Publications by authors named "Ichiro Isobe"

Article Synopsis
  • A study in Aichi Prefecture, Japan, aims to identify causes of child deaths and propose a method for systematic reviews to improve child death review (CDR) systems.* -
  • Researchers examined clinical medical and autopsy records for children under 15 who died between 2014-2016, finding that 26.8% of these deaths were preventable, while cases of suspected maltreatment were notably higher than government statistics indicate.* -
  • The findings suggest that reviewing clinical records is an effective strategy for identifying potentially preventable deaths and initiating the CDR process in Japan.*
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Objectives: As less autopsies are performed, the need for postmortem computed tomography (PMCT) as an alternative is increasing. It is important to know how postmortem changes over time are reflected on CT, in order to improve the diagnostic capability of PMCT and replace forensic pathology evaluations such as time of death estimation.

Methods: In this study, we examined temporal changes on postmortem chest CT images of a rat model.

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Five autopsy cases of fulminant group A streptococcal infection without gangrene in the extremities are presented. Clinical course of the fulminant illness was short (2-4 days). One pathological autopsy case was aged (86-years-old), and hemorrhagic cystitis was observed.

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DNA methylation in gene promoter regions influences gene expression. Circadian clock genes play an important role in the formation of a biological clock and aberrant methylation of these genes contributes to several disorders. In this study, we examined forensic autopsy specimens to determine whether DNA methylation status in the promoter regions of nine circadian clock genes (Per1, Per2, Per3, Cry1, Cry2, Bmal1, Clock, Tim, and Ck1e) is related to a change in acquired diathesis and/or causes of death.

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Inherited mutations in the human cardiac sodium channel (SCN5A) gene cause arrhythmogenic diseases such as tachyarrhythmia and bradyarrhythmia. Moreover, mutation subsets in the coding region impair SCN5A function, potentially leading to sudden cardiac death (SCD). In the present study, we performed diplotype analysis of the regulatory region of the SCN5A gene in Japanese people who died suddenly because of an unknown cause (sudden death group; n=70) and controls (n=112).

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Glutathione S-transferase (GST) plays a major role in the detoxification of many compounds by conjugation with glutathione. GSTM1 and T1, which are important members of the GST multigene family, are polymorphic in humans. Complete deletion of the gene results in the null genotype and loss of function.

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There are various toxic chemicals that cause cell death. However, in certain cases deleterious agents elicit various cellular responses prior to cell death. To determine the cellular mechanisms by which such cellular responses are induced is important, but sufficient attention has not been paid to this issue to date.

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Reported are 2 autopsy cases in which Y-chromosomal microsatellite short tandem repeats DYS19, DYS389I and II, DYS390, and DYS393 could be haplotyped with vaginal swabs by using a Chelex 100-based DNA extraction method and dual-round polymerase chain reaction. The extraction of DNA from vaginal swabs by using this method was as efficient or more efficient than using proteinase K and phenol-chloroform extraction or the alkaline lysis methods. Y-chromosomal microsatellite short tandem repeats haplotyping based on the dual-round polymerase chain reaction method provided genotypes from all the loci determined.

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On March 20, 1995, the Tokyo subway system was subjected to a horrifying terrorist attack with sarin gas (isopropyl methylphosphonofluoridate) that left 12 persons dead and over 5000 injured. In order to diagnose the definite cause of death of the victims, a new method was developed to detect sarin hydrolysis products in the erythrocytes and formalin-fixed cerebella from four victims of sarin poisoning. Sarin-bound acetylcholinesterase (AChE) was solubilized from the specimens of sarin victims and digested with trypsin.

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The authors report four cases in which severely damaged human remains were identified by mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) sequencing. Degraded DNA was extracted from highly adipoceratous tissues using the phenol-chloroform method and polymerase chain reaction amplified for sequencing of two hypervariable regions, hypervariable region 1 and hypervariable region 2, of mitochondrial DNA. They also sequenced these regions of blood samples that were obtained from the presumptive mother or sister of the human remains.

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A procedure utilizing Chelex 100, chelating resin, was adapted to extract DNA from dental pulp. The procedure was simple and rapid, involved no organic solvents, and did not require multiple tube transfers. The extraction of DNA from dental pulp using this method was as efficient, or more so, than using proteinase K and phenol-chloroform extraction.

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The utility of Y-STR haplotype and mtDNA sequence in personal identification from human remains is demonstrated. In five cases, severely damaged human remains were identified by Y-chromosomal short tandem repeat (STR) (Y-STR) haplotyping and mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) sequencing. DNA was extracted from highly adipoceratous tissues using the phenol-chloroform method and polymerase chain reaction amplified for Y-STR haplotyping and sequencing of two hypervariable regions, HV1 and HV2, of the mtDNA.

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A 65-year-old male patient who was hospitalized with schizophrenia died about 15 min later after ingestion of a large volume of saponated cresol solution in a mental hospital. Fatal levels of free p- and m-cresol in the heart blood were detected at 458.8 and 957.

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The distribution of allele frequency of X-chromosomal STR, DXS10011, from 99 unrelated Japanese, 72 male and 27 female, were determined by PCR amplification and PAGE. At the same time, haplotype frequencies of five Y-chromosomal STR loci, DYS19, DYS389I, DYS389II, DYS390 and DYS393 from male samples were determined.

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Sequence polymorphysms of the mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) control region, hypervariable regions I and II, from 50 unrelated Japanese were determined by PCR amplification and cycle sequencing.

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