Publications by authors named "I Koide"

Article Synopsis
  • This study examines how chewing movements change in dementia patients, focusing on the relationship between mandibular movement and cognitive function.
  • Sixty-three residents from long-term care facilities chewed rice crackers while their movements were recorded for analysis.
  • Results showed that as cognitive function declined, patients exhibited less circular chewing motions and more linear ones, which may hinder their ability to eat solid foods effectively.
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A previous study suggested the usefulness of pericardial fluid (PCF) and bone marrow aspirate (BMA) for the postmortem analysis of ethanol. The present study reviewed forensic autopsy cases (n = 2,983), which included 683 cases with the following positive toxicological findings, to reassess ethanol distribution and to investigate other gaseous and volatile substances in blood, PCF and BMA. Toxicological analyses detected ethanol (>10 mg/dL, n = 345), acetone (>0.

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A simple and rapid method for the determination of amphetamine (AP) and methamphetamine (MA) in human hair was developed by headspace solid-phase microextraction (SPME) and gas chromatography with nitrogen-phosphorus detection (GC-NPD). The hair (1 mg) was dissolved in 0.2 ml of a 5 M sodium hydroxide solution in a tightly sealed vial by shaking at 75 degrees C for about 5 min.

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To obtain insight into the development of the heterogeneous intracerebral populations of luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone (LHRH) neurons, their spatiotemporal appearance was examined at different stages in normal rat embryos, in nasal epithelial explants in vitro, and in intrauterine nasal-operated embryos. Following the appearance of nerve cell adhesion molecule in the nasal placode at embryonic day (E) 12.5, LHRH neurons, generated in the nasal placode at E13.

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We unilaterally destroyed the nasal radix of rat embryos on day 15.5 of gestation (E15.5) in utero so as to block the olfactory inputs to the ipsilateral forebrain vesicle.

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