pylori infection and, therefore, gastric cancer. For an epidemiological investigation of the relationship between the broccoli consumption and CAG, a cross-sectional study of 438 male employees, aged 39 to 60 years, of a Japanese steel company was conducted. CAG was serologically determined with serum cut-off values set at pepsinogen I < or = 70 ng/ml and a ratio of serum pepsinogen I/pepsinogen II < or = 3.0. Broccoli consumption (weekly frequency) and diet were monitored by using a 31-item food frequency questionnaire. The prevalence of CAG among men who ate broccoli once or more weekly was twice as high as that among men who consumed a negligible amount (P < 0.05). Multiple logistic regression analysis indicated that broccoli consumption once or more weekly significantly increased the risk for CAG (odds ratio, 3.06; 95% confidence interval, 1.12-8.38; P < 0.05), after controlling for age, education, cigarette smoking, and alcohol consumption. The present study failed to show an expected association between frequent broccoli consumption and a low prevalence of CAG. |
| Keywords | broccoli sulforaphane chronic atrophic gastritis pepsinogen Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) |
| Amo Type | Article |
| Publication Title | Acta Medica Okayama |
| Published Date | 2004-06 |
| Volume | volume58 |
| Issue | issue3 |
| Publisher | Okayama University Medical School |
| Start Page | 127 |
| End Page | 133 |
| ISSN | 0386-300X |
| NCID | AA00508441 |
| Content Type | Journal Article |
| language | English |
| File Version | publisher |
| Refereed | True |
| PubMed ID | 15471434 |
| Web of Science KeyUT | 000222273300003 |
| JaLCDOI | 10.18926/AMO/31977 |
|---|---|
| FullText URL | fulltext.pdf |
| Author | Mikuniya, Takeshi| Kato, Yoshihisa| Kariyama, Reiko| Monden, Koichi| Hikida, Muneo| Kumon, Hiromi| |
| Abstract | Ulifloxacin is the active form of the prodrug prulifloxacin and shows a highly potent antipseudomonal activity. In this study, we examined the combined effect of fosfomycin and ulifloxacin against Pseudomonas aeruginosa (P. aeruginosa) growing in a biofilm using a modified Robbins device with artificial urine, and compared it to that of the combination of fosfomycin and ciprofloxacin or levofloxacin. An ATP bioluminescence assay was used to evaluate the antibacterial activity of the agents against sessile cells in a mature biofilm developed on a silicon disk. The total bioactivity of P. aeruginosa growing in a biofilm that had not been fully eradicated by fosfomycin or any of the fluoroquinolones alone at 10 times the MIC decreased after combination treatment with fosfomycin and fluoroquinolones. Morphological changes occurred in a time-dependent fashion; namely, swollen and/or rounding cells emerged within a couple of hours after combination treatment, marking the initial stage in the process leading to the destruction of the biofilms. We could not find any difference among the 3 fluoroquinolones with regard to their synergistic effects when administered with fosfomycin. The combination treatment of fosfomycin and fluoroquinolones with highly potent antipseudomonal activities was effective in eradicating sessile cells of P. aeruginosa in the biofilm and promises to be beneficial against biofilm-associated infectious diseases. |
| Keywords | urinary tract infection Pseudomonas aeruginosa biofilm ulifloxacin fosfomycin |
| Amo Type | Article |
| Publication Title | Acta Medica Okayama |
| Published Date | 2005-10 |
| Volume | volume59 |
| Issue | issue5 |
| Publisher | Okayama University Medical School |
| Start Page | 209 |
| End Page | 216 |
| ISSN | 0386-300X |
| NCID | AA00508441 |
| Content Type | Journal Article |
| language | English |
| File Version | publisher |
| Refereed | True |
| PubMed ID | 16286954 |
| Web of Science KeyUT | 000232835600005 |
| JaLCDOI | 10.18926/AMO/31975 |
|---|---|
| FullText URL | fulltext.pdf |
| Author | Hiraki, Takao| Kanazawa, Susumu| |
| Abstract | Hepatic outflow obstruction created by balloon occlusion of the hepatic vein induces characteristic angiographic findings in the occluded area: prolonged enhancement on hepatogram followed by reversed portal opacification on the hepatic arteriogram and perfusion defect on the arterial portogram. The following induced hepatic hemodynamic changes are suggested: hepatic arterial flow increases, and the portal vein acts as a draining vein with slow reversed flow. These unique hemodynamic changes enhance the effect of hepatic interventional therapies. In transcatheter arterial infusion, increasing hepatic arterial flow and absence of portal inflow can bring about a high concentration of drugs, the presence of which is greatly protracted due to outflow blockage. In transcatheter arterial chemoembolization, reversed portal flow can allow portal embolization in addition to arterial embolization. In microwave coagulation therapy and radiofrequency ablation therapy, decreasing portal flow can cause larger areas of coagulation. Further, the technique of hepatic venous occlusion has potential therapeutic applications. |
| Keywords | liver hepatic vein obstruction blood supply therapy |
| Amo Type | Letter to the Editor |
| Publication Title | Acta Medica Okayama |
| Published Date | 2005-10 |
| Volume | volume59 |
| Issue | issue5 |
| Publisher | Okayama University Medical School |
| Start Page | 171 |
| End Page | 178 |
| ISSN | 0386-300X |
| NCID | AA00508441 |
| Content Type | Journal Article |
| language | English |
| File Version | publisher |
| Refereed | True |
| PubMed ID | 16286956 |
| Web of Science KeyUT | 000232835600001 |