start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=131 cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page=e2025JE009453 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260430 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Lateral Variations in Lunar Crustal Thickness Inferred From Apollo Seismic and GRAIL Gravity Data en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=The internal structure of the Moon is key to understanding its formation, evolution, and bulk composition. In particular, determining the structure of the crust?mantle interface (Moho), including its lateral variations, is of significant importance, but current knowledge is still insufficient to fully constrain it. To address this, we used seismic wave arrivals from impact events, which yield constraints on the crust at both the impact sites and the Apollo stations, to invert for local crustal thickness. Based on a series of assumed crust and mantle density models, we compared Moho depths inferred from global gravity recovery and interior laboratory gravity data with those from seismic observations. Although the gravity]derived results broadly capture the overall Moho relief, local discrepancies remain, with differences reaching up to 10 km in the vicinity of the Apollo 17 Saturn IVB impact site. These results may reflect regional geological anomalies and highlight the importance of incorporating multiple seismically constrained crustal thickness estimates as anchors in gravity inversions. Using seven seismic anchor points and assuming an upper mantle velocity of Vp = 7.68 km/ s, an upper mantle density of 3,280 kg/m3, and a crustal density of 2,693 kg/m3, we obtain an average lunar crustal thickness of 43.6 } 1.9 km. The findings also provide valuable guidance for future global 3D modeling of the Moon. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=ZhangXiang en-aut-sei=Zhang en-aut-mei=Xiang kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=KawamuraTaichi en-aut-sei=Kawamura en-aut-mei=Taichi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=DrilleauM?lanie en-aut-sei=Drilleau en-aut-mei=M?lanie kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=Lognonn?Philippe en-aut-sei=Lognonn? en-aut-mei=Philippe kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=HenriSamuel en-aut-sei=Henri en-aut-mei=Samuel kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=XuZongbo en-aut-sei=Xu en-aut-mei=Zongbo kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=OnoderaKeisuke en-aut-sei=Onodera en-aut-mei=Keisuke kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= en-aut-name=BodinThomas en-aut-sei=Bodin en-aut-mei=Thomas kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=8 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Universit? Paris Cit?, Institut de physique du globe de Paris, CNRS kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Universit? Paris Cit?, Institut de physique du globe de Paris, CNRS kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Universit? Paris Cit?, Institut de physique du globe de Paris, CNRS kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Universit? Paris Cit?, Institut de physique du globe de Paris, CNRS kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Universit? Paris Cit?, Institut de physique du globe de Paris, CNRS kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Universit? Paris Cit?, Institut de physique du globe de Paris, CNRS kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=Institute for Planetary Materials, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=8 en-affil=Instituto de Ciencias del Mar (ICM)?CSIC kn-affil= END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol= cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page= end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260429 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=CDPKs as Ca2+ signaling decoders in guard cell signaling en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Stomatal movements are essential for balancing photosynthetic carbon dioxide uptake with water conservation and defense against pathogens. These processes are controlled by complex signaling networks in guard cells, in which calcium ions (Ca2+) act as a ubiquitous second messenger. Although stimulus-specific Ca2+ signatures have been well documented, how these signals are decoded into distinct physiological responses remains a central question in plant biology. Increasing evidence highlights calcium-dependent protein kinases (CDPKs) as key signal decoders in guard cell signaling. This mini-review summarizes recent advances in our understanding of how CDPKs perceive and translate Ca2+ fluctuations into stomatal responses. We focus on the roles of CDPKs in signaling pathways triggered by diverse stimuli, including phytohormones such as abscisic acid ABA, jasmonates, and salicylic acid, as well as biotic cues such as microbe- or pathogen-associated molecular patterns (MAMPs/PAMPs) and pathogen infection. We also discuss how gaseous signals and metabolic cues are integrated into CDPK-mediated pathways. In addition to their established role as downstream decoders of Ca2+ signals, emerging studies suggest that CDPKs can act upstream of Ca2+ oscillations and may also function through Ca2+-independent mechanisms. Together, these findings highlight the context-dependent and integrative roles of CDPKs in regulating stomatal behavior, contributing to plant fitness under fluctuating environmental conditions. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=MoriIzumi C. en-aut-sei=Mori en-aut-mei=Izumi C. kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Institute of Plant Science and Resources, Okayama University kn-affil= en-keyword=Ca2+ signaling kn-keyword=Ca2+ signaling en-keyword=CDPK kn-keyword=CDPK en-keyword=Signal decoding kn-keyword=Signal decoding en-keyword=Stomata kn-keyword=Stomata END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=31 cd-vols= no-issue=3 article-no= start-page=e70500 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=202604 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Early sedation intensity and psychological outcomes in critically ill adults en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Background: Long-term psychological impairment is a major concern for intensive care unit (ICU) survivors. Early deep sedation during mechanical ventilation has been associated with poor short-term outcomes and mortality after ICU discharge; however, its relationship with psychological outcomes remains unclear.
Aim: To investigate sedation intensity during the first 24?h of mechanical ventilation and its association with psychological impairment 3 months after ICU discharge.
Study Design: This retrospective ancillary analysis of a single-centre cohort study was conducted in two general ICUs at a university hospital in Japan. Eligible patients stayed in the ICU for more than 48?h and received mechanical ventilation for more than 8?h. Sedation intensity was quantified using the Sedation Index (SI) and Agitation Index (AI) derived from Richmond Agitation-Sedation Scale scores during the first 24?h. Psychological impairment 3 months post-ICU discharge was assessed based on symptoms of post-traumatic stress, anxiety and depression. Associations were examined using hierarchical logistic regression.
Results: Among 130 participants, the median age was 64?years, and the median ventilation duration was 14?h. The median SI was 3.0; 47% had SI >?3, and 8.5% had AI >?0. Sedation intensity showed no significant association with psychological impairment (SI: adjusted odds ratio [OR] 0.87, 90% confidence interval [CI] 0.57?1.33, p?=?0.59; AI: adjusted OR 0.21, 90% CI 0.01?3.08, p?=?0.34). However, any agitation during the ICU stay was associated with psychological outcomes (adjusted OR 2.61, 90% CI 1.16?5.88, p?=?0.05).
Conclusions: This study did not identify a statistically significant association between early sedation intensity and psychological impairment 3 months after ICU discharge.
Relevance to Clinical Practice: Critical care nurses should carefully titrate sedation from the initiation of mechanical ventilation to avoid unnecessary deep sedation, considering sedation intensity over time, while actively assessing agitation and its underlying causes. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=IwataniMikiko en-aut-sei=Iwatani en-aut-mei=Mikiko kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=MorimotoMichiko en-aut-sei=Morimoto en-aut-mei=Michiko kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Okayama University Hospital; Graduate School of Health Sciences, Doctoral Program, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Faculty of Health Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= en-keyword=anxiety kn-keyword=anxiety en-keyword=depression kn-keyword=depression en-keyword=post-intensive care syndrome kn-keyword=post-intensive care syndrome en-keyword=post-traumatic stress disorder kn-keyword=post-traumatic stress disorder en-keyword=sedation intensity kn-keyword=sedation intensity END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=15 cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page=265 end-page=271 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=2026 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Automatic Detection of Turning Over in Bed with Protection of Privacy Using Four Low-resolution Thermal Sensors to Support Nursing Care en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Turning over in bed, especially turning over at night, is a vital human unconscious behavior. Clinically, this movement disperses pressure between the body and bed, thus preventing bedsores. Several devices, such as acceleration and pressure sensors, can count turning overs automatically; however, they often require installation on the patients or in the bed. The simplest and noninvasive method to count turning overs is to record and count on video images, but this method cannot protect privacy. Images obtained using thermal sensors have been used to protect privacy; however, there are no reports of counting turning overs automatically using low-resolution sensors. We developed a novel device equipped with four low-resolution thermal sensors, with each sensor recording only an 8~8-pixel thermal image. The original data can protect patient privacy because the resolution is only ~28.8~28.8 cm per body, which is the lowest resolution compared to previous reports using thermal images. Using four sensors simultaneously enables us to collect sufficient data for automatic identification. We first used the bilinear interpolation method employed in a previous report to count turning overs; however, the results were unsatisfactory because turning overs produced extremely subtle changes in the original data compared with postural changes such as falls. After several attempts, we finally developed a unique identification program that interleaved all data from four sensors and then identified turning overs using residual neural network-18. Using the new system, the accuracy, recall, and precision of counting turning overs in bed improved to approximately 90% with an acceptable computation load in an experiment conducted on volunteers. This study demonstrated the feasibility of our device to count turning overs in clinical settings by the new identification program using four 8~8-pixel thermal images per frame, which have sufficiently low resolution to protect patient privacy. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=ChouJyun-Jhe en-aut-sei=Chou en-aut-mei=Jyun-Jhe kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=RaiKammei en-aut-sei=Rai en-aut-mei=Kammei kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=MakimotoGo en-aut-sei=Makimoto en-aut-mei=Go kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=MoritaMizuki en-aut-sei=Morita en-aut-mei=Mizuki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=MaedaYoshinobu en-aut-sei=Maeda en-aut-mei=Yoshinobu kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=ShihChi-Sheng en-aut-sei=Shih en-aut-mei=Chi-Sheng kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Department of Computer Science and Information Engineering, National Taiwan University kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Department of Hematology, Oncology and Respiratory Medicine, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Department of Hematology, Oncology and Respiratory Medicine, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Department of Biomedical Informatics, Graduate School of Interdisciplinary Science and Engineering in Health Systems, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Department of Hematology, Oncology and Respiratory Medicine, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Graduate Institute of Networking and Multimedia, National Taiwan University kn-affil= en-keyword=turning overs kn-keyword=turning overs en-keyword=privacy kn-keyword=privacy en-keyword=thermal sensors kn-keyword=thermal sensors en-keyword=low-resolution kn-keyword=low-resolution en-keyword=ResNet kn-keyword=ResNet END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=16 cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page=13650 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260316 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Sex-related differences in blood concentrations and emergence profiles following total intravenous anesthesia with remimazolam and remifentanil en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Remimazolam is a novel, short-acting benzodiazepine, which is characterized by rapid onset and quick recovery. The clinical efficacy and metabolism of many intravenous anesthetics are known to be influenced by sex; however, the effects of sex on the anesthetic efficacy and metabolism of remimazolam remain unclear. This prospective observational study examined sex-related differences in pharmacokinetics and emergence profiles after total intravenous anesthesia was induced with remimazolam and remifentanil in patients undergoing oral and maxillofacial surgery. Thirty-five American Society of Anesthesiologists Physical Status 1 adults (19 females, 16 males), aged 18?49 years, received standardized dosing based on their actual body weights. Serum remimazolam concentrations were measured at the end of administration and immediately before extubation using high-performance liquid chromatography. Although the emergence time did not differ significantly between the sexes, the mean emergence time of the females was approximately 80 s shorter. Serum remimazolam concentrations were significantly lower in females at both measurement time points (p? Objective: To investigate how real-world patients with suspected CBD fulfill Armstrong's clinical phenotypes and diagnostic criteria, and to compare clinical and imaging features between the Alzheimer's disease (AD) group and the non-AD group defined by CSF amyloid biomarkers.
Methods: We retrospectively reviewed 137 patients undergoing differential diagnosis for CBS, frontotemporal dementia, primary progressive aphasia, or PSPS. Of these, 78 met the criteria for cr-CBD (n = 36) or p-CBD (n = 42). CSF was examined in 32 patients, and based on the CSF AƒÀ42/40 ratio, patients were classified into an AD-group (AD-CBS; n = 6) and a non-AD group (n = 26).
Results: Among patients classified as cr-CBD or p-CBD, 79% fulfilled two or more clinical phenotypes, with FBS and PSPS most commonly. Compared with the AD group, the non-AD group showed more parkinsonian features and frontal hypoperfusion on [123I]-IMP SPECT.
Conclusion: Armstrong's criteria captured a spectrum of overlapping clinical features. While helpful in clinical phenotyping, further validation with biomarkers is essential to distinguish CBD from AD and related disorders. Prospective studies with pathological confirmation are warranted. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=MoriharaRyuta en-aut-sei=Morihara en-aut-mei=Ryuta kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=NomuraEmi en-aut-sei=Nomura en-aut-mei=Emi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=OsakadaYosuke en-aut-sei=Osakada en-aut-mei=Yosuke kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=YunokiTaijun en-aut-sei=Yunoki en-aut-mei=Taijun kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=TakemotoMami en-aut-sei=Takemoto en-aut-mei=Mami kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=YamashitaToru en-aut-sei=Yamashita en-aut-mei=Toru kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=IshiuraHiroyuki en-aut-sei=Ishiura en-aut-mei=Hiroyuki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Department of Neurology, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Department of Neurology, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Department of Neurology, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Department of Neurology, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Department of Neurology, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Department of Neurology, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=Department of Neurology, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= en-keyword=Corticobasal degeneration kn-keyword=Corticobasal degeneration en-keyword=CBD kn-keyword=CBD en-keyword=Corticobasal syndrome kn-keyword=Corticobasal syndrome en-keyword=CBS kn-keyword=CBS en-keyword=Armstrong's criteria kn-keyword=Armstrong's criteria END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=481 cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page=125733 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=202602 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=The utility of Gold Coast criteria for amyotrophic lateral sclerosis en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Introduction: Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a rapidly progressive neurodegenerative disease. Current diagnostic criteria, including the revised El Escorial (rEE) and Awaji (AW) criteria, have limitations in sensitivity. The Gold Coast (GC) criteria were proposed to simplify diagnosis and improve early detection, but their real-world performance remains unclear.
Methods: We retrospectively analyzed 260 patients suspected of ALS who were admitted to our department between 2013 and 2022. The GC, AW, and rEE criteria were applied to data from initial hospitalization. Final diagnoses were based on follow-up data, and sensitivity/specificity were compared using McNemar's test.
Results: The GC criteria showed equivalent sensitivity (91.6 %), but higher specificity (75.9 %) compared to all combined AW and rEE categories. GC sensitivity was significantly higher than that of AW/rEE definite/probable categories. False negatives of GC criteria were often due to insufficient LMN signs, particularly in bulbar-onset cases. Subgroup analysis showed consistent trends.
Conclusion: The GC criteria demonstrated high sensitivity and moderate specificity, supporting their clinical utility in early ALS diagnosis. However, variability in clinical presentation and retrospective limitations suggest the need for further prospective validation. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=NomuraEmi en-aut-sei=Nomura en-aut-mei=Emi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=MoriharaRyuta en-aut-sei=Morihara en-aut-mei=Ryuta kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=OsakadaYosuke en-aut-sei=Osakada en-aut-mei=Yosuke kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=YunokiTaijun en-aut-sei=Yunoki en-aut-mei=Taijun kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=TakemotoMami en-aut-sei=Takemoto en-aut-mei=Mami kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=YamashitaToru en-aut-sei=Yamashita en-aut-mei=Toru kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=IshiuraHiroyuki en-aut-sei=Ishiura en-aut-mei=Hiroyuki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Department of Neurology, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Department of Neurology, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Department of Neurology, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Department of Neurology, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Department of Neurology, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Department of Neurology, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=Department of Neurology, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= en-keyword=Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis kn-keyword=Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis en-keyword=ALS kn-keyword=ALS en-keyword=Gold Coast criteria kn-keyword=Gold Coast criteria en-keyword=Revised El Escorial criteria kn-keyword=Revised El Escorial criteria en-keyword=Awaji criteria kn-keyword=Awaji criteria END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=211 cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page=104882 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=202607 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Lease or sale: When a durable goods monopolist can choose supply chain openness en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=We construct a two-period model of supply chain openness in a durable goods market with two marketing modes: leasing and selling. For a given marketing mode, at the beginning of the first period, an incumbent supplier and the downstream monopolist choose one of two trading modes: (i) a two-period exclusive supply chain, or (ii) an open supply chain, allowing the downstream monopolist to trade with an efficient supplier in the second period. We show that in the selling mode, the exclusive supply chain can arise if the incumbent supplier is highly efficient. In contrast, under the leasing mode, the exclusive supply chain never arises; instead, the open supply chain is always selected. Furthermore, when the downstream monopolist is allowed to endogenously choose the marketing mode before the first period, it opts for the selling mode if the incumbent supplier is relatively inefficient; otherwise, it selects the leasing mode. Regardless of the chosen marketing mode, the open supply chain always arises on the equilibrium path, implying that the recent advancement of ICT to enhance leasing may discourage the adoption of exclusive supply chains. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=KitamuraHiroshi en-aut-sei=Kitamura en-aut-mei=Hiroshi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=MatsushimaNoriaki en-aut-sei=Matsushima en-aut-mei=Noriaki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=SatoMisato en-aut-sei=Sato en-aut-mei=Misato kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Faculty of Economics, Kyoto Sangyo University kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Osaka School of International Public Policy, University of Osaka kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= en-keyword=Durable goods kn-keyword=Durable goods en-keyword=Exclusive supply chain kn-keyword=Exclusive supply chain en-keyword=Vertical relation kn-keyword=Vertical relation en-keyword=Selling versus leasing kn-keyword=Selling versus leasing END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=80 cd-vols= no-issue=2 article-no= start-page=153 end-page=157 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=202604 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Revisiting Adrenal Crisis Triggered by Influenza Infection: Lessons from Two Fatal Cases en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Adrenal crisis is a life-threatening endocrine emergency that can progress within hours despite a prior diagnosis and maintenance therapy. We describe a fatal influenza-triggered adrenal crisis in two patients: a child with panhypopituitarism and an adult with prior pituitary surgery, both presenting in cardiac arrest. Despite resuscitation and intravenous hydrocortisone, a fatal hypoxic-ischemic injury or multiorgan failure occurred. These cases highlight the fulminant course of an adrenal crisis and underscore the importance of early recognition, clinician awareness, prompt parenteral hydrocortisone administration, and reinforcement of education for patients, caregivers, and healthcare providers to improve preparedness and prevent avoidable deaths. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=UedaYoshiyuki en-aut-sei=Ueda en-aut-mei=Yoshiyuki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=YumotoTetsuya en-aut-sei=Yumoto en-aut-mei=Tetsuya kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=HongoTakashi en-aut-sei=Hongo en-aut-mei=Takashi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=ObaraTakafumi en-aut-sei=Obara en-aut-mei=Takafumi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=NojimaTsuyoshi en-aut-sei=Nojima en-aut-mei=Tsuyoshi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=TsukaharaKohei en-aut-sei=Tsukahara en-aut-mei=Kohei kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=HasegawaKosei en-aut-sei=Hasegawa en-aut-mei=Kosei kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= en-aut-name=FutagawaNatsuko en-aut-sei=Futagawa en-aut-mei=Natsuko kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=8 ORCID= en-aut-name=NaitoHiromichi en-aut-sei=Naito en-aut-mei=Hiromichi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=9 ORCID= en-aut-name=NakaoAtsunori en-aut-sei=Nakao en-aut-mei=Atsunori kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=10 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Department of Emergency, Critical Care and Disaster Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Department of Emergency, Critical Care and Disaster Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Department of Emergency, Critical Care and Disaster Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Department of Emergency, Critical Care and Disaster Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Department of Emergency, Critical Care and Disaster Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Department of Emergency, Critical Care and Disaster Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=Department of Emergency, Critical Care and Disaster Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=8 en-affil=Department of Pediatrics, Okayama University Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=9 en-affil=Department of Emergency, Critical Care and Disaster Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=10 en-affil=Department of Emergency, Critical Care and Disaster Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= en-keyword=adrenal insufficiency kn-keyword=adrenal insufficiency en-keyword=cardiac arrest kn-keyword=cardiac arrest en-keyword=hydrocortisone kn-keyword=hydrocortisone en-keyword=influenza kn-keyword=influenza en-keyword=shock kn-keyword=shock END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=80 cd-vols= no-issue=2 article-no= start-page=131 end-page=139 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=202604 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Impact of Proteinuria on Postoperative Complications Following Colorectal Cancer Surgery en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Colorectal surgery is associated with a high incidence of postoperative complications regardless of the advances in surgical techniques and multidisciplinary treatment. Proteinuria is common in patients with malignancies, but few studies have investigated the association between preoperative proteinuria and patient prognoses, especially postoperative complications. We investigated the impact of proteinuria on patients undergoing colorectal surgery in a single-center, retrospective cohort study of 767 patients who underwent surgical resection for colorectal cancer between January 2016 and December 2022 at the National Hospital Organization Shikoku Cancer Center. Among them, 81 patients with preoperative proteinuria were compared with the control group of 686 patients without proteinuria. Our analyses revealed that the patients with proteinuria had malnutrition with a significantly lower prognostic nutritional index compared to the no-proteinuria control group (p<0.001). The proteinuria group had a significantly advanced tumor stage (p=0.005), experienced more bleeding during the surgery (p=0.002), and required more transfusions (p<0.001). Postoperative complications were significantly more frequent in the proteinuria group (p=0.03), thus demonstrating that proteinuria was independently associated with postoperative complications (p=0.045). Proteinuria in patients undergoing colorectal cancer surgery can therefore be considered a risk factor for postoperative complications. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=NakataShunsuke en-aut-sei=Nakata en-aut-mei=Shunsuke kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=TakatsuFumiaki en-aut-sei=Takatsu en-aut-mei=Fumiaki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=MikuriyaYoshihiro en-aut-sei=Mikuriya en-aut-mei=Yoshihiro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=KakishitaTomokazu en-aut-sei=Kakishita en-aut-mei=Tomokazu kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=HatoShinji en-aut-sei=Hato en-aut-mei=Shinji kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=OhtaKoji en-aut-sei=Ohta en-aut-mei=Koji kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=KobatakeTakaya en-aut-sei=Kobatake en-aut-mei=Takaya kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Department of Gastroenterological Surgery, National Hospital Organization Shikoku Cancer Center kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Department of Gastroenterological Surgery, National Hospital Organization Shikoku Cancer Center kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Department of Gastroenterological Surgery, National Hospital Organization Shikoku Cancer Center kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Department of Gastroenterological Surgery, National Hospital Organization Shikoku Cancer Center kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Department of Gastroenterological Surgery, National Hospital Organization Shikoku Cancer Center kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Department of Gastroenterological Surgery, National Hospital Organization Shikoku Cancer Center kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=Department of Gastroenterological Surgery, National Hospital Organization Shikoku Cancer Center kn-affil= en-keyword=colorectal cancer kn-keyword=colorectal cancer en-keyword=surgery kn-keyword=surgery en-keyword=proteinuria kn-keyword=proteinuria en-keyword=complication kn-keyword=complication en-keyword=malnutrition kn-keyword=malnutrition END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=80 cd-vols= no-issue=2 article-no= start-page=119 end-page=129 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=202604 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Mini-open Corpectomy and Posterior Spinal Fixation with Single-Position Surgery in Lateral Decubitus Position for Osteoporotic Thoracolumbar Vertebral Collapse in Elderly Patients en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=We evaluated the clinical outcomes and limitations of anterior and posterior combined surgery with a mini-open corpectomy applying an expandable cage (Xcore?) and percutaneous pedicle screw (PPS) fixation using single-position surgery in the lateral decubitus position in patients aged > 75 years with thoracolumbar vertebral collapse. The cases of 30 consecutive patients who underwent this procedure and had ? 1-year follow-up were retrospectively analyzed. The mean operative time was 78.8 min and the estimated blood loss was 115.7 ml per level. The complications included adjacent junctional failure (n=9, 30%), deep venous thrombosis (n=3, 10%), delirium (n=3, 10%), pleural injury (n=2, 6%), screw backout (n=1, 3%) kidney injury (n=1, 3%), chylothorax (n=1, 3%), and wound dehiscence (n=1, 3%). Seven cases (23.3%) required reoperation. Local kyphosis showed significant improvement (p<0.05) that was maintained at the final follow-up. The Japanese Orthopaedic Association Back Pain Evaluation Questionnaire and a visual analogue scale indicated significant improvement in all categories at the final follow-up (p<0.05). The use of mini-open corpectomy and posterior fixation with SPAPS can thus provide reliable radiological correction and good postoperative clinical outcomes even in patients aged > 75 years. However, a limitation of this procedure is the rate of reoperation (23.3%) for osteoporosis-related adjacent segment fracture and screw backout. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=IkumaHisanori en-aut-sei=Ikuma en-aut-mei=Hisanori kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=HiroseTomohiko en-aut-sei=Hirose en-aut-mei=Tomohiko kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=KawasakiKeisuke en-aut-sei=Kawasaki en-aut-mei=Keisuke kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=OtsukaKazutoshi en-aut-sei=Otsuka en-aut-mei=Kazutoshi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Kagawa Prefectural Central Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Kagawa Prefectural Central Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Kagawa Prefectural Central Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Otsuka Orthopedic Clinic kn-affil= en-keyword=single postion surgery kn-keyword=single postion surgery en-keyword=osteoporotic vertebral collapse kn-keyword=osteoporotic vertebral collapse en-keyword=anterior and posterior combined surgery kn-keyword=anterior and posterior combined surgery en-keyword=minimum invasive surgery kn-keyword=minimum invasive surgery END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=80 cd-vols= no-issue=2 article-no= start-page=109 end-page=117 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=202604 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=A Mixed-Methods Study on Changes in Interprofessional Education Attitudes and Fundamental Competencies: A Pre?Post Analysis of Clinical Training in Dietetic Students en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=This study examined the effects of interprofessional education (IPE) on dietetics students during clinical training, focusing on changes in their attitudes toward IPE and their fundamental competencies. Eighty third-year female students (mean age, 21.0 years) at a Japanese womenfs university participated. Self-administered surveys were conducted before and after clinical training to assess attitudes toward IPE using the Readiness for Interprofessional Learning Scale (RIPLS) and the Shakaijin Kisoryoku (SKL; Fundamental Competencies for Working Persons) scale. Quantitative data were analyzed using paired t-tests, chi-squared tests, and cluster analyses. Qualitative data from open-ended responses were analyzed thematically. RIPLS and SKL scores increased significantly, from 65.3 to 68.9, and from 28. 4 to 33. 2, respectively (p<0.001). All 12 SKL items showed significant improvement. In free responses, ginitiativeh (66 mentions), gcommunicationh (10), and gexecutionh (8) were the most frequently cited as improved competencies. Cluster analysis identified three groups: increasing scores (n=25), high baseline (n=30), and minimal change (n=25). No significant correlation was found between changes in RIPLS and SKL scores (r=?0.108, p=0.355). IPE integrated into clinical training may enhance dietetics studentsf attitudes toward interprofessional collaboration and contribute to the development of professional identity. Individualized, phased IPE implementation is recommended to accommodate differences in learner readiness. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=SonoiMika en-aut-sei=Sonoi en-aut-mei=Mika kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=SonoiNorihiro en-aut-sei=Sonoi en-aut-mei=Norihiro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=KoyamaYoko en-aut-sei=Koyama en-aut-mei=Yoko kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Department of Foods and Human Nutrition, Faculty of Human Life Sciences, Notre Dame Seishin University kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Center for Education in Medicine and Health Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Department of Foods and Human Nutrition, Faculty of Human Life Sciences, Notre Dame Seishin University kn-affil= en-keyword=interprofessional education kn-keyword=interprofessional education en-keyword=dietetics students kn-keyword=dietetics students en-keyword=clinical training kn-keyword=clinical training en-keyword=professional competencies kn-keyword=professional competencies en-keyword=transformative learning kn-keyword=transformative learning END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=80 cd-vols= no-issue=2 article-no= start-page=99 end-page=107 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=202604 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Consistent Clinical Outcomes of Anteroinferior Minimally Invasive Plate Osteosynthesis for Midshaft Clavicle Fractures Across AO/OTA Fracture Types en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Although the performance of minimally invasive plate osteosynthesis (MIPO) via the anteroinferior approach is increasingly adopted for midshaft clavicle fractures, the influence of fracture morphology on clinical outcomes under a standardized protocol is unclear. We retrospectively analyzed the cases of 54 patients who underwent anteroinferior MIPO for an acute midshaft clavicle fracture (AO/OTA types B1, B2, B3) performed by a single surgeon across three affiliated institutions (2009-2022). We evaluated the clinical outcomes, i.e., the surgical time, incision length, radiographic union, reduction accuracy, range of motion, pain (visual analog scale [VAS]), and complications and compared them among the three AO/OTA subtypes. The mean incision length (3.4 cm) and surgical time (71-79 min) were similar among the groups (both p>0.2). All fractures achieved radiographic union at a mean of 3.5 months. Postoperative alignment and clavicular length were maintained (length reduction ?1.0}2.2 mm [B1], ?0.5}2.0 mm [B2], ?0.6}1.8 mm [B3]; p=0.825; angulation ?0.8}3.4‹, ?1.1}3.1‹, ?0.3}3.3‹; p=0.888). At 3 months, shoulder elevation and abduction were 169‹-175‹ (p=0.079) and 164‹-175‹ (p=0.324). Pain was minimal (100-mm VAS: ?1 mm; p=0.782). One plate-fatigue failure occurred; no supraclavicular-nerve symptoms were recorded. Anteroinferior MIPO yielded consistent outcomes across AO/OTA types, with excellent union rates, functional recovery, and few complications, indicating that this technique is safe and reproducible for the surgical management of midshaft clavicle fractures. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=Nguyen Trung Thanh en-aut-sei=Nguyen Trung Thanh en-aut-mei= kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=NakamichiRyo en-aut-sei=Nakamichi en-aut-mei=Ryo kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=ShimamuraYasunori en-aut-sei=Shimamura en-aut-mei=Yasunori kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=SaitoTaichi en-aut-sei=Saito en-aut-mei=Taichi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=IshiharaTakeshi en-aut-sei=Ishihara en-aut-mei=Takeshi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=FurutaniTomoki en-aut-sei=Furutani en-aut-mei=Tomoki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=ShitozawaHisakazu en-aut-sei=Shitozawa en-aut-mei=Hisakazu kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= en-aut-name=NodaTomoyuki en-aut-sei=Noda en-aut-mei=Tomoyuki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=8 ORCID= en-aut-name=OzakiToshifumi en-aut-sei=Ozaki en-aut-mei=Toshifumi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=9 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Kousei Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=8 en-affil=Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Kawasaki Medical School General Medical Center kn-affil= affil-num=9 en-affil=Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= en-keyword=clavicle fracture kn-keyword=clavicle fracture en-keyword=minimally invasive plate osteosynthesis kn-keyword=minimally invasive plate osteosynthesis en-keyword=anteroinferior plating kn-keyword=anteroinferior plating en-keyword=AO/OTA classification kn-keyword=AO/OTA classification END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=80 cd-vols= no-issue=2 article-no= start-page=85 end-page=97 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=202604 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Effects of Nonsurgical Periodontal Treatment on Bacterial and Clinical Parameters in Down Syndrome Patients Based on 16S rRNA Gene Amplicon Sequencing en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Individuals with Down syndrome (DS) are more susceptible to periodontal disease; however, microbial changes following treatment remain insufficiently understood. This study evaluated the effects of nonsurgical periodontal therapy on clinical outcomes and oral microbiome dynamics in 6 patients with DS using 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing. Bacterial diversity, composition, network structure, and predicted functional pathways were analyzed using dental plaque samples. Bleeding on probing decreased significantly (p=0.047) after treatment, with a trend toward reduction in periodontal inflamed surface area (p=0.05). The abundance of Fusobacteria at the class level decreased significantly after treatment. The abundance of Mogibacterium timidum was higher in the pretreatment group than in the posttreatment group. M. timidum was positively correlated with Treponema denticola and associated with multiple bacterial taxa in the network during pretreatment. Predicted functional pathways related to aromatic compound degradation were more abundant in posttreatment samples than in pretreatment samples. An increase in the abundance of Fusobacterium and the positive correlation between T. denticola and M. timidum, together with their associations with other periodontal pathogens before treatment, may contribute to the development of periodontitis in individuals with DS. Nonsurgical periodontal therapy produces measurable clinical improvement and promotes microbial shifts in patients with DS. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=ShibaTakahiko en-aut-sei=Shiba en-aut-mei=Takahiko kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=TakamoriMitsuhito en-aut-sei=Takamori en-aut-mei=Mitsuhito kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=KatagiriSayaka en-aut-sei=Katagiri en-aut-mei=Sayaka kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=KobayashiRyota en-aut-sei=Kobayashi en-aut-mei=Ryota kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=KawauchiAki en-aut-sei=Kawauchi en-aut-mei=Aki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=OhsugiYujin en-aut-sei=Ohsugi en-aut-mei=Yujin kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=LinPeiya en-aut-sei=Lin en-aut-mei=Peiya kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= en-aut-name=EkuniDaisuke en-aut-sei=Ekuni en-aut-mei=Daisuke kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=8 ORCID= en-aut-name=EgusaMasahiko en-aut-sei=Egusa en-aut-mei=Masahiko kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=9 ORCID= en-aut-name=IwataTakanori en-aut-sei=Iwata en-aut-mei=Takanori kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=10 ORCID= en-aut-name=MaedaShigeru en-aut-sei=Maeda en-aut-mei=Shigeru kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=11 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Department of Periodontology, Graduate School of Medical and Dental Sciences, Institute of Science Tokyo kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Department of Oral Physiology, Graduate School of Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Department of Oral Biology, Graduate School of Medical and Dental Sciences, Institute of Science Tokyo kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Department of Periodontology, Graduate School of Medical and Dental Sciences, Institute of Science Tokyo kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Department of Dental Anesthesiology, Graduate School of Medical and Dental Sciences, Institute of Science Tokyo kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Department of Oral Biology, Graduate School of Medical and Dental Sciences, Institute of Science Tokyo kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=Department of Oral Biology, Graduate School of Medical and Dental Sciences, Institute of Science Tokyo kn-affil= affil-num=8 en-affil=Department of Preventive Dentistry, Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=9 en-affil=The center for Special Needs Dentistry, Medical Development Field, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=10 en-affil=Department of Periodontology, Graduate School of Medical and Dental Sciences, Institute of Science Tokyo kn-affil= affil-num=11 en-affil=Department of Dental Anesthesiology, Graduate School of Medical and Dental Sciences, Institute of Science Tokyo kn-affil= en-keyword=Down Syndrome kn-keyword=Down Syndrome en-keyword=16S rRNA Gene Amplicon Sequencing kn-keyword=16S rRNA Gene Amplicon Sequencing en-keyword=periodontitis kn-keyword=periodontitis en-keyword=nonsurgical periodontal treatment kn-keyword=nonsurgical periodontal treatment en-keyword=oral microbiome kn-keyword=oral microbiome END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=80 cd-vols= no-issue=2 article-no= start-page=75 end-page=83 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=202604 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Involvement of ADAM12 in TGF-ƒÀ1-Induced Proliferation of Rheumatoid Arthritis Synovial Fibroblasts en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=A disintegrin and metalloproteinase 12 (ADAM12) is known to be involved in chondrocyte proliferation and is upregulated in the synovial tissue of osteoarthritis (OA). However, the underlying mechanisms of ADAM12 on rheumatoid arthritis (RA) synovial cell proliferation remain unknown. Here, we investigated the role of ADAM12 in the proliferation of RA synovial fibroblasts (RASFs). The expression and localization of ADAM12 in RA synovial tissues were examined by immunohistochemistry and compared with OA and healthy control (HC) synovial tissues. The effect of inflammatory cytokines (TNF-ƒ¿, TGF-ƒÀ1, and PDGF-BB) on ADAM12 expression in RASFs from RA patients was examined by real-time RT-PCR. The effect of ADAM12 knock-down by ADAM12 siRNA and ADAM12 overexpression on cell proliferation of RASFs were examined by WST-1 assay. ADAM12 was identified predominantly in RA synovial tissue rather than OA and HC synovial tissues. Stimulation with TGF-ƒÀ1 upregulated the expression of ADAM12 and cell proliferation of RASFs. ADAM12 siRNA suppressed TGF-ƒÀ1-induced cell proliferation of RASFs, while ADAM12 overexpression promoted the cell proliferation of RASFs. These findings demonstrate that ADAM12 may have a key role in TGF-ƒÀ1-induced cell proliferation of synovial fibroblasts in patients with RA. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=LinDeting en-aut-sei=Lin en-aut-mei=Deting kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=HoritaMasahiro en-aut-sei=Horita en-aut-mei=Masahiro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=WatanabeMasahito en-aut-sei=Watanabe en-aut-mei=Masahito kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=HaseiJoe en-aut-sei=Hasei en-aut-mei=Joe kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=OhtsukiTakashi en-aut-sei=Ohtsuki en-aut-mei=Takashi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=OtsukaNoriaki en-aut-sei=Otsuka en-aut-mei=Noriaki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=IchikawaChinatsu en-aut-sei=Ichikawa en-aut-mei=Chinatsu kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= en-aut-name=ShimizuNoriyuki en-aut-sei=Shimizu en-aut-mei=Noriyuki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=8 ORCID= en-aut-name=NaniwaShuichi en-aut-sei=Naniwa en-aut-mei=Shuichi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=9 ORCID= en-aut-name=OzakiToshifumi en-aut-sei=Ozaki en-aut-mei=Toshifumi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=10 ORCID= en-aut-name=NishidaKeiichiro en-aut-sei=Nishida en-aut-mei=Keiichiro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=11 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Faculty of Medical Development Field, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Muscat Orthopaedic Clinic kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Medical Information and Assistive Technology Development, Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Medical Technology, Graduate School of Health Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=8 en-affil=Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=9 en-affil=Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=10 en-affil=Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=11 en-affil=Division of Chronic Pain Medicine and Division of Comprehensive Rheumatology, Locomotive Pain Center, Faculty of Medical Development Field, Okayama University kn-affil= en-keyword=rheumatoid arthritis kn-keyword=rheumatoid arthritis en-keyword=synovial tissue kn-keyword=synovial tissue en-keyword=TGF-ƒÀ1 kn-keyword=TGF-ƒÀ1 en-keyword=ADAM12 kn-keyword=ADAM12 en-keyword=cell proliferation kn-keyword=cell proliferation END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=367 cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page=199714 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=202605 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Virome of the fungi associated with mushroom dry bubble disease en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Dry bubble disease, attributed to the filamentous fungus Lecanicillium fungicola (Cordycipitaceae) results in huge yield losses in mushroom (Agaricus bisporus) cultivation worldwide. The possibilities for controlling the disease using commercial fungicides are highly limited, and therefore, there is an increasing demand for novel, alternative means of pest management. Our research objective was the comprehensive examination of viruses in the causal agents of dry bubble disease, which may open up an avenue for its virocontrol in the future. Out of 57 fungal isolates obtained from dry bubble-affected A. bisporus crops in various countries, 47 (82%) were confirmed by ITS (Internal Transcribed Spacer) sequence analysis as L. fungicola. In addition, different members of the genera Akanthomyces and Simplicillium (7 and 3 isolates, respectively), yet unknown to cause dry bubble symptoms, have also been detected. Cellulose column chromatography revealed the presence of double-stranded (ds) RNA in seven L. fungicola and three Akanthomyces sp. isolates, suggesting viral infection. The ten dsRNA-positive and eight randomly selected dsRNA-negative fungal strains were subjected to rRNA-depletion high-throughput RNA-sequencing analysis. The presence of seven new viruses representing four new species in the established families, Partitiviridae, Polymycoviridae, Botourmiaviridae and the narna-like virus group, and three previously established/proposed species in the families Chrysoviridae and gMycovirgaviridaeh were confirmed. The impact of the detected and identified viruses on their host fungi, and their potential applicability for virocontrol purposes will be examined in the future. This study provides the first detailed report on viruses of mushroom pathogenic fungi. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=HatvaniL?r?nt en-aut-sei=Hatvani en-aut-mei=L?r?nt kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=HisanoSakae en-aut-sei=Hisano en-aut-mei=Sakae kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=KondoHideki en-aut-sei=Kondo en-aut-mei=Hideki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=SugaharaHitomi en-aut-sei=Sugahara en-aut-mei=Hitomi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=TelengechPaul en-aut-sei=Telengech en-aut-mei=Paul kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=ShahiSabitree en-aut-sei=Shahi en-aut-mei=Sabitree kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=IbiangSarah Remi en-aut-sei=Ibiang en-aut-mei=Sarah Remi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= en-aut-name=Kocsub?S?ndor en-aut-sei=Kocsub? en-aut-mei=S?ndor kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=8 ORCID= en-aut-name=KartaliT?nde en-aut-sei=Kartali en-aut-mei=T?nde kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=9 ORCID= en-aut-name=FitzpatrickDavid A. en-aut-sei=Fitzpatrick en-aut-mei=David A. kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=10 ORCID= en-aut-name=GroganHelen en-aut-sei=Grogan en-aut-mei=Helen kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=11 ORCID= en-aut-name=SuzukiNobuhiro en-aut-sei=Suzuki en-aut-mei=Nobuhiro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=12 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Institute of Plant Science and Resources, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Institute of Plant Science and Resources, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Institute of Plant Science and Resources, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Institute of Plant Science and Resources, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Institute of Plant Science and Resources, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Institute of Plant Science and Resources, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=Institute of Plant Science and Resources, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=8 en-affil=Department of Biotechnology and Microbiology, Faculty of Science and Informatics, University of Szeged kn-affil= affil-num=9 en-affil=Department of Biotechnology and Microbiology, Faculty of Science and Informatics, University of Szeged kn-affil= affil-num=10 en-affil=Genome Evolution Laboratory, Department of Biology, Maynooth University kn-affil= affil-num=11 en-affil=Teagasc Food Research Center, Horticulture Development Department kn-affil= affil-num=12 en-affil=Institute of Plant Science and Resources, Okayama University kn-affil= en-keyword=Lecanicillium fungicola kn-keyword=Lecanicillium fungicola en-keyword=Agaricus bisporus kn-keyword=Agaricus bisporus en-keyword=Akanthomyces kn-keyword=Akanthomyces en-keyword=Simplicillium kn-keyword=Simplicillium en-keyword=dsRNA kn-keyword=dsRNA en-keyword=Myovirus kn-keyword=Myovirus en-keyword=Fungal virus kn-keyword=Fungal virus en-keyword=Mycovirgaviridae kn-keyword=Mycovirgaviridae en-keyword=Partitiviridae kn-keyword=Partitiviridae en-keyword=Polymycoviridae kn-keyword=Polymycoviridae en-keyword=Botourmiaviridae kn-keyword=Botourmiaviridae en-keyword=Splipalmiviridae kn-keyword=Splipalmiviridae en-keyword=Narna-like virus kn-keyword=Narna-like virus END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=64 cd-vols= no-issue=3 article-no= start-page=101428 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=202605 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Short- and long-term outcomes of anti-thymocyte globulin-based regimen for acute antibody-mediated rejection after lung transplantation en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Background: Antibody-mediated rejection (AMR) remains a major barrier to successful lung transplantation (LTx). Despite advances in donor-specific alloantibody (DSA) detection, effective treatments are limited, with current management largely empirical. Acute clinical AMR, marked by rapid graft dysfunction, demands urgent intervention. In Japan, where approved therapies for AMR were historically limited, rabbit anti-thymocyte globulin (rATG) has been adopted as a treatment option.
Methods: This retrospective study analyzed 11 patients who developed acute AMR within three months after LTx at Okayama University Hospital between 2013 and 2023. Diagnosis (ISHLT possible AMR) was based on acute graft dysfunction unresponsive to steroids, positive DSA, and exclusion of infection, without histological confirmation due to procedural risk. rATG (1.5 mg/kg/day for 7 days) was administered, along with intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG), plasma exchange (PLEX), and rituximab when indicated. Outcomes included DSA clearance, clinical response, survival, and adverse events.
Results: Remission was achieved in 64% of patients, with 36% not requiring PLEX and 64% not receiving rituximab. Early rATG treatment correlated with favorable outcomes, whereas delayed therapy resulted in poorer responses. Six patients (55%) survived without chronic lung allograft dysfunction (CLAD) for over one year. Adverse events included cytomegalovirus infection (91%), bacterial pneumonia (36%), fungal infection (18%), and malignancy (18%).
Conclusions: rATG was effective for acute possible AMR management, particularly when initiated early. Some patients achieved remission without adjunct therapy, indicating rATG's potent immunosuppressive activity. However, frequent infectious complications emphasize the need for optimized dosing and further studies to validate its safety and long-term efficacy. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=MiyoshiKentaroh en-aut-sei=Miyoshi en-aut-mei=Kentaroh kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=OtaniShinji en-aut-sei=Otani en-aut-mei=Shinji kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=SugimotoSeiichiro en-aut-sei=Sugimoto en-aut-mei=Seiichiro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=TanakaShin en-aut-sei=Tanaka en-aut-mei=Shin kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=OkazakiMikio en-aut-sei=Okazaki en-aut-mei=Mikio kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=ToyookaShinichi en-aut-sei=Toyooka en-aut-mei=Shinichi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Department of Thoracic Surgery, Okayama University Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Department of Thoracic Surgery, Okayama University Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Department of Thoracic Surgery, Okayama University Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Department of Thoracic Surgery, Okayama University Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Department of Thoracic Surgery, Okayama University Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Department of Thoracic Surgery, Okayama University Hospital kn-affil= en-keyword=Anti-thymocyte globulin kn-keyword=Anti-thymocyte globulin en-keyword=Acute antibody-mediated rejection kn-keyword=Acute antibody-mediated rejection en-keyword=Treatment kn-keyword=Treatment en-keyword=Lung transplantation kn-keyword=Lung transplantation END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=5 cd-vols= no-issue=2 article-no= start-page=14 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260416 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Solution-Processable Near-Infrared-Absorbing Dye: Thiophene-Substituted N-Phenylphenothiazine Radical Cations for Stable Thin Films en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=We report a ƒÎ-extended N-phenylphenothiazine dye bearing thiophene substituents, designed to address the practical compromise between long-wavelength near-infrared (NIR) absorption and the isolability of a stable radical cation state. The target compound was synthesized via Suzuki?Miyaura cross-coupling and exhibited good solubility in common organic solvents. Cyclic voltammetry in dichloromethane showed a reversible one-electron oxidation at E0 = 0.19 V vs. Fc/Fc+. Chemical oxidation afforded the corresponding radical cation, which showed an intense NIR absorption maximum at 910 nm. DFT calculations support thiophene-induced narrowing of the HOMO?SOMO gap and predict a pronounced bathochromic shift of the main absorption band. The radical cation was isolated as a stable PF6? salt and readily processed into spin-coated films, which retained strong NIR absorption and remained stable for months under ambient conditions. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=YanoMasafumi en-aut-sei=Yano en-aut-mei=Masafumi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=SakaiKengo en-aut-sei=Sakai en-aut-mei=Kengo kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=UedaMinami en-aut-sei=Ueda en-aut-mei=Minami kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=MitsudoKoichi en-aut-sei=Mitsudo en-aut-mei=Koichi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=KashiwagiYukiyasu en-aut-sei=Kashiwagi en-aut-mei=Yukiyasu kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Faculty of Chemistry, Material and Bioengineering, Kansai University kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Faculty of Chemistry, Material and Bioengineering, Kansai University kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Faculty of Chemistry, Material and Bioengineering, Kansai University kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Division of Applied Chemistry, Graduate School of Environmental, Life, Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Osaka Research Institute of Industrial Science and Technology kn-affil= en-keyword=N-phenylphenothiazine kn-keyword=N-phenylphenothiazine en-keyword=radical cation kn-keyword=radical cation en-keyword=thiophene substitution kn-keyword=thiophene substitution en-keyword=near-infrared absorption kn-keyword=near-infrared absorption en-keyword=stability in solid state kn-keyword=stability in solid state END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=73 cd-vols= no-issue=4 article-no= start-page=5942 end-page=5953 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=202604 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Transverse- and Axial-Flux Permanent Magnet Machine With C-Type SMC Stator: A Solution for Ultra-Flat Applications en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=This article proposes a novel transverse- and axial-flux permanent magnet machine (T-AFPM) using a C-type stator core for reducing system size via an ultra-flat shape. With an axial length of only 19.7 mm, this ultra-flat shape contributes markedly to reducing system size in industrial applications such as water pumps. In general, AFPMs are suitable for a flat shape because of their high torque density with a short axial length. However, it is difficult to use conventional AFPMs to achieve an ultra-flat shape because of structural problems and insufficient performance. By contrast, the proposed T-AFPM achieves a highly manufacturable structure, high efficiency, and the required output power despite its extremely short axial length. Herein, the T-AFPM is compared with conventional AFPMs with various configurations by means of three-dimensional finite-element analysis, and experiments on a T-AFPM prototype are reported. From the simulation and experimental results, the proposed T-AFPM shows high efficiency (IE5 class), the required output power, and suitable structural properties for an ultra-flat shape. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=TsunataRen en-aut-sei=Tsunata en-aut-mei=Ren kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=TakemotoMasatsugu en-aut-sei=Takemoto en-aut-mei=Masatsugu kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=ImaiJun en-aut-sei=Imai en-aut-mei=Jun kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=SaitoTatsuya en-aut-sei=Saito en-aut-mei=Tatsuya kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=UenoTomoyuki en-aut-sei=Ueno en-aut-mei=Tomoyuki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Graduate School of Environmental, Life, Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Graduate School of Environmental, Life, Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Graduate School of Environmental, Life, Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Sumitomo Electric Sintered Alloy Ltd. kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Sumitomo Electric Sintered Alloy Ltd. kn-affil= en-keyword=Axial-flux machine kn-keyword=Axial-flux machine en-keyword=coreless rotor structure kn-keyword=coreless rotor structure en-keyword=C-shaped core kn-keyword=C-shaped core en-keyword=efficiency (IE5 class) kn-keyword=efficiency (IE5 class) en-keyword=permanent magnet synchronous machine (PMSM) kn-keyword=permanent magnet synchronous machine (PMSM) en-keyword=short axial length kn-keyword=short axial length en-keyword=soft magnetic composite (SMC) kn-keyword=soft magnetic composite (SMC) en-keyword=transverse-flux machine kn-keyword=transverse-flux machine en-keyword=ultra-flat shape kn-keyword=ultra-flat shape END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol= cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page= end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260407 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=ROWVA: A Structure-Based Metric for Predicting the Pathogenicity of Protein Variants Using Alphafold2 en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=p53, an important tumor suppressor protein, functions as a tetramer. Therefore, malignant variants in the tetramer-forming domain increase the likelihood of p53 dysfunction. Recent developments in genome analysis technology have expanded our understanding of malignant variants. However, variants of uncertain significance are also being increasingly identified. Hence, methods to assess the pathogenicity of these variants are required. In this study, we aimed to examine whether AlphaFold2 can be used to evaluate the functional impacts of p53 variants based on predicted three-dimensional (3D) structural information. For each variant present in datasets of p53 functional score, we performed 3D structural prediction using AlphaFold2. We analyzed the correlations among multiple AlphaFold2-derived scores to predict functional scores, such as protein stability and pathogenicity labels, for each dataset. The root-mean-square deviation obtained by comparing the 3D structures predicted by AlphaFold2 for the wild-type and variant structures showed a high correlation with each functional score. Overall, these findings indicate that AlphaFold2 can be used to evaluate variants. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=FurutaniTaiki en-aut-sei=Furutani en-aut-mei=Taiki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=OkushaYuka en-aut-sei=Okusha en-aut-mei=Yuka kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=NagamiHiroki en-aut-sei=Nagami en-aut-mei=Hiroki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=HanafusaHiroko en-aut-sei=Hanafusa en-aut-mei=Hiroko kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=TomidaShuta en-aut-sei=Tomida en-aut-mei=Shuta kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=SawadaRyusuke en-aut-sei=Sawada en-aut-mei=Ryusuke kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=HosonoYasuyuki en-aut-sei=Hosono en-aut-mei=Yasuyuki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= en-aut-name=NakatochiMasahiro en-aut-sei=Nakatochi en-aut-mei=Masahiro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=8 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Public Health Informatics Unit, Department of Integrated Health Sciences, Nagoya University Graduate School of Medicine kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Department of Pharmacology, Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry & Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Department of Pharmacology, Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry & Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Department of Pharmacology, Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry & Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Center for Comprehensive Genomic Medicine, Okayama University Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Department of Pharmacology, Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry & Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=Department of Pharmacology, Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry & Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=8 en-affil=Public Health Informatics Unit, Department of Integrated Health Sciences, Nagoya University Graduate School of Medicine kn-affil= en-keyword=3D protein structural prediction kn-keyword=3D protein structural prediction en-keyword=AlphaFold2 kn-keyword=AlphaFold2 en-keyword=p53 kn-keyword=p53 en-keyword=tumor suppressor kn-keyword=tumor suppressor en-keyword=variants of uncertain significance kn-keyword=variants of uncertain significance END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol= cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page= end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260409 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Rice EMF3 Alleles Adjust Flower Opening Time to Enhance the Seed Setting Rate Under High Temperature Stress en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=To safeguard global food security against rapid population growth and a warming world, the effective genetic improvement of cereals is imperative. Flower opening time (FOT) critically affects the seed setting rate. In this study, we identified a gene, EARLY-MORNING FLOWERING 3 (EMF3), in which single-nucleotide substitutions strongly modulate FOT in rice in a semi-dominant manner, resulting in wide variation in FOT from earlier to later FOT than the wild-type. EMF3 knock-out mutants showed significantly reduced FOT synchrony and disrupted anther dehiscence, leading to fertilisation failure. EMF3 encodes a plasma membrane-localised polypeptide of 723 amino acids with an armadillo repeat fold and four transmembrane segments. Furthermore, EMF3 is specifically expressed in the anthers starting from nighttime on the day of flowering, with substantial impacts on the transcriptomes of both anther and lodicule, which suggested an exclusive role of EMF3 in flowering events. Modifying EMF3 alleles of O. sativa enabled the adjustment of FOT among Oryza species and subspecies, potentially facilitating cross-fertilisation by overcoming one of the major challenges of inter-specific hybridisation to exploit heterosis. Introducing the EMF3 alleles with the earlier FOT into popular rice cultivars resulted in flowering at an earlier time of day when the temperature was cooler, efficiently increasing seed setting rate under heat stress. This discovery unveils the novel mechanism of anther control of flower opening time through the EMF3 gene, while also enabling the use of EMF3 alleles in breeding strategies for efficient fertilisation for increasing hybrid rice seed production and mitigating future heat-stress damage at flowering. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=IshizakiTakuma en-aut-sei=Ishizaki en-aut-mei=Takuma kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=HashidaYoichi en-aut-sei=Hashida en-aut-mei=Yoichi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=HirabayashiHideyuki en-aut-sei=Hirabayashi en-aut-mei=Hideyuki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=SasakiKazuhiro en-aut-sei=Sasaki en-aut-mei=Kazuhiro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=TokunagaHiroki en-aut-sei=Tokunaga en-aut-mei=Hiroki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=Simon]AdaEliza Vie M. en-aut-sei=Simon]Ada en-aut-mei=Eliza Vie M. kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=WakayamaMasataka en-aut-sei=Wakayama en-aut-mei=Masataka kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= en-aut-name=TakaiToshiyuki en-aut-sei=Takai en-aut-mei=Toshiyuki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=8 ORCID= en-aut-name=SaitoHiroki en-aut-sei=Saito en-aut-mei=Hiroki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=9 ORCID= en-aut-name=NaganoAtsushi J. en-aut-sei=Nagano en-aut-mei=Atsushi J. kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=10 ORCID= en-aut-name=SakakibaraHitoshi en-aut-sei=Sakakibara en-aut-mei=Hitoshi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=11 ORCID= en-aut-name=KojimaMikiko en-aut-sei=Kojima en-aut-mei=Mikiko kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=12 ORCID= en-aut-name=TakebayashiYumiko en-aut-sei=Takebayashi en-aut-mei=Yumiko kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=13 ORCID= en-aut-name=KimSung]Ryul en-aut-sei=Kim en-aut-mei=Sung]Ryul kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=14 ORCID= en-aut-name=MatsushimaRyo en-aut-sei=Matsushima en-aut-mei=Ryo kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=15 ORCID= en-aut-name=ThomsonMichael J. en-aut-sei=Thomson en-aut-mei=Michael J. kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=16 ORCID= en-aut-name=SugimotoKazuhiko en-aut-sei=Sugimoto en-aut-mei=Kazuhiko kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=17 ORCID= en-aut-name=HibaraKen]Ichiro en-aut-sei=Hibara en-aut-mei=Ken]Ichiro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=18 ORCID= en-aut-name=IshimaruTsutomu en-aut-sei=Ishimaru en-aut-mei=Tsutomu kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=19 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Tropical Agriculture Research Front, Japan International Research Center for Agricultural Sciences (JIRCAS) kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Faculty of Agriculture, Takasaki University of Health and Welfare kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Institute of Crop Science, National Agriculture and Food Research Organization (NARO) kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Biological Resources and Post-Harvest Division, Japan International Research Center for Agricultural Sciences (JIRCAS) kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Tropical Agriculture Research Front, Japan International Research Center for Agricultural Sciences (JIRCAS) kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Plant Breeding, Genetics, and Biotechnology Division, International Rice Research Institute (IRRI) kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=Institute for Advanced Biosciences, Keio University kn-affil= affil-num=8 en-affil=Plant Breeding, Genetics, and Biotechnology Division, International Rice Research Institute (IRRI) kn-affil= affil-num=9 en-affil=Tropical Agriculture Research Front, Japan International Research Center for Agricultural Sciences (JIRCAS) kn-affil= affil-num=10 en-affil=Institute for Advanced Biosciences, Keio University kn-affil= affil-num=11 en-affil=Graduate School of Bioagricultural Sciences, Nagoya University kn-affil= affil-num=12 en-affil=RIKEN Center for Sustainable Resource Science kn-affil= affil-num=13 en-affil=RIKEN Center for Sustainable Resource Science kn-affil= affil-num=14 en-affil=Rice Breeding Innovations Department, International Rice Research Institute (IRRI) kn-affil= affil-num=15 en-affil=Institute of Plant Science and Resources, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=16 en-affil=Plant Breeding, Genetics, and Biotechnology Division International Rice Research Institute (IRRI) Metro Manila Philippines kn-affil= affil-num=17 en-affil=Institute of Crop Science, National Agriculture and Food Research Organization (NARO) kn-affil= affil-num=18 en-affil=18Graduate School of Agricultural Regional Vitalization, Kibi International University kn-affil= affil-num=19 en-affil=Biological Resources and Post-Harvest Division, Japan International Research Center for Agricultural Sciences (JIRCAS) kn-affil= en-keyword=EARLY-MORNING FLOWERING 3 kn-keyword=EARLY-MORNING FLOWERING 3 en-keyword=flower opening time kn-keyword=flower opening time en-keyword=heat stress kn-keyword=heat stress en-keyword=rice kn-keyword=rice en-keyword=seed setting rate kn-keyword=seed setting rate END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=113 cd-vols= no-issue=4 article-no= start-page=043713 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260408 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Analytical and numerical studies of periodic superradiance en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=We conduct a theoretical study to understand the periodic superradiance observed in an Er:YSO crystal. First, we construct a model based on the Maxwell-Bloch equations for a reduced level system, a pair of superradiance states, and a population reservoir state. Analysis of the eigenvalues of the linearized differential equations shows that periodic superradiance can be realized only for certain parameters. We also derive two-variable equations consisting of the coherence and population difference between the two superradiance states, which contain the essential feature of the periodic superradiance. The two-variable equations clarify the mathematical structure of this periodic phenomenon and give analytical forms of the period, pulse duration, and number of emitted photons. Our model successfully reproduces the periodic behavior, but the actual experimental parameters are found to be outside the parameter region for the periodic superradiance. This result implies that some other mechanism(s) is (are) required. As one example, assuming that the field decay rate varies with the electric field, the periodic superradiance can be reproduced even under the actual experimental conditions. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=HaraHideaki en-aut-sei=Hara en-aut-mei=Hideaki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=MiyamotoYuki en-aut-sei=Miyamoto en-aut-mei=Yuki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=HanJunseok en-aut-sei=Han en-aut-mei=Junseok kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=OmotoRiku en-aut-sei=Omoto en-aut-mei=Riku kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=ImaiYasutaka en-aut-sei=Imai en-aut-mei=Yasutaka kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=YoshimiAkihiro en-aut-sei=Yoshimi en-aut-mei=Akihiro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=YoshimuraKoji en-aut-sei=Yoshimura en-aut-mei=Koji kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= en-aut-name=YoshimuraMotohiko en-aut-sei=Yoshimura en-aut-mei=Motohiko kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=8 ORCID= en-aut-name=SasaoNoboru en-aut-sei=Sasao en-aut-mei=Noboru kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=9 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Research Institute for Interdisciplinary Science, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Research Institute for Interdisciplinary Science, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Research Institute for Interdisciplinary Science, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Research Institute for Interdisciplinary Science, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Research Institute for Interdisciplinary Science, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Research Institute for Interdisciplinary Science, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=Research Institute for Interdisciplinary Science, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=8 en-affil=Research Institute for Interdisciplinary Science, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=9 en-affil=Research Institute for Interdisciplinary Science, Okayama University kn-affil= END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol= cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page=e202501237 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260403 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Informatics]Driven and Automated Optimization in Flow Electrochemical Synthesis en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Electrochemical synthesis has emerged as a powerful platform for environmentally sustainable chemical transformations. When integrated with flow chemistry, electrosynthetic processes exhibit enhanced scalability, making them suitable for industrial applications. Recently, the integration of electrochemical flow systems with informatics techniques has accelerated the optimization of reaction conditions. Data-driven strategies facilitate rapid exploration of multidimensional parameter spaces, enabling identification of optimal reaction conditions with high efficiency. These advances have enabled the development of automated optimization systems. This review highlights recent progress in combining electrosynthesis, flow chemistry, and computational tools, focusing on representative examples that illustrate efficient optimization protocols and autonomous reaction development. By showcasing these developments, we discuss how the integration of these technologies is driving innovation in electrochemical synthesis. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=SatoEisuke en-aut-sei=Sato en-aut-mei=Eisuke kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=TaniAkine en-aut-sei=Tani en-aut-mei=Akine kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=NakahamaTomohiro en-aut-sei=Nakahama en-aut-mei=Tomohiro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=MitsudoKoichi en-aut-sei=Mitsudo en-aut-mei=Koichi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=SugaSeiji en-aut-sei=Suga en-aut-mei=Seiji kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Department of Applied Chemistry, Graduate School of Environmental, Life, Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Department of Applied Chemistry, Graduate School of Environmental, Life, Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Department of Applied Chemistry, Graduate School of Environmental, Life, Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Department of Applied Chemistry, Graduate School of Environmental, Life, Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Department of Applied Chemistry, Graduate School of Environmental, Life, Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= en-keyword=artificial intelligence kn-keyword=artificial intelligence en-keyword=electrochemical synthesis kn-keyword=electrochemical synthesis en-keyword=flow synthesis kn-keyword=flow synthesis en-keyword=laboratory automation kn-keyword=laboratory automation END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=380 cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page=114924 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=202604 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Constitutive activation of MC1R in the large-billed crow (Corvus macrorhynchos) and its potential role in black plumage en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Melanin-based plumage coloration in birds is largely regulated by the melanocortin 1 receptor (MC1R), a G protein?coupled receptor that promotes eumelanin synthesis via cAMP signaling. In domestic chickens, constitutively activating mutations such as the MC1R^E (E92K) allele cause melanistic phenotypes, demonstrating that persistent MC1R activation can drive generalized darkening. However, to our knowledge, no experimental study has directly demonstrated constitutive MC1R activation in wild birds exhibiting uniformly black plumage. We investigated the sequence and signaling properties of MC1R from the Large-billed Crow (Corvus macrorhynchos), a species with strongly eumelanin-dominant plumage. Crow MC1R exhibited elevated basal cAMP signaling and minimal responsiveness to ƒ¿-melanocyte-stimulating hormone (ƒ¿-MSH) in both stable Chinese hamster ovary (CHO-K1) cells and transient CRE-luciferase assays in HEK293T cells, demonstrating ligand-independent activation comparable to that observed in the melanizing chicken MC1R^E (E92K) allele. Comparative sequence analysis identified multiple substitutions conserved across Corvus species. Among these, E12K and E18K were functionally evaluated based on prior associations with melanism in other birds. Although E12K modestly increased basal signaling in chicken MC1R, E18K alone or in combination with E12K did not reproduce crow-level constitutive activity, and reciprocal substitutions in crow MC1R failed to abolish ligand-independent activation. These findings demonstrate that crow MC1R possesses constitutive activity and suggest that this phenotype reflects lineage-specific modifications rather than a single activating substitution. Our results provide experimental evidence that constitutive MC1R activation is a plausible molecular mechanism that may contribute to the black plumage in the Large-billed Crow, although a direct causal relationship remains to be established. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=NakanoSaya en-aut-sei=Nakano en-aut-mei=Saya kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=TashiroYuichi en-aut-sei=Tashiro en-aut-mei=Yuichi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=FukuchiHibiki en-aut-sei=Fukuchi en-aut-mei=Hibiki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=AizawaSayaka en-aut-sei=Aizawa en-aut-mei=Sayaka kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=TakeuchiSakae en-aut-sei=Takeuchi en-aut-mei=Sakae kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Graduate School of Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Graduate School of Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Graduate School of Environmental, Life, Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Graduate School of Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Graduate School of Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= en-keyword=MC1R kn-keyword=MC1R en-keyword=Constitutive activation kn-keyword=Constitutive activation en-keyword=Ligand-independent signaling kn-keyword=Ligand-independent signaling en-keyword=Melanism kn-keyword=Melanism en-keyword=Plumage coloration kn-keyword=Plumage coloration en-keyword=Corvus macrorhynchos kn-keyword=Corvus macrorhynchos END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=264 cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page=128798 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=202608 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Improving thermal stability of a microcavity emitter for utilization under atmospheric environment en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=With the development of micro-fabrication technology, various metamaterials with controlled emission spectra have been proposed as thermal emitters. However, general metamaterials have a risk of deformations and degradation at high temperatures in atmospheric conditions, which is inconvenient for use as a thermal emitter. In this study, we propose a concept to enhance the thermal durability of microcavity-type metamaterials. Although typical microcavities are entirely composed of metal to excite the resonance of electromagnetic waves, we assessed the feasibility of a microcavity consisting of silicon with minimal metal coatings. While usual metals are oxidized at high temperatures, gold is rarely oxidized due to its chemical stability. However, the gold layer deposited on the Si substrate has the potential to melt below 400 ‹C due to the formation of an Au-Si eutectic alloy, which has a much lower melting point than pure gold. Therefore, we focused on the gold-tungsten bilayer as a suitable metal coating for the silicon microcavity, thereby preventing oxidation and melting that would otherwise influence the emission spectra of the thermal emitter. The numerical analysis ensured that the proposed microcavity exhibited electromagnetic resonance, similar to that of a microcavity entirely composed of metal, unless the metal coating was too thin. The fabricated microcavity with the gold-tungsten coating also exhibited a thermal emission within a limited wavelength range, due to the microcavity resonance. Moreover, the heating experiment revealed that the microcavity with a gold-tungsten coating maintained its emissivity even when heated to 400 ‹C, which is higher than the oxidation point of tungsten and the melting point of the Au-Si eutectic alloy. Consequently, the gold-tungsten coating would be a reasonable approach to improve the stability of the microcavity-type metamaterial at high temperatures under oxidative conditions. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=IsobeKazuma en-aut-sei=Isobe en-aut-mei=Kazuma kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=MorishigeShota en-aut-sei=Morishige en-aut-mei=Shota kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=SatoTaiyo en-aut-sei=Sato en-aut-mei=Taiyo kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=YamadaYutaka en-aut-sei=Yamada en-aut-mei=Yutaka kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=HoribeAkihiko en-aut-sei=Horibe en-aut-mei=Akihiko kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Faculty of Environmental, Life, Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Graduate School of Environmental, Life, Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Graduate School of Environmental, Life, Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Faculty of Environmental, Life, Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Faculty of Environmental, Life, Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= en-keyword=Metamaterial kn-keyword=Metamaterial en-keyword=Microcavity emitter kn-keyword=Microcavity emitter en-keyword=Emissivity spectrum kn-keyword=Emissivity spectrum en-keyword=Thermal stability kn-keyword=Thermal stability en-keyword=Tungsten oxidation kn-keyword=Tungsten oxidation en-keyword=Eutectic melting kn-keyword=Eutectic melting END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=283 cd-vols= no-issue=2 article-no= start-page=78 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260401 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=The Simons Observatory: Detector Polarization Angle Calibration Using a Sparse Wire Grid with Initial Datasets of the Small-aperture Telescopes en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Improved measurements of B-modes in the cosmic microwave background can be obtained through accurate calibration of the orientation of detector antennas as projected onto the sky. Miscalibration of the detector polarization angle leads to a leakage of E-modes into B-modes, which can bias the detection of the latter. To achieve a ƒÐ(r) of 0.003, the Simons Observatory small-aperture telescopes are required to calibrate the global polarization angle on the sky with an accuracy ?0.‹1. We demonstrate a fully remote-controllable calibration system using a gsparse wire grid,h which injects a rotatable linear polarized signal across the telescopefs focal plane. This calibration system is installed and operational on one of the small-aperture telescopes at its observing site at the Parque Astron?mico in the Atacama desert in Chile. We developed a pipeline for the detector polarization angle calibration, and demonstrate it using initial data for 93 and 145 GHz frequency bands. The observed distribution of detector polarization angles is in agreement with the instrument design. Statistical uncertainties for the relatively calibrated polarization angles are 0.‹02 and 0.‹03 at 93 and 145 GHz, respectively. Systematic uncertainty was evaluated to be 0.‹08 at the hardware development and fabrication stage. Their sum in quadrature is less than 0.‹1. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=NakataHironobu en-aut-sei=Nakata en-aut-mei=Hironobu kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=AdachiShunsuke en-aut-sei=Adachi en-aut-mei=Shunsuke kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=YamadaKyohei en-aut-sei=Yamada en-aut-mei=Kyohei kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=RandallMichael en-aut-sei=Randall en-aut-mei=Michael kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=KasaiYutaro en-aut-sei=Kasai en-aut-mei=Yutaro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=ArnoldKam en-aut-sei=Arnold en-aut-mei=Kam kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=BixlerBryce en-aut-sei=Bixler en-aut-mei=Bryce kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= en-aut-name=ChinoneYuji en-aut-sei=Chinone en-aut-mei=Yuji kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=8 ORCID= en-aut-name=CrowleyKevin T. en-aut-sei=Crowley en-aut-mei=Kevin T. kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=9 ORCID= en-aut-name=DachlythraNadia en-aut-sei=Dachlythra en-aut-mei=Nadia kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=10 ORCID= en-aut-name=Day-WeissSamuel en-aut-sei=Day-Weiss en-aut-mei=Samuel kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=11 ORCID= en-aut-name=GalitzkiNicholas en-aut-sei=Galitzki en-aut-mei=Nicholas kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=12 ORCID= en-aut-name=GiardielloSerena en-aut-sei=Giardiello en-aut-mei=Serena kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=13 ORCID= en-aut-name=JohnsonBradley R. en-aut-sei=Johnson en-aut-mei=Bradley R. kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=14 ORCID= en-aut-name=KeatingBrian en-aut-sei=Keating en-aut-mei=Brian kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=15 ORCID= en-aut-name=KoopmanBrian J. en-aut-sei=Koopman en-aut-mei=Brian J. kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=16 ORCID= en-aut-name=KusakaAkito en-aut-sei=Kusaka en-aut-mei=Akito kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=17 ORCID= en-aut-name=LashnerJack en-aut-sei=Lashner en-aut-mei=Jack kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=18 ORCID= en-aut-name=NatiFederico en-aut-sei=Nati en-aut-mei=Federico kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=19 ORCID= en-aut-name=PageLyman en-aut-sei=Page en-aut-mei=Lyman kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=20 ORCID= en-aut-name=SasakiDaichi en-aut-sei=Sasaki en-aut-mei=Daichi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=21 ORCID= en-aut-name=SuenoYoshinori en-aut-sei=Sueno en-aut-mei=Yoshinori kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=22 ORCID= en-aut-name=SuzukiJunya en-aut-sei=Suzuki en-aut-mei=Junya kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=23 ORCID= en-aut-name=TajimaOsamu en-aut-sei=Tajima en-aut-mei=Osamu kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=24 ORCID= en-aut-name=TsanTran en-aut-sei=Tsan en-aut-mei=Tran kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=25 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Department of Physics, Faculty of Science, Kyoto University kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Okayama University, Department of Physics kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Joseph Henry Laboratories of Physics, Jadwin Hall, Princeton University kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Joseph Henry Laboratories of Physics, Jadwin Hall, Princeton University kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Department of Physics, Faculty of Science, Kyoto University kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Joseph Henry Laboratories of Physics, Jadwin Hall, Princeton University kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=Department of Physics, University of California San Diego kn-affil= affil-num=8 en-affil=QUP (WPI), KEK kn-affil= affil-num=9 en-affil=Joseph Henry Laboratories of Physics, Jadwin Hall, Princeton University kn-affil= affil-num=10 en-affil=Department of Physics, University of Milano-Bicocca kn-affil= affil-num=11 en-affil=Joseph Henry Laboratories of Physics, Jadwin Hall, Princeton University kn-affil= affil-num=12 en-affil=Department of Physics, University of Texas at Austin kn-affil= affil-num=13 en-affil=School of Physics and Astronomy, Cardiff University kn-affil= affil-num=14 en-affil=University of Virginia, Department of Astronomy kn-affil= affil-num=15 en-affil=Department of Physics, University of California San Diego kn-affil= affil-num=16 en-affil=Wright Laboratory, Department of Physics, Yale University kn-affil= affil-num=17 en-affil=Kavli IPMU (WPI), UTIAS, The University of Tokyo kn-affil= affil-num=18 en-affil=Wright Laboratory, Department of Physics, Yale University kn-affil= affil-num=19 en-affil=Department of Physics, University of Milano-Bicocca kn-affil= affil-num=20 en-affil=Joseph Henry Laboratories of Physics, Jadwin Hall, Princeton University kn-affil= affil-num=21 en-affil=Department of Physics, The University of Tokyo kn-affil= affil-num=22 en-affil=Joseph Henry Laboratories of Physics, Jadwin Hall, Princeton University kn-affil= affil-num=23 en-affil=Department of Physics, Faculty of Science, Kyoto University kn-affil= affil-num=24 en-affil=Department of Physics, Faculty of Science, Kyoto University kn-affil= affil-num=25 en-affil=Physics Division, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory kn-affil= END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=220 cd-vols= no-issue=3 article-no= start-page=29 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260404 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Knot surgered elliptic surfaces without 1- and 3-handles for a (2, 2h + 1)-torus knot en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=For any positive integers h and n, we show that a knot surgered elliptic surface E(n)T(2,2h+1) for a (2, 2h + 1)-torus knot T (2, 2h + 1) admits a handle decomposition without 1- and 3-handles using a Kirby diagram derived from a Lefschetz fibration on it. As a corollary, an elliptic surface E(1)2,2h+1 has such a handle decomposition. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=MondenNaoyuki en-aut-sei=Monden en-aut-mei=Naoyuki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=YabuguchiReo en-aut-sei=Yabuguchi en-aut-mei=Reo kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Department of Mathematics, Faculty of Science, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Department of Mathematics, Faculty of Science, Okayama University kn-affil= END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=131 cd-vols= no-issue=4 article-no= start-page=e2025JE009432 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=202604 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Investigating the Detectability of Body Wave Phases From Tidal Ice Cracking Events on Titan With the Dragonfly Short-Period Seismometer en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Detecting seismic activity on Saturn's icy moon Titan during the Dragonfly mission could provide crucial information on its internal structure. The geological complexity of the moon's surface suggests significant cyclic tidal deformation, likely leading to the fracturing of the ice shell. Considering realistic source locations and fault geometries, we assess whether a vertical short-period seismometer can detect body waves from a Mw 4.0 icequake. Signal-to-noise ratios are evaluated by comparing the high-frequency content with the expected background noise and instrument capabilities for several ice attenuation scenarios and 1D interior models. Our results indicate that the high-frequency content (?1Hz) of Mw?4.0 tidal-induced icequakes is likely undetectable under the most unfavorable attenuation scenarios and atmospheric conditions. However, seismic signals in the 0.5?1 Hz band?where P wave reflections dominate?may still be observable for events occurring in potential seismically active regions at ?800?1,000 km from the Dragonfly's landing site. These signals could provide constraints on the thickness of Titan's outer ice shell, provided that intrinsic attenuation is low and environmental conditions are favorable. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=DelaroqueL. en-aut-sei=Delaroque en-aut-mei=L. kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=KawamuraT. en-aut-sei=Kawamura en-aut-mei=T. kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=LucasA. en-aut-sei=Lucas en-aut-mei=A. kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=RodriguezS. en-aut-sei=Rodriguez en-aut-mei=S. kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=OnoderaK. en-aut-sei=Onodera en-aut-mei=K. kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=ShiraishiH. en-aut-sei=Shiraishi en-aut-mei=H. kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=YamadaR. en-aut-sei=Yamada en-aut-mei=R. kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= en-aut-name=TanakaS. en-aut-sei=Tanaka en-aut-mei=S. kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=8 ORCID= en-aut-name=PanningM. P. en-aut-sei=Panning en-aut-mei=M. P. kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=9 ORCID= en-aut-name=LorenzR. D. en-aut-sei=Lorenz en-aut-mei=R. D. kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=10 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Universit? Paris Cit?, Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris, CNRS kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Universit? Paris Cit?, Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris, CNRS kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Universit? Paris Cit?, Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris, CNRS kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Universit? Paris Cit?, Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris, CNRS kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Institute for Planetary Materials, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Institute of Space and Astronautical Science, Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=The University of Aizu kn-affil= affil-num=8 en-affil=Institute of Space and Astronautical Science, Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency kn-affil= affil-num=9 en-affil=Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology kn-affil= affil-num=10 en-affil=The Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory kn-affil= en-keyword=body waves kn-keyword=body waves en-keyword=planetary seismology kn-keyword=planetary seismology en-keyword=interior structure kn-keyword=interior structure en-keyword=dragonfly mission kn-keyword=dragonfly mission en-keyword=icy moons kn-keyword=icy moons en-keyword=Titan kn-keyword=Titan END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol= cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page= end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260401 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Triangulation in teaching probability: teaching materials for the theoretical foundations of probability in real-world applications en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=This paper proposes using the concept of triangulation with probabilistic models as a means to enhance theoretical inversion for deepening studentsf understanding of the nature of probability in real-world contexts. Triangulation refers to the combined application of multiple methodologies to investigate the same phenomenon, particularly in the social sciences. Theoretical inversion refers to a shift in focus from surprising outcomes to the theoretical foundations of probability. The paper introduces three types of problem-solving tasks designed to enhance one of four types of triangulations: theory triangulation. Theoretical inversion is expected to emerge through engaging in these tasks. The characteristics of the problems are as follows. Problem 1 promotes students to compare different probabilistic models of events under similar procedures. Problem 2 provides students with an opportunity to simplify an experiment by omitting steps that add no new information. Problem 3 enhances studentsf ability to recognise how subtle differences in the experimental setup can affect the resulting probability. These tasks are designed to encourage students to view probabilistic reasoning as a form of modelling and to appreciate the importance of assumptions, definitions of elementary events, and clarity in procedural descriptions. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=UegataniYusuke en-aut-sei=Uegatani en-aut-mei=Yusuke kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=IshibashiIppo en-aut-sei=Ishibashi en-aut-mei=Ippo kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=SakotaAya en-aut-sei=Sakota en-aut-mei=Aya kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Hiroshima University High School kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Faculty of Education, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Hiroshima University High School kn-affil= en-keyword=Probability kn-keyword=Probability en-keyword=triangulation kn-keyword=triangulation en-keyword=mathematical modelling kn-keyword=mathematical modelling en-keyword=theoretical inversion kn-keyword=theoretical inversion END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=27 cd-vols= no-issue=5 article-no= start-page=2308 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260228 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Aerobic Exercise Attenuates Epidermal Hyperplasia in an Obesity-Associated Psoriasiform Dermatitis Model en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Obesity is an important risk factor for psoriasis, and clinical studies indicate that exercise interventions can improve disease severity. However, the mechanisms by which exercise influences psoriatic pathogenesis remain insufficiently understood. To investigate the effects of aerobic exercise on obesity-associated psoriasis, wild-type mice were fed a high-fat diet (HFD) for 7 weeks to induce obesity and subsequently underwent moderate-intensity treadmill running for 3 weeks. Psoriasiform dermatitis was induced by daily topical application of imiquimod (IMQ) to the skin for five consecutive days. HFD increased body weight, epididymal fat mass, and serum cholesterol. HFD-fed mice developed more severe IMQ-induced psoriatic skin changes compared with normal diet-fed mice. Treadmill exercise modestly reduced body weight gain and attenuated epidermal hyperplasia in HFD-fed mice. In contrast, inflammatory cytokine expression, including Tnfa, Il17a, and Il23a, showed modest increases in the skin of HFD-fed exercised mice, which did not parallel the improvement in epidermal hyperplasia. Overall, these findings indicate that while obesity exacerbates psoriasiform dermatitis, aerobic exercise ameliorates epidermal hyperplasia in obese mice without corresponding changes in inflammatory cytokine expression in the skin, suggesting that exercise may influence psoriatic skin changes through multiple metabolic and immunological pathways. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=MatsudaYoshihiro en-aut-sei=Matsuda en-aut-mei=Yoshihiro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=MorizaneShin en-aut-sei=Morizane en-aut-mei=Shin kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=TakezakiDaiki en-aut-sei=Takezaki en-aut-mei=Daiki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=SakamotoYuma en-aut-sei=Sakamoto en-aut-mei=Yuma kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=BabaNobuyasu en-aut-sei=Baba en-aut-mei=Nobuyasu kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=IsekiMasanori en-aut-sei=Iseki en-aut-mei=Masanori kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=KawakamiYoshio en-aut-sei=Kawakami en-aut-mei=Yoshio kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= en-aut-name=ShiomiTatsushi en-aut-sei=Shiomi en-aut-mei=Tatsushi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=8 ORCID= en-aut-name=MukaiTomoyuki en-aut-sei=Mukai en-aut-mei=Tomoyuki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=9 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Department of Dermatology, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Department of Dermatology, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Department of Dermatology, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Department of Immunology and Molecular Genetics, Kawasaki Medical School kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Department of Immunology and Molecular Genetics, Kawasaki Medical School kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Department of Immunology and Molecular Genetics, Kawasaki Medical School kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=Department of Dermatology, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=8 en-affil=Department of Pathology, Kawasaki Medical School kn-affil= affil-num=9 en-affil=Department of Immunology and Molecular Genetics, Kawasaki Medical School kn-affil= en-keyword=psoriasis kn-keyword=psoriasis en-keyword=obesity kn-keyword=obesity en-keyword=aerobic exercise kn-keyword=aerobic exercise en-keyword=imiquimod kn-keyword=imiquimod en-keyword=high-fat diet kn-keyword=high-fat diet END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=18 cd-vols= no-issue=7 article-no= start-page=810 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260326 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Effect of Universal Adhesives on Resin Cement?Fiber Post?Core Materials en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=This study evaluated eleven resin cements used as core build-up materials by examining the following properties: (a) push-out force between root dentin and the fiber post; (b) pull-out force between the fiber post and the core build-up material; (c) shear bond strength of the resin cement to root dentin; (d) flexural strength of the resin cement; and (e) flexural modulus of elasticity of the resin cement. The purpose of this investigation was to clarify the relationships between recently available universal adhesives, core build-up materials, resin cements, and fiber posts. All experiments were performed at two evaluation periods: after 1 day of water storage (Base) and after 20,000 thermocycles (TC 20k). For the push-out test, simulated post spaces were prepared in single-rooted human premolars. The specimens were sectioned perpendicular to the long axis into 2 mm-thick slices and then subjected to push-out testing to assess the bond strength of the dentin?resin cement?fiber post complex. No significant differences in bonding performance were found between Base and TC 20k. These findings suggest that universal adhesives used for pretreatment of multiple substrates in fiber post cementation can provide not only strong but also durable adhesion over time. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=IrieMasao en-aut-sei=Irie en-aut-mei=Masao kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=OkadaMasahiro en-aut-sei=Okada en-aut-mei=Masahiro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=MaruoYukinori en-aut-sei=Maruo en-aut-mei=Yukinori kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=AkiyamaKenraro en-aut-sei=Akiyama en-aut-mei=Kenraro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=YoshiharaKumiko en-aut-sei=Yoshihara en-aut-mei=Kumiko kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=TsujimotoAkimasa en-aut-sei=Tsujimoto en-aut-mei=Akimasa kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=MatsumotoTakuya en-aut-sei=Matsumoto en-aut-mei=Takuya kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Department of Biomaterials, Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Department of Dental Biomaterials, Graduate School of Dentistry, Tohoku University kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Department of Prosthodontics, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Department of Occlusal and Oral Functional Rehabilitation, Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Health Research Institute, National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Department of Operative Dentistry, School of Dentistry, Aichi Gakuin University kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=Department of Biomaterials, Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= en-keyword=bonding performance kn-keyword=bonding performance en-keyword=universal adhesive kn-keyword=universal adhesive en-keyword=fiber post kn-keyword=fiber post en-keyword=luting materials kn-keyword=luting materials en-keyword=root dentin kn-keyword=root dentin END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=16 cd-vols= no-issue=1 article-no= start-page=10464 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260225 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Liquid?liquid phase separation by caged coacervating peptides en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Liquid?liquid phase separation is an important biomolecular process in the formation of membraneless intracellular organelles that has inspired the development of artificial droplet systems. We developed caged coacervating peptides (CCPs) based on a histidine-rich squid beak protein sequence. The peptides were caged with a photodeprotectable (7-diethylaminocoumarin-4-yl)methoxycarbonyl group. The CCPs formed coacervates in the caged state and were partially dispersed upon blue-light irradiation. Photo-uncaging occurred rapidly, inducing coacervate dispersion. A mutant CCP with reduced ƒÎ?ƒÎ interactions exhibited efficient photo-dependent disassembly and enabled the encapsulation and release of a fluorescently labeled adenosine 5Œ-triphosphate (Bodipy-ATP) upon irradiation. These CCPs offer an efficient light-controlled approach for biomolecular encapsulation within coacervates and targeted drug delivery. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=BandoAkinari en-aut-sei=Bando en-aut-mei=Akinari kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=KitamatsuMizuki en-aut-sei=Kitamatsu en-aut-mei=Mizuki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=KanazakiYuuki en-aut-sei=Kanazaki en-aut-mei=Yuuki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=TojoRika en-aut-sei=Tojo en-aut-mei=Rika kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=WatanabeKazunori en-aut-sei=Watanabe en-aut-mei=Kazunori kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=OhtsukiTakashi en-aut-sei=Ohtsuki en-aut-mei=Takashi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Department of Interdisciplinary Science and Engineering in Health Systems, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Department of Applied Chemistry, Kindai University kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Department of Applied Chemistry, Kindai University kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Department of Applied Chemistry, Kindai University kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Department of Interdisciplinary Science and Engineering in Health Systems, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Department of Interdisciplinary Science and Engineering in Health Systems, Okayama University kn-affil= en-keyword=Caged coacervating peptide kn-keyword=Caged coacervating peptide en-keyword=Liquid?liquid phase separation kn-keyword=Liquid?liquid phase separation en-keyword=Light kn-keyword=Light END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=26 cd-vols= no-issue=1 article-no= start-page=558 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260224 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Evaluation of contact-active antibacterial properties of cetylpyridinium chloride?graphene oxide coatings on dental restorative and titanium surfaces: an in vitro study en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Objective Biofilm formation on dental restorative materials and implant surfaces plays a central role in the development of dental caries, periodontal disease, and peri-implantitis. Durable antimicrobial surface treatments that inhibit bacterial adhesion and biofilm formation remain a significant unmet need in restorative and implant dentistry. Therefore, this study aimed to develop a composite coating combining cetylpyridinium chloride and graphene oxide, and to evaluate its durable antibacterial surface modification under in vitro conditions.
Methods A composite coating consisting of cetylpyridinium chloride and graphene oxide was prepared and applied to composite resin and titanium surfaces. Antibacterial activity against Streptococcus mutans and Porphyromonas gingivalis was evaluated using adenosine triphosphate assays and fluorescence-based live/dead staining. Coating retention after washing and air-drying was assessed by optical microscopy and Raman spectroscopy.
Results Cetylpyridinium chloride-graphene oxide-coated surfaces showed a significant reduction in bacterial viability compared with phosphate-buffered saline, ethanol, and cetylpyridinium chloride-only controls. Antibacterial effects were maintained after rinsing and air-drying on both composite resin and titanium surfaces. Raman spectroscopy confirmed the persistence of characteristic graphene oxide bands after washing, indicating stable retention of the coating on the material surfaces.
Conclusions Cetylpyridinium chloride?graphene oxide coatings demonstrate sustained surface-associated antibacterial activity against key cariogenic and periodontal pathogens and remain stably adhered to common dental restorative and implant materials after washing. These findings suggest that cetylpyridinium chloride?graphene oxide coatings may serve as a durable contact-active surface modification strategy to reduce biofilm formation associated with dental caries and peri-implantitis. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=OkuboKeisuke en-aut-sei=Okubo en-aut-mei=Keisuke kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=KanoGen en-aut-sei=Kano en-aut-mei=Gen kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=KomodaMasato en-aut-sei=Komoda en-aut-mei=Masato kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=KamataHideyuki en-aut-sei=Kamata en-aut-mei=Hideyuki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=NakamuraShin en-aut-sei=Nakamura en-aut-mei=Shin kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=Shinoda-ItoYuki en-aut-sei=Shinoda-Ito en-aut-mei=Yuki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=OmoriKazuhiro en-aut-sei=Omori en-aut-mei=Kazuhiro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= en-aut-name=NishinaYuta en-aut-sei=Nishina en-aut-mei=Yuta kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=8 ORCID= en-aut-name=TakashibaShogo en-aut-sei=Takashiba en-aut-mei=Shogo kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=9 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Department of Periodontics and Endodontics, Field of Medical Development, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Research Institute for Interdisciplinary Science, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Department of Pathophysiology - Periodontal Science, Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Department of Pathophysiology - Periodontal Science, Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=Department of Pathophysiology - Periodontal Science, Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=8 en-affil=Research Institute for Interdisciplinary Science, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=9 en-affil=Department of Pathophysiology - Periodontal Science, Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= en-keyword=Wash-resistant antibacterial coating kn-keyword=Wash-resistant antibacterial coating en-keyword=Graphene oxide kn-keyword=Graphene oxide en-keyword=Cetylpyridinium chloride kn-keyword=Cetylpyridinium chloride en-keyword=Oral pathogenic bacteria kn-keyword=Oral pathogenic bacteria END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=27 cd-vols= no-issue=2 article-no= start-page=831 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260114 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Porphyromonas gingivalis Vesicles Control Osteoclast?Macrophage Lineage Fate en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Porphyromonas gingivalis (Pg), a keystone pathogen of chronic periodontitis, releases outer membrane vesicles (OMVs) that act as nanoscale vehicles to disseminate virulence factors within periodontal tissues and systemically beyond the oral cavity. Although Pg-OMVs are increasingly recognized as critical mediators of host?pathogen interactions, their effects on the differentiation and function of monocyte?macrophage/osteoclast lineage cells remain unclear. Here, we examined the impact of Pg-OMVs on the differentiation of RAW264.7 monocyte/macrophage-like cells into osteoclasts (OC) and/or macrophages (Mƒ³) in the presence of receptor activator of nuclear factor-ƒÈB ligand (RANKL). OMVs were isolated from Pg W83 and applied to RANKL-primed RAW264.7 cells using three distinct stimulation schedules: (1) simultaneous treatment with Pg-OMVs and RANKL at Day 0; (2) RANKL priming at Day 0 followed by Pg-OMV stimulation at Day 1; and (3) RANKL priming at Day 0 followed by Pg-OMV stimulation at Day 3. In all schedules, cells were cultured for 7 days from the initial RANKL exposure. Remarkably, simultaneous exposure to Pg-OMVs and RANKL (Schedule 1) markedly suppressed osteoclastogenesis (OC-genesis) while promoting M1 macrophage polarization. In contrast, delayed Pg-OMV stimulation of RANKL-primed cells (Schedules 2 and 3) significantly enhanced OC-genesis while reducing M1 polarization. These schedule-dependent effects were consistent with altered expression of osteoclastogenic markers, including dc-stamp, oc-stamp, nfatc1, and acp5. Importantly, a monoclonal antibody against OC-STAMP counteracted the Pg-OMV-induced upregulation of OC-genesis in Schedules 2 and 3. Furthermore, levels of Pg-OMV phagocytosis were inversely correlated with osteoclast formation. Finally, co-stimulation with RANKL and Pg-OMVs (Schedule 1) enhanced macrophage migratory capacity, whereas delayed stimulation with Pg-OMVs (Schedules 2 and 3) did not. Collectively, these findings indicate that Pg-OMVs exert stage-specific effects on the OC/Mƒ³ lineage: stimulation at early stages of RANKL priming suppresses OC-genesis and promotes M1 polarization, whereas stimulation at later stages enhances OC-genesis without inducing M1 differentiation. Thus, Pg-OMVs may critically influence the fate of the OC/Mƒ³ unit in periodontal lesions, contributing to disease progression and tissue destruction. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=LeonElizabeth en-aut-sei=Leon en-aut-mei=Elizabeth kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=NakamuraShin en-aut-sei=Nakamura en-aut-mei=Shin kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=ShindoSatoru en-aut-sei=Shindo en-aut-mei=Satoru kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=PastoreMaria Rita en-aut-sei=Pastore en-aut-mei=Maria Rita kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=KumagaiTomoki en-aut-sei=Kumagai en-aut-mei=Tomoki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=HeidariAlireza en-aut-sei=Heidari en-aut-mei=Alireza kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=AbdolahiniaElaheh Dalir en-aut-sei=Abdolahinia en-aut-mei=Elaheh Dalir kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= en-aut-name=UedaTomoya en-aut-sei=Ueda en-aut-mei=Tomoya kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=8 ORCID= en-aut-name=MemidaTakumi en-aut-sei=Memida en-aut-mei=Takumi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=9 ORCID= en-aut-name=Duran-PinedoAna en-aut-sei=Duran-Pinedo en-aut-mei=Ana kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=10 ORCID= en-aut-name=Frias-LopezJorge en-aut-sei=Frias-Lopez en-aut-mei=Jorge kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=11 ORCID= en-aut-name=HanXiaozhe en-aut-sei=Han en-aut-mei=Xiaozhe kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=12 ORCID= en-aut-name=ChenXin en-aut-sei=Chen en-aut-mei=Xin kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=13 ORCID= en-aut-name=HuangShengyuan en-aut-sei=Huang en-aut-mei=Shengyuan kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=14 ORCID= en-aut-name=CaoGuoqin en-aut-sei=Cao en-aut-mei=Guoqin kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=15 ORCID= en-aut-name=RuizSunniva en-aut-sei=Ruiz en-aut-mei=Sunniva kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=16 ORCID= en-aut-name=PotempaJan en-aut-sei=Potempa en-aut-mei=Jan kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=17 ORCID= en-aut-name=KawaiToshihisa en-aut-sei=Kawai en-aut-mei=Toshihisa kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=18 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Department of Oral Science and Translational Research, College of Dental Medicine, Nova Southeastern University kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Department of Periodontics and Endodontics, Division of Dentistry, Okayama University Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Department of Oral Science and Translational Research, College of Dental Medicine, Nova Southeastern University kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Department of Oral Science and Translational Research, College of Dental Medicine, Nova Southeastern University kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Department of Oral Science and Translational Research, College of Dental Medicine, Nova Southeastern University kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Department of Oral Science and Translational Research, College of Dental Medicine, Nova Southeastern University kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=Department of Oral Science and Translational Research, College of Dental Medicine, Nova Southeastern University kn-affil= affil-num=8 en-affil=Department of Oral Science and Translational Research, College of Dental Medicine, Nova Southeastern University kn-affil= affil-num=9 en-affil=Department of Oral Science and Translational Research, College of Dental Medicine, Nova Southeastern University kn-affil= affil-num=10 en-affil=Department of Oral Biology, College of Dentistry, University of Florida kn-affil= affil-num=11 en-affil=Department of Oral Biology, College of Dentistry, University of Florida kn-affil= affil-num=12 en-affil=Department of Oral Science and Translational Research, College of Dental Medicine, Nova Southeastern University kn-affil= affil-num=13 en-affil=Department of Oral Science and Translational Research, College of Dental Medicine, Nova Southeastern University kn-affil= affil-num=14 en-affil=Department of Oral Science and Translational Research, College of Dental Medicine, Nova Southeastern University kn-affil= affil-num=15 en-affil=Department of Oral Science and Translational Research, College of Dental Medicine, Nova Southeastern University kn-affil= affil-num=16 en-affil=Department of Oral Science and Translational Research, College of Dental Medicine, Nova Southeastern University kn-affil= affil-num=17 en-affil=Department of Oral Immunology and Infectious Diseases, School of Dentistry, University of Louisville kn-affil= affil-num=18 en-affil=Department of Oral Science and Translational Research, College of Dental Medicine, Nova Southeastern University, Fort Lauderdale, FL 33314, USA kn-affil= en-keyword=Porphyromonas gingivalis kn-keyword=Porphyromonas gingivalis en-keyword=outer membrane vesicle kn-keyword=outer membrane vesicle en-keyword=periodontitis pathogenesis kn-keyword=periodontitis pathogenesis en-keyword=macrophage polarization kn-keyword=macrophage polarization en-keyword=osteoclastogenesis kn-keyword=osteoclastogenesis en-keyword=OC/Mƒ³ unit kn-keyword=OC/Mƒ³ unit END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=14 cd-vols= no-issue=4 article-no= start-page=760 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260327 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=The Role of Nitrate-Reducing Bacteria Isolated from Helicobacter pylori-Infected Individuals in Gastric Cancer Development en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Helicobacter pylori is a Gram-negative bacterium that inhabits the gastric mucosa, with a global prevalence in humans of approximately 40%. It is likely the cause of 90% of gastric cancer (GC) cases and thus considered the most prominent driver of GC development. However, during gastric mucosal atrophy, other bacteria such as nitrate-reducing bacteria (NRB) also proliferate. In this study, we isolated NRB from patients with gastritis and GC to examine their effects on the epithelial cell cycle and production of various cytokines in monocytic cell lines. Bacterial counts (excluding H. pylori and NRB) increased with the progression of gastric mucosal atrophy and were significantly higher in patients with GC. Gastric epithelial cell lines were stimulated with isolated NRB, and the proportion of cells in each cell cycle was measured. Strains from patients with open-type gastritis progressed more rapidly through cell cycles than those from patients with GC. NRB isolated from gastric cancer had high nitrate-reducing activity. Thus, NRB may contribute to GC progression during H. pylori-induced carcinogenesis. Therefore, evaluating gastric atrophy and microbiota may be important for managing the risk of GC. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=KuwagiSerika en-aut-sei=Kuwagi en-aut-mei=Serika kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=GotohKazuyoshi en-aut-sei=Gotoh en-aut-mei=Kazuyoshi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=KomatsubaraMarina en-aut-sei=Komatsubara en-aut-mei=Marina kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=TsujiShuma en-aut-sei=Tsuji en-aut-mei=Shuma kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=OkanoueShyoutarou en-aut-sei=Okanoue en-aut-mei=Shyoutarou kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=OkadaHiroyuki en-aut-sei=Okada en-aut-mei=Hiroyuki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=UchiyamaJumpei en-aut-sei=Uchiyama en-aut-mei=Jumpei kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= en-aut-name=WatanabeAkari en-aut-sei=Watanabe en-aut-mei=Akari kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=8 ORCID= en-aut-name=YokotaKenji en-aut-sei=Yokota en-aut-mei=Kenji kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=9 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Department of Bacteriology, Academic Field of Health Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Department of Bacteriology, Academic Field of Health Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Department of Bacteriology, Academic Field of Health Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Department of Bacteriology, Academic Field of Health Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Department of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Academic Field of Medicine Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Himeji Red Cross Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=Department of Bacteriology, Academic Field of Medicine Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=8 en-affil=Department of Oral Health Care and Rehabilitation, Institute of Biomedical Sciences, Graduate School, Tokushima University kn-affil= affil-num=9 en-affil=Department of Bacteriology, Academic Field of Health Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= en-keyword=Helicobacter pylori infection kn-keyword=Helicobacter pylori infection en-keyword=gastric cancer kn-keyword=gastric cancer en-keyword=nitrate-reducing bacteria kn-keyword=nitrate-reducing bacteria en-keyword=gastritis kn-keyword=gastritis END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol= cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page= end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260318 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Suppression of salt-enhanced apoplastic flow by salicylic acid in rice en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Salinity enhances apoplastic flow, resulting in an increment of Na+ uptake and a lower K+/Na+ ratio. Salicylic acid (SA) plays an important role in improving salinity tolerance in plants. The effect of exogenous SA on apoplastic flow in salt-treated rice seedlings was studied using an apoplastic tracer, 8-hydroxy-1,3,6-pyrenetrisulphonic acid (PTS) in light. Application of NaCl at 25 mM to the hydroponic solution significantly increased PTS uptake, while 25 mM NaCl did not affect seedling growth. Application of 25 mM NaNO3 increased PTS uptake to the same degree. Salinity significantly increased sodium (Na+) content but had no significant effect on potassium (K+) content, resulting in a lower K+/Na+ ratio. The application of SA at 0.05 mM and 0.1 mM to the hydroponic solution reduced Na-enhanced PTS uptake. Salicylic acid at 0.05 mM and 0.1 mM significantly reduced Na+ content and slightly increased K+ content in the shoots of rice seedlings, resulting in a higher K+/Na+ ratio. However, SA at up to 0.1 mM did not increase SA contents in shoots under salt stress. These results suggest that exogenous SA reduces Na+ uptake by suppressing Na+-enhanced apoplastic flow in rice seedlings. These findings provide insight into modulation of Na+ transport pathways from roots to shoots by SA and may allow us to utilize brackish water for rice cultivation and to improve salt-tolerant rice through suppression of salt-enhanced apoplastic flow by chemicals such as salicylic acid. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=GalibMd. Asadulla Al en-aut-sei=Galib en-aut-mei=Md. Asadulla Al kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=ZhaoMaoxiang en-aut-sei=Zhao en-aut-mei=Maoxiang kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=NakamuraToshiyuki en-aut-sei=Nakamura en-aut-mei=Toshiyuki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=NakamuraYoshimasa en-aut-sei=Nakamura en-aut-mei=Yoshimasa kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=HiraiYoshihiko en-aut-sei=Hirai en-aut-mei=Yoshihiko kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=NakashimaYoshitaka en-aut-sei=Nakashima en-aut-mei=Yoshitaka kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=MunemasaShintaro en-aut-sei=Munemasa en-aut-mei=Shintaro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= en-aut-name=MoriIzumi C. en-aut-sei=Mori en-aut-mei=Izumi C. kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=8 ORCID= en-aut-name=MurataYoshiyuki en-aut-sei=Murata en-aut-mei=Yoshiyuki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=9 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Graduate School of Environmental and Life Science, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Graduate School of Environmental and Life Science, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Graduate School of Environmental and Life Science, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Graduate School of Environmental and Life Science, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Graduate School of Environmental and Life Science, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Graduate School of Environmental and Life Science, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=Graduate School of Environmental and Life Science, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=8 en-affil=Institute of Plant Science and Resources, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=9 en-affil=Graduate School of Environmental and Life Science, Okayama University kn-affil= en-keyword=Apoplastic flow kn-keyword=Apoplastic flow en-keyword=Salicylic acid kn-keyword=Salicylic acid en-keyword=Rice kn-keyword=Rice en-keyword=Salinity kn-keyword=Salinity en-keyword=Trisodium-8-hydroxy-1,3,6-pyrenetrisulphonic acid kn-keyword=Trisodium-8-hydroxy-1,3,6-pyrenetrisulphonic acid END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=7 cd-vols= no-issue=1 article-no= start-page=265 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260325 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Stability and distribution of dense hydrous magnesium silicates in the mantle transition zone under low water activity conditions en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Water plays a central role in controlling the physical and chemical properties of Earthfs deep interior. It remains uncertain how water is stored in subducting slabs within the mantle transition zone, between depths of about 410 and 660 kilometers, and whether dense hydrous magnesium silicates act as major water carriers to greater depths. Here we report high-pressure and high-temperature laboratory experiments on the Mg-Si-H system at pressures of 16 and 21.5?GPa and a temperature of 1400?K to evaluate hydrous phase stability under transition zone conditions. We find that when bulk water content is below 1.22?wt%, H2O is predominantly incorporated into wadsleyite and ringwoodite rather than forming dense hydrous magnesium silicates. Because estimated water contents in subducted oceanic slabs are typically lower than one weight percent, formation of these silicates is unlikely, suggesting that the mantle transition zone may restrict large scale water transport into the lower mantle. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=SongYunke en-aut-sei=Song en-aut-mei=Yunke kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=GuoXinzhuan en-aut-sei=Guo en-aut-mei=Xinzhuan kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=ZhaiKuan en-aut-sei=Zhai en-aut-mei=Kuan kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=GuoWei en-aut-sei=Guo en-aut-mei=Wei kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=YoshinoTakashi en-aut-sei=Yoshino en-aut-mei=Takashi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Key Laboratory of High-temperature and High-pressure Study of the Earthfs Interior, Institute of Geochemistry, Chinese Academy of Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=State Key Laboratory of Critical Mineral Research and Exploration, Institute of Geochemistry, Chinese Academy of Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Key Laboratory of High-temperature and High-pressure Study of the Earthfs Interior, Institute of Geochemistry, Chinese Academy of Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=State Key Laboratory of Geomicrobiology and Environmental Changes, School of Earth Sciences, China University of Geosciences (Wuhan) kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Institute for Planetary Materials, Okayama University kn-affil= END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=171 cd-vols= no-issue=2 article-no= start-page=xaag004 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=202602 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Rho kinase and RND3 regulate the direct effect of estradiol-17ƒÀ on oviductal tonus en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Ensuring the timely transport of gametes and embryos within the oviduct is essential for the successful establishment of pregnancy. This study investigated the direct effect of estradiol-17ƒÀ (E2) on bovine oviductal contractility and the differences in responsiveness to E2 during the estrous cycle. Bovine isthmic tissues from four estrous stages were analyzed using the Magnus method to assess contractile responses to E2 and related reagents. Protein expression of G-protein-coupled estrogen receptor 1 (GPER1) and components of the RhoA/Rho kinase (ROCK) signaling pathway were also evaluated. E2 and a GPER1 agonist significantly increased oviductal tonus at 1?4?days after ovulation. This effect was significantly suppressed by treatment with a GPER1 antagonist and a ROCK inhibitor. At 1?4?days after ovulation, both ROCK II expression and ROCK activity were elevated. E2 also enhanced phosphorylation of myosin phosphatase targeting subunit 1 (MYPT1) and myosin light chain (MLC), key downstream targets of ROCK. Before ovulation, when endogenous E2 levels peak, the expression of RND3?a ROCK inhibitor?was upregulated. The application of an RND inhibitor restored E2 responsiveness in oviductal tonus, ROCK activity, and the phosphorylation of MYPT1 and MLC in oviductal tissues before ovulation. These findings suggest that E2 directly increases oviductal tonus via GPER1 and ROCK/MYPT1/MLC activation at 1?4?days after ovulation. Differences in oviductal responsiveness to E2 during the estrous cycle appear to be mediated by the expression of ROCK and RND3. This mechanism can enable sperm transport within the oviduct at an appropriate time. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=KubotaSayaka en-aut-sei=Kubota en-aut-mei=Sayaka kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=OkawaraRisa en-aut-sei=Okawara en-aut-mei=Risa kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=KawanoKohei en-aut-sei=Kawano en-aut-mei=Kohei kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=KimuraKoji en-aut-sei=Kimura en-aut-mei=Koji kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Laboratory of Reproductive Physiology, Graduate School of Environmental, Life, Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=School of Agriculture, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Laboratory of Reproductive Physiology, Graduate School of Environmental, Life, Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Laboratory of Reproductive Physiology, Graduate School of Environmental, Life, Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= en-keyword=estradiol-17ƒÀ kn-keyword=estradiol-17ƒÀ en-keyword=oviduct kn-keyword=oviduct en-keyword=rho kinase kn-keyword=rho kinase en-keyword=RND3 kn-keyword=RND3 END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=14 cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page=30309 end-page=30326 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=2026 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=A Self-Adaptive Framework for Deploying Machine Learning Systems Without Ground-Truth Data at Runtime en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=In recent years, the practical application of machine learning technology has rapidly progressed, accelerating its adoption across various fields. In this context, studies into the effective operation of machine learning systems in real-world environments have become essential. In actual operational settings, the distribution of input data often changes over time, leading to a significant decline in the predictive performance of models. Additionally, the lack of ground-truth data for test data during operation can sometimes make adaptation through retraining difficult. This study proposes a framework that autonomously adapts to changes in input data distribution, even in environments where ground-truth data for test data is unavailable during operation. This framework analyzes the distribution of input data and selects the appropriate predictive model based on the state of the distribution. To ensure optimal model selection, the framework employs two complementary approaches: 1) dynamically switching between multiple pre-trained models with different feature sets according to environmental changes and 2) building ensemble models based on the distribution of the test data. These approaches enable the framework to autonomously adapt to shifts in data distribution, even in operational settings where ground-truth data is unavailable. Evaluation experiments using both simulated and real-world data assessed the predictive performance of the proposed method through metrics such as R2, RMSE, and MAE. Compared to conventional single model predictions, the proposed method consistently demonstrated higher accuracy. These results indicate that the proposed approach effectively adapts to data distribution shifts in operational environments where ground-truth data is unavailable. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=FurukawaKento en-aut-sei=Furukawa en-aut-mei=Kento kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=NakagawaHiroyuki en-aut-sei=Nakagawa en-aut-mei=Hiroyuki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=TsuchiyaTatsuhiro en-aut-sei=Tsuchiya en-aut-mei=Tatsuhiro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Graduate School of Information Science and Technology, Osaka University kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Graduate School of Environmental, Life, Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Graduate School of Information Science and Technology, Osaka University kn-affil= en-keyword=Self-adaptive systems kn-keyword=Self-adaptive systems en-keyword=frameworks kn-keyword=frameworks en-keyword=machine learning kn-keyword=machine learning END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=6 cd-vols= no-issue=1 article-no= start-page=269 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2025 dt-pub=20251125 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=From localized 4f electrons to anisotropic exchange interactions in ferromagnetic CeRh6Ge4 en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=CeRh6Ge4 is a cerium-based ferromagnetic material exhibiting a quantum critical behavior under pressure. We derive effective exchange interactions, using the framework of density functional theory combined with dynamical mean-field theory. Our results reveal that the nearest-neighbor ferromagnetic interaction along the c axis is isotropic in spin space, leading to a formation of spin chains. On the other hand, the inter-chain coupling is highly anisotropic: The in-plane moment weakly interacts ferromagnetically in the a?b plane to stabilize the ferromagnetic state, whereas the z-component couples antiferromagnetically, contributing to its destabilization. The magnetic anisotropy of the interchain interactions as well as of the local 4f wavefunctions characterizes the magnetic properties underlying the ferromagnetic transition and the quantum critical behavior in CeRh6Ge4. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=ItokazuShoichiro en-aut-sei=Itokazu en-aut-mei=Shoichiro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=KirikoshiAkimitsu en-aut-sei=Kirikoshi en-aut-mei=Akimitsu kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=JeschkeHarald O. en-aut-sei=Jeschke en-aut-mei=Harald O. kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=OtsukiJunya en-aut-sei=Otsuki en-aut-mei=Junya kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Department of Physics, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Research Institute for Interdisciplinary Science, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Research Institute for Interdisciplinary Science, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Research Institute for Interdisciplinary Science, Okayama University kn-affil= END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=75 cd-vols= no-issue=3-4 article-no= start-page=438 end-page=410 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260318 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title=A Study on Water Pollution by Persistent Organic PollutantsiPFOSEPFOAj: Focused on Duty of Care in Transactions. kn-title=PFOSEPFOA “™‚ÌŽc—¯«—L‹@‰˜õ•¨Ž¿‚É‚æ‚é…Ž¿‰˜õ‚ÉŠÖ‚·‚éˆêlŽ@ \ Žæˆøã‚Ì‹`–±‚ÌŽ‹“_‚©‚ç\ en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract= en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=TsujiH. en-aut-sei=Tsuji en-aut-mei=H. kn-aut-name=’Ò”Ž–¾ kn-aut-sei=’Ò kn-aut-mei=”Ž–¾ aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil= kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠw–¼—_‹³Žö END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=75 cd-vols= no-issue=3-4 article-no= start-page=706 end-page=657 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260318 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title=The Development and Present State of Judicial Doctrine on the Speedy Trial Clause kn-title=v‘¬Ù”»ð€‚ÉŠÖ‚·‚é”»—á–@—‚Ì“WŠJ‚ÆŒ»ó en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract= en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=HaradaK. en-aut-sei=Harada en-aut-mei=K. kn-aut-name=Œ´“c˜a‰ kn-aut-sei=Œ´“c kn-aut-mei=˜a‰ aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil= kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠwŠwpŒ¤‹†‰@ŽÐ‰ï•¶‰»‰ÈŠwŠwˆæ END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=75 cd-vols= no-issue=3-4 article-no= start-page=726 end-page=707 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260318 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title=A Study on the Consequences of Invalid Election Results under Article 251 of the Public Offices Election Act kn-title=ŒöE‘I‹“–@251ði“–‘Il–{l‚Ì‘I‹“”Æßj‚É‚æ‚é“–‘I–³Œø‚ÌŒ‹‰Ê‚ÉŠÖ‚·‚éˆêlŽ@ \ ÅŽO¬”»—ߘa‚T”N12ŒŽ12“ú–¯W77Šª‚X†2229•Å‚ðŒ_‹@‚Æ‚µ‚Ä\ en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract= en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=FukushigeS. en-aut-sei=Fukushige en-aut-mei=S. kn-aut-name=•Ÿd‚³‚ÆŽq kn-aut-sei=•Ÿd kn-aut-mei=‚³‚ÆŽq aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil= kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠwŠwpŒ¤‹†‰@ŽÐ‰ï•¶‰»‰ÈŠwŠwˆæ END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=75 cd-vols= no-issue=3-4 article-no= start-page=371 end-page=407 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260318 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title=On F. Michelmanfs Interpretation of Rawlsfs Later Thought: An Examination of Its Republican Implications kn-title=‚eEƒ}ƒCƒPƒ‹ƒ}ƒ“‚ÌŒãŠúƒ[ƒ‹ƒY‰ðŽß‚ɂ‚¢‚Ä \‚»‚Ì‹¤˜aŽå‹`“IŠÜˆÓ‚ÌŒŸ“¢ en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract= en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=OmoriH. en-aut-sei=Omori en-aut-mei=H. kn-aut-name=‘åXGb kn-aut-sei=‘åX kn-aut-mei=Gb aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil= kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠwŠwpŒ¤‹†‰@ŽÐ‰ï•¶‰»‰ÈŠwŠwˆæ END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=16 cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page=237 end-page=251 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260328 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title=Preliminary Consideration on the Introduction of Philosophical Thinking into Special Needs Education: A Methodological Framework Based on the Concepts of Duration, Becoming, and Diffraction kn-title=“Á•ÊŽx‰‡‹³ˆç‚Ö‚Ì“NŠw“IŽvl“±“ü‚ɂ‚¢‚Ă̗\”õ“IlŽ@ Ž‘±E¶¬•ω»E‰ñÜ‚Ìl‚¦•û‚ÉŠî‚­•û–@“I˜g‘g‚Ý‚ÌŽŽˆÄ en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract=This paper presents a theoretical and methodological examination aimed at introducing philosophical thinking into the practice of special needs education in response to contemporary challenges in the field. As its theoretical foundation, the study outlines Bergsonf s theory of memory, Deleuze and Guattarif s philosophy of becoming, Baradf s diffractive methodology, and Blomf s diffractive ethnography. Building upon these theories, it proposes a methodological framework that adopts three interrelated analytical perspectives?gmaterial-discursive practices,h gduration,h and gbecomingh?for reading and interpreting educational practices. These perspectives, situated within the paradigm of post-qualitative research, make it possible to understand educational events as relational and processual phenomena rather than fixed outcomes. Future issues include the theoretical integration of the three lenses, clarification of the distinctions between diffractive methodology and diffractive ethnography, and refinement of analytical methods for connecting multiple practice episodes. kn-abstract=@–{e‚ÍCŒ»‘ã‚Ì“Á•ÊŽx‰‡‹³ˆç‚̉ۑ肩‚çC“Á•ÊŽx‰‡‹³ˆçŽÀ‘H‚É“NŠw“IŽvl‚𓱓ü‚·‚邽‚߂̗˜_“IE•û–@“IŒŸ“¢‚ðs‚¤‚à‚̂ł ‚éB‚Ü‚¸C—˜_Šî”Õ‚Æ‚µ‚ÄCƒxƒ‹ƒNƒ\ƒ“‚Ìu‹L‰¯—˜_vCƒhƒDƒ‹[ƒY•ƒKƒ^ƒŠ‚Ìu¶¬•ω»‚Ì“NŠwvCBarad‚Ìu‰ñÜ“I•û–@˜_vCBlom‚Ìu‰ñÜ“IƒGƒXƒmƒOƒ‰ƒtƒB[v‚ɂ‚¢‚ÄŠTà‚µ‚½B‚»‚µ‚ÄC—˜_Šî”Õ‚ðŠî‚É•û–@“I˜g‘g‚݂Ƃµ‚ÄCu•¨Ž¿|Œ¾à“IŽÀ‘HvCuŽ‘±vCu¶¬•ω»v‚ÌŽO‚‚̎‹“_‚ð‹³ˆçŽÀ‘H‚ð“Ç‚Ý‰ð‚­‚½‚ß‚Ì‘ŠŒÝ•âŠ®“I‚È•ªÍŽ‹“_‚Æ‚µ‚ÄÌ—p‚·‚邱‚Æ‚ð’ñˆÄ‚µ‚½B‚±‚ê‚ç‚ÌŽ‹“_‚ÍCƒ|ƒXƒgŽ¿“IŒ¤‹†‚Æ‚µ‚ÄCo—ˆŽ–‚ðŠÖŒW“IE‰ß’ö“I‚É‘¨‚¦‚邱‚Æ‚ð‰Â”\‚É‚·‚é‚à‚̂ł ‚éB¡Œã‚Ì‰Û‘è‚Æ‚µ‚ÄCŽO‚‚̃Œƒ“ƒYŠÔ‚Ì—˜_“I®—C‰ñÜ“I•û–@˜_‚ƉñÜ“IƒGƒXƒmƒOƒ‰ƒtƒB[‚Ì·ˆÙ‰»C‚¨‚æ‚Ñ•¡”‚ÌŽÀ‘HƒGƒsƒ\[ƒh‚ðÚ‘±‚µ‚Ä•`‚­‚½‚߂̕ªÍŽè–@‚̸ãk‰»‚ª‹“‚°‚ç‚ꂽB en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=HAMADAYo en-aut-sei=HAMADA en-aut-mei=Yo kn-aut-name=ûM“c—j kn-aut-sei=ûM“c kn-aut-mei=—j aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=TAKANOMiyuki en-aut-sei=TAKANO en-aut-mei=Miyuki kn-aut-name=ûü–ì”ü—R‹I kn-aut-sei=ûü–ì kn-aut-mei=”ü—R‹I aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=SATOSatoru en-aut-sei=SATO en-aut-mei=Satoru kn-aut-name=²“¡ú kn-aut-sei=²“¡ kn-aut-mei=ú aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Okayama Prefectural Okayama Seto Special Needs School kn-affil=‰ªŽRŒ§—§‰ªŽR£ŒË‚“™Žx‰‡ŠwZ affil-num=2 en-affil=Hyogo University of Teacher Education kn-affil=•ºŒÉ‹³ˆç‘åŠw‘åŠw‰@ affil-num=3 en-affil=Faculty of Education, Okayama University kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠwŠwpŒ¤‹†‰@‹³ˆçŠwˆæ en-keyword=“Á•ÊŽx‰‡‹³ˆç (special needs education) kn-keyword=“Á•ÊŽx‰‡‹³ˆç (special needs education) en-keyword=“NŠw (philosophy) kn-keyword=“NŠw (philosophy) en-keyword=•ªÍŽ‹“_ (analytical perspectives) kn-keyword=•ªÍŽ‹“_ (analytical perspectives) en-keyword=ƒ|ƒXƒgƒqƒ…[ƒ}ƒjƒYƒ€ (posthumanism) kn-keyword=ƒ|ƒXƒgƒqƒ…[ƒ}ƒjƒYƒ€ (posthumanism) en-keyword=Ž¿“IŒ¤‹† (qualitative research) kn-keyword=Ž¿“IŒ¤‹† (qualitative research) END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=16 cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page=221 end-page=235 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260328 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title=Designing an Educational Model and Assessing Outcomes for the Graduate Course gLeadership and SDGsh New Directions in Leadership Education through Theory Learning, Peer Review, and Reflective Practice kn-title=‘åŠw‰@‹¤’ʉȖÚwƒŠ[ƒ_[ƒVƒbƒv‚ÆSDGsx‚Ì‹³ˆçƒ‚ƒfƒ‹\’z‚Ƭ‰Ê•ªÍ —˜_ŠwKEƒsƒAƒŒƒrƒ…[EÈŽ@Šˆ“®‚É‚æ‚郊[ƒ_[ƒVƒbƒv‹³ˆç‚ÌV“WŠJ en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract=Okayama University's graduate school has developed and implemented a core course, gLeadership and SDGs,h to foster leadership among graduate students. The course focuses on the development of leaders who can contribute to the achievement of the SDGs (Sustainable Development Goals) and combines theoretical study, peer review, reflective practice, and group discussion to encourage mutual learning and self-growth among students. By analyzing learning outcomes across different departments, the study demonstrates that reflective, theory-based learning and collaborative critique activities effectively deepen leadership understanding and personal development. This research clarifies the significance of building and continuously improving an educational model that integrates academic theory and practical activities. kn-abstract=@‰ªŽR‘åŠw‘åŠw‰@‚Å‚ÍA”ŽŽm‰Û’ölނ̃Š[ƒ_[ƒVƒbƒvˆç¬‚ÉŒü‚¯A‹¤’ʉȖÚwƒŠ[ƒ_[ƒVƒbƒv‚ÆSDGsx‚ðÝŒvEŽÀ‘H‚µ‚Ä‚¢‚éB–{‰È–Ú‚ÍSDGs‚ÉvŒ£‚·‚郊[ƒ_[ˆç¬‚ÉŽåŠá‚ð’u‚«A—˜_ŠwKEƒsƒAƒŒƒrƒ…[EÈŽ@EƒOƒ‹[ƒvƒfƒBƒXƒJƒbƒVƒ‡ƒ““™‚ÌŽè–@‚ð‘g‚݇‚킹AŠw¶“¯Žm‚ÌŠw‚ч‚¢EŽ©ŒÈ¬’·‚Ì‘£i‚ð–Ú“I‚Æ‚µ‚Ä‚¢‚éB–{e‚Å‚ÍAŠw•”EŒ¤‹†‰È‚²‚ƂɊwK¬‰Ê‚ð•ªÍ‚µA—˜_‚ÉŠî‚­Ȏ@“IŠw‚тƋ¦“­“I‚È”á•]Šˆ“®‚ªƒŠ[ƒ_[ƒVƒbƒv—‰ð‚⬒·‚É—L—p‚Å‚ ‚邱‚Ƃ𖾂炩‚É‚µ‚½B–{Œ¤‹†‚ÍAŠwp“I—˜_‚ÆŽÀ‘H“IŠˆ“®‚ðD‚èŒð‚º‚½ƒ‚ƒfƒ‹\’z‚ÆA‚»‚ÌŒp‘±“I‰ü‘P‚̈Ӌ`‚ðŽ¦‚µ‚Ä‚¢‚éB en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=ISHIDAMamoru en-aut-sei=ISHIDA en-aut-mei=Mamoru kn-aut-name=Γc‰q kn-aut-sei=Γc kn-aut-mei=‰q aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=OTSUNEShinichi en-aut-sei=OTSUNE en-aut-mei=Shinichi kn-aut-name=‘åí^ˆê kn-aut-sei=‘åí kn-aut-mei=^ˆê aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=NAKAZAWATakuya en-aut-sei=NAKAZAWA en-aut-mei=Takuya kn-aut-name=’†àV‘ñ–ç kn-aut-sei=’†àV kn-aut-mei=‘ñ–ç aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Faculty of General Education and Global Studies, Okayama University kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠwŠwpŒ¤‹†‰@‹¤’Ê‹³ˆçEƒOƒ[ƒoƒ‹—̈æ affil-num=2 en-affil=Graduate student, Graduate School of Environmental, Life, Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠw‘åŠw‰@ŠÂ‹«¶–½Ž©‘R‰ÈŠwŒ¤‹†‰È affil-num=3 en-affil=Graduate student, Graduate School of Interdisciplinary Science and Engineering in Health Systems, Okayama University kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠw‘åŠw‰@ƒwƒ‹ƒXƒVƒXƒeƒ€“‡‰ÈŠwŒ¤‹†‰È en-keyword=ƒŠ[ƒ_[ƒVƒbƒv‹³ˆç (Leadership Education) kn-keyword=ƒŠ[ƒ_[ƒVƒbƒv‹³ˆç (Leadership Education) en-keyword=ŠwKÝŒv (Learning Design) kn-keyword=ŠwKÝŒv (Learning Design) en-keyword=‚“™‹³ˆç (Higher Education) kn-keyword=‚“™‹³ˆç (Higher Education) END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=16 cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page=205 end-page=219 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260328 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title=Tier 1 Support of School-Wide Positive Behavior Support (SWPBS) in the High School Division of a Special Needs School for Students with Intellectual Disabilities: Implementation and Effects of a Campaign-Based Approach kn-title=’m“IáŠQ‚“™“Á•ÊŽx‰‡ŠwZ‚É‚¨‚¯‚é SWPBS ‘æ‚P‘wŽx‰‡ \ƒLƒƒƒ“ƒy[ƒ“•ûŽ®‚Ì“±“ü‚Æ‚»‚ÌŒø‰Ê\ en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract=This study examined the effects of a campaign-based intervention implemented as Tier 1 support within School-Wide Positive Behavior Support (SWPBS). It took place at a public upper secondary school for students with mild intellectual disabilities. A gThank-You Campaignh was conducted with 24 students in one grade level. The frequency of predefined target behaviors was analyzed using AB design with follow-ups. A social validity questionnaire was also administered to six teachers of the same grade. Results showed that both the frequency of the target behaviors and the percentage of students engaging in those behaviors increased after the campaign. These increases remained above baseline levels for a certain period after the campaign ended. The intervention also demonstrated a moderate degree of social validity. These findings suggest that campaign-based approaches can be a useful form of Tier 1 support in SWPBS for students with mild intellectual disabilities at the upper secondary level. kn-abstract=@–{Œ¤‹†‚ÍCŒy“x’m“IáŠQ‚Ì‚ ‚éŒãŠú’†“™‹³ˆç’iŠK‚ÌŒö—§’m“IáŠQ‚“™“Á•ÊŽx‰‡ŠwZ‚É‚¨‚¢‚ÄCSWPBS ‘æ1‘wŽx‰‡‚Æ‚µ‚ăLƒƒƒ“ƒy[ƒ“•ûŽ®‚ÌŽx‰‡‚ðŽÀŽ{‚µC‚»‚ÌŒø‰ÊŒŸØ‚ðs‚Á‚½B•û–@‚Æ‚µ‚Ä‚ÍC‚wŠw”N¶“k24–¼‚ɑ΂µ‚Ĉ¥ŽAs“®‚Ì‘£i‚ð‘_‚Á‚½ƒLƒƒƒ“ƒy[ƒ“‚ðŽÀŽ{‚µC–Ú•Ws“®‚̶‹N”‚ɂ‚¢‚ÄABƒtƒHƒ[ƒAƒbƒvƒfƒUƒCƒ“‚ð—p‚¢‚ÄŒŸ“¢‚µ‚½B‚Ü‚½C‚wŠw”N‹³ˆõ6–¼‚ɑ΂µCŽÐ‰ï“I‘Ó–«‚ð•]‰¿‚·‚éƒAƒ“ƒP[ƒg‚ðŽÀŽ{‚µ‚½B‚»‚ÌŒ‹‰ÊCƒLƒƒƒ“ƒy[ƒ“‚̉î“ü’¼Œã‚É–Ú•Ws“®‚̶‹N”‚¨‚æ‚Ñ–Ú•Ws“®‚É]Ž–‚µ‚½¶“k‚ÌŠ„‡‚Ì‘‰Á‚ªŒ©‚ç‚êCƒLƒƒƒ“ƒy[ƒ“I—¹Œã‚àƒx[ƒXƒ‰ƒCƒ“‚Æ”äŠr‚µ‚½‘‰Á‚ªˆê’èŠúŠÔŠm”F‚³‚ꂽB‚Ü‚½Cˆê’è’ö“x‚̎Љï“I‘Ó–«‚àŠm”F‚Å‚«‚½B en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=TOKIMITSUHideaki en-aut-sei=TOKIMITSU en-aut-mei=Hideaki kn-aut-name=ŽžŒõG–¾ kn-aut-sei=ŽžŒõ kn-aut-mei=G–¾ aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=MIYAZAKIYoshio en-aut-sei=MIYAZAKI en-aut-mei=Yoshio kn-aut-name=‹{ú±‘P˜Y kn-aut-sei=‹{ú± kn-aut-mei=‘P˜Y aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=KOYAMAMadoka en-aut-sei=KOYAMA en-aut-mei=Madoka kn-aut-name=¬ŽR‰~ kn-aut-sei=¬ŽR kn-aut-mei=‰~ aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Graduate School of Education (Professional Degree Course), Okayama University kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠw‘åŠw‰@‹³ˆçŠwŒ¤‹†‰È affil-num=2 en-affil=Faculty of Education, Okayama University kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠwŠwpŒ¤‹†‰@‹³ˆçŠwˆæ affil-num=3 en-affil=Kurashiki Kotoura Special Needs Seni or High School, Okayama Prefecture kn-affil=‰ªŽRŒ§—§‘q•~‹Õ‰Y‚“™Žx‰‡ŠwZ en-keyword=‚“™•” (High school division) kn-keyword=‚“™•” (High school division) en-keyword=Œy“x’m“IáŠQ (Mild intellectual disabilities) kn-keyword=Œy“x’m“IáŠQ (Mild intellectual disabilities) en-keyword=SWPBSiŠwZ‹K–̓|ƒWƒeƒBƒus“®Žx‰‡j(School-Wide Positive Behavior Support (SWPBS)) kn-keyword=SWPBSiŠwZ‹K–̓|ƒWƒeƒBƒus“®Žx‰‡j(School-Wide Positive Behavior Support (SWPBS)) en-keyword=‘æ1‘wŽx‰‡ (Tier 1 support) kn-keyword=‘æ1‘wŽx‰‡ (Tier 1 support) END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=16 cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page=191 end-page=203 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260328 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title=Examining a Practical Case of Learning for Community Development ?Focusing on the Changes in Awareness of Junior High School Students During Integrated Studies? kn-title=’¬‚­‚è‚ðl‚¦‚éŽÀ‘HŽ–—á‚ÌŒŸ“¢ \‘‡“I‚ÈŠwK‚ÌŽžŠÔ‚ð’Ê‚¶‚½’†Šw¶‚̈ӎ¯•ω»‚É’…–Ú‚µ‚Ä\ en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= This study aims to clarify the effects of junior high school students planning community development through collaboration and interaction with others, and the changes in learners that arise from the results of such practice. It also examines how interactions with others, which are emphasized in dialogic learning, can be applied to junior high school practice and what form this should take. The goal of this practice is to foster a change in students' awareness of their town by having them interpret the future and nature of the town from various perspectives in relation to their interactions with others, and consider sustainable ways of living in the town and forming relationships as their own concern. As a result of the practice, students experienced changes in their perspectives and awareness regarding the town and were able to think about the regional issues involved in town development as their own concern. kn-abstract=@–{Œ¤‹†‚ÍC’†ŠwZ‘‡“I‚ÈŠwK‚ÌŽžŠÔ‚É‚¨‚¯‚é’¬‚­‚è‚É‚¨‚¢‚ÄC‘¼ŽÒ‚Ƃ̋¦“­‚⑊ŒÝì—p‚ð’Ê‚¶‚Ä’¬‚­‚è‚ð\‘z‚µCŽÀ‘H‚ÌŒ‹‰Ê¶‚¶‚½ŠwKŽÒ‚̕ω»‚©‚ç‚»‚ÌŒø‰Ê‚𖾂炩‚É‚·‚邱‚Æ‚ð–Ú“I‚Æ‚µ‚Ä‚¢‚éB‚Ü‚½C‘Θb“I‚ÈŠw‚Ñ‚ÅdŽ‹‚³‚ê‚鑼ŽÒ‚Æ‚Ì‘ŠŒÝì—p‚ðC’†ŠwZ‚ÌŽÀ‘H‚É—Ž‚Æ‚µž‚ÝC‚»‚Ì‚ ‚è•û‚ɂ‚¢‚Ä‚àŒŸ“¢‚·‚éB–{ŽÀ‘H‚̂˂炢‚ÍC‘½—l‚ÈŽ‹“_‚©‚ç’¬‚Ì«—ˆ‚ÌŽp‚â‚ ‚è•û‚ðl‚Ƃ̊ւí‚è‚ɂ‚¢‚ēǂ݉ð‚«CŽ‘±‰Â”\‚È’¬‚Ì‚ ‚è•û‚ɂ‚¢‚ÄŽ©•ªŽ–‚Ɉø‚«Šñ‚¹‚Äl‚¦‚邱‚Æ‚ÅC’¬‚ɑ΂·‚éˆÓޝ‚̕ω»‚𑣂·‚±‚Ƃɂ ‚éBŽÀ‘H‚ÌŒ‹‰ÊCŠwKŽÒ‚Ì’¬‚ɑ΂·‚錩•û‚âl‚¦•û‚̈ӎ¯•ω»‚ªˆø‚«‹N‚±‚³‚êC’¬‚­‚è‚ÌŽ‚Â’nˆæ‰Û‘è‚ɂ‚¢‚ÄŽ©•ªŽ–‚Ɉø‚«Šñ‚¹‚ÄŽvl‚·‚邱‚Æ‚ª‚Å‚«‚½B en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=KAMADAAkemi en-aut-sei=KAMADA en-aut-mei=Akemi kn-aut-name=Š™“c–¾”ü kn-aut-sei=Š™“c kn-aut-mei=–¾”ü aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=KAJIIKazuaki en-aut-sei=KAJII en-aut-mei=Kazuaki kn-aut-name=Šˆäˆê‹Å kn-aut-sei=Šˆä kn-aut-mei=ˆê‹Å aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Anan City Anan First Junior High School kn-affil=ˆ¢“ìŽs—§ˆ¢“ì‘æˆê’†ŠwZ affil-num=2 en-affil=Faculty of Education, Okayama University kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠwŠwpŒ¤‹†‰@‹³ˆçŠwˆæ en-keyword=‘‡“I‚ÈŠwK‚ÌŽžŠÔ (the period for integrated studies) kn-keyword=‘‡“I‚ÈŠwK‚ÌŽžŠÔ (the period for integrated studies) en-keyword=’†Šw¶ (junior high school student) kn-keyword=’†Šw¶ (junior high school student) en-keyword=’¬‚­‚è (community development) kn-keyword=’¬‚­‚è (community development) en-keyword=‘Θb“I‚ÈŠw‚Ñ (int eractive lea rning) kn-keyword=‘Θb“I‚ÈŠw‚Ñ (int eractive lea rning) END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=16 cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page=181 end-page=190 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260328 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title=Practice and Challenges of Elementary School Moral Education Lessons Utilizing Self-Developed Teaching Materials on the Theme of eThe Dignity of Lifef kn-title=u¶–½‚Ì‘¸‚³v‚ÌŽ©ì‹³Þ‚ðŠˆ—p‚µ‚½¬ŠwZ“¹“¿‰ÈŽö‹Æ‚ÌŽÀ‘H‚Ɖۑè en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract=This study investigated whether utilizing self-developed teaching materials for the moral content item "The Dignity of Life" could lead elementary school students to deeply reflect on the value of life in relation to their own experiences. The results confirmed that the use of these materials successfully enabled students to empathize with the characters and engage in deep reflection on the moral value of "The Dignity of Life" in a personal context. Conversely, a challenge emerged: due to the strength of the teacher's intent embedded in the original materials, students were occasionally observed tailoring their comments to align with the teacher's expectations. This suggests a potential, albeit unintentional, directionality imposed on student discourse by the instructor. Finally, this paper discusses the necessity of a continuous cycle of practice and reflection to realize truly student-centered moral education lessons. kn-abstract=@–{Œ¤‹†‚Å‚ÍC“à—e€–Úu¶–½‚Ì‘¸‚³v‚ÉŠÖ‚·‚鎩싳ނðŠJ”­‚µCŽö‹Æ‚ðŽÀŽ{‚·‚邱‚Ƃɂæ‚Á‚ÄCŽq‚Ç‚à‚ªu¶–½‚Ì‘¸‚³v‚ðŽ©•ª‚Ƃ̊ւí‚è‚Å[‚­l‚¦‚邱‚Æ‚ª‚Å‚«‚é‚©‚ɂ‚¢‚ÄŒŸØ‚µ‚½B¬‰Ê‚Æ‚µ‚ÄCŽ©ì‹³Þ‚ÌŠˆ—p‚É‚æ‚Á‚ÄŽq‚Ç‚à‚ª‹³Þ‚Ì“oêl•¨‚É‹¤Š´‚µCu¶–½‚Ì‘¸‚³v‚Ì“¹“¿“I‰¿’l‚ðŽ©•ª‚Ƃ̊ւí‚è‚Å[‚­l‚¦‚é—lŽq‚ªŠm”F‚Å‚«‚½Bˆê•ûC‰Û‘è‚Æ‚µ‚ÄCŽ©ì‹³Þ‚Öž‚ß‚½Žv‚¢‚Ì‹­‚³‚©‚çCŽq‚Ç‚à‚ªŽö‹ÆŽÒ‚̈Ó}‚ð‘g‚݂Ȃª‚ç”­Œ¾‚·‚éŽp‚ªŒ©‚ç‚êCˆÓ}‚¹‚¸Žq‚Ç‚à‚Ì”­Œ¾‚ð•ûŒü•t‚¯‚½‰Â”\«‚ªŽ¦‚³‚ꂽBÅŒã‚ÉCŽq‚Ç‚à’†S‚ÌŽö‹Æ‚ÌŽÀŒ»‚ÉŒü‚¯‚ÄCŽÀ‘H‚ÆÈŽ@‚̉ŠÒ‚Ì•K—v«‚ɂ‚¢‚Ä‹c˜_‚µ‚½B en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=YOSHIKAWAShinji en-aut-sei=YOSHIKAWA en-aut-mei=Shinji kn-aut-name=‹gìL“ñ kn-aut-sei=‹gì kn-aut-mei=L“ñ aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=IZUMITsuguyuki en-aut-sei=IZUMI en-aut-mei=Tsuguyuki kn-aut-name=ˆÉZŒps kn-aut-sei=ˆÉZ kn-aut-mei=Œps aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Tsurajimakita Elementary School kn-affil=‘q•~Žs—§˜A“‡–k¬ŠwZ affil-num=2 en-affil=Faculty of Education, Okayama University kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠwŠwpŒ¤‹†‰@‹³ˆçŠwˆæ en-keyword=“¹“¿‰È (Moral Education) kn-keyword=“¹“¿‰È (Moral Education) en-keyword=Ž©ì‹³Þ (Self-developed teaching materials) kn-keyword=Ž©ì‹³Þ (Self-developed teaching materials) en-keyword=¶–½‚Ì‘¸‚³ (The Dignity of Life) kn-keyword=¶–½‚Ì‘¸‚³ (The Dignity of Life) en-keyword=Ž™“¶ (Children) kn-keyword=Ž™“¶ (Children) END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=16 cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page=167 end-page=180 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260328 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title=Study on Developing High School Civics Lesson Plan Aimed at Improving Understanding of Constitutionalism: Depending on gWe the Peopleh of the Center for Civic Education kn-title=—§Œ›Žå‹`‚ɑ΂·‚é”Fޝ‚̉ü‘P‚ð–ÚŽw‚µ‚½‚“™ŠwZŒö–¯‰È‚ÌŽö‹ÆŠJ”­Œ¤‹† \•Ä‘Œö–¯‹³ˆçƒZƒ“ƒ^[ŠJ”­w‰ä‚ç‡O‘l–¯x‚ðŽè‚ª‚©‚è‚É‚µ‚Ä\ en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract=This study aims to develop practicable lessons for high school civics classes that foster an understanding of constitutionalism as the foundation for grasping the Constitution. Traditional Japanese social studies education focused on understanding the Constitution's fundamental principles?popular sovereignty, respect for basic human rights, and pacifism. But, recently, the concept of constitutionalism has gained attention as a means to help students understand what a constitution fundamentally is, and it is now described in textbooks. This study proposes a lesson plan designed to help students appropriately grasp the concept of constitutionalism. In making the lesson plan, we referenced the long-used gWe the Peopleh program developed by the Center for Civic Education in U.S. We adapted materials originally created based on the historical context of the United States to fit the Japanese context, utilizing parts of this program. kn-abstract=@–{Œ¤‹†‚ÍAŒ›–@—‰ð‚ÌŠî–{‚Æ‚µ‚Ă̗§Œ›Žå‹`‚ɑ΂·‚é”FޝŒ`¬‚ð–Ú•W‚Æ‚·‚éA‚“™ŠwZŒö–¯‰È‚ÅŽÀ‘H‰Â”\‚ÈŽö‹Æ‚ÌŠJ”­‚ð–ÚŽw‚µ‚½‚à‚̂ł ‚éB]—ˆ‚Ì“ú–{‚̎Љï‰È‹³ˆç‚É‚¨‚¢‚Ä‚ÍAŒ›–@—‰ð‚Í“ú–{‘Œ›–@‚ÌŠî–{Œ´‘¥‚Å‚ ‚é‘–¯ŽåŒ AŠî–{“IlŒ ‚Ì‘¸dA•½˜aŽå‹`‚Ì—‰ð‚ðŠî–{‚Æ‚µ‚Ä‚¢‚½‚ªA‹ß”NA‚»‚à‚»‚àŒ›–@‚Ƃ͉½‚©‚ð—‰ð‚³‚¹‚邽‚ß‚ÉA—§Œ›Žå‹`‚ÌŠT”O‚ª’–Ú‚³‚ê‚邿‚¤‚ɂȂèA‹³‰È‘‚É‚à‹Lq‚³‚ê‚Ä‚¢‚éB–{Œ¤‹†‚ÍA‚»‚̂悤‚È—§Œ›Žå‹`‚Æ‚¢‚¤ŠT”O‚ɂ‚¢‚Ķ“k‚É“K؂ɗ‰ð‚³‚¹‚邱‚Æ‚ð–ÚŽw‚µ‚½Žö‹Æ‚Ì’ñˆÄ‚ð‚µ‚æ‚¤‚Æ‚·‚é‚à‚̂ł ‚éBŽö‹ÆŒv‰æì¬‚É‚ ‚½‚Á‚Ä‚ÍA•Ä‘‚ÌŒö–¯‹³ˆçƒZƒ“ƒ^[‚ªŠJ”­‚µA’·”NŠˆ—p‚³‚ê‚Ä‚¢‚éw‰ä‚ç‡O‘l–¯iŒ´‘è We the Peoplejx‚ðŽQÆ‚µA‚»‚̈ꕔ‚ðŠˆ—p‚µA•Ä‘‚Ì—ðŽj“I”wŒi‚ÉŠî‚¢‚Äì‚ç‚ꂽ‹³Þ‚ðA“ú–{‚Ì•¶–¬‚É‚»‚Á‚ĉü•Ï‚µ‚½B en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=KUWABARAToshinori en-aut-sei=KUWABARA en-aut-mei=Toshinori kn-aut-name=ŒKŒ´•q“T kn-aut-sei=ŒKŒ´ kn-aut-mei=•q“T aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=MIYAMOTOAyuha en-aut-sei=MIYAMOTO en-aut-mei=Ayuha kn-aut-name=‹{–{‚ ‚ä‚Í kn-aut-sei=‹{–{ kn-aut-mei=‚ ‚ä‚Í aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Faculty of Education, Okayama University kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠwŠwpŒ¤‹†‰@‹³ˆçŠwˆæ affil-num=2 en-affil=Graduate School of Humanities and Social Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠw‘åŠw‰@ŽÐ‰ï•¶‰»ŠwŒ¤‹†‰ÈŽÐ‰ï•¶‰»ŠwêU en-keyword=Žö‹ÆŠJ”­Œ¤‹† (Lesson Development Research) kn-keyword=Žö‹ÆŠJ”­Œ¤‹† (Lesson Development Research) en-keyword=Œö–¯‰È (Civic Education) kn-keyword=Œö–¯‰È (Civic Education) en-keyword=Œ›–@ŠwK (Constitutional Studies) kn-keyword=Œ›–@ŠwK (Constitutional Studies) en-keyword=—§Œ›Žå‹` (Constitutionalism) kn-keyword=—§Œ›Žå‹` (Constitutionalism) END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=16 cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page=153 end-page=165 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260328 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title=Methods for Implementing Legal Education in Social Studies to Foster Understanding of Criminal Law Through Developing Junior High School Social Studies Lessons Incorporating Mock Trials kn-title=ŒY–@‚̈Ӌ`‚𑨂¦‚³‚¹‚éŽÐ‰ï‰È‚É‚¨‚¯‚é–@‹³ˆçŽÀ‘H‚Ì•û–@ \–Í‹[Ù”»‚ðŽæ‚è“ü‚ꂽ’†ŠwZŽÐ‰ï‰È‚ÌŽö‹ÆŠJ”­‚ð’Ê‚µ‚Ä\ en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract=This study focuses on developing junior high school social studies lessons incorporating mock trials to enhance understanding of criminal law. Legal education in Japanese social studies has traditionally centered on constitutional studies, with very few opportunities to learn about other laws. Given this situation, recent years have seen the development of legal education lessons covering civil law, criminal law, and other areas. Meanwhile, since the introduction of the lay judge system, the development and implementation of social studies lessons incorporating mock trials have become commonplace, and it is no longer unusual for criminal cases to be addressed in social studies classes. This study examines the characteristics and challenges of conventional mock trial-based lessons and aims to develop a junior high school social studies lesson that helps students grasp the significance of criminal law. kn-abstract=@–{Œ¤‹†‚ÍAŒY–@‚Ì—‰ð‚ÉÅ“_‚ð‚ ‚ÄA–Í‹[Ù”»‚ðŽæ‚è“ü‚ꂽ’†ŠwZŽÐ‰ï‰È‚ÌŽö‹ÆŠJ”­‚ðs‚È‚¨‚¤‚Æ‚·‚é‚à‚̂ł ‚éB“ú–{‚̎Љï‰È‚É‚¨‚¯‚é–@‹³ˆç‚ÍA]—ˆ‚©‚猛–@ŠwK‚ª’†S‚ƂȂÁ‚Ä‚¨‚èA‚»‚Ì‘¼‚Ì–@—¥‚ɂ‚¢‚ÄŠw‚Ô‹@‰ï‚Í”ñí‚É­‚È‚¢B‚»‚̂悤‚ÈŒ»ó‚𓥂܂¦‚ÄA‹ß”NA–¯–@‚âŒY–@‚È‚Ç‚ðŽæ‚èã‚°‚½–@‹³ˆç‚ÌŽö‹ÆŠJ”­‚ªs‚í‚ê‚邿‚¤‚ɂȂÁ‚½B‚»‚̈ê•û‚ÅAÙ”»ˆõ§“x“±“üˆÈ~A–Í‹[Ù”»‚ðŽæ‚è“ü‚ꂽŽÐ‰ï‰ÈŽö‹Æ‚ÌŠJ”­EŽÀ‘H‚ª‚æ‚­Œ©‚ç‚ê‚邿‚¤‚ɂȂÁ‚Ä‚¨‚èAŒYŽ–Ž–Œ‚ªŽÐ‰ï‰ÈŽö‹Æ‚ÅŽæ‚èã‚°‚ç‚ê‚邱‚Æ‚à’¿‚µ‚­‚͂Ȃ­‚È‚Á‚½B‚µ‚©‚µA‚»‚̂悤‚ÈŽö‹Æ‚ð’S“–‚·‚鋳ˆõ‚ÉAŒY–@“™‚ÉŠÖ‚·‚é’mޝ‚ª\•ª‚ł͂Ȃ­A–Í‹[Ù”»‚Ì“à—e‚ÆŽÀÛ‚ÌÙ”»‚ª˜¨—£‚µ‚Ä‚¢‚邯‚¢‚¤‰Û‘è‚à‚ ‚éB–{Œ¤‹†‚Å‚ÍA]—ˆ‚Ì–Í‹[Ù”»‚ðŽæ‚è“ü‚ꂽŽö‹Æ‚Ì“ÁŽ¿‚Ɖۑè‚ðŒŸ“¢‚µ‚½‚¤‚¦‚ÅAŒY–@‚̈Ӌ`‚𑨂¦‚³‚¹‚é’†ŠwZŽÐ‰ï‰È‚ÌŽö‹ÆŠJ”­‚ð–ÚŽw‚·B en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=MIYAMOTOAyuha en-aut-sei=MIYAMOTO en-aut-mei=Ayuha kn-aut-name=‹{–{‚ ‚ä‚Í kn-aut-sei=‹{–{ kn-aut-mei=‚ ‚ä‚Í aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=KUWABARAToshinori en-aut-sei=KUWABARA en-aut-mei=Toshinori kn-aut-name=ŒKŒ´•q“T kn-aut-sei=ŒKŒ´ kn-aut-mei=•q“T aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Graduate School of Human ities and So cial Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠw‘åŠw‰@ŽÐ‰ï•¶‰»ŠwŒ¤‹†‰ÈŽÐ‰ï•¶‰»ŠwêU affil-num=2 en-affil=Faculty of Education, Okayama University kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠwŠwpŒ¤‹†‰@‹³ˆçŠwˆæ en-keyword=Žö‹ÆŠJ”­Œ¤‹† (Lesson development research) kn-keyword=Žö‹ÆŠJ”­Œ¤‹† (Lesson development research) en-keyword=’†ŠwZŽÐ‰ï‰È (Junior high school social studies) kn-keyword=’†ŠwZŽÐ‰ï‰È (Junior high school social studies) en-keyword=–Í‹[Ù”» (Mock trial) kn-keyword=–Í‹[Ù”» (Mock trial) en-keyword=ŒY–@ (Criminal law) kn-keyword=ŒY–@ (Criminal law) END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=16 cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page=139 end-page=152 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260328 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title=Practical Issues on Differences in Hours of Attendance as Seen in an Interview of Initial Appointment Child Care Teachers kn-title=‰”C•ۈ狳—@‚ÌŒê‚è‚ÉŒ©‚鉀ޙ‚Ì݉€ŽžŠÔ‚̈Ⴂ‚É‚æ‚éŽÀ‘Hã‚̉ۑè en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract=In this paper, we examined practical issues and responses through interviews with novice childcare teachers with a focus on the differences in the length of kindergarteners' attendance time, which characterizes certified childcare centers. As a result, it became obvious that childcare teachers were aware of eight challenges. In addition to the challenge with respect to the gdevelopment of childcare ensuring the continuity of playh described in the gGuidelines for Education and Childcare for Certified Childcare Centers,h furthermore, a new challenge regarding gunderstanding of kindergarteners in consideration of their various attendance time and lifestylesh not described in it was identified. Differences in attendance time due to certification classification inevitably lead to differences in time schedules, locations, and groups during certified childcare centers life. Therefore, in order to clarify what common experiences should be established in certified childcare centers life, what differences in experience should be utilized, and what kind of childcare should be practiced based on the goals set by childcare teachers, a future challenge is to collect and organize good practice examples that have been accumulated so far in certified nurseries and to clarify indicators. kn-abstract=@–{˜_‚Å‚ÍC—c•Û˜AŒgŒ^”F’肱‚Ç‚à‰€‚Ì“Á’¥‚Å‚ ‚鉀ޙ‚Ì݉€ŽžŠÔ‚̈Ⴂ‚ÉÅ“_‚ð“–‚ÄC‰”C•ۈ狳—@‚Ö‚Ì–ÊÚ’²¸‚É‚æ‚èŽÀ‘Hã‚Ì‰Û‘è‚Æ‘Ήž‚ɂ‚¢‚ÄŒŸ“¢‚µ‚½B‚»‚ÌŒ‹‰ÊC•ۈ狳—@‚ª‚W‚‚̉ۑè‚ð”Fޝ‚µ‚Ä‚¢‚邱‚Æ‚ª–¾‚ç‚©‚ɂȂÁ‚½B‚Ü‚½Cw—c•Û˜AŒgŒ^”F’肱‚Ç‚à‰€‹³ˆçE•Ûˆç—v—Ìx‚É‹Lq‚³‚ê‚Ä‚¢‚éu—V‚т̘A‘±«‚ð•Ûá‚·‚é•Ûˆç‚Ì“WŠJv‚ÉŠÖ‚·‚é‰Û‘è‚ɉÁ‚¦‚ÄC‹Lq‚³‚ê‚Ä‚¢‚È‚¢u‘½—l‚È݉€ŽžŠÔ‚â¶ŠˆŒ`‘Ô‚ðl—¶‚µ‚½‰€Ž™—‰ðv‚ÉŠÖ‚·‚éV‚½‚ȉۑ肪Œ©o‚³‚ꂽB”F’è‹æ•ª‚É‚æ‚é݉€ŽžŠÔ‚̈Ⴂ‚͉€¶Šˆ‚É‚¨‚¯‚鎞ŠÔ“IƒXƒPƒWƒ…[ƒ‹‚âêŠCW’c‚̈Ⴂ‚ð—]‹V‚È‚­‚³‚ê‚éB‚»‚Ì‚½‚ßC•ۈ狳—@‚ªÝ’è‚·‚é‚˂炢‚ÉŠî‚¢‚½‰€¶Šˆ‚ʼn½‚ð‹¤’ÊŒoŒ±‚Æ‚·‚ׂ«“à—e‚Æ‚µ‚Äݒ肵C‰½‚ðŒoŒ±·‚Æ‚µ‚ÄŠˆ‚©‚µC‚ǂ̂悤‚ȕۈç‚ðŽÀ‘H‚·‚é‚©–¾Šm‚É‚·‚ׂ­C‚±‚ê‚܂ŔF’肱‚Ç‚à‰€‚ÅÏ‚Ýd‚Ë‚ç‚ê‚Ä‚«‚½DŽÀ‘H—á‚ðWÏE®—‚µCŽw•W‚𖾎¦‚·‚邱‚Æ‚ª¡Œã‚̉ۑè‚Å‚ ‚éB en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=HASUIKazuya en-aut-sei=HASUI en-aut-mei=Kazuya kn-aut-name=˜@ˆä˜a–ç kn-aut-sei=˜@ˆä kn-aut-mei=˜a–ç aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=KATAYAMAMika en-aut-sei=KATAYAMA en-aut-mei=Mika kn-aut-name=•ÐŽR”ü kn-aut-sei=•ÐŽR kn-aut-mei=”ü aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Faculty of Health and WelfareC Kawasaki University of Medical Welfare kn-affil=ìèˆã—ÕŸŽƒ‘åŠwˆã—ÕŸŽƒŠw•” affil-num=2 en-affil=Faculty of Education, Graduate School of Science, Okayama University kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠwŠwpŒ¤‹†‰@‹³ˆçŠwˆæ en-keyword=”F’肱‚Ç‚à‰€ (Certified Children Centers) kn-keyword=”F’肱‚Ç‚à‰€ (Certified Children Centers) en-keyword=݉€ŽžŠÔ‚̈Ⴂ (Differences in Hours of Attendance) kn-keyword=݉€ŽžŠÔ‚̈Ⴂ (Differences in Hours of Attendance) en-keyword=ŽÀ‘Hã‚̉ۑè (Issues in Childcare) kn-keyword=ŽÀ‘Hã‚̉ۑè (Issues in Childcare) en-keyword=‰”C•ۈ狳—@ (Initial Appointment Child Care Teachers) kn-keyword=‰”C•ۈ狳—@ (Initial Appointment Child Care Teachers) END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=16 cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page=123 end-page=137 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260328 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title=A Study on the Involvement of Community Wind Bands in the Community Development of Wind Band Activities; Can Community Wind Bands Serve as Key Supporters in Community Development of Club Activities? kn-title=‘tŠyŠˆ“®‚Ì’nˆæ“WŠJ‚É‚¨‚¯‚éŽs–¯‘tŠy’c‚ÌŠÖ‚í‚è‚ÉŠÖ‚·‚錤‹† \Žs–¯‘tŠy’c‚Í’nˆæ“WŠJ‚Ì’S‚¢Žè‚ɂȂ蓾‚é‚©\ en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract=In the community development of wind band activities, the shortage of instructors and rehearsal spaces has become an urgent issue. This study investigates whether community wind bands can serve as key supporters of community development of childrenf s wind band activities progresses. Based on interviews with 20 community wind bands in Okayama Prefecture and text mining analysis, the study revealed differences in their awareness toward community development of club activities. More proactive bands tended to view providing musical instruction to children and engaging in joint activities positively. On the other hand, concerns about instructional skills, time constraints, and the burden of responsibility were identified as potential obstacles. Furthermore, the findings suggest that utilizing public school facilities could help address the issues of rehearsal space and financial constraints faced by community wind bands. However, disparities among municipalities were also found in the actual implementation of public school facility use systems. kn-abstract=@‘tŠyŠˆ“®‚Ì’nˆæ“WŠJiˆÈ‰ºA’nˆæ“WŠJj‚É‚¨‚¢‚ÄAŽw“±ŽÒ‚⊈“®êŠ‚Ì•s‘«‚Í‹i‹Ù‚̉ۑè‚Å‚ ‚éB–{Œ¤‹†‚ÍA’nˆæ“WŠJ‚ªi‚Þ’†‚ÅAŽs–¯‘tŠy’c‚ª’nˆæ‚ÌŽq‚Ç‚à’B‚Ì‘tŠyŠˆ“®‚ðŽx‚¦‚é’S‚¢Žè‚ƂȂ蓾‚é‚©‚𒲸EŒŸ“¢‚µ‚½B‰ªŽRŒ§“à‚ÌŽs–¯‘tŠy’c20 ’c‘̂ւ̕·‚«Žæ‚è’²¸‚ƃeƒLƒXƒgƒ}ƒCƒjƒ“ƒO•ªÍ‚ÌŒ‹‰ÊA’nˆæ“WŠJ‚ւ̈ӎ¯‚ɂͷ‚ª‚Ý‚ç‚êAϋɓI‚È’c‘̂ł͎q‚Ç‚à’B‚̉‰‘tŽw“±‚⇓¯‚ł̊ˆ“®‚ðm’è“I‚É‘¨‚¦‚éŒXŒü‚ªŠm”F‚³‚ꂽBˆê•û‚ÅAŽw“±‹Zp‚⎞ŠÔ“I§–ñAÓ”C•‰’S‚Ö‚Ì•sˆÀ‚ªá•ǂƂȂÁ‚Ä‚¢‚é‰Â”\«‚ªŽ¦´‚³‚ꂽB‚Ü‚½AŽs–¯‘tŠy’c‚ª•ø‚¦‚銈“®êŠ‚âà­“I‚ȉۑè‚ɑ΂µ‚ÄŒö—§ŠwZŽ{݂̊ˆ—p‚ª‚»‚Ì‰ðŒˆ‚ÉŠñ—^‚µ“¾‚é‰Â”\«‚ªŽ¦´‚³‚ꂽBˆê•û‚ÅAŒö—§ŠwZ‚ÌŽ{ÝŠJ•ú‚ɂ‚¢‚Ä‚ÍAŽÀۂ̧“x‰^—p‚É‚¨‚¢‚ÄŽ©Ž¡‘ÌŠÔ‚ÌŠi·‚ª‘¶Ý‚·‚邱‚Æ‚ª–¾‚ç‚©‚ƂȂÁ‚½B en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=MAKINOKunihiko en-aut-sei=MAKINO en-aut-mei=Kunihiko kn-aut-name=ê –ì–M•F kn-aut-sei=ê –ì kn-aut-mei=–M•F aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Center for Teacher Education and DevelopmentAOkayama University kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠwŠwpŒ¤‹†‰@‹³ˆçŠwˆæ ‹³ˆç„i‹@\‹³Žt‹³ˆçŠJ”­ƒZƒ“ƒ^[ en-keyword=’nˆæ“WŠJ (community development of club activities) kn-keyword=’nˆæ“WŠJ (community development of club activities) en-keyword=Žs–¯‘tŠy’c (community wind band) kn-keyword=Žs–¯‘tŠy’c (community wind band) en-keyword=’nˆæƒNƒ‰ƒuŠˆ“® (regional club activities) kn-keyword=’nˆæƒNƒ‰ƒuŠˆ“® (regional club activities) en-keyword=ŠwZŽ{ÝŠJ•ú (community use of school facilities) kn-keyword=ŠwZŽ{ÝŠJ•ú (community use of school facilities) END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=16 cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page=107 end-page=121 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260328 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title=Developing Lesson Plan for Global Citizenship Education in Junior High School Music Education through Japan-Korea Music Cultural Exchange: Based on Research Findings from an Internship at APCEIU kn-title=“úŠØ‚̉¹Šy•¶‰»Œð—¬‚ð’Ê‚µ‚½’†ŠwZ‰¹Šy‰È‚É‚¨‚¯‚éƒOƒ[ƒoƒ‹EƒVƒeƒBƒYƒ“ƒVƒbƒv‹³ˆç‚Ì\‘z \APCEIU‚ł̃Cƒ“ƒ^[ƒ“ƒVƒbƒv‚É‚¨‚¯‚é’²¸‚̬‰Ê‚ÉŠî‚¢‚Ä\ en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract=This paper proposes a Global Citizenship Education program for junior high school music classes. The program aims to promote mutual understanding by having students examine the musical cultures of Japan and Korea, identifying their cultural differences and commonalities. In designing the program, author Konishi drew upon methods of GCED being implemented in Korea, identified through field research conducted during a roughly one-month internship at APCEIU (Asia-Pacific Centre of Education for International Understanding) in Seoul, Korea. The developed program focused on percussion instruments from both Japan and Korea. By comparing these instruments, students identified cultural differences between the two countries. The program then aimed to deepen students' understanding of cultural diversity and the unique value of each country's culture, while also helping them recognize the historical background underlying each nation's musical culture and accept these differences. kn-abstract=@–{˜_•¶‚ÍA’†ŠwZ‰¹Šy‰È‚É‚¨‚¢‚ÄA“ú–{‚ÆŠØ‘‚̉¹Šy•¶‰»‚ðŽæ‚èã‚°‚ÄAŒÝ‚¢‚Ì•¶‰»‚̈Ⴂ‚⋤’Ê«‚𑨂¦‚³‚¹‚½‚¤‚¦‚Å‘ŠŒÝ—‰ð‚ð‘£i‚·‚éAƒOƒ‹[ƒoƒ‹EƒVƒeƒBƒYƒ“ƒVƒbƒv‹³ˆçiˆÈ‰ºAGCED ‚Æ•\‹LjƒvƒƒOƒ‰ƒ€‚ð\‘z‚µ‚悤‚Æ‚·‚é‚à‚̂ł ‚éBƒvƒƒOƒ‰ƒ€‚Ì\‘z‚ÌÛ‚É‚ÍA•MŽÒ‚Å‚ ‚鬼‚ªAŠØ‘‚̃\ƒEƒ‹‚ÌAPCEIUiƒAƒWƒA‘¾•½—m‘Û—‰ð‹³ˆçƒZƒ“ƒ^[j‚Ås‚È‚Á‚½–ñˆê‚©ŒŽŠÔ‚̃Cƒ“ƒ^[ƒ“ƒVƒbƒv‚ÌŠÔ‚ÌŽÀ’n’²¸‚Å”cˆ¬‚µ‚½AŠØ‘‚Å“WŠJ‚³‚ê‚Ä‚¢‚éGCED ‚Ì•û–@‚ðŽQl‚É‚µ‚½BŠJ”­ƒvƒƒOƒ‰ƒ€‚Å‚ÍA“úŠØ—¼‘‚̑ŊyŠí‚ðŽæ‚èã‚°‚ÄA‚»‚Ì”äŠr‚©‚çŒÝ‚¢‚Ì•¶‰»‚̈Ⴂ‚𑨂¦‚³‚¹‚½‚¤‚¦‚ÅAˆá‚¢‚ðŽó‚¯“ü‚ê‚È‚ª‚çA‚»‚ꂼ‚ê‚Ì‘‚̉¹Šy•¶‰»‚̪’ê‚É‚ ‚é—ðŽj“I”wŒi‚É‹C‚©‚¹‚½‚¤‚¦‚ÅA•¶‰»‚Ì‘½—l«‚â—¼‘‚Ì•¶‰»‚̌ŗL‚̉¿’l‚ɑ΂·‚é—‰ð‚ð[‚߂邱‚Æ‚ð–ÚŽw‚µ‚½B en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=KONISHIHikari en-aut-sei=KONISHI en-aut-mei=Hikari kn-aut-name=¬¼Œõ kn-aut-sei=¬¼ kn-aut-mei=Œõ aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=KUWABARAToshinori en-aut-sei=KUWABARA en-aut-mei=Toshinori kn-aut-name=ŒKŒ´•q“T kn-aut-sei=ŒKŒ´ kn-aut-mei=•q“T aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=KONISHIYumi en-aut-sei=KONISHI en-aut-mei=Yumi kn-aut-name=¬¼—T”ü kn-aut-sei=¬¼ kn-aut-mei=—T”ü aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Graduate School of Education kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠw‘åŠw‰@‹³ˆçŠwŒ¤‹†‰È affil-num=2 en-affil=Faculty of Education kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠwŠwpŒ¤‹†‰@‹³ˆçŠwˆæ affil-num=3 en-affil=Graduate School of Education kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠw‘åŠw‰@‹³ˆçŠwŒ¤‹†‰È en-keyword=ƒOƒ[ƒoƒ‹EƒVƒeƒBƒYƒ“ƒVƒbƒv‹³ˆç (Global Citizenship Education) kn-keyword=ƒOƒ[ƒoƒ‹EƒVƒeƒBƒYƒ“ƒVƒbƒv‹³ˆç (Global Citizenship Education) en-keyword=‰¹Šy‰È (Music Education) kn-keyword=‰¹Šy‰È (Music Education) en-keyword=ˆÙ•¶‰»—‰ð (Cross-Cultural Understanding) kn-keyword=ˆÙ•¶‰»—‰ð (Cross-Cultural Understanding) en-keyword=Žö‹ÆŠJ”­ (Lesson Development) kn-keyword=Žö‹ÆŠJ”­ (Lesson Development) END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=16 cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page=91 end-page=105 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260328 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title=Practical Research on Nurturing the Next Generation of Classical Japanese Instrument Music that Connects the Local and the Global Community (3) . The Potential for Developing Intercultural Competence through Questionnaire Surveys of Elementary and Junior High School Student. kn-title=’nˆæŽÐ‰ï‚ƃOƒ[ƒoƒ‹‚ð‚‚Ȃ®˜aŠyŠí‰¹ŠyŽŸ¢‘ãˆç¬‚ÌŽÀ‘HŒ¤‹†i‚Rj ¬’†Šw¶‚ÌŽ¿–⎆’²¸‚ÉŒ©‚éuˆÙ•¶‰»ŠÔ”\—Ívˆç¬‚̉”\« en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=@–{Œ¤‹†‚ÍCu‚¨‚©‚â‚ܑۘaŠyŠíŠw¶ƒtƒFƒXƒeƒBƒoƒ‹v‚ÌŽÀ‘H‚É‚¨‚¯‚éCˆÙ•¶‰»ŠÔ”\—͈笂̉”\«‚ɂ‚¢‚ÄCŽQ‰Á‚µ‚½¬’†Šw¶‚ÌŽ¿–⎆’²¸Œ‹‰Ê‚©‚猟“¢‚µ‚½B
@‚»‚ÌŒ‹‰ÊC‚Pj‘ÌŒ±‚ð’Ê‚µ‚ÄŒ`¬‚³‚ꂽV‚½‚È”Fޝ‚É‚æ‚èC˜aŠyŠí‰¹Šy•¶‰»‚ÆŽ©ŒÈ‚Ƃ̊֌W«‚ðÄ”FޝEÄ\’z‚µC˜aŠyŠí‰¹Šy•¶‰»‚Ö‚ÌϋɓI‚ÈŠÖ—^‚ðŽ¦‚·‰¿’l‚¯EˆÓ–¡‚¯‚ªs‚í‚êC“à݉»‚ª‘£‚³‚ꂽ‚±‚ÆC‚Qj‰z‹«•¶‰»‚Æ‚µ‚Ă̘aŠyŠí‰¹Šy•¶‰»‚ɑ΂µ‚ÄCŠJ•ú“IE‘¸d“I‘Ô“x‚ðŽ¦‚µ‚Ä‚¢‚½‚ªCŽ©ŒÈ‚Ì•¶‰»“IƒAƒCƒfƒ“ƒeƒBƒeƒB‚ðˆÓޝ‚·‚éŒ_‹@‚ƂȂÁ‚½‚±‚ÆC‚Rj˜aŠyŠí‰¹Šy‚Ì‹¤—L‚ð’Ê‚µ‚Ķ‚¶‚½‹¤Š´‚Ìã‚ÉC‘ŠŒÝ—‰ð‚⋦“­ŠÖŒW‚ª\’z‚³‚ê‚Ä‚¢‚½‚±‚ÆC‚Sju•¶‰»‚Ì‹¤—L‚̉”\«‚ɂ‚¢‚Ă̔Fޝv‚ªŒ`¬‚³‚ê‚é‚È‚ÇCƒtƒFƒXƒeƒBƒoƒ‹‚ł̌oŒ±‚ªC•¶‰»ŠÏ‚ÌŒ`¬‚ɉe‹¿‚ð—^‚¦‚éŒ_‹@‚ƂȂÁ‚Ä‚¢‚½‚±‚ÆC‚ª–¾‚ç‚©‚ɂȂÁ‚½B en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=HAYAKAWARinko en-aut-sei=HAYAKAWA en-aut-mei=Rinko kn-aut-name=‘ì—ÏŽq kn-aut-sei=‘ì kn-aut-mei=—ÏŽq aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=BEPPUYuko en-aut-sei=BEPPU en-aut-mei=Yuko kn-aut-name=•Ê•{—SŽq kn-aut-sei=•Ê•{ kn-aut-mei=—SŽq aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=YAMAJIMiho en-aut-sei=YAMAJI en-aut-mei=Miho kn-aut-name=ŽR˜H‚݂٠kn-aut-sei=ŽR˜H kn-aut-mei=‚݂٠aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=HANAKUSAYoko en-aut-sei=HANAKUSA en-aut-mei=Yoko kn-aut-name=‰Ô‘—eŽq kn-aut-sei=‰Ô‘ kn-aut-mei=—eŽq aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=TAKESHITANoriko en-aut-sei=TAKESHITA en-aut-mei=Noriko kn-aut-name=’|‰º‘¥Žq kn-aut-sei=’|‰º kn-aut-mei=‘¥Žq aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=TAKASUHiromi en-aut-sei=TAKASU en-aut-mei=Hiromi kn-aut-name=ûü{—T”ü kn-aut-sei=ûü{ kn-aut-mei=—T”ü aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=MIYOSHIKeiko en-aut-sei=MIYOSHI en-aut-mei=Keiko kn-aut-name=ŽODŒ[Žq kn-aut-sei=ŽOD kn-aut-mei=Œ[Žq aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= en-aut-name=SHIMIZUNaoko en-aut-sei=SHIMIZU en-aut-mei=Naoko kn-aut-name=´…®Žq kn-aut-sei=´… kn-aut-mei=®Žq aut-affil-num=8 ORCID= en-aut-name=TOSAChihiro en-aut-sei=TOSA en-aut-mei=Chihiro kn-aut-name=“y²çh kn-aut-sei=“y² kn-aut-mei=çh aut-affil-num=9 ORCID= en-aut-name=NAKAMURA Ai en-aut-sei=NAKAMURA en-aut-mei=Ai kn-aut-name=’†‘ºˆ¤ kn-aut-sei=’†‘º kn-aut-mei=ˆ¤ aut-affil-num=10 ORCID= en-aut-name=HIGUCHIAki en-aut-sei=HIGUCHI en-aut-mei=Aki kn-aut-name=”óŒûˆŸŠó kn-aut-sei=”óŒû kn-aut-mei=ˆŸŠó aut-affil-num=11 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Okayama University kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠwŠwpŒ¤‹†‰@‹³ˆçŠwˆæ affil-num=2 en-affil=Kurashiki City College kn-affil=‘q•~Žs—§’ZŠú‘åŠw affil-num=3 en-affil=Part-time Lecturer at Okayama University kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠw”ñí‹ÎuŽt affil-num=4 en-affil=Research Student at the Joint Graduate School in Science of School Education Hyogo University of Teacher Education kn-affil=•ºŒÉ‹³ˆç‘åŠw‘åŠw‰@˜A‡ŠwZ‹³ˆçŠwŒ¤‹†‰È affil-num=5 en-affil=Biwako-Gakuin University kn-affil=‚т킱Šw‰@‘åŠw’ZŠú‘åŠw•” affil-num=6 en-affil=Okayama University kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠwŠwpŒ¤‹†‰@‹³ˆçŠwˆæ affil-num=7 en-affil=Research Student at the Joint Graduate School in Science of School Education Hyogo University of Teacher Education kn-affil=•ºŒÉ‹³ˆç‘åŠw‘åŠw‰@˜A‡ŠwZ‹³ˆçŠwŒ¤‹†‰È affil-num=8 en-affil=Doctoral Student at the Joint Graduate School in Science of School Education Hyogo University of Teacher Education kn-affil=•ºŒÉ‹³ˆç‘åŠw‘åŠw‰@˜A‡ŠwZ‹³ˆçŠwŒ¤‹†‰È affil-num=9 en-affil=Yamaha Corporation kn-affil=ƒ„ƒ}ƒnДޮ‰ïŽÐŠyŠíŽ–‹Æ–{•” affil-num=10 en-affil=Doctoral Student at the Joint Graduate School in Science of School Education Hyogo University of Teacher Education kn-affil=•ºŒÉ‹³ˆç‘åŠw‘åŠw‰@˜A‡ŠwZ‹³ˆçŠwŒ¤‹†‰È affil-num=11 en-affil=Okayama Prefectural School for the Deaf kn-affil=‰ªŽRŒ§—§‰ªŽR˜WŠwZ en-keyword=˜aŠyŠí‰¹Šy (Classical Japanese instrument) kn-keyword=˜aŠyŠí‰¹Šy (Classical Japanese instrument) en-keyword=ˆÙ•¶‰»ŠÔ”\—Í (eIntercultural Competencef) kn-keyword=ˆÙ•¶‰»ŠÔ”\—Í (eIntercultural Competencef) en-keyword=ŽŸ¢‘ãˆç¬ (the next generation) kn-keyword=ŽŸ¢‘ãˆç¬ (the next generation) en-keyword=Ž¿–⎆’²¸ (questionnaire survey) kn-keyword=Ž¿–⎆’²¸ (questionnaire survey) en-keyword=¬Šw¶E’†Šw¶ (elementary and junior high school students) kn-keyword=¬Šw¶E’†Šw¶ (elementary and junior high school students) END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=16 cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page=75 end-page=89 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260328 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title=Summer Climate around Germany and the German Lied gIm Fr?hlingh (In Spring) by F. Schubert: A Report of an Interdisciplinary Lesson Practice at the University Leading to the Understanding of Heterogeneous Others kn-title=ƒhƒCƒc•t‹ß‚̉Ă̋CŒó‚ƃVƒ…[ƒxƒ‹ƒg‚̉̋Èst‚Ét ˆÙŽ¿‚È‘¼ŽÒ‚Æ‚Ìo‰ï‚¢‚𑣂·‘åŠw‚ł̊wÛ“IŽö‹Æ‚Ì•ñ en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract=An interdisciplinary lesson practice for the university students leading to the understanding of heterogeneous others was made on a topic of summer climate and the seasonal feeling around Germany, as a continuing study of Kato et al. (2025). In the lesson practice, details of the climate and seasonal cycle around Germany were firstly explained and the German lied gIm Fr?hlingh (In spring) composed by F. Schubert was appreciated, paying attention to how the scenes and emotions expressed by the lyrics gall summer longh in the 3rd verse of this song might differ whether we imagine the climate around Germany or that around Japan. It seems that the present activity provided an opportunity for the students to perceive the climate environments and seasonal feelings quite different from those familiar to them . However, how to explore the appreciation activities that focus also on the musical expression itself of that song is an interesting remaining problem, in order for the students to capture the summer scenery and emotions which Schubert himself imagined. kn-abstract=@uˆÙŽ¿‚È‘¼ŽÒv‚Ö‚Ìo‰ï‚¢‚𑣂·Žö‹Æ—á‚ÌX‚È‚é’~ς̂½‚ßCƒhƒCƒc•t‹ß‚Ìu‰Äv‚Ì‹CŒó‚Æ‹Gߊ´‚É’–Ú‚µ‚½‹³‰È‰¡’f“I‚ÈŽö‹Æ‚ð‘åŠw‚ÅŽÀ‘H‚µ‚½BŽö‹Æ‚Å‚ÍCƒhƒCƒc•t‹ß‚Ì‹CŒó‚Æ‹G߃TƒCƒNƒ‹‚Ì’†‚Å‚Ìu‰Äv‚Ì“Á’¥‚ð”cˆ¬‚·‚邯‹¤‚ÉCƒVƒ…[ƒxƒ‹ƒg‚̉̋Èst‚Ét‚ðŠÓÜ‚µ‚½Bst‚Ét‚Ì3 ”Ô‚Ìu‰Ä‚ÌŠÔ‚¶‚イC‚¸‚Á‚Æv‚Æ‚¢‚¤‰ÌŽŒ‚ʼn̂í‚ê‚Ä‚¢‚éîŒi‚â‚ªCƒhƒCƒc•t‹ß‚Æ“ú–{•t‹ß‚ð‘z’肵‚½ê‡‚ɂǂ¤ˆá‚¢“¾‚é‚©C‚ÉŠÖ‚·‚éŽóu¶‚Ì‹Lq‚ð•ªÍ‚µ‚½B‚»‚ÌŒ‹‰ÊC“ú–{‚̉Ă̂‰·‘½Ž¼‚Ȋ‹«‚©‚ç‚ÍŒ´Ž‚Ì‚»‚Ì‚à‚Ì‚ª¬—§‚µ“ï‚¢‚ÆŠ´‚¶‚½Šw¶‚à‚¢‚é‚È‚ÇC–{ŽÀ‘H‚ÍCŽ©•ª‚½‚¿‚Ìu“–‚½‚è‘Ov‚Ƃ͈قȂé‹CŒó‚â‹Gߊ´‚É‚à–Ú‚ðŒü‚¯‚é‹@‰ï‚ɂȂ蓾‚½‚Æ‚¢‚¦‚éBˆê•ûC“ú–{‚Ƃ͂©‚È‚èˆá‚¤‹CŒó”wŒi‚Ì’†‚ŃVƒ…[ƒxƒ‹ƒg‚ªŽv‚¢•`‚¢‚½‚Å‚ ‚낤îŒiESî‚ÉŽö‹Æ‚Å[‚­”—‚邽‚ß‚ÌC‰¹Šy•\Œ»Ž©‘̂ւ̓¥‚Ýž‚Ý•û‚ɂ‚¢‚Ä‚àC¡ŒãŒŸ“¢‚·‚é•K—v«‚ªŽ¦´‚³‚ꂽB en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=KATOKuranoshin en-aut-sei=KATO en-aut-mei=Kuranoshin kn-aut-name=‰Á“¡“àåUi kn-aut-sei=‰Á“¡ kn-aut-mei=“àåUi aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=NAGAOKAIsao en-aut-sei=NAGAOKA en-aut-mei=Isao kn-aut-name=’·‰ªŒ÷ kn-aut-sei=’·‰ª kn-aut-mei=Œ÷ aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=KATOHaruko en-aut-sei=KATO en-aut-mei=Haruko kn-aut-name=‰Á“¡°Žq kn-aut-sei=‰Á“¡ kn-aut-mei=°Žq aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Faculty of Education, Okayama University kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠwŠwpŒ¤‹†‰@‹³ˆçŠwˆæ affil-num=2 en-affil=Faculty of Education, Okayama University kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠwŠwpŒ¤‹†‰@‹³ˆçŠwˆæ affil-num=3 en-affil=Faculty of Education, Gufu Shotoku Gakuen University (Former affiliation) kn-affil=Œ³@Šò•Œ¹“¿Šw‰€‘åŠw‹³ˆçŠw•” en-keyword=‹CŒó‚Ɖ¹Šy kn-keyword=‹CŒó‚Ɖ¹Šy en-keyword=ƒhƒCƒc•t‹ß‚̉Ă̋CŒó‚Æ‹Gߊ´ kn-keyword=ƒhƒCƒc•t‹ß‚̉Ă̋CŒó‚Æ‹Gߊ´ en-keyword=‹CŒó‚Æ•¶‰»—‰ð‚ÌŠwÛ“IESD‹³Žt‹³ˆç kn-keyword=‹CŒó‚Æ•¶‰»—‰ð‚ÌŠwÛ“IESD‹³Žt‹³ˆç en-keyword=ˆÙŽ¿‚È‘¼ŽÒ‚Ö‚Ì—‰ð kn-keyword=ˆÙŽ¿‚È‘¼ŽÒ‚Ö‚Ì—‰ð END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=16 cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page=61 end-page=73 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260328 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title=Study on Physical Activity Levels During Soccer Matches Among Junior High School Students Focusing on Position and Physical/Fitness Characteristics kn-title=’†Šw¶‚ð‘ÎÛ‚Æ‚µ‚½ƒTƒbƒJ[ŽŽ‡’†‚Ìg‘ÌŠˆ“®—ʂɊւ·‚錤‹† `ƒ|ƒWƒVƒ‡ƒ“‚Æg‘ÌE‘Ì—Í“Á«‚É’…–Ú‚µ‚Ä` en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract=We compared physical and fitness characteristics by soccer position using results from the New Physical Fitness Test administered to 30 junior high school students. Additionally, we compared differences in physical activity levels by position during soccer matches while wearing LC devices. The results showed no significant differences in physical or fitness characteristics between positions. However, significant differences were observed between positions in step count and the proportion of time spent in physical activity by intensity level. This revealed that physical activity levels during soccer matches differ between positions even among junior high school students, clarifying position-specific characteristics in soccer. It also suggested the usefulness of evaluating physical activity levels during matches over time. kn-abstract=@’†Šw¶34l‚ð‘ÎÛ‚Æ‚µCg‘ÌE‘Ì—Í“Á«‚ƃTƒbƒJ[ŽŽ‡’†‚Ìg‘ÌŠˆ“®—ʂɂ‚¢‚ÄCƒ|ƒWƒVƒ‡ƒ“‚É’…–Ú‚µ‚Ä”äŠrEŒŸ“¢‚µ‚½D‚»‚ÌŒ‹‰ÊCg‘ÌE‘Ì—Í“Á«‚ɂ‚¢‚Ă̓|ƒWƒVƒ‡ƒ“ŠÔ‚É—LˆÓ‚È·‚Í”F‚ß‚ç‚ê‚È‚©‚Á‚½D•à”‚Å‚Íƒ|ƒWƒVƒ‡ƒ“ŠÔ‚Å—LˆÓ·‚ª”F‚ß‚ç‚êCƒ‰ƒCƒgƒTƒCƒhƒoƒbƒN‚ª­‚È‚­CƒZƒ“ƒ^[ƒ~ƒbƒhƒtƒBƒ‹ƒ_[‚ª‚‚©‚Á‚½D‹­“x•Êg‘ÌŠˆ“®—ÊŽžŠÔ‚ÌŠ„‡‚ł̓|ƒWƒVƒ‡ƒ“ŠÔ‚Å—LˆÓ·‚ª”F‚ß‚ç‚êCƒ‰ƒCƒgƒTƒCƒhƒoƒbƒN‚ª’á‚­CƒZƒ“ƒ^[ƒ~ƒbƒhƒtƒBƒ‹ƒ_[‚ª‚‚©‚Á‚½DˆÈã‚Ì‚±‚Æ‚©‚çC–{Œ¤‹†‚Ì‘ÎÛ’†Šw¶‚ł̓|ƒWƒVƒ‡ƒ“ŠÔ‚Åg‘ÌE‘Ì—Í“Á«‚ɂ͗LˆÓ·‚ª”F‚ß‚ç‚ê‚È‚¢‚ªCƒTƒbƒJ[ŽŽ‡’†‚Ìg‘ÌŠˆ“®—ʂł̓|ƒWƒVƒ‡ƒ“ŠÔ‚Å·‚ª¶‚¶‚邱‚Æ‚ªŽ¦´‚³‚ꂽD en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=NATSUMEDATakaaki en-aut-sei=NATSUMEDA en-aut-mei=Takaaki kn-aut-name=ž¥“c‘¸‹M kn-aut-sei=ž¥“c kn-aut-mei=‘¸‹M aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=ADACHIMinoru en-aut-sei=ADACHI en-aut-mei=Minoru kn-aut-name=‘«—§–« kn-aut-sei=‘«—§ kn-aut-mei=–« aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Graduate School of Education, Okayama University kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠw‘åŠw‰@‹³ˆçŠwŒ¤‹†‰È affil-num=2 en-affil=Okayama University Graduate School of Education kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠwŠwpŒ¤‹†‰@‹³ˆçŠwˆæ en-keyword=ƒTƒbƒJ[ (Soccer) kn-keyword=ƒTƒbƒJ[ (Soccer) en-keyword=’†Šw¶ (Junior High School Students) kn-keyword=’†Šw¶ (Junior High School Students) en-keyword=‰Á‘¬“xŒv (Accelerometer) kn-keyword=‰Á‘¬“xŒv (Accelerometer) en-keyword=V‘̗̓eƒXƒg (New Physical Fitness Test) kn-keyword=V‘̗̓eƒXƒg (New Physical Fitness Test) END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=16 cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page=45 end-page=59 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260328 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title=Physical Activity and Physical Fitness in the School Life of Elementary School Children kn-title=¬Šw¶‚ÌŠwZ¶Šˆ‚É‚¨‚¯‚ég‘ÌŠˆ“®—ʂƑ̗͂Ɋւ·‚錤‹† en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract=@The purpose of this study was to objectively measure physical activity levels during different school settings among sixth-grade elementary school children using an accelerometer, and to examine their relationship with physical fitness. Participants were 85 children (41 boys, 44 girls). Step counts and time spent in different activity intensities were evaluated during recess, physical education (PE) classes, and the whole school day. Results showed that children with higher fitness levels tended to have greater step counts and more moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (MVPA) during recess. Significant differences were found in morning recess for boys and in lunch recess and PE classes for girls. The proportion of MVPA was 11.3% during recess and 15.7% during PE classes, which was lower than that reported in other countries and did not meet international recommendations. This study provides fundamental data on physical activity in elementary school settings and suggests the importance of enhancing opportunities for physical activity, parti cularly during recess and PE classes. kn-abstract=@–{Œ¤‹†‚Ì–Ú“I‚ÍC¬ŠwZ6”N¶‚ÌŠwZ¶Šˆ‚É‚¨‚¯‚銈“®ê–ʕʂÌg‘ÌŠˆ“®—Ê‚ð‰Á‘¬“xŒv‚ð—p‚¢‚Ä‹qŠÏ“I‚É‘ª’肵C‚»‚̗̑͂Ƃ̊֌W‚ðŒŸ“¢‚·‚邱‚Ƃł ‚éD‘ÎۂͬŠwZŽ™“¶85–¼(’jŽq41–¼C—Žq44–¼)‚Æ‚µC‹x‚ÝŽžŠÔC‘̈çŽö‹ÆCŠwZ¶Šˆ‘S‘̂ɂ¨‚¯‚é•à”‚Æ‹­“x•ÊŠˆ“®ŽžŠÔ‚ð•]‰¿‚µ‚½D‚»‚ÌŒ‹‰ÊC’j—‚Æ‚à‚ɑ̗ÍãˆÊŒQ‚Í‹x‚ÝŽžŠÔ‚É‚¨‚¢‚Ä•à”‚ÆMVPA‚ª‘½‚¢ŒXŒü‚ªŽ¦‚³‚êC“Á‚É’jŽq‚Í’†‹x‚ÝC—Žq‚Í’‹‹x‚Ý‚¨‚æ‚ё̈çŽö‹Æ‚Å—LˆÓ·‚ª”F‚ß‚ç‚ꂽDŠeŠˆ“®ê–Ê‚ÌMVPA ‚ªè‚߂銄‡‚Í‹x‚ÝŽžŠÔ11.3“C‘̈çŽö‹Æ15.7“‚Å‚ ‚èC”ŠO‘‚Æ”äŠr‚µ‚Ä­‚È‚­C‘Û“I„§’l‚É‚à“Í‚©‚È‚©‚Á‚½D–{Œ¤‹†‚ÍC¬ŠwZ‚É‚¨‚¯‚ég‘ÌŠˆ“®—ʂ̊î‘bƒf[ƒ^‚ð’ñަ‚·‚邯‚Æ‚à‚ÉCŠwZ¶ŠˆC“Á‚É‹x‚ÝŽžŠÔ‚â‘̈çŽö‹Æ‚É‚¨‚¯‚ég‘ÌŠˆ“®‹@‰ï‚Ì[ŽÀ‚ª•K—v‚Å‚ ‚邱‚Æ‚ðŽ¦´‚µ‚½D en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=YASUNOBEJin en-aut-sei=YASUNOBE en-aut-mei=Jin kn-aut-name=ˆÀ‰„m kn-aut-sei=ˆÀ‰„ kn-aut-mei=m aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=SASAYAMAKensaku en-aut-sei=SASAYAMA en-aut-mei=Kensaku kn-aut-name=ùŽRŒ’ì kn-aut-sei=ùŽR kn-aut-mei=Œ’ì aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=ADACHIMinoru en-aut-sei=ADACHI en-aut-mei=Minoru kn-aut-name=‘«—§–« kn-aut-sei=‘«—§ kn-aut-mei=–« aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Graduate School of Education, Okayama University kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠw‘åŠw‰@‹³ˆçŠwŒ¤‹†‰È affil-num=2 en-affil=Faculty of Education, Mie University kn-affil=ŽOd‘åŠw‹³ˆçŠw•” affil-num=3 en-affil=Faculty of Education, Okayama University kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠwŠwpŒ¤‹†‰@‹³ˆçŠwˆæ en-keyword=‰Á‘¬“xŒv (accelerometer) kn-keyword=‰Á‘¬“xŒv (accelerometer) en-keyword=g‘ÌŠˆ“®—Ê (physical activity) kn-keyword=g‘ÌŠˆ“®—Ê (physical activity) en-keyword=‘Ì—Í (physical fitness) kn-keyword=‘Ì—Í (physical fitness) en-keyword=¬ŠwZŽ™“¶ (elementary school children) kn-keyword=¬ŠwZŽ™“¶ (elementary school children) END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=16 cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page=31 end-page=44 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260328 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title=Analysis of Factors Contributing to Confusion Regarding Left-Right Understanding of Convex Lens Images ?Proposals for Inquiry-Based Learning Based on Textbook Analysis and Teacher Questionnaire? kn-title=“ʃŒƒ“ƒY‚Ì‘œ‚̶‰E—‰ð‚ÉŠÖ‚·‚鬗‚Ì—vˆö•ªÍ ‹³‰È‘•ªÍ‚Æ‹³ˆõƒAƒ“ƒP[ƒg‚É‚æ‚é’T‹†“I‚ÈŠw‚тւ̒ñˆÄ en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract=This study focused on the confusion students experience regarding the orientation of images during the learning of convex lens in junior high school. It examined the causes of this confusion, identifying insufficient awareness of experimental conditions such as the light source, screen, and observation location. To investigate, the study analyzed changes in the Course of Study for Lower Secondary Schools and textbooks and conducted a questionnaire survey of science teachers. The results revealed that while textbook descriptions have shifted toward specifying the observation location, teaching methods among teachers vary, causing confusion of students. To address these issues, a 3D-printed teaching material was developed that naturally fixes the observation viewpoint. Its effectiveness was examined through teacher training. This material was found to be effective in promoting students' intuitive understanding and bringing inquiry-based learning. kn-abstract=@–{Œ¤‹†‚ÍA’†ŠwZ—‰È‚̓ʃŒƒ“ƒYŠwK‚Ŷ“k‚ª‘œ‚ÌŒü‚«‚É•ø‚­¬—‚É’…–Ú‚µ‚½B‚»‚Ì—vˆö‚ðAŒõŒ¹EƒXƒNƒŠ[ƒ“EŠÏŽ@ꊂƂ¢‚Á‚½ŽÀŒ±ðŒ‚ª\•ª‚Ɉӎ¯‚³‚ê‚Ä‚±‚È‚©‚Á‚½“_‚É‚ ‚邯lŽ@‚µAŠwKŽw“±—v—̂Ƌ³‰È‘‚̕ϑJ•ªÍA‚¨‚æ‚ÑŒ»E‹³ˆõ‚ւ̃Aƒ“ƒP[ƒg’²¸‚ðŽÀŽ{‚µ‚½B‚»‚ÌŒ‹‰ÊA‹³‰È‘‚Ì‹Lq‚ÍŠÏŽ@ꊂðŽw’è‚·‚é•ûŒü‚֕ω»‚µ‚Ä‚¢‚é‚à‚Ì‚ÌAŒ»ê‹³ˆõ‚ÌŽw“±–@‚ɂ͂΂ç‚‚«‚ª‚ ‚èA¶“k‚̬—‚𵂭ˆêˆö‚ƂȂÁ‚Ä‚¢‚邱‚Ƃ𖾂炩‚É‚µ‚½B‚±‚ê‚ç‚̉ۑè‰ðŒˆ‚Ì‚½‚ßAŠÏŽ@Ž‹“_‚ðŽ©‘R‚ɌŒè‚Å‚«‚é3D ƒvƒŠƒ“ƒ^»‹³Þ‚ðŠJ”­‚µA‹³ˆõŒ¤C‚Å‚»‚Ì—LŒø«‚ðŒŸ“¢‚µ‚½B–{‹³Þ‚Ͷ“k‚Ì’¼Š´“I—‰ð‚𑣂µA’T‹†“I‚ÈŠw‚Ñ‚ðˆø‚«o‚·ã‚Å—LŒø‚Å‚ ‚邱‚Æ‚ªŽ¦´‚³‚ꂽB en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=TANIMOTOKunihiko en-aut-sei=TANIMOTO en-aut-mei=Kunihiko kn-aut-name=’J–{ŒO•F kn-aut-sei=’J–{ kn-aut-mei=ŒO•F aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=INADAYoshihiko en-aut-sei=INADA en-aut-mei=Yoshihiko kn-aut-name=ˆî“c‰À•F kn-aut-sei=ˆî“c kn-aut-mei=‰À•F aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Faculty of Education, Okayama University kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠwŠwpŒ¤‹†‰@‹³ˆçŠwˆæ affil-num=2 en-affil=Faculty of Education, Okayama University kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠwŠwpŒ¤‹†‰@‹³ˆçŠwˆæ en-keyword=“ʃŒƒ“ƒY (Convex lens) kn-keyword=“ʃŒƒ“ƒY (Convex lens) en-keyword=㉺¶‰E‹t (the orientation of images) kn-keyword=㉺¶‰E‹t (the orientation of images) en-keyword=‹³‰È‘ (Textbooks) kn-keyword=‹³‰È‘ (Textbooks) en-keyword=ŠwKŽw“±—v—Ì (Course of Study) kn-keyword=ŠwKŽw“±—v—Ì (Course of Study) en-keyword=‚RD ƒvƒŠƒ“ƒ^ (3D printer) kn-keyword=‚RD ƒvƒŠƒ“ƒ^ (3D printer) END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=16 cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page=15 end-page=29 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260328 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title=Critical Reading Instruction of Expository Text that Promotes Reflecting: Practice for First-year Student at High School kn-title=à–¾“I•¶Í‚ÌŽw“±‚É‚¨‚¯‚éu“àÈv‚𑣂·”á”»“I“Ç‚Ý \‚“™ŠwZ‚P”N¶‚ð‘ÎÛ‚Æ‚µ‚Ä\ en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract=@Critical reading is an essential skill at present time and is included in government guidelines for teaching. Although recent research on teaching critical reading has been conducted, there have been criticisms that lack of consideration of content value and understanding context within society. There are also calls for critical reading that focuses on the perspective of greflecth . Therefore, this paper developed a lesson that encourages students not only critically read the text, but also critically consider (reflect on) their own ideas. As a measure to achieve this, incorporated activities such as comparing two teaching materials that contained multiple social perceptions, exchanging opinions from opposing perspectives, writing an evaluation of the materials, and having the students themselves evaluate their own writing (their own reading). Analysis of the studentsf writings shows that, while some students didnf t reach conscious reflection, about 60% of studentsf writings showed changes. And then it suggests that the methods used were effective. kn-abstract=@”á”»“I“ǂ݂ÍCŒ»‘ã‚ł͌‡‚©‚¹‚È‚¢”\—͂ł ‚èCŠwKŽw“±—v—Ì‚É‚à–¾‹L‚³‚ê‚Ä‚¢‚éB‹ß”NC”á”»“I“ǂ݂̎w“±‚ÉŠÖ‚·‚錤‹†‚ª‚È‚³‚ê‚Ä‚¢‚é‚à‚Ì‚ÌC“à—e“I‚ȉ¿’l‚ÌŒŸ“¢‚âŽÐ‰ï“I‚È•¶–¬‚̂Ȃ©‚Å‘¨‚¦‚邱‚Æ‚ªŠó”–‚¾‚Æ‚·‚éŽw“E‚âCu”½È«v‚Æ‚¢‚¤ŠÏ“_‚É’…–Ú‚µ‚½”á”»“I“ǂ݂ð‹‚ß‚éº‚à‚ ‚éB‚»‚±‚ÅC–{e‚Å‚ÍC•¶Í‚»‚Ì‚à‚Ì‚ð”á”»“I‚ɓǂނ¾‚¯‚łȂ­CŽ©g‚ÌŽ‚Á‚Ä‚¢‚él‚¦‚ð‚à”á”»“I‚É‘¨‚¦‚éi“àÈ‚·‚éj‚±‚Ƃ𑣂·Žö‹Æ‚ðŠJ”­‚µ‚½B‚»‚ÌŽè—§‚ĂƂµ‚ÄC•¡”‚̎Љï”Fޝ‚ª‘¶Ý‚·‚é“ñ‚‚̋³Þ‚̓ǂݔä‚ׂ½‚¤‚¦‚ÅC‘Η§‚·‚é—§ê‚©‚ç‚̈ӌ©ŒðŠ·‚ðs‚¤‚±‚Æ‚âC‹³Þ‚ɑ΂·‚é•]‰¿‚Ì‹LqC‚»‚Ì‹LqiŽ©ŒÈ‚̓ǂÝj‚ðŠwKŽÒŽ©g‚ª•]‰¿‚·‚邯‚¢‚Á‚½Šˆ“®‚ðŽæ‚è“ü‚ꂽBŠwKŽÒ‚Ì‹Lq‚Ì•ªÍ‚©‚ç‚ÍCˆÓޝ“I‚È“àÈ‚ÉŽŠ‚ç‚È‚©‚Á‚½ŠwKŽÒ‚àŒ©Žó‚¯‚ç‚ꂽ‚à‚Ì‚ÌC–ñ‚UŠ„‚ÌŠwKŽÒ‚Ì‹Lq‚ɂ͕ϗe‚ªŒ©‚ç‚êC—p‚¢‚½Žè—§‚Ă͌ø‰Ê‚ª‚ ‚Á‚½‚Æ„‘ª‚Å‚«‚邱‚Æ‚ðŽw“E‚µ‚½B en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=SAISHOYumi en-aut-sei=SAISHO en-aut-mei=Yumi kn-aut-name=őЗL–¢ kn-aut-sei=őРkn-aut-mei=—L–¢ aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=IKEDAMasafumi en-aut-sei=IKEDA en-aut-mei=Masafumi kn-aut-name=’r“c‹§Žj kn-aut-sei=’r“c kn-aut-mei=‹§Žj aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Graduate School of Education (Professional Degree Corse), Okayama University kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠw‘åŠw‰@‹³ˆçŠwŒ¤‹†‰È affil-num=2 en-affil=Faculty of Education, Okayama University kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠwŠwpŒ¤‹†‰@‹³ˆçŠwˆæ en-keyword=”½È« (reflectiveness) kn-keyword=”½È« (reflectiveness) en-keyword=îˆÓ“I«Œü (affective disposition) kn-keyword=îˆÓ“I«Œü (affective disposition) en-keyword=•¡”ƒeƒNƒXƒg (multiple texts) kn-keyword=•¡”ƒeƒNƒXƒg (multiple texts) en-keyword=uŒ»‘ã‚Ì‘Œêv (gContemporary Japanese Languageh) kn-keyword=uŒ»‘ã‚Ì‘Œêv (gContemporary Japanese Languageh) en-keyword=¶•¨‘½—l« (biodiversity) kn-keyword=¶•¨‘½—l« (biodiversity) END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=16 cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page=1 end-page=13 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260328 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title=Preschool Teachersf Strategies and Practical Challenges in Supporting the School Enrollment of Foreign Children kn-title=ŠO‘l—cŽ™‚ÌAŠwŽx‰‡‚É‚¨‚¯‚é•ÛˆçŽm‚ÌH•v‚ÆŽÀ‘H“I‰Û‘è en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract=This study aimed to clarify the specific practices and challenges faced by preschool teachers in supporting foreign children at the time of school enrollment. Semi-structured interviews were conducted with two preschool teachers who had experience in supporting foreign children, and qualitative analysis using SCAT was applied to organize the support provided to both children and their parents. The results revealed that, in terms of language support, teachers utilized visual aids and simplified Japanese, while in cultural support they sought to balance family culture with the culture of the preschool. Regarding developmental support, the importance of fostering non-cognitive skills and collaborating with medical institutions was highlighted. In parent support, participatory involvement and careful explanations were practiced; however, challenges remained in providing institutional information and establishing collaboration with local governments. Based on these findings, it is necessary to establish a regional collaborative system that can provide institutional support for families with multicultural backgrounds, standardize the provision of information, and build practical mechanisms to connect with Japanese language education resources, so that support does not rely solely on the individual efforts of preschool teachers. kn-abstract=@–{Œ¤‹†‚ÍCŠO‘l—cŽ™‚ªAŠwŠú‚É’¼–Ê‚·‚颓ï‚ɑΉž‚·‚邽‚ßC•ÛˆçŽm‚ªs‚Á‚Ä‚¢‚é‹ï‘Ì“I‚ȕۈçŽÀ‘H‚É‚¨‚¯‚éŽx‰‡‚ÌH•v‚Ɖۑè‚𖾂炩‚É‚·‚邱‚Æ‚ð–Ú“I‚Æ‚µ‚½BŠO‘l—cŽ™‚ÌŽx‰‡ŒoŒ±‚ð—L‚·‚é•ÛˆçŽm2 –¼‚É”¼\‘¢‰»ƒCƒ“ƒ^ƒrƒ…[‚ðs‚¢CSCAT ‚ð—p‚¢‚½Ž¿“I•ªÍ‚É‚æ‚èC—cŽ™‚¨‚æ‚ѕیìŽÒ‚Ö‚ÌŽx‰‡“à—e‚ð®—‚µ‚½B‚»‚ÌŒ‹‰ÊCŒ¾Œê–ʂł͎‹Šo“IŽx‰‡‚â‚₳‚µ‚¢“ú–{Œê‚ðŠˆ—p‚µC•¶‰»–ʂł͉ƒ땶‰»‚Æ“ú–{‚̉€•¶‰»‚Ì’²®‚ªs‚í‚ê‚Ä‚¢‚½B”­’BŽx‰‡‚É‚¨‚¢‚Ä‚ÍC”ñ”F’m“IƒXƒLƒ‹‚̈笂âˆã—Ë@ŠÖ‚Ƃ̘AŒg‚Ì•K—v«‚ªŽw“E‚³‚ꂽB•ÛŒìŽÒŽx‰‡‚Å‚ÍCŽQ‰ÁŒ^‚ÌŠÖ‚í‚è‚â’š”J‚Èà–¾‚ªŽÀ‘H‚³‚ê‚Ä‚¢‚½‚ªC§“xî•ñ‚Ì’ñ‹Ÿ‚âs­‚Ƃ̘AŒg‚ɂ͉ۑ肪Žc‚³‚ꂽB‚±‚ê‚ç‚ÌŒ‹‰Ê‚𓥂܂¦C¡Œã‚͕ۈçŽm‚̌•ʓI“w—͂Ɉˑ¶‚µ‚È‚¢‚½‚߂ɂàC‘½•¶‰»”wŒi‚ð‚à‚‰ƒë‚Ö‚ÌŽx‰‡‚ð§“x“I‚ÉŽx‚¦‚é’nˆæ˜AŒg‘̧‚Ì®”õ‚âCî•ñ’ñ‹Ÿ‚Ì•W€‰»C“ú–{Œê‹³ˆçŽ‘Œ¹‚Æ‚ÌÚ‘±‚ð}‚éŽÀ‘H“IŽd‘g‚Ý‚Ì\’z‚ª‹‚ß‚ç‚ê‚éB en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=CHENYiwen en-aut-sei=CHEN en-aut-mei=Yiwen kn-aut-name=’ˆ˕¶ kn-aut-sei=’ kn-aut-mei=ˆË•¶ aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=YANAGISAWAKazuki en-aut-sei=YANAGISAWA en-aut-mei=Kazuki kn-aut-name=–öàV‰ÀŒŽ kn-aut-sei=–öàV kn-aut-mei=‰ÀŒŽ aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=REN Xinyu en-aut-sei=REN en-aut-mei= Xinyu kn-aut-name=”Cc˜° kn-aut-sei=”C kn-aut-mei=c˜° aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=YOSHITOSHIMunehisa en-aut-sei=YOSHITOSHI en-aut-mei=Munehisa kn-aut-name=‹g—˜@‹v kn-aut-sei=‹g—˜ kn-aut-mei=@‹v aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=The Joint Graduate School (Ph.D. Program) in Science of School Education, Hyogo University of Teacher, Hyogo University of Teacher Education kn-affil=•ºŒÉ‹³ˆç‘åŠw‘åŠw‰@˜A‡ŠwZ‹³ˆçŠwŒ¤‹†‰È”ŽŽm‰Û’ö affil-num=2 en-affil=Graduate School of Education, Okayama University kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠw‘åŠw‰@‹³ˆçŠwŒ¤‹†‰È affil-num=3 en-affil=Graduate School of Education, Okayama University kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠw‘åŠw‰@‹³ˆçŠwŒ¤‹†‰È affil-num=4 en-affil=Faculty of Education, Okayama University kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠwŠwpŒ¤‹†‰@‹³ˆçŠwˆæ en-keyword=ŠO‘l—cŽ™ (foreign preschool children) kn-keyword=ŠO‘l—cŽ™ (foreign preschool children) en-keyword=AŠw (school enrollment) kn-keyword=AŠw (school enrollment) en-keyword=•ÛˆçŽm (preschool teachers) kn-keyword=•ÛˆçŽm (preschool teachers) END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol= cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page= end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260325 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Clinicopathological and transcriptomic profiles of 101 patients with diffuse large B-cell lymphoma/high-grade B-cell lymphoma with double-hit MYC and BCL2 or BCL6 and triple hit en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Aims: Diffuse large B-cell lymphoma/high-grade B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL/HGBCL) with MYC and BCL2 rearrangements (double-hit lymphoma with BCL2, DHL-BCL2) is a mature aggressive B-cell lymphoma that also includes concurrent triple hit with BCL6 translocation (TH). DHL with MYC and BCL6 (DH-BCL6) can also occur. The differences among these three DLBCL/HGBCL subtypes have not yet been definitively determined.
Methods and Results: This study characterized the clinicopathological features and transcriptomic profiles of a series of 101 cases of DLBCL/HGBCL that were subclassified according to MYC, BCL2 and BCL6 FISH data, including cell-of-origin (COO)-like, molecular high-grade (MHG)-like and double-hit/dark-zone (DHIT/DZsig)-like signatures. DLBCL/HGBCL-DH-BCL2 was characterized by higher HGBCL morphology, CD10 positivity, GCB Hans's, GCB COO and MHG molecular subtype. DLBCL/HGBCL-TH had higher LDH levels and worse overall survival. DLBCL/HGBCL-DH-BCL6 had higher MUM1 expression, non-GCB Hans', ABC/Unclassified COO, non-MHG and low DHIT/DZ signatures. Transcriptomic analysis showed that DLBCL/HGBCL-DH-BCL2 and DLBCL/HGBCL-TH were close but separated from DLBCL/HGBCL-DH-BCL6. Gene set enrichment analysis (GSEA) revealed different levels of enrichment between the subtypes.
Conclusions: DLBCL/HGBCL-DH-BCL6 differs from the DLBCL/HGBCL-DH-BCL2, and the DLBCL/HGBCL-TH is associated with the worst survival. Analysis of all three genes of MYC, BCL2 and BCL6 is recommended in the context of DLBCL/HGBCL diagnosis. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=MiyaokaMasashi en-aut-sei=Miyaoka en-aut-mei=Masashi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=CarrerasJoaquim en-aut-sei=Carreras en-aut-mei=Joaquim kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=KikutiYara Yukie en-aut-sei=Kikuti en-aut-mei=Yara Yukie kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=IkomaHaruka en-aut-sei=Ikoma en-aut-mei=Haruka kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=NagaseShunsuke en-aut-sei=Nagase en-aut-mei=Shunsuke kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=ItoAtsushi en-aut-sei=Ito en-aut-mei=Atsushi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=OritaMakoto en-aut-sei=Orita en-aut-mei=Makoto kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= en-aut-name=KawadaHiroshi en-aut-sei=Kawada en-aut-mei=Hiroshi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=8 ORCID= en-aut-name=SakaiRika en-aut-sei=Sakai en-aut-mei=Rika kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=9 ORCID= en-aut-name=SatoYasuharu en-aut-sei=Sato en-aut-mei=Yasuharu kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=10 ORCID= en-aut-name=NishimuraMidori Filiz en-aut-sei=Nishimura en-aut-mei=Midori Filiz kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=11 ORCID= en-aut-name=TsukasakiKunihiro en-aut-sei=Tsukasaki en-aut-mei=Kunihiro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=12 ORCID= en-aut-name=MomoseShuji en-aut-sei=Momose en-aut-mei=Shuji kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=13 ORCID= en-aut-name=KameokaYoshihiro en-aut-sei=Kameoka en-aut-mei=Yoshihiro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=14 ORCID= en-aut-name=YoshidaMasahiro en-aut-sei=Yoshida en-aut-mei=Masahiro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=15 ORCID= en-aut-name=SatouAkira en-aut-sei=Satou en-aut-mei=Akira kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=16 ORCID= en-aut-name=KatoSeiichi en-aut-sei=Kato en-aut-mei=Seiichi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=17 ORCID= en-aut-name=OishiNaoki en-aut-sei=Oishi en-aut-mei=Naoki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=18 ORCID= en-aut-name=SaitoAkio en-aut-sei=Saito en-aut-mei=Akio kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=19 ORCID= en-aut-name=SadahiraKen en-aut-sei=Sadahira en-aut-mei=Ken kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=20 ORCID= en-aut-name=MasugiYohei en-aut-sei=Masugi en-aut-mei=Yohei kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=21 ORCID= en-aut-name=NakamuraNaoya en-aut-sei=Nakamura en-aut-mei=Naoya kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=22 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Department of Pathology, School of Medicine, Tokai University kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Department of Pathology, School of Medicine, Tokai University kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Department of Pathology, School of Medicine, Tokai University kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Department of Pathology, School of Medicine, Tokai University kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Department of Pathology, School of Medicine, Tokai University kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Department of Pathology, School of Medicine Tokai University Isehara Japan kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=Department of Pathology, School of Medicine, Tokai University kn-affil= affil-num=8 en-affil=Department of Hematology, School of Medicine, Tokai University kn-affil= affil-num=9 en-affil=Department of Medical Oncology, Kanagawa Cancer Center kn-affil= affil-num=10 en-affil=Department of Molecular Hematopathology, Okayama University Graduate School of Health Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=11 en-affil=Department of Molecular Hematopathology, Okayama University Graduate School of Health Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=12 en-affil=Department of Hematology, International Medical Center, Saitama Medical University kn-affil= affil-num=13 en-affil=Department of Pathology, Saitama Medical Center, Saitama Medical University kn-affil= affil-num=14 en-affil=Department of Hematology, Nephrology and Rheumatology, Akita University Graduate School of Medicine kn-affil= affil-num=15 en-affil=Department of Hematology, Osaka City General Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=16 en-affil=Department of Surgical Pathology, Aichi Medical University Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=17 en-affil=Center for Clinical Pathology, Fujita Health University Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=18 en-affil=Department of Pathology, University of Yamanashi kn-affil= affil-num=19 en-affil=Department of Hematology, NHO Shibukawa Medical Center kn-affil= affil-num=20 en-affil=Division of Hematology, Kawasaki Municipal Kawasaki Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=21 en-affil=Department of Pathology, School of Medicine, Tokai University kn-affil= affil-num=22 en-affil=Department of Pathology, School of Medicine, Tokai University kn-affil= en-keyword=BCL2 kn-keyword=BCL2 en-keyword=BCL6 kn-keyword=BCL6 en-keyword=high-grade B-cell lymphoma kn-keyword=high-grade B-cell lymphoma en-keyword=molecular profile kn-keyword=molecular profile en-keyword=MYC kn-keyword=MYC en-keyword=rearrangements kn-keyword=rearrangements END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=75 cd-vols= no-issue=3 article-no= start-page=84 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260225 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=A real-world comparison of nivolumab plus cabozantinib and pembrolizumab plus lenvatinib focusing on safety outcomes in metastatic renal cell carcinoma: results from the JK-FOOT consortium en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Purpose Immune checkpoint inhibitor (ICI)-based combination therapy is a standard first-line treatment for metastatic renal cell carcinoma (mRCC), with combinations such as nivolumab plus cabozantinib (Nivo?+?Cabo) and pembrolizumab plus lenvatinib (Pem?+?Len) demonstrating favorable oncologic outcomes. However, no direct comparisons between these two regimens have been conducted. This study aimed to compare the safety and oncologic outcomes of Nivo?+?Cabo and Pem?+?Len in patients with mRCC.
Methods This retrospective study included 185 patients with mRCC treated with Nivo?+?Cabo (n?=?81) or Pem?+?Len (n?=?104) between January 2018 and June 2025 across multiple institutions. The primary outcome was a comparison of treatment-related adverse events (TrAEs). Oncologic outcomes, including objective response rate (ORR), progression-free survival (PFS), cancer-specific survival (CSS), and overall survival (OS), were compared using one-to-one propensity score matching.
Results Any-grade TrAEs occurred in 90% of patients in the Nivo?+?Cabo group and 92% in the Pem?+?Len group (p?=?0.6). Severe TrAEs (grade???3) were more frequent in the Pem?+?Len group (44%) than in the Nivo?+?Cabo group (30%, p?=?0.048). Tyrosine kinase inhibitor dose reduction and treatment discontinuation rates were similar between groups. In the matched cohort (Nivo?+?Cabo: n?=?74; Pem?+?Len: n?=?74), ORRs were comparable (66% vs. 71%, p?=?0.6). With a median follow-up of 17 months, no significant differences were observed in PFS (p?=?0.4), CSS (p?=?0.9), or OS (p?=?0.5).
Conclusions Nivo?+?Cabo and Pem?+?Len demonstrated similar oncologic efficacy as first-line treatments for mRCC. However, Pem?+?Len was associated with more severe TrAEs. Careful toxicity management and shared decision-making are essential when selecting ICI-based combinations. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=YanagisawaTakafumi en-aut-sei=Yanagisawa en-aut-mei=Takafumi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=MoriKeiichiro en-aut-sei=Mori en-aut-mei=Keiichiro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=KawadaTatsushi en-aut-sei=Kawada en-aut-mei=Tatsushi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=KatayamaSatoshi en-aut-sei=Katayama en-aut-mei=Satoshi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=TsujinoTakuya en-aut-sei=Tsujino en-aut-mei=Takuya kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=MaenosonoRyoichi en-aut-sei=Maenosono en-aut-mei=Ryoichi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=ToyodaShingo en-aut-sei=Toyoda en-aut-mei=Shingo kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= en-aut-name=NukayaTakuhisa en-aut-sei=Nukaya en-aut-mei=Takuhisa kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=8 ORCID= en-aut-name=MorinakaHirofumi en-aut-sei=Morinaka en-aut-mei=Hirofumi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=9 ORCID= en-aut-name=TamuraKeita en-aut-sei=Tamura en-aut-mei=Keita kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=10 ORCID= en-aut-name=FukuokayaWataru en-aut-sei=Fukuokaya en-aut-mei=Wataru kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=11 ORCID= en-aut-name=UrabeFumihiko en-aut-sei=Urabe en-aut-mei=Fumihiko kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=12 ORCID= en-aut-name=MurakamiMasaya en-aut-sei=Murakami en-aut-mei=Masaya kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=13 ORCID= en-aut-name=BekkuKensuke en-aut-sei=Bekku en-aut-mei=Kensuke kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=14 ORCID= en-aut-name=TakaharaKiyoshi en-aut-sei=Takahara en-aut-mei=Kiyoshi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=15 ORCID= en-aut-name=FujitaKazutoshi en-aut-sei=Fujita en-aut-mei=Kazutoshi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=16 ORCID= en-aut-name=AzumaHaruhito en-aut-sei=Azuma en-aut-mei=Haruhito kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=17 ORCID= en-aut-name=ArakiMotoo en-aut-sei=Araki en-aut-mei=Motoo kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=18 ORCID= en-aut-name=InamotoTeruo en-aut-sei=Inamoto en-aut-mei=Teruo kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=19 ORCID= en-aut-name=KomuraKazumasa en-aut-sei=Komura en-aut-mei=Kazumasa kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=20 ORCID= en-aut-name=KimuraTakahiro en-aut-sei=Kimura en-aut-mei=Takahiro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=21 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Department of Urology, The Jikei University School of Medicine kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Department of Urology, The Jikei University School of Medicine kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Department of Urology, Comprehensive Cancer Center, Medical University of Vienna kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Department of Urology, Comprehensive Cancer Center, Medical University of Vienna kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Department of Urology, Osaka Medical and Pharmaceutical University kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Department of Urology, Osaka Medical and Pharmaceutical University kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=Department of Urology, Faculty of Medicine, Kindai University kn-affil= affil-num=8 en-affil=Department of Urology, Fujita-Health University School of Medicine kn-affil= affil-num=9 en-affil=Department of Urology, Kawasaki Medical School kn-affil= affil-num=10 en-affil=Department of Urology, Hamamatsu Medical University kn-affil= affil-num=11 en-affil=Department of Urology, The Jikei University School of Medicine kn-affil= affil-num=12 en-affil=Department of Urology, The Jikei University School of Medicine kn-affil= affil-num=13 en-affil=Department of Urology, The Jikei University School of Medicine kn-affil= affil-num=14 en-affil=Department of Urology, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=15 en-affil=Department of Urology, Fujita-Health University School of Medicine kn-affil= affil-num=16 en-affil=Department of Urology, Faculty of Medicine, Kindai University kn-affil= affil-num=17 en-affil=Department of Urology, Osaka Medical and Pharmaceutical University kn-affil= affil-num=18 en-affil=Department of Urology, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=19 en-affil=Department of Urology, Hamamatsu Medical University kn-affil= affil-num=20 en-affil=Department of Urology, Kawasaki Medical School kn-affil= affil-num=21 en-affil=Department of Urology, The Jikei University School of Medicine kn-affil= en-keyword=Metastatic renal cell carcinoma kn-keyword=Metastatic renal cell carcinoma en-keyword=Immune checkpoint inhibitor kn-keyword=Immune checkpoint inhibitor en-keyword=Pembrolizumab kn-keyword=Pembrolizumab en-keyword=Lenvatinib kn-keyword=Lenvatinib en-keyword=Nivolumab kn-keyword=Nivolumab en-keyword=Cabozantinib kn-keyword=Cabozantinib END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=73 cd-vols= no-issue=3 article-no= start-page=55 end-page=59 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260315 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title=Low Temperature Formation of Dense Yttria-Stabilized Zirconia Layer Using Hot Isostatic Pressing kn-title=”MŠÔÃ…ˆ³‰Áˆ³–@‚ð—p‚¢‚½ƒCƒbƒgƒŠƒAˆÀ’艻ƒWƒ‹ƒRƒjƒAãk–§‘w‚̒ቷŒ`¬ en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=The sintering conditions using hot isostatic press (HIP) of yttria-stabilized zirconia (YSZ) were investigated to obtain a dense YSZ layer at low sintering temperature such as 1000‹C for an electrolyte of metal-supported solid oxide fuel cell. It was found that a dense YSZ pellet with relative density of 93% could be obtained under a sintering condition of 1000‹C-10 hours with HIP in 195 MPa. On the other hand, in X-ray diffraction analysis of the dense YSZ pellet, peaks of the monoclinic phase were slightly detected in addition to peaks of the cubic phase. From energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy analysis, a small amount of boron was detected in the dense YSZ pellet. It is considered that the YSZ crystalline phase transformation of cubic to monoclinic phase was occurred by the boron diffusion from the diffusion barrier coating of metal foil capsule used for the HIP. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=MANABEKyohei en-aut-sei=MANABE en-aut-mei=Kyohei kn-aut-name=^“ç‹•½ kn-aut-sei=^“ç kn-aut-mei=‹•½ aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=ECHIGOMitsuaki en-aut-sei=ECHIGO en-aut-mei=Mitsuaki kn-aut-name=‰zŒã–žH kn-aut-sei=‰zŒã kn-aut-mei=–žH aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=KISHIMOTOAkira en-aut-sei=KISHIMOTO en-aut-mei=Akira kn-aut-name=ŠÝ–{º kn-aut-sei=ŠÝ–{ kn-aut-mei=º aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Osaka Gas Co. Ltd. kn-affil=‘åãƒKƒXiŠ”j affil-num=2 en-affil=Osaka Gas Co. Ltd. kn-affil=‘åãƒKƒXiŠ”j affil-num=3 en-affil=Institute of Academic and Research, Faculty of Environmental, Life, Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠwŠwpŒ¤‹†‰@ŠÂ‹«¶–½Ž©‘R‰ÈŠwŠwˆæ en-keyword=dense yttria-stabilized zirconia kn-keyword=dense yttria-stabilized zirconia en-keyword=hot isostatic press kn-keyword=hot isostatic press en-keyword=low sintering temperature kn-keyword=low sintering temperature en-keyword=electrolyte kn-keyword=electrolyte en-keyword=metal-supported solid oxide fuel cell kn-keyword=metal-supported solid oxide fuel cell END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=37 cd-vols= no-issue=3 article-no= start-page=580 end-page=589 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260304 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=A Cysteine-Specific Cationization Strategy for Versatile Antibody Production against Intrinsically Disordered Proteins en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Several autoantigens relevant to the immune system, especially those targeted by autoantibodies induced by antitumor responses, tend to be rich in disordered regions and are prone to aggregation. This inherent instability presents significant challenges for the production, purification, and analysis of autoantigens in laboratory settings. Cysteine-specific cationization can effectively solubilize and purify these challenging proteins, allowing the isolation of full-length water-soluble antigens in their denatured state. The purified antigens enable accurate multiplex autoantibody assays using a suspension Luminex bead array platform. However, well-validated positive control antibodies are essential to ensuring precise clinical diagnosis. In this study, we prepared and characterized a panel of control antibodies by immunizing rabbits with cysteine-specific S-cationized antigens. The resulting antibodies predominantly recognized linear epitopes and were highly effective as quality control reagents in autoantibody array assays. Additionally, these antibodies maintained their ability to bind to their native, unmodified intracellular counterparts, highlighting the usefulness of this approach for producing antibodies against intrinsically disordered proteins. Although a modest immune response against the S-cationized modification site was observed, it remained minimal and did not affect the usefulness of the antibodies for assay validation. We propose this versatile cysteine-specific cationization platform for managing unstable proteins rich in disordered regions, supporting antigen production for diagnostics, and antibody development for research and validation purposes. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=SakaguchiRyui en-aut-sei=Sakaguchi en-aut-mei=Ryui kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=MiyamotoAi en-aut-sei=Miyamoto en-aut-mei=Ai kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=KutsumaRikako en-aut-sei=Kutsuma en-aut-mei=Rikako kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=MoriTakeru en-aut-sei=Mori en-aut-mei=Takeru kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=NakashimaDaichi en-aut-sei=Nakashima en-aut-mei=Daichi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=MasuiMirei en-aut-sei=Masui en-aut-mei=Mirei kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=HonjoTomoko en-aut-sei=Honjo en-aut-mei=Tomoko kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= en-aut-name=FutamiMidori en-aut-sei=Futami en-aut-mei=Midori kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=8 ORCID= en-aut-name=MoriiMariko en-aut-sei=Morii en-aut-mei=Mariko kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=9 ORCID= en-aut-name=OshikiToshiyuki en-aut-sei=Oshiki en-aut-mei=Toshiyuki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=10 ORCID= en-aut-name=FutamiJunichiro en-aut-sei=Futami en-aut-mei=Junichiro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=11 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Graduate School of Interdisciplinary Science and Engineering in Health Systems, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Graduate School of Interdisciplinary Science and Engineering in Health Systems, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Graduate School of Interdisciplinary Science and Engineering in Health Systems, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Graduate School of Interdisciplinary Science and Engineering in Health Systems, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Graduate School of Interdisciplinary Science and Engineering in Health Systems, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Graduate School of Interdisciplinary Science and Engineering in Health Systems, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=Graduate School of Interdisciplinary Science and Engineering in Health Systems, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=8 en-affil=Department of Bioscience, Faculty of Life Science, Okayama University of Science kn-affil= affil-num=9 en-affil=Graduate School of Interdisciplinary Science and Engineering in Health Systems, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=10 en-affil=Division of Applied Chemistry, Graduate School of Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=11 en-affil=Graduate School of Interdisciplinary Science and Engineering in Health Systems, Okayama University kn-affil= END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=6 cd-vols= no-issue=3 article-no= start-page=e202500639 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=202603 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=PPy]Coated Wire Actuators for the Micromechanostimulation of Cells: Fabrication and Characterization en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Cellular mechanotransduction signals play a crucial role in physiological and pathological conditions, including skeletal disorders. Although various systems exist to mechanically stimulate cultured cells, most are constrained by incubator incompatibility, limited physiological relevance, nonuniform stimulation, or complexity. The objective of this article is to develop and validate a compact, incubator-compatible tool capable of delivering localized and physiologically relevant mechanical stimulation to small cell populations. Here, we introduce a polypyrrole-based wire-shaped microactuator designed to induce localized mechanical stress to adjacent cells. These wire-shaped microactuators are biocompatible, easy-to-use, and compact for use within standard in vitro cell culture systems. Using a noncontact optical method, we characterize the actuation of polypyrrole-coated wires in an aqueous NaDBS electrolyte, showing radial expansion of 1.5?8??m depending on the deposited polypyrrole film thickness, comparable to cellular dimensions. Next, the actuation is confirmed to be robust and stable to use in cell culture media at physiological temperature. To evaluate biological relevance, osteoblastic KUSA-A1 cells are mechanically stimulated inside the incubator and transcriptomic changes are assessed. Mechanical stimulation resulted in upregulation of genes previously associated with mechanotransduction, including Fos and Fosb. Additionally, several uncharacterized long noncoding RNAs are differentially expressed, suggesting potential novel players in the mechanotransduction pathway. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=Ortega]SantosAmaia B. en-aut-sei=Ortega]Santos en-aut-mei=Amaia B. kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=HayanoSatoru en-aut-sei=Hayano en-aut-mei=Satoru kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=HaraEmilio Satoshi en-aut-sei=Hara en-aut-mei=Emilio Satoshi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=Mart?nezJose G. en-aut-sei=Mart?nez en-aut-mei=Jose G. kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=KamiokaHiroshi en-aut-sei=Kamioka en-aut-mei=Hiroshi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=JagerEdwin W. H. en-aut-sei=Jager en-aut-mei=Edwin W. H. kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Sensor and Actuator Systems, Department of Physics Chemistry and Biology (IFM), Link?ping University kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Department of Orthodontics, Okayama University Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Advanced Research Center for Oral and Craniofacial Sciences Dental School, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Sensor and Actuator Systems, Department of Physics Chemistry and Biology (IFM), Link?ping University kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Department of Orthodontics, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Sensor and Actuator Systems, Department of Physics Chemistry and Biology (IFM), Link?ping University kn-affil= en-keyword=conducting polymers kn-keyword=conducting polymers en-keyword=mechanotransduction kn-keyword=mechanotransduction en-keyword=osteoblasts kn-keyword=osteoblasts en-keyword=polypyrrole kn-keyword=polypyrrole en-keyword=RNA sequencing kn-keyword=RNA sequencing en-keyword=soft-microactuators kn-keyword=soft-microactuators END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=27 cd-vols= no-issue=1 article-no= start-page=bbag021 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=202601 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=SGCRNA: spectral clustering-guided co-expression network analysis without scale-free constraints for multi-omic data en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Weighted gene co-expression network analysis (WGCNA) is among the most widely employed methods in bioinformatics. WGCNA enables the identification of gene clusters (modules) exhibiting correlated expression patterns, the association of these modules with traits, and the exploration of candidate biomarker genes by focusing on hub genes within the modules. WGCNA has been successfully applied in diverse biological contexts. However, conventional algorithms manifest three principal limitations: the assumption of scale-free topology, the requirement for parameter tuning, and the neglect of regression line slopes. These limitations are addressed by SGCRNA. SGCRNA provides Julia functions for the analysis of co-expression networks derived from various types of biological data, such as gene expression data. The Julia packages and their source code are freely available at https://github.com/C37H41N2O6/SGCRNAs.jl. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=OsoneTatsunori en-aut-sei=Osone en-aut-mei=Tatsunori kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=TakaoTomoka en-aut-sei=Takao en-aut-mei=Tomoka kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=OtakeShigeo en-aut-sei=Otake en-aut-mei=Shigeo kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=TakaradaTakeshi en-aut-sei=Takarada en-aut-mei=Takeshi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Department of Regenerative Science, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Department of Regenerative Science, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Department of Regenerative Science, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Department of Regenerative Science, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= en-keyword=co-expression network analysis kn-keyword=co-expression network analysis en-keyword=multi-omics kn-keyword=multi-omics en-keyword=spectral clustering kn-keyword=spectral clustering END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=5 cd-vols= no-issue=1 article-no= start-page=133 end-page=142 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2025 dt-pub=20251016 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=A Study on Zeek IDS Effectiveness for Cybersecurity in Agricultural IoT Networks en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=As agriculture moves toward Agriculture 4.0, which uses Internet of Things (IoT) devices to collect data in real time and monitor things from a distance, these networks are becoming increasingly vulnerable to cyberattacks. A common method used to protect against these kinds of threats is the use of intrusion detection systems (IDS). However, the agricultural environment is often changing and has limited resources, which makes cybersecurity challenging. Several available IDS tools are not designed to work properly in places with few resources, intermittent access, and unpredictable network conditions. This paper investigates the performance of Zeek, an open-source IDS, in identifying potential threats in agricultural IoT networks. We performed both offline and real-time experiments: offline analysis used pcap files from the Stratosphere Laboratory dataset, and real-time evaluation involved simulated live attack scenarios, focusing on unauthorized access attempts and distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks. Zeek's performance was assessed based on CPU and memory utilization, as well as quality of service (QoS) metrics. From the experimental results, we found that Zeek was quite effective in protecting agricultural IoT networks against typical threats. Memory usage remained stable around 5% during offline analysis and under 20% during active attacks. However, CPU usage was more volatile, peaking at 120% during DDoS events. In terms of QoS, the system maintained a good throughput (1,375 kbits/s) with minimal packet loss (0.000186%). Among the attack types that we tested, brute force attacks, which represent attempts at unauthorized access, had the strongest effect on network performance, increasing delay to 2.159 ms and jitter to 0.793 ms. It seems clear that a heavier traffic load during such attacks can interfere with QoS. On the basis of our observation, we recommend practical deployment strategies for agricultural IoT systems that take these limitations into consideration, aiming to keep networks both secure and efficient under pressure. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=HudaSamsul en-aut-sei=Huda en-aut-mei=Samsul kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=MusthafaMuhammad Bisri en-aut-sei=Musthafa en-aut-mei=Muhammad Bisri kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=ShamimS. M. en-aut-sei=Shamim en-aut-mei=S. M. kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=NogamiYasuyuki en-aut-sei=Nogami en-aut-mei=Yasuyuki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Interdisciplinary Education and Research Field, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Graduate School of Environmental, Life, Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Graduate School of Environmental, Life, Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Graduate School of Environmental, Life, Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= en-keyword=agricultural IoT kn-keyword=agricultural IoT en-keyword=Zeek IDS kn-keyword=Zeek IDS en-keyword=intrusion detection systems kn-keyword=intrusion detection systems en-keyword=open-source security tools kn-keyword=open-source security tools en-keyword=Agriculture 4.0 kn-keyword=Agriculture 4.0 en-keyword=cybersecurity kn-keyword=cybersecurity en-keyword=Raspberry Pi kn-keyword=Raspberry Pi END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=6 cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page=39 end-page=47 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260331 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title=A Narrative Review on Motivation and Evaluation of Community Residents regarding Advance Care Planning in Japan kn-title=‚킪‘‚̃Aƒhƒoƒ“ƒXEƒPƒAEƒvƒ‰ƒ“ƒjƒ“ƒO‚É‚¨‚¯‚é’nˆæZ–¯‚Ö‚Ì“®‹@‚¯‚Æ•]‰¿‚ɂ‚¢‚Ẵiƒ‰ƒeƒBƒuEƒŒƒrƒ…[ en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract= en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=HASUITakako en-aut-sei=HASUI en-aut-mei=Takako kn-aut-name=˜@ˆä‹MŽq kn-aut-sei=˜@ˆä kn-aut-mei=‹MŽq aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=NAKAYAMANaoko en-aut-sei=NAKAYAMA en-aut-mei=Naoko kn-aut-name=’†ŽR’¼Žq kn-aut-sei=’†ŽR kn-aut-mei=’¼Žq aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Japanese Red Cross Hokkaido College of Nursing kn-affil=“ú–{Ô\Žš–kŠC“¹ŠÅŒì‘åŠw affil-num=2 en-affil=Kanagawa University of Human Services kn-affil=_“Þ쌧—§•ÛŒ’•ŸŽƒ‘åŠw END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=6 cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page=17 end-page=25 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260331 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title=Patient Participation in Shared Decision-Making: A Consideration of Aspects and Challenges kn-title=Shared Decision Making ‚É‚¨‚¯‚銳ŽÒŽQ‰Á‚Ì”‘Š‚Æ‰Û‘è‚ÌlŽ@ en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=This paper traces the historical development of decision-making models in healthcare while exploring the meaning and practical significance of gpatient participationh within the shared decision-making (SDM) framework. SDM is a recommended approach to clinical decision-making that emphasizes mutual information sharing and deliberation between physicians and patients. Traditional models often assume that patients can clearly articulate their values, preferences, and treatment goals. However, in actual clinical settings, particularly in cases of serious illness or life-threatening situations, patients frequently face emotional distress and psychological burdens, which can hinder their active participation in decision-making and the expression of their preferences. Based on SDM theory and practice reports, this study argues that SDM should not be viewed merely as a process that promotes patient choice. Even when patients choose not to actively participate and ultimately delegate decisions to healthcare providers or family members, such a choice can represent autonomous decision-making if it arises through meaningful communication and mutual understanding. This perspective calls for a more comprehensive and flexible interpretation of patient participation in SDM practice. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=YOSHIDAMiho en-aut-sei=YOSHIDA en-aut-mei=Miho kn-aut-name=‹g“c”ü•ä kn-aut-sei=‹g“c kn-aut-mei=”ü•ä aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Graduate School of Interdisciplinary Science and Engineering in Health Systems Okayama University kn-affil=‘—§‘åŠw–@l‰ªŽR‘åŠwŠwpŒ¤‹†‰@ƒwƒ‹ƒXƒVƒXƒeƒ€“‡‰ÈŠwŒ¤‹†Šwˆæ en-keyword=Shared Decision-Making kn-keyword=Shared Decision-Making en-keyword=Patient Participation kn-keyword=Patient Participation en-keyword=Physician?Patient Relationship kn-keyword=Physician?Patient Relationship END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=6 cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page=7 end-page=16 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260331 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title=A Preliminary Study on Nursing Care Technology: A Case Study of Elderly Care kn-title=‰îŒì‹Zp˜_ŽŽ˜_\‚—îŽÒ‰îŒì‚ðŽ–—á‚Æ‚µ‚Ä\ en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=In the first part of this paper, it was confirmed that the term gkaigoh (nursing care) was coined and its meaning defined during discussions on enacting social welfare legislation accompanying societal aging, as the care aspect was being gdifferentiatedh from the gfamilyfs health and welfare functions.h The paper also examined how the term gkaigo gijutsuh(nursing care technique) has been defined and used. In the latter part, based on the authorfs own definition of gkaigo gijutsuh(nursing care technology), an attempt was made to analyze examples of technology utilization in nursing care settings, focusing on papers published in specialized welfare and nursing care technology journals. Through this preliminary study, it was shown that the authorfs definition of gnursing care technologyh clearly distinguishes between the means for care activities?such as welfare equipment?and the care recipients and caregivers who make use of them, and that this definition is useful for grasping the essence of challenges in nursing care settings. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=YOSHIBAYasuyuki en-aut-sei=YOSHIBA en-aut-mei=Yasuyuki kn-aut-name=‹g—t‹±s kn-aut-sei=‹g—t kn-aut-mei=‹±s aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Faculty of Interdisciplinary Science and Engineering in Health Systems, Okayama University kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠwŠwpŒ¤‹†‰@ƒwƒ‹ƒXƒVƒXƒeƒ€“‡‰ÈŠwŠwˆæ en-keyword=Nursing Care Technology kn-keyword=Nursing Care Technology en-keyword=Elderly Care kn-keyword=Elderly Care en-keyword=welfare equipment kn-keyword=welfare equipment END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=6 cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page=1 end-page=6 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260331 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=The effects of cold compresses on itching in patients with atopic dermatitis: A cross-over controlled pilot trial en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=This cross-over controlled trial aimed to evaluate the effectiveness and safety of two types of cold compresses (towels and ice packs) in alleviating itching among patients with atopic dermatitis. The study recruited 19 participants diagnosed with atopic dermatitis and suffering from chronic itching for over 6 months. Each participant received both types of cold compress interventions. Itching sensations were assessed repeatedly using a visual analogue scale before and after the application of the cold compress. The mean and standard deviation of itching scores for the towel intervention were 16.9 } 19.1 (baseline) and 11.4 } 16.1 (post-application). For the ice pack intervention, the scores were 13.6 } 14.7 (baseline) and 6.2 } 9.8 (post-application). Although there was a reduction in mean itching scores following the application of cold compresses, the differences were not statistically significant for either intervention. Despite the lack of statistical significance, this study suggests that cold compresses, which are user-friendly and inexpensive, may safely reduce subjective itching in patients with atopic dermatitis without causing pain or discomfort. However, further research with a larger sample size is needed to confirm these findings. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=HIRAMIYuki en-aut-sei=HIRAMI en-aut-mei=Yuki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=HARADANahoko en-aut-sei=HARADA en-aut-mei=Nahoko kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=ONOMiho en-aut-sei=ONO en-aut-mei=Miho kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=KODAMasahide en-aut-sei=KODA en-aut-mei=Masahide kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=FUKAIKiyoko en-aut-sei=FUKAI en-aut-mei=Kiyoko kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Former Department of Nursing, Graduate School of Health Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Department of Nursing Science, Faculty of Interdisciplinary Science and Engineering in Health Systems, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Department of Nursing, Faculty of Health, Kagawa Prefectural University of Health Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Co-learning Community Healthcare Re-innovation Office, Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Professor Emeritus, Okayama University, Graduate School of Nursing, The Jikei University School of Medicine kn-affil= en-keyword=Atopic Dermatitis kn-keyword=Atopic Dermatitis en-keyword=Pruritus kn-keyword=Pruritus en-keyword=Cryotherapy kn-keyword=Cryotherapy en-keyword=Quality of Life kn-keyword=Quality of Life en-keyword=Skin Temperature kn-keyword=Skin Temperature END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=19 cd-vols= no-issue=1 article-no= start-page=42 end-page=50 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=2026 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Biosensing method of growth diagnosis in the forced culture of strawberries \Development of crop-identification algorithms\ en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=An image-processing algorithm for identifying individual crops is developed for labor-savings and time-series biological information collection. Information including the leaf development frequency are diagnostic indicators of strawberry growth. The algorithm is designed for drones in greenhouses that cannot acquire location information using the global navigation satellite system (GNSS). Drones fly over crop rows and sequentially assign identification numbers (IDs) to crops. Object-detection artificial intelligence (AI) is used to estimate the crop zone, and the ID is based on the crops number difference between frames. The previous misdetection rate was 1.06 %, failing to identify crops, which decreases to 0.31 % using the proposed algorithm. Furthermore, because there are no failures in consecutive frames, IDs are assigned to all crops correctly. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=TSUBOTAShogo en-aut-sei=TSUBOTA en-aut-mei=Shogo kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=NAMBAKazuhiko en-aut-sei=NAMBA en-aut-mei=Kazuhiko kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=KASEIShota en-aut-sei=KASEI en-aut-mei=Shota kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=FUKATSUTokihiro en-aut-sei=FUKATSU en-aut-mei=Tokihiro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Institute of Agricultural Machinery, National Agriculture and Food Research Organization kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Faculty of Environmental, Life, Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Institute of Agricultural Machinery, National Agriculture and Food Research Organization kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Institute of Agricultural Machinery, National Agriculture and Food Research Organization kn-affil= en-keyword=strawberry kn-keyword=strawberry en-keyword=forcing culture kn-keyword=forcing culture en-keyword=image-processing kn-keyword=image-processing en-keyword=object-detection kn-keyword=object-detection en-keyword=identification of individual crops kn-keyword=identification of individual crops en-keyword=drones kn-keyword=drones END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=119 cd-vols= no-issue=1 article-no= start-page=9 end-page=17 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2025 dt-pub=202507 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Big data-driven target identification by machine learning: DRD2 as a therapeutic target for psoriasis en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Background: The development of medical treatments has traditionally relied on researchers leveraging scientific knowledge to hypothesize disease mechanisms and identify therapeutic agents. However, the depletion of novel therapeutic targets has become a significant challenge, resulting in stagnation within pharmaceutical research.
Objective: To address the scarcity of therapeutic targets, we developed a machine learning (ML)-based system capable of predicting therapeutic target molecules for diseases. To validate its utility, we applied this system to psoriasis, aiming to identify novel treatment strategies.
Methods: Our approach utilized a large clinical database to calculate reporting odds ratios for all drugs associated with the prevention of diseases of interest. We identified target proteins by analyzing large chemical structure databases to discover proteins commonly associated with preventive drug candidates. Experimental validation was conducted by administering a predicted therapeutic candidate in an imiquimod-induced psoriasis mouse model.
Results: The ML-based predictions identified drugs for Parkinsonfs disease as potential preventive candidates for psoriasis. Further analysis highlighted dopamine receptor D2 (DRD2) as a therapeutic target. Administration of a DRD2 agonist alleviated psoriasis symptoms in mice, evidenced by the downregulation of mRNA expression in the IL-17 pathway and reduced serum tumor necrosis factor-ƒ¿ levels.
Conclusion: This study demonstrates the utility of a novel ML-based system for identifying therapeutic targets, as shown by its successful application in uncovering the role of DRD2 in psoriasis. Beyond psoriasis, this system offers significant potential for exploring pathological mechanisms and discovering therapeutic targets across various diseases. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=SakaiTakashi en-aut-sei=Sakai en-aut-mei=Takashi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=SawadaRyusuke en-aut-sei=Sawada en-aut-mei=Ryusuke kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=IchinoseOtoha en-aut-sei=Ichinose en-aut-mei=Otoha kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=TerabayashiTakeshi en-aut-sei=Terabayashi en-aut-mei=Takeshi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=HatanoYutaka en-aut-sei=Hatano en-aut-mei=Yutaka kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=YamanishiYoshihiro en-aut-sei=Yamanishi en-aut-mei=Yoshihiro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=IshizakiToshimasa en-aut-sei=Ishizaki en-aut-mei=Toshimasa kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Department of Dermatology, Faculty of Medicine, Oita University kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Department of Pharmacology, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Department of Bioscience and Bioinformatics, Faculty of Computer Science and Systems Engineering, Kyushu Institute of Technology kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Department of Pharmacology, Faculty of Medicine, Oita University kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Department of Dermatology, Faculty of Medicine, Oita University kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Department of Complex Systems Science, Graduate School of Informatics, Nagoya University kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=Department of Pharmacology, Faculty of Medicine, Oita University kn-affil= en-keyword=artificial intelligence kn-keyword=artificial intelligence en-keyword=big data kn-keyword=big data en-keyword=machine learning kn-keyword=machine learning en-keyword=dopamine receptor D2 kn-keyword=dopamine receptor D2 en-keyword=psoriasis kn-keyword=psoriasis END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=20 cd-vols= no-issue=1 article-no= start-page=JFST0004 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2025 dt-pub=2025 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Numerical analysis validating the standard k-epsilon model for the kinetic energy of turbulence subjected to weak but long-lasting wind tunnel blockage acceleration en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=The aim of this study is to investigate the effect of weak but prolonged mean flow accelerations, such as those observed in wind tunnel blockage acceleration, on free-stream turbulence. Specifically, this research aims to validate a model previously developed based on the k-epsilon model. To test this model, the study focuses on scenarios where the turbulence under acceleration is steady and isotropic, since the model suggests that this type of acceleration has no effect on the turbulent kinetic energy. To examine this suggestion, the turbulence within a periodic box was analyzed using large-eddy simulation (LES) based on the conventional Smagorinsky model framework. The numerical analysis is based on a method that conserves velocity fluctuation intensities. The results show that while high rate of acceleration deviates turbulent kinetic energy, low rate acceleration has hardly any effect on turbulent kinetic energy, enstrophy, pressure fluctuation, relative pressure fluctuation intensity, and higher-order statistics of a velocity fluctuation. These results validate the accuracy of the model proposed in the previous studies. These results were obtained by focusing on differences in Reynolds numbers and the spatial scale of the forcing. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=ONOAkira en-aut-sei=ONO en-aut-mei=Akira kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=SUZUKIHiroki en-aut-sei=SUZUKI en-aut-mei=Hiroki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=KOUCHIToshinori en-aut-sei=KOUCHI en-aut-mei=Toshinori kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=TANAKAKento en-aut-sei=TANAKA en-aut-mei=Kento kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Graduate School of Environmental, Life, Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Graduate School of Environmental, Life, Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Graduate School of Environmental, Life, Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Graduate School of Environmental, Life, Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= en-keyword=Turbulent flows kn-keyword=Turbulent flows en-keyword=Large-eddy simulation kn-keyword=Large-eddy simulation en-keyword=Homogeneous turbulence kn-keyword=Homogeneous turbulence en-keyword=K-epsilon model kn-keyword=K-epsilon model en-keyword=Wind tunnel blockage kn-keyword=Wind tunnel blockage END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=17 cd-vols= no-issue=2 article-no= start-page=110 end-page=118 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2025 dt-pub=20251231 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Trend of adjusted antenatal care visits on pregnant women and neonatal during the COVID-19 pandemic: Findings from a three districts survey in 2021 en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract=Upaya pengembangan kesehatan berkelanjutan di tengah wabah penyakit menular seperti COVID-19 memerlukan sistem kesehatan ibu yang tangguh. Dengan kasus yang terus meningkat secara global dan di seluruh Asia, Indonesia menghadapi gangguan signifikan pada layanan esensial. Terdapat kesenjangan penelitian kritis dalam memanfaatkan analisis time-series yang disesuaikan untuk memisahkan dampak pandemi dari variasi musiman di Indonesia perkotaan. Studi ini mengevaluasi tren kunjungan perawatan antenatal (ANC) (Januari 2019?Desember 2020) di tiga Pusat Kesehatan Masyarakat (Puskesmas) di Makassar: Bara-Baraya, Jongaya dan Batua menggunakan analisis Interrupted Time Series (ITS). Temuan menunjukkan penurunan signifikan dalam kunjungan selama kuartal kedua dan ketiga tahun 2020, terutama disebabkan oleh kekhawatiran akan penularan. Kami menyarankan integrasi telemedisin dan kunjungan rumah untuk menjaga kelangsungan perawatan. Meskipun berfokus pada Makassar perkotaan, hasil ini menjadi acuan penting bagi kesehatan dan menawarkan solusi yang dapat diterapkan bagi negara-negara berkembang lain yang menghadapi keterbatasan sumber daya. Studi ini menekankan perlunya strategi pencegahan inklusif untuk melindungi kesehatan ibu di daerah perkotaan dan pedesaan di negara-negara berpendapatan rendah hingga menengah selama krisis kesehatan sistemik. kn-abstract=Sustainable health development efforts amid infectious disease outbreaks such as Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) require a resilient maternal health system. With cases rising globally and across Asia, Indonesia faces significant disruptions in essential services. A critical research gap exist in utilizing adjusted time-series analysis to isolated pandemic impact from seasonal variation in urban Indonesia. This study evaluates trends in antenatal care (ANC) visits (January 2019?December 2020) at three Community Health Centres in Makassar: Bara-Baraya, Jongaya and Batua using Interrupted Time Series (ITS) analysis. Findings reveal a significant decline in visits during the second and third quarters of 2020, primarily due to transmission fears. We suggest integration of telemedicine and home visits to maintain continuity of care. Although focused on urban Makassar, these results are an important reference for health and offer applicable solutions for other developing countries facing resource constraints. This study emphasizes the need for inclusive prevention strategies to protect maternal health in urban and rural areas in low- to middle-income countries during systemic health crises. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=IbrahimJuliani en-aut-sei=Ibrahim en-aut-mei=Juliani kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=TakahataYoko en-aut-sei=Takahata en-aut-mei=Yoko kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=IbrahimSukaeni en-aut-sei=Ibrahim en-aut-mei=Sukaeni kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Departement of Public Health, Faculty of Medicine and Health Science, Universitas Muhammadiyah Makassar kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Nursing of Department, Graduate School of Health Science, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Faculty of Medicine, Bosowa University kn-affil= en-keyword=antenatal care kn-keyword=antenatal care en-keyword=covid-19 kn-keyword=covid-19 en-keyword=interrupted time series kn-keyword=interrupted time series en-keyword=maternal health kn-keyword=maternal health en-keyword=neonatal birth kn-keyword=neonatal birth END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=11 cd-vols= no-issue=9 article-no= start-page=14570 end-page=14577 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260226 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Water-Resistant Antibacterial Coatings Using Cetylpyridinium Chloride - Graphene Oxide Composites en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Hospital-acquired infections remain a persistent threat in healthcare settings, especially with the increasing number of elderly and immunocompromised patients. In situations where the use of disposable materials is difficult, durable antibacterial surface coatings are essential. In this study, we report the structural characterization of cetylpyridinium chloride-graphene oxide (CPC?GO) hybrid materials and the sustainability of their antibacterial effects, aiming at washable antibacterial coatings for medical applications. Graphene oxide (GO) has a large surface area and numerous functional groups, while cetylpyridinium chloride (CPC) is a quaternary ammonium compound with well-documented antibacterial activity. We hypothesized that the stable incorporation of CPC through the functional groups of GO could improve surface retention and provide long-term antibacterial performance. The structural properties of the CPC?GO composites were characterized by UV?vis spectroscopy, X-ray diffraction, thermogravimetric analysis, scanning electron microscopy, and atomic force microscopy. These analyses confirmed the formation of a complex through ionic bonds and the maintenance of a planar composite structure. The antibacterial performance of the CPC?GO coatings was examined using representative bacteria. Notably, the CPC?GO coatings maintained their antibacterial activity significantly better than the negative controls even after multiple washings. The excellent surface retention of the CPC?GO composite suggests its potential as a next-generation antibacterial coating for areas where disinfection and sterilization are impossible, such as the interior of complex medical devices. This study suggests a strategy to extend the efficacy of existing antibacterial agents through the application of nanomaterials. Future studies will focus on the controlled release, long-term stability, and biocompatibility of CPC to realize clinical applications. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=OkuboKeisuke en-aut-sei=Okubo en-aut-mei=Keisuke kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=KanoGen en-aut-sei=Kano en-aut-mei=Gen kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=KomodaMasato en-aut-sei=Komoda en-aut-mei=Masato kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=OmoriKazuhiro en-aut-sei=Omori en-aut-mei=Kazuhiro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=NishinaYuta en-aut-sei=Nishina en-aut-mei=Yuta kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=TakashibaShogo en-aut-sei=Takashiba en-aut-mei=Shogo kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Department of Periodontics and Endodontics, Field of Medical Development, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Research Institute for Interdisciplinary Science, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Department of Pathophysiology - Periodontal Science, Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Research Institute for Interdisciplinary Science, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Department of Pathophysiology - Periodontal Science, Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=45 cd-vols= no-issue=6 article-no= start-page=657 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=202603 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Adolescent screen use in the pre-internet era and subsequent health and well-being: an outcome-wide longitudinal study en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=This study used data from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health (Add Health, N?=?11,054) to assess whether increases in screen-based leisure during adolescence (Wave II, from 1996) predicted adult well-being (Wave IV, from 2008-09), adjusting for a wide range of covariates (Wave I, from 1995). Using an outcome-wide analytic approach, we examined associations between screen time and 38 adult outcomes, adjusting for prior screen time, values of most outcomes, and confounders. Most associations were null. Modest evidence was found for links between screen time (continuous) and reduced sense of control, illicit drug use, and allostatic load. High screen time (14 h/week) or more also showed weak associations with lower depression and preventive care use. Because the data predate widespread internet use, the findings help establish a baseline for the long-term effects of non-internet screen activities, which appeared to behave had limited impact on adult health and well-being. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=de la Rosa Fern?ndez-PachecoPedro Antonio en-aut-sei=de la Rosa Fern?ndez-Pacheco en-aut-mei=Pedro Antonio kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=WilkinsonRenae en-aut-sei=Wilkinson en-aut-mei=Renae kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=CowdenRichard G. en-aut-sei=Cowden en-aut-mei=Richard G. kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=ChenYing en-aut-sei=Chen en-aut-mei=Ying kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=CaseBrendan en-aut-sei=Case en-aut-mei=Brendan kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=SuzukiEtsuji en-aut-sei=Suzuki en-aut-mei=Etsuji kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=VanderWeeleTyler J. en-aut-sei=VanderWeele en-aut-mei=Tyler J. kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Youth in Transition, Institute for Culture and Society, Universidad de Navarra kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Human Flourishing Program, Institute for Quantitative Social Science, Harvard University kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Human Flourishing Program, Institute for Quantitative Social Science, Harvard University kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Human Flourishing Program, Institute for Quantitative Social Science, Harvard University kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Human Flourishing Program, Institute for Quantitative Social Science, Harvard University kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Department of Epidemiology, Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=Department of Epidemiology, Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= en-keyword=Leisure kn-keyword=Leisure en-keyword=Television kn-keyword=Television en-keyword=Outcome-wide epidemiology kn-keyword=Outcome-wide epidemiology en-keyword=Video games kn-keyword=Video games en-keyword=Adolescence kn-keyword=Adolescence en-keyword=Well-being kn-keyword=Well-being END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=26 cd-vols= no-issue=5 article-no= start-page=1535 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260228 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=A Proposal of Secure and Automated Over-the-Air Firmware Update Mechanism for IoT Devices Using Continuous Integration and Continuous Delivery en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=The Internet of Things (IoT) technology has grown rapidly over the past decade, resulting in deployments of thousands of IoT devices around the world. Then, managing firmware updates for these numerous devices poses significant challenges. Firmware updates face issues such as version rollback, modified firmware files, and potential man-in-the-middle (MITM) attacks, highlighting the need for a secure over-the-air (OTA) firmware update mechanism. In this paper, we propose an automated OTA firmware update mechanism, integrated with continuous integration (CI) and continuous delivery (CD) to ensure trusted sources for firmware origins. It offers security, error handling during firmware updates, and monitoring of the update process. For evaluations, we implemented the proposal with the SEMAR IoT application server that has been implemented in our previous studies. Then, we verified the integrity and authentication, measured the performance and resource utilization, and performed benchmarking tests to assess the efficiency. The results demonstrate that the proposal is sufficiently reliable and efficient. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=Noprianto en-aut-sei=Noprianto en-aut-mei= kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=FunabikiNobuo en-aut-sei=Funabiki en-aut-mei=Nobuo kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=KyawHtoo Htoo Sandi en-aut-sei=Kyaw en-aut-mei=Htoo Htoo Sandi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=BrataKomang Candra en-aut-sei=Brata en-aut-mei=Komang Candra kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=KotamaI Nyoman Darma en-aut-sei=Kotama en-aut-mei=I Nyoman Darma kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Department of Information and Communication Systems, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Department of Information and Communication Systems, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Department of Information and Communication Systems, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Department of Information and Communication Systems, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Department of Information and Communication Systems, Okayama University kn-affil= en-keyword=Internet of Things (IoT) kn-keyword=Internet of Things (IoT) en-keyword=over-the-air (OTA) firmware update kn-keyword=over-the-air (OTA) firmware update en-keyword=security kn-keyword=security en-keyword=continuous integration (CI) kn-keyword=continuous integration (CI) en-keyword=continuous delivery (CD) kn-keyword=continuous delivery (CD) END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=68 cd-vols= no-issue=3 article-no= start-page=e70044 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260310 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=A Simple Method for RNA-Seq of Manually Isolated Chromatophores in Oryzias Fishes en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=RNA sequencing (RNA-seq) has become an essential tool for analyzing gene expression and exploring cell type?specific transcriptomes. However, sample preparation and quality control remain challenging, as current approaches typically rely on dissecting tissues containing mixed cell populations or using flow cytometry to isolate fluorescently labeled cells. Here we present a simple and reliable method for RNA-seq of chromatophores (pigment cells) by manually isolating cells based on their natural pigmentation. We analyzed four chromatophore types?melanophores, xanthophores, iridophores, and leucophores?in medaka (Oryzias latipes). Remarkably, as few as 100 cells per type yielded reasonably high-quality transcriptomes sufficient to identify differentially expressed genes (DEGs). Furthermore, this method was successfully applied to a non-model medaka species, O. woworae, which shares the same four chromatophore types. Our approach enables efficient, low-cost, and cross-species transcriptome analysis of chromatophores without requiring transgenic markers or flow cytometry. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=GodaMakoto en-aut-sei=Goda en-aut-mei=Makoto kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=MiyagiAsuka en-aut-sei=Miyagi en-aut-mei=Asuka kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=SugiwakaKeisuke en-aut-sei=Sugiwaka en-aut-mei=Keisuke kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=WatanabeMasakatsu en-aut-sei=Watanabe en-aut-mei=Masakatsu kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=Bessho]UeharaManabu en-aut-sei=Bessho]Uehara en-aut-mei=Manabu kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=HibiMasahiko en-aut-sei=Hibi en-aut-mei=Masahiko kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=ToyodaAtsushi en-aut-sei=Toyoda en-aut-mei=Atsushi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= en-aut-name=TanakaRieko en-aut-sei=Tanaka en-aut-mei=Rieko kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=8 ORCID= en-aut-name=MasengiKawilarang W. A. en-aut-sei=Masengi en-aut-mei=Kawilarang W. A. kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=9 ORCID= en-aut-name=YamahiraKazunori en-aut-sei=Yamahira en-aut-mei=Kazunori kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=10 ORCID= en-aut-name=AnsaiSatoshi en-aut-sei=Ansai en-aut-mei=Satoshi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=11 ORCID= en-aut-name=HashimotoHisashi en-aut-sei=Hashimoto en-aut-mei=Hisashi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=12 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Institute of Photonics Medicine, Hamamatsu University School of Medicine kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Institute of Photonics Medicine, Hamamatsu University School of Medicine kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Department of Biological Science, Division of Natural Science, Graduate School of Science, Nagoya University kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Cellular and Structural Physiology Institute (CeSPI) and Graduate School of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Nagoya University kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Frontier Research Institute for Interdisciplinary Science, Tohoku University kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Department of Biological Science, Division of Natural Science, Graduate School of Science, Nagoya University kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=Comparative Genomics Laboratory, National Institute of Genetics kn-affil= affil-num=8 en-affil=World Medaka Aquarium, Nagoya Higashiyama Zoo and Botanical Gardens kn-affil= affil-num=9 en-affil=Faculty of Fisheries and Marine Science, Sam Ratulangi University kn-affil= affil-num=10 en-affil=Tropical Biosphere Research Center, University of the Ryukyus kn-affil= affil-num=11 en-affil=Ushimado Marine Institute, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=12 en-affil=Department of Biological Science, Division of Natural Science, Graduate School of Science, Nagoya University kn-affil= END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=32 cd-vols= no-issue=1 article-no= start-page=33 end-page=44 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260331 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title=Large-scale rainfall characteristics at the heavy rainfall event around the western Japan during 5?7 July 2018 kn-title=2018”N7ŒŽ5“ú?7“ú‚̼“ú–{‹‰J‚É‚¨‚¯‚éLˆæ~…“Á« en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=@Large-scale rainfall characteristics at the heavy rainfall event around the western Japan for 5?7 July 2018 were analyzed with use of the 10-mimute precipitation data at the surface meteorological observation stations of the Japan Meteorological Agency, and so on. In this case, the area with 3 days total precipitation of near or more than 300 mm was distributed widely from northern Kyushu to Shiga and Fukui Prefectures. As in the many heavy rainfall events around Kyushu District in the mature stage of the Baiu season, contribution of the intense rainfall with more than 4 mm/10-minute (24 mm/h) attained about one third of the areal mean total precipitation. However, it is noted that the "not so intense rain" with less than 2 mm/10-minute (12 mm/h) also contributed to about one third of the huge total precipitation in the wide area. In short, this case could be characterized by the mixture of the western Japan type heavy rainfall event and the eastern Japan type one. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=KATOKuranoshin en-aut-sei=KATO en-aut-mei=Kuranoshin kn-aut-name=‰Á“¡“àåUi kn-aut-sei=‰Á“¡ kn-aut-mei=“àåUi aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=MATSUMOTOKengo en-aut-sei=MATSUMOTO en-aut-mei=Kengo kn-aut-name=¼–{Œ’Œá kn-aut-sei=¼–{ kn-aut-mei=Œ’Œá aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=OTANIKazuo en-aut-sei=OTANI en-aut-mei=Kazuo kn-aut-name=‘å’J˜a’j kn-aut-sei=‘å’J kn-aut-mei=˜a’j aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Faculty of Education, Okayama University kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠwŠwpŒ¤‹†‰@‹³ˆçŠwˆæi—‰Èj affil-num=2 en-affil=Okayama Gakugeikan High School kn-affil=‰ªŽRŠwŒ|ŠÙ‚“™ŠwZ affil-num=3 en-affil=TV Setouchi Broadcasting Co., LTD. kn-affil=ƒeƒŒƒr‚¹‚Æ‚¤‚¿(Š”) en-keyword=western Japan heavy rainfall in July 2018 kn-keyword=western Japan heavy rainfall in July 2018 en-keyword=10-minute precipitation data kn-keyword=10-minute precipitation data en-keyword=east-west difference of the Baiu precipitation kn-keyword=east-west difference of the Baiu precipitation END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=32 cd-vols= no-issue=1 article-no= start-page=21 end-page=31 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260331 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title=A trial of lesson practice at the university on the variety of heavy rainfall characteristics based on the 10-minute precipitation data toward promoting the meteorological disaster prevention literacy kn-title=10•ªŠÔ~…—Ê‚©‚ç‘å‰J‚Ì“Á’¥‚Ì‘½—l«‚𑨂¦‚é‘åŠw‚ł̎ö‹Æ‚ÌŽŽ‚Ýi–hЋCÛƒŠƒeƒ‰ƒV[ˆç¬‚ÖŒü‚¯‚Äj en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=@In the disaster prevention education on the heavy rainfall around Japan, it is also important to promote the meteorological literacy on the seasonal and regional differences of their rainfall characteristics such as the convective rain or stratiform rain, together with their total amount of precipitation and their occurrence frequency. As the first step toward the above purpose, the present study made a lesson practice for the university students by utilizing the 10-minute precipitation data for the four heavy rainfall events, in which the types of the heavy rainfall (although all the cases examined in the lesson are relating to the deep convective clouds) are rather different from each other, such as the differences of the rainfall intensity at the peak time, short-period variation of the rainfall intensity and the persistency of the rainfall including the "not so intense rainfall". The reports by the students seem to perceive the different features among these events briefly, but the students' attention to how long the intense rainfall with short-period variation or "not so intense rainfall" lasted was not so sufficient. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=KATOKuranoshin en-aut-sei=KATO en-aut-mei=Kuranoshin kn-aut-name=‰Á“¡“àåUi kn-aut-sei=‰Á“¡ kn-aut-mei=“àåUi aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Faculty of Education, Okayama University kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠwŠwpŒ¤‹†‰@‹³ˆçŠwˆæi—‰Èj en-keyword=disaster prevention education kn-keyword=disaster prevention education en-keyword=variety of the heavy rainfall characteristics kn-keyword=variety of the heavy rainfall characteristics en-keyword=meteorological disaster prevention literacy kn-keyword=meteorological disaster prevention literacy en-keyword=use of the 10-minute precipitation data kn-keyword=use of the 10-minute precipitation data END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=32 cd-vols= no-issue=1 article-no= start-page=1 end-page=7 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260331 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title=Microtremor exploration in Kojima Bay area, Okayama Plain kn-title=‰ªŽR•½–쎙“‡˜pŠÝ•”‚ł̔÷“®ƒAƒŒƒC’T¸ en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=@This report describes microtremor array observations conducted at two sites for deep exploration and three sites for shallow exploration around Kojima Bay area in the southern Okayama Plain. Based on these records, the ground velocity structures were estimated. The results yielded solutions indicating the depth of the top of the seismic base layer (equivalent to 3 km/s layer) ranges from 140 to 300 m, while the depth of the top of the engineering basement layer (equivalent to 0.6 km/s layer) is approximately about 13?14 m. The shallow exploration results also suggested the possible presence of an inversion layer. These estimated velocity structure models provided a reasonable explanation for the observed phase velocities. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=YAMADANobuyuki en-aut-sei=YAMADA en-aut-mei=Nobuyuki kn-aut-name=ŽR“cL”V kn-aut-sei=ŽR“c kn-aut-mei=L”V aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=TAKENAKAHiroshi en-aut-sei=TAKENAKA en-aut-mei=Hiroshi kn-aut-name=’|’†”ŽŽm kn-aut-sei=’|’† kn-aut-mei=”ŽŽm aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Faculty of Science and Technology, Kochi University kn-affil=‚’m‘åŠw—HŠw•”’n‹…ŠÂ‹«–hЊw‰È affil-num=2 en-affil=Department of Earth Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠwŠwpŒ¤‹†‰@ŠÂ‹«¶–½Ž©‘R‰ÈŠwŠwˆæ en-keyword=Okayama Plain kn-keyword=Okayama Plain en-keyword=Kojima Bay kn-keyword=Kojima Bay en-keyword=Microtremor array exploration kn-keyword=Microtremor array exploration en-keyword=S-wave velocity structure model kn-keyword=S-wave velocity structure model END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=61 cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page=(59) end-page=(74) dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260316 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title=On Cen Shenfs Guozhou Period: His Mental State and Poetic Expression kn-title=?BŠú‚Ì›¨ŽQ‚ɂ‚¢‚Ä \\ S‹«‚ÆŽ“I•\Œ» \\ en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract= en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=KUROSEKanako en-aut-sei=KUROSE en-aut-mei=Kanako kn-aut-name=•£‰Á“ߎq kn-aut-sei=•£ kn-aut-mei=‰Á“ߎq aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil= kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠw‘åŠw‰@ŽÐ‰ï•¶‰»‰ÈŠwŒ¤‹†‰È END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=61 cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page=(21) end-page=(38) dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260316 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title=On Ten-nyoi Heavenly Maidensj with Wings, Part 14: Feathered Robes on Taisho and Early Showa Stages kn-title=u—L—ƒ‚Ì“V—}v\Žll \ ‘å³Eº˜a‰Šú‚Ì•‘‘ä‚̉Hˆß \ en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract= en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=TATSUNOYuko en-aut-sei=TATSUNO en-aut-mei=Yuko kn-aut-name=—´–ì—LŽq kn-aut-sei=—´–ì kn-aut-mei=—LŽq aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil= kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠwŠwpŒ¤‹†‰@ŽÐ‰ï•¶‰»‰ÈŠwŠwˆæ END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=61 cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page=175 end-page=193 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260316 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title=Career Transitions of Lower-Ranking Officials in the Northern Dynasties after the Late Taihe Period of the Northern Wei: An Analysis Based on Epitaphs kn-title=•掂©‚猩‚½–ké°‘¾˜aŒã—߈Ȍã‚Ì–k’©‰ºˆÊН‚Ì‘J“] en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract= en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=SUNQIAN en-aut-sei=SUN en-aut-mei=QIAN kn-aut-name=‘·˜è kn-aut-sei=‘· kn-aut-mei=˜è aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil= kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠw‘åŠw‰@ŽÐ‰ï•¶‰»‰ÈŠwŒ¤‹†‰È END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=61 cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page=155 end-page=174 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260316 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title=Does Environmental Spending Reduce Firm Risk? Evidence from Japanese Companies kn-title=ŠÂ‹«Žxo‚ÍŠé‹ÆƒŠƒXƒN‚ðŒyŒ¸‚·‚é‚Ì‚©H“ú–{Šé‹Æ‚ÌŽÀØ•ªÍ en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=@This study examines how environmental conservation costs (ECC) affects firm risk, using changes in leverage ratios and earnings volatility as stand-ins for risk. This study evaluates the direct impact of ECC and its relationship to profitability (ROA) using panel data of Japanese companies from 2010 to 2022 and Pooled OLS regression models. The results demonstrate the risk-mitigating function of sustainability investments by showing that, although independent ECC have little direct significance, their interaction with firm profitability dramatically lowers earnings volatility and leverage instability. These findings underscore the economic value of environmental strategies, suggesting that incorporating profitability considerations into sustainability practices enhances operational stability and reduces risk exposure. To help policymakers, investors, and corporate managers strike a balance between sustainability and financial performance, this study contributes to the growing body of research on the relationship between the environment and finance. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=NAZIRYUSRA en-aut-sei=NAZIR en-aut-mei=YUSRA kn-aut-name=ƒiƒW[ƒ‹ƒ†ƒXƒ‰ kn-aut-sei=ƒiƒW[ƒ‹ kn-aut-mei=ƒ†ƒXƒ‰ aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil= kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠw‘åŠw‰@ŽÐ‰ï•¶‰»‰ÈŠwŒ¤‹†‰È en-keyword=Environmental Accounting kn-keyword=Environmental Accounting en-keyword=Environmental Conservation Costs kn-keyword=Environmental Conservation Costs en-keyword=Firm Risk kn-keyword=Firm Risk en-keyword=Earnings Volatility kn-keyword=Earnings Volatility en-keyword=ESG kn-keyword=ESG en-keyword=and Risk Management Leverage Ratio kn-keyword=and Risk Management Leverage Ratio en-keyword=Sustainability kn-keyword=Sustainability en-keyword=Panel Data kn-keyword=Panel Data en-keyword=Japanese Companies kn-keyword=Japanese Companies END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=61 cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page=139 end-page=153 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260316 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title=Examining the Impact of Oil Shocks on Exchange Rates in Oil Importing and Oil Exporting Countries: A GARCH-MIDAS Approach kn-title=GARCH-MIDAS ƒAƒvƒ[ƒ`‚É‚æ‚éΖûƒVƒ‡ƒbƒN‚ªÎ–û—A“ü‘‚¨‚æ‚Ñ—Ao‘‚̈בփŒ[ƒg‚É—^‚¦‚é‰e‹¿‚Ì•ªÍ en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract= en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=CHENPeng en-aut-sei=CHEN en-aut-mei=Peng kn-aut-name=’–Q kn-aut-sei=’ kn-aut-mei=–Q aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil= kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠw‘åŠw‰@ŽÐ‰ï•¶‰»‰ÈŠwŒ¤‹†‰È END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=61 cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page=121 end-page=138 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260316 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title=A Study on Procedural Protection of Debtors in Creditor Subrogation Litigation in China kn-title=’†‘‚ÌÂŒ ŽÒ‘ãˆÊ‘iׂɂ¨‚¯‚é–±ŽÒ‚̎葱•Ûá‚ÉŠÖ‚·‚éˆêlŽ@ en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract= en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=WANGYANLING en-aut-sei=WANG en-aut-mei=YANLING kn-aut-name=‰¤‰? kn-aut-sei=‰¤ kn-aut-mei=‰? aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil= kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠw‘åŠw‰@ŽÐ‰ï•¶‰»‰ÈŠwŒ¤‹†‰È END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=11 cd-vols= no-issue=1 article-no= start-page=23 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260205 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Band-selective plasmonic polaron in thermoelectric semimetal Ta2PdSe6 with ultra-high power factor en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=We report the electronic structure of the thermoelectric semimetal Ta2PdSe6 with a large thermoelectric power factor and giant Peltier conductivity by means of angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES). The ARPES spectra reveal the coexistence of a sharp hole band with a light electron mass and a broad electron band with a relatively heavy electron mass, which originate from different quasi-one-dimensional (Q1D) chains in Ta2PdSe6. Moreover, the electron band around the Brillouin-zone (BZ) boundary shows a replica structure with respect to the energy originating from plasmonic polarons due to electron-plasmon interactions. The different scattering effects and interactions in each atomic chain lead to asymmetric transport lifetimes of carriers: a large Seebeck coefficient can be realized even in a semimetal. Our findings pave the way for exploring the thermoelectric materials in previously overlooked semimetals and provide a new platform for low-temperature thermoelectric physics, which has been challenging with semiconductors. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=OotsukiDaiki en-aut-sei=Ootsuki en-aut-mei=Daiki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=NakanoAkitoshi en-aut-sei=Nakano en-aut-mei=Akitoshi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=MaruokaUrara en-aut-sei=Maruoka en-aut-mei=Urara kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=HasegawaTakumi en-aut-sei=Hasegawa en-aut-mei=Takumi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=AritaMasashi en-aut-sei=Arita en-aut-mei=Masashi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=KitamuraMiho en-aut-sei=Kitamura en-aut-mei=Miho kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=HoribaKoji en-aut-sei=Horiba en-aut-mei=Koji kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= en-aut-name=YoshidaTeppei en-aut-sei=Yoshida en-aut-mei=Teppei kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=8 ORCID= en-aut-name=TerasakiIchiro en-aut-sei=Terasaki en-aut-mei=Ichiro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=9 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Research Institute for Interdisciplinary Science, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Present address: Department of Applied Physics, Nagoya University kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Present address: Department of Applied Physics, Nagoya University kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Graduate School of Advanced Science and Engineering, Hiroshima University kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Research Institute for Synchrotron Radiation Science, Hiroshima University kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Present address: NanoTerasu Center, National Institutes for Quantum Science and Technology (QST) kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=Present address: NanoTerasu Center, National Institutes for Quantum Science and Technology (QST) kn-affil= affil-num=8 en-affil=Graduate School of Human and Environmental Studies, Kyoto University kn-affil= affil-num=9 en-affil=Present address: Department of Applied Physics, Nagoya University kn-affil= END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=15 cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page=160 end-page=164 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=2026 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Verification of a Skin Electrical Impedance Model for Evaluating Indicators of Skin Barrier Function of Older Adults en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Skin barrier function has been quantitatively evaluated through trans-epidermal water loss, which has been difficult to measure in clinical settings owing to environmental factors and the measurement time. The thickness and surface water content of the stratum corneum are important indicators of skin barrier function, and current methods for measuring these two indicators are also difficult to implement in clinical settings. Therefore, we developed a model based on skin electrical impedance to estimate the thickness and water content of the stratum corneum, enabling measurement and estimation of these two indicators in a short time. In this study, we verified this model implemented in a portable skin electrical impedance measurement device for estimating the thickness and surface water content of the stratum corneum of the skin in older adults. Thirty-four older individuals were studied. The measurement electrodes were placed in contact with the forearm skin, and an alternating signal of two frequencies was applied to measure the impedance, from which the thickness and surface water content of the stratum corneum were estimated in approximately 5 s. The correlation coefficients between the estimated and measured thickness and between the estimated and measured surface water content were 0.732 and 0.604, respectively. Furthermore, the root mean square errors of the residuals for the thickness and surface water content were 1.66 ?m and 3.50 points, respectively, indicating that the model accurately estimated the thickness and surface water content of the stratum corneum, even in the skin of older adults. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=UEHARAOsamu en-aut-sei=UEHARA en-aut-mei=Osamu kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=FUNAKIYuya en-aut-sei=FUNAKI en-aut-mei=Yuya kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=NAKAMURATakao en-aut-sei=NAKAMURA en-aut-mei=Takao kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Medical Engineering Laboratory, ALCARE Co., Ltd. kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Medical Engineering Laboratory, ALCARE Co., Ltd. kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Department of Radiological Technology, Graduate School of Health Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= en-keyword=older adults kn-keyword=older adults en-keyword=stratum corneum thickness kn-keyword=stratum corneum thickness en-keyword=stratum corneum surface water content kn-keyword=stratum corneum surface water content END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=9 cd-vols= no-issue=3 article-no= start-page=e72040 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=202603 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Effects of Overload on Imiquimod]Induced Psoriasis Model Mice: A Basic Experimental Study en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Background and Aim: Psoriasis is a skin disorder complicated by arthritis and enthesitis. The cytokines interleukin (IL)-17, IL-23, and tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-ƒ¿ are reportedly key effectors of psoriasis. Additionally, gamma delta (ƒÁƒÂ) T cells exacerbate inflammation by producing inflammatory cytokines such as IL-17 and TNF-ƒ¿. However, details regarding the mechanisms linking pathogenesis and mechanical stress remain unclear. This study aimed to investigate the effect of strenuous exercise on the pathology of psoriasis using mouse models of imiquimod (IMQ)-induced psoriasis.
Methods: Twenty mice were randomly assigned to four groups: IMQ???TRED? (control), IMQ???TRED+ (treadmill running mice), IMQ?+?TRED? group (IMQ treated mice), and IMQ?+?TRED+ group (IMQ treated and treadmill running mice). The tissue sections from back skin and thymus were immunostained with antibodies against IL-17, IL-23, and ƒÁƒÂ T cells. Shoulder sections were stained using hematoxylin and eosin, and Toluidine Blue and Picrosirius Red. Additionally, the shoulder tissue sections were immunostained with antibodies against TNF-ƒ¿ and matrix metalloproteinase (MMP)-13. Serum cytokine level was measured to evaluate systemic inflammation.
Results: Strenuous exercise exacerbated pathological changes associated with psoriasis, including increased ƒÁƒÂ T cell infiltration and upregulated IL-17 and IL-23 expression in the skin, as well as enhanced ƒÁƒÂ T cell development and IL-17 expression in the thymus. Although strenuous exercise did not further worsen the modified PASI scores, histological and immunological markers of inflammation were significantly enhanced. Serum levels of TNF-ƒ¿ and IL-17 were significantly elevated in IMQ-induced psoriasis model mice. Moreover, pathological changes induced by strenuous exercise were observed in the enthesis, including angiogenesis and upregulated expression of TNF-ƒ¿ and MMP-13.
Conclusion: This study revealed that strenuous exercise exacerbates pathological changes in IMQ-induced psoriasis model mice. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=FurutaniTomoki en-aut-sei=Furutani en-aut-mei=Tomoki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=SaitoTaichi en-aut-sei=Saito en-aut-mei=Taichi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=IkedaAsahi en-aut-sei=Ikeda en-aut-mei=Asahi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=MashimaKenta en-aut-sei=Mashima en-aut-mei=Kenta kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=YukihiroNatsumi en-aut-sei=Yukihiro en-aut-mei=Natsumi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=KusakabeSatoki en-aut-sei=Kusakabe en-aut-mei=Satoki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=NakamichiRyo en-aut-sei=Nakamichi en-aut-mei=Ryo kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= en-aut-name=YoshidaAki en-aut-sei=Yoshida en-aut-mei=Aki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=8 ORCID= en-aut-name=NishidaKeiichiro en-aut-sei=Nishida en-aut-mei=Keiichiro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=9 ORCID= en-aut-name=OzakiToshifumi en-aut-sei=Ozaki en-aut-mei=Toshifumi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=10 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Section of Medicine, Division of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Okayama University Medical School Faculty of Medicine kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Okayama University Medical School Faculty of Medicine kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Okayama University Medical School Faculty of Medicine kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Okayama University Medical School Faculty of Medicine Okayama Japan kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=8 en-affil=Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=9 en-affil=Locomotive Pain Center, Okayama University Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=10 en-affil=Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= en-keyword=enthesis kn-keyword=enthesis en-keyword=psoriasis kn-keyword=psoriasis en-keyword=strenuous exercise kn-keyword=strenuous exercise END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=9 cd-vols= no-issue=1 article-no= start-page=e70168 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=202603 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Mechanosensitive Ion Channel PIEZO1 Suppresses BMP2-Induced Ossification of the Annulus Fibrosus Cells en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Objective: Major cause of low-back pain is intervertebral disc degeneration (IVDD), with mechanical stress playing a crucial role in its progression. A mechanosensitive ion channel, PIEZO1, is involved in various musculoskeletal tissues, but its role in the annulus fibrosus (AF) remains unclear. This study aimed to elucidate the function of PIEZO1 in AF cells under mechanical stimulation.
Methods: Primary rat AF cells were subjected to cyclic tensile strain (CTS) at low (2%) and high (12%) strain levels to investigate strain-dependent effects on osteogenic gene expression. We evaluated the effects of Piezo1, Piezo2, and Trpv4 knockdown by RNA interference to identify the upstream mechanotransducer. Furthermore, PIEZO1 was activated using the agonist Yoda1, followed by RNA-sequencing analysis and evaluation of its effects on BMP2-induced osteogenesis in rat AF cells. We also examined the effects of Yoda1 in primary human AF cells.
Results: Low-strain CTS significantly suppressed osteogenic marker expression, which was not observed with high strain. Piezo1 knockdown reversed this suppression, whereas Piezo2 and Trpv4 had no effect. Piezo1 activation by Yoda1 produced similar anti-osteogenic effects in both rat and human AF cells. RNA sequencing revealed the enrichment of ossification and calcineurin signaling pathways in rat cells. Furthermore, Piezo1 activation inhibited BMP2-induced osteogenesis and nuclear translocation of p-Smad1/5/9.
Conclusions: Piezo1 maintains AF cell homeostasis under mechanical stress by suppressing osteogenic changes via calcineurin-mediated inhibition of BMP signaling, which may represent a novel therapeutic target for IVDD. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=ShitozawaHisakazu en-aut-sei=Shitozawa en-aut-mei=Hisakazu kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=NakamichiRyo en-aut-sei=Nakamichi en-aut-mei=Ryo kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=YoshidaAki en-aut-sei=Yoshida en-aut-mei=Aki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=UedaMasataka en-aut-sei=Ueda en-aut-mei=Masataka kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=SaitoTaichi en-aut-sei=Saito en-aut-mei=Taichi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=UotaniKoji en-aut-sei=Uotani en-aut-mei=Koji kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=OdaYoshiaki en-aut-sei=Oda en-aut-mei=Yoshiaki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= en-aut-name=TakatoriRyo en-aut-sei=Takatori en-aut-mei=Ryo kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=8 ORCID= en-aut-name=YamashitaKazutaka en-aut-sei=Yamashita en-aut-mei=Kazutaka kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=9 ORCID= en-aut-name=OzakiToshifumi en-aut-sei=Ozaki en-aut-mei=Toshifumi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=10 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Science of Functional Recovery and Reconstruction, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Okayama University Graduate School Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Science of Functional Recovery and Reconstruction, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Science of Functional Recovery and Reconstruction, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Okayama University Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Okayama University Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=8 en-affil=Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Science of Functional Recovery and Reconstruction, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=9 en-affil=Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Science of Functional Recovery and Reconstruction, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=10 en-affil=Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= en-keyword=annulus fibrosus kn-keyword=annulus fibrosus en-keyword=calcification kn-keyword=calcification en-keyword=ossification kn-keyword=ossification en-keyword=PIEZO1 kn-keyword=PIEZO1 END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=57 cd-vols= no-issue=3 article-no= start-page=93 end-page=109 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260318 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Environmental Conservation Costs and Operational Efficiency: Evidence from Japanese Manufacturing Firms en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=@This study investigates whether environmental conservation costs (ECC) support the operational effectiveness and financial stability of Japanese manufacturing firms. Using a balanced panel of 128 non-financial companies listed on the Tokyo Stock Exchange from 2010 to 2022, we manually collected firm-level ECC data based on the Ministry of the Environment, Japan's guidelines from sustainability reports and matched them with financial data from Compustat Global/S&P Capital IQ. Applying pooled ordinary least squares regression with firm-level clustered standard errors and winsorized variables, we examine two aspects of performance as measures of operating efficiency and profitability: asset turnover and profit margin. The results show that ECC is positively associated with asset turnover and profit margin, and that the effect is stronger in more profitable companies, substantiating the Resource-Based View that green practices generate competitiveness. These findings contribute to sustainability finance research by going beyond perceptual measures of environmental, social, and governance ratings, and measuring actual firm-level spending on environmental activities, thereby providing more nuanced insights into how environmental practices translate into actual financial performance. This study offers clear managerial and policy implications by showing that transparent environmental conservation costs improve disclosure quality and serve as a measure of improved efficiency and profitability. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=NazirYusra en-aut-sei=Nazir en-aut-mei=Yusra kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=TennojiyaTatsumasa en-aut-sei=Tennojiya en-aut-mei=Tatsumasa kn-aut-name=“V‰¤Ž›’J’B« kn-aut-sei=“V‰¤Ž›’J kn-aut-mei=’B« aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Doctoral student at Graduate school of humanities and social sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Faculty of humanities and social sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= en-keyword=Environmental Accounting kn-keyword=Environmental Accounting en-keyword=Environmental Conservation Cost, Operating Efficiency kn-keyword=Environmental Conservation Cost, Operating Efficiency en-keyword=Profitability kn-keyword=Profitability en-keyword=Asset Turnover kn-keyword=Asset Turnover en-keyword=Sustainability kn-keyword=Sustainability en-keyword=Japanese Manufacturing Companies kn-keyword=Japanese Manufacturing Companies en-keyword=Resource-Based View kn-keyword=Resource-Based View END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=57 cd-vols= no-issue=3 article-no= start-page=11 end-page=40 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260318 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title=Network Analysis of Interregional Information Exchange: A Study in the Takahashi River Basin Area kn-title=’nˆæŠÔ‚Å‚Ìî•ñŒð—¬‚ÉŠÖ‚·‚éƒlƒbƒgƒ[ƒN•ªÍF‚—Àì—¬ˆæŒ—‚ł̒²¸‚É‚æ‚é en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract=@This paper conducted network analysis focusing on information exchange among participating entities in the "Takahashi River Basin Economic Growth Strategy Council," operating within Okayama Prefecture's "Takahashi River Basin Core City Area." The Takahashi River Basin Collaborative Core City Areai Takahashi River Basin Areajis a collaborative core city area encompassing ten municipalities located around the Takahashi River in Okayama Prefecture: Niimi City, Takahashi City, Soja City, Hayashima Town, Kurashiki City, Yakage Town, Ibara City, Asakuchi City, Satosho Town, and Kasaoka City. For the network analysis within the Takahashi River Basin Area, projects implemented within the area were classified into eight categories. A questionnaire survey was conducted regarding information exchange among participating entities for each project. Network metrics included calculating centrality indicesi degree centrality and betweenness centralityj for each project, along with density, transitivity, and reciprocity. By project type, tourism projects exhibited the densest network structure for information exchange. From a network perspective, tourism projects can be considered the most actively pursued initiative within the Takahashi River Basin area. Furthermore, across all projects, centrality indicators for specific administrative bodies and regional economic organizations, such as chambers of commerce and industry, generally showed high values. This clearly indicates their function as hubs for information exchange and as entities concentrating or dispersing information within the network. Based on the results of network analysis, two recommendations for future regional development in the Takahashi River Basin were proposed from a network perspective. The first is to aim for dense networks across all businesses by sharing the roles of information exchange hubs and information concentration/distribution entities among the entities involved, depending on the business. The second is to aim for a dense network overall by eliminating entities that are not participating at all in the Takahashi River Basin's information exchange network. kn-abstract=@–{e‚Å‚ÍC‰ªŽRŒ§‚Ìu‚—Àì—¬ˆæ˜AŒg’†•“sŽsŒ—v‚Å2014”N‚©‚çŠJ³‚ê‚Ä‚¢‚éu‚—Àì—¬ˆæŒoϬ’·í—ª‰ï‹cv‚É‚¨‚¯‚éŽQ‰ÁŽå‘ÌŠÔ‚Ìî•ñŒð—¬‚ɂ‚¢‚Ẵlƒbƒgƒ[ƒN•ªÍ‚ðs‚Á‚½B‚—Àì—¬ˆæ˜AŒg’†•“sŽsŒ—i‚—Àì—¬ˆæŒ—j‚Æ‚ÍC‰ªŽRŒ§‚—ÀìŽü•ӂɈʒu‚·‚錻݂ÌVŒ©ŽsC‚—ÀŽsC‘ŽÐŽsC‘“‡’¬C‘q•~ŽsC–îŠ|’¬CˆäŒ´ŽsCóŒûŽsC—¢¯’¬CŠ}‰ªŽs‚Ì10ީޡ‘Ì‚ªŽQ‰Á‚µ‚Ä‚¢‚é˜AŒg’†•“sŽsŒ—‚Å‚ ‚éB‚—Àì—¬ˆæŒ—‚É‚¨‚¯‚éƒlƒbƒgƒ[ƒN•ªÍ‚ÉÛ‚µ‚Ä‚ÍC“¯Œ—ˆæ“à‚Å“WŠJ‚³‚ê‚Ä‚¢‚鎖‹Æ‚ð‚W‚‚ɕª—Þ‚µC‚»‚ꂼ‚ê‚ÌŽ–‹Æ‚ÉŠÖ‚·‚éŽQ‰ÁŽå‘ÌŠÔ‚Ìî•ñŒð—¬‚ɂ‚¢‚ăAƒ“ƒP[ƒg’²¸‚ðs‚Á‚½Bƒlƒbƒgƒ[ƒNŽw•W‚ɂ‚¢‚Ă͎–‹Æ‚²‚ƂɎŸ”’†S«‚Æ”}‰î’†S«‚Ì’†S«Žw•W‚ðC‚Ü‚½Ž–‹Æ•ʂɖ§“xC„ˆÚ«C‘ŠŒÝ«‚ðŽZo‚µ‚½BŽ–‹Æ•Ê‚É‚Ý‚é‚ÆCŠÏŒõŽ–‹Æ‚ɂ‚¢‚Ä‚Ìî•ñŒð—¬‚ªÅ‚à–§‚ȃlƒbƒgƒ[ƒN\‘¢‚ð‚µ‚Ä‚¨‚èCƒlƒbƒgƒ[ƒN‚ÌŽ‹“_‚ł͊όõŽ–‹Æ‚ª‚—Àì—¬ˆæŒ—“à‚Åłਗ͓I‚És‚í‚ê‚Ä‚¢‚鎖‹Æ‚Æ‚¢‚¦‚éB‚Ü‚½‘SŽ–‹Æ‚É‚¨‚¢‚Ä“Á’è‚Ìs­Žå‘Ì‚â¤H‰ï‹cŠ‚ð‚Í‚¶‚߂Ƃ·‚é’nˆæŒoÏ’c‘Ì“™‚Ì’†S«Žw•W‚ª‘S‘Ì“I‚ɑ傫‚È’l‚ð‚Æ‚Á‚Ä‚¨‚èCƒlƒbƒgƒ[ƒN‚É‚¨‚¢‚Äî•ñŒð—¬‚̃nƒu‚âî•ñ‚ÌW’†E•ªŽUŽå‘̂Ƃµ‚Ä‹@”\‚µ‚Ä‚¢‚邱‚Æ‚ª–¾‚ç‚©‚ɂȂÁ‚½B•ªÍŒ‹‰Ê‚𓥂܂¦Cƒlƒbƒgƒ[ƒN‚ÌŽ‹“_‚©‚ç‚—Àì—¬ˆæŒ—‚Ì¡“x‚Ì’nˆæU‹»‚ɂ‚¢‚Ä‚Q“_’ñŒ¾‚µ‚½B‚P‚‚͎–‹Æ‚É‚æ‚Á‚Äî•ñŒð—¬‚̃nƒu‚âî•ñ‚ÌW’†E•ªŽUŽå‘Ì‚ðŽå‘ÌŠÔ‚Å•ª’S‚·‚邱‚Ƃɂæ‚Á‚ÄC‚·‚ׂĂ̎–‹Æ‚Å–§‚ȃlƒbƒgƒ[ƒN‚ð’z‚­‚±‚Æ‚ð–ÚŽw‚·‚±‚Ƃł ‚éB‚à‚¤‚P‚‚͂—Àì—¬ˆæŒ—‚Ìî•ñŒð—¬ƒlƒbƒgƒ[ƒN‚É‘S‚­ŽQ‰Á‚µ‚Ä‚¢‚È‚¢Žå‘Ì‚ð‚È‚­‚·‚±‚Æ‚ÅC‘S‘Ì“I‚É–§‚ȃlƒbƒgƒ[ƒN‚ð–ÚŽw‚·‚±‚Ƃł ‚éB en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=NakamuraRyohei en-aut-sei=Nakamura en-aut-mei=Ryohei kn-aut-name=’†‘º—Ç•½ kn-aut-sei=’†‘º kn-aut-mei=—Ç•½ aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=YokotaNatsumi en-aut-sei=Yokota en-aut-mei=Natsumi kn-aut-name=‰¡“c‰ÄŽÀ kn-aut-sei=‰¡“c kn-aut-mei=‰ÄŽÀ aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil= kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠw affil-num=2 en-affil= kn-affil=‰ºŠÖŽs–ðŠ END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=57 cd-vols= no-issue=3 article-no= start-page=1 end-page=10 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260318 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title=The 1998 Amendment to the Foreign Exchange and Foreign Trade Control Act and the Classification of Income from Gains and Losses on Foreign Currency Transactions: How Did the Amendment of 1998 Affect Income Classification? kn-title=1998”N‚ÌŠO‘ˆ×‘Ö‹y‚ÑŠO‘–fˆÕŠÇ—–@‰ü³‚Æ ŠO‘’ʉ݂Ì÷“n‚É‚æ‚鑹‰v‚ÌŠ“¾‹æ•ª \1998”N‚Ì–@‰ü³‚ÍŠ“¾‹æ•ª‚ɂǂ̂悤‚ȉe‹¿‚ð—^‚¦‚½‚Ì‚©\ en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract=@The 1998 amendment to the Foreign Exchange and Foreign Trade Control Acti subsequently renamed the Foreign Exchange and Foreign Trade Actj liberalized foreign exchange transactions, which had previously been restricted in principle to authorized foreign exchange banks. This amendment allowed all companies and individuals to freely conduct such transactions.
@This paper first examines the basis for the tax authorities' view that "gains or losses from foreign currency transfers constitute miscellaneous income," drawing from government witness testimony in the Diet and the Tokyo District Court judgement of March 9, 2023. Then it concludes that the 1998 legal amendment, by enabling anyone to freely conduct foreign currency transactions both internationally and domestically, transformed foreign currency into a means of payment functioning as a measure of value. Consequently, it became impossible to conceptualize foreign currency as an asset subject to appreciation or depreciation, leading to the reclassification of income from its transfer from capital gains to miscellaneous income. kn-abstract=@1998”N‚ÌŠO‘ˆ×‘Ö‹y‚ÑŠO‘–fˆÕŠÇ—–@‚̉ü³iˆÈ~CŠO‘ˆ×‘Ö‹y‚ÑŠO‘–fˆÕ–@‚ɉü–¼j‚É‚æ‚èC‚»‚ê‚܂ŊO‘ˆ×‘ÖŒö”F‹âs‚ÉŒ´‘¥‚Æ‚µ‚ÄŒÀ‚ç‚ê‚Ä‚¢‚½ŠO‘ˆ×‘ÖŽæˆø‚ªC‚ ‚ç‚ä‚éŠé‹Æ‹y‚ÑŒÂl‚ɉð•ú‚³‚êCŽ©—R‚És‚¤‚±‚Æ‚ª‚Å‚«‚邿‚¤‚ɂȂÁ‚½B
@–{e‚ÍC‚Ü‚¸‰ÛÅ“–‹Ç‚ÌuŠO‘’ʉ݂Ì÷“n‚É‚æ‚鑹‰v‚ÍŽGŠ“¾‚ÉŠY“–‚·‚év‚Ƃ̌©‰ð‚Ì”»’fª‹’‚ðC‘‰ï‚É‚¨‚¯‚é­•{ŽQll“š•Ù‹y‚Ñ“Œ‹ž’nٗߘa‚T”N‚RŒŽ‚X“ú”»Œˆ‚©‚ç“ǂ݉ð‚«C‚»‚Ì‚¤‚¦‚ÅC1998”N‚Ì–@‰ü³‚É‚æ‚èŠO‘’Ê‰ÝŽæˆø‚ª‘ΊO‹y‚Ñ‘“à‚É‚¨‚¢‚ĉ½l‚àŽ©—R‚És‚¤‚±‚Æ‚ª‚Å‚«‚邿‚¤‚ɂȂÁ‚½‚±‚Æ‚©‚çCŠO‘’ʉ݂͎x•¥Žè’i‚Æ‚µ‚ÄŒ¾‚í‚Ή¿’l‚ÌŽÚ“x‚Æ‚µ‚Ä‹@”\‚·‚邿‚¤‚ɂȂèCŽ‘ŽY‚Ì’lオ‚èC’l‰º‚ª‚è‚ðŠÏ”O‚·‚邱‚Æ‚ª‚Å‚«‚È‚­‚È‚Á‚½Œ‹‰Ê‚Æ‚µ‚ÄC‚»‚Ì÷“n‚É‚æ‚銓¾‹æ•ª‚ª÷“nŠ“¾‚©‚çŽGŠ“¾‚ւƕω»‚µ‚½‚Ƃ̌‹˜_‚𓱂­‚à‚̂ł ‚éB en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=NakagawaYoshiyuki en-aut-sei=Nakagawa en-aut-mei=Yoshiyuki kn-aut-name=’†ì‹g”V kn-aut-sei=’†ì kn-aut-mei=‹g”V aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil= kn-affil= END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=22 cd-vols= no-issue=9 article-no= start-page=e772 end-page=e780 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2025 dt-pub=202509 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Aging of the tricuspid valve annulus detected by photon-counting detector computed tomography: Importance of aortic root compression on occurrence of arrhythmias en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Background The aortic root compresses the heart in elderly patients, potentially influencing the conduction system and causing atrial tachyarrhythmias. However, actual anatomic alterations in the right side of the heart because of aortic root compression have not yet been fully evaluated.
Objective This study aimed to elucidate the alterations in the tricuspid valve annulus (TVA) caused by aortic root compression using a 3-dimensional endoscopic view of the heart constructed by photon-counting detector computed tomography, an emerging medical technology.
Methods We analyzed 147 consecutive patients who underwent photon-counting detector computed tomography at our institute after excluding those with diseases that directly influenced the right side of the heart.
Results Aortic root compression caused significant TVA deformation. We defined severe TVA compression as the length of the TVA compressed by the aortic root ?80% of the major axis of the TVA. Severe compression was more prevalent in elderly patients (age ?75 years [44%]; P < .01). The distance between the membranous septum and ostium of the coronary sinus was shortened, whereas the cavotricuspid isthmus was elongated in older patients. The regression analysis identified aging as a significant contributor to TVA compression. The short minor and long major axes of the TVA, incidence of atrial tachyarrhythmias (74% vs 45%; P < .01), and atrioventricular conduction disturbances (35% vs 15%; P < .01) were more frequently observed in patients with severe compression.
Conclusion Aortic root compression deforms the TVA and alters the anatomic relationship between the atrioventricular conduction system and the cavotricuspid isthmus. Therefore, aortic root compression may contribute to the occurrence of atrial tachyarrhythmias and conduction disturbances in older patients. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=MoritaHiroshi en-aut-sei=Morita en-aut-mei=Hiroshi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=NakagawaKoji en-aut-sei=Nakagawa en-aut-mei=Koji kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=NagaseSatoshi en-aut-sei=Nagase en-aut-mei=Satoshi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=MorimotoYoshihisa en-aut-sei=Morimoto en-aut-mei=Yoshihisa kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=MasudaTakuro en-aut-sei=Masuda en-aut-mei=Takuro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=UeokaAkira en-aut-sei=Ueoka en-aut-mei=Akira kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=AsadaSaori en-aut-sei=Asada en-aut-mei=Saori kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= en-aut-name=MiyamotoMasakazu en-aut-sei=Miyamoto en-aut-mei=Masakazu kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=8 ORCID= en-aut-name=TohNorihisa en-aut-sei=Toh en-aut-mei=Norihisa kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=9 ORCID= en-aut-name=MiyoshiToru en-aut-sei=Miyoshi en-aut-mei=Toru kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=10 ORCID= en-aut-name=NishiiNobuhiro en-aut-sei=Nishii en-aut-mei=Nobuhiro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=11 ORCID= en-aut-name=YuasaShinsuke en-aut-sei=Yuasa en-aut-mei=Shinsuke kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=12 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Department of Cardiovascular Therapeutics, Okayama University Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Department of Cardiovascular Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine and Dentistry kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Department of General Internal Medicine 3, Kawasaki Medical School General Medical Center kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Department of Cardiovascular Medicine, Fukuyama City Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Department of Cardiovascular Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine and Dentistry kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Department of Cardiovascular Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine and Dentistry kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=Department of Cardiovascular Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine and Dentistry kn-affil= affil-num=8 en-affil=Department of Cardiovascular Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine and Dentistry kn-affil= affil-num=9 en-affil=Department of Cardiovascular Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine and Dentistry kn-affil= affil-num=10 en-affil=Department of Cardiovascular Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine and Dentistry kn-affil= affil-num=11 en-affil=Department of Cardiovascular Therapeutics, Okayama University Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=12 en-affil=Department of Cardiovascular Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine and Dentistry kn-affil= en-keyword=Tricuspid valve annulus kn-keyword=Tricuspid valve annulus en-keyword=Aortic root kn-keyword=Aortic root en-keyword=Photon-counting detector computed tomography kn-keyword=Photon-counting detector computed tomography en-keyword=Atrial tachyarrhythmia kn-keyword=Atrial tachyarrhythmia en-keyword=Conduction abnormality kn-keyword=Conduction abnormality END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=67 cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page=101798 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=202602 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Alcohol consumption, smoking, and the implications of their cessations for field carcinogenesis in the esophagus: a 10-year prospective cohort study en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Background Alcohol and tobacco are established carcinogens, which promote field carcinogenesis for esophageal squamous cell carcinoma (ESCC). This study aimed to evaluate the long-term effects of alcohol and tobacco cessations, and background mucosal status, on risk for metachronous ESCC (mESCC) after endoscopic resection (ER).
Methods This was a multicentre prospective cohort study of patients with intramucosal ESCC treated by ER. All participants received structured education on cessation, and underwent regular endoscopic surveillance. Patients were stratified by Lugol-voiding lesion (LVL) grade (A: none, B: 1?9, C: ?10). The impacts of alcohol and smoking cessation on field carcinogenesis were assessed.
Findings Among 331 enrolled patients, the median follow-up was 120 months (range: 1.3?176.9). The cumulative incidences of mESCC were 10.4%, 27.2%, and 61.8% in grades A, B, and C, respectively. An increment of 1 unit (22 g ethanol) of alcohol consumption and higher LVL grade independently increased the risk for mESCC. Alcohol or smoking cessation reduced this risk (hazard ratio [HR] 0.52, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.31?0.88; HR 0.44, 95% CI: 0.25?0.78, respectively), and combined cessation had the greatest impact (HR 0.21, 95% CI: 0.07?0.65). Complete cessation, rather than partial reduction, was necessary to achieve meaningful risk reduction.
Interpretation Alcohol and tobacco exposure, and a large number of LVL, are major determinants of mESCC. Complete cessation markedly reduces risk, underscoring the importance of behavioural interventions for secondary prevention of field carcinogenesis after ER. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=KatadaChikatoshi en-aut-sei=Katada en-aut-mei=Chikatoshi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=YokoyamaTetsuji en-aut-sei=Yokoyama en-aut-mei=Tetsuji kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=YanoTomonori en-aut-sei=Yano en-aut-mei=Tomonori kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=FurueYasuaki en-aut-sei=Furue en-aut-mei=Yasuaki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=SuzukiHaruhisa en-aut-sei=Suzuki en-aut-mei=Haruhisa kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=IshidoKenji en-aut-sei=Ishido en-aut-mei=Kenji kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=YamamotoKeiko en-aut-sei=Yamamoto en-aut-mei=Keiko kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= en-aut-name=NakanishiHiroyoshi en-aut-sei=Nakanishi en-aut-mei=Hiroyoshi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=8 ORCID= en-aut-name=KoikeTomoyuki en-aut-sei=Koike en-aut-mei=Tomoyuki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=9 ORCID= en-aut-name=TamaokiMasashi en-aut-sei=Tamaoki en-aut-mei=Masashi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=10 ORCID= en-aut-name=KawataNoboru en-aut-sei=Kawata en-aut-mei=Noboru kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=11 ORCID= en-aut-name=HiraoMotohiro en-aut-sei=Hirao en-aut-mei=Motohiro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=12 ORCID= en-aut-name=KawaharaYoshiro en-aut-sei=Kawahara en-aut-mei=Yoshiro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=13 ORCID= en-aut-name=OgataTakashi en-aut-sei=Ogata en-aut-mei=Takashi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=14 ORCID= en-aut-name=KatagiriAtsushi en-aut-sei=Katagiri en-aut-mei=Atsushi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=15 ORCID= en-aut-name=YamanouchiTakenori en-aut-sei=Yamanouchi en-aut-mei=Takenori kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=16 ORCID= en-aut-name=KiyokawaHirofumi en-aut-sei=Kiyokawa en-aut-mei=Hirofumi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=17 ORCID= en-aut-name=KawakuboHirofumi en-aut-sei=Kawakubo en-aut-mei=Hirofumi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=18 ORCID= en-aut-name=KonnoMaki en-aut-sei=Konno en-aut-mei=Maki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=19 ORCID= en-aut-name=YokoyamaAkira en-aut-sei=Yokoyama en-aut-mei=Akira kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=20 ORCID= en-aut-name=OhashiShinya en-aut-sei=Ohashi en-aut-mei=Shinya kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=21 ORCID= en-aut-name=OmoriTai en-aut-sei=Omori en-aut-mei=Tai kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=22 ORCID= en-aut-name=ShimodaTadakazu en-aut-sei=Shimoda en-aut-mei=Tadakazu kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=23 ORCID= en-aut-name=OchiaiAtsushi en-aut-sei=Ochiai en-aut-mei=Atsushi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=24 ORCID= en-aut-name=IshikawaHideki en-aut-sei=Ishikawa en-aut-mei=Hideki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=25 ORCID= en-aut-name=YokoyamaAkira en-aut-sei=Yokoyama en-aut-mei=Akira kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=26 ORCID= en-aut-name=MutoManabu en-aut-sei=Muto en-aut-mei=Manabu kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=27 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Department of Medical Oncology, Kyoto University Graduate School of Medicine kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Department of Health Promotion, National Institute of Public Health kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Department of Gastroenterology and Endoscopy, National Cancer Center Hospital East kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Department of Endoscopy, Saitama Cancer Center kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Department of Medicine, Nihon University School of Medicine kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Department of Gastroenterology, Kitasato University School of Medicine kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=Division of Endoscopy, Hokkaido University Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=8 en-affil=Department of Gastroenterology, Ishikawa Prefectural Central Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=9 en-affil=Division of Gastroenterology, Tohoku University Graduate School of Medicine kn-affil= affil-num=10 en-affil=Department of Medical Oncology, Kyoto University Graduate School of Medicine kn-affil= affil-num=11 en-affil=Division of Endoscopy, Shizuoka Cancer Center kn-affil= affil-num=12 en-affil=Department of Surgery, NHO Osaka National Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=13 en-affil=Department of Practical Gastrointestinal Endoscopy, Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=14 en-affil=Department of Gastrointestinal Surgery, Kanagawa Cancer Center kn-affil= affil-num=15 en-affil=Division of Gastroenterology, Department of Medicine, Showa Medical University Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=16 en-affil=Department of Gastroenterology, Kumamoto Regional Medical Center kn-affil= affil-num=17 en-affil=Department of Gastroenterology, St. Marianna University School of Medicine kn-affil= affil-num=18 en-affil= kn-affil= affil-num=19 en-affil=Department of Gastroenterology, Tochigi Cancer Center kn-affil= affil-num=20 en-affil=Department of Medical Oncology, Kyoto University Graduate School of Medicine kn-affil= affil-num=21 en-affil=Department of Medical Oncology, Kyoto University Graduate School of Medicine kn-affil= affil-num=22 en-affil=Department of Surgery, Kawasaki Municipal Kawasaki Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=23 en-affil=Department of Diagnostic Pathology, Shizuoka Cancer Center kn-affil= affil-num=24 en-affil=Exploratory Oncology Research and Clinicai Trial Center, National Cancer Center kn-affil= affil-num=25 en-affil=Department of Molecular-Targeting Prevention, Kyoto Prefectural University of Medicine kn-affil= affil-num=26 en-affil=Clinical Research Unit, National Hospital Organization Kurihama Medical and Addiction Center kn-affil= affil-num=27 en-affil=Department of Medical Oncology, Kyoto University Graduate School of Medicine kn-affil= en-keyword=Esophageal squamous cell carcinoma kn-keyword=Esophageal squamous cell carcinoma en-keyword=Field carcinogenesis kn-keyword=Field carcinogenesis en-keyword=Metachronous cancer kn-keyword=Metachronous cancer en-keyword=Alcohol kn-keyword=Alcohol en-keyword=Tobacco kn-keyword=Tobacco en-keyword=Lugol-voiding lesion kn-keyword=Lugol-voiding lesion END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=12 cd-vols= no-issue=1 article-no= start-page=27 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260203 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Association between the incidence of infusion-related reactions by obinutuzumab and the dose of corticosteroid as premedication: a multicenter retrospective cohort study en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Background Premedication with corticosteroids is recommended for prophylaxis against infusion-related reactions (IRRs) caused by obinutuzumab despite a lack of solid evidence regarding the dose of corticosteroids.
Methods The incidence rates of IRR in the high-dose and low-dose corticosteroid groups were investigated and compared using Studentfs t-test.Univariable and multivariable logistic regression analyses were performed on patients to explore the risk of developing IRRs with obinutuzumab.
Results The incidence of IRRs in the high-dose and low-dose corticosteroid groups at the initial administration of obinutuzumab was 27.0% (41/152) and 48.4% (31/64), respectively, indicating that the high-dose group had a lower incidence of IRRs (p?=?0.002). The incidence of IRRs at the initial administration of obinutuzumab was significantly associated with the administration of first-generation histamine 1 receptor antagonist (OR?=?3.31, 95% CI: 1.16?9.47; reference: second-generation histamine 1 receptor antagonist), hydrocortisone (OR?=?7.21, 95% CI: 1.57?33.15; reference: dexamethasone), and methylprednisolone (OR?=?3.99, 95% CI :1.13?14.10; reference: dexamethasone), although no association was found with the lower dose of corticosteroids.
Conclusions Although no association was found between corticosteroid dosage and IRR when considering multiple factors, dexamethasone may be a better option than hydrocortisone or methylprednisolone for preventing IRR. Additionally, second-generation H1-receptor antagonists may be a better option than first-generation drugs. Certain combinations of premedications may influence infusion reaction incidence. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=OhtsuboTatsuya en-aut-sei=Ohtsubo en-aut-mei=Tatsuya kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=YamamotoKazuhiro en-aut-sei=Yamamoto en-aut-mei=Kazuhiro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=MatumotoSaori en-aut-sei=Matumoto en-aut-mei=Saori kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=ItoKaori en-aut-sei=Ito en-aut-mei=Kaori kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=SasaYuzuka en-aut-sei=Sasa en-aut-mei=Yuzuka kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=TomishimaKosuke en-aut-sei=Tomishima en-aut-mei=Kosuke kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=DoteSatoshi en-aut-sei=Dote en-aut-mei=Satoshi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= en-aut-name=MakiharaKatuya en-aut-sei=Makihara en-aut-mei=Katuya kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=8 ORCID= en-aut-name=WakasugiYoshinori en-aut-sei=Wakasugi en-aut-mei=Yoshinori kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=9 ORCID= en-aut-name=MitsuieTsutomu en-aut-sei=Mitsuie en-aut-mei=Tsutomu kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=10 ORCID= en-aut-name=YamagiwaKouhei en-aut-sei=Yamagiwa en-aut-mei=Kouhei kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=11 ORCID= en-aut-name=SatoKazuo en-aut-sei=Sato en-aut-mei=Kazuo kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=12 ORCID= en-aut-name=HasegawaHiroki en-aut-sei=Hasegawa en-aut-mei=Hiroki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=13 ORCID= en-aut-name=UoshimaNobuhiko en-aut-sei=Uoshima en-aut-mei=Nobuhiko kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=14 ORCID= en-aut-name=KitahiroYumi en-aut-sei=Kitahiro en-aut-mei=Yumi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=15 ORCID= en-aut-name=TomoganeKanji en-aut-sei=Tomogane en-aut-mei=Kanji kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=16 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Department of Pharmacy, Japanese Red Cross Kyoto Daini Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Department of Integrated Clinical and Basic Pharmaceutical Sciences, Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Department of Pharmacy, Japanese Red Cross Osaka Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Faculty of Pharmacy, Meijo University kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Department of Pharmacy, Kindai University Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Department of Pharmacy, Japanese Red Cross Kyoto Daiichi Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=Department of Pharmacy, Kyoto-Katsura Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=8 en-affil=Department of Pharmacy, Yodogawa Christian Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=9 en-affil=Department of Pharmacy, Shiga University of Medical Science Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=10 en-affil=Department of Pharmacy, Japanese Red Cross Otsu Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=11 en-affil=Department of Pharmacy, Saiseikai Shiga Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=12 en-affil=Department of Pharmacy, Japan Baptist Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=13 en-affil=Department of Pharmacy, Rakuwakai Otowa Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=14 en-affil=Department of Hematology, Japanese Red Cross Kyoto Daini Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=15 en-affil=Department of Pharmacy, Kobe University Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=16 en-affil=Department of Pharmacy, Japanese Red Cross Kyoto Daini Hospital kn-affil= en-keyword=Obinutuzumab kn-keyword=Obinutuzumab en-keyword=Infusion-related reaction kn-keyword=Infusion-related reaction en-keyword=Premedication kn-keyword=Premedication en-keyword=Corticosteroids kn-keyword=Corticosteroids en-keyword=Histamine 1 receptor antagonists kn-keyword=Histamine 1 receptor antagonists END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=16 cd-vols= no-issue=5 article-no= start-page=2339 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260228 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Concentration-Dependent Synergistic Interfacial Interactions Between Multifunctional Acrylate and Silane Coupling Agents in an Organic?Inorganic Nanohybrid Material en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Synergistic effects of a multifunctional acrylate and a long-chain silane coupling agent were investigated in an organic?inorganic nanohybrid material. We tested the bond strength of nanohybrid composites treated with experimental primers containing silane coupling agents?3-methacryloxypropyl trimethoxysilane (ƒÁ-MPTS) or 8-methacryloxyoctyl trimethoxysilane (8-MOTS)?with or without multifunctional acrylates?trimethylolpropane triacrylate (A-TMPT) or dipentaerythritol hexaacrylate (A-DPH). Shear bond strength was evaluated after 24 h of water storage at 37 ‹C. Untreated control and silane-only groups exhibited low shear bond strengths (e.g., control: 2.4 } 2.0 MPa) and failed exclusively at the adhesive interface. While addition of A-TMPT did not significantly improve bond strength, addition of A-DPH produced significantly higher shear bond strengths. Highest strength was achieved with 30% 8-MOTS and A-DPH (22.4 } 6.1 MPa), followed by 20% ƒÁ-MPTS and A-DPH (19.0 } 7.0 MPa), and A-DPH groups produced cohesive failures. Regardless of the silane used (ƒÁ-MPTS or 8-MOTS), incorporating A-DPH in the primer consistently yielded superior bond strengths, indicating a promising strategy for improved adhesion for such nanohybrid systems. These findings provide new insights into optimizing resin?filler interfacial interactions and may contribute to the development of restorative materials with improved long-term clinical durability. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=MaruoYukinori en-aut-sei=Maruo en-aut-mei=Yukinori kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=YoshiharaKumiko en-aut-sei=Yoshihara en-aut-mei=Kumiko kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=IrieMasao en-aut-sei=Irie en-aut-mei=Masao kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=NagaokaNoriyuki en-aut-sei=Nagaoka en-aut-mei=Noriyuki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=KodamaNaoki en-aut-sei=Kodama en-aut-mei=Naoki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=YoshizaneMai en-aut-sei=Yoshizane en-aut-mei=Mai kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=AkiyamaKentaro en-aut-sei=Akiyama en-aut-mei=Kentaro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Department of Prosthodontics, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Health Research Institute, National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Department of Biomaterials, Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Advanced Research Center for Oral and Craniofacial Sciences, Dental School, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Department of Prosthodontics, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Department of Occlusal and Oral Functional Rehabilitation, Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=Department of Occlusal and Oral Functional Rehabilitation, Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= en-keyword=silane coupling kn-keyword=silane coupling en-keyword=multifunctional acrylate kn-keyword=multifunctional acrylate en-keyword=bond strength kn-keyword=bond strength en-keyword=resin kn-keyword=resin END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=12 cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page=e79545 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260302 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Prescription Support Practice for Pharmacy Students: Pre-Post Educational Intervention Study en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Background: In the field of team-based care, pharmacists are vital for optimizing medication therapy. However, many medical professionals lack the opportunity to learn how to propose prescription changes with precision.
Objective: This study aimed to address this knowledge gap by developing and assessing a new educational program for pharmacy students focused on prescription support and interprofessional collaboration.
Methods: We recruited 191 fifth-year pharmaceutical students during the 2022]2024 academic years. The program featured a 7-day intensive curriculum that included learning how to assist with prescriptions, analyzing clinical data, and engaging in role-playing exercises. A web-based questionnaire and a paper test were used to evaluate studentsf awareness and knowledge both before and after the program. Statistical analyses were performed to verify the significance of changes; we utilized the Wilcoxon signed-rank test for the ordinal data derived from the specific behavioral objectives and 2-tailed paired t tests for the interval data from the knowledge tests. The magnitude of change was quantified using r for Wilcoxon tests and Cohen dz for 2-tailed t tests, with 95% CI calculated to ensure the stability and reliability of the observed results.
Results: Analysis of the primary outcome specific behavioral objectives revealed statistically significant effects across all items (Wilcoxon signed-rank test; P<.001). Effect sizes (r=0.505]0.835) ranged from moderate to large, with particularly large effects observed in identifying contents issue (r=0.835, 95% CI 0.126-0.330; P<.001). Knowledge test scores showed significant improvement in the following 3 subjects: pharmacology (r=?0.504, 95% CI ?0.215 to 0.127; P<.001), organic chemistry (r=0.254, 95% CI ?0.148 to ?0.193; P=.004), and communication (r=0.221, 95% CI ?0.151 to ?0.190; P=.01). No significant changes were observed in pathology or pharmacokinetics.
Conclusions: This program provides strong evidence that practical, hands-on learning with hospital pharmacists helps improve pharmacy studentsf professional skills and optimize pharmaceutical therapies in interprofessional care. By teaching pharmacists to effectively propose prescription changes, the program equips them to become integral members of interprofessional care, ultimately leading to optimized pharmaceutical care for patients. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=AizawaFuka en-aut-sei=Aizawa en-aut-mei=Fuka kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=YagiKenta en-aut-sei=Yagi en-aut-mei=Kenta kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=HigashionnaTsukasa en-aut-sei=Higashionna en-aut-mei=Tsukasa kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=HamanoHirofumi en-aut-sei=Hamano en-aut-mei=Hirofumi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=TakahashiShimon en-aut-sei=Takahashi en-aut-mei=Shimon kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=ZamamiYoshito en-aut-sei=Zamami en-aut-mei=Yoshito kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=ShinomiyaKazuaki en-aut-sei=Shinomiya en-aut-mei=Kazuaki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= en-aut-name=NiimuraTakahiro en-aut-sei=Niimura en-aut-mei=Takahiro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=8 ORCID= en-aut-name=GodaMitsuhiro en-aut-sei=Goda en-aut-mei=Mitsuhiro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=9 ORCID= en-aut-name=KawadaKei en-aut-sei=Kawada en-aut-mei=Kei kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=10 ORCID= en-aut-name=IshizawaKeisuke en-aut-sei=Ishizawa en-aut-mei=Keisuke kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=11 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Clinical Research Center for Developmental Therapeutics, Tokushima University Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Department of Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics, Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences, Tokushima University kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Department of Pharmacy, Okayama University Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Department of Pharmacy, Okayama University Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Department of Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics, Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences, Tokushima University kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Department of Pharmacy, Okayama University Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=Department of Pharmaceutical Care and Clinical Pharmacy, Tokushima Bunri University kn-affil= affil-num=8 en-affil=Clinical Research Center for Developmental Therapeutics, Tokushima University Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=9 en-affil=Department of Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics, Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences, Tokushima University kn-affil= affil-num=10 en-affil=Department of Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics, Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences, Tokushima University kn-affil= affil-num=11 en-affil=Clinical Research Center for Developmental Therapeutics, Tokushima University Hospital kn-affil= en-keyword=academic detailing kn-keyword=academic detailing en-keyword=pharmaceutical clinical practice kn-keyword=pharmaceutical clinical practice en-keyword=prescription support kn-keyword=prescription support en-keyword=professional education kn-keyword=professional education en-keyword=Interprofessional care kn-keyword=Interprofessional care END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=69 cd-vols= no-issue=5 article-no= start-page=5944 end-page=5955 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260218 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Discovery of Thermal Sensitizers That Inhibit Heat-Induced SAFB Granule Formation en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Hyperthermia is a minimally invasive cancer treatment based on heat stress-induced apoptosis. Its therapeutic efficacy, however, is often limited by tumor heterogeneity and acquired thermotolerance. Therefore, combination strategies involving hyperthermia and chemotherapy have been developed to enhance the therapeutic efficacy. Previously, we showed that SB366791 enhanced heat-induced apoptosis by inhibiting heat stress-induced scaffold attachment factor B (SAFB) granule formation, although its proapoptotic activity was insufficient. Therefore, we screened to identify novel compounds that enhance heat-induced apoptosis by suppressing SAFB granule formation. We identified four hit compounds that inhibited SAFB granule formation, all exhibiting thermal enhancement ratios > 1.0„Ÿthat significantly enhanced heat-induced apoptosis efficiency. Additionally, the tumor volume in mice treated with a combination of Z19024498 and hyperthermia was significantly smaller than that in mice treated with hyperthermia or Z19024498. These results indicate that the identified compounds, specifically Z19024498, have potential as thermal sensitizers for hyperthermia therapy. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=FurutaniYuji en-aut-sei=Furutani en-aut-mei=Yuji kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=ShimasakiNatsuki en-aut-sei=Shimasaki en-aut-mei=Natsuki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=YamadaRiko en-aut-sei=Yamada en-aut-mei=Riko kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=OhtsukiTakashi en-aut-sei=Ohtsuki en-aut-mei=Takashi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=WatanabeKazunori en-aut-sei=Watanabe en-aut-mei=Kazunori kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Faculty of Interdisciplinary Science and Engineering in Health Systems, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Faculty of Interdisciplinary Science and Engineering in Health Systems, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Faculty of Interdisciplinary Science and Engineering in Health Systems, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Faculty of Interdisciplinary Science and Engineering in Health Systems, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Faculty of Interdisciplinary Science and Engineering in Health Systems, Okayama University kn-affil= END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=16 cd-vols= no-issue=2 article-no= start-page=199 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260128 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Targeting the Gut in Sepsis: Therapeutic Potential of Medical Gases en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Sepsis is a life-threatening condition characterized by a dysregulated host response to infection, often resulting in multiorgan dysfunction. Among affected systems, the gastrointestinal tract plays a central role in sepsis progression by promoting systemic inflammation through impaired barrier function, immune imbalance, and microbiome alterations. Recent research has identified selected medical gases and gasotransmitters as promising therapeutic candidates for preserving gut integrity in sepsis. In particular, hydrogen, carbon monoxide, and hydrogen sulfide exhibit antioxidative, anti-inflammatory, and cytoprotective properties. These gases act through defined molecular pathways, including activation of Nrf2, inhibition of NF-ƒÈB, and preservation of tight junction integrity, thereby supporting intestinal barrier function. In addition, they influence immune cell phenotypes and autophagy, with indirect effects on the gut microbiome. Although most supporting evidence derives from preclinical models, translational findings and emerging safety data highlight the potential of gut-targeted gas-based strategies. This review summarizes current mechanistic and translational evidence for gut-protective medical gases in sepsis and discusses their integration into future organ-specific and mechanism-based therapeutic approaches. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=YumotoTetsuya en-aut-sei=Yumoto en-aut-mei=Tetsuya kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=ObaraTakafumi en-aut-sei=Obara en-aut-mei=Takafumi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=NaitoHiromichi en-aut-sei=Naito en-aut-mei=Hiromichi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=NakaoAtsunori en-aut-sei=Nakao en-aut-mei=Atsunori kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Department of Emergency, Critical Care, and Disaster Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Department of Emergency, Critical Care, and Disaster Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Department of Emergency, Critical Care, and Disaster Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Department of Emergency, Critical Care, and Disaster Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= en-keyword=carbon monoxide kn-keyword=carbon monoxide en-keyword=gastrointestinal tract kn-keyword=gastrointestinal tract en-keyword=gut kn-keyword=gut en-keyword=hydrogen kn-keyword=hydrogen en-keyword=hydrogen sulfide kn-keyword=hydrogen sulfide en-keyword=sepsis kn-keyword=sepsis en-keyword=septic shock kn-keyword=septic shock END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=16 cd-vols= no-issue=1 article-no= start-page=888 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2025 dt-pub=20251215 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=TRPV2 in muscle satellite cells is crucial for skeletal muscle remodelling en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Skeletal muscle remodelling relies on muscle stem cells (MuSCs) for regeneration after injury and hypertrophy in response to mechanical loading. However, the mechanisms that trigger MuSC activation and proliferation remain unclear. Transient receptor potential vanilloid 2 (TRPV2) ion channels respond to insulin-like growth factor-1 and mechanical stimuli to regulate the biological characteristics of various cells. Using a temporally inducible MuSC-specific conditional knockout (cKO) mouse, we show that TRPV2 regulates MuSC function and is essential for muscle remodelling. In cultured myofibre, MuSCs express TRPV2 and exhibit Ca2+ responses to the TRPV2 agonists 2-aminoethoxydiphenyl borate and probenecid, which are abolished upon TRPV2 deletion. TRPV2-deficient MuSCs exhibit reduced paired box 7 (Pax7) expression and impaired proliferation, suggesting TRPV2 is a factor that regulates the early stage of MuSC function. Myotube formation in MuSCs was enhanced by overexpression of TRPV2 and suppressed by TRPV2 deficiency, suggesting that TRPV2 is a factor that promotes myogenesis. Muscle-administered cardiotoxin promoted muscle regeneration and resulted in the appearance of numerous Pax7-positive MuSCs between myofibres. MuSC-specific TRPV2 cKO mice exhibit substantially impaired muscle regeneration after cardiotoxin-induced injury, drastically reducing Pax7-positive MuSCs between myofibres. In floxed mice, mechanical loading via synergist ablation induces hypertrophy and greatly increases the number of myonuclei per myofibre. In contrast, MuSC-specific TRPV2 cKO mice show no changes in myofibre thickness or nuclear number, either at baseline or after mechanical loading. Mechanical loading of floxed mice increased TRPV2+/Pax7+ double-positive MuSCs, but MuSC-specific TRPV2 cKO mice showed no change. Additionally, MuSCs exhibit Ca2+ responses to hypo-osmotic stimuli, which are suppressed by TRPV2 inhibitors and TRPV2 deletion, suggesting that MuSCs exhibit TRPV2-dependent mechanical responses. These results establish TRPV2 as a critical regulator of MuSC-mediated muscle remodelling, an important finding that may lead to therapeutic strategies for muscle repair and adaptation. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=ChenYanzhu en-aut-sei=Chen en-aut-mei=Yanzhu kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=KatanosakaKimiaki en-aut-sei=Katanosaka en-aut-mei=Kimiaki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=ShibuyaMakoto en-aut-sei=Shibuya en-aut-mei=Makoto kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=DongYubing en-aut-sei=Dong en-aut-mei=Yubing kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=ZhangLidan en-aut-sei=Zhang en-aut-mei=Lidan kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=KanagawaMotoi en-aut-sei=Kanagawa en-aut-mei=Motoi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=FukadaSo-ichiro en-aut-sei=Fukada en-aut-mei=So-ichiro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= en-aut-name=NaruseKeiji en-aut-sei=Naruse en-aut-mei=Keiji kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=8 ORCID= en-aut-name=KatanosakaYuki en-aut-sei=Katanosaka en-aut-mei=Yuki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=9 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Department of Cardiovascular Physiology, Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Department of Biomedical Sciences, College of Life and Health Sciences, Chubu University kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Department of Cardiovascular Physiology, Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Department of Cardiovascular Physiology, Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Laboratory of Stem Cell Regeneration and Adaptation, Graduate School of Pharmaceutical Sciences, The University of Osaka kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Department of Cell Biology and Molecular Medicine, Ehime University Graduate School of Medicine kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=Laboratory of Stem Cell Regeneration and Adaptation, Graduate School of Pharmaceutical Sciences, The University of Osaka kn-affil= affil-num=8 en-affil=Department of Cardiovascular Physiology, Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=9 en-affil=Department of Cardiovascular Physiology, Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=411 cd-vols= no-issue=1 article-no= start-page=22 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2025 dt-pub=20251127 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=The impact of liver transection depth on surgical difficulty in robotic versus laparoscopic limited liver resection (TAKUMI-5) en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Purpose Although robotic liver resection (RLR) has gained popularity worldwide, limited liver resection remains the mainstay of RLR. This study aimed to investigate the effect of parameters, including liver transection depth (LTD), on surgical difficulty in limited RLR compared with limited laparoscopic liver resection (LLR).
Methods This retrospective study included 105 patients who underwent limited RLR (n?=?56) or LLR (n?=?49) at our institution between January 2018 and December 2024. After comparing outcomes of RLR and LLR, multivariate analyses were performed to examine effect of LTD on surgical difficulty (defined as prolonged operative time). Moreover, outcomes stratified by LTD cut-off values were compared between the groups.
Results Median LTD was similar between groups (RLR vs. LLR: 2.6 vs. 2.6 cm, P?=?0.77). LTD was significantly correlated with operative time for both procedures (RLR, R? = 0.07, P?=?0.042; LLR, R? = 0.08, P?=?0.046). Multivariate analyses demonstrated that LLR (odds ratio, 6.9; P??2.5 cm), the RLR group had significantly shorter operative time (145 vs. 231 min, P? Conclusion This study investigated impact of LTD on surgical outcomes in patients who underwent limited RLR compared to those who underwent limited LLR. LTD may be a useful parameter for estimating surgical difficulty in limited RLR. Moreover, robotic surgery may be favorable for deeper and limited liver resections. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=FujiTomokazu en-aut-sei=Fuji en-aut-mei=Tomokazu kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=TakagiKosei en-aut-sei=Takagi en-aut-mei=Kosei kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=YasuiKazuya en-aut-sei=Yasui en-aut-mei=Kazuya kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=ItoAtene en-aut-sei=Ito en-aut-mei=Atene kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=NishiyamaTakeyoshi en-aut-sei=Nishiyama en-aut-mei=Takeyoshi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=NagaiYasuo en-aut-sei=Nagai en-aut-mei=Yasuo kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=YokoyamaShohei en-aut-sei=Yokoyama en-aut-mei=Shohei kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= en-aut-name=FujiwaraToshiyoshi en-aut-sei=Fujiwara en-aut-mei=Toshiyoshi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=8 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Department of Gastroenterological Surgery, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Department of Gastroenterological Surgery, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Department of Gastroenterological Surgery, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Department of Gastroenterological Surgery, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Department of Gastroenterological Surgery, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Department of Gastroenterological Surgery, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=Department of Gastroenterological Surgery, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine kn-affil= affil-num=8 en-affil=Department of Gastroenterological Surgery, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine kn-affil= en-keyword=Robotic surgery kn-keyword=Robotic surgery en-keyword=Laparoscopic surgery kn-keyword=Laparoscopic surgery en-keyword=Limited liver resection kn-keyword=Limited liver resection en-keyword=Textbook outcome kn-keyword=Textbook outcome END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=27 cd-vols= no-issue=10 article-no= start-page=e70269 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2025 dt-pub=202510 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=D3 lymph node dissection in colon cancer patients aged 90?years and over: Is it justified? A multi]institutional retrospective study en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Aim: The oncological benefit of D3 lymph node dissection (D3 LND) for colon cancer in patients aged ?90?years remains unclear. This study aimed to evaluate the impact of D3 LND on outcomes in this specific, vulnerable population.
Method: This retrospective cohort study evaluated 166 patients aged ?90?years with pathological Stages II?III colon cancer undergoing non-D3 or D3 LND from a multicentre database (2011?2022). Postoperative complications, overall survival and cancer-specific survival were compared between LND groups using propensity score-weighted analyses.
Results: D3 LND group had significantly more females and laparoscopic procedures. Operation time was longer, and blood loss was lower in the D3 LND group. Postoperative complications and severe complications were significantly fewer, and postoperative hospital stay was shorter in the D3 LND group. The number of harvested lymph nodes and distal margin was significantly higher in the D3 group. While unadjusted analysis showed better overall survival with D3 LND (p? Conclusion: In nonagenarian colon cancer patients, D3 LND is safe and feasible without increasing complications, but lacks survival benefit. Careful consideration is warranted, and high-quality D2 LND must be consistently ensured when limited surgery is chosen. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=TeraishiFuminori en-aut-sei=Teraishi en-aut-mei=Fuminori kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=TakanagaSatoe en-aut-sei=Takanaga en-aut-mei=Satoe kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=InadaRyo en-aut-sei=Inada en-aut-mei=Ryo kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=MitsuhashiToshiharu en-aut-sei=Mitsuhashi en-aut-mei=Toshiharu kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=ToshimaToshiaki en-aut-sei=Toshima en-aut-mei=Toshiaki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=OhtaniTsuyoshi en-aut-sei=Ohtani en-aut-mei=Tsuyoshi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=YoshidaRyosuke en-aut-sei=Yoshida en-aut-mei=Ryosuke kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= en-aut-name=ShojiRyohei en-aut-sei=Shoji en-aut-mei=Ryohei kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=8 ORCID= en-aut-name=FujiwaraToshiyoshi en-aut-sei=Fujiwara en-aut-mei=Toshiyoshi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=9 ORCID= en-aut-name=Setouchi Colorectal Neoplasm Registration study group collaborators en-aut-sei=Setouchi Colorectal Neoplasm Registration study group collaborators en-aut-mei= kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=10 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Department of Gastroenterological Surgery, Okayama University Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Department of Gastroenterological Surgery, Okayama University Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Department of Surgery, Kochi Health Sciences Center kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Center for Innovative Clinical Medicine, Medical Development Field, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Department of Surgery, Kagawa Rosai Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Department of Surgery, Saiseikai Okayama Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=Department of Surgery, Okayama Rosai Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=8 en-affil=Department of Gastroenterological Surgery, Okayama University Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=9 en-affil=Department of Gastroenterological Surgery, Okayama University Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=10 en-affil= kn-affil= en-keyword=colon cancer kn-keyword=colon cancer en-keyword=lymph node dissection kn-keyword=lymph node dissection en-keyword=nonagenarian kn-keyword=nonagenarian en-keyword=postoperative complication kn-keyword=postoperative complication en-keyword=survival benefit kn-keyword=survival benefit END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol= cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page= end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2025 dt-pub=20250828 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Early C-reactive protein as a predictive biomarker for postoperative complications following robot-assisted surgery for rectal cancer en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=This retrospective cohort study aimed to assess the predictive value of early postoperative C-reactive protein (CRP) levels for complications following robot-assisted rectal surgery (RARS) for rectal cancer. We analyzed data from 117 consecutive patients who underwent elective RARS at Okayama University Hospital between September 2020 and January 2025. Serum CRP levels were routinely measured preoperatively and on postoperative days (POD) 1 and 4. The primary outcome was the occurrence of any postoperative complication within 30 days, classified according to the Clavien?Dindo grading system. Postoperative complications were observed in 26 patients, representing 22.2% of the cohort. Univariate analysis revealed that several factors were significantly associated with complications, including older age, higher ASA score, neoadjuvant therapy, stoma creation, prolonged operative time, and elevated CRP levels on POD1 and POD4. Notably, multivariate logistic regression analysis identified POD1 CRP as a robust independent predictor of overall postoperative complications (adjusted odds ratio 0.77, 95% confidence interval (CI) [0.63?0.93], p? Methods In this retrospective study, morphologic mapping of sacral fracture lines was performed in 36 patients with FFP type IVb. Based on the mapping results, a finite element (FE) model of FFP type IVb was developed to evaluate the biomechanical stability of ilio-sacral screw (ISS) fixation, trans-sacral screw (TSS) fixation, spinopelvic fixation (SPF; On each side, L5 pedicle screw was connected to two iliac screws with a rod, and the bilateral constructs were linked using a cross-connector.), and bilateral triangular fixation (one TSS at S1 combined with SPF mentioned above) using finite element analysis (FEA).
Results Morphologic mapping showed that the sacrum fracture transverse line tended to pass between the S1-2 transverse lines. Although bilateral triangular fixation and SPF provided the highest stability in both U-type and H-type fractures, a TSS for U-type and two TSSs for H-type also demonstrated comparable levels of stability. ISS-based methods showed greater displacements.
Conclusion TSS-based fixation may provide stability comparable to bilateral triangular fixation and SPF in FFP type IVb, with less invasiveness when anatomy permits. Further studies are needed to optimize treatment strategies for this complex injury. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=NaniwaShuichi en-aut-sei=Naniwa en-aut-mei=Shuichi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=YorimitsuMasanori en-aut-sei=Yorimitsu en-aut-mei=Masanori kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=HasegawaTsubasa en-aut-sei=Hasegawa en-aut-mei=Tsubasa kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=AndoTeruhiko en-aut-sei=Ando en-aut-mei=Teruhiko kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=OkudaRyuichiro en-aut-sei=Okuda en-aut-mei=Ryuichiro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=FukuokaShiro en-aut-sei=Fukuoka en-aut-mei=Shiro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=MochizukiYusuke en-aut-sei=Mochizuki en-aut-mei=Yusuke kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= en-aut-name=YamakawaYasuaki en-aut-sei=Yamakawa en-aut-mei=Yasuaki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=8 ORCID= en-aut-name=NakaharaRyuichi en-aut-sei=Nakahara en-aut-mei=Ryuichi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=9 ORCID= en-aut-name=HanakawaShiro en-aut-sei=Hanakawa en-aut-mei=Shiro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=10 ORCID= en-aut-name=OzakiToshifumi en-aut-sei=Ozaki en-aut-mei=Toshifumi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=11 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Section of Medicine, Division of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Department of Musculoskeletal Traumatology, Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University, kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Section of Medicine, Division of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Section of Medicine, Division of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Section of Medicine, Division of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Kagawa Prefectural Central Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=Department of Emergency Health Care and Disaster Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=8 en-affil=Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Kochi Health Sciences Center kn-affil= affil-num=9 en-affil=Department of Musculoskeletal Health Promotion, Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=10 en-affil=Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Okayama Saidaiji Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=11 en-affil=Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= en-keyword=Fragility fractures of the pelvis kn-keyword=Fragility fractures of the pelvis en-keyword=Spinopelvic dissociation kn-keyword=Spinopelvic dissociation en-keyword=Finite element analysis kn-keyword=Finite element analysis en-keyword=Internal fixation kn-keyword=Internal fixation END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=46 cd-vols= no-issue=1 article-no= start-page=e70089 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260111 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Lifestyle Factors and Current Alcohol Consumption Among Japanese Adolescents During the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Nationwide Cross-Sectional Study en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Background: The COVID-19 pandemic may have influenced drinking behaviors in minors by disrupting daily routines and increasing psychosocial stress, although alcohol use among Japanese adolescents has declined in recent years. We aimed to clarify the relationships between current alcohol consumption and lifestyle factors during the COVID-19 pandemic based on a nationwide cross-sectional survey.
Methods: This cross-sectional study analyzed data from the 2021 Lifestyle Survey of Adolescents, a nationwide survey conducted in Japan during the COVID-19 pandemic. A total of 15?549 junior and senior high school students (7645 boys and 7904 girls) were included. Current alcohol consumption was defined as drinking on at least 1?day in the past 30?days. Multivariable logistic regression analyses were used to examine associations between current alcohol consumption and lifestyle factors, including irregular sleep patterns, irregular dietary habits, and increased screen time. Sex-stratified analyses and interaction tests were also performed.
Results: The overall prevalence of current alcohol consumption was 2.1%, with slightly higher rates among boys (2.2%) than girls (2.0%). Current alcohol consumption was significantly associated with irregular sleep patterns (odds ratio [OR]?=?1.51; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.17?1.95) and irregular dietary habits (OR?=?1.68; 95% CI, 1.18?2.40). An association with increased screen time was also observed (OR?=?1.29; 95% CI, 1.00?1.69), particularly among boys. A significant interaction by sex was detected for irregular sleep patterns (p for interaction?=?0.013).
Conclusions: Alcohol consumption among Japanese adolescents was associated with irregular sleep and dietary habits and, among boys, with increased screen time. These findings highlight the importance of promoting regular routines and addressing lifestyle-related risks to prevent current alcohol consumption among adolescents during public health crises. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=NishiwakiMasatake en-aut-sei=Nishiwaki en-aut-mei=Masatake kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=KandaHideyuki en-aut-sei=Kanda en-aut-mei=Hideyuki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=YoshidaKeita en-aut-sei=Yoshida en-aut-mei=Keita kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=HisamatsuTakashi en-aut-sei=Hisamatsu en-aut-mei=Takashi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=KinjoAya en-aut-sei=Kinjo en-aut-mei=Aya kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=KuwabaraYuki en-aut-sei=Kuwabara en-aut-mei=Yuki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=KimHongja en-aut-sei=Kim en-aut-mei=Hongja kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= en-aut-name=ImamotoAya en-aut-sei=Imamoto en-aut-mei=Aya kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=8 ORCID= en-aut-name=YoshimotoHisashi en-aut-sei=Yoshimoto en-aut-mei=Hisashi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=9 ORCID= en-aut-name=ItoTeruna en-aut-sei=Ito en-aut-mei=Teruna kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=10 ORCID= en-aut-name=KasugaHideaki en-aut-sei=Kasuga en-aut-mei=Hideaki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=11 ORCID= en-aut-name=MinobeRuriko en-aut-sei=Minobe en-aut-mei=Ruriko kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=12 ORCID= en-aut-name=MaesatoHitoshi en-aut-sei=Maesato en-aut-mei=Hitoshi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=13 ORCID= en-aut-name=JikeMaki en-aut-sei=Jike en-aut-mei=Maki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=14 ORCID= en-aut-name=OtsukaYuichiro en-aut-sei=Otsuka en-aut-mei=Yuichiro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=15 ORCID= en-aut-name=ItaniOsamu en-aut-sei=Itani en-aut-mei=Osamu kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=16 ORCID= en-aut-name=KaneitaYoshitaka en-aut-sei=Kaneita en-aut-mei=Yoshitaka kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=17 ORCID= en-aut-name=HiguchiSusumu en-aut-sei=Higuchi en-aut-mei=Susumu kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=18 ORCID= en-aut-name=OsakiYoneatsu en-aut-sei=Osaki en-aut-mei=Yoneatsu kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=19 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Department of Public Health, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Department of Public Health, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Department of Public Health, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Department of Public Health, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Division of Environmental and Preventive Medicine, Department of Social Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Tottori University kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Division of Environmental and Preventive Medicine, Department of Social Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Tottori University kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=Division of Environmental and Preventive Medicine, Department of Social Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Tottori University kn-affil= affil-num=8 en-affil=Division of Environmental and Preventive Medicine, Department of Social Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Tottori University kn-affil= affil-num=9 en-affil=Department of Family Medicine, General Practice and Community Health, Institute of Medicine, University of Tsukuba kn-affil= affil-num=10 en-affil=Department of Food and Nutrition, Koriyama Women's University kn-affil= affil-num=11 en-affil=Department of Hygiene and Preventive Medicine, Fukushima Medical University kn-affil= affil-num=12 en-affil=National Institute of Alcoholism, Kurihama National Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=13 en-affil=National Institute of Alcoholism, Kurihama National Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=14 en-affil=Department of Food Science and Nutrition, Faculty of Life and Environmental Science, Showa Women's University kn-affil= affil-num=15 en-affil=Division of Public Health, Department of Social Medicine, Nihon University School of Medicine kn-affil= affil-num=16 en-affil=Division of Public Health, Department of Social Medicine, Nihon University School of Medicine kn-affil= affil-num=17 en-affil=Division of Public Health, Department of Social Medicine, Nihon University School of Medicine kn-affil= affil-num=18 en-affil=National Institute of Alcoholism, Kurihama National Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=19 en-affil=Division of Environmental and Preventive Medicine, Department of Social Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Tottori University kn-affil= en-keyword=adolescent kn-keyword=adolescent en-keyword=alcohol drinking kn-keyword=alcohol drinking en-keyword=COVID-19 kn-keyword=COVID-19 en-keyword=Japan kn-keyword=Japan en-keyword=lifestyle kn-keyword=lifestyle END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=414 cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page=578885 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=202605 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Immuno-deficient features of thymoma-associated myasthenia gravis patients with hypogammaglobulinemia: A condition comparable to Good's syndrome en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Good's syndrome (GS) is a rare immunodeficiency disorder associated with thymoma, characterized by hypogammaglobulinemia and recurrent infections; however, its clinical significance in thymoma-associated myasthenia gravis (TAMG) remains unclear. We retrospectively reviewed 30 patients with TAMG admitted to our center between January 2010 and March 2022. We defined GS-like immunodeficiency as serum IgG below the institutional cutoff of 861 mg/dL and a history of two or more infections requiring antimicrobial treatment; 11 patients (36.7%) met this definition. Compared with the remaining patients, the GS-like group had higher incidences of malignancy (45.5% vs. 5.3%, p = 0.016) and autoimmune diseases other than MG (36.4% vs. 5.3%, p = 0.047), lower peripheral lymphocyte counts (median 1100/ƒÊL vs. 2200/ƒÊL, p = 0.0051), and more frequent airflow obstruction defined by one second to forced vital capacity ratio of less than 70% (60.0% vs. 5.3%, p = 0.0026). Five deaths occurred in the GS-like group, and none in the other; median survival from the first antimicrobial-treated infection was 5.0 years. These findings imply that TAMG patients with GS-like immunodeficiency have a worse prognosis, underscoring the need for close monitoring and timely adjustments of MG management. (189 words). en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=NakashimaSaki en-aut-sei=Nakashima en-aut-mei=Saki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=SakuishiKaori en-aut-sei=Sakuishi en-aut-mei=Kaori kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=HaraManato en-aut-sei=Hara en-aut-mei=Manato kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=KawasakiReiko en-aut-sei=Kawasaki en-aut-mei=Reiko kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=KakumotoToshiyuki en-aut-sei=Kakumoto en-aut-mei=Toshiyuki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=IshiuraHiroyuki en-aut-sei=Ishiura en-aut-mei=Hiroyuki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=TodaTatsushi en-aut-sei=Toda en-aut-mei=Tatsushi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Department of Neurology, Graduate School of Medicine, the University of Tokyo kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Department of Neurology, Teikyo University Chiba Medical Center kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Department of Neurology, Graduate School of Medicine, the University of Tokyo kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Department of Neurology, Graduate School of Medicine, the University of Tokyo kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Department of Neurology, Graduate School of Medicine, the University of Tokyo kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Department of Neurology, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=Department of Neurology, Graduate School of Medicine, the University of Tokyo kn-affil= en-keyword=Good's syndrome kn-keyword=Good's syndrome en-keyword=Thymoma-associated myasthenia gravis kn-keyword=Thymoma-associated myasthenia gravis en-keyword=Hypogammaglobulinemia kn-keyword=Hypogammaglobulinemia en-keyword=Immunodeficiency kn-keyword=Immunodeficiency en-keyword=Prognosis kn-keyword=Prognosis END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=23 cd-vols= no-issue=1 article-no= start-page=120 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2025 dt-pub=20251124 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Comparison of clinical practices during the transitional and young adult phases between patients with oligoarticular/polyarticular juvenile idiopathic arthritis and those with rheumatoid arthritis in Japan en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Background Juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) is a chronic inflammatory condition that frequently persists into adulthood, posing long-term challenges in disease control and quality of life. However, clinical management during the transitional and young adult phases remains insufficiently characterized, especially in comparison with adult-onset rheumatoid arthritis (RA). This study aimed to compare disease activity, medication use, and treatment practices between patients with oligoarticular/polyarticular JIA and those with RA, focusing on individuals aged 16?30 years.
Methods Data were derived from two nationwide multicenter databases in Japan?NinJa (National Database of Rheumatic Diseases in Japan) for RA and CoNinJa (a pediatric counterpart of NinJa) for JIA. A total of 176 JIA and 152 RA patients, all aged 16?30 years, were analyzed. Clinical parameters, disease activity indices, and medication profiles were compared using the Mann?Whitney U test and Fisherfs exact test.
Results Compared to RA patients, JIA patients demonstrated significantly lower disease activity (median SDAI 0.6 vs. 2.4) and higher remission rates, particularly Boolean remission (70% vs. 44%) (p? Conclusions Despite an overlap in age, patients with JIA and RA exhibit distinct disease characteristics and therapeutic patterns. These differences underscore the need to expand approved treatment options for JIA, promote equitable access to biologics, and strengthen transitional care frameworks. Further research is warranted to explore long-term outcomes, reproductive health considerations, and socioeconomic barriers that influence treatment continuity in young adults with childhood-onset arthritis. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=MoriSho en-aut-sei=Mori en-aut-mei=Sho kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=ShabanaKosuke en-aut-sei=Shabana en-aut-mei=Kosuke kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=MatsuiToshihiro en-aut-sei=Matsui en-aut-mei=Toshihiro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=NozawaTomo en-aut-sei=Nozawa en-aut-mei=Tomo kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=SugitaYuko en-aut-sei=Sugita en-aut-mei=Yuko kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=TomiitaMinako en-aut-sei=Tomiita en-aut-mei=Minako kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=NakagishiYasuo en-aut-sei=Nakagishi en-aut-mei=Yasuo kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= en-aut-name=YamasakiYuichi en-aut-sei=Yamasaki en-aut-mei=Yuichi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=8 ORCID= en-aut-name=UmebayashiHiroaki en-aut-sei=Umebayashi en-aut-mei=Hiroaki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=9 ORCID= en-aut-name=YashiroMasato en-aut-sei=Yashiro en-aut-mei=Masato kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=10 ORCID= en-aut-name=IwataNaomi en-aut-sei=Iwata en-aut-mei=Naomi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=11 ORCID= en-aut-name=YasumuraJunko en-aut-sei=Yasumura en-aut-mei=Junko kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=12 ORCID= en-aut-name=WakiguchiHiroyuki en-aut-sei=Wakiguchi en-aut-mei=Hiroyuki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=13 ORCID= en-aut-name=YamamotoTakeshi en-aut-sei=Yamamoto en-aut-mei=Takeshi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=14 ORCID= en-aut-name=TakezakiShunichiro en-aut-sei=Takezaki en-aut-mei=Shunichiro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=15 ORCID= en-aut-name=OkuraYuka en-aut-sei=Okura en-aut-mei=Yuka kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=16 ORCID= en-aut-name=YokoyamaTadafumi en-aut-sei=Yokoyama en-aut-mei=Tadafumi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=17 ORCID= en-aut-name=ShimizuMasaki en-aut-sei=Shimizu en-aut-mei=Masaki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=18 ORCID= en-aut-name=HirayamaMasahiro en-aut-sei=Hirayama en-aut-mei=Masahiro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=19 ORCID= en-aut-name=TohmaShigeto en-aut-sei=Tohma en-aut-mei=Shigeto kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=20 ORCID= en-aut-name=OkamotoNami en-aut-sei=Okamoto en-aut-mei=Nami kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=21 ORCID= en-aut-name=MoriMasaaki en-aut-sei=Mori en-aut-mei=Masaaki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=22 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Division of Rheumatology and Allergology, Department of Internal Medicine, St. Marianna University School of Medicine kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Department of Pediatrics, Osaka Medical and Pharmaceutical University kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Department of Rheumatology Research, Clinical Research Center for Allergy and Rheumatology, National Hospital Organization Sagamihara National Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Department of Pediatrics, Graduate School of Medicine, Yokohama City University kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Department of Pediatrics, Osaka Medical and Pharmaceutical University kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Department of Allergy and Rheumatology, Chiba Childrenfs Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=Department of Pediatric Rheumatology, Hyogo Prefectural Kobe Childrenfs Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=8 en-affil=Department of Pediatrics, Kagoshima University Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=9 en-affil=Department of General Pediatrics, Miyagi Childrenfs Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=10 en-affil=Department of Pediatrics, Okayama University Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=11 en-affil=Department of Infection and Immunology, Allergy and Immunology Center, Aichi Childrenfs Health and Medical Center kn-affil= affil-num=12 en-affil=Department of Pediatrics, Hiroshima University Graduate School of Biomedical and Health Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=13 en-affil=Department of Pediatrics, Yamaguchi University Graduate School of Medicine kn-affil= affil-num=14 en-affil=Department of Pediatrics, Chiba University Graduate School of Medicine kn-affil= affil-num=15 en-affil=Department of Pediatrics, Faculty of Medicinea and Graduate School of Medicine, Hokkaido University kn-affil= affil-num=16 en-affil=Center for Pediatric Allergy and Rheumatology, KKR Sapporo Medical Center kn-affil= affil-num=17 en-affil=Department of Pediatrics, Kanazawa University kn-affil= affil-num=18 en-affil=Department of Pediatrics, Perinatal and Maternal Medicine, Graduate School of Medical and Dental Sciences, Institute of Science Tokyo kn-affil= affil-num=19 en-affil=Department of Pediatrics, Mie University Graduate School of Medicine kn-affil= affil-num=20 en-affil=Department of Rheumatology, National Hospital Organization Tokyo National Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=21 en-affil=Department of Pediatrics, Osaka Medical and Pharmaceutical University kn-affil= affil-num=22 en-affil=Division of Rheumatology and Allergology, Department of Internal Medicine, St. Marianna University School of Medicine kn-affil= en-keyword=Juvenile idiopathic arthritis kn-keyword=Juvenile idiopathic arthritis en-keyword=Rheumatoid arthritis kn-keyword=Rheumatoid arthritis en-keyword=Disease activity kn-keyword=Disease activity en-keyword=Biologics kn-keyword=Biologics en-keyword=Methotrexate kn-keyword=Methotrexate END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=7 cd-vols= no-issue=2 article-no= start-page=e70170 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=202602 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Safety and efficacy of Rez?m water vapour energy therapy in BPH patients receiving antithrombotic therapy: A Japanese single]centre experience en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Objectives: The objective of this study is to evaluate the safety and efficacy of Rez?m water vapour energy therapy (WAVE) in Japanese patients with benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) continuing antithrombotic therapy and to validate the Okayama University Modified Clavien-Dindo classification (OU-mCD) for perioperative hematuria.
Patients and Methods: We retrospectively analysed 80 consecutive patients who underwent WAVE from August 2023 to July 2024, including 37 (46.2%) continuing antithrombotic therapy perioperatively. Hematuria within 30?days was graded using conventional Clavien-Dindo classification and the OU-mCD, a novel classification focusing on intervention necessity. We assessed clinically significant hematuria (Grade ? Ib), catheter-free rate, prostate volume reduction and haemoglobin change.
Results: Clinically significant hematuria occurred in 21.6% (8/37) of patients continuing antithrombotic therapy versus 4.7% (2/43) without (p?=?0.038). All 10 Grade ? Ib cases occurred during hospitalization with the catheter in place and were managed conservatively with continuous bladder irrigation (median 1 day); none required transfusion or surgical reintervention. Only one patient required temporary drug discontinuation. Treatment efficacy did not differ by antithrombotic status: 86.2% achieved PVR? Conclusion: WAVE can be safely performed with continued antithrombotic therapy. Whereas Grade ?Ib hematuria occurred in 25% of antiplatelet/anticoagulant users (vs. 5% without), 75% had no significant bleeding, and all complications were managed conservatively without transfusion. The OU-mCD provides precise complication stratification. These findings suggest outpatient procedures may be feasible with appropriate patient selection. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=MoriwakeTakatoshi en-aut-sei=Moriwake en-aut-mei=Takatoshi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=TominagaYusuke en-aut-sei=Tominaga en-aut-mei=Yusuke kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=KatayamaSatoshi en-aut-sei=Katayama en-aut-mei=Satoshi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=KakuHaruki en-aut-sei=Kaku en-aut-mei=Haruki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=TsuboiIchiro en-aut-sei=Tsuboi en-aut-mei=Ichiro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=YoshinagaKasumi en-aut-sei=Yoshinaga en-aut-mei=Kasumi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=YamanoiTomoaki en-aut-sei=Yamanoi en-aut-mei=Tomoaki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= en-aut-name=KawadaTatsushi en-aut-sei=Kawada en-aut-mei=Tatsushi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=8 ORCID= en-aut-name=SadahiraTakuya en-aut-sei=Sadahira en-aut-mei=Takuya kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=9 ORCID= en-aut-name=IwataTakehiro en-aut-sei=Iwata en-aut-mei=Takehiro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=10 ORCID= en-aut-name=NishimuraShingo en-aut-sei=Nishimura en-aut-mei=Shingo kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=11 ORCID= en-aut-name=BekkuKensuke en-aut-sei=Bekku en-aut-mei=Kensuke kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=12 ORCID= en-aut-name=KatayamaYasuhiro en-aut-sei=Katayama en-aut-mei=Yasuhiro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=13 ORCID= en-aut-name=ArakiMotoo en-aut-sei=Araki en-aut-mei=Motoo kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=14 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Department of Urology, Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Department of Urology, Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Department of Urology, Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Department of Urology, Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Department of Urology, Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Department of Urology, Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=Department of Urology, Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=8 en-affil=Department of Urology, Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=9 en-affil=Department of Urology, Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=10 en-affil=Department of Urology, Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=11 en-affil=Department of Urology, Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=12 en-affil=Department of Urology, Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=13 en-affil=Department of Urology, Okamura Isshindo Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=14 en-affil=Department of Urology, Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= en-keyword=benign prostatic hyperplasia kn-keyword=benign prostatic hyperplasia en-keyword=hematuriaantithrombotic therapy kn-keyword=hematuriaantithrombotic therapy en-keyword=Japanese kn-keyword=Japanese en-keyword=OU-mCD kn-keyword=OU-mCD en-keyword=water vapour energy therapy kn-keyword=water vapour energy therapy END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=78 cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page=100 end-page=80 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2025 dt-pub=20251212 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title=On Ten-nyoiHeavenly Maidensj with Wings, Part 12: The Ceiling of the Imperial Theatre by Wada Eisaku and its Cont ext kn-title=u—L—ƒ‚Ì“V—}v\“ñl „Ÿ ˜a“c‰pì‚É‚æ‚é’鑌€êŠÏ——Ȃ̓Vˆä‰æ‚Æ‚»‚ÌŽü•Ó „Ÿ en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract= en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=TATSUNOYuko en-aut-sei=TATSUNO en-aut-mei=Yuko kn-aut-name=—´–ì—LŽq kn-aut-sei=—´–ì kn-aut-mei=—LŽq aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil= kn-affil= END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=78 cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page=39 end-page=50 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2025 dt-pub=20251212 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title=Inheritance and Changes of Accents in the Hiroshima City Dialecti1j: Generational Variation in One-, Two-, and Three-Mora Nouns kn-title=L“‡Žs•ûŒ¾‚É‚¨‚¯‚éƒAƒNƒZƒ“ƒg‚ÌŒp³‚ƕϗei1j„Ÿ 1 ”E2 ”E3 ”–¼ŽŒ‚̃AƒNƒZƒ“ƒg‚Ì¢‘ã“I“®‘Ô „Ÿ en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract= en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=NAKATOYasue en-aut-sei=NAKATO en-aut-mei=Yasue kn-aut-name=’†“Œ–õŒb kn-aut-sei=’†“Œ kn-aut-mei=–õŒb aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil= kn-affil= END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=20 cd-vols= no-issue=12 article-no= start-page=1814 end-page=1828 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2025 dt-pub=202512 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Final Analysis Results and Patient-Reported Outcomes From DESTINY-Lung02?A Dose-Blinded, Randomized, Phase 2 Study of Trastuzumab Deruxtecan in Patients With HER2-Mutant Metastatic NSCLC en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Introduction: Trastuzumab deruxtecan (T-DXd) demonstrated strong and durable responses in patients with previously treated HER2 (ERBB2) mutant (HER2m) metastatic NSCLC (mNSCLC) in the DESTINY-Lung02 primary analysis (December 23, 2022, data cutoff). This final analysis evaluated T-DXd efficacy and safety after 8 additional months of follow-up, including clinically relevant subgroups and patient-reported outcomes.
Methods: DESTINY-Lung02 was a randomized, dose-blinded, multicenter, phase 2 trial. Patients with previously treated HER2m mNSCLC were randomized 2:1 to receive T-DXd 5.4 or 6.4 mg/kg once every 3 weeks. Primary end point was confirmed objective response rate by blinded independent central review.
Results: As of August 25, 2023, 102 and 50 patients had received T-DXd 5.4 or 6.4 mg/kg, respectively. Median follow-up (Q1?Q3) was 15.8 (8.2?20.7) months and 16.5 (9.4?20.8) months, respectively. Confirmed objective response rate (95% confidence interval) was 50.0% (51/102; 39.9%?60.1%) and 56.0% (28/50; 41.3%?70.0%), respectively. Safety profile was acceptable and generally manageable. Accordingly, median treatment duration (Q1?Q3) was 7.7 (3.7?14.4) months and 8.3 (2.8?13.1) months; drug-related grade 3 or higher treatment-emergent adverse events occurred in 39.6% (40/101) and 60.0% (30/50), with nausea most common (67.3% [68/101], 82.0% [41/50]). Adjudicated drug-related interstitial lung disease occurred in 14.9% (15/101) and 32.0% (16/50), mostly grade 1 or 2 with one grade 5 in each arm. Health-related quality of life was preserved for the duration of T-DXd treatment while sample size was sufficient for analysis, with no adverse effects on health-related quality of life observed at either dose.
Conclusions: T-DXd demonstrated strong and durable responses at both doses, with no clinically significant changes in toxicity. The approved 5.4-mg/kg dose demonstrated a more favorable benefit-risk profile, including lower adjudicated drug-related interstitial lung disease incidence.
ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT04644237 en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=J?nnePasi A. en-aut-sei=J?nne en-aut-mei=Pasi A. kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=GotoYasushi en-aut-sei=Goto en-aut-mei=Yasushi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=KuboToshio en-aut-sei=Kubo en-aut-mei=Toshio kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=NinomiyaKiichiro en-aut-sei=Ninomiya en-aut-mei=Kiichiro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=KimSang-We en-aut-sei=Kim en-aut-mei=Sang-We kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=PlanchardDavid en-aut-sei=Planchard en-aut-mei=David kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=AhnMyung-Ju en-aut-sei=Ahn en-aut-mei=Myung-Ju kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= en-aut-name=SmitEgbert en-aut-sei=Smit en-aut-mei=Egbert kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=8 ORCID= en-aut-name=Johannes de LangenAdrianus en-aut-sei=Johannes de Langen en-aut-mei=Adrianus kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=9 ORCID= en-aut-name=P?rolMaurice en-aut-sei=P?rol en-aut-mei=Maurice kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=10 ORCID= en-aut-name=Pons-TostivintElvire en-aut-sei=Pons-Tostivint en-aut-mei=Elvire kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=11 ORCID= en-aut-name=NovelloSilvia en-aut-sei=Novello en-aut-mei=Silvia kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=12 ORCID= en-aut-name=HayashiHidetoshi en-aut-sei=Hayashi en-aut-mei=Hidetoshi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=13 ORCID= en-aut-name=ShimizuJunichi en-aut-sei=Shimizu en-aut-mei=Junichi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=14 ORCID= en-aut-name=KimDong-Wan en-aut-sei=Kim en-aut-mei=Dong-Wan kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=15 ORCID= en-aut-name=PereiraKaline en-aut-sei=Pereira en-aut-mei=Kaline kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=16 ORCID= en-aut-name=ChengFu-Chih en-aut-sei=Cheng en-aut-mei=Fu-Chih kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=17 ORCID= en-aut-name=TaguchiAyumi en-aut-sei=Taguchi en-aut-mei=Ayumi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=18 ORCID= en-aut-name=ChengYingkai en-aut-sei=Cheng en-aut-mei=Yingkai kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=19 ORCID= en-aut-name=DuntonKyle en-aut-sei=Dunton en-aut-mei=Kyle kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=20 ORCID= en-aut-name=AliAhmed en-aut-sei=Ali en-aut-mei=Ahmed kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=21 ORCID= en-aut-name=GotoKoichi en-aut-sei=Goto en-aut-mei=Koichi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=22 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Lowe Center for Thoracic Oncology, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Department of Thoracic Oncology, National Cancer Central Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Center for Clinical Oncology, Okayama University Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Center for Comprehensive Genomic Medicine, Okayama University Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Oncology Department, Asan Medical Center, Seoul, and University of Ulsan College of Medicine, Ulsan kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Department of Medical Oncology, Thoracic Cancer Group, Gustave Roussy, and Faculty of Medicine, Paris-Saclay University kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=Department of Hematology and Oncology, Samsung Medical Center Sungkyunkwan, and University School of Medicine kn-affil= affil-num=8 en-affil=Department of Pulmonary Diseases, Leiden University Medical Center kn-affil= affil-num=9 en-affil=Department of Thoracic Oncology, Netherlands Cancer Institute kn-affil= affil-num=10 en-affil=Department of Medical Oncology, L?on Berard Centre kn-affil= affil-num=11 en-affil=Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Nantes, Nantes University kn-affil= affil-num=12 en-affil=Department of Oncology, University of Turin, Turin, and Azienda Ospedaliero-Universitaria San Luigi Gonzaga kn-affil= affil-num=13 en-affil=Department of Medical Oncology, Kindai University Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=14 en-affil=Department of Thoracic Oncology, Aichi Cancer Center Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=15 en-affil=Department of Internal Medicine, Seoul National University College of Medicine and Seoul National University Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=16 en-affil=Daiichi Sankyo kn-affil= affil-num=17 en-affil=Daiichi Sankyo kn-affil= affil-num=18 en-affil=Daiichi Sankyo kn-affil= affil-num=19 en-affil=Daiichi Sankyo kn-affil= affil-num=20 en-affil=Daiichi Sankyo UK kn-affil= affil-num=21 en-affil=Daiichi Sankyo Europe GmbH kn-affil= affil-num=22 en-affil=Department of Thoracic Oncology, National Cancer Center Hospital East kn-affil= en-keyword=HER2-directed therapy kn-keyword=HER2-directed therapy en-keyword=HER2-mutant kn-keyword=HER2-mutant en-keyword=HER2-targeted kn-keyword=HER2-targeted en-keyword=Non?small cell lung cancer kn-keyword=Non?small cell lung cancer en-keyword=Trastuzumab deruxtecan kn-keyword=Trastuzumab deruxtecan END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=17 cd-vols= no-issue=7 article-no= start-page=e87334 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2025 dt-pub=20250705 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=The Challenge of Diagnosing Scirrhous Gastric Cancer by Endoscopic Biopsy: A Case Report en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Scirrhous gastric cancer, also known as linitis plastica, is a rare and aggressive subtype of gastric carcinoma that poses significant diagnostic challenges due to its submucosal infiltration and often normal-appearing mucosa. We report a case involving a 30-year-old Japanese woman who presented with a six-month history of epigastric pain and postprandial vomiting. Initial endoscopic examination revealed erythema and mucosal swelling, with limited antral distensibility and resistance during duodenal intubation. Despite 12 mucosal biopsies, histopathological examination revealed no evidence of malignancy. Given the strong clinical and endoscopic suspicion of scirrhous gastric cancer, additional deep sections and immunohistochemical staining were performed. These revealed scattered signet-ring cell carcinoma and poorly differentiated adenocarcinoma, with positive immunostaining for p53 and Ki67. The patient underwent total gastrectomy, and the diagnosis of scirrhous gastric cancer was confirmed on the resected specimen. This case highlights the importance of a high index of clinical suspicion, close collaboration between endoscopists and pathologists, and the utility of ancillary diagnostic tools, such as immunohistochemistry, in identifying subepithelial gastric malignancies that may be missed on conventional biopsy. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=IkedaYuka en-aut-sei=Ikeda en-aut-mei=Yuka kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=IwamuroMasaya en-aut-sei=Iwamuro en-aut-mei=Masaya kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=YoshinoTadashi en-aut-sei=Yoshino en-aut-mei=Tadashi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=TanakaTakehiro en-aut-sei=Tanaka en-aut-mei=Takehiro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=IkedaNobumasa en-aut-sei=Ikeda en-aut-mei=Nobumasa kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=OtsukaMotoyuki en-aut-sei=Otsuka en-aut-mei=Motoyuki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Department of Internal Medicine, Clinic IkedaDepartment of Internal Medicine, Clinic Ikeda kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Department of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Department of Pathology, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Department of Pathology, Okayama University Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Department of Internal Medicine, Clinic Ikeda kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Department of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= en-keyword=endoscopic biopsy kn-keyword=endoscopic biopsy en-keyword=esophagogastroduodenoscopy kn-keyword=esophagogastroduodenoscopy en-keyword=immunohistochemistry kn-keyword=immunohistochemistry en-keyword=linitis plastica kn-keyword=linitis plastica en-keyword=scirrhous gastric cancer kn-keyword=scirrhous gastric cancer END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=191 cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page=187 end-page=196 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260228 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title=A Practice Report on Strength-Based Intervention to Promote Positive Self-Understanding in Adolescents: Through the Approach of Developmentally Supportive Educational Counseling kn-title=”N‚Ìm’è“IŽ©ŒÈ—‰ð‚𑣂·‹­‚݉î“ü‚ÌŽÀ‘H•ñ \ ”­’BŽxŽ“I‹³ˆç‘Š’k‚É‚æ‚éƒAƒvƒ[ƒ`‚ð’Ê‚µ‚Ä \ en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=@–{Œ¤‹†‚ÍC”­’BŽxŽ“I‹³ˆç‘Š’k‚Æ‚µ‚ÄŽÀŽ{‚µ‚½‹­‚Ý”FޝŽö‹Æ‚ªC”N‚ÌŽ©ŒÈ‚Ì‹­‚Ý‘I‘ð‚Ì“ïˆÕ“x‚É‹y‚Ú‚·‰e‹¿‚ð’Tõ“I‚ÉŒŸ“¢‚µ‚½‚à‚̂ł ‚éBŒ¤‹†‚P‚ł͒†‘’n•û‚ÌŒö—§’†ŠwZ423–¼‚ð‘ÎۂɃIƒ“ƒ‰ƒCƒ“‚ÅCŒ¤‹†‚Q‚Å‚Íê–åŠwZŠw¶86–¼C‘åŠw¶93–¼‚ð‘ÎۂɑΖʂÅC‹­‚Ý”FޝŽö‹Æ‚ðŽÀŽ{‚µCŽö‹ÆŒã‚ÉCŽ©ŒÈ‚Ì‹­‚Ý‘I‘ð‚Ì“ïˆÕ“x‚𑪒肵‚½B‚»‚ÌŒ‹‰ÊC‚·‚ׂĂ̌Q‚Ì‹­‚Ý‘I‘ð‚Ì“ïˆÕ“x‚Ì•]‰¿‚ÍC•½–ì(2019)‚Æ”äŠr‚µ‚Äu—eˆÕ‚Å‚ ‚év‚Ƃ̉ñ“šŒXŒü‚ðŽ¦‚µ‚½(Mdn = ‚V)B‚Ü‚½C‚RŒQ‚Ì‹­‚Ý‘I‘ð‚Ì“ïˆÕ“x‚Ì•ª•z‚É“Œv“I‚È—LˆÓ·‚Í”F‚ß‚ç‚ê‚È‚©‚Á‚½(p = .222)B‚±‚Ì’mŒ©‚ÍC–{Žö‹Æ‚ª‘ÎÛŽÒ‚Ì”­’B’iŠK‚âŽÀŽ{Œ`Ž®(ƒIƒ“ƒ‰ƒCƒ“E‘ΖÊ)‚ÉŠÖ‚í‚炸C••Õ“I‚É‹­‚Ý“Á’è‚ðŽx‰‡‚·‚é‹@”\‚ðŽ‚Â‰Â”\«‚ðŽ¦´‚·‚éBÅŒã‚ÉC‚±‚Ì’mŒ©‚ð‚à‚Æ‚ÉCŠwZŒ»ê‚ł̋³ˆç‘Š’k‚ÌV‚½‚È“WŠJ‚ð’ñŒ¾‚µ‚½B en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=IZUMITsuguyuki en-aut-sei=IZUMI en-aut-mei=Tsuguyuki kn-aut-name=ˆÉZŒps kn-aut-sei=ˆÉZ kn-aut-mei=Œps aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Faculty of Education, Okayama University kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠwŠwpŒ¤‹†‰@‹³ˆçŠwˆæ en-keyword=”N kn-keyword=”N en-keyword=”­’BŽxŽ“I‹³ˆç‘Š’k kn-keyword=”­’BŽxŽ“I‹³ˆç‘Š’k en-keyword=ŠJ”­“I‹@”\ kn-keyword=ŠJ”­“I‹@”\ en-keyword=«Ši“Á«“I‹­‚݉î“ü kn-keyword=«Ši“Á«“I‹­‚݉î“ü en-keyword=ƒ|ƒWƒeƒBƒuS—Šw kn-keyword=ƒ|ƒWƒeƒBƒuS—Šw END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=191 cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page=169 end-page=175 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260228 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title=Towards Autonomous Use of Digital Media and Digital Devices (1) : Overview of Research on Self-Control Ability and Internet Addiction Tendency kn-title=ƒfƒWƒ^ƒ‹ƒƒfƒBƒAEƒfƒWƒ^ƒ‹ƒfƒoƒCƒX‚ÌŽ©—¥“I‚ÈŽg—p‚ÉŒü‚¯‚Äi‚Pj \ Ž©ŒÈ§Œä”\—͂ƃCƒ“ƒ^[ƒlƒbƒgˆË‘¶ŒXŒü‚ÉŠÖ‚·‚錤‹†‚ÌŠTŠÏ‚©‚ç \ en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=@ƒfƒWƒ^ƒ‹ƒƒfƒBƒAEƒfƒWƒ^ƒ‹ƒfƒoƒCƒX‚ÌŽg—p‚É‚¨‚¢‚ÄCŽg—pŠJŽn”N—î‚Ì’á”N—E’·ŽžŠÔ—˜—p‚ÌŽÀ‘Ô‚ªŽw“E‚³‚êC’á”N—î‚ÌŽq‚Ç‚à‚ɂ‚¢‚Ä‚àˆË‘¶“™‚Ì–â‘肪’–Ú‚³‚ê‚‚‚ ‚éB–{•ñ‚Å‚ÍCŽq‚Ç‚àŽ©g‚ÉCƒfƒWƒ^ƒ‹ƒƒfƒBƒAEƒfƒWƒ^ƒ‹ƒfƒoƒCƒX‚Æ“K؂ɕt‚«‡‚¤—Í‚ðˆç‚Ă邱‚Ƃ̕K—v«‚ðdŽ‹‚·‚é—§ê‚©‚çCƒCƒ“ƒ^[ƒlƒbƒgˆË‘¶ŒXŒü‚Ì—}§—vˆö‚Ì‚P‚‚ɋ“‚°‚ç‚ê‚鎩ŒÈ§Œä”\—͂ɒ…–Ú‚µC—¼ŽÒ‚ÌŠÖ˜A‚ɂ‚¢‚Ă̖{–M‚É‚¨‚¯‚錤‹†‚ðŠTŠÏ‚·‚éB‚»‚µ‚ÄCŽq‚Ç‚à‚ÌŽ©ŒÈ§Œä‚Ì”­’B‰ß’öCŽ©ŒÈ§Œä‚Ì”­’B‚É‚¨‚¯‚é‘£i—vˆöE—}§—vˆö‚ð®—‚µ‚½ã‚ÅCƒCƒ“ƒ^[ƒlƒbƒgˆË‘¶‚Ì—\–h‚Ì‚½‚߂Ɏq‚Ç‚à‚ÌŽ©ŒÈ§Œä‚Ì”­’B‚ÌŠÏ“_‚©‚瓾‚ç‚ê‚鎦´‚ɂ‚¢‚ÄŒŸ“¢‚µ‚½B en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=MIYAKEMotoko en-aut-sei=MIYAKE en-aut-mei=Motoko kn-aut-name=ŽO‘Žq kn-aut-sei=ŽO‘î kn-aut-mei=вŽq aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Faculty of Education, Okayama University kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠwŠwpŒ¤‹†‰@‹³ˆçŠwˆæ en-keyword=Ž©ŒÈ§Œä kn-keyword=Ž©ŒÈ§Œä en-keyword=ƒCƒ“ƒ^[ƒlƒbƒgˆË‘¶ŒXŒü kn-keyword=ƒCƒ“ƒ^[ƒlƒbƒgˆË‘¶ŒXŒü en-keyword=Ž©—¥“IŽg—p kn-keyword=Ž©—¥“IŽg—p en-keyword=ƒfƒWƒ^ƒ‹ƒƒfƒBƒA kn-keyword=ƒfƒWƒ^ƒ‹ƒƒfƒBƒA en-keyword=ƒfƒWƒ^ƒ‹ƒfƒoƒCƒX kn-keyword=ƒfƒWƒ^ƒ‹ƒfƒoƒCƒX END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=191 cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page=157 end-page=167 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260228 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title=A Fundamental Study on Teachersf Learning through gArt Education Where Creativity Meets Societyh II: An Inquiry into the Meaning Transformation of Teachers through Dialogues with Ordinary Citizens kn-title=u‘n‘¢«‚ªŽÐ‰ï‚Æo‰ï‚¤”üp‹³ˆçv‚É‚æ‚鋳ˆõ‚ÌŠw‚тɊւ·‚éŠî‘bŒ¤‹†‡U \ Žsˆä‚Ì‘¼ŽÒ‚Ƃ̑Θb‚ª‚à‚½‚ç‚·‹³ˆõ‚̈Ӗ¡•Ï—e‚ÉŠÖ‚·‚élŽ@ \ en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=@–{Œ¤‹†‚ÍC´“c“N’j‚Ì—˜_˜g‘g‚ðŠî”Õ‚Æ‚µ‚ÄC‹³ˆõ‚ª“úí¶Šˆ‚Åo‰ï‚¤Žsˆä‚Ì‘¼ŽÒ‚Ƃ̑Θb‚ð’Ê‚¶‚Ä‘n‘¢«‚âŽö‹ÆŠÏ‚ð•Ï—e‚³‚¹‚éƒvƒƒZƒX‚𖾊m‰»‚µ‚½‚à‚̂ł ‚éBŽsˆäƒvƒƒWƒFƒNƒg‚ÌŽ¿“I•ªÍ‚É‚æ‚èC‹³ˆõ‚Í‘¼ŽÒ‚̶‚«•û‚âŽp¨‚©‚çV‚½‚ȉ¿’l‚ðŽó‚¯Žæ‚èiŽsˆä‚©‚ç‚Ì‹Žó‰ß’öjC‚»‚ÌŒoŒ±‚ðŒ_‹@‚É‹³ˆçŠÏ‚ðĕ҂µi‹³ˆçŠÏ•Ï—e‰ß’öjC‚³‚ç‚ÉŽö‹Æ\‘z‚É‹ï‘Ì“I•ω»‚ð¶‚¶‚³‚¹‚邱‚ÆiŽö‹Æ“à—eŠÖ—^‰ß’öj‚ªŠm”F‚³‚ꂽB‚Æ‚è‚킯C§“x“IŒ¤C‚ł͓¾‚É‚­‚¢‹ô”­“I‘Θb‚â¶Šˆ’m‚ÌŽó—e‚ªC‹³ˆõ‚Ì‘n‘¢«‚ðŠ«‹N‚µC“úí‚ɪ‚´‚µ‚½Šw‚тƂµ‚Ä‹@”\‚·‚é“_‚ª¬‰Ê‚Å‚ ‚éB–{Œ¤‹†‚ÍC‹³ˆõŽ©g‚ªŠw‚Ô‘n‘¢«‚Æ‚¢‚¤V‚½‚ÈŒ¤‹†—̈æ‚ÌŠî”Õ‚ðŒ`¬‚µC”üp‹³ˆç‚É‚¨‚¯‚é‘n‘¢«ˆç¬‚ÌV‚½‚ȉ”\«‚ð’ñަ‚µ‚½B en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=MATSUURAAi en-aut-sei=MATSUURA en-aut-mei=Ai kn-aut-name=¼‰Y—• kn-aut-sei=¼‰Y kn-aut-mei=—• aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=SENOOYusuke en-aut-sei=SENOO en-aut-mei=Yusuke kn-aut-name=–…”ö—C‰î kn-aut-sei=–…”ö kn-aut-mei=—C‰î aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=KIMURAHitoshi en-aut-sei=KIMURA en-aut-mei=Hitoshi kn-aut-name=–Ø‘ºm kn-aut-sei=–Ø‘º kn-aut-mei=m aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=TAKEDASoichiro en-aut-sei=TAKEDA en-aut-mei=Soichiro kn-aut-name=•“c‘ˆê˜Y kn-aut-sei=•“c kn-aut-mei=‘ˆê˜Y aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=SONChande en-aut-sei=SON en-aut-mei=Chande kn-aut-name=鹑å kn-aut-sei=é kn-aut-mei=¹‘å aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=KIYOTA,Tetsuo en-aut-sei=KIYOTA, en-aut-mei=Tetsuo kn-aut-name=´“c“N’j kn-aut-sei=´“c kn-aut-mei=“N’j aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Faculty of Education, Okayama University kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠwŠwpŒ¤‹†‰@‹³ˆçŠwˆæ affil-num=2 en-affil=Okayama Prefectural Tamashima High School kn-affil=‰ªŽRŒ§—§‹Ê“‡‚“™ŠwZ affil-num=3 en-affil=Shiga University Faculty of Education Elementary School kn-affil=Ž ‰ê‘åŠw‹³ˆçŠw•”•‘®¬ŠwZ affil-num=4 en-affil=Okayama University Junior High School kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠw•‘®’†ŠwZ affil-num=5 en-affil=Osaka Kyoiku University Tennoji Junior High School kn-affil=‘å㋳ˆç‘åŠw•‘®“V‰¤Ž›’†ŠwZ affil-num=6 en-affil=Faculty of Education, Okayama University kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠwŠwpŒ¤‹†‰@‹³ˆçŠwˆæ en-keyword=”üp‹³ˆç kn-keyword=”üp‹³ˆç en-keyword=‘n‘¢« kn-keyword=‘n‘¢« en-keyword=Œ¤C kn-keyword=Œ¤C END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=191 cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page=119 end-page=130 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260228 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title=Treatment of Climate Change Content in Science Education at Primary and Middle Schools in India: Focusing on the NCERT Textbooks kn-title=ƒCƒ“ƒh‚̬E’†ŠwZ—‰È‚É‚¨‚¯‚é‹CŒó•Ï“®‚ÉŠÖ‚·‚é“à—e‚ÌŽæ‚舵‚¢ \ NCERT ”­s‚Ì‹³‰È‘‚É’–Ú‚µ‚Ä \ en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=@–{Œ¤‹†‚ÍCƒCƒ“ƒh‚Ì‘‰Æ‹³ˆç­ô2020‚¨‚æ‚Ñ‘‰ÆƒJƒŠƒLƒ…ƒ‰ƒ€EƒtƒŒ[ƒ€ƒ[ƒN2023‚ÉŠî‚¢‚Ä쬂³‚ꂽ NCERT ”­s‚ÌŠwZ‹³‰È‘i‘æ3`8 Šw”Nj‚ð‘ÎÛ‚ÉC—‰È“I“à—e‚ðˆµ‚¤‹³‰È‚Ì‹CŒó•Ï“®‚ÉŠÖ‚·‚é“à—e‚ÌŽæ‚舵‚¢‚ÌŒ»ó‚ð•ªÍ‚µ‚½B•ªÍ‚Å‚Í UNESCO ‚É‚æ‚é SDGs ‚Ì‚½‚߂̋³ˆç‚Æ Kagawa & Selby ‚Ìu—‰ðEŠÉ˜aE“K‰žv‚Ìl‚¦•û‚ð‚à‚Æ‚ÉŠÏ“_‚ðÝ‚¯C‹Lq‚ð’ŠoE•ª—Þ‚µ‚½B‚»‚ÌŒ‹‰ÊC‰“™‹³ˆç’iŠK‚ÌuThe World Around Usv‚Å‚Í¶Šˆ¢ŠE‚ɪ‚´‚µ‚½ŠÂ‹«”z—¶‚̑ԓx‚Æs“®‚ÌŠî‘bŒ`¬‚ªdŽ‹‚³‚êC‘OŠú’†“™‹³ˆç’iŠK‚ÌuSciencev‚ł͉Ȋw“I‚Ȉö‰ÊŠÖŒW‚â‹CŒó•Ï“®‘Îô‚̑ۓI˜g‘g‚Ý‚ª“±“ü‚³‚ê‚Ä‚¨‚è’iŠK“I[‰»‚ªŠm”F‚³‚ꂽBˆê•û‚ÅCŠT”O“±“ü‚Ì’x‚êCˆö‰Ê˜A½‚Ì•s“ˆêCs“®•Ï—e‚ÉŽŠ‚éŽd‘g‚݂̎コCŠwÛ«‚Ì•s‘«‚âŒêœb‚âŠT”O‚ÌK“¾‚̃XƒpƒCƒ‰ƒ‹‚ÈŠwK‚Ì•s‘«‚ª–¾‚ç‚©‚ɂȂÁ‚½BŒ»s‹³‰È‘‚ÍC‘ÌŒn“I‚©‚ÂŽÀŒø“I‚È‹CŒó•Ï“®‹³ˆç‚ɂ͖¢‚¾•s\•ª‚Å‚ ‚èC¡Œã‚̉ü‘P‚ª‹‚ß‚ç‚ê‚邱‚Æ‚ðŽw“E‚µ‚½B en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=KAWAIKen en-aut-sei=KAWAI en-aut-mei=Ken kn-aut-name=ìˆäŒ’ kn-aut-sei=ìˆä kn-aut-mei=Œ’ aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=FUJIIHiroki en-aut-sei=FUJII en-aut-mei=Hiroki kn-aut-name=“¡ˆä_Ž÷ kn-aut-sei=“¡ˆä kn-aut-mei=_Ž÷ aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Okayama University Graduate School of Humanities and Social Sciences Science Doctoral Course kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠw‘åŠw‰@ŽÐ‰ï•¶‰»‰ÈŠwŒ¤‹†‰È”ŽŽm‰Û’ö affil-num=2 en-affil=Faculty of Education, Okayama University kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠwŠwpŒ¤‹†‰@‹³ˆçŠwˆæ en-keyword=‹CŒó•Ï“®‹³ˆç kn-keyword=‹CŒó•Ï“®‹³ˆç en-keyword=Ž‘±‰Â”\‚ÈŠJ”­‚Ì‚½‚߂̋³ˆçiESDj kn-keyword=Ž‘±‰Â”\‚ÈŠJ”­‚Ì‚½‚߂̋³ˆçiESDj en-keyword=ƒCƒ“ƒh kn-keyword=ƒCƒ“ƒh en-keyword=¬E’†ŠwZ kn-keyword=¬E’†ŠwZ en-keyword=‹³‰È‘ kn-keyword=‹³‰È‘ END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=191 cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page=93 end-page=100 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260228 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title=Study of Perspectives That Capture the Interaction between Artists and Their Artistic Acts: Literature Research for Qualitative Considerations based on the Theories of Mikhail Bakhtin kn-title=§ìŽÒ‚Æ‘¢Œ`•¨‚̑Θb‚𑨂¦‚鎋“_‚ÌŒ¤‹† \ ƒoƒtƒ`ƒ“‚ÉŠî‚Â­Ž¿“I‚ÈlŽ@‚Ì‚½‚߂̕¶Œ£‚ÌŒŸ“¢ \ en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=@–{Œ¤‹†‚Å‚ÍC§ìŽÒ‚ª‘¢Œ`sˆ×‚̉ߒö‚ÅŽÀ‘H‚·‚é‘¢Œ`•¨‚Ƃ̑Θb‚É’…–Ú‚µC‘¢Œ`sˆ×‚É‚¨‚¢‚ħìŽÒ‚ÉŒoŒ±‚³‚ê‚éŠw‚т𑨂¦Ž¿“I‚ÉlŽ@‚·‚邽‚߂̎‹“_‚ðCƒoƒtƒ`ƒ“(„M„y„‡„p„y„| „M„y„‡„p„z„|„€„r„y„‰ „A„p„‡„„„y?„~)‚̑Θb‚ÌŠT”O‚É—§‚¿ŒŸ“¢‚µ‚½B‚Ü‚¸C‘Θb‚̉ߒö‚ł‚­‚ç‚ê‚鎩ŒÈ‚Æ‘¼ŽÒ‚Ìu‘ŠŒÝì—pC‘ŠŒÝŠÖŒWv‚ɂ‚¢‚ÄŒŸ“¢‚µC‘Θb‚̉ߒö‚É‚¨‚¢‚ÄŒÂX‚Ìu¢ŠEv‚ªŠm—§‚³‚ê‚邯‹¤‚ÉCŠm—§‚³‚ꂽŒÂX‚Ìu¢ŠEv‚ªŽ©ŒÈ‚Æ‘¼ŽÒ‚ÌŠÔ‚Å‹¤—L‚³‚ê‚邱‚Æ‚ðŒŸ“¢‚µ‚½BŽŸ‚ÉC‘¢Œ`sˆ×‚̉ߒö‚ÅC§ìŽÒ‚ª‘fÞ‚ð•ω»‚³‚¹‚Ä‚¢‚­‚ɂ‚ê‚ÄC‚»‚Ì‘¢Œ`•¨‚È‚¢‚µì•i‚Ì‚à‚ÂŒ`‚âF‚ªC‘z‘œ‚Ì¢ŠECƒ‚ƒ`[ƒtC‰½‚ç‚©‚Ì‹K‘¥«‚Ȃǂð“Z‚Á‚Ä‚¢‚­C§ìŽÒ‚Æ‘¢Œ`•¨‚È‚¢‚µì•i‚Ƃ̑Θb‚ªŽÀ‘H‚³‚ê‚邱‚Æ‚ðŒŸ“¢‚µ‚½BŒ¤‹†‚̬‰Ê‚Æ‚µ‚ÄC‘¢Œ`•¨‚Ƃ̑Θb‚̉ߒö‚ŧìŽÒ‚ÉŒoŒ±‚³‚ê‚éŠw‚т𑨂¦Ž¿“I‚ÉlŽ@‚·‚邽‚߂̎‹“_‚Å‚ ‚éŒ|p“Isˆ×‚ð’ñަ‚µ‚½B en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=OHIRAShuya en-aut-sei=OHIRA en-aut-mei=Shuya kn-aut-name=‘啽C–ç kn-aut-sei=‘啽 kn-aut-mei=C–ç aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Faculty of Education, Okayama University kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠwŠwpŒ¤‹†‰@‹³ˆçŠwˆæ en-keyword=‘Θb kn-keyword=‘Θb en-keyword=Œ|p“Isˆ× kn-keyword=Œ|p“Isˆ× en-keyword=Ž©ŒÈ kn-keyword=Ž©ŒÈ en-keyword=‘¼ŽÒ kn-keyword=‘¼ŽÒ en-keyword=‘ŠŒÝŠÖŒW‚Ü‚½‚Í‘ŠŒÝì—p kn-keyword=‘ŠŒÝŠÖŒW‚Ü‚½‚Í‘ŠŒÝì—p END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=191 cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page=47 end-page=61 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260228 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title=Goal Setting and Adaptation in University Club Teams: Focusing on the Alignment between Individual and Group Goals kn-title=ƒ`[ƒ€‚É‚¨‚¯‚é–Ú•Wݒ肪•”Šˆ“®“K‰žŠ´‚É‹y‚Ú‚·‰e‹¿ \ ŒÂl–Ú•W‚ÆW’c–Ú•W‚Ì®‡«‚É’…–Ú‚µ‚Ä \ en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=@–{Œ¤‹†‚Å‚ÍC‘åŠw•”Šˆ“®‚̃`[ƒ€‚É‚¨‚¯‚é–Ú•Wݒ肪•”Šˆ“®“K‰žŠ´‚É‹y‚Ú‚·‰e‹¿‚ɂ‚¢‚ÄCŒÂl–Ú•W‚ÆW’c–Ú•W‚Ì®‡«‚É’…–Ú‚µ‚ÄŒŸ“¢‚µ‚½B‘åŠw¶187 –¼‚ð‘ÎÛ‚ÉŽ¿–⎆’²¸‚ðŽÀŽ{‚µCŒÂl–Ú•WEW’c–Ú•W‚Ì4 —v‘fi¢“ï“xC‹ï‘Ì«CŠÖ—^“xCƒtƒB[ƒhƒoƒbƒNjC–Ú•W‚Ì®‡«C‚»‚µ‚Ä•”Šˆ“®“K‰žŠ´‚𑪒肵‚½Bd‰ñ‹A•ªÍ‚ÌŒ‹‰ÊC–Ú•W‚Ì®‡«‚ÍCuŠˆ“®‚Ö‚ÌŒX“|v‚Æu‘gDE¬ˆõ‚Ö‚Ì–ž‘«v‚ɳ‚ÌŒø‰Ê‚ðŽ¦‚µ‚½B‚Ü‚½CW’c–Ú•W‚ÌŠÖ—^“x‚à“K‰žŠ´‚ð‚‚ß‚é—vˆö‚Å‚ ‚Á‚½B‚³‚ç‚ÉC®‡«‚Í–Ú•W—v‘f‚ÌŒø‰Ê‚ð’²®‚µ‚Ä‚¢‚½B®‡«‚ª‚‚¢ê‡‚ɂ͌Âl–Ú•W‚Ö‚ÌŠÖ—^“x‚ªuŠˆ“®‚Ö‚ÌŒX“|v‚ð‘£i‚µC’ႢꇂɂÍW’c–Ú•W‚̃tƒB[ƒhƒoƒbƒN‚ª•⊮“I‚É‹@”\‚µ‚Ä‚¢‚½B‚±‚ê‚ç‚Ì’mŒ©‚©‚çC–Ú•W‚Ì®‡«‚ªCŒÂl–Ú•W‚ÆW’c–Ú•W‚ÌŠ‹“¡‚ðŠÉ˜a‚µC•”Šˆ“®‚É‚¨‚¯‚éS—“I“K‰ž‚ðŽx‚¦‚éd—v‚È—vˆö‚Å‚ ‚邱‚Æ‚ªŽ¦´‚³‚ꂽB en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=MISAWARyo en-aut-sei=MISAWA en-aut-mei=Ryo kn-aut-name=ŽO‘ò—Ç kn-aut-sei=ŽO‘ò kn-aut-mei=—Ç aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=MORITAEri en-aut-sei=MORITA en-aut-mei=Eri kn-aut-name=X“c‰pä» kn-aut-sei=X“c kn-aut-mei=‰pä» aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Faculty of Education, Okayama University kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠwŠwpŒ¤‹†‰@‹³ˆçŠwˆæ affil-num=2 en-affil=Accounting Division, Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠw‘åŠw‰@ˆãŽ•–òŠw‘‡Œ¤‹†‰È“™‰ïŒv‰Û en-keyword=–Ú•WÝ’è—˜_ kn-keyword=–Ú•WÝ’è—˜_ en-keyword=–Ú•W‚Ì®‡« kn-keyword=–Ú•W‚Ì®‡« en-keyword=‘åŠw•”Šˆ“® kn-keyword=‘åŠw•”Šˆ“® en-keyword=•”Šˆ“®“K‰žŠ´ kn-keyword=•”Šˆ“®“K‰žŠ´ END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=191 cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page=17 end-page=30 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260228 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title=The Herbartian Seen by Early 20th Century Britain Teachers: An Analysis of Notes of Lessons on the Herbartian Method kn-title=20 ¢‹I‰“ª‚̃CƒMƒŠƒX‹³ˆõ‚©‚猩‚½ƒwƒ‹ƒoƒ‹ƒgŠw”h \wƒwƒ‹ƒoƒ‹ƒg‹³Žö–@‚É‚©‚ñ‚·‚éŽö‹Æƒm[ƒgx‚Ì•ªÍ \ en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=@–{˜_‚ÍCƒWƒƒ[ƒ}ƒ“EƒCƒ“ƒpƒNƒg‚ðŽ‹À‚Æ‚µ‚ÄC19-20 ¢‹I‚É‚©‚¯‚Ä‹³ˆõ—{¬‰üŠv‚ª‚¢‚©‚É“WŠJ‚³‚ê‚Ä‚«‚½‚Ì‚©‚ð‰ð–¾‚·‚錤‹†‚̈ꕔ‚ð‚È‚·‚à‚̂ł ‚éB‚±‚±‚Å‚Í20 ¢‹I‰“ª‚̃CƒMƒŠƒX‹³ˆõ‚ª‚ǂ̂悤‚Ƀwƒ‹ƒoƒ‹ƒgŠw”h‚Ì‹³ˆçŽv‘z‚ðŽó—e‚µ‚½‚Ì‚©‚𖾂炩‚É‚·‚邱‚Æ‚ð–Ú“I‚Æ‚µCwƒwƒ‹ƒoƒ‹ƒg‹³Žö–@‚É‚©‚ñ‚·‚éŽö‹Æƒm[ƒgx‚Ì•ªÍ‚ðs‚Á‚½B‚»‚ÌŒ‹‰ÊCˆÈ‰º‚Ì‹¤’Ê“_‚Æ‘Šˆá“_‚ª–¾‚ç‚©‚ƂȂÁ‚½BŽö‹Æ–`“ª‚É‚¨‚¢‚Ä–Ú“I‚𖾂炩‚É‚µCŽö‹Æ‚ÅŠw‚΂ê‚é“à—e‚Ö‚ÆŽq‚Ç‚à‚̈ӎ¯‚ðW’†‚³‚¹CV‚µ‚¢’mޝ‚ð‹³Žö‚·‚邯‚¢‚¤—¬‚ê‚ÍCƒwƒ‹ƒoƒ‹ƒgŠw”h‚̌ܒiŠK‹³Žö–@‚Æ‹¤’Ê‚µ‚Ä‚¢‚½B‚¾‚ªC‘æŽl‚¨‚æ‚Ñ‘æŒÜ’iŠK‚ɂ‚¢‚Ă͑å’_‚È•ÏX‚ªŽ{‚³‚ê‚Ä‚¢‚½B20 ¢‹I‰“ª‚̃CƒMƒŠƒX‹³ˆõ‚ªƒwƒ‹ƒoƒ‹ƒgŠw”h‚Ì‹³ˆçŽv‘z‚ð³Šm‚ÉŽó—e‚·‚邿‚è‚à‘I‘ð“I‚ÉŽó—e‚µ‚½‰Â”\«‚ª‚ ‚邱‚Æ‚ð‰ð–¾‚µ‚½B en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=HIRATAYoshitsugu en-aut-sei=HIRATA en-aut-mei=Yoshitsugu kn-aut-name=•½“cmˆû kn-aut-sei=•½“c kn-aut-mei=mˆû aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Faculty of Education, Okayama University kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠwŠwpŒ¤‹†‰@‹³ˆçŠwˆæ en-keyword=ƒWƒƒ[ƒ}ƒ“EƒCƒ“ƒpƒNƒg kn-keyword=ƒWƒƒ[ƒ}ƒ“EƒCƒ“ƒpƒNƒg en-keyword=ƒwƒ‹ƒoƒ‹ƒgŠw”h kn-keyword=ƒwƒ‹ƒoƒ‹ƒgŠw”h en-keyword=ƒCƒMƒŠƒX kn-keyword=ƒCƒMƒŠƒX en-keyword=‹³ˆõ—{¬ kn-keyword=‹³ˆõ—{¬ en-keyword=‹³ˆçŽj kn-keyword=‹³ˆçŽj END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=191 cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page=1 end-page=16 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260228 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title=A Consideration on Roles and Issues of Universities in Developing Teachers and Staff Training: Through the Activities of Okayama University Center for NITS kn-title=‹³EˆõŒ¤C‚Ì‚“x‰»‚ɉʂ½‚·‘åŠw‚Ì–ðŠ„‚Æ‰Û‘è \ NITS ‰ªŽR‘åŠwƒZƒ“ƒ^[‚ÌŠˆ“®‚ð’Ê‚µ‚Ä \ en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=@–{˜_•¶‚Å‚ÍCê–åE‚Æ‚µ‚Ă̋³Eˆõ‚ÌŠw‚Ñ‚ð•Ûá‚·‚錤C‚Ì‚ ‚è•û‚ðŒŸ“¢‚µC‚Æ‚­‚É‘åŠw‚ª‰Ê‚½‚·–ðŠ„‚Æ‰Û‘è‚ɂ‚¢‚ÄlŽ@‚·‚éB‹³Eˆõ‚ÌŠw‚т͋³ˆçˆÏˆõ‰ï‚ł̌¤CC‹Î–±Z‰€‚ł̌¤CC‹³E‘åŠw‰@‚ł̊wCCŒ¤‹†’c‘̂ł̌¤C‚Ȃǂɂ¨‚¢‚Ä“WŠJ‚³‚ê‚éB‘åŠw‚ªŠJ”­EŽÀŽ{‚·‚錤C‚Í‚±‚ê‚ç‚Æ‚Ç‚¤ŠÖ˜A‚µC‚ǂ̂悤‚È“ÁF‚ð‚à‚‚©B“Æ—§s­–@l‹³EˆõŽx‰‡‹@\iˆÈ‰ºCNITSj‰ªŽR‘åŠwƒZƒ“ƒ^[‚ÌŠˆ“®‚ð’Ê‚µ‚ÄŒŸ“¢‚·‚éB‚»‚µ‚ÄC‘åŠw‚Í‹³Eˆõ‚ÌŠw‚т̃j[ƒY‚ɉž‚¦‚鑤‚É‚ ‚邾‚¯‚łȂ­C‹³Eˆõ‚ÌŠw‚Ñ‚ðÄ\¬‚µCŽ©—¥“I‹¦“­“I‚ÈŠw‚Ñ‚ðŽx‰‡E‘£i‚µ‚Ä‚¢‚­‘¤‚Æ‚µ‚Ä‚Ì–ðŠ„‚ð‰Ê‚½‚·‚à‚̂ł ‚邱‚Æ‚ðlŽ@‚·‚éB‚Ü‚½C‘åŠw‚¨‚¯‚éƒAƒEƒgƒJƒ€dŽ‹‚ÌŒ¤CŠJ”­‚Ì•K—v«‚ðŽw“E‚µC¡Œã‚ÌŽæ‘g‚Ì‰Û‘è‚Æ‚µ‚ÄŽ¦‚·B en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=TAKASEAtsushi en-aut-sei=TAKASE en-aut-mei=Atsushi kn-aut-name=ûü£~ kn-aut-sei=ûü£ kn-aut-mei=~ aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=TSURUMIAkiko en-aut-sei=TSURUMI en-aut-mei=Akiko kn-aut-name=’ߊC–¾Žq kn-aut-sei=’ߊC kn-aut-mei=–¾Žq aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=KUROSUMIChiyo en-aut-sei=KUROSUMI en-aut-mei=Chiyo kn-aut-name=•Z’m‘ã kn-aut-sei=•Z kn-aut-mei=’m‘ã aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=KIYOTATetsuo en-aut-sei=KIYOTA en-aut-mei=Tetsuo kn-aut-name=´“c“N’j kn-aut-sei=´“c kn-aut-mei=“N’j aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=INADAYoshihiko en-aut-sei=INADA en-aut-mei=Yoshihiko kn-aut-name=ˆî“c‰À•F kn-aut-sei=ˆî“c kn-aut-mei=‰À•F aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=MATSUURAAi en-aut-sei=MATSUURA en-aut-mei=Ai kn-aut-name=¼‰Y—• kn-aut-sei=¼‰Y kn-aut-mei=—• aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=MIYAMOTOKouji en-aut-sei=MIYAMOTO en-aut-mei=Kouji kn-aut-name=‹{–{_Ž¡ kn-aut-sei=‹{–{ kn-aut-mei=_Ž¡ aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= en-aut-name=MATSUEDAMutsumi en-aut-sei=MATSUEDA en-aut-mei=Mutsumi kn-aut-name=¼Ž}–r”ü kn-aut-sei=¼Ž} kn-aut-mei=–r”ü aut-affil-num=8 ORCID= en-aut-name=TSUSHIMAAiko en-aut-sei=TSUSHIMA en-aut-mei=Aiko kn-aut-name=’Ó‡ˆ¤Žq kn-aut-sei=’Ó‡ kn-aut-mei=ˆ¤Žq aut-affil-num=9 ORCID= en-aut-name=MIYAZAKIYoshio en-aut-sei=MIYAZAKI en-aut-mei=Yoshio kn-aut-name=‹{ú±‘P˜Y kn-aut-sei=‹{ú± kn-aut-mei=‘P˜Y aut-affil-num=10 ORCID= en-aut-name=TAKEMOTOToshiya en-aut-sei=TAKEMOTO en-aut-mei=Toshiya kn-aut-name=’|–{rÆ kn-aut-sei=’|–{ kn-aut-mei=rÆ aut-affil-num=11 ORCID= en-aut-name=SAWATANIYoko en-aut-sei=SAWATANI en-aut-mei=Yoko kn-aut-name=àV’J—zŽq kn-aut-sei=àV’J kn-aut-mei=—zŽq aut-affil-num=12 ORCID= en-aut-name=KAJIIKazuaki en-aut-sei=KAJII en-aut-mei=Kazuaki kn-aut-name=Šˆäˆê‹Å kn-aut-sei=Šˆä kn-aut-mei=ˆê‹Å aut-affil-num=13 ORCID= en-aut-name=KANAGAWAMakiko en-aut-sei=KANAGAWA en-aut-mei=Makiko kn-aut-name=‹àì•‘‹MŽq kn-aut-sei=‹àì kn-aut-mei=•‘‹MŽq aut-affil-num=14 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Faculty of Education, Okayama University kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠwŠwpŒ¤‹†‰@‹³ˆçŠwˆæ affil-num=2 en-affil=Okayama University Kindergarten kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠw•‘®—c’t‰€ affil-num=3 en-affil=Okayama University Kindergarten kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠw•‘®—c’t‰€ affil-num=4 en-affil=Faculty of Education, Okayama University kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠwŠwpŒ¤‹†‰@‹³ˆçŠwˆæ affil-num=5 en-affil=Faculty of Education, Okayama University kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠwŠwpŒ¤‹†‰@‹³ˆçŠwˆæ affil-num=6 en-affil=Faculty of Education, Okayama University kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠwŠwpŒ¤‹†‰@‹³ˆçŠwˆæ affil-num=7 en-affil=Faculty of Education, Okayama University kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠwŠwpŒ¤‹†‰@‹³ˆçŠwˆæ affil-num=8 en-affil=Faculty of Education, Okayama University kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠwŠwpŒ¤‹†‰@‹³ˆçŠwˆæ affil-num=9 en-affil=Faculty of Education, Okayama University kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠwŠwpŒ¤‹†‰@‹³ˆçŠwˆæ affil-num=10 en-affil=Faculty of Education, Okayama University kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠwŠwpŒ¤‹†‰@‹³ˆçŠwˆæ affil-num=11 en-affil=Okayama University School for Special Needs Education kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠw•‘®“Á•ÊŽx‰‡ŠwZ affil-num=12 en-affil=Okayama University School for Special Needs Education kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠw•‘®“Á•ÊŽx‰‡ŠwZ affil-num=13 en-affil=Faculty of Education, Okayama University kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠwŠwpŒ¤‹†‰@‹³ˆçŠwˆæ affil-num=14 en-affil=Faculty of Education, Okayama University kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠwŠwpŒ¤‹†‰@‹³ˆçŠwˆæ en-keyword=‹³EˆõŒ¤C kn-keyword=‹³EˆõŒ¤C en-keyword=‚“x‰» kn-keyword=‚“x‰» en-keyword=‘åŠw kn-keyword=‘åŠw en-keyword=NITS kn-keyword=NITS en-keyword=ê–åE‚Æ‚µ‚Ă̋³Eˆõ kn-keyword=ê–åE‚Æ‚µ‚Ă̋³Eˆõ END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol= cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page= end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260213 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Distinct associations of blood pressure phenotypes with subclinical cerebrovascular disease and coronary artery calcification in Japanese men en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Hypertension, encompassing white-coat hypertension (WCH), masked hypertension (MH), and sustained hypertension (SH), is an established risk factor for cardiovascular diseases (CVDs), including atherosclerosis. However, among the general population, findings on which target organ is affected by the different phenotypes of hypertension remain unclear. In this community-based observational study of Shiga Epidemiological Study of Subclinical Atherosclerosis, 740 Japanese men underwent brain magnetic resonance imaging to assess the presence of lacunar infarction, white-matter hyperintensities, microbleeds, and intracranial artery stenosis (ICAS) between 2012 and 2015. They also underwent office blood pressure (BP) measurements, home BP monitoring for at least five consecutive days, and coronary artery calcification (CAC) assessments between 2010 and 2014. The final analysis included 686 participants without a history of CVDs. Of the 686 participants, the mean age (?}?SD) was 68.0 (?}?8.3) years, and 39.3% were taking antihypertensive medication. In multivariable-adjusted models, each of WCH, MH, and SH was significantly associated with a higher risk of microbleeds compared to normotension. However, the association of WCH with microbleeds was evident only among those on antihypertensive medication (adjusted odds ratio [OR] 6.75 [95% CI 1.83?24.86]) and absent in those not on such medication (adjusted OR 1.20 [95% CI 0.31?4.73]). SH was associated with lacunar infarction, ICAS, and CAC. Among Japanese men, WCH, MH, SH were associated with subclinical cerebrovascular diseases, whereas only SH was associated with CAC. Moreover, any elevated BP phenotype increased the risk of microbleeds. Our findings suggest that different hypertension phenotypes distinctly affect target organs, particularly the brain and heart. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=BayaraaNomin en-aut-sei=Bayaraa en-aut-mei=Nomin kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=YanoYuichiro en-aut-sei=Yano en-aut-mei=Yuichiro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=KadotaAya en-aut-sei=Kadota en-aut-mei=Aya kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=AzaharNazar Mohd en-aut-sei=Azahar en-aut-mei=Nazar Mohd kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=PhapTran Ngoc Hoang en-aut-sei=Phap en-aut-mei=Tran Ngoc Hoang kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=HisamatsuTakashi en-aut-sei=Hisamatsu en-aut-mei=Takashi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=KondoKeiko en-aut-sei=Kondo en-aut-mei=Keiko kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= en-aut-name=ToriiSayuki en-aut-sei=Torii en-aut-mei=Sayuki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=8 ORCID= en-aut-name=FujiyoshiAkira en-aut-sei=Fujiyoshi en-aut-mei=Akira kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=9 ORCID= en-aut-name=OhkuboTakayoshi en-aut-sei=Ohkubo en-aut-mei=Takayoshi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=10 ORCID= en-aut-name=ShiinoAkihiko en-aut-sei=Shiino en-aut-mei=Akihiko kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=11 ORCID= en-aut-name=NozakiKazuhiko en-aut-sei=Nozaki en-aut-mei=Kazuhiko kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=12 ORCID= en-aut-name=MiuraKatsuyuki en-aut-sei=Miura en-aut-mei=Katsuyuki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=13 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=NCD Epidemiology Research Center, Shiga University of Medical Science kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=NCD Epidemiology Research Center, Shiga University of Medical Science kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=NCD Epidemiology Research Center, Shiga University of Medical Science kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil= kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=National Institutes of Biomedical Innovation, Health and Nutrition kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Department of Public Health, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=NCD Epidemiology Research Center, Shiga University of Medical Science kn-affil= affil-num=8 en-affil=NCD Epidemiology Research Center, Shiga University of Medical Science kn-affil= affil-num=9 en-affil=Department of Hygiene, School of Medicine, Wakayama Medical University kn-affil= affil-num=10 en-affil=Department of Hygiene and Public Health, Teikyo University School of Medicine kn-affil= affil-num=11 en-affil=Molecular Neuroscience Research Center, Shiga University of Medical Science kn-affil= affil-num=12 en-affil=Department of Neurosurgery, Shiga University of Medical Science kn-affil= affil-num=13 en-affil=NCD Epidemiology Research Center, Shiga University of Medical Science kn-affil= en-keyword=Blood pressure phenotypes kn-keyword=Blood pressure phenotypes en-keyword=Morning hypertension kn-keyword=Morning hypertension en-keyword=Home blood pressure kn-keyword=Home blood pressure en-keyword=Subclinical cerebrovascular disease kn-keyword=Subclinical cerebrovascular disease en-keyword=Coronary artery calcification kn-keyword=Coronary artery calcification END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=28 cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page=100540 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2025 dt-pub=202510 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Flow diverter treatment for internal carotid artery aneurysm following management of distal cerebral aneurysms: Technical note en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Background: In recent years, the effectiveness of flow diverters (FDs) for the treatment of intracranial aneurysms has been reported. While FDs are effective, their deployment involves advancing a delivery wire distally, which may pose a risk if a distal aneurysm exists within the same artery. In such cases, the delivery wire could potentially perforate the distal aneurysm. Here, we present two cases of tandem aneurysms in which an internal carotid artery (ICA) aneurysm was treated with an FD following the treatment of a distal cerebral aneurysm.
Case description: A 44-year-old woman and a 67-year-old woman underwent magnetic resonance imaging for headache or abducens nerve palsy. In both cases, two aneurysms were revealed: one at the ICA and the other either at the middle cerebral artery or the top of the ICA. Due to the risk of perforation by the delivery wire during FD deployment, the distal aneurysms were treated first?either with surgical neck clipping or stent-assisted coil embolization. One month after the initial treatment, FD placement for the ICA aneurysm was performed as planned without complications in either case.
Discussion: This is the first report where tandem aneurysms were successfully treated with treatment for distal cerebral aneurysms, followed by FDs for proximal ICA aneurysms. We emphasize the potential risk of perforation of the distal aneurysm by the delivery wire during FD placement.
Conclusion: Treatment of distal cerebral aneurysms beforehand can help ensure the safe and effective use of FDs in patients with tandem aneurysms. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=HirataYuichi en-aut-sei=Hirata en-aut-mei=Yuichi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=HiramatsuMasafumi en-aut-sei=Hiramatsu en-aut-mei=Masafumi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=SugiuKenji en-aut-sei=Sugiu en-aut-mei=Kenji kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=BabaFukiko en-aut-sei=Baba en-aut-mei=Fukiko kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=FujitaJuntaro en-aut-sei=Fujita en-aut-mei=Juntaro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=SotomeYuta en-aut-sei=Sotome en-aut-mei=Yuta kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=KawakamiMasato en-aut-sei=Kawakami en-aut-mei=Masato kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= en-aut-name=KimuraRyu en-aut-sei=Kimura en-aut-mei=Ryu kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=8 ORCID= en-aut-name=EbisudaniYuki en-aut-sei=Ebisudani en-aut-mei=Yuki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=9 ORCID= en-aut-name=HarumaJun en-aut-sei=Haruma en-aut-mei=Jun kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=10 ORCID= en-aut-name=HishikawaTomohito en-aut-sei=Hishikawa en-aut-mei=Tomohito kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=11 ORCID= en-aut-name=TanakaShota en-aut-sei=Tanaka en-aut-mei=Shota kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=12 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Department of Neurological Surgery, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Department of Neurological Surgery, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Department of Neurological Surgery, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Department of Neurological Surgery, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Department of Neurological Surgery, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Department of Neurological Surgery, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=Department of Neurological Surgery, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=8 en-affil=Department of Neurological Surgery, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=9 en-affil=Department of Neurological Surgery, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=10 en-affil=Department of Neurological Surgery, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=11 en-affil=Department of Neurosurgery, Kawasaki Medical School kn-affil= affil-num=12 en-affil=Department of Neurological Surgery, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= en-keyword=Flow diverter kn-keyword=Flow diverter en-keyword=Tandem aneurysms kn-keyword=Tandem aneurysms en-keyword=Complication kn-keyword=Complication en-keyword=Perforation kn-keyword=Perforation en-keyword=Delivery wire kn-keyword=Delivery wire END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol= cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page= end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260219 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Tabtoxin biosynthetic gene cluster in Pseudomonas syringae pv. tabaci 6605 genomic island 1 (GI-1Pta6605) is required for severe disease symptoms en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=One of the genomic islands in Pseudomonas syringae pv. tabaci 6605 (GI-1Pta6605) has been identified as a pathogenicity island required for virulence because the deletion almost completely eliminated disease symptoms in inoculation tests at 4?~?105 CFU/ml. GI-1Pta6605 contains four cargo regions (CRs) named CR-1 to CR-4. The ?CR-4 mutant did not produce tabtoxin like ?GI-1 and disease symptoms did not develop in tobacco. However, it grew, although to a lesser extent than the wild-type strain. These results indicate that the tabtoxin biosynthetic gene cluster in GI-1 is required for virulence but not for establishment of compatibility. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=KunishiKotomi en-aut-sei=Kunishi en-aut-mei=Kotomi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=FujisawaNorika en-aut-sei=Fujisawa en-aut-mei=Norika kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=MatsuiHidenori en-aut-sei=Matsui en-aut-mei=Hidenori kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=SakataNanami en-aut-sei=Sakata en-aut-mei=Nanami kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=NoutoshiYoshiteru en-aut-sei=Noutoshi en-aut-mei=Yoshiteru kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=ToyodaKazuhiro en-aut-sei=Toyoda en-aut-mei=Kazuhiro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=IchinoseYuki en-aut-sei=Ichinose en-aut-mei=Yuki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=The Graduate School of Environmental, Life, Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=The Graduate School of Environmental, Life, Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=The Graduate School of Environmental, Life, Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=The Graduate School of Environmental, Life, Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=The Graduate School of Environmental, Life, Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=The Graduate School of Environmental, Life, Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=The Graduate School of Environmental, Life, Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= en-keyword=GI-1Pta6605 kn-keyword=GI-1Pta6605 en-keyword=Pathogenicity island kn-keyword=Pathogenicity island en-keyword=Pseudomonas syringae kn-keyword=Pseudomonas syringae en-keyword=Tabtoxin kn-keyword=Tabtoxin END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=183 cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page=111902 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=202605 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Monitoring postharvest water loss in eggplants (Solanum melongena L.) using UV-induced fluorescence imaging and multivariate analysis en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Eggplant (Solanum melongena L.) is susceptible to significant postharvest losses primarily due to water loss during storage, which affects market quality by causing texture and glossiness degradation. We investigated whether UV-induced fluorescence imaging and EEM (Excitation-Emission Matrix) fluorescence spectroscopy can non-destructively monitor WL under four storage regimes (10 ‹C/95 % RH, 20 ‹C/95 % RH, 20 ‹C/75 % RH, 10 ‹C/75 % RH). EEMs exhibited three regions; a 365/420 nm blue emission increased most under warm, low-humidity storage and is consistent with phenolic/lignin-related fluorescence. Side-view fluorescence (FL) images showed progressive blue-white emission and surface textural changes that tracked gravimetric water loss (WL). A PLSR model using combined color and texture features from FL and reflectance (CL) images achieved R2CV = 0.88 (RMSECV = 3.47 %) with only six features. To test a minimal predictor, we fit an Analysis of Covariance (ANCOVA) using Day-1 FL MeanBlue as a covariate and storage category as a factor with Leave One Out Cross-validation (LOOCV); this forecasted cumulative WL with R2LOOCV = 0.92 and MAE = 1.88 %. Importantly, this ANCOVA model using Day-1 blue-band fluorescence as a covariate was predictive only under 20 ‹C/75 % RH; under the other conditions, its contribution was weak. Linear Discriminant Analysis (LDA) and Support Vector Machine (SVM) models achieved accuracies of 94.4 % and 85.2 %, respectively, in differentiating storage conditions. These results support low-cost FL imaging as a practical tool to monitor WL and storage stress. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=RotichVincent en-aut-sei=Rotich en-aut-mei=Vincent kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=GaoTianqi en-aut-sei=Gao en-aut-mei=Tianqi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=PrempreePanintorn en-aut-sei=Prempree en-aut-mei=Panintorn kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=HayashiTakahiro en-aut-sei=Hayashi en-aut-mei=Takahiro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=NambaKazuhiko en-aut-sei=Namba en-aut-mei=Kazuhiko kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=MontaMitsuji en-aut-sei=Monta en-aut-mei=Mitsuji kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=NishimotoMotomi en-aut-sei=Nishimoto en-aut-mei=Motomi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= en-aut-name=KondoNaoshi en-aut-sei=Kondo en-aut-mei=Naoshi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=8 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Laboratory of Biosensing Engineering, Graduate School of Agriculture, Kyoto University kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Laboratory of Biosensing Engineering, Graduate School of Agriculture, Kyoto University kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Laboratory of Biosensing Engineering, Graduate School of Agriculture, Kyoto University kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Laboratory of Biosensing Engineering, Graduate School of Agriculture, Kyoto University kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Faculty of Environmental, Life, Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Faculty of Environmental, Life, Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=Technology and Innovation Center, Daikin Industries, Ltd. kn-affil= affil-num=8 en-affil=Laboratory of Biosensing Engineering, Graduate School of Agriculture, Kyoto University kn-affil= en-keyword=Eggplant kn-keyword=Eggplant en-keyword=Fluorescence spectroscopy kn-keyword=Fluorescence spectroscopy en-keyword=UV-Induced imaging kn-keyword=UV-Induced imaging en-keyword=Water loss kn-keyword=Water loss en-keyword=Postharvest quality kn-keyword=Postharvest quality en-keyword=Non-destructive assessment kn-keyword=Non-destructive assessment END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=32 cd-vols= no-issue=16 article-no= start-page=9663 end-page=9677 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2025 dt-pub=20251011 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Development of sulfation for cellulose pulp to change its fiber morphology and appearance to transparent in water en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Cellulose pulp (CP) is composed mainly of cellulose which is one of the most useful and sustainable natural polymers. Cellulose-based materials, such as completely dispersed nanofibers and water-soluble cellulose, are transparent in water. Additionally, chemical modification of CP has been employed as a pretreatment for the preparation of nanofibers and to impart absorption properties derived from anionic functional groups. However, little is known about chemically modified CPs comprising micron-scale fibers that are transparent in water.In this study, we synthesized transparent sulfated cellulose pulp (TSCP) that exhibits good dispersion stability, high transparency in water, and highly swollen fiber structures. The sulfation method involved heating sulfamic acid and urea supported on CP. TSCP synthesized using a sulfamic acid amount relative to CP (Q) of 18.5, a molar ratio of urea to sulfamic acid (R) of 0.80, and a reaction temperature of 140 ‹C exhibited the highest total light transmittance (94.7%) in water, a degree of polymerization (535), and amount of sulfate groups (1.73 mmol/g). Polarization microscopy confirmed that most TSCP fibers swelled in water along the fiber width direction. The structure of hydrous-state TSCP was further confirmed using low-vacuum scanning electron microscopy. The maximum fiber width of the swollen TSCP reached 122 ƒÊm, which was approximately six times than that of CP. The crystallinity was equivalent to that of the original CP with a Cellulose I-type crystalline structure. This transparent, hydrous-state TSCP, comprising predominantly swollen CP fibers, demonstrates potential for applications as a transparent material. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=NishimuraAyato en-aut-sei=Nishimura en-aut-mei=Ayato kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=UchidaTetsuya en-aut-sei=Uchida en-aut-mei=Tetsuya kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Graduate School of Environmental, Life, Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Graduate School of Environmental, Life, Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= en-keyword=Cellulose pulp kn-keyword=Cellulose pulp en-keyword=Sulfation kn-keyword=Sulfation en-keyword=Transparent kn-keyword=Transparent en-keyword=Swollen fiber structure kn-keyword=Swollen fiber structure en-keyword=Microscopy kn-keyword=Microscopy en-keyword=Refractive index kn-keyword=Refractive index END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=5 cd-vols= no-issue=1 article-no= start-page=pgaf393 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2025 dt-pub=20251222 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Chloroplast heat shock protein cpHsc70-1 interacts with thylakoid membrane remodeling protein VIPP1 C-terminal tail and controls VIPP1 oligomer assembly en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Oxygenic photosynthetic organisms depend on the thylakoid membranes (TMs) for light-driven energy conversion. Recent studies on TM homeostasis (thylakostasis) have highlighted the essential role of the TM remodeling protein vesicle-inducing protein in plastid 1 (VIPP1). As a member of the endosomal sorting complexes required for transport-III (ESCRT-III)/phage shock protein A (PspA)/VIPP1 superfamily, VIPP1 forms large ring- and filament-like homo-oligomeric structures that exhibit a membrane remodeling activity. The oligomerization status was proposed to be modulated by the intrinsically disordered C-terminal tail (Vc), whereas its functional role remained unclear. Notably, this Vc region is conserved not only in photosynthetic VIPP1 but also in the PspA proteins of extremophilic species, implicating its role in membrane stress responses. To investigate the role of the Vc region in VIPP1 assembly, we performed coimmunoprecipitation assays in Arabidopsis chloroplasts and identified chloroplast-localized HSP70 proteins (cpHsc70) as major interactors. Among the two isoforms, cpHsc70-1 was found to be specifically required for modulating VIPP1 oligomeric assembly and dynamics in response to heat stress. Genetic analyses revealed that cpHsc70-1 facilitates the disassembly of VIPP1 oligomers, similarly to Vps4 ATPase in ESCRT-III; loss of either the Vc region or cpHsc70-1-impaired VIPP1 disassembly, resulting in more static oligomeric structures. Furthermore, cpHsc70-1 exhibited a broader role in chloroplast proteostasis, as the cphsc70-1 mutant showed impaired accumulation of green fluorescent protein (GFP)-fusion proteins. Together, our findings uncover a crucial crosstalk between proteostasis and thylakostasis in chloroplasts, coordinated by cpHsc70-1 and VIPP1 in response to membrane stress. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=LiDi en-aut-sei=Li en-aut-mei=Di kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=GachieSarah Wanjiru en-aut-sei=Gachie en-aut-mei=Sarah Wanjiru kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=OzawaShin-ichiro en-aut-sei=Ozawa en-aut-mei=Shin-ichiro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=ScholzMartin en-aut-sei=Scholz en-aut-mei=Martin kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=HipplerMichael en-aut-sei=Hippler en-aut-mei=Michael kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=SakamotoWataru en-aut-sei=Sakamoto en-aut-mei=Wataru kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Institute of Plant Science and Resources, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Institute of Plant Science and Resources, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Institute of Plant Science and Resources, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Institute of Plant Biology and Biotechnology, University of M?nster kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Institute of Plant Science and Resources, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Institute of Plant Science and Resources, Okayama University kn-affil= en-keyword=Arabidopsis thaliana kn-keyword=Arabidopsis thaliana en-keyword=chloroplast kn-keyword=chloroplast en-keyword=heat shock protein kn-keyword=heat shock protein en-keyword=photosynthesis kn-keyword=photosynthesis en-keyword=thylakoid membrane remodeling kn-keyword=thylakoid membrane remodeling END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=16 cd-vols= no-issue=1 article-no= start-page=4591 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260106 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Calcium ions play a critical role in calcification of Corynebacterium matruchotii en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Dental calculus is a hardened deposit composed of calcium phosphate precipitated within dental plaque. While the involvement of dental calculus in the progression of periodontal disease is well established, many aspects of its formation process remain poorly understood. In this study, we focused on Corynebacterium matruchotii, a key bacterium involved in dental calculus formation, and investigated the role of calcium ions in calcification, as well as the associated internal and external changes in the bacterium through long-term observation. In the absence of calcium ions, no intracellular calcification was observed, and the lipid bilayer with the formation of holes in bacterial body was evident. In contrast, in the presence of calcium ions, lipid bilayer remained intact, and intracellular needle- and plate- like crystals were formed. Furthermore, calcified C. matruchotii showed increased flocculation compared to non-calcified C. matruchotii. These results indicate that the influx of calcium ions is essential for intracellular calcification. Calcium ions entry appears to reinforce the integrity of the lipid bilayer, providing a stable intracellular environment conductive to calcification. Moreover, calcified C. matruchotii may contribute to the nucleation of dental calculus by forming aggregates composed of both bacterial components and calcified material. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=OharaNaoko en-aut-sei=Ohara en-aut-mei=Naoko kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=OgawaMidori en-aut-sei=Ogawa en-aut-mei=Midori kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=TakebeKatsuki en-aut-sei=Takebe en-aut-mei=Katsuki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=TosaIkue en-aut-sei=Tosa en-aut-mei=Ikue kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=OnoSerina en-aut-sei=Ono en-aut-mei=Serina kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=SaitoMitsumasa en-aut-sei=Saito en-aut-mei=Mitsumasa kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=OharaNaoya en-aut-sei=Ohara en-aut-mei=Naoya kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Department of Operative Dentistry, Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Department of Microbiology, School of Medicine, University of Occupational and Environmental Health kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Department of Dental Pharmacology, Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Department of Oral Microbiology, Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Department of Operative Dentistry, Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Department of Microbiology, School of Medicine, University of Occupational and Environmental Health kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=Department of Oral Microbiology, Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= en-keyword=Calcification kn-keyword=Calcification en-keyword=Corynebacterium matruchotii kn-keyword=Corynebacterium matruchotii en-keyword=Dental calculus kn-keyword=Dental calculus en-keyword=Calcium ions kn-keyword=Calcium ions END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=61 cd-vols= no-issue=2 article-no= start-page=444 end-page=451 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=202602 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Interactive Effects of Maximum Daytime and Minimum Nighttime Temperatures on Spinach Growth and Physiological Characteristics en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=High temperatures restrict spinach growth, and the plantfs growth and physiological responses to heat remain poorly understood. It remains unclear whether high daytime or elevated nighttime temperatures have a more negative impact on spinach growth. In addition, the interaction effect of maximum daytime and minimum nighttime temperatures on spinach growth remains unknown. This study was conducted to address these issues. Spinach was grown in controlled environments under four temperature treatments: 30 and 20 ‹C (T30/20), 30 and 25 ‹C (T30/25), 35 and 20 ‹C (T35/20), and 35 and 25 ‹C (T35/25). These treatments represent the maximum daytime temperature and minimum nighttime temperature, respectively, and were maintained for 45 days. Plant growth characteristics were monitored, and the physiological responses to temperature regimes were assessed. The results show that compared with T30/20, dry matter production decreased by 15.4% with increased nighttime temperature (T30/25), decreased by 42.3% with increased daytime temperature (T35/20), and decreased by 57.7% when both daytime and nighttime temperatures were increased (T35/25). However, there was no statistically significant interaction effect (P > 0.05) between daytime maximum and nighttime minimum temperatures on plant biomass production variables. In comparison with T30/20, the T35/25 treatment increased significantly plant stomatal conductance, stomatal apertures, transpiration rate, and leaf temperature during heat waves. The T35/25 treatment also decreased the quantum efficiency in light compared with the other treatments. Plant biomass production did not improve with the T35/20 and T35/25 treatments, likely as a result of a decoupling of photosynthesis and stomatal conductance during heat waves. Overall, these results reveal that maximum daytime and minimum nighttime temperatures exert additive effects on spinach growth. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=SambaNethone en-aut-sei=Samba en-aut-mei=Nethone kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=AkasakaHisao en-aut-sei=Akasaka en-aut-mei=Hisao kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=YasubaKen-ichiro en-aut-sei=Yasuba en-aut-mei=Ken-ichiro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=GotoTanjuro en-aut-sei=Goto en-aut-mei=Tanjuro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=Hikawa-EndoMinori en-aut-sei=Hikawa-Endo en-aut-mei=Minori kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=MiyamaYoko en-aut-sei=Miyama en-aut-mei=Yoko kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Faculty of Food and Agricultural Sciences, Fukushima University kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=The United Graduate School of Agricultural Sciences, Iwate University, Iwate, 020-8550, Japan; and Iwate Agricultural Research Center, Kenpoku Agricultural Research Institute kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Graduate School of Environmental and Life Science, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Graduate School of Environmental and Life Science, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Graduate School of Environmental and Life Science, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Faculty of Food and Agricultural Sciences, Fukushima University, Fukushima, 960-1296, Japan; and The United Graduate School of Agricultural Sciences, Iwate University kn-affil= en-keyword=photosynthesis kn-keyword=photosynthesis en-keyword=quantum efficiency kn-keyword=quantum efficiency en-keyword=stomatal aperture kn-keyword=stomatal aperture en-keyword=stomatal conductance kn-keyword=stomatal conductance en-keyword=transpiration kn-keyword=transpiration END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=18 cd-vols= no-issue=3 article-no= start-page=e105012 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=2026310 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=A Rare Association of Congenital Glaucoma and Retinitis Pigmentosa: A 22-Year Follow-Up Case en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Primary congenital glaucoma is a rare congenital disease with a genetic background that shows high intraocular pressure due to ocular outflow anomalies. Retinitis pigmentosa is a predominant form of inherited retinal disorders. In this study, we present the case of a patient with primary congenital glaucoma in association with retinitis pigmentosa. A four-month-old female baby was brought to the emergency department due to corneal opacity in the left eye. The intraocular pressure measured by a hand-held applanation tonometer was 40 mmHg in the right eye and 36 mmHg in the left eye. She was otherwise healthy and diagnosed with primary congenital glaucoma. She immediately underwent trabeculotomy ab externo in both eyes under general anesthesia, and the intraocular pressure was lowered to 15 mmHg in the right eye and 12 mmHg in the left eye three weeks later. At the age of nine months, she was found to have retinal degeneration along the upper and lower vascular arcades of the fundus in both eyes and was diagnosed with retinitis pigmentosa. At the age of one year and 10 months, the visual acuity was measured at 0.2 in the right eye and 0.2 in the left eye for the first time by a preferential looking procedure. The intraocular pressure was 9 mmHg in both eyes under sedation, and she did not use any topical medication. At the age of three years and three months, the uncorrected visual acuity and best-corrected visual acuity with myopic astigmatism correction were 0.1 and 0.15, respectively, in the right eye and 0.6 and 0.7, respectively, in the left eye. Occlusion therapy with an eye patch over the left eye for one hour daily was started. At the age of four years and 10 months, the best-corrected visual acuity was 0.7 in both eyes. At the age of six years, occlusion therapy was discontinued, and full-correction glasses were prescribed, based on cycloplegic refraction. The visual acuity in the right eye decreased to 0.3 at the age of 11 years and further to 0.1 at the age of 12 years, while the visual acuity in the left eye remained 0.8. Afterwards, she maintained a visual acuity of 0.1 in the right eye and 0.8 in the left eye until the age of 22 years. An incidental presence of primary congenital glaucoma in this patient led to the detection of retinitis pigmentosa in earlier years and allowed long-term follow-up for 22 years. Even though genetic testing was not performed for this patient, the abnormal function of primary cilia, designated as ciliopathy, might explain the co-occurrence of primary congenital glaucoma and retinitis pigmentosa. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=MatsuoToshihiko en-aut-sei=Matsuo en-aut-mei=Toshihiko kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Ophthalmology, Graduate School of Interdisciplinary Science and Engineering in Health Systems, Okayama University kn-affil= en-keyword=ciliopathy kn-keyword=ciliopathy en-keyword=cycloplegic refraction kn-keyword=cycloplegic refraction en-keyword=full-correction glasses kn-keyword=full-correction glasses en-keyword=goldmann perimetry kn-keyword=goldmann perimetry en-keyword=occlusion therapy kn-keyword=occlusion therapy en-keyword=optical coherence tomography kn-keyword=optical coherence tomography en-keyword=photoreceptor ellipsoid zone kn-keyword=photoreceptor ellipsoid zone en-keyword=primary congenital glaucoma kn-keyword=primary congenital glaucoma en-keyword=retinitis pigmentosa kn-keyword=retinitis pigmentosa en-keyword=trabeculotomy kn-keyword=trabeculotomy END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=94 cd-vols= no-issue=4 article-no= start-page=522 end-page=529 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2025 dt-pub=2025 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Effects of Intermittent Low-temperature Storage Duration and Cycle on the Bolting and Flowering of Delphinium elatum in Summer en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Early-bolting in summer is a major problem when growing delphinium seedlings in summer to produce cut flowers that will be shipped in autumn and winter. In this study, an intermittent low-temperature storage (ILTS) treatment that induces flower bud differentiation in strawberry and prevents rosette formation in Eustoma significantly increased the Delphinium elatum cut flower length. Moreover, ILTS was as effective as growing seedlings under cool conditions at preventing early-bolting. We analyzed the effects of six ILTS treatments that differed regarding the treatment temperature (5 and 10‹C) and treatment cycle (3 days/3 days, 6 days/6 days, and 12 days/12 days; ambient conditions/cool and dark). Cut flowers were significantly longer with the 6 days/6 days treatment at 10‹C than for the control treatment. Furthermore, repeating the ILTS treatment cycle (6 days ambient conditions/6 days at 10‹C) a total of four times produced high-quality cut flowers regardless of the cultivar. Therefore, this ILTS treatment may be ideal for preventing early-bolting in D. elatum. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=KawaiMika en-aut-sei=Kawai en-aut-mei=Mika kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=FukuyasuMiwa en-aut-sei=Fukuyasu en-aut-mei=Miwa kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=TanakaYoshiyuki en-aut-sei=Tanaka en-aut-mei=Yoshiyuki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=KitamuraYoshikuni en-aut-sei=Kitamura en-aut-mei=Yoshikuni kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=YasubaKen-ichiro en-aut-sei=Yasuba en-aut-mei=Ken-ichiro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=YoshidaYuichi en-aut-sei=Yoshida en-aut-mei=Yuichi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=GotoTanjuro en-aut-sei=Goto en-aut-mei=Tanjuro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Graduate School of Environmental, Life, Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Graduate School of Environmental, Life, Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Graduate School of Agriculture, Kyoto University kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Graduate School of Environmental, Life, Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Graduate School of Environmental, Life, Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Graduate School of Environmental, Life, Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=Graduate School of Environmental, Life, Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= en-keyword=cool storage kn-keyword=cool storage en-keyword=cut flower quality kn-keyword=cut flower quality en-keyword=high ambient temperature kn-keyword=high ambient temperature en-keyword=long day kn-keyword=long day en-keyword=Ranunculaceae kn-keyword=Ranunculaceae END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=18 cd-vols= no-issue=1 article-no= start-page=123 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260119 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Streamlined Radiosynthesis of [18F]Fluproxadine (AF78): An Unprotected Guanidine Precursor Enables Efficient One-Step, Automation-Ready Labeling for Clinical Use en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Background/Objectives: [18F]Fluproxadine (formerly [18F]AF78) is a PET radiotracer targeting the norepinephrine transporter (NET) with potential applications in cardiac, neurological, and oncological imaging. Its guanidine moiety, while essential for NET binding, presents major radiosynthetic challenges due to high basicity and the harsh deprotection conditions required for protected precursors. Previous methods relied on multistep procedures, strong acids, and complex purification, limiting clinical translation. This study aimed to develop a practical one-step radiosynthesis suitable for routine and automated production. Methods: A direct SN2-type nucleophilic [18F]fluorination was performed using an unprotected guanidine precursor to eliminate deprotection steps. Reaction parameters, including the base system, solvent composition, precursor concentration, and temperature, were optimized under conventional and microwave heating. Radiochemical conversion (RCC) and operational robustness were evaluated, and purification strategies were assessed for automation compatibility. Results: Direct [18F]fluorination using the unprotected precursor reduced the total synthesis time to 60?70 min. Optimal conditions employed a tert-butanol/acetonitrile (4:1) solvent system with K2CO3/Kryptofix222, affording RCC up to 33% under conventional heating. Microwave irradiation further improved efficiency, achieving RCC of up to 64% within 1.5 min at 140 ‹C. The method showed broad tolerance to variations in the base molar ratio and precursor concentration and enabled isocratic HPLC purification. Conclusions: This one-step radiosynthesis overcomes longstanding challenges in [18F]fluproxadine production by eliminating harsh deprotection and enabling high-yield, automation-ready synthesis, thereby improving clinical feasibility. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=ChenXinyu en-aut-sei=Chen en-aut-mei=Xinyu kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=OhtaKaito en-aut-sei=Ohta en-aut-mei=Kaito kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=KimuraHiroyuki en-aut-sei=Kimura en-aut-mei=Hiroyuki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=YagiYusuke en-aut-sei=Yagi en-aut-mei=Yusuke kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=SasakiTakanori en-aut-sei=Sasaki en-aut-mei=Takanori kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=NoseNaoko en-aut-sei=Nose en-aut-mei=Naoko kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=AkehiMasaru en-aut-sei=Akehi en-aut-mei=Masaru kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= en-aut-name=YamaneTomohiko en-aut-sei=Yamane en-aut-mei=Tomohiko kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=8 ORCID= en-aut-name=WernerRudolf A. en-aut-sei=Werner en-aut-mei=Rudolf A. kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=9 ORCID= en-aut-name=HiguchiTakahiro en-aut-sei=Higuchi en-aut-mei=Takahiro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=10 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Nuclear Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, University of Augsburg kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Agency for Health, Safety and Environment, Kyoto University kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=8 en-affil=Department of Molecular Imaging Research, Kobe City Medical Center General Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=9 en-affil=Department of Nuclear Medicine, LMU Hospital, and German Cancer Consortium (DKTK), Partner Site Munich, Ludwig-Maximilians-University of Munich kn-affil= affil-num=10 en-affil=Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= en-keyword=norepinephrine transporter kn-keyword=norepinephrine transporter en-keyword=positron emission tomography kn-keyword=positron emission tomography en-keyword=[18F]AF78 kn-keyword=[18F]AF78 en-keyword=[18F]fluproxadine kn-keyword=[18F]fluproxadine en-keyword=radiolabeling kn-keyword=radiolabeling END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=27 cd-vols= no-issue=5 article-no= start-page=2113 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260224 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Fgf10 Gene Dosage from a Single Allele Is Insufficient for Forming Multilayered Epithelial Cells in the Murine Lacrimal Gland en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Mutations in the fibroblast growth factor 10 (FGF10) gene in humans cause aplasia of the lacrimal and salivary glands (ALSG). In patients with ALSG, heterozygous loss-of-function mutations are found, and FGF10 haploinsufficiency results in the absence of these secretory organs. Lacrimal glands (LGs) are formed through epithelial thickening, budding, and branching morphogenesis. To compare the variable phenotypes of the Fgf10+/? Harderian glands (HGs) previously reported, we examined the development of LGs in wild-type (WT), Fgf10+/?, and Fgf10-null mice. Pax6 immunostaining was performed to visualize the LG primordia from embryonic day 15.5 (E15.5) onwards. In situ hybridization of the genes encoding the epithelial receptor of FGF10, FGFR2b, and its other ligands was performed to determine their potential involvement in LG development. LG primordia were not observed in Fgf10+/? mice bilaterally at E16.5 or later stages. At E15.5, budding from the developing conjunctival epithelium (CE) was observed in a small fraction of the Fgf10+/? LG primordia. In contrast, the Fgf10-null CE failed to promote budding. Among Fgf1, Fgf3, Fgf7, Fgf10, and Fgf22, Fgf10 was expressed in the mesenchyme surrounding developing LG epithelial cells, whereas Fgf1 was expressed in the LG epithelium of WT mice. Fgf7 was initially expressed in the mesenchyme surrounding the nascent LG epithelium, but its expression subsequently became diffused. Thus, we conclude that among the FGFR2b ligands, initial LG formation is dependent on the mesenchymal factors FGF10 and FGF7, and FGF1 is likely to function as an epithelial factor in the LG primordia. A single allele of Fgf10 was found to be insufficient to support the budding process during LG morphogenesis. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=IkedaShiori en-aut-sei=Ikeda en-aut-mei=Shiori kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=SatoKeita en-aut-sei=Sato en-aut-mei=Keita kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=TajikaYuki en-aut-sei=Tajika en-aut-mei=Yuki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=FujitaHirofumi en-aut-sei=Fujita en-aut-mei=Hirofumi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=BandoTetsuya en-aut-sei=Bando en-aut-mei=Tetsuya kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=NohnoTsutomu en-aut-sei=Nohno en-aut-mei=Tsutomu kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=MiyaishiSatoru en-aut-sei=Miyaishi en-aut-mei=Satoru kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= en-aut-name=OhuchiHideyo en-aut-sei=Ohuchi en-aut-mei=Hideyo kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=8 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Department of Cytology and Histology, Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Department of Cytology and Histology, Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Department of Radiological Technology, Gumma Prefectural College of Health Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Department of Cytology and Histology, Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Department of Cytology and Histology, Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Department of Cytology and Histology, Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=Department of Legal Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=8 en-affil=Department of Cytology and Histology, Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= en-keyword=fibroblast growth factor kn-keyword=fibroblast growth factor en-keyword=Fgf10 kn-keyword=Fgf10 en-keyword=Fgf1 kn-keyword=Fgf1 en-keyword=Fgf3 kn-keyword=Fgf3 en-keyword=Fgf7 kn-keyword=Fgf7 en-keyword=Fgf22 kn-keyword=Fgf22 en-keyword=Fgfr2b kn-keyword=Fgfr2b en-keyword=mouse kn-keyword=mouse en-keyword=lacrimal gland kn-keyword=lacrimal gland en-keyword=development kn-keyword=development END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=14 cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page=17960 end-page=17970 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=2026 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=FEM-Based Design and Characterization of a Millimeter-Scale Piezoelectric Resonance Force Sensor en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=This paper presents a millimeter-scale piezoelectric effect-based force sensor that uses the change in its resonant frequency as the detection principle for high sensitivity and a wide measurement range. Such characteristics are suited for robot hand applications that not only detect small forces but also handle large payloads. We develop a methodology to estimate the relationship between applied force and resonant frequency shift by combining classical contact theory and finite element method (FEM) analysis. Although this relationship is non-linear, the designability of sensitivity and measurement range is demonstrated by the simulation. The simulation results based on the method are verified, showing good agreement with the experimental results. The static characteristics, including sensitivity, standard deviation, and resolution, are evaluated using prototype sensors with characteristic lengths ranging from 1 mm to 4 mm. The 4-mm model has a measurement range of 77 mN to 300 N, and the smallest model, which is one of the smallest force sensors suitable for practical implementation, has a measurement range of 9 mN to 20 N. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=YamazakiAoto en-aut-sei=Yamazaki en-aut-mei=Aoto kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=AkidukiTakuma en-aut-sei=Akiduki en-aut-mei=Takuma kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=HonnaAtsuo en-aut-sei=Honna en-aut-mei=Atsuo kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=KitazakiMichiteru en-aut-sei=Kitazaki en-aut-mei=Michiteru kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=MashimoTomoaki en-aut-sei=Mashimo en-aut-mei=Tomoaki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Department of Mechanical Engineering, Toyohashi University of Technology kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Department of Mechanical Engineering, Toyohashi University of Technology kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Riccoh Company Ltd. kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Department of Computer Science and Engineering, Toyohashi University of Technology kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Graduate School of Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= en-keyword=Force sensors kn-keyword=Force sensors en-keyword=piezoelectric effect kn-keyword=piezoelectric effect en-keyword=resonators kn-keyword=resonators en-keyword=transducers kn-keyword=transducers en-keyword=ultrasonics kn-keyword=ultrasonics END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=19 cd-vols= no-issue=1 article-no= start-page=13 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2025 dt-pub=20251208 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Pan-cancer profiling links C1orf50 to DNA repair and immune modulation in ovarian cancer en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Background C1orf50 encodes a small, evolutionarily conserved protein, the function of which remains unclear. Its significance across various human cancers, particularly its specific role in ovarian cancer within an immunogenomic context, is not yet fully understood. Utilizing The Cancer Genome Atlas and single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq) public datasets, we conducted a comprehensive profiling of C1orf50 across multiple cancer types, with a particular focus on ovarian cancer, to investigate its associations with copy-number status, genomic instability, tumor programs, and the immune microenvironment.
Results Across cancer types, copy-number gain or amplification of C1orf50 was most frequent in ovarian cancer and closely tracked with higher messenger RNA levels. Higher C1orf50 expression was associated with a greater tumor mutational burden and homologous recombination deficiency, as indicated by gene-set patterns that suggested heightened cell-cycle and cellular stress responses accompanied by reduced oxidative phosphorylation, enrichment of regulatory T cells, and depletion of resting memory CD4 T cells. In ovarian cancer, focal events at chromosome 1p34.2 were accompanied by stepwise increases in C1orf50 expression by clinical stage and were linked to higher tumor mutational burden, homologous recombination deficiency, and greater loss of heterozygosity, together with more frequent gene alterations in BRCA1 or BRCA2. Immune composition clustered into profiles consistent with an immunosuppressive context in tumors with higher C1orf50 expression. The scRNA-seq data further revealed that cancer cells enhanced immune-suppressive interactions with various immune cell populations and diminished antigen-presentation signals. Analyses of genomic instability in ovarian cancer suggested mutational processes compatible with base-substitution patterns associated with cytidine deaminase activity and with insertion-deletion patterns characteristic of homologous recombination failure, while transcript-level patterns pointed to a broad downshift of canonical DNA repair activity with apparent compensatory adjustments in related pathways rather than a uniform change in any single pathway.
Conclusions The overexpression of C1orf50 characterizes an aggressive immunogenomic phenotype in ovarian cancer, distinguished by genomic instability, impaired DNA repair mechanisms, and extensive immunosuppression. These findings indicate that C1orf50 warrants consideration as a potential biomarker and a prospective target for therapeutic investigation. Furthermore, they advocate for the progression to prospective validation and functional studies to ascertain its clinical significance. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=RogachevskayaAnna en-aut-sei=Rogachevskaya en-aut-mei=Anna kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=OtaniYusuke en-aut-sei=Otani en-aut-mei=Yusuke kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=OhtsuAkira en-aut-sei=Ohtsu en-aut-mei=Akira kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=ChinVanessa D. en-aut-sei=Chin en-aut-mei=Vanessa D. kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=Pe?aTirso en-aut-sei=Pe?a en-aut-mei=Tirso kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=AraiSeiji en-aut-sei=Arai en-aut-mei=Seiji kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=ToyookaShinichi en-aut-sei=Toyooka en-aut-mei=Shinichi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= en-aut-name=FujimuraAtsushi en-aut-sei=Fujimura en-aut-mei=Atsushi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=8 ORCID= en-aut-name=TanakaAtsushi en-aut-sei=Tanaka en-aut-mei=Atsushi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=9 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Department of Pathology, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Harvard Medical School kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Department of General Thoracic Surgery and Breast and Endocrinological Surgery, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Harvard Medical School kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=UMass Chan Medical School, UMass Memorial Medical Center kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Department of Pathology, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Harvard Medical School kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Department of Urology, Gunma University Graduate School of Medicine kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=Department of General Thoracic Surgery and Breast and Endocrinological Surgery, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine kn-affil= affil-num=8 en-affil=Department of Molecular Physiology, Faculty of Medicine, Graduate School of Medicine, Kagawa University kn-affil= affil-num=9 en-affil=Department of Pathology, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Harvard Medical School kn-affil= en-keyword=C1orf50 kn-keyword=C1orf50 en-keyword=Pan-cancer analysis kn-keyword=Pan-cancer analysis en-keyword=DNA repair kn-keyword=DNA repair en-keyword=Gene expression kn-keyword=Gene expression en-keyword=Tumor microenvironment kn-keyword=Tumor microenvironment en-keyword=Immune evasion kn-keyword=Immune evasion en-keyword=Single-cell RNA-seq kn-keyword=Single-cell RNA-seq END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=24 cd-vols= no-issue=1 article-no= start-page= end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260124 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=TeMPRA: advancing continuing professional development in pediatric rheumatology in Japan en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Background In the context of the global shortage of pediatric rheumatologists, mid-career specialists who can play key roles in regional education, research, and clinical practice have become increasingly important. In Japan, the Team of Mid-career Pediatric Rheumatologists Alliance (TeMPRA) was founded in 2014 to support continuing professional development (CPD) and foster collaboration among mid-career pediatric rheumatologists. The aim of this study was to characterize the current status and future perspectives of the TeMPRA members.
Methods In 2024, a cross-sectional, web-based survey was conducted among all 37 active members of the TeMPRA across Japan. Data were collected on career trajectories, educational roles, research activities, clinical practices, and international engagement. Categorical variables were compared using appropriate statistical tests, with a significance level of 0.05.
Results Responses were obtained from 35 members (response rate: 95%). Most respondents (71%) were affiliated with university hospitals, and 60% had?>?10 years of experience in pediatric rheumatology. Compared with those working in community hospitals, respondents affiliated with university hospitals were significantly more likely to be involved in research activities (50% vs. 0%, P?=?0.0261) and global professional contributions (88% vs. 0%, P? Conclusions This nationwide survey highlights the substantial educational roles, research activities, and clinical practices of mid-career pediatric rheumatologists in Japan and suggests that the TeMPRA framework can serve as a valuable model for supporting CPD and workforce sustainability. Similar alliance-based approaches may be applicable in other countries facing comparable challenges in pediatric rheumatology. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=WakiguchiHiroyuki en-aut-sei=Wakiguchi en-aut-mei=Hiroyuki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=HashimotoKunio en-aut-sei=Hashimoto en-aut-mei=Kunio kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=YashiroMasato en-aut-sei=Yashiro en-aut-mei=Masato kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=NishimuraKenichi en-aut-sei=Nishimura en-aut-mei=Kenichi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=EbatoTakasuke en-aut-sei=Ebato en-aut-mei=Takasuke kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=AkamineKeiji en-aut-sei=Akamine en-aut-mei=Keiji kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=UejimaYoji en-aut-sei=Uejima en-aut-mei=Yoji kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= en-aut-name=SatoTomomi en-aut-sei=Sato en-aut-mei=Tomomi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=8 ORCID= en-aut-name=YamasakiYuichi en-aut-sei=Yamasaki en-aut-mei=Yuichi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=9 ORCID= en-aut-name=YasumuraJunko en-aut-sei=Yasumura en-aut-mei=Junko kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=10 ORCID= en-aut-name=OkazakiFumiko en-aut-sei=Okazaki en-aut-mei=Fumiko kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=11 ORCID= en-aut-name=KizawaToshitaka en-aut-sei=Kizawa en-aut-mei=Toshitaka kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=12 ORCID= en-aut-name=YasuokaRyuhei en-aut-sei=Yasuoka en-aut-mei=Ryuhei kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=13 ORCID= en-aut-name=IshikawaTomoaki en-aut-sei=Ishikawa en-aut-mei=Tomoaki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=14 ORCID= en-aut-name=YamamotoTakeshi en-aut-sei=Yamamoto en-aut-mei=Takeshi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=15 ORCID= en-aut-name=FujitaYuji en-aut-sei=Fujita en-aut-mei=Yuji kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=16 ORCID= en-aut-name=ItohNaohiro en-aut-sei=Itoh en-aut-mei=Naohiro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=17 ORCID= en-aut-name=TakasakiAsami en-aut-sei=Takasaki en-aut-mei=Asami kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=18 ORCID= en-aut-name=SakuraiNodoka en-aut-sei=Sakurai en-aut-mei=Nodoka kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=19 ORCID= en-aut-name=SuzukiKazuo en-aut-sei=Suzuki en-aut-mei=Kazuo kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=20 ORCID= en-aut-name=TamaiTasuku en-aut-sei=Tamai en-aut-mei=Tasuku kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=21 ORCID= en-aut-name=HiranoNaoki en-aut-sei=Hirano en-aut-mei=Naoki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=22 ORCID= en-aut-name=OkamotoNami en-aut-sei=Okamoto en-aut-mei=Nami kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=23 ORCID= en-aut-name=ShimizuMasaki en-aut-sei=Shimizu en-aut-mei=Masaki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=24 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Division of General Pediatrics and Emergency Medicine, Department of Pediatrics, Oita University Faculty of Medicine kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Department of Pediatrics, Nagasaki University Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Department of Pediatrics, Okayama University Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Department of Pediatrics, Yokohama City University Graduate School of Medicine kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Department of Pediatrics, Kitasato University kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Department of Nephrology and Rheumatology, Tokyo Metropolitan Childrenfs Medical Center kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=Division of Infectious Diseases and Immunology, Saitama Childrenfs Medical Center kn-affil= affil-num=8 en-affil=Clinical Education Center for Physicians, Shiga University of Medical Science kn-affil= affil-num=9 en-affil=Department of Pediatrics, Kagoshima University Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=10 en-affil=Department of Pediatrics, Hiroshima Prefectural Hospital Organization Futabanosato Prefectural Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=11 en-affil=Department of Pediatrics, Yamaguchi University Graduate School of Medicine kn-affil= affil-num=12 en-affil=Department of Pediatrics, Japan Community Health Care Organization Sapporo Hokushin Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=13 en-affil=Department of Pediatrics, Hamamatsu University School of Medicine kn-affil= affil-num=14 en-affil=Department of Pediatrics, Nara Medical University kn-affil= affil-num=15 en-affil=Department of Pediatrics, Chiba University Graduate School of Medicine kn-affil= affil-num=16 en-affil=Department of Pediatrics, Dokkyo Medical University kn-affil= affil-num=17 en-affil=Department of Pediatrics, Faculty of Medical Sciences, University of Fukui kn-affil= affil-num=18 en-affil=Department of Pediatrics, School of Medicine, University of Toyama kn-affil= affil-num=19 en-affil=Department of Pediatrics, NTT East Medical Center Sapporo kn-affil= affil-num=20 en-affil=Suzuki Kids Clinic kn-affil= affil-num=21 en-affil=Division of General Pediatrics and Emergency Medicine, Department of Pediatrics, Oita University Faculty of Medicine kn-affil= affil-num=22 en-affil=Department of Public Health and Epidemiology, Faculty of Medicine, Oita University kn-affil= affil-num=23 en-affil=Department of Pediatrics, Osaka Rosai Hospital, Japan Organization of Occupational Health and Safety kn-affil= affil-num=24 en-affil=Department of Pediatrics, Perinatal and Maternal Medicine, Graduate School of Medical and Dental Sciences, Institute of Science Tokyo kn-affil= en-keyword=Child kn-keyword=Child en-keyword=Education kn-keyword=Education en-keyword=Juvenile idiopathic arthritis kn-keyword=Juvenile idiopathic arthritis en-keyword=Practice kn-keyword=Practice en-keyword=Rheumatic diseases kn-keyword=Rheumatic diseases en-keyword=Systemic lupus erythematosus kn-keyword=Systemic lupus erythematosus en-keyword=Team of mid-career pediatric rheumatologists alliance kn-keyword=Team of mid-career pediatric rheumatologists alliance END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=17 cd-vols= no-issue=9 article-no= start-page=4363 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=2026 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Gaseous CO2 electrolysis: latest advances in electrode and electrolyzer technologies toward abating CO2 emissions en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=The conversion of CO2 into multicarbon (C2+) products via electrochemical reduction is considered a key technology for the sustainable production of fuels and chemicals. The performance of high-rate gaseous CO2 electrolysis is governed by interrelated factors such as the electrocatalysts, electrodes, electrolytes, and cell architectures. Despite the intensive focus on catalyst research, systematic studies addressing the other components remain scarce, leaving critical gaps in our understanding toward achieving higher performance in CO2 electrolysis systems. The nanoscale design of catalyst surface electronic structures and the macroscale design of electrodes and electrolyzer architectures both influence the overall activity of the electrochemical system. In designing macroscale components, it is necessary to establish benchmarks based on a comprehensive evaluation of CO2 emissions for the entire electrolysis process, because these parameters are directly linked to output metrics such as current density and cell voltage under practical operating conditions. This review summarizes recent advances in electrodes and electrolyzers, and through life-cycle assessment (LCA), evaluates key performance indicators (KPIs) for achieving negative emissions and assesses the current technology readiness of CO2 electrolysis. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=KamiyaKazuhide en-aut-sei=Kamiya en-aut-mei=Kazuhide kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=NakasoneSora en-aut-sei=Nakasone en-aut-mei=Sora kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=KuriharaRyo en-aut-sei=Kurihara en-aut-mei=Ryo kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=InoueAsato en-aut-sei=Inoue en-aut-mei=Asato kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=IrieHazuki en-aut-sei=Irie en-aut-mei=Hazuki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=NakahataShoko en-aut-sei=Nakahata en-aut-mei=Shoko kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=NishinaYuta en-aut-sei=Nishina en-aut-mei=Yuta kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= en-aut-name=TaniguchiSatoshi en-aut-sei=Taniguchi en-aut-mei=Satoshi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=8 ORCID= en-aut-name=NguyenThuy T. H. en-aut-sei=Nguyen en-aut-mei=Thuy T. H. kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=9 ORCID= en-aut-name=KataokaSho en-aut-sei=Kataoka en-aut-mei=Sho kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=10 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Research Center for Solar Energy Chemistry, Graduate School of Engineering Science, The University of Osaka kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Research Center for Solar Energy Chemistry, Graduate School of Engineering Science, The University of Osaka kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Research Center for Solar Energy Chemistry, Graduate School of Engineering Science, The University of Osaka kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Research Center for Solar Energy Chemistry, Graduate School of Engineering Science, The University of Osaka kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Research Center for Solar Energy Chemistry, Graduate School of Engineering Science, The University of Osaka kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Research Center for Solar Energy Chemistry, Graduate School of Engineering Science, The University of Osaka kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=Research Institute for Interdisciplinary Science, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=8 en-affil=Research Institute for Chemical Process Technology, National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology (AIST), Central 5 kn-affil= affil-num=9 en-affil=Research Institute for Chemical Process Technology, National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology (AIST), Central 5 kn-affil= affil-num=10 en-affil=Research Institute for Chemical Process Technology, National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology (AIST), Central 5 kn-affil= END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=9 cd-vols= no-issue=6 article-no= start-page=1128 end-page=1136 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2025 dt-pub=20250531 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Surgery for Older Cancer Patients: Cross]Organ Review and Good Practice Statement by the Japanese Geriatric Oncology Guideline Committee en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Background: Although the number of older people is increasing, there is a lack of evidence and insufficient consensus regarding postoperative complications and survival in older cancer patients. In this study, we conducted a literature search and systematic review focusing on the outcomes after surgery for older cancer patients.
Methods: Literature focusing on surgical treatment for older cancer patients was extracted from Japanese clinical practice guidelines for gastric cancer, lung cancer, colorectal cancer, liver cancer, and gynecological cancers (uterine body, uterine cervix, ovary, and external genitalia and vagina). Outcomes were reviewed, and committee members determined the strength of evidence on a four-point scale (A to D), with A being the highest and D being the lowest.
Results: Older cancer patients tend to have a higher incidence of postoperative complications and postoperative syndromes, and their expected survival is generally shorter compared to non-older patients. When extensive surgeries such as para-aortic lymph node dissection and/or resection with other organs are performed for older cancer patients, the postoperative mortality rates tend to increase compared to non-older patients.
Conclusion: Surgical treatments for older cancer patients tend to result in higher morbidity even when the patients are in good health status. Nevertheless, there is still a possibility that a certain fraction of the patients achieve treatment outcomes comparable to those of non-older patients. Therefore, surgical indication and procedure for older cancer patients should be carefully determined based on surgical invasiveness and patient tolerability. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=TanakaChie en-aut-sei=Tanaka en-aut-mei=Chie kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=OfuchiTakashi en-aut-sei=Ofuchi en-aut-mei=Takashi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=NinomiyaKiichiro en-aut-sei=Ninomiya en-aut-mei=Kiichiro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=InoueDaisuke en-aut-sei=Inoue en-aut-mei=Daisuke kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=SugimotoKen en-aut-sei=Sugimoto en-aut-mei=Ken kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=MurofushiKeiko en-aut-sei=Murofushi en-aut-mei=Keiko kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=OkuyamaToru en-aut-sei=Okuyama en-aut-mei=Toru kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= en-aut-name=WatanukiShigeaki en-aut-sei=Watanuki en-aut-mei=Shigeaki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=8 ORCID= en-aut-name=ImamuraChiyo en-aut-sei=Imamura en-aut-mei=Chiyo kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=9 ORCID= en-aut-name=SakaiDaisuke en-aut-sei=Sakai en-aut-mei=Daisuke kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=10 ORCID= en-aut-name=SakuraiNaomi en-aut-sei=Sakurai en-aut-mei=Naomi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=11 ORCID= en-aut-name=WatanabeKiyotaka en-aut-sei=Watanabe en-aut-mei=Kiyotaka kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=12 ORCID= en-aut-name=TamuraKazuo en-aut-sei=Tamura en-aut-mei=Kazuo kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=13 ORCID= en-aut-name=SaekiToshiaki en-aut-sei=Saeki en-aut-mei=Toshiaki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=14 ORCID= en-aut-name=IshiguroHiroshi en-aut-sei=Ishiguro en-aut-mei=Hiroshi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=15 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Department of Gastroenterological Surgery, Nagoya University Graduate School of Medicine kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Department of Surgery, Kyushu University Beppu Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Center for Comprehensive Genomic Medicine, Okayama University Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of Fukui kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Department of General Geriatric Medicine, Kawasaki Medical School kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Division of Radiation Oncology, Department of Radiology, Tokyo Metropolitan Cancer and Infectious Diseases Center Komagome Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=Department of Psychiatry/Palliative Care Center, Nagoya City University West Medical Center kn-affil= affil-num=8 en-affil=National Center for Global Health and Medicine, National College of Nursing kn-affil= affil-num=9 en-affil=Advanced Cancer Translational Research Institute, Showa University kn-affil= affil-num=10 en-affil=Department of Frontier Science for Cancer and Chemotherapy, Osaka University Graduate School of Medicine kn-affil= affil-num=11 en-affil=Cancer Solutions Co. Ltd kn-affil= affil-num=12 en-affil=Division of Medical Oncology, Department of Medicine, School of Medicine, Teikyo University kn-affil= affil-num=13 en-affil=NPO Clinical Hematology/Oncology Treatment Study Group kn-affil= affil-num=14 en-affil=Breast Oncology Service, Saitama Medical University International Medical Center kn-affil= affil-num=15 en-affil=Breast Oncology Service, Saitama Medical University International Medical Center kn-affil= en-keyword=cancer kn-keyword=cancer en-keyword=older patients kn-keyword=older patients en-keyword=surgery kn-keyword=surgery END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol= cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page= end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260303 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Towards place-responsive climate change education: Mongolian primary teachersf pedagogical judgement across urban and rural contexts en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Climate change education (CCE) in primary schools is increasingly recognised as essential, yet how teachers interpret and enact CCE across diverse local contexts remains underexplored. This study examines how Mongolian primary school teachers working with students aged 6?11 in urban and rural contexts interpret and teach climate change, with particular attention to the role of place. Drawing on semi-structured interviews with 20 teachers across contrasting contexts, the study explores how environmental, cultural, and institutional conditions shape teachersf pedagogical interpretations and classroom practices. Data were analysed using reflexive thematic analysis, informed by conceptual frameworks that position place as an active mediator of teaching and learning. Findings show that rural teachers frequently integrated traditional ecological knowledge and lived environmental experience to connect global climate processes with locally observable ecological change, emphasising livelihood impacts and intergenerational ecological memory. Urban teachers, by contrast, framed climate change through anthropogenic pressures such as air pollution, waste, and infrastructure constraints, foregrounding feasible individual actions within everyday school contexts. Across both settings, teachers exercised place-responsive pedagogical judgement by selectively adapting climate content to local realities while navigating curriculum constraints and workload pressures. The study contributes a place-responsive account of teachersf pedagogical judgement in CCE, demonstrating how place functions not only as context but as a condition shaping pedagogical feasibility. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=GerelkhuuShinetsetseg en-aut-sei=Gerelkhuu en-aut-mei=Shinetsetseg kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=FielfardhKhalifatulloh en-aut-sei=Fielfardh en-aut-mei=Khalifatulloh kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=FujiiHiroki en-aut-sei=Fujii en-aut-mei=Hiroki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=YembuuBatchuluun en-aut-sei=Yembuu en-aut-mei=Batchuluun kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=DembereldorjUuriintuya en-aut-sei=Dembereldorj en-aut-mei=Uuriintuya kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Graduate School of Humanities and Social Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Graduate School of Education, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Graduate School of Education, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Geography Department, Mongolian National University of Education kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Lifelong Learning and Distance Education Department, Mongolian National University of Education kn-affil= en-keyword=Climate change education kn-keyword=Climate change education en-keyword=place-responsive education kn-keyword=place-responsive education en-keyword=primary school teachers kn-keyword=primary school teachers en-keyword=pedagogical judgement kn-keyword=pedagogical judgement en-keyword=traditional ecological knowledge kn-keyword=traditional ecological knowledge en-keyword=urban?rural contexts kn-keyword=urban?rural contexts en-keyword=Mongolia kn-keyword=Mongolia END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=53 cd-vols= no-issue=5 article-no= start-page=e2025GL119568 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260303 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Electrical Conductivity of Amorphous and Molten CaCO3 at High Pressures and Its Implications for Mantle Conductivity Anomalies en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Impedance spectrometry experiments have been conducted on CaCO3 up to 15 GPa and 2,100 K to identify its state under high pressure. The melting temperature of CaCO3 was also determined by the falling of a Re sphere observed via X-ray radiography. The phase transition from aragonite to the amorphous phase does not cause a leap in the Electrical conductivity (EC), while a drastic increase in the EC, by 1.5?2.0 log units, only occurs with the onset of melting. The EC of amorphous CaCO3 is comparable to other hydrous mantle minerals at similar pressure and temperature conditions. The required fraction of amorphous CaCO3 implies that it can be excluded from the potential origins responsible for the observed high EC anomalies in the upper mantle. If the conductivity anomalies are induced by the presence of carbonate, a low-degree melting of carbonate-bearing peridotite is anticipated. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=ZhaoBin en-aut-sei=Zhao en-aut-mei=Bin kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=YoshinoTakashi en-aut-sei=Yoshino en-aut-mei=Takashi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=ChenQi en-aut-sei=Chen en-aut-mei=Qi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=YuTony en-aut-sei=Yu en-aut-mei=Tony kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=ZhangDongzhou en-aut-sei=Zhang en-aut-mei=Dongzhou kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=ChenBin en-aut-sei=Chen en-aut-mei=Bin kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=WangYanbin en-aut-sei=Wang en-aut-mei=Yanbin kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Institute for Planetary Materials, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Institute for Planetary Materials, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Center for Advanced Radiation Sources, The University of Chicago kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Center for Advanced Radiation Sources, The University of Chicago kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Center for Advanced Radiation Sources, The University of Chicago kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=School of Ocean and Earth Science and Technology, University of Hawaii at Manoa kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=Center for Advanced Radiation Sources, The University of Chicago kn-affil= END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=6 cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page=47 end-page=60 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=2026 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Ultrafast Time-Compressive CMOS Image Sensors Based on Multitap Charge Modulators for Filming Light-In Flight en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Ultrafast time-compressive CMOS image sensors based on multitap charge modulators can capture light-in flight using coded exposure masks on the focal plane. Transient images can then be reconstructed using iterative methods or deep learning models. Although the image sensor is based on indirect time-of-flight (ToF) image sensors, the reconstructed images are equivalent to those captured by direct ToF (D-ToF) image sensors. Important design parameters of the image sensor include the pixel block size and the number of taps of the charge modulator. Several constraints regarding the charge transfer of the multitap charge modulator, the hamming distance between exposure codes at adjacent timings, and the minimal time window duration must be considered when designing exposure codes. The influence of these factors on the fidelity of the reconstructed images is analyzed numerically. The results show that a pixel block size of 4~4 is optimal and that four or more taps are required for light detection and ranging (LiDAR) applications when 32 transient images of light-in flight are reconstructed. To demonstrate LiDAR in a scene with multipath interference, two objects were observed through a weakly diffusive sheet. The temporal resolution, as defined by the clock period of the exposure codes, was 1.65 ns. Multiple reflections were reconstructed using an iterative method (TVAL3) and a deep learning model (ADMM-Net). Although the waveforms of optical pulses reconstructed by TVAL3 are distorted, the amplitudes are more accurate. Conversely, although ADMM-Net reconstructs sharper optical pulses, the amplitudes are inaccurate. To achieve the shorter temporal resolution required for time-resolved diffuse optical tomography (DOT) and fluorescence lifetime imaging (FLIm), the feasibility of heterodyne compression was demonstrated through simulation. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=KagawaKeiichiro en-aut-sei=Kagawa en-aut-mei=Keiichiro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=HayashiDaisuke en-aut-sei=Hayashi en-aut-mei=Daisuke kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=TakakuraArashi en-aut-sei=Takakura en-aut-mei=Arashi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=UmekiYuto en-aut-sei=Umeki en-aut-mei=Yuto kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=YoshidaMichitaka en-aut-sei=Yoshida en-aut-mei=Michitaka kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=YasutomiKeita en-aut-sei=Yasutomi en-aut-mei=Keita kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=KawahitoShoji en-aut-sei=Kawahito en-aut-mei=Shoji kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= en-aut-name=ChaeYoungcheol en-aut-sei=Chae en-aut-mei=Youngcheol kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=8 ORCID= en-aut-name=NagaharaHajime en-aut-sei=Nagahara en-aut-mei=Hajime kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=9 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Research Institute of Electronics, Shizuoka University kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Graduate School of Integrated Science and Technology, Shizuoka University kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Faculty of Engineering, Shizuoka University kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Graduate School of Integrated Science and Technology, Shizuoka University kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Faculty of Environmental, Life, Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Research Institute of Electronics, Shizuoka University kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=Research Institute of Electronics, Shizuoka University kn-affil= affil-num=8 en-affil=Department of Electrical and Electronic Engineering, Yonsei University kn-affil= affil-num=9 en-affil=D3 Center, The University of Osaka kn-affil= en-keyword=CMOS image sensor kn-keyword=CMOS image sensor en-keyword=compressive imaging kn-keyword=compressive imaging en-keyword=computational photography (CP) kn-keyword=computational photography (CP) en-keyword=multitap charge modulator kn-keyword=multitap charge modulator en-keyword=transient imaging kn-keyword=transient imaging END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=59 cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page=101740 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2025 dt-pub=202506 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Evaluation of platinum-free interval and chemotherapeutic effect of subsequent platinum-containing chemotherapy in patients with recurrent ovarian cancer initially treated with bevacizumab: SGSG018/Intergroup study en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Objective: The effect of bevacizumab on platinum sensitivity in recurrent ovarian cancer remains poorly understood. This study examined the association between platinum-free interval (PFI) and sensitivity to subsequent platinum-containing chemotherapy in patients with first relapsed ovarian cancer after bevacizumab chemotherapy.
Methods: We retrospectively analyzed patients who received platinum-based chemotherapy for platinum-sensitive recurrence between November 2013, and December 2019, and who were initially treated by platinum-based chemotherapy with concurrent and maintenance bevacizumab. The primary endpoint was response rate to subsequent chemotherapy after various periods of PFI. The relevance between response rate and PFI was assessed for each PFI of 6?12, 12?24 and †24 months using Cochran-Armitage test. The secondary endpoint was progression-free survival (PFS) defined as time from chemotherapy for first recurrence to subsequent progression and response rate to subsequent chemotherapy for each treatment-free interval since last administration of bevacizumab (Bev-TFI).
Results: A total of 77 patients were eligible. The median PFI until first recurrence was 12 months (range: 6?43). The response rates of subsequent chemotherapy for patients with PFI of 6?12, ?12-24, and 24 months were 42 %, 65 %, and 80 %, showing a linear trend (p < 0.05). Median PFS among the three groups was 8 (95 %CI: 6.7?9.2), 11 (95 %CI: 8.4?13.5) and 13 months (95 % CI: 5.4?20.5) (p = 0.107, log-rank test), respectively. By contrast, no linear trend was observed between Bev-TFI and response rate (p = 0.225)
Conclusion: In patients with first relapse of primary ovarian cancer and bevacizumab beyond progression, the prolonged PFS effect of bevacizumab does not seem to affect sensitivity to subsequent platinum-based chemotherapy. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=TanakaTamaki en-aut-sei=Tanaka en-aut-mei=Tamaki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=TakeharaKazuhiro en-aut-sei=Takehara en-aut-mei=Kazuhiro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=UsamiTomoka en-aut-sei=Usami en-aut-mei=Tomoka kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=IshikawaMasako en-aut-sei=Ishikawa en-aut-mei=Masako kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=KondoEiji en-aut-sei=Kondo en-aut-mei=Eiji kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=KagabuMasahiro en-aut-sei=Kagabu en-aut-mei=Masahiro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=HirabayashiKei en-aut-sei=Hirabayashi en-aut-mei=Kei kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= en-aut-name=MatsumuraNoriomi en-aut-sei=Matsumura en-aut-mei=Noriomi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=8 ORCID= en-aut-name=SatoShinya en-aut-sei=Sato en-aut-mei=Shinya kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=9 ORCID= en-aut-name=NishimuraMasato en-aut-sei=Nishimura en-aut-mei=Masato kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=10 ORCID= en-aut-name=ArakawaAtsushi en-aut-sei=Arakawa en-aut-mei=Atsushi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=11 ORCID= en-aut-name=NakamuraKeiichiro en-aut-sei=Nakamura en-aut-mei=Keiichiro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=12 ORCID= en-aut-name=KonnoYosuke en-aut-sei=Konno en-aut-mei=Yosuke kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=13 ORCID= en-aut-name=FujiwaraSatoe en-aut-sei=Fujiwara en-aut-mei=Satoe kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=14 ORCID= en-aut-name=SueokaKotaro en-aut-sei=Sueoka en-aut-mei=Kotaro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=15 ORCID= en-aut-name=NakamuraHiroko en-aut-sei=Nakamura en-aut-mei=Hiroko kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=16 ORCID= en-aut-name=KohIemasa en-aut-sei=Koh en-aut-mei=Iemasa kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=17 ORCID= en-aut-name=ItoKimihiko en-aut-sei=Ito en-aut-mei=Kimihiko kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=18 ORCID= en-aut-name=HongoAtsushi en-aut-sei=Hongo en-aut-mei=Atsushi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=19 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Department of Perinatology and Gynecology, Kagawa University Graduate School of Medicine kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Department of Gynecologic Oncology, NHO Shikoku Cancer Center kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Ehime University Graduate School of Medicine kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Shimane University Faculty of Medicine kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Mie University Graduate School of Medicine kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Iwate Medical University kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, JCHO Tokuyama Central Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=8 en-affil=Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Kindai University Faculty of Medicine kn-affil= affil-num=9 en-affil=Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Faculty of Medicine Tottori University kn-affil= affil-num=10 en-affil=Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Tokushima Prefectural Central Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=11 en-affil=Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Nagoya City University West Medical Center kn-affil= affil-num=12 en-affil=Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=13 en-affil=Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Hokkaido University Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=14 en-affil=Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Osaka Medical and Pharmaceutical University kn-affil= affil-num=15 en-affil=Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Yamaguchi University Graduate School of Medicine kn-affil= affil-num=16 en-affil=Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, NHO Kure Medical Center and Chugoku Cancer Center kn-affil= affil-num=17 en-affil=Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences, Hiroshima University kn-affil= affil-num=18 en-affil=Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Kansai Rosai Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=19 en-affil=Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Kansai Rosai Hospital kn-affil= en-keyword=Ovarian cancer kn-keyword=Ovarian cancer en-keyword=Bevacizumab kn-keyword=Bevacizumab en-keyword=Chemotherapy kn-keyword=Chemotherapy en-keyword=Platinum-sensitive relapse kn-keyword=Platinum-sensitive relapse en-keyword=Platinum-free interval kn-keyword=Platinum-free interval END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=32 cd-vols= no-issue=12 article-no= start-page=8903 end-page=8905 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2025 dt-pub=20250818 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Mesenteric Route Superior Mesenteric Artery First Approach in Robot-Assisted Pancreatoduodenectomy en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Background. The superior mesenteric artery (SMA) approach is crucial for the successful implementation of robot-assisted pancreatoduodenectomy (RPD). Herein, we present a novel technique, the mesenteric route SMA-first approach, for RPD.
Patients and Methods. A 20-year-old woman with a 50 mm intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasm underwent RPD. As the tumor was large and located close to the mesenteric vessels, we developed the mesenteric route SMA-first approach.
Results. Following the mesenteric Kocher maneuver, the mesenteric route SMA-first approach was applied. With appropriate retraction of the pancreatic head, dissection around the mesenteric vessels was performed and their branches were divided. The uncinate process dissection (PL, ph II) was performed via the mesenteric route. This approach facilitated dorsal dissection, particularly around the large tumor. After dissection of the hepatoduodenal ligament, the remaining pancreatic nerve plexus (PL ph I) was dissected. Finally, the pancreas was divided on the superior mesenteric vein, and the specimen was resected. Operative time was 390 min with minimal blood loss.
Conclusions. The mesenteric route SMA-first approach enables uncinate process dissection via the mesenteric route. This technique may be a safe and feasible option for selected patients, such as nonobese individuals with a large pancreatic head tumor near major vessels. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=TakagiKosei en-aut-sei=Takagi en-aut-mei=Kosei kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=ItoAtene en-aut-sei=Ito en-aut-mei=Atene kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=FujiTomokazu en-aut-sei=Fuji en-aut-mei=Tomokazu kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=YasuiKazuya en-aut-sei=Yasui en-aut-mei=Kazuya kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=NishiyamaTakeyoshi en-aut-sei=Nishiyama en-aut-mei=Takeyoshi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=YanagiharaTsubasa en-aut-sei=Yanagihara en-aut-mei=Tsubasa kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=FujiwaraToshiyoshi en-aut-sei=Fujiwara en-aut-mei=Toshiyoshi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Department of Gastroenterological Surgery, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Department of Gastroenterological Surgery, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Department of Gastroenterological Surgery, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Department of Gastroenterological Surgery, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Department of Gastroenterological Surgery, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Department of Gastroenterological Surgery, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=Department of Gastroenterological Surgery, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= en-keyword=Robotic pancreaticoduodenectomy kn-keyword=Robotic pancreaticoduodenectomy en-keyword=Superior mesenteric artery approach kn-keyword=Superior mesenteric artery approach en-keyword=Mesenteric route kn-keyword=Mesenteric route END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=133 cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page=111546 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2025 dt-pub=202508 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Robotic pancreatoduodenectomy for a giant duodenal leiomyoma: A case report and literature review en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Introduction: Duodenal leiomyomas are rare mesenchymal tumors. To date, several studies have reported on the safety and feasibility of surgical intervention for duodenal leiomyomas. However, minimally invasive surgery has rarely been performed in cases with duodenal leiomyomas. Herein, we present a case of a giant duodenal leiomyoma successfully treated with robotic pancreatoduodenectomy (RPD).
Presentation of case: A 74-year-old man was referred to our hospital with a 6.5 cm duodenal tumor accompanied by gastrointestinal bleeding. The tumor was located in the second portion of the duodenum. Considering the tumor size and location, RPD was performed. Using the mesenteric Kocker maneuver, the posterior side of the duodenum was safely dissected, and the tumor was resected. The operative time was 373 min, with an estimated blood loss of 10 mL. The patient was followed up for 7 months with no recurrence.
Discussion: To the best of our knowledge, this is the first to highlight the clinicopathological findings of a patient with duodenal leiomyoma undergoing RPD. To date, there have been 19 cases, including our case, reporting surgically treated duodenal leiomyoma. Treatment strategies should be decided depending on tumor characteristics, including the size, location, and histology of the tumor.
Conclusion: We present a rare case of a giant duodenal leiomyoma that was successfully treated with RPD. Minimally invasive surgery can be safe and an alternative for the treatment of large duodenal tumors. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=DoitaSusumu en-aut-sei=Doita en-aut-mei=Susumu kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=TakagiKosei en-aut-sei=Takagi en-aut-mei=Kosei kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=YamadaMotohiko en-aut-sei=Yamada en-aut-mei=Motohiko kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=YasuiKazuya en-aut-sei=Yasui en-aut-mei=Kazuya kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=FujiTomokazu en-aut-sei=Fuji en-aut-mei=Tomokazu kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=FujiwaraToshiyoshi en-aut-sei=Fujiwara en-aut-mei=Toshiyoshi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Department of Gastroenterological Surgery, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Department of Gastroenterological Surgery, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Department of Gastroenterological Surgery, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Department of Gastroenterological Surgery, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Department of Gastroenterological Surgery, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Department of Gastroenterological Surgery, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= en-keyword=Duodenal leiomyomas kn-keyword=Duodenal leiomyomas en-keyword=Robotic surgery kn-keyword=Robotic surgery en-keyword=Pancreatoduodenectomy kn-keyword=Pancreatoduodenectomy END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=39 cd-vols= no-issue=5 article-no= start-page=3137 end-page=3145 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2025 dt-pub=20250404 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Impact of visceral fat area on surgical difficulty during robotic distal pancreatectomy (TAKUMI-2) en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Background: Difficulty scoring systems (DSS) have been developed to quantify the surgical complexity of laparoscopic distal pancreatectomy (LDP). However, few studies have validated these systems in the context of robotic distal pancreatectomy (RDP). Moreover, the impact of body composition on RDP outcomes remains unexplored. This study aimed to investigate the risk factors of surgical difficulty in RDP, including body composition.
Methods: This retrospective study included 72 consecutive patients who underwent RDP at our institution between April 2021 and October 2024. Using a modified DSS for LDP, patients were divided into three difficulty index groups. The association between the difficulty index and outcomes was investigated. Multivariate analyses were performed to identify risk factors associated with surgical difficulty (prolonged operative time) in RDP.
Results: Patients were classified into three difficulty index groups: low (n?=?28), intermediate (n?=?25), and high (n?=?19). Operative time was significantly associated with the surgical index (P?=?0.01). Moreover, visceral fat area (VFA) was significantly correlated with operative time (r2?=?0.10, P?=?0.008). The multivariate analyses found that VFA (??100 cm2) (odds ratio [OR] 5.03, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.32?22.4, P?=?0.02), malignancy (OR 4.92, 95% CI 1.50?18.9, P?=?0.01), and pancreatic resection on the portal vein (OR 4.14, 95% CI 1.24?15.9, P?=?0.02) were significant risk factors associated with surgical difficulty.
Conclusion: VFA could be a novel and useful factor for assessing the surgical difficulty associated with RDP. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=TakagiKosei en-aut-sei=Takagi en-aut-mei=Kosei kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=YamadaMotohiko en-aut-sei=Yamada en-aut-mei=Motohiko kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=FujiTomokazu en-aut-sei=Fuji en-aut-mei=Tomokazu kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=YasuiKazuya en-aut-sei=Yasui en-aut-mei=Kazuya kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=NishiyamaTakeyoshi en-aut-sei=Nishiyama en-aut-mei=Takeyoshi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=NagaiYasuo en-aut-sei=Nagai en-aut-mei=Yasuo kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=KanehiraNoriyuki en-aut-sei=Kanehira en-aut-mei=Noriyuki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= en-aut-name=FujiwaraToshiyoshi en-aut-sei=Fujiwara en-aut-mei=Toshiyoshi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=8 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Department of Gastroenterological Surgery, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Department of Gastroenterological Surgery, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Department of Gastroenterological Surgery, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Department of Gastroenterological Surgery, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Department of Gastroenterological Surgery, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Department of Gastroenterological Surgery, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=Department of Gastroenterological Surgery, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=8 en-affil=Department of Gastroenterological Surgery, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= en-keyword=Robotic distal pancreatectomy kn-keyword=Robotic distal pancreatectomy en-keyword=Difficulty score kn-keyword=Difficulty score en-keyword=Visceral fat area kn-keyword=Visceral fat area END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=30 cd-vols= no-issue=7 article-no= start-page=1259 end-page=1267 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2025 dt-pub=20250511 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=How to report and discuss subgroup analyses in clinical practice guidelines? Evaluation procedure of the clinical and statistical relevancy en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=The results of subgroup analyses of clinical trials are important reference information when considering the generalizability of a study treatment, i.e., providing the best treatment for each individual patient. The results of subgroup analyses are often presented in publications, etc. as forest plots focusing on patient backgrounds. However, it is important to fully understand and grasp some of the issues involved in subgroup analyses and to interpret the results carefully to apply them in clinical practice. Although the literature includes some reports on how subgroup analyses should be evaluated and handled for the purpose of establishing medical practice guidelines, most of the papers have mainly evaluated the reliability of subgroup analyses from a statistical perspective; few of them have incorporated clinical importance in their evaluations. Therefore, in December 2019, we established a Subgroup Analysis Review Committee consisting of oncologists specializing in lung cancer treatment and statistical experts among the members of the Guidelines Review Committee of the Japanese Lung Cancer Association, with the aim of appropriately reflecting subgroup analysis in Japanese lung cancer practice guidelines. We developed a new evaluation strategy to incorporate clinical aspects as well as reliability assessment. Specifically, on the basis of a clinical and statistical review of the problems with subgroup analyses presented as clinical trial results, we developed criteria and procedures to ensure consistency and fairness in the citation of clinical guidelines. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=NinomiyaKiichiro en-aut-sei=Ninomiya en-aut-mei=Kiichiro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=MiuraSatoru en-aut-sei=Miura en-aut-mei=Satoru kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=OyaYuko en-aut-sei=Oya en-aut-mei=Yuko kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=SakamotoTomohiro en-aut-sei=Sakamoto en-aut-mei=Tomohiro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=TanakaKentaro en-aut-sei=Tanaka en-aut-mei=Kentaro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=TeraokaShunsuke en-aut-sei=Teraoka en-aut-mei=Shunsuke kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=MoriseMasahiro en-aut-sei=Morise en-aut-mei=Masahiro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= en-aut-name=MoritaSatoshi en-aut-sei=Morita en-aut-mei=Satoshi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=8 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Center for Comprehensive Genomic Medicine, Okayama University Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Department of Internal Medicine, Niigata Cancer Center Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Department of Respiratory Medicine and Allergy, Fujita Health University kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Division of Respiratory Medicine and Rheumatology, Department of Multidisciplinary Internal Medicine, Tottori University kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Graduate School of Medical Sciences, Research Institute for Diseases of the Chest, Kyushu University kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Internal Medicine III, Wakayama Medical University kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=Department of Respiratory Medicine, Nagoya University Graduate School of Medicine kn-affil= affil-num=8 en-affil=Department of Biomedical Statistics and Bioinformatics, Graduate School of Medicine, Kyoto University kn-affil= en-keyword=Subgroup analysis kn-keyword=Subgroup analysis en-keyword=Guideline kn-keyword=Guideline en-keyword=Lung cancer kn-keyword=Lung cancer END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=3027 cd-vols= no-issue=1 article-no= start-page=012009 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2025 dt-pub=20250601 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=LES analysis to investigate a random-phase forcing scheme for steadying anisotropic turbulence fields en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=The aim of this study is to investigate the effect of phase randomization on forcing mechanisms that stabilize localized turbulence. A trigonometric forcing based on vector potential is combined with uniform random numbers to create a spatially homogeneous forcing field. The analysis is performed using large-eddy simulation (LES) with the Smagorinsky model as the subgrid scale model. The results demonstrate that steady flows are generated regardless of the presence of phase randomization, successfully forming isotropic turbulence. In contrast, for anisotropic turbulent fields, the addition of phase randomization reduces the degree of anisotropy, indicating a smoothing effect on the anisotropy of the flow. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=MinamiKoki en-aut-sei=Minami en-aut-mei=Koki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=SuzukiHiroki en-aut-sei=Suzuki en-aut-mei=Hiroki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=KouchiToshinori en-aut-sei=Kouchi en-aut-mei=Toshinori kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=TanakaKento en-aut-sei=Tanaka en-aut-mei=Kento kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Graduate School of Environmental, Life, Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Graduate School of Environmental, Life, Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Graduate School of Environmental, Life, Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Graduate School of Environmental, Life, Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=3027 cd-vols= no-issue=1 article-no= start-page=012008 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2025 dt-pub=20250601 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Fundamental examination of coherent structure model prediction using vortex cores in a two-dimensional Taylorfs analytical solution en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=This study focuses on the possibility that flow around vortex tubes in turbulence may resemble laminar flow, and aims to describe the characteristics of turbulent fields using analytical solutions to the governing equations. In the two-dimensional analytical Taylor solution, the velocity and pressure fields are expressed by trigonometric functions, and a structure in which counter-rotating vortices are arranged in a grid pattern is demonstrated. This solution is used to verify the accuracy of numerical analyses and is expected to contribute to a simple yet unambiguous description of turbulent fields based on vortex structures. Predictions of sub-grid scale components and validation of a coherent structure model using invariants of the velocity gradient tensor are also performed. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=GongXuanyou en-aut-sei=Gong en-aut-mei=Xuanyou kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=SuzukiHiroki en-aut-sei=Suzuki en-aut-mei=Hiroki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=KouchiToshinori en-aut-sei=Kouchi en-aut-mei=Toshinori kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=TanakaKento en-aut-sei=Tanaka en-aut-mei=Kento kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Graduate School of Environmental, Life, Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Graduate School of Environmental, Life, Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Graduate School of Environmental, Life, Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Graduate School of Environmental, Life, Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=3 cd-vols= no-issue=2 article-no= start-page=100078 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2025 dt-pub=202506 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Erythromelalgia presenting with posterior reversible encephalopathy syndrome: A pediatric case report en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Background: Erythromelalgia is a rare disorder characterized by erythema, warmth, and burning pain in the extremities. We report a pediatric case of erythromelalgia in a patient who developed posterior reversible encephalopathy syndrome (PRES), without any cutaneous signs.
Case presentation: A previously healthy 12-year-old girl presented to our pediatric clinic with burning extremity pain that had persisted for 6 weeks. The patient was treated with analgesics; however, the pain was refractory to these agents. Seven days after the first visit, she developed afebrile seizures and was transferred to our hospital. Her initial blood pressure was 139/105 mmHg (+2.0 SD), and brain magnetic resonance imaging revealed high intensity areas in the bilateral parietal and occipital lobes, leading to a diagnosis of PRES. Her blood pressure was difficult to control with anti-hypertensive agents. Burning pain in her extremities was relieved by cooling and worsened by warming. Although erythema was not observed in her hands or legs, erythromelalgia was suspected based on the characteristic nature of her pain. Intravenous lidocaine was administered for diagnosis, which was dramatically effective. After initiating mexiletine, the burning pain in her extremities disappeared, and hypertension improved. A final diagnosis of erythromelalgia with PRES was made.
Conclusion: A history of temperature-dependent pain relief and deterioration are important indicators of disease diagnosis, even if patients indicate a lack of erythema or warmth. Physicians should be aware that persistent pain due to erythromelalgia can lead to refractory hypertension and development of PRES. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=SuzukiKengo en-aut-sei=Suzuki en-aut-mei=Kengo kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=UdaKazuhiro en-aut-sei=Uda en-aut-mei=Kazuhiro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=TsugeMitsuru en-aut-sei=Tsuge en-aut-mei=Mitsuru kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=ArakawaKyosuke en-aut-sei=Arakawa en-aut-mei=Kyosuke kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=ShigeharaKenji en-aut-sei=Shigehara en-aut-mei=Kenji kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=ObaraTakafumi en-aut-sei=Obara en-aut-mei=Takafumi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=HasegawaKosei en-aut-sei=Hasegawa en-aut-mei=Kosei kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= en-aut-name=TsukaharaHirokazu en-aut-sei=Tsukahara en-aut-mei=Hirokazu kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=8 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Department of Pediatrics, Okayama University Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Department of Pediatrics, Okayama University Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Department of Pediatric Acute Diseases, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Department of Anesthesiology and Resuscitology, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Department of Pediatrics, Okayama University Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Department of Emergency, Critical Care, and Disaster Medicine, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=Department of Pediatrics, Okayama University Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=8 en-affil=Department of Pediatrics, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= en-keyword=Erythromelalgia kn-keyword=Erythromelalgia en-keyword=Posterior reversible encephalopathy syndrome kn-keyword=Posterior reversible encephalopathy syndrome en-keyword=Hypertension kn-keyword=Hypertension en-keyword=Child kn-keyword=Child END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=115 cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page=9 end-page=12 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260301 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title=Soil nitrogen dynamics affected by the fine roots of canopy trees in Eastern Hokkaido, Japan kn-title=–kŠC“¹“Œ•”‚ÌX—тɂ¨‚¢‚Ä—ÑŠ¥–Ø‚Ìת‚ª“yë’‚‘f“®‘Ô‚É—^‚¦‚é‰e‹¿ en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=@Plants release mixtures of labile organic matter from their fine roots (root exudates) into the surrounding soil (rhizosphere). Partly due to the release of root exudates, microbial community structures and their activities within the rhizosphere differ significantly from those in other soil areas (bulk soil). Consequently, nutrient cycling processes, including nitrogen mineralization, are accelerated in the rhizosphere, facilitating nutrient acquisition by plants. This phenomenon, known as the rhizosphere effect, has been repeatedly reported in studies of herbaceous plants; however, the impact of canopy tree fine roots on soil nitrogen dynamics through the effect in forest ecosystems remains largely unknown. Here, I introduce our research investigating the root exudates and rhizosphere effects of the fine roots of canopy trees, Quercus crispula, and how these fine roots affect soil nitrogen dynamics. The quantity of root exudates varied daily rather than seasonally, with solar radiation having a strong and positive effect on the amounts. However, even after leaf fall, root exudation was observed. In the rhizosphere, specific bacterial communities were present regardless of season, while ectomycorrhizal fungal populations were higher than in the bulk soil only in summer. Extracellular enzymatic activity relating to nitrogen cycling was higher in the rhizosphere than in the bulk soil across seasons. Nitrogen uptake by the tree was likely lower in winter and spring, leading to labile nitrogen accumulation in the rhizosphere during these periods. On an annual basis, however, the impact of fine roots on apparent inorganic nitrogen dynamics was minor. These results suggest that the canopy tree, Q. crispula, accelerates soil nitrogen cycling through root exudation and rhizosphere effects, regardless of season, while the acceleration of the cycle and the utilization of available nitrogen are well-balanced annually, thereby avoiding unnecessary carbon investment. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=NakayamaMasataka en-aut-sei=Nakayama en-aut-mei=Masataka kn-aut-name=’†ŽR—’q kn-aut-sei=’†ŽR kn-aut-mei=—’q aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Course of Environmental Ecology kn-affil=ŠÂ‹«¶‘ÔŠwƒR[ƒX en-keyword=Quercus crispula kn-keyword=Quercus crispula en-keyword=root exudates kn-keyword=root exudates en-keyword=rhizosphere effect kn-keyword=rhizosphere effect en-keyword=nitrogen dynamics kn-keyword=nitrogen dynamics en-keyword=nitrogen uptake kn-keyword=nitrogen uptake END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=115 cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page=1 end-page=8 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260301 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Evaluation of Branching Characteristics and Their Contribution to Yield in Everbearing Strawberry Cultivars under Forced Cultivation en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=@Enhancing continuous flowering in cultivated strawberries may result in insufficient photosynthetic products due to the lower limit of leaf number on each lateral shoot, leading to reduced yield and fruit quality. If strawberries could differentiate an appropriate number of tillers and allow each tiller to grow autonomously with sufficient leaf number on each lateral shoot, rather than flowering continuously on the main bud alone, plants could achieve high yields while preventing plant weakening and fruit quality deterioration. Therefore, this study evaluated branching characteristics of everbearing strawberry cultivars under forcing cultivation to identify cultivars with moderate tillering and moderately low continuous flowering. Pot experiments revealed that the number of tillers was high in eSummer Princessf and eMiyazaki-natsuharukaf but low in eSummer Berryf and eSuzuakanef. This trend was independent of total number of lateral shoots, nodal position of first inflorescence, and the number of leaves on each lateral shoot, which serve as indicators of continuous flowering ability. Among seven tested cultivars, eDT17f and eMiyazaki-natsuharukaf showed intermediate values with 2.1 - 2.5 tillers per plant and 6.7 - 7.7 leaves on each lateral shoots. These cultivars showed yields of 747.0 - 1,028.5 g per plant under forcing cultivation, which were higher than other cultivars, along with consistent fruit quality. These results suggest that improving branching characteristics is a practical approach to enhancing fruit productivity in strawberries. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=Hikawa-EndoMinori en-aut-sei=Hikawa-Endo en-aut-mei=Minori kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=SoneKazuyoshi en-aut-sei=Sone en-aut-mei=Kazuyoshi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=MorishitaMasami en-aut-sei=Morishita en-aut-mei=Masami kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Kyushu Okinawa Region Agricultural Research Center, NARO kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Kyushu Okinawa Region Agricultural Research Center, NARO kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Kyushu Okinawa Region Agricultural Research Center, NARO kn-affil= en-keyword=branching characteristics kn-keyword=branching characteristics en-keyword=continuous flowering ability kn-keyword=continuous flowering ability en-keyword=crown kn-keyword=crown en-keyword=strawberry kn-keyword=strawberry en-keyword=tiller kn-keyword=tiller END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=3 cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page=195 end-page=208 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260220 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title=Examination of Accessible Outdoor Tourism Based on the Global Code of Ethics for TourismFPractical Application of Outdoor Wheelchairs in World Natural Heritage Sites kn-title=¢ŠEŠÏŒõ—Ï—Œ›Í‚𓥂܂¦‚½ƒAƒNƒZƒVƒuƒ‹ƒAƒEƒgƒhƒAƒc[ƒŠƒYƒ€‚ÌŒŸ“¢ \¢ŠEŽ©‘RˆâŽY’nˆæ‚ł̃AƒEƒgƒhƒAŒ^ŽÔˆÖŽq‚ð—p‚¢‚½ŽÀ‘H‚ð’Ê‚¶‚Ä\ en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract=Promoting accessible outdoor tourism requires balancing conservation and protection with development. Therefore, this study aims to enable as many people as possible to participate in outdoor activities. This verification examines whether tours using outdoor wheelchairs can be conducted within World Natural Heritage sites. To achieve tourism that leaves no one behind, we believe the most reliable approach is to gradually expand the scope of accessible outdoor tourism through the accumulation of individual practices, even if progress is incremental. kn-abstract=ƒAƒNƒZƒVƒuƒ‹ƒAƒEƒgƒhƒAƒc[ƒŠƒYƒ€‚ði‚߂Ă¢‚­‚½‚߂ɂÍCu•Û‘SE•ÛŒìv‚ÆuŠJ”­v‚Ì—¼—§‚ª”ñí‚Éd—v‚ÈŠÏ“_‚ƂȂéB‚»‚±‚Å–{ŽÀ‘H‚Å‚ÍCˆêl‚Å‚à‘½‚­‚Ìl‚ªƒAƒEƒgƒhƒAŠˆ“®‚ÉŽQ‰Á‚Å‚«‚邱‚Æ‚ð–ÚŽw‚µC¢ŠEŽ©‘RˆâŽY’nˆæ‚É‚¨‚¢‚ăAƒEƒgƒhƒAŒ^ŽÔˆÖŽq‚ð—p‚¢‚½ƒcƒA[‚ªŽÀŒ»‚Å‚«‚é‚©‚Ç‚¤‚©‚ðŒŸ“¢‚·‚邱‚ƂƂµ‚½Bu’N‚Ð‚Æ‚èŽæ‚èŽc‚³‚È‚¢ŠÏŒõv‚Æ‚ÍC¢ŠEŠÏŒõ—Ï—Œ›Í‚Å‚à•WžÔ‚³‚ꂽ–Ú•W‚Å‚ ‚邪C‚±‚Ì‚±‚Æ‚ðŽÀŒ»‚·‚邽‚߂ɂÍC¡‰ñŒŸ“¢‚ðs‚Á‚½‚悤‚Ȉꂈꂂ̎À‘H‚ðÏ‚Ýd‚˂邱‚Ƃɂæ‚Á‚ÄC­‚µ‚¸‚‚ł ‚Á‚Ä‚àƒAƒNƒZƒVƒuƒ‹ƒAƒEƒgƒhƒAƒc[ƒŠƒYƒ€‚̉”\”͈͂ðL‚°‚Ä‚¢‚­‚±‚Æ‚ªCÅ‚àŠmŽÀ‚ÈŽæ‚è‘g‚݂Ȃ̂ł͂Ȃ¢‚©‚Æl‚¦‚Ä‚¢‚éB en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=IKETANIKosuke en-aut-sei=IKETANI en-aut-mei=Kosuke kn-aut-name=’r’Jq‰î kn-aut-sei=’r’J kn-aut-mei=q‰î aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=HARADAShin en-aut-sei=HARADA en-aut-mei=Shin kn-aut-name=Œ´“cV kn-aut-sei=Œ´“c kn-aut-mei=V aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=KUSUNOKIKeita en-aut-sei=KUSUNOKI en-aut-mei=Keita kn-aut-name=“íŒh‘¾ kn-aut-sei=“í kn-aut-mei=Œh‘¾ aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=General Education and Global Studies Field, Okayama University kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠwŠwpŒ¤‹†‰@‹¤’Ê‹³ˆçEƒOƒ[ƒoƒ‹—̈æ affil-num=2 en-affil=General Education and Global Studies Field, Okayama University kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠwŠwpŒ¤‹†‰@‹¤’Ê‹³ˆçEƒOƒ[ƒoƒ‹—̈æ affil-num=3 en-affil=Institute of Student Support, Bukkyo University kn-affil=˜Å‹³‘åŠwŠw¶Žx‰‡‹@\ en-keyword=ŠÏŒõ kn-keyword=ŠÏŒõ en-keyword=ƒ†ƒjƒo[ƒTƒ‹ƒc[ƒŠƒYƒ€ kn-keyword=ƒ†ƒjƒo[ƒTƒ‹ƒc[ƒŠƒYƒ€ en-keyword=ƒAƒNƒZƒVƒrƒŠƒeƒB kn-keyword=ƒAƒNƒZƒVƒrƒŠƒeƒB en-keyword=áŠQŽÒŽx‰‡ kn-keyword=áŠQŽÒŽx‰‡ en-keyword=ƒAƒEƒgƒhƒA kn-keyword=ƒAƒEƒgƒhƒA END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=3 cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page=174 end-page=194 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260220 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title=Redesigning Writing Instruction through Peer?AI?Instructor Collaborative Triadic FeedbackFIntegrating AI in an Academic Writing Course kn-title=ƒsƒAEAIE‹³ˆõ‚ÌŽOŽÒ‹¦“­ƒtƒB[ƒhƒoƒbƒN‚É‚æ‚郉ƒCƒeƒBƒ“ƒOŽö‹Æ‚ÌÄÝŒv \AI—˜—p‚ÌŽÀ‘H•ñ| en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract=This paper presents the design of a triadic feedback model for an academic writing course that clarifies the role allocation and sequencing of feedback among peers, AI, and the instructor (studentfs own draft ¨ peer feedback ¨ AI feedbacki¨ metacognitive reflection )¨teacher feedback), and it describes its implementation and evaluation in 2024?2025. Post-course student surveys valued AIfs immediacy and capacity for elaboration, while also expressing concerns about dependence and limits to its effectiveness. Grade distributions showed a contraction of the lower-performing band after the introduction of the model, suggesting an overall uplift in learning outcomes. To counter misuse AI, explicit in-class instruction on constructive use, such as privileging diagnostic feedback over canned text and requiring metacognitive justification for accepting or rejecting AI suggestions, proved effective. We thus present the effectiveness and remaining challenges of a course design that leverages AIfs potential while keeping human judgment and ethics at its core. kn-abstract=–{e‚ÍAƒAƒJƒfƒ~ƒbƒNEƒ‰ƒCƒeƒBƒ“ƒOŽö‹Æ‚É‚¨‚¯‚éƒsƒAEAIE‹³ˆõ‚Ì‚»‚ꂼ‚ê‚Ì–ðŠ„‚Æ—˜—p‡˜iŽ©•ª¨ƒsƒA¨AI¨iÈŽ@j¨‹³ˆõj‚ð‘g‚Ýž‚ñ‚¾ŽOŽÒ‹¦“­ƒ‚ƒfƒ‹‚ðÝŒv‚µA2024`2025”N“x‚ÉŽÀ‘H‚µ‚½“à—e‚ð•ñ‚·‚éBŽö‹ÆŒã‚ÌŠw¶ƒAƒ“ƒP[ƒg‚Å‚ÍAAI‚Ì‘¦Žž«E¸ãk‰»‚ª•]‰¿‚³‚ê‚éˆê•ûAˆË‘¶‚â—LŒø«‚ÌŒÀŠE‚ÉŠÖ‚·‚錜”O‚à•\–¾‚³‚ꂽB¬Ñ•ª•z‚É‚¨‚¢‚Ä‚ÍAAI“±“üŒã‚ɉºˆÊ‘w‚ªk¬‚µAŠwK¬‰Ê‚Ì’êã‚°‚ªŽ¦´‚³‚ꂽB‚Ü‚½AAIŒë—p‚â—”—p‚ð–h‚®‚É‚ÍA‹³Žº“à‚ÅŒšÝ“I‚È—˜—p–@‚Ì‹ï‘Ì“I‚ÈŽw“±i—áF—á•¶‚æ‚èf’f“IƒtƒB[ƒhƒoƒbƒN‚ðdŽ‹AAI’ñˆÄ‚Ì̔ۗ—R‚̃ƒ^‹Lqj‚ªŒø‰Ê“I‚Å‚ ‚Á‚½B‚±‚ê‚ç‚ÌŒ‹‰Ê‚©‚çAAI‚Ì—˜“_‚ðŠˆ‚©‚µ‚‚ÂAŠw¶‚Ì”»’f‚ð’†S‚ɘ‚¦‚郉ƒCƒeƒBƒ“ƒOŽö‹ÆÝŒv‚Ì—LŒø«‚Ɖۑè‚ð’ñަ‚·‚éB en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=UzukaMariko en-aut-sei=Uzuka en-aut-mei=Mariko kn-aut-name=‰F’Ë–œ—¢Žq kn-aut-sei=‰F’Ë kn-aut-mei=–œ—¢Žq aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Institute for Promotion of Education and Campus Life kn-affil=‹³ˆç„i‹@\ en-keyword=¶¬ AI kn-keyword=¶¬ AI en-keyword=ƒAƒJƒfƒ~ƒbƒNEƒ‰ƒCƒeƒBƒ“ƒO kn-keyword=ƒAƒJƒfƒ~ƒbƒNEƒ‰ƒCƒeƒBƒ“ƒO en-keyword=ƒsƒA•]‰¿ kn-keyword=ƒsƒA•]‰¿ en-keyword=ƒƒ^”F’m kn-keyword=ƒƒ^”F’m en-keyword=AI ƒŠƒeƒ‰ƒV[ kn-keyword=AI ƒŠƒeƒ‰ƒV[ END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=3 cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page=155 end-page=173 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260220 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title=An Attempt at Extensive Reading in Chinese at the Pre-Intermediate Level kn-title=‘åŠw‚É‚¨‚¯‚é’†‘Œê‘½“Ç‚ÌŽŽ‚Ý en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=@This study examines the implementation of the instruction for extensive reading in Chinese among 19 learners who completed one year of beginner-level Chinese studies comprising two 100-minute sessions per week. Regarding survey methods, a questionnaire using a five-point Likert scale and open-ended responses was utilized. The findings revealed that learners recognized extensive reading as an effective strategy for improving their reading comprehension and vocabulary. However, some challenges exist, including the lack of suitable books for extensive reading practices and difficulties in sustaining extensive reading habits. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=ISHIITomomi en-aut-sei=ISHII en-aut-mei=Tomomi kn-aut-name=Έä—F”ü kn-aut-sei=Έä kn-aut-mei=—F”ü aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Institute for Promotion of Education and Campus Life, Okayama University kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠw‹³ˆç„i‹@\ en-keyword=’†‘Œê‘½“Ç kn-keyword=’†‘Œê‘½“Ç en-keyword=€’†‹‰ƒŒƒxƒ‹ kn-keyword=€’†‹‰ƒŒƒxƒ‹ en-keyword=‘½“ǃ‹[ƒ‹ kn-keyword=‘½“ǃ‹[ƒ‹ en-keyword=“ljð—Í kn-keyword=“ljð—Í en-keyword=Œêœb—Í kn-keyword=Œêœb—Í END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=3 cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page=145 end-page=154 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260220 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title=Chi no Tanken (Inquiries of Knowledge) meets Multicultural Collaborative LearningFTransforming a Japanese Online Course for Global Learners kn-title=u’m‚Ì’TŒ¤v~ ‘½•¶‰»‹¤C \ƒIƒ“ƒ‰ƒCƒ“Žö‹ÆÄ\’z‚ÌŽŽ‚Ý\ en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract=Okayama University launched a new undergraduate curriculum in April 2025. As part of this reform, Chi no Tanken, a general education course required for incoming students, was introduced. This paper reports on the first-year implementation of the course, offered in English as Inquiries of Knowledge, for students in the Discovery Program for Global Learners, many of whom are international students. Reconstructing the on-demand online course from a multicultural collaborative learning perspective required more than simply translating the materials into English. It also necessitated developing pedagogical strategies to foster collaborative learning in the online environment and to integrate linguistic and cultural considerations. kn-abstract=‰ªŽR‘åŠw‚Å‚Í2025”N4ŒŽ“üŠw¶‚©‚çVƒJƒŠƒLƒ…ƒ‰ƒ€‚ªƒXƒ^[ƒg‚µ‚½BŠwŽm‰Û’ö‰üŠv‚̈êŠÂ‚Æ‚µ‚Ä“±“ü‚³‚ꂽ‚Ì‚ª‘SŠw‹¤’ÊE‰Û‘è’T‹†‰È–Úu’m‚Ì’TŒ¤v‚Å‚ ‚éB–{e‚Å‚ÍCV“ü¶‘ÎۉȖڂł ‚éu’m‚Ì’TŒ¤v‚ðCŠCŠO¶‚ðŠÜ‚ÞƒOƒ[ƒoƒ‹EƒfƒBƒXƒJƒoƒŠ[EƒvƒƒOƒ‰ƒ€¶Œü‚¯‚ɉpŒê‚Å gInquiries of Knowledgeh ‚Æ‚µ‚ÄŠJu‚µ‚½‰”N“x‚ÌŽæ‚è‘g‚Ý‚ð•ñ‚·‚éB‚Æ‚è‚킯ƒIƒ“ƒfƒ}ƒ“ƒhŒ^ƒIƒ“ƒ‰ƒCƒ“Žö‹Æ‚ð, –{Šw‚ª„i‚·‚鑽•¶‰»‹¤C‚ÌŽ‹“_‚ÅÄ\’z‚·‚é‚É‚ ‚½‚èC‹³Þ‚ð’P‚ɉp–ó‚·‚é‚̂ł͂Ȃ­, ƒIƒ“ƒ‰ƒCƒ“ŠÂ‹«‚É‚¨‚¢‚Ä‚à‹¦“­ŠwK‚ðŽÀŒ»‚·‚éH•v‚âCŒ¾Œê“IE•¶‰»“I”z—¶‚Ì“‡‚ª•s‰ÂŒ‡‚Å‚ ‚邱‚Ƃ𖾂炩‚É‚·‚éB en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=YAMAMOTOYumiko en-aut-sei=YAMAMOTO en-aut-mei=Yumiko kn-aut-name=ŽR–{—R”üŽq kn-aut-sei=ŽR–{ kn-aut-mei=—R”üŽq aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=NGUYENKha Manh en-aut-sei=NGUYEN en-aut-mei=Kha Manh kn-aut-name=ƒOƒGƒ“?ƒJ?ƒ}ƒ“ kn-aut-sei=ƒOƒGƒ“? kn-aut-mei=ƒJ?ƒ}ƒ“ aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Faculty of General and Global Studies (GDP), Okayama University kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠwŠwpŒ¤‹†‰@ ‹¤’Ê‹³ˆçEƒOƒ[ƒoƒ‹—̈æiGDPj affil-num=2 en-affil=Discovery Program for Global Learners, Okayama University kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠwƒOƒ[ƒoƒ‹EƒfƒBƒXƒJƒoƒŠ[EƒvƒƒOƒ‰ƒ€ en-keyword=‘½•¶‰»‹¤C kn-keyword=‘½•¶‰»‹¤C en-keyword=‹¦“­ŠwK kn-keyword=‹¦“­ŠwK en-keyword=’T‹†Œ^ŠwK kn-keyword=’T‹†Œ^ŠwK en-keyword=ƒIƒ“ƒfƒ}ƒ“ƒhŒ^ƒIƒ“ƒ‰ƒCƒ“Žö‹Æ kn-keyword=ƒIƒ“ƒfƒ}ƒ“ƒhŒ^ƒIƒ“ƒ‰ƒCƒ“Žö‹Æ END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=3 cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page=129 end-page=144 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260220 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title=Learner Narratives Based on Faculty-Specific Interviews and Orientation PracticesFAn Attempt to Enhance Foreign Language Learning Motivation at University Entrance kn-title=Šw•”•ʃCƒ“ƒ^ƒrƒ…[‚É‚æ‚éŠwKŽÒƒiƒ‰ƒeƒBƒu‚ƃIƒŠƒGƒ“ƒe[ƒVƒ‡ƒ“ŽÀ‘H \‘åŠw“üŠwŽž‚É‚¨‚¯‚éŠO‘ŒêŠwK“®‹@‚¯‘£i‚ÌŽŽ‚Ý\ en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract=Okayama University has implemented a comprehensive reform of its English curriculum as part of Target2025, a university-wide initiative launched in response to the new Course of Study issued by MEXT. The reform fosters close collaboration between the English section and other faculties to support undergraduate English learning across the university. We interviewed role models|successful English learners recommended by their faculties|about how they learned English. We also shared messages of encouragement for new students, which were recorded and shown during the orientation for English courses. This paper reviews the interview and orientation process, as well as first-year studentsf responses to a subsequent survey. kn-abstract=‰ªŽR‘åŠw‚Å‚ÍVŠwKŽw“±—v—ÌŽÀŽ{‚ɇ‚킹AuŠwKŽÒ’†S‚ÌŠw‚Ñv‚ÌŽÀŒ»‚ð–ÚŽw‚·Target2025‚ƌĂ΂ê‚é•ûj‚Ì‚à‚Æ‰pŒêƒJƒŠƒLƒ…ƒ‰ƒ€‚̉üŠv‚ði‚߂Ă«‚½B‚±‚̉üŠv‚Å‚ÍA‰pŒêŒn‹³ˆõ‚ÆŠe•”‹Ç‚Æ‚ª–§‚ɘAŒg‚µ‚È‚ª‚çAŠwŽm‰Û’ö‘S‘Ì‚ð’Ê‚µ‚½‰pŒêŠwK‚ð‘SŠw“I‚É“WŠJ‚µ‚Ä‚¢‚­‚±‚Æ‚ÉÅ“_‚𓖂ĂĂ¢‚éB‚»‚ÌŽæ‚è‘g‚݂̈êŠÂ‚Æ‚µ‚ÄAŠe•”‹Ç‚©‚ç„‘E‚ðŽó‚¯‚½ƒ[ƒ‹ƒ‚ƒfƒ‹‚Ƃ̊w•”•ʃCƒ“ƒ^ƒrƒ…[‚ðŽÀŽ{‚µA‰pŒêŠwK‚ɂ‚¢‚Ä‚ÌÚׂ𒮂«Žæ‚Á‚½B‚Ü‚½AV“ü¶‚Ö‚ÌŒƒ—ã‚̃ƒbƒZ[ƒW“®‰æ‚ð쬂µA‰pŒêŽö‹ÆƒIƒŠƒGƒ“ƒe[ƒVƒ‡ƒ“‚Åã‰f‚µ‚½B–{e‚Å‚ÍAƒCƒ“ƒ^ƒrƒ…[‚Å“¾‚ç‚ꂽƒiƒ‰ƒeƒBƒu‚âƒIƒŠƒGƒ“ƒe[ƒVƒ‡ƒ“ŽÀŽ{‚ÌŒoˆÜA‚Ü‚½AƒIƒŠƒGƒ“ƒe[ƒVƒ‡ƒ“Œã‚ÉŽÀŽ{‚µ‚½ƒAƒ“ƒP[ƒgŒ‹‰Ê‚ɂ‚¢‚Ä•ñ‚·‚éB en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=YOSHIDAAzumi en-aut-sei=YOSHIDA en-aut-mei=Azumi kn-aut-name=‹g“cˆÀ“Ü kn-aut-sei=‹g“c kn-aut-mei=ˆÀ“Ü aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=TERANISHIMasako en-aut-sei=TERANISHI en-aut-mei=Masako kn-aut-name=Ž›¼‰ëŽq kn-aut-sei=Ž›¼ kn-aut-mei=‰ëŽq aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Institute for Promotion of Education and Campus Life, Okayama University kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠw‹³ˆç„i‹@\ affil-num=2 en-affil=Institute for Promotion of Education and Campus Life, Okayama University kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠw‹³ˆç„i‹@\ en-keyword=Šw•”•ʃCƒ“ƒ^ƒrƒ…[ kn-keyword=Šw•”•ʃCƒ“ƒ^ƒrƒ…[ en-keyword=ŠwKŽÒƒiƒ‰ƒeƒBƒu kn-keyword=ŠwKŽÒƒiƒ‰ƒeƒBƒu en-keyword=ƒ[ƒ‹ƒ‚ƒfƒ‹ kn-keyword=ƒ[ƒ‹ƒ‚ƒfƒ‹ en-keyword=ƒIƒŠƒGƒ“ƒe[ƒVƒ‡ƒ“ kn-keyword=ƒIƒŠƒGƒ“ƒe[ƒVƒ‡ƒ“ en-keyword=“®‹@‚¯ kn-keyword=“®‹@‚¯ END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=3 cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page=120 end-page=128 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260220 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=From The Odyssey to The ZahirFThe Evolution of Penelopeia Across Time and Tradition en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=The story of a man who leaves home and strives to return has become one of the most enduring narrative patterns in world literature and folklore. Across centuries and cultures, it has been retold in myths, epics, folktales, and modern fiction?the story of the homecoming hero who, after long absence and peril, finds his way back to the place and the person he once called his own. This study explores the persistence and transformation of this universal motif through a comparative reading of Homerfs The Odyssey and Paulo Coelhofs The Zahir. It examines the evolving image of the waiting wife?from Homerfs Penelopeia, emblem of chastity and endurance, to Coelhofs Esther, a modern woman of independence and choice. Despite differences in setting, voice, and moral vision, both works embody the same human longing: to return, to be recognized, and to rediscover love that endures time and change. Beneath their differences lies the same truth?the heart to which every journey, whether physical or spiritual, must ultimately return. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=KHALMIRZAEVASaida en-aut-sei=KHALMIRZAEVA en-aut-mei=Saida kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Faculty of General Education and Global Studies, Okayama University kn-affil= en-keyword=Homer kn-keyword=Homer en-keyword=The Odyssey kn-keyword=The Odyssey en-keyword=Paulo Coelho kn-keyword=Paulo Coelho en-keyword=The Zahir kn-keyword=The Zahir en-keyword=Penelopeia kn-keyword=Penelopeia END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=3 cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page=74 end-page=90 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260220 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title=Reconsidering the Sources of the Modern Korean Reader Textbook Chodeung-sohak kn-title=‹ß‘ãŠØ‘‚̓ǖ{‹³‰È‘w‰“™¬Šwx‚Ì’ê–{‚ÉŠÖ‚·‚éÄl en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract=@This study examines the Japanese Meiji-period reader textbooks that appear to have been consulted in the compilation of the Korean modern reader textbook Chodeung-sohak(1906). While reviewing prior research, this paper newly identifies two previously unnoted source textbooks: one published by Kink?d? in 1894 and another by Fuky?sya in 1893. The findings indicate that the Meiji-period reader most frequently referenced in Chodeung-sohak was Jinj? Kokugo Tokuhon published by Kink?d? in 1900. Overall, it can be concluded that Chodeung-sohak relied primarily on the comparatively recent elementary-level readers issued by Kink?d? and the Ministry of Education. kn-abstract=@–{e‚Å‚ÍA‹ß‘ãŠØ‘‚̓ǖ{‹³‰È‘w‰“™¬Šwxi1906j‚̕Ҏ[‚É‚¨‚¢‚ÄŽQÆ‚³‚ꂽ‚ÆŽv‚í‚ê‚é“ú–{‚Ì–¾Ž¡Šú“Ç–{‹³‰È‘‚ɂ‚¢‚Ä”äŠrElŽ@‚ðs‚Á‚½B‚Ü‚¸A•¶•”ȕҎ[‚ÌŒŸ’èwqí¬Šw“Ç–{xi1887j‚Æ‘æ1Šú‘’èwqí¬Šw“Ç–{xi1903jA‚³‚ç‚É‹à`“°o”Å‚Ìwq푌ê“Ç–{xi1900j‹y‚Ñw‚“™‘Œê“Ç–{xi1900j‚Ƃ̊֘A«‚ɂ‚¢‚ÄAæsŒ¤‹†‚Ì‹c˜_‚ðÄŒŸ“¢‚µ‚½B‚»‚Ì‚¤‚¦‚ÅAV‚½‚É‹à`“°‚ÌwV‘̓ǖ{ qí¬Šw—pxi1894j‚Æ•‹yŽÉ‚Ìwqí¬ŠwV“Ç–{xi1893j‚Ì2Ží‚ð’ê–{‚Æ‚µ‚ÄŠm”F‚·‚邱‚Æ‚ª‚Å‚«‚½Bw‰“™¬Šwx‚É‚¨‚¢‚ÄÅ‚à‘½‚­ŽQÆ‚³‚ꂽ–¾Ž¡Šú“Ç–{‹³‰È‘‚Í‹à`“°‚Ìwq푌ê“Ç–{xi1900j‚Å‚ ‚èAw‰“™¬Šwx‚ÍA‹à`“°‚Æ•¶•”Ȃ̔äŠr“IV‚µ‚¢qí¬Šw—p“Ç–{‹³‰È‘‚ð—Dæ“I‚ÉŽQÆ‚µ‚½‚ÆŽv‚í‚ê‚éB en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=LEEAnkoo en-aut-sei=LEE en-aut-mei=Ankoo kn-aut-name=—›ˆÀ‹ã kn-aut-sei=—› kn-aut-mei=ˆÀ‹ã aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Institute for Promotion of Education and Campus Life, Okayama University kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠw‹³ˆç„i‹@\ en-keyword=w‰“™¬Šwx kn-keyword=w‰“™¬Šwx en-keyword=‹ß‘ãŠØ‘‚̓ǖ{‹³‰È‘ kn-keyword=‹ß‘ãŠØ‘‚̓ǖ{‹³‰È‘ en-keyword=–¾Ž¡Šú“Ç–{‹³‰È‘ kn-keyword=–¾Ž¡Šú“Ç–{‹³‰È‘ END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=3 cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page=1 end-page=11 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260220 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title=Exploring the Connection Between Sexual/Gender Fluidity and ADHD kn-title=ƒZƒNƒVƒ…ƒAƒŠƒeƒB‚Ì‚ä‚炬‚Æ”­’BáŠQ‚ÌADHD‚Ƃ̊֘A en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract=To explore the relationship between sexual/gender fluidity and ADHD, a longitudinal web-based survey was conducted with adults aged 18 and over. The first survey collected responses from 11,018 participants, and the second, one year later, from 5,474. Participants were divided into four groups based on changes in identification with various aspects of sexuality. A one-way ANOVA showed that, except for gdemiromantich and gdemisexual,h most sexualities (excluding gheterosexualh and ggayh) were associated with significantly higher ADHD scores in those who shifted from identifying to not identifying. These findings suggest a potential association between sexual/gender fluidity and ADHD. kn-abstract=@ƒZƒNƒVƒ…ƒAƒŠƒeƒB‚Ì‚ä‚炬‚Æ”­’BáŠQ‚ÌADHD‚Ƃ̊֘A‚𖾂炩‚É‚·‚邽‚ßCWEB‚É‚æ‚éc’f’²¸‚ðs‚Á‚½B18ΈÈã‚̬l‚ð‘ÎÛ‚Æ‚µC‘æ1‰ñ–Ú‚Ì’²¸‚Í11,018lC1”NŒã‚Ì‘æ2‰ñ–Ú‚Ì’²¸‚Å‚Í5,474l‚©‚ç‰ñ“š‚𓾂½B«Ž©”FC«“IŽwŒüC«•\Œ»‚Ì—lX‚ȃZƒNƒVƒ…ƒAƒŠƒeƒB‚ɂ‚¢‚ÄC2‰ñ‚Ì’²¸‚ł̊Y“–E”ñŠY“–‚Å4ŒQ‚É•ª‚¯CADHD“¾“_‚ɂ‚¢‚Ä1—vˆö‚̔팱ŽÒŠÔ•ªŽU•ªÍ‚ðs‚Á‚½Buƒfƒ~ƒƒ}ƒ“ƒeƒBƒbƒNvuƒfƒ~ƒZƒNƒVƒ…ƒAƒ‹vˆÈŠO‚ÅŒQ‚ÌŽåŒø‰Ê‚ª—LˆÓ‚Å‚ ‚èCuˆÙ«ˆ¤vuƒQƒCv‚𜂭ƒZƒNƒVƒ…ƒAƒŠƒeƒB‚ÅC2‰ñ‚Æ‚àu”ñŠY“–vŒQ‚æ‚è‚àuŠY“–¨”ñŠY“–vŒQ‚ÌADHD“¾“_‚ª—LˆÓ‚É‚‚©‚Á‚½B‚±‚ê‚É‚æ‚èƒZƒNƒVƒ…ƒAƒŠƒeƒB‚Ì‚ä‚炬‚ÆADHD‚Ƃ̊֘A‚ªŽ¦´‚³‚ꂽB en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=MATSUIMegumi en-aut-sei=MATSUI en-aut-mei=Megumi kn-aut-name=¼ˆä‚ß‚®‚Ý kn-aut-sei=¼ˆä kn-aut-mei=‚ß‚®‚Ý aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Institute for Promotion of Education and Campus Life, Okayama University kn-affil=‰ªŽR‘åŠw‹³ˆç„i‹@\ en-keyword=ƒZƒNƒVƒ…ƒAƒŠƒeƒB‚Ì‚ä‚炬 kn-keyword=ƒZƒNƒVƒ…ƒAƒŠƒeƒB‚Ì‚ä‚炬 en-keyword=”­’BáŠQ kn-keyword=”­’BáŠQ en-keyword=ADHD kn-keyword=ADHD en-keyword=c’f’²¸ kn-keyword=c’f’²¸ END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=71 cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page=107048 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2025 dt-pub=202509 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=A cross-sectional study of the gut microbiota associated with urinary and serum equol production status in a general population of Japanese men en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Equol is a metabolite produced by the gut microbiota from the soy isoflavone daidzein. Previous studies identified bacteria capable of converting daidzein to equol. We investigated whether equol producers among Japanese with a high soy intake contained these bacteria. We also examined differences in equol production status between urine and serum and how the gut microbiota differs between these statuses. To minimize the potential confounding effects of hormonal variability in women, this cross-sectional study analyzed 853 Japanese men. Urinary and serum isoflavones were collected in the morning after fasting and were analyzed using LC-MS/MS. By applying a finite mixture model for each log10 equol/daidzein ratio, we defined equol producers and non-producers from urine and serum. Among 669 participants with fecal microbial measurements, the 16S rRNA gene was sequenced on a MiSeq System. The cut-off values for the log10 equol/daidzein ratio were ?0.94 for urine and ?0.95 for serum. Equol production status in urine and serum matched in 97 %, and equol producers from urine or serum were 42 %. The microbiota was more diverse in producers than in non-producers; the genus Senegalimassilia included strains with high sequence identity (>98 %) to daidzein reductase. The family Oscillospiraceae and class Clostridia also had approximately 46 %?48 % sequence identity. The equol production status of fasting urine and serum almost matched among a general population of Japanese men. Although we did not detect a microbiota with known daidzein reductase in equol producers, several shared similar sequences; these may include equol-producing bacteria that have not yet been identified. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=OkamiYukiko en-aut-sei=Okami en-aut-mei=Yukiko kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=ArimaHisatomi en-aut-sei=Arima en-aut-mei=Hisatomi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=BambaShigeki en-aut-sei=Bamba en-aut-mei=Shigeki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=NamaiFu en-aut-sei=Namai en-aut-mei=Fu kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=KondoKeiko en-aut-sei=Kondo en-aut-mei=Keiko kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=IdenoYuki en-aut-sei=Ideno en-aut-mei=Yuki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=SoejimaAyumi en-aut-sei=Soejima en-aut-mei=Ayumi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= en-aut-name=MiyakawaHaruna en-aut-sei=Miyakawa en-aut-mei=Haruna kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=8 ORCID= en-aut-name=ToriiSayuki en-aut-sei=Torii en-aut-mei=Sayuki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=9 ORCID= en-aut-name=SegawaHiroyoshi en-aut-sei=Segawa en-aut-mei=Hiroyoshi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=10 ORCID= en-aut-name=OhashiMizuki en-aut-sei=Ohashi en-aut-mei=Mizuki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=11 ORCID= en-aut-name=KawashimaMegumi en-aut-sei=Kawashima en-aut-mei=Megumi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=12 ORCID= en-aut-name=HisamatsuTakashi en-aut-sei=Hisamatsu en-aut-mei=Takashi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=13 ORCID= en-aut-name=KadotaAya en-aut-sei=Kadota en-aut-mei=Aya kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=14 ORCID= en-aut-name=SekikawaAkira en-aut-sei=Sekikawa en-aut-mei=Akira kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=15 ORCID= en-aut-name=FujiyoshiAkira en-aut-sei=Fujiyoshi en-aut-mei=Akira kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=16 ORCID= en-aut-name=MiuraKatsuyuki en-aut-sei=Miura en-aut-mei=Katsuyuki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=17 ORCID= en-aut-name=SESSA Research Group en-aut-sei=SESSA Research Group en-aut-mei= kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=18 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=NCD Epidemiology Research Center, Shiga University of Medical Science kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Department of Preventive Medicine and Public Health, Faculty of Medicine, Fukuoka University kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Department of Fundamental Nursing, Shiga University of Medical Science kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Graduate School of Agricultural Science, Tohoku University kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=NCD Epidemiology Research Center, Shiga University of Medical Science kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Gunma University Center for Food Science and Wellness kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=Nutraceuticals Research Institute, R&D Headquarters, Nutraceuticals Division, Otsuka Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd. kn-affil= affil-num=8 en-affil=Nutraceuticals Research Institute, R&D Headquarters, Nutraceuticals Division, Otsuka Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd. kn-affil= affil-num=9 en-affil=NCD Epidemiology Research Center, Shiga University of Medical Science kn-affil= affil-num=10 en-affil=NCD Epidemiology Research Center, Shiga University of Medical Science kn-affil= affil-num=11 en-affil=NCD Epidemiology Research Center, Shiga University of Medical Science kn-affil= affil-num=12 en-affil=NCD Epidemiology Research Center, Shiga University of Medical Science kn-affil= affil-num=13 en-affil=Department of Public Health, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=14 en-affil=NCD Epidemiology Research Center, Shiga University of Medical Science kn-affil= affil-num=15 en-affil=Department of Epidemiology, School of Public Health, University of Pittsburgh kn-affil= affil-num=16 en-affil=Department of Hygiene, Wakayama Medical University kn-affil= affil-num=17 en-affil=NCD Epidemiology Research Center, Shiga University of Medical Science kn-affil= affil-num=18 en-affil= kn-affil= en-keyword=Equol kn-keyword=Equol en-keyword=Soy kn-keyword=Soy en-keyword=Isoflavone kn-keyword=Isoflavone en-keyword=Gut microbiota kn-keyword=Gut microbiota en-keyword=Men kn-keyword=Men en-keyword=Producers kn-keyword=Producers END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=27 cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page=106742 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2025 dt-pub=202509 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Inscribed-type spherical speed reducer with uniform reduction ratio in all directions en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=A spherical motor is an actuator that can generate rotational motion about all three orthogonal axes. However, it is difficult to obtain high output torque from most electromagnetic spherical motors, primarily due to limitations inherent in electromagnetic actuators, such as restricted magnetic force and thermal constraints. Since its torque cannot be increased using planar gears, spherical speed reducers that transmit rotational torque along three orthogonal axes through sphere-to-sphere contact are required. One major limitation of conventional spherical speed reducers is that their size increases significantly as the reduction ratio becomes higher. To address this issue, we propose a novel inscribed-type spherical speed reducer, in which the deceleration mechanism is integrated within the output sphere. This configuration enables a more compact design, reducing the overall size to approximately half that of conventional designs. To predict the angular velocity and transmitted torque, theoretical models for the rotation and torque transmission of the speed reducer were developed. According to the proposed model, the reduction ratio of the spherical speed reducer is 1/3. To verify the validity of these models, experiments were conducted to measure angular velocity and torque. The theoretical results agreed well with the experimental results. In addition, the theoretical torque exhibited an average relative error of 1.63 % compared to the experimental result. Therefore, it was confirmed that the rotation and torque transmission models were valid. These results demonstrate that a reduction ratio can be obtained in all directions of the 3-DOF of the spherical speed reducer, unlike conventional 1-DOF reducers. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=NaramuraSeiya en-aut-sei=Naramura en-aut-mei=Seiya kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=TonegawaKoichi en-aut-sei=Tonegawa en-aut-mei=Koichi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=ShimookaSo en-aut-sei=Shimooka en-aut-mei=So kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=YanoTomoaki en-aut-sei=Yano en-aut-mei=Tomoaki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=GofukuAkio en-aut-sei=Gofuku en-aut-mei=Akio kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=KasashimaNagayoshi en-aut-sei=Kasashima en-aut-mei=Nagayoshi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=KamegawaTetsushi en-aut-sei=Kamegawa en-aut-mei=Tetsushi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Faculty of Environmental, Life, Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Graduate School of Interdisciplinary Science and Engineering in Health Systems, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Faculty of Environmental, Life, Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Faculty of Environmental, Life, Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Okayama Prefectural University kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=Faculty of Environmental, Life, Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= en-keyword=Inscribed-type spherical speed reducer kn-keyword=Inscribed-type spherical speed reducer en-keyword=Rotation and torque transmission kn-keyword=Rotation and torque transmission en-keyword=Friction kn-keyword=Friction en-keyword=Spherical motor kn-keyword=Spherical motor en-keyword=Three-axis rotation kn-keyword=Three-axis rotation END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=779 cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page=110775 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=202605 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Comparison of bioavailability of quercetin and its structural analogs in mice en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Flavonoids are thought to provide beneficial effects on health. However, there are still uncertainties regarding their bioavailability. In this study, we investigated the bioavailability of 6 flavonoids, galangin, kaempferol, quercetin, myricetin, fisetin, and luteolin, by oral administration to mice. Analysis of plasma concentrations of free flavonoids after deconjugation by LC-MS/MS revealed that all flavonoids were rapidly absorbed after administration. Among 6 flavonoids, kaempferol and fisetin showed high absorbed amounts in blood plasma. With the LogP value of the two flavonoids as the maximum value, the amount absorbed decreased for both lower and higher LogP values. The results of the tissue distribution of galangin, kaempferol, and quercetin suggested that the order of fastest movement from the stomach to the small intestine was kaempferol?>?quercetin?>?galangin. In addition, the amount of kaempferol and quercetin distributed in the liver was greater than that of galangin. These results suggest that the bioavailability of flavonoids varies with the slight structural differences, possibly due to differences in their rapid accessibility to the small intestine that is the primary site of absorption and metabolism within the body. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=MaedaNozomi en-aut-sei=Maeda en-aut-mei=Nozomi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=HashimotoAtsushi en-aut-sei=Hashimoto en-aut-mei=Atsushi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=MoritaRyosei en-aut-sei=Morita en-aut-mei=Ryosei kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=MunemasaShintaro en-aut-sei=Munemasa en-aut-mei=Shintaro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=MurataYoshiyuki en-aut-sei=Murata en-aut-mei=Yoshiyuki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=NakamuraYoshimasa en-aut-sei=Nakamura en-aut-mei=Yoshimasa kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=NakamuraToshiyuki en-aut-sei=Nakamura en-aut-mei=Toshiyuki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Graduate School of Environmental and Life Science, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Graduate School of Environmental and Life Science, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Graduate School of Environmental and Life Science, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Graduate School of Environmental and Life Science, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Graduate School of Environmental and Life Science, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Graduate School of Environmental and Life Science, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=Graduate School of Environmental and Life Science, Okayama University kn-affil= en-keyword=Flavonoid kn-keyword=Flavonoid en-keyword=Bioavailability kn-keyword=Bioavailability en-keyword=Distribution kn-keyword=Distribution END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=15 cd-vols= no-issue=5 article-no= start-page=1877 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260228 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Effect of Surgical Procedures for Rheumatoid Forefoot Deformities on Radiographic Foot Length and Width Variations en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Background: The number of patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) undergoing forefoot arthroplasty has increased to better control the disease. Despite patients frequently expressing concerns regarding postoperative foot appearance and footwear-related expectations, no study has investigated postoperative changes in foot length and width in patients with RA. The aim of this study was to evaluate the effect of surgical procedures for rheumatoid forefoot deformities on variations in radiologically determined foot length and width. Methods: In total, 72 feet of 50 women and 3 men (average age: 66.7 years) underwent joint-preserving arthroplasty (n = 33) and arthrodesis of the first metatarsophalangeal joint with shortening osteotomy of the lesser metatarsals or resection arthroplasty of the lesser metatarsal heads (n = 39); procedures were carried out in our institute from August 2013 to February 2020. The mean disease duration was 23.5 years, and the average follow-up period was 17.5 months. Pre- and postoperative hallux valgus angle (HVA), intermetatarsal angle (IMA) of the first and second metatarsals (M1M2A), and IMA of the first and fifth metatarsals (M1M5A) were measured on weightbearing radiographs as well as foot length and width. We also evaluated the correlation between changes in radiographic parameters and variations in radiologically determined foot length and width. Results: Radiologically determined foot width changed significantly from 10.1 cm to 9.7 cm (p < 0.01), while no significant difference was found between pre- and postoperative radiologically determined foot length. HVA, M1M2A, and M1M5A were significantly improved after the surgery (p < 0.01, p < 0.01, and p < 0.01, respectively). A significant negative correlation was found between the variation in radiologically determined foot length and changes in HVA (r = ?0.29, p = 0.02) and M1M5A (r = ?0.23, p < 0.05), while a significant positive correlation was found between the variation in the foot width and changes in HVA (r = 0.34, p < 0.01), M1M2A (r = 0.55, p < 0.01), and M1M5A (r = 0.45, p < 0.01). There were no significant differences between operative procedures regarding variation in radiologically determined foot length and width. Conclusions: Surgical procedure for rheumatoid forefoot deformity improved radiographic parameters and reduced radiographic foot width while maintaining foot length. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=HoritaMasahiro en-aut-sei=Horita en-aut-mei=Masahiro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=KisoYohei en-aut-sei=Kiso en-aut-mei=Yohei kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=NasuYoshihisa en-aut-sei=Nasu en-aut-mei=Yoshihisa kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=NakaharaRyuichi en-aut-sei=Nakahara en-aut-mei=Ryuichi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=SaigaKenta en-aut-sei=Saiga en-aut-mei=Kenta kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=OzakiToshifumi en-aut-sei=Ozaki en-aut-mei=Toshifumi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=NishidaKeiichiro en-aut-sei=Nishida en-aut-mei=Keiichiro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Faculty of Medical Development Field, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Kurashiki Sweet Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Okayama City Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Department of Musculoskeletal Health Promotion, Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Department of Sports Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=Locomotive Pain Center, Faculty of Medical Development Field, Okayama University kn-affil= en-keyword=forefoot surgery kn-keyword=forefoot surgery en-keyword=foot length kn-keyword=foot length en-keyword=foot width kn-keyword=foot width en-keyword=rheumatoid arthritis kn-keyword=rheumatoid arthritis END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=2026 cd-vols= no-issue=2 article-no= start-page=023F01 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260120 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Feedback-Controlled Beam Pattern Measurement Method Using a Power-Variable Calibration Source for Cosmic Microwave Background Telescopes en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=We demonstrate a novel beam pattern measurement method for the side lobe characterization of cosmic microwave background telescopes. The method employs a power-variable artificial microwave source under feedback control from the detector under test on the telescope. It enables us to extend the dynamic range of the beam pattern measurement without introducing nonlinearity effects from the detector. We conducted a laboratory-based proof-of-concept experiment, measuring the H-plane beam pattern of a horn antenna coupled to a diode detector at 81 GHz. We gained an additional dynamic range of 60.3 dB attributed to the feedback control. In addition, we verified the measurement by comparing it with other reference measurements obtained using conventional methods. The method is also applicable to general optical measurements requiring a high dynamic range to detect subtle nonidealities in the characteristics of optical devices. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=HiroseHaruaki en-aut-sei=Hirose en-aut-mei=Haruaki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=HasegawaMasaya en-aut-sei=Hasegawa en-aut-mei=Masaya kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=KanekoDaisuke en-aut-sei=Kaneko en-aut-mei=Daisuke kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=NagasakiTaketo en-aut-sei=Nagasaki en-aut-mei=Taketo kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=TakakuRyota en-aut-sei=Takaku en-aut-mei=Ryota kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=de?HaanTijmen en-aut-sei=de?Haan en-aut-mei=Tijmen kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=TakakuraSatoru en-aut-sei=Takakura en-aut-mei=Satoru kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= en-aut-name=FujinoTakuro en-aut-sei=Fujino en-aut-mei=Takuro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=8 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Department of Physics, Graduate School of Engineering Science, Yokohama National University kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Institute of Particle and Nuclear Studies (IPNS), High Energy Accelerator Research Organization (KEK) kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=International Center for Quantum-field Measurement Systems for Studies of the Universe and Particles (WPI-QUP), High Energy Accelerator Research Organization (KEK) kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Accelerator Laboratory (ACCL), High Energy Accelerator Research Organization (KEK) kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Graduate School of Environmental, Life, Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Institute of Particle and Nuclear Studies (IPNS), High Energy Accelerator Research Organization (KEK) kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=Department of Physics, Faculty of Science, The University of Tokyo kn-affil= affil-num=8 en-affil=International Center for Quantum-field Measurement Systems for Studies of the Universe and Particles (WPI-QUP), High Energy Accelerator Research Organization (KEK) kn-affil= END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=19 cd-vols= no-issue=1 article-no= start-page=11 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260105 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Association of Wet-Bulb Globe Temperature with heat-related illness hospitalizations in Japan: a time-stratified, case-crossover study en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Background Heat-related illnesses are a serious public health concern and are exacerbated by global warming. Wet-Bulb Globe Temperature (WBGT) is widely used as a heat stress indicator, but its clinical impact remains unclear. This study aimed to investigate the association between hourly variations in WBGT and the incidence of hospitalizations for heat-related illness in Japan using a nationwide database. By incorporating individual-level clinical data and performing stratified analyses, we sought to provide a more granular understanding of how heat exposure affects the risk of heat-related illness requiring hospitalization.
Methods We conducted a time-stratified, case-crossover study using data collected from July to September in 2020 and 2021 in the Heatstroke STUDY registry. The inclusion criteria were patients registered in the Heatstroke STUDY registry, specifically hospitalized patients with heat-related illness who were transported to participating hospitals during the study period. Hourly WBGT values were assigned based on the nearest monitoring station to each hospital. Conditional logistic regression and distributed lag models were used to estimate associations between WBGT and the risk of hospitalization.
Results A total of 1,653 heat-related illness hospitalizations were analyzed. The mean patient age was 67.9 years; 67.6% were male. Each 1 ‹C increase in WBGT at onset (hospital arrival) was associated with a significantly increased risk of hospitalization (OR 1.10, 95% CI: 1.05?1.15). The cumulative effect over the prior six hours was also significant (OR 1.56, 95% CI: 1.50?1.62). Compared with WBGT? Conclusions Higher WBGT levels were associated with an increased risk of heat-related hospitalization. Although the effect appeared greater in some subgroups, only patients with mental disorders demonstrated statistically significant effect modification, suggesting elevated WBGT confers risk broadly. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=YamamuraYuka en-aut-sei=Yamamura en-aut-mei=Yuka kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=HongoTakashi en-aut-sei=Hongo en-aut-mei=Takashi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=YumotoTetsuya en-aut-sei=Yumoto en-aut-mei=Tetsuya kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=SasaiFumiya en-aut-sei=Sasai en-aut-mei=Fumiya kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=TokiokaKohei en-aut-sei=Tokioka en-aut-mei=Kohei kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=ObaraTakafumi en-aut-sei=Obara en-aut-mei=Takafumi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=NojimaTsuyoshi en-aut-sei=Nojima en-aut-mei=Tsuyoshi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= en-aut-name=KandaJun en-aut-sei=Kanda en-aut-mei=Jun kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=8 ORCID= en-aut-name=YokoboriShoji en-aut-sei=Yokobori en-aut-mei=Shoji kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=9 ORCID= en-aut-name=NaitoHiromichi en-aut-sei=Naito en-aut-mei=Hiromichi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=10 ORCID= en-aut-name=YorifujiTakashi en-aut-sei=Yorifuji en-aut-mei=Takashi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=11 ORCID= en-aut-name=NakaoAtsunori en-aut-sei=Nakao en-aut-mei=Atsunori kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=12 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Department of Epidemiology, Okayama University Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Department of Emergency, Critical Care, and Disaster Medicine, Okayama University Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Department of Emergency, Critical Care, and Disaster Medicine, Okayama University Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Department of Epidemiology, Okayama University Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Department of Emergency, Critical Care, and Disaster Medicine, Okayama University Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Department of Emergency, Critical Care, and Disaster Medicine, Okayama University Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=Department of Emergency, Critical Care, and Disaster Medicine, Okayama University Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=8 en-affil=Emergency and Critical Care Medicine, Nippon Medical School Musashikosugi Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=9 en-affil=Department of Emergency and Critical Care Medicine, Nippon Medical School kn-affil= affil-num=10 en-affil=Department of Emergency, Critical Care, and Disaster Medicine, Okayama University Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=11 en-affil=Department of Epidemiology, Okayama University Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=12 en-affil=Department of Emergency, Critical Care, and Disaster Medicine, Okayama University Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= en-keyword=Wet-Bulb Globe Temperature kn-keyword=Wet-Bulb Globe Temperature en-keyword=Heat stroke kn-keyword=Heat stroke en-keyword=Heat related illness kn-keyword=Heat related illness en-keyword=Global warming kn-keyword=Global warming END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=17 cd-vols= no-issue=11 article-no= start-page=e97962 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2025 dt-pub=20251127 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Association of Carboxyhemoglobin With Severity and Outcomes in Hypothermic Patients: A Retrospective Cohort Study en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Introduction
Carboxyhemoglobin (COHb), an endogenous marker of carbon monoxide production mediated by heme oxygenase-1, may reflect physiological stress responses in critically ill patients. However, its clinical relevance in accidental hypothermia remains unclear.

Methods
We conducted a single-center retrospective cohort study of adult patients admitted to the emergency ICU with accidental hypothermia between January 1, 2019, and March 31, 2025. Patients were categorized into low- and high-COHb groups based on median COHb levels upon emergency department arrival. Associations between COHb levels, disease severity (Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation II (APACHE II) and Sequential Organ Failure Assessment (SOFA) scores), and 28-day mortality were analyzed using regression models adjusted for clinical confounders.

Results
Among the 88 patients, who had a median admission temperature of 28.7‹C, 45 were classified into the low-COHb group and 43 into the high-COHb group, based on a median COHb level of 0.3%. Lower COHb levels on admission were significantly associated with higher APACHE II scores (ƒÀ = ?4.20; 95% CI, ?7.56 to ?0.85), but not with SOFA scores. Admission and minimum COHb levels were not associated with 28-day mortality. However, higher maximum COHb levels within the first 24 hours were independently associated with lower 28-day mortality (adjusted OR, 0.17; 95% CI, 0.023 to 0.93).

Conclusions
Lower COHb levels were associated with greater disease severity, and higher maximum COHb levels were associated with lower 28-day mortality. COHb may reflect systemic stress in accidental hypothermia, but its prognostic value appears limited. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=MiyoshiYuya en-aut-sei=Miyoshi en-aut-mei=Yuya kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=YumotoTetsuya en-aut-sei=Yumoto en-aut-mei=Tetsuya kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=HongoTakashi en-aut-sei=Hongo en-aut-mei=Takashi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=ObaraTakafumi en-aut-sei=Obara en-aut-mei=Takafumi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=NojimaTsuyoshi en-aut-sei=Nojima en-aut-mei=Tsuyoshi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=NaitoHiromichi en-aut-sei=Naito en-aut-mei=Hiromichi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=NakaoAtsunori en-aut-sei=Nakao en-aut-mei=Atsunori kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Department of Emergency, Critical Care, and Disaster Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Department of Emergency, Critical Care, and Disaster Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Department of Emergency, Critical Care, and Disaster Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Department of Emergency, Critical Care, and Disaster Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Department of Emergency, Critical Care, and Disaster Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Department of Emergency, Critical Care, and Disaster Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=Department of Emergency, Critical Care, and Disaster Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= en-keyword=carbon monoxide kn-keyword=carbon monoxide en-keyword=carboxyhemoglobin kn-keyword=carboxyhemoglobin en-keyword=heme oxygenase kn-keyword=heme oxygenase en-keyword=hypothermia kn-keyword=hypothermia en-keyword=sepsis kn-keyword=sepsis END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=18 cd-vols= no-issue=4 article-no= start-page=715 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260223 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Antigen Remodeling in Colorectal Cancer: How Radiotherapy and Chemotherapy Enhance Immunotherapy Responsiveness en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Colorectal cancer (CRC) is traditionally considered a gcold tumorh characterized by low immunogenicity and limited responsiveness to immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs). However, recent findings reveal that cytotoxic modalities can reprogram this immunologically inert landscape. This review integrates these evolving concepts to guide the optimization of future treatments. Radiotherapy induces extensive DNA double-strand breaks, which may generate de novo mutations through error-prone repair while simultaneously exposing cryptic antigens via increased transcriptional instability, alternative splicing, and enhanced proteasomal processing. Chemoradiation also amplifies epigenetic and epitranscriptomic sources of neoepitope diversity, including RNA editing and stress-induced splicing alterations, expanding the immunopeptidome beyond canonical mutation-driven neoantigens. These changes collectively enhance antigen presentation and facilitate T-cell priming. Chemotherapy further reduces immunosuppressive cell populations and promotes dendritic cell activation, creating a permissive milieu for subsequent immune engagement. Clinically, the VOLTAGE studies demonstrated that long-course chemoradiotherapy can sensitize even mismatch repair?proficient rectal cancers to PD-1 blockade, yielding clinically meaningful pathological responses. In contrast, mismatch repair?deficient rectal tumors may respond completely to ICIs alone. Short-course radiotherapy combined with chemotherapy and ICIs has also shown encouraging activity in the setting of total neoadjuvant therapy. Collectively, these findings support a paradigm in which radiotherapy, chemotherapy, and epigenetic/epitranscriptomic alterations?including RNA editing?act as potent modulators of tumor antigenicity. By expanding the neoantigen repertoire and reshaping the tumor microenvironment, these strategies can transform CRC from a cold tumor into one that is increasingly responsive to immunotherapy. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=MatsumiYuki en-aut-sei=Matsumi en-aut-mei=Yuki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=ShigeyasuKunitoshi en-aut-sei=Shigeyasu en-aut-mei=Kunitoshi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=TakahashiToshiaki en-aut-sei=Takahashi en-aut-mei=Toshiaki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=MoriwakeKazuya en-aut-sei=Moriwake en-aut-mei=Kazuya kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=KayanoMasashi en-aut-sei=Kayano en-aut-mei=Masashi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=FujiwaraToshiyoshi en-aut-sei=Fujiwara en-aut-mei=Toshiyoshi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Department of Gastroenterological Surgery, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Department of Gastroenterological Surgery, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Department of Gastroenterological Surgery, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Department of Gastroenterological Surgery, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Department of Gastroenterological Surgery, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Department of Gastroenterological Surgery, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= en-keyword=colorectal cancer kn-keyword=colorectal cancer en-keyword=immunotherapy kn-keyword=immunotherapy en-keyword=radiotherapy kn-keyword=radiotherapy en-keyword=chemotherapy kn-keyword=chemotherapy en-keyword=neoantigens kn-keyword=neoantigens END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol= cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page= end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260221 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Turning pancreatic cancer from cold to hot: the promise of a p53-expressing oncolytic adenovirus (OBP-702) en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Pancreatic cancer remains one of the most lethal malignancies, with limited therapeutic options and poor responsiveness to immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs). This resistance is largely attributed to its profoundly immunosuppressive and desmoplastic tumor microenvironment (TME), characterized by low tumor mutational burden, dense stroma, and abundant immunosuppressive cell populations. Therefore, strategies capable of enhancing tumor immunogenicity and overcoming immune evasion are urgently needed. Oncolytic virotherapy is a promising approach, offering not only tumor-selective cytotoxicity, but also potent immunomodulatory effects. Of these agents, Telomelysin (OBP-301, Suratadenoturev), a telomerase-specific oncolytic adenovirus, demonstrated clinical safety but limited efficacy in refractory tumors. To address this challenge, we developed OBP-702, a next-generation, p53-armed, oncolytic adenovirus designed to augment antitumor activity. Preclinical studies have shown that OBP-702 exerts robust cytotoxicity through multiple mechanisms, including p53-mediated apoptosis and autophagy, E1A?E2F1-mediated p21 suppression, and inhibition of oncogenic KRAS pathways. Importantly, OBP-702 induces strong immunogenic cell death, activates dendritic cells, and promotes tumor-specific T-cell responses, effectively converting immunologically gcoldh pancreatic tumors into ghoth tumors. OBP-702 also remodels the immunosuppressive TME by reducing granulocyte?macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) secretion, suppressing myeloid-derived suppressor cells (MDSCs), and targeting stromal components, such as cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs). These effects contribute to enhanced responses to ICIs and standard chemotherapies. Given its multifaceted antitumor functions and ability to overcome key barriers in pancreatic cancer, OBP-702 represents a highly promising therapeutic candidate. A first-in-human clinical trial evaluating endoscopic ultrasonography-guided intratumoral injection of OBP-702 is currently in preparation, expected to advance clinical translation of this novel virotherapeutic strategy. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=KurodaShinji en-aut-sei=Kuroda en-aut-mei=Shinji kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=TazawaHiroshi en-aut-sei=Tazawa en-aut-mei=Hiroshi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=HashimotoMasashi en-aut-sei=Hashimoto en-aut-mei=Masashi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=KanayaNobuhiko en-aut-sei=Kanaya en-aut-mei=Nobuhiko kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=KakiuchiYoshihiko en-aut-sei=Kakiuchi en-aut-mei=Yoshihiko kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=KagawaShunsuke en-aut-sei=Kagawa en-aut-mei=Shunsuke kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=UrataYasuo en-aut-sei=Urata en-aut-mei=Yasuo kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= en-aut-name=FujiwaraToshiyoshi en-aut-sei=Fujiwara en-aut-mei=Toshiyoshi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=8 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Department of Gastroenterological Surgery, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Center for Innovative Clinical Medicine, Okayama University Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Department of Gastroenterological Surgery, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Department of Gastroenterological Surgery, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Department of Gastroenterological Surgery, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Department of Gastroenterological Surgery, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=Oncolys BioPharma Inc kn-affil= affil-num=8 en-affil=Department of Gastroenterological Surgery, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= en-keyword=Oncolytic adenovirus kn-keyword=Oncolytic adenovirus en-keyword=p53 kn-keyword=p53 en-keyword=OBP-702 kn-keyword=OBP-702 en-keyword=Immunogenic cell death kn-keyword=Immunogenic cell death en-keyword=Tumor microenvironment kn-keyword=Tumor microenvironment en-keyword=Pancreatic cancer kn-keyword=Pancreatic cancer END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=15 cd-vols= no-issue=2 article-no= start-page=275 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260206 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=A Study on the Development of an Image Classification System for Urban Sprawl Areas in Japan en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=In Japan, unlike in many other countries, urbanization has progressed while original rural road structures have been retained, leading to distinctive urban sprawl areas with intermingling residential lots and farmland. Currently, much of Japanfs urban areas consist of urban sprawl areas, posing considerable challenges for infrastructure development. However, for such urban sprawl areas in Japan, it is difficult to say that methods have been established to identify their spatial distribution based on quantitative evaluation. Therefore, for this study, we used machine learning to investigate a system that extracts sprawling urban areas from aerial photographs divided into meshes. In the systemfs design, we prioritized precision to ensure the reliable detection of urban sprawl areas. Consequently, the accuracy of identifying sprawl areas achieved precision of 0.81, recall of 0.63, and an F-score of 0.71. Examination of the classification results of sprawl areas revealed that most misclassifications occurred near class boundaries. By contrast, areas with particularly high levels of urban sprawl showed few misclassifications. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=HemmiRyota en-aut-sei=Hemmi en-aut-mei=Ryota kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=UjiharaTakehito en-aut-sei=Ujihara en-aut-mei=Takehito kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=AndoRyosuke en-aut-sei=Ando en-aut-mei=Ryosuke kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=HashimotoSeiji en-aut-sei=Hashimoto en-aut-mei=Seiji kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Graduate School of Environmental, Life, Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Faculty of Environmental, Life, Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=National Institute for Land and Infrastructure Management, Ministry of Land, Infrastructure Transport and Tourism kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Faculty of Environmental, Life, Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= en-keyword=image classification kn-keyword=image classification en-keyword=machine learning kn-keyword=machine learning en-keyword=sprawl kn-keyword=sprawl END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=6 cd-vols= no-issue=1 article-no= start-page=96 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260109 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Effects of an oral exercise intervention on pre-frailty or frailty in older people: a randomized clinical trial en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Background: Frailty is often experienced by older adults, which can lead to long-term health problems. We aimed to examine associations with improvements in nutritional status, sarcopenia (age-related loss of skeletal muscle mass and strength), and frailty in four groups with different oral exercise frequencies.
Methods: We conducted a prospective, parallel multi-arm randomized controlled trial (Japan Registry of Clinical Trials (jRCT) 1062210063) to test the effects of oral exercise on frailty in older adults. Each intervention consisted of a standardized oral exercise protocol including neck exercises, lip exercises, and tongue movements, designed to improve oral function and reduce frailty. The primary outcome was the change in the number of frailty criteria from baseline to follow-up. Individuals aged ?60 years were screened for frailty status using standardized criteria at the Department of Preventive Dentistry at Okayama University Hospital between October 2022 and December 2023. Those identified as pre-frailty or frailty were eligible and enrolled in the study. After screening 60 individuals, 58 eligible participants were randomly assigned using block randomization to one of four oral exercise frequency groups: 3 times/day & everyday, 3 times/day & 3 days/week, once/day & everyday, and once/day & 3 days/week. A two-way repeated measures analysis of variance was used to evaluate the impact of the four frequencies of oral exercise methods on frailty in older adults. Outcome assessors were blinded; participants were not.
Results: Here we show the results of the 58 participants. Group sizes are: 3 times/day & everyday (n?=?14), 3 times/day & 3 days/week (n?=?15), once/day & everyday (n?=?14), once/day & 3 days/week (n?=?15). The trial is completed as planned, and all randomized participants are analyzed. The main effect of time is significant for the number of frailty criteria (F?=?14.803, p? Conclusions: After conducting oral exercises for 3 months on older adults with pre-frailty or frailty, improvements in frailty are observed. Overall, these exercises could be a simple, low-cost way to support healthy aging in the community. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=TakeuchiNoriko en-aut-sei=Takeuchi en-aut-mei=Noriko kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=SawadaNanami en-aut-sei=Sawada en-aut-mei=Nanami kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=InadaSakura en-aut-sei=Inada en-aut-mei=Sakura kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=MoritaManabu en-aut-sei=Morita en-aut-mei=Manabu kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=EkuniDaisuke en-aut-sei=Ekuni en-aut-mei=Daisuke kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Department of Preventive Dentistry, Division of Dentistry, Medical Development Field, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Section of Preventive and Public Health Dentistry, Division of Oral Health, Growth and Development, Faculty of Dental Science, Kyushu University kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Division of Health Promotion, Okayama-City Health Center kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Department of Oral Health Sciences, Faculty of Health Care Sciences, Takarazuka University of Medical and Health Care kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Department of Preventive Dentistry, Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=25 cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page=e5 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=2026 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Effects of sagging correction calibration error on radiation therapy equipment using image analysis en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Purpose: This study investigates the effect of sagging correction errors on image quality and geometric coordinate accuracy.
Methods: This study utilised the Elekta radiotherapy system, ball bearing (BB), Catphan phantom and MultiMet-WL phantom. Ten distinct flex maps (FMs) were acquired by positioning the BB at the accuracy isocentre and introducing shifts of 0.2, 0.4 and 0.6 mm in the left, table and up directions, respectively. Cone-beam computed tomography images of the Catphan phantom were acquired using 10 FMs. The images were analysed for modulation transfer function (MTF) values and geometric coordinates. Additionally, the Winston?Lutz (W-L) test was conducted under reference couch positions and with a 0.3 mm couch shift.
Results: For the Catphan phantom analysis, the standard deviations of MTF10% across FMs were 0.19. The centre-of-gravity coordinates of the insert exhibited shifts of approximately 0.2, 0.4 and 0.6 mm when comparing reference images to those acquired with the shifted FMs. The results of the W-L test with a 0.3 mm couch shift showed radiation isocentre deviations exceeding 1 mm compared to the reference couch positions.
Conclusions: Minor sagging correction calibration errors did not remarkably impact image quality; however, they altered the geometric coordinates of the image isocentre. These calibration errors decreased the accuracy of off-isocentre positioning. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=FujiiYasushi en-aut-sei=Fujii en-aut-mei=Yasushi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=NakayamaTakahiro en-aut-sei=Nakayama en-aut-mei=Takahiro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=OshitaJunki en-aut-sei=Oshita en-aut-mei=Junki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=TsunodaAyaka en-aut-sei=Tsunoda en-aut-mei=Ayaka kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=SaekiYusuke en-aut-sei=Saeki en-aut-mei=Yusuke kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=TanabeYoshinori en-aut-sei=Tanabe en-aut-mei=Yoshinori kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Department of Radiology, Chugoku Central Hospital of the Mutual Aid Association of Public School Teachers kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Department of Radiology, Chugoku Central Hospital of the Mutual Aid Association of Public School Teachers kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Department of Radiology, Chugoku Central Hospital of the Mutual Aid Association of Public School Teachers kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Department of Radiology, Graduate School of Health Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Department of Radiological Technology, Kawasaki Medical School Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil= Faculty of Medicine, Graduate School of Health Sciences, Okayama University kn-affil= en-keyword=flex map kn-keyword=flex map en-keyword=sagging kn-keyword=sagging en-keyword=Winston?Lutz test kn-keyword=Winston?Lutz test END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=32 cd-vols= no-issue=3 article-no= start-page=102931 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=202603 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Tick-borne pathogens in ticks collected from Humans: A prospective clinical pilot study en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Tick-borne diseases (TBDs), particularly Japanese spotted fever, are an increasing public health concern in Japan. Data on pathogens carried by ticks removed directly from patients and their associated clinical outcomes remain limited. This prospective study investigated pathogen carriage in patient-derived ticks and evaluated the clinical risk of TBDs. Between April and October 2025, ticks were collected from patients presenting with tick bites at two medical institutions in Western Japan. Ticks were morphologically identified and spotted fever group rickettsiae (SFGR) was detected by nested PCR targeting the 17-kDa antigen gene, followed by sequence analysis. Clinical data, including patient background, antibiotic prescriptions, and outcomes, were reviewed. Clinical information was available for 70 patients (median age; 75 years), of whom 88.6% were prescribed prophylactic antibiotics. Ticks were collected from 60 patients (85.7%), and seven adults without antibiotic prophylaxis were followed for disease onset. Sixty-two ticks, predominantly Amblyomma testudinarium (88.7%), were analyzed. SFGR was detected in eight ticks (12.9%), including seven A. testudinarium and one Ixodes nipponensis, collected from seven patients. Two patients bitten by Rickettsia tamurae?carrying ticks were observed for one month without antibiotics and remained asymptomatic. In this prospective analysis, no clinically apparent rickettsiosis was observed following bites from R. tamurae?positive ticks without antibiotic prophylaxis; however, subclinical infection could not be excluded. Despite the small sample size, our findings suggest that the clinical risk associated with R. tamurae infection may be low. Direct analysis of removed ticks from patients may help characterize pathogen reservoirs and inform targeted approaches to TBDs. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=FukushimaShinnosuke en-aut-sei=Fukushima en-aut-mei=Shinnosuke kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=SumidaTakaomi en-aut-sei=Sumida en-aut-mei=Takaomi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=KawamataOsamu en-aut-sei=Kawamata en-aut-mei=Osamu kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=HidaniYoshimi en-aut-sei=Hidani en-aut-mei=Yoshimi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=HagiyaHideharu en-aut-sei=Hagiya en-aut-mei=Hideharu kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Department of General Medicine, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Numakuma Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Numakuma Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Numakuma Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Department of Infectious Diseases, Okayama University Hospital kn-affil= en-keyword=Epidemiology kn-keyword=Epidemiology en-keyword=Japanese spotted fever kn-keyword=Japanese spotted fever en-keyword=Spotted fever group rickettsiae kn-keyword=Spotted fever group rickettsiae en-keyword=Tick bite kn-keyword=Tick bite en-keyword=Tick-borne disease kn-keyword=Tick-borne disease END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=32 cd-vols= no-issue=3 article-no= start-page=102933 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=202603 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Comments on gIn vitro activity of cefiderocol against carbapenem-resistant Gram-negative pathogens in Japanh en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract= en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=OgawaSakura en-aut-sei=Ogawa en-aut-mei=Sakura kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=FukushimaShinnosuke en-aut-sei=Fukushima en-aut-mei=Shinnosuke kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=YamamotoMari en-aut-sei=Yamamoto en-aut-mei=Mari kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=TsujiShuma en-aut-sei=Tsuji en-aut-mei=Shuma kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=GotohKazuyoshi en-aut-sei=Gotoh en-aut-mei=Kazuyoshi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=HagiyaHideharu en-aut-sei=Hagiya en-aut-mei=Hideharu kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Department of General Medicine, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Department of General Medicine, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Department of Infectious Diseases, Okayama University Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Department of Medical Laboratory Science, Okayama University Graduate School of Health Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Department of Medical Laboratory Science, Okayama University Graduate School of Health Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Department of Infectious Diseases, Okayama University Hospital kn-affil= END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=18 cd-vols= no-issue=1 article-no= start-page=e100872 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260105 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Saliva as a Reliable and Non-invasive Sample for Detecting Influenza A in Severe Acute Respiratory Infection Cases en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Background
Nasopharyngeal swab sampling remains the gold standard for influenza diagnosis; however, it has several limitations, including dependence on medical staff, invasiveness, potential for nosocomial transmission, and occupational exposure risk. Non-invasive alternatives, such as saliva and nasal vestibular swabs, may improve patient comfort and participation in clinical studies. In addition, diagnosis with reverse transcription real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction (RT-qPCR) is often delayed because it requires trained laboratory technicians and facilities with appropriate laboratory settings. Although rapid diagnostic devices such as the GenPad? offer potential alternatives to RT-qPCR, their performance with non-invasive samples remains insufficiently explored. This study addresses the two key questions for influenza detection in severe acute respiratory infection (SARI) cases: (i) whether saliva or nasal vestibular swab samples serve as suitable alternatives to nasopharyngeal swab samples, and (ii) whether the GenPad? provides a reliable option for detecting influenza using saliva samples.
Methodology
A prospective observational study was conducted with 16 inpatients classified as having SARIs and diagnosed with influenza between December 2024 and March 2025 in Japan. Paired saliva and nasal vestibular swab samples were collected 1-9 (median = 3.5) days after symptom onset. RT-qPCR testing was performed according to the National Institute of Infectious Diseases protocol. Saliva samples were also tested using the GenPad? system. Comparisons between sample types and diagnostic methods were analyzed using the exact McNemar's test.
Results
Among the 16 influenza-positive patients, saliva samples demonstrated higher sensitivity (87.5%) than nasal vestibular swabs (31.3%) in RT-qPCR when compared with the diagnostic results obtained from nasopharyngeal swabs. A comparison of RT-qPCR results between saliva and nasal vestibular swabs revealed a total agreement of 43.8%, with exact McNemar's test showing a significant difference (p = 0.0039). While nasal vestibular swabs showed inconsistent results, saliva samples consistently tested positive, particularly within seven days of symptom onset (100% positive agreement). The GenPad?, a rapid diagnostic device, showed promising performance (92.9%) using saliva samples compared to RT-qPCR.
Conclusions
Saliva is a reliable non-invasive alternative to nasopharyngeal swabs for influenza detection in SARI cases, particularly within seven days of symptom onset, whereas nasal vestibular swabs show lower sensitivity. Additionally, the GenPad? provides comparable performance to RT-qPCR using saliva samples, offering a rapid, portable diagnostic option. These approaches may mitigate discomfort, minimize infection risk for healthcare workers, and improve testing capacity. However, the absence of influenza-negative controls and the small sample size (n = 16) substantially limit the assessment of diagnostic accuracy and specificity. As a result, the broader applicability of our findings should be interpreted with caution, and further studies are required to validate these observations. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=TakeuchiJunko S en-aut-sei=Takeuchi en-aut-mei=Junko S kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=MatsunagaNobuaki en-aut-sei=Matsunaga en-aut-mei=Nobuaki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=TsukadaAi en-aut-sei=Tsukada en-aut-mei=Ai kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=IwamotoNoriko en-aut-sei=Iwamoto en-aut-mei=Noriko kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=FuwaNoriko en-aut-sei=Fuwa en-aut-mei=Noriko kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=IchikawaTakahiro en-aut-sei=Ichikawa en-aut-mei=Takahiro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=KatoYasuyuki en-aut-sei=Kato en-aut-mei=Yasuyuki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= en-aut-name=TomitaYuka en-aut-sei=Tomita en-aut-mei=Yuka kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=8 ORCID= en-aut-name=KitagawaHiroki en-aut-sei=Kitagawa en-aut-mei=Hiroki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=9 ORCID= en-aut-name=YamatoMasaya en-aut-sei=Yamato en-aut-mei=Masaya kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=10 ORCID= en-aut-name=AoyagiTetsuji en-aut-sei=Aoyagi en-aut-mei=Tetsuji kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=11 ORCID= en-aut-name=HagiyaHideharu en-aut-sei=Hagiya en-aut-mei=Hideharu kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=12 ORCID= en-aut-name=HaseRyota en-aut-sei=Hase en-aut-mei=Ryota kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=13 ORCID= en-aut-name=HatakeyamaShuji en-aut-sei=Hatakeyama en-aut-mei=Shuji kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=14 ORCID= en-aut-name=InabaTohru en-aut-sei=Inaba en-aut-mei=Tohru kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=15 ORCID= en-aut-name=IzumikawaKoichi en-aut-sei=Izumikawa en-aut-mei=Koichi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=16 ORCID= en-aut-name=TakesueYoshio en-aut-sei=Takesue en-aut-mei=Yoshio kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=17 ORCID= en-aut-name=KimuraMoto en-aut-sei=Kimura en-aut-mei=Moto kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=18 ORCID= en-aut-name=OhmagariNorio en-aut-sei=Ohmagari en-aut-mei=Norio kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=19 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Department of Academic-Industrial Partnerships Promotion, Center for Clinical Sciences, Japan Institute for Health Security kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Antimicrobial Resistance (AMR) Clinical Reference Center, Japan Institute for Health Security kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Antimicrobial Resistance (AMR) Clinical Reference Center, Japan Institute for Health Security kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Disease Control and Prevention Center, Japan Institute for Health Security kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Disease Control and Prevention Center, Japan Institute for Health Security kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Department of Infectious Diseases, Sapporo City General Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=Department of Infectious Diseases, International University of Health and Welfare (IUHW) Narita Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=8 en-affil=Department of Infectious Diseases, Japanese Red Cross Aichi Medical Center Nagoya Daini Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=9 en-affil=Department of Infectious Diseases, Hiroshima University Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=10 en-affil=Department of General Internal Medicine and Infectious Diseases, Rinku General Medical Center kn-affil= affil-num=11 en-affil=Department of Clinical Infectious Diseases, Tohoku University Graduate School of Medicine kn-affil= affil-num=12 en-affil=Department of Infectious Diseases, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=13 en-affil=Department of Infectious Diseases, Japanese Red Cross Narita Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=14 en-affil=Division of Infectious Diseases, Jichi Medical University Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=15 en-affil=Department of Infection Control and Laboratory Medicine, Kyoto Prefectural University of Medicine kn-affil= affil-num=16 en-affil= kn-affil= affil-num=17 en-affil=Department of Infectious Diseases, Nagasaki University Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=18 en-affil=Department of Academic-Industrial Partnerships Promotion, Center for Clinical Sciences, Japan Institute for Health Security kn-affil= affil-num=19 en-affil=Disease Control and Prevention Center, Japan Institute for Health Security kn-affil= en-keyword=influenza a kn-keyword=influenza a en-keyword=nasal vestibular swab kn-keyword=nasal vestibular swab en-keyword=nasopharyngeal swab kn-keyword=nasopharyngeal swab en-keyword=rapid diagnostics kn-keyword=rapid diagnostics en-keyword=rt-qpcr kn-keyword=rt-qpcr en-keyword=saliva kn-keyword=saliva en-keyword=sari kn-keyword=sari END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=17 cd-vols= no-issue=12 article-no= start-page=e100138 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2025 dt-pub=20251226 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Streptococcal Toxic Shock Syndrome Following Intestinal Obstruction in a Patient With Crohnfs Disease en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Streptococcal toxic shock syndrome (STSS) is a rare, life-threatening complication of invasive group A streptococcal (iGAS) infections. We report the case of a 24-year-old woman with Crohn's disease receiving immunosuppressive therapy who developed STSS following intestinal obstruction. On day 2, she developed fever, altered mental status, hypoxemia, erythema, and hypotension. Chest CT revealed bilateral pulmonary infiltrates, and blood cultures grew emm1-positive M1UK Streptococcus pyogenes, confirming STSS. Early multidisciplinary intervention resulted in rapid recovery without sequelae. This case emphasizes the importance of considering iGAS-induced STSS in septic shock, especially in immunocompromised patients, and highlights the need for prompt recognition and treatment. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=NishioAyano en-aut-sei=Nishio en-aut-mei=Ayano kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=IwamuroMasaya en-aut-sei=Iwamuro en-aut-mei=Masaya kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=InokuchiToshihiro en-aut-sei=Inokuchi en-aut-mei=Toshihiro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=IshiguroMikako en-aut-sei=Ishiguro en-aut-mei=Mikako kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=AoyamaYuki en-aut-sei=Aoyama en-aut-mei=Yuki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=TakaharaMasahiro en-aut-sei=Takahara en-aut-mei=Masahiro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=HiraokaSakiko en-aut-sei=Hiraoka en-aut-mei=Sakiko kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= en-aut-name=OguniKohei en-aut-sei=Oguni en-aut-mei=Kohei kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=8 ORCID= en-aut-name=HagiyaHideharu en-aut-sei=Hagiya en-aut-mei=Hideharu kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=9 ORCID= en-aut-name=MatsuokaYuto en-aut-sei=Matsuoka en-aut-mei=Yuto kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=10 ORCID= en-aut-name=KanazawaTomoyuki en-aut-sei=Kanazawa en-aut-mei=Tomoyuki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=11 ORCID= en-aut-name=OtsukaMotoyuki en-aut-sei=Otsuka en-aut-mei=Motoyuki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=12 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Department of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Department of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Okayama University Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Department of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Department of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Department of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Department of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=Department of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=8 en-affil=Department of Infectious Diseases, Okayama University Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=9 en-affil=Department of General Medicine, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=10 en-affil=Department of Anesthesiology and Resuscitology, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=11 en-affil=Department of Anesthesiology and Resuscitology, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=12 en-affil=Department of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= en-keyword=crohnfs disease (cd) kn-keyword=crohnfs disease (cd) en-keyword=group a streptococcus kn-keyword=group a streptococcus en-keyword=immunosuppression kn-keyword=immunosuppression en-keyword=intestinal obstruction kn-keyword=intestinal obstruction en-keyword=streptococcal toxic shock syndrome (stss) kn-keyword=streptococcal toxic shock syndrome (stss) END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol= cd-vols= no-issue= article-no= start-page= end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260219 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Induction of IL-9-producing CD8+ T cells by ascochlorin derivatives en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Background and Purpose: Ascochlorin (ASC) is an antiviral antibiotic from the fermented broth of Ascochyta viciae which exerts an inhibitory effect to cancers. Its impact on immune cells has not been examined. In this study, we obtained ASC derivatives with less cytotoxicity and determined whether they affected T cells, indicating possible immune-mediated antitumour effects.
Experimental Approach: Newly synthesised ASC derivatives were screened for inhibitory effects on T-cell antigen receptor (TCR)-stimulated proliferative responses using murine CD4+ and CD8+ T cells. Two compounds were identified that exhibited >10-fold less toxicity compared with ASC. N184, the less toxic of the two, was analysed for its in vivo antitumour effects, and in vitro effects on CD8+ T-cell proliferation, survival, cytokine production and exhaustion, using microscopy, qPCR and flow cytometry.
Key Results: N184 induced limited IL-9 production in CD8+ T cells following TCR stimulation, thereby improving cell survival. It also enhanced cytokine production in the late phase of proliferation and suppressed the induction of exhaustion. N184 suppressed tumour growth in mice in a CD8+ T cell-dependent manner. The effect was partially prevented by an IL-9-neutralising antibody.
Conclusion and Implications: N184 induces differentiation of IL-9-producing CD8+ T cells in vitro and elicits antitumour immunity in an IL-9-dependent manner. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=ImanoNatsumi en-aut-sei=Imano en-aut-mei=Natsumi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=NishidaMikako en-aut-sei=Nishida en-aut-mei=Mikako kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=TokumasuMiho en-aut-sei=Tokumasu en-aut-mei=Miho kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=ZhaoWeiyang en-aut-sei=Zhao en-aut-mei=Weiyang kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=YamashitaNahoko en-aut-sei=Yamashita en-aut-mei=Nahoko kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=UdonoHeiichiro en-aut-sei=Udono en-aut-mei=Heiichiro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Department of Immunology, Okayama University Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Department of Metabolic Immune Regulation, Okayama University Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Department of Immunology, Okayama University Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Department of Immunology, Okayama University Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Department of Metabolic Immune Regulation, Okayama University Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Department of Metabolic Immune Regulation, Okayama University Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= en-keyword=ascochlorin derivative kn-keyword=ascochlorin derivative en-keyword=CD8 positive T lymphocytes kn-keyword=CD8 positive T lymphocytes en-keyword=cell survival kn-keyword=cell survival en-keyword=IFN-ƒÁ kn-keyword=IFN-ƒÁ en-keyword=interleukin-9 kn-keyword=interleukin-9 en-keyword=Tc9 kn-keyword=Tc9 en-keyword=tumour immunity kn-keyword=tumour immunity END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=19 cd-vols= no-issue=2 article-no= start-page=110 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260201 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=A Slide Annotation System with Multimodal Analysis for Video Presentation Review en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=With the rapid growth of online presentations, there has been an increasing need for efficient review of recorded materials. In typical presentations, speakers verbally elaborate on each slide, providing details not captured in the slides themselves. Automatically extracting and embedding these verbal explanations at their corresponding slide locations can greatly enhance the review process for audiences. This paper presents a Slide Annotation System that employs a robust hybrid two-stage detector to identify slide boundaries, extracts slide text through Optical Character Recognition (OCR), transcribes narration, and employs a multimodal Large Language Model (LLM) to generate concise, context-aware annotations that are added to their corresponding slide locations. For evaluations, the technical performance was validated on five recorded presentations, while the user experience was assessed by 37 participants. The results showed that the system achieved a macro-average ?1 score of 0.879 (??=0.024, 95% ??[0.849,0.909]) for slide segmentation and 90.0% accuracy (95% ??[74.4%,96.5%]) for annotation alignment. Subjective evaluations revealed high annotation validity and usefulness as rated by presenters, and a high System Usability Scale (SUS) score of 80.5 (??=6.7, 95% ??[78.3,82.7]). Qualitative feedback further confirmed that the system effectively streamlined the review process, enabling users to locate key information more efficiently than standard video playback. These findings demonstrate the strong potential of the proposed system as an effective automated annotation system. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=HazAmma Liesvarastranta en-aut-sei=Haz en-aut-mei=Amma Liesvarastranta kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=BrataKomang Candra en-aut-sei=Brata en-aut-mei=Komang Candra kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=FunabikiNobuo en-aut-sei=Funabiki en-aut-mei=Nobuo kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=KyawHtoo Htoo Sandi en-aut-sei=Kyaw en-aut-mei=Htoo Htoo Sandi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=FajriantiEvianita Dewi en-aut-sei=Fajrianti en-aut-mei=Evianita Dewi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=SukaridhotoSritrusta en-aut-sei=Sukaridhoto en-aut-mei=Sritrusta kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Department of Information and Communication Systems, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Department of Information and Communication Systems, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Department of Information and Communication Systems, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Department of Information and Communication Systems, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Human Centric Multimedia Research Laboratory, Department of Informatic and Computer Engineering, Politeknik Elektronika Negeri Surabaya kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Human Centric Multimedia Research Laboratory, Department of Informatic and Computer Engineering, Politeknik Elektronika Negeri Surabaya kn-affil= en-keyword=slide annotation kn-keyword=slide annotation en-keyword=multimodal analysis kn-keyword=multimodal analysis en-keyword=speech-to-text kn-keyword=speech-to-text en-keyword=LLM kn-keyword=LLM en-keyword=SUS kn-keyword=SUS END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=17 cd-vols= no-issue=1 article-no= start-page=65 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=20260109 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=An SQL Query Description Problem with AI Assistance for an SQL Programming Learning Assistant System en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Today, relational databases are widely used in information systems. SQL (structured query language) is taught extensively in universities and professional schools across the globe as a programming language for its data management and accesses. Previously, we have studied a web-based programming learning assistant system (PLAS) to help novice students learn popular programming languages by themselves through solving various types of exercises. For SQL programming, we have implemented the grammar-concept understanding problem (GUP) and the comment insertion problem (CIP) for its initial studies. In this paper, we propose an SQL Query Description Problem (SDP) as a new exercise type for describing the SQL query to a specified request in a MySQL database system. To reduce teachersf preparation workloads, we integrate a generative AI-assisted SQL query generator to automatically generate a new SDP instance with a given dataset. An SDP instance consists of a table, a set of questions and corresponding queries. Answer correctness is determined by enhanced string matching against an answer module that includes multiple semantically equivalent canonical queries. For evaluation, we generated 11 SDP instances on basic topics using the generator, where we found that Gemini 3.0 Pro exhibited higher pedagogical consistency compared to ChatGPT-5.0, achieving perfect scores in Sensibleness, Topicality, and Readiness metrics. Then, we assigned the generated instances to 32 undergraduate students at the Indonesian Institute of Business and Technology (INSTIKI). The results showed an average correct answer rate of 95.2% and a mean SUS score of 78, which demonstrates strong initial student performance and system acceptance. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=WardaniNi Wayan en-aut-sei=Wardani en-aut-mei=Ni Wayan kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=FunabikiNobuo en-aut-sei=Funabiki en-aut-mei=Nobuo kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=KyawHtoo Htoo Sandi en-aut-sei=Kyaw en-aut-mei=Htoo Htoo Sandi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=ZhuZihao en-aut-sei=Zhu en-aut-mei=Zihao kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=KotamaI Nyoman Darma en-aut-sei=Kotama en-aut-mei=I Nyoman Darma kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=SugiartawanPutu en-aut-sei=Sugiartawan en-aut-mei=Putu kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=PutraI Nyoman Agus Suarya en-aut-sei=Putra en-aut-mei=I Nyoman Agus Suarya kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Graduate School of Environmental, Life, Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Graduate School of Environmental, Life, Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Graduate School of Environmental, Life, Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Graduate School of Environmental, Life, Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Graduate School of Environmental, Life, Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Graduate School of Environmental, Life, Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=Faculty of Business and Creative Design, Indonesian Institute of Business and Technology kn-affil= en-keyword=database programming kn-keyword=database programming en-keyword=SQL query description problem (SDP) kn-keyword=SQL query description problem (SDP) en-keyword=self-study kn-keyword=self-study en-keyword=programming learning assistant system (PLAS) kn-keyword=programming learning assistant system (PLAS) en-keyword=generative AI kn-keyword=generative AI END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=5 cd-vols= no-issue=1 article-no= start-page=2 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2025 dt-pub=20251226 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=A Threshold Selection Method in Code Plagiarism Checking Function for Code Writing Problem in Java Programming Learning Assistant System Considering AI-Generated Codes en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=To support novice learners, the Java programming learning assistant system (JPLAS) has been developed with various features. Among them, code writing problem (CWP) assigns writing an answer code that passes a given test code. The correctness of an answer code is validated by running it on JUnit. In previous works, we implemented a code plagiarism checking function that calculates the similarity score for each pair of answer codes based on the Levenshtein distance. When the score is higher than a given threshold, this pair is regarded as plagiarism. However, a method for finding the proper threshold has not been studied. In addition, AI-generated codes have become threats in plagiarism, as AI has grown in popularity, which should be investigated. In this paper, we propose a threshold selection method based on Tukeyfs IQR fences. It uses a custom upper threshold derived from the statistical distribution of similarity scores for each assignment. To better accommodate skewed similarity distributions, the method introduces a simple percentile-based adjustment for determining the upper threshold. We also design prompts to generate answer codes using generative AI and apply them to four AI models. For evaluation, we used a total of 745 source codes of two datasets. The first dataset consists of 420 answer codes across 12 CWP instances from 35 first-year undergraduate students in the State Polytechnic of Malang, Indonesia (POLINEMA). The second dataset includes 325 answer codes across five CWP assignments from 65 third-year undergraduate students at Okayama University, Japan. The applications of our proposals found the following: (1) any pair of student codes whose score is higher than the selected threshold has some evidence of plagiarism, (2) some student codes have a higher similarity than the threshold with AI-generated codes, indicating the use of generative AI, and (3) multiple AI models can generate code that resembles student-written code, despite adopting different implementations. The validity of our proposal is confirmed. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=PermatasariPerwira Annissa Dyah en-aut-sei=Permatasari en-aut-mei=Perwira Annissa Dyah kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=MentariMustika en-aut-sei=Mentari en-aut-mei=Mustika kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=KinariSafira Adine en-aut-sei=Kinari en-aut-mei=Safira Adine kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=AungSoe Thandar en-aut-sei=Aung en-aut-mei=Soe Thandar kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=FunabikiNobuo en-aut-sei=Funabiki en-aut-mei=Nobuo kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=KyawHtoo Htoo Sandi en-aut-sei=Kyaw en-aut-mei=Htoo Htoo Sandi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=WaiKhaing Hsu en-aut-sei=Wai en-aut-mei=Khaing Hsu kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Graduate School of Environmental, Life, Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Graduate School of Environmental, Life, Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Graduate School of Environmental, Life, Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Graduate School of Environmental, Life, Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Graduate School of Environmental, Life, Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Graduate School of Environmental, Life, Natural Science and Technology, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=Graduate School of Engineering Science, Akita University kn-affil= en-keyword=Java programming learning kn-keyword=Java programming learning en-keyword=JPLAS kn-keyword=JPLAS en-keyword=JUnit kn-keyword=JUnit en-keyword=code writing problem kn-keyword=code writing problem en-keyword=plagiarism kn-keyword=plagiarism en-keyword=Levenshtein distance kn-keyword=Levenshtein distance en-keyword=threshold kn-keyword=threshold en-keyword=IQR kn-keyword=IQR en-keyword=AI-generated kn-keyword=AI-generated END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=14 cd-vols= no-issue=24 article-no= start-page=4967 end-page= dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2025 dt-pub=20251218 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=An AI-Driven System for Learning MQTT Communication Protocols with Python Programming en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=With rapid developments of wireless communication and Internet of Things (IoT) technologies, an increasing number of devices and sensors are interconnected, generating massive amounts of data in real time. Among the underlying protocols, Message Queuing Telemetry Transport (MQTT) has become a widely adopted lightweight publish?subscribe standard due to its simplicity, minimal overhead, and scalability. Then, understanding such protocols is essential for students and engineers engaging in IoT application system designs. However, teaching and learning MQTT remains challenging for them. Its asynchronous architecture, hierarchical topic structure, and constituting concepts such as retained messages, Quality of Service (QoS) levels, and wildcard subscriptions are often difficult for beginners. Moreover, traditional learning resources emphasize theory and provide limited hands-on guidance, leading to a steep learning curve. To address these challenges, we propose an AI-assisted, exercise-based learning platform for MQTT. This platform provides interactive exercises with intelligent feedback to bridge the gap between theory and practice. To lower the barrier for learners, all code examples for executing MQTT communication are implemented in Python for readability, and Docker is used to ensure portable deployments of the MQTT broker and AI assistant. For evaluations, we conducted a usability study using two groups. The first group, who has no prior experience, focused on fundamental concepts with AI-guided exercises. The second group, who has relevant background, engaged in advanced projects to apply and reinforce their knowledge. The results show that the proposed platform supports learners at different levels, reduces frustrations, and improves both engagement and efficiency. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=ZhuZihao en-aut-sei=Zhu en-aut-mei=Zihao kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=FunabikiNobuo en-aut-sei=Funabiki en-aut-mei=Nobuo kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=Sandi KyawHtoo Htoo en-aut-sei=Sandi Kyaw en-aut-mei=Htoo Htoo kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=KotamaI Nyoman Darma en-aut-sei=Kotama en-aut-mei=I Nyoman Darma kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=PradhanaAnak Agung Surya en-aut-sei=Pradhana en-aut-mei=Anak Agung Surya kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=RahmadaniAlfiandi Aulia en-aut-sei=Rahmadani en-aut-mei=Alfiandi Aulia kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=Noprianto en-aut-sei=Noprianto en-aut-mei= kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Department of Information and Communication Systems, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Department of Information and Communication Systems, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Department of Information and Communication Systems, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Department of Information and Communication Systems, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Department of Information and Communication Systems, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Department of Information and Communication Systems, Okayama University kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=Department of Information and Communication Systems, Okayama University kn-affil= en-keyword=IoT kn-keyword=IoT en-keyword=MQTT protocol kn-keyword=MQTT protocol en-keyword=AI-assisted learning kn-keyword=AI-assisted learning en-keyword=exercise-based education kn-keyword=exercise-based education en-keyword=Python programming kn-keyword=Python programming en-keyword=docker kn-keyword=docker en-keyword=learning platform kn-keyword=learning platform END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=80 cd-vols= no-issue=1 article-no= start-page=63 end-page=67 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=202602 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Metastatic Intraocular Tumor Likely from Hepatocellular Carcinoma Mimicking Panuveitis en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=A 77-year-old man undergoing treatment for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) presented with blurred vision in his right eye, persisting for 2 months. Slit-lamp microscopy and fundus examination revealed inflammatory cells in the anterior chamber, severe vitreous opacities, and retinal vasculitis in the right eye. The patient underwent vitreous surgery with biopsy, and vitreous cytology confirmed a metastatic intraocular tumor originating from the HCC. Radiotherapy was administered to the right eye, with no recurrence of intraocular inflammation observed at 10 months post-irradiation. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=TakasuEri en-aut-sei=Takasu en-aut-mei=Eri kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=ShiodeYusuke en-aut-sei=Shiode en-aut-mei=Yusuke kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=KindoHiroya en-aut-sei=Kindo en-aut-mei=Hiroya kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=KimuraShuhei en-aut-sei=Kimura en-aut-mei=Shuhei kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=HosokawaMio en-aut-sei=Hosokawa en-aut-mei=Mio kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=MatobaRyo en-aut-sei=Matoba en-aut-mei=Ryo kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=KanzakiYuki en-aut-sei=Kanzaki en-aut-mei=Yuki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= en-aut-name=MoritaTetsuro en-aut-sei=Morita en-aut-mei=Tetsuro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=8 ORCID= en-aut-name=AdachiTakuya en-aut-sei=Adachi en-aut-mei=Takuya kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=9 ORCID= en-aut-name=OtsukaMotoyuki en-aut-sei=Otsuka en-aut-mei=Motoyuki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=10 ORCID= en-aut-name=MorizaneYuki en-aut-sei=Morizane en-aut-mei=Yuki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=11 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Department of Ophthalmology, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Department of Ophthalmology, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Department of Ophthalmology, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Department of Ophthalmology, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Department of Ophthalmology, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Department of Ophthalmology, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=Department of Ophthalmology, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=8 en-affil=Department of Ophthalmology, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=9 en-affil=Department of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=10 en-affil=Department of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= affil-num=11 en-affil=Department of Ophthalmology, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences kn-affil= en-keyword=metastatic intraocular tumor kn-keyword=metastatic intraocular tumor en-keyword=hepatocellular carcinoma kn-keyword=hepatocellular carcinoma en-keyword=panuveitis kn-keyword=panuveitis en-keyword=uveitis masquerade syndrome kn-keyword=uveitis masquerade syndrome END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=80 cd-vols= no-issue=1 article-no= start-page=55 end-page=62 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=202602 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Changes in Prescribing Patterns of Antiviral Drugs before and after Public Coverage Termination among Hospitalized COVID-19 Patients in Regional Hospitals in Japan: A Retrospective, Multicenter Study en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=In Japan, antiviral agents for COVID-19 were freely available until September 2023 as part of national policy. This study evaluated changes in these agentsf prescribing patterns and the patient outcomes following the policy shift. We conducted a multicenter retrospective study at four hospitals in Japanfs Okayama and Kagawa prefectures from January 2022 to March 2024. The study period was divided into the public-expenditure phase (January 2022 to September 2023) and the post-expenditure phase (October 2023 to March 2024). We extracted the hospitalized patientsf clinical data from the electronic database. The studyfs primary outcome was the antiviral prescription rate; the secondary outcome was in-hospital mortality. Among the 302 hospitalized patients (median age 85 years), 52.0% were classified as having a mild condition. Of the patients with mild conditions, 37.7% were diagnosed in outpatient settings prior to hospitalization. During the public-expenditure phase, 47.4% of the patients received antivirals as outpatients, mainly molnupiravir (80.9%). In the post-expenditure period, 80.0% of the patients were prescribed antivirals, mostly molnupiravir (91.7%). The antiviral prescription rate was significantly higher after the policy change. The overall in-hospital mortality was 15.8%, with no significant difference between the two periods (17.0% vs. 10.5%). Despite the termination of government funding, antiviral prescriptions remained frequent at community hospitals located in highly aging regions of western Japan such as Okayama and Kagawa prefectures. Mortality remains high among the elderly, highlighting the need for continued antiviral therapy and booster vaccinations. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=AkazawaHidemasa en-aut-sei=Akazawa en-aut-mei=Hidemasa kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=HagiyaHideharu en-aut-sei=Hagiya en-aut-mei=Hideharu kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=FukushimaShinnosuke en-aut-sei=Fukushima en-aut-mei=Shinnosuke kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=YamamotoShohei en-aut-sei=Yamamoto en-aut-mei=Shohei kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=NakanoYasuhiro en-aut-sei=Nakano en-aut-mei=Yasuhiro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=OtsukaFumio en-aut-sei=Otsuka en-aut-mei=Fumio kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Department of General Medicine, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Department of Infectious Diseases, Okayama University Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Department of Infectious Diseases, Okayama University Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Department of General Medicine, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Department of General Medicine, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Department of General Medicine, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences, kn-affil= en-keyword=coronavirus disease 2019 kn-keyword=coronavirus disease 2019 en-keyword=public expenditure kn-keyword=public expenditure en-keyword=prescribing pattern kn-keyword=prescribing pattern en-keyword=prognosis kn-keyword=prognosis en-keyword=Japan kn-keyword=Japan END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=80 cd-vols= no-issue=1 article-no= start-page=47 end-page=54 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=202602 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Time Course of the Development and Loss of Delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol Tolerance: Effects on Hypothermia and Spontaneous Locomotor Activity in Mice en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=Deregulation of cannabis use is gradually expanding in Europe and the United States. However, the biological processes driving tolerance to delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol (ƒ¢9-THC), the main psychoactive component of cannabis, remain unclear. Thus, this study aimed to investigate the mechanisms and time course of tolerance development and loss to ƒ¢9-THC in mice. Male ICR mice (7 weeks old) were administered ƒ¢9-THC once daily for 3 days and then divided into three groups according to the washout period (3-, 10-, and 17-day washout groups). After each washout, changes in body temperature and locomotor activity were measured following re-exposure to ƒ¢9-THC. Furthermore, the mRNA expression levels of CB1 and CB2 receptors in the brain were evaluated using real-time PCR. On day 1, significant hypothermia and reduced spontaneous locomotor activity were observed in the ƒ¢9-THC-treated mice compared with the vehicle-treated mice. Tolerance to the hypothermic and locomotor-suppressing effects of ƒ¢9-THC developed on days 2 and 3, respectively, and dissipated after 3 and 11 days of washout, respectively. These differences in the rates of tolerance development and recovery may reflect distinct underlying mechanisms. No significant changes in receptor mRNA expression were observed. These findings highlight the complexity of ƒ¢9-THC tolerance and its potential implications for long-term cannabis use. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=EguchiYukiomi en-aut-sei=Eguchi en-aut-mei=Yukiomi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=UshioSoichiro en-aut-sei=Ushio en-aut-mei=Soichiro kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=IrieKeiichi en-aut-sei=Irie en-aut-mei=Keiichi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=YamashitaYuta en-aut-sei=Yamashita en-aut-mei=Yuta kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=EguchiMiyu en-aut-sei=Eguchi en-aut-mei=Miyu kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=NakanoTakafumi en-aut-sei=Nakano en-aut-mei=Takafumi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=MishimaKenichi en-aut-sei=Mishima en-aut-mei=Kenichi kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Department of Physiology and Pharmacology, Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Fukuoka University kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Department of Emergency and Disaster Medical Pharmacy, Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Fukuoka University kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Department of Physiology and Pharmacology, Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Fukuoka University kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Department of Physiology and Pharmacology, Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Fukuoka University kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Department of Emergency and Disaster Medical Pharmacy, Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Fukuoka University kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Department of Oncology and Infectious Disease Pharmacy, Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Fukuoka University kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=Department of Physiology and Pharmacology, Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Fukuoka University kn-affil= en-keyword=delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol kn-keyword=delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol en-keyword=cannabis kn-keyword=cannabis en-keyword=tolerance kn-keyword=tolerance en-keyword=locomotor kn-keyword=locomotor en-keyword=hypothermic kn-keyword=hypothermic END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=80 cd-vols= no-issue=1 article-no= start-page=39 end-page=46 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=202602 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=Kinesiophobia Is Associated with Disability, Poor Quality of Life, Psychological Morbidity, and Surgery Dissatisfaction in Patients with Lumbar Microdiscetomy: A Cross-Sectional Controlled Study en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=The study aimed to determine the prevalence of kinesiophobia in patients who had undergone lumbar microdiscectomy and to examine its associations with pain intensity, disability, quality of life, depression, anxiety, and satisfaction with surgery. Forty-eight patients with microdiscectomy and 48 healthy controls were enrolled. The Tampa Scale for Kinesiophobia (TSK), Roland-Morris Disability Index (RMDI), Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS-A and HADS-D, respectively), and Short Form-36 Health Survey (SF-36) were administered to both groups. The scores of TSK, RMDI, HADS-A, and HADS-D were significantly higher and SF-36 scores were significantly lower in the microdiscectomy than the control group (p<0.001 for all). In the microdiscectomy group, median (min-max) RMDI, HADS-A, and HADS-D scores were 19 (4-34), 10 (0-18), and 9 (0-18), respectively, in kinesiophobic patients, and were significantly higher than 6 (2-20), 3 (0-11), 2.5 (0-11) in non-kinesiophobic patients (all p<0.001). The median (min-max) SF-36 PCS, SF-36 MCS, and VAS scores for surgery satisfaction were 36.5 (8.7-75), 52.1 (11-95), 5, 5 (0-10), respectively, in kinesiophobic patients and were significantly lower than 71 (28-95), 85.5 (9-93), 8.5 (3-10) in non-kinesiophobic patients (all p<0.05). TSK scores were significantly correlated with RMDI, HADS-A, HADS-D, SF-36, and surgery satisfaction scores (all p<0.05). Kinesiophobic patients with lumbar microdiscectomy therefore showed greater disability and psychological morbidity, poorer quality of life, and lower satisfaction with surgery. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=TezelNihal en-aut-sei=Tezel en-aut-mei=Nihal kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=CanAsl? Gen?ay en-aut-sei=Can en-aut-mei=Asl? Gen?ay kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Department of Physical and Rehabilitation Medicine, Health Sciences University kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Department of Physical and Rehabilitation Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Ankara Y?ld?r?m Beyaz?t University kn-affil= en-keyword=kinesiophobia kn-keyword=kinesiophobia en-keyword=microdiscectomy kn-keyword=microdiscectomy en-keyword=disability kn-keyword=disability en-keyword=quality of life kn-keyword=quality of life en-keyword=depression kn-keyword=depression END start-ver=1.4 cd-journal=joma no-vol=80 cd-vols= no-issue=1 article-no= start-page=31 end-page=37 dt-received= dt-revised= dt-accepted= dt-pub-year=2026 dt-pub=202602 dt-online= en-article= kn-article= en-subject= kn-subject= en-title= kn-title=The Preoperative Anterior Pelvic Plane Angle Predicts Cup Anteversion Changes at 1 Year after Total Hip Arthroplasty en-subtitle= kn-subtitle= en-abstract= kn-abstract=We investigated global alignment changes following total hip arthroplasty (THA) and predictive alignment parameters for increased cup anteversion (CA) by retrospectively analyzing the primary THA data of 75 patients treated at our hospital (49 women, 26 men; age 65.1}5.7 years, BMI 28.3}3.4 kg/m2). Global alignment parameters, i.e., the anterior pelvic plane angle (APPa) and proximal femoral shaft angle (PFSa) and other alignment parameters were measured. CA was evaluated based on the patientsf standing coronal radiographs. ƒ¢CA was defined as the difference in CA from 2 weeks before to 1 year after each THA. We classified the cases as stable (S) (CA < 10‹; n=63) and pelvic retroversion (R) (CA ? 10‹; n=12) groups. Associations between ƒ¢CA and alignment parameters were evaluated by linear regression and a receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analysis. A significant decrease in the PFSa occurred between the 2-week and 1-year post-THA timepoints (7.8}4.3‹ vs. 4.2}3.6‹, p<0.001), with no notable change in other alignment parameters. At 1-year post-THA, the CA of 12 (16%) patients had increased to 4.5}4.4‹. Only the preoperative APPa was positively associated with ƒ¢CA (ƒÀ=0.165, p=0.020). The ROC analysis revealed that the optimal cut-off value for increased CA in the APPa is 2.1‹ (area under the curve, 0.700; p=0.020; odds ratio, 4.80). The APPa change predicted increased CA, which emphasizes the importance of the use of preoperative standing radiography for identifying the optimal cup positioning for post-THA changes in CA. en-copyright= kn-copyright= en-aut-name=IshibashiKyota en-aut-sei=Ishibashi en-aut-mei=Kyota kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=1 ORCID= en-aut-name=OishiHirotaka en-aut-sei=Oishi en-aut-mei=Hirotaka kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=2 ORCID= en-aut-name=ArakiRyo en-aut-sei=Araki en-aut-mei=Ryo kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=3 ORCID= en-aut-name=KawamuraKosuke en-aut-sei=Kawamura en-aut-mei=Kosuke kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=4 ORCID= en-aut-name=SasakiIsamu en-aut-sei=Sasaki en-aut-mei=Isamu kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=5 ORCID= en-aut-name=SasakiEiji en-aut-sei=Sasaki en-aut-mei=Eiji kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=6 ORCID= en-aut-name=KamadaHikaru en-aut-sei=Kamada en-aut-mei=Hikaru kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=7 ORCID= en-aut-name=KogawaMasakazu en-aut-sei=Kogawa en-aut-mei=Masakazu kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=8 ORCID= en-aut-name=TanakaSunao en-aut-sei=Tanaka en-aut-mei=Sunao kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=9 ORCID= en-aut-name=NumasawaTakuya en-aut-sei=Numasawa en-aut-mei=Takuya kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=10 ORCID= en-aut-name=IshibashiYasuyuki en-aut-sei=Ishibashi en-aut-mei=Yasuyuki kn-aut-name= kn-aut-sei= kn-aut-mei= aut-affil-num=11 ORCID= affil-num=1 en-affil=Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Hachinohe City Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=2 en-affil=Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Hachinohe City Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=3 en-affil=Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Hachinohe City Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=4 en-affil=Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Hachinohe City Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=5 en-affil=Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Hachinohe City Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=6 en-affil=Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Hirosaki University Graduate School of Medicine kn-affil= affil-num=7 en-affil=Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Hachinohe City Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=8 en-affil=Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Hachinohe City Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=9 en-affil=Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Hachinohe City Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=10 en-affil=Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Hachinohe City Hospital kn-affil= affil-num=11 en-affil=Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Hirosaki University Graduate School of Medicine kn-affil= en-keyword=total hip arthroplasty kn-keyword=total hip arthroplasty en-keyword=global alignment kn-keyword=global alignment en-keyword=anterior pelvic plane kn-keyword=anterior pelvic plane en-keyword=cup anteversion kn-keyword=cup anteversion en-keyword=pelvic tilt kn-keyword=pelvic tilt END