Publications by authors named "E Sakuma"

Article Synopsis
  • A study focused on adolescents and young adults (AYA) with cancer found that they have specific end-of-life care needs that differ from older patients, emphasizing the importance of individualized care.
  • Researchers analyzed medical records of 81 AYA patients aged 16-39 who received home palliative care and compared them to over 5,000 older patients, finding that AYA patients had a median home care duration of 28.5 days, shorter than the 40 days for older patients.
  • The study revealed that while the rates of receiving home care were similar between AYA and older patients, the type of care and sedation practices varied by age group, particularly showing more sedation use in older AYAs (30-39 years)
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Objectives: The aim of this study was to evaluate the prevalence of the frontal cell variants according to International Frontal Sinus Anatomy Classification (IFAC), in the population of a Brazilian tertiary hospital, and analyze the reliability of the classification between observers.

Methods: A cross-sectional study in the Hospital de Clínicas of the State University of Campinas, Brazil. One hundred and three Computed Tomography's (CTs) were evaluated by radiologists and otorhinolaryngologist to estimate the prevalence of frontoethmoidal cells according to the IFAC.

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Specific amino acid substitutions in degenerin mechano-gated channels (DEGs) of C. elegans convert these channels into constitutively active mutants that induce the degeneration of neurons where DEGs are expressed. Acid-sensing ion channel-2a (ASIC2a), a proton-gated cation channel predominantly expressed in central neurons, is a mammalian ortholog of DEGs, and it can remain unclosed to be cytotoxic once the same mutations as the DEG mutants are introduced into its gene.

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Schwann cells play an important role in peripheral myelination, and dysfunction of these cells leads to axonal damage. Schwann cells degenerate following peripheral nerve injury. Immature Schwann cells proliferate, differentiate, and support axonal regeneration and extension during recovery.

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Objectives: A precise anatomical understanding of the morphology of the spine is indispensable for neck and low back pain therapy including rehabilitation. However, few studies have directly addressed spinal morphology with a focus on the height of the vertebral body and discs. The aim of the current study was to analyze sex- and age-related changes in the spine by measuring the distance between adjacent centers of the intervertebral disc spaces from the posterior aspect in cadavers and by using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) measurements at the cervical and lumbar vertebral levels.

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