Publications by authors named "Kitade K"

Background: Spinal cord injury (SCI) is a devastating disease that results in permanent paralysis. Currently, there is no effective treatment for SCI, and it is important to identify factors that can provide therapeutic intervention during the course of the disease. Zinc, an essential trace element, has attracted attention as a regulator of inflammatory responses.

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Neonatal spinal cord injury (SCI) shows better functional outcomes than adult SCI. Although the regenerative capability in the neonatal spinal cord may have cues in the treatment of adult SCI, the mechanism underlying neonatal spinal cord regeneration after SCI is unclear. We previously reported age-dependent variation in the pathogenesis of inflammation after SCI.

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After spinal cord injury (SCI), inflammatory cells such as macrophages infiltrate the injured area, and astrocytes migrate, forming a glial scar around macrophages. The glial scar inhibits axonal regeneration, resulting in significant permanent disability. However, the mechanism through which glial scar-forming astrocytes migrate to the injury site has not been clarified.

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Article Synopsis
  • Joint contracture is a permanent mobility disorder caused by factors like trauma and aging, primarily due to joint capsule fibrosis, but the exact molecular reasons are still unclear.
  • A mouse model study revealed that increased levels of the protein periostin (POSTN) in joint capsules are linked to irreversible contractures, with significant fibrosis observed.
  • Treatment with POSTN-neutralizing antibodies showed promise in reducing contracture severity, highlighting POSTN as a potential target for future therapies to address joint contracture.
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After spinal cord injury (SCI), inflammatory cells such as macrophages infiltrate the injured area, and astrocytes migrate, forming a glial scar around macrophages. The glial scar inhibits axonal regeneration, resulting in significant permanent disability. However, the mechanism by which glial scar-forming astrocytes migrate to the injury site has not been clarified.

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Spinal cord injury (SCI) causes reactive astrogliosis, the sequential phenotypic change of astrocytes in which naïve astrocytes (NAs) transform into reactive astrocytes (RAs) and subsequently become scar-forming astrocytes (SAs), resulting in glial scar formation around the lesion site and thereby limiting axonal regeneration and motor/sensory functional recovery. Inhibiting the transformation of RAs into SAs in the acute phase attenuates the reactive astrogliosis and promotes regeneration. However, whether or not SAs once formed can revert to RAs or SAs is unclear.

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Objectives: This study aimed to clarify the relationship between vitamin D status and complications after periacetabular osteotomy.

Methods: A total of 46 hips of 39 patients (3 men and 36 women; mean age at surgery, 41.0 years; mean postoperative follow-up duration, 63 months) were reviewed to obtain the following information: patients' serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D [25(OH)D] status, prevalence of postoperative delayed union of osteotomy sites in the greater trochanter (DUGT) and ischiopubic stress fractures (IPSFs), and risk factors.

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In crush syndrome, massive muscle breakdown resulting from ischemia-reperfusion muscle injury can be a life-threatening condition that requires urgent treatment. Blood reperfusion into the ischemic muscle triggers an immediate inflammatory response, and neutrophils are the first to infiltrate and exacerbate the muscle damage. Since free zinc ion play a critical role in the immune system and the function of neutrophils is impaired by zinc depletion, we hypothesized that the administration of a zinc chelator would be effective for suppressing the inflammatory reaction at the site of ischemia-reperfusion injury and for improving of the pathology of crush syndrome.

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Study Design: Basic science study.

Objective: The aim of this study was to examine whether epidural fat tissue (EFT) transplantation can prevent epidural adhesion after laminectomy more efficiently than subcutaneous fat tissue (SFT) transplantation.

Summary Of Background Data: Epidural adhesion is almost inevitable after laminectomy.

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Background: It is still unclear whether morphological changes in hip disorders is a pathogenic or independent factor for the variations in leg alignment. The purpose of this study was to elucidate the characteristics of the change in leg alignment after total hip arthroplasty (THA) and the morphological factors affecting the ipsilateral and contralateral leg alignment.

Methods: Both pre-operative and post-operative bilateral whole-leg radiographs in the standing position were taken in 100 patients who underwent THA.

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Tumor prostheses for the lower limb following resection of musculoskeletal tumors is useful limb salvage management; however, as compared with routine total joint replacement, an increased incidence of deep periprosthetic infection of tumor prosthesis has been observed. The risk factors for periprosthetic infection of tumor prosthesis remain unclear. This study examines the risk factors and outcomes of periprosthetic infection.

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Aims: Appropriate acetabular component placement has been proposed for prevention of postoperative dislocation in total hip arthroplasty (THA). Manual placements often cause outliers in spite of attempts to insert the component within the intended safe zone; therefore, some surgeons routinely evaluate intraoperative pelvic radiographs to exclude excessive acetabular component malposition. However, their evaluation is often ambiguous in case of the tilted or rotated pelvic position.

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This study was designed to evaluate the effect of discontinuing oral beta2-stimulant in patients with asthma who were being treated with multiple medications. Thirty-two asthmatics controlled under multiple medications who had a stable PEF were entered. Patient symptoms, PEF, FEV10, V75,V50, and V25 were evaluated before and after discontinuing beta2-stimulant.

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Changes in plasma concentrations of GH and insulin in response to feeding and stimulation with GH-releasing hormone (GHRH) or GH-releasing peptide (GHRP-6, a ligand for endogenous GH secretagogue receptors) were compared between 3-week-old (milk-fed) and 12-week-old (concentrate and hay-fed) calves. Feeding of a milk-replacer diet in 3-week-old animals significantly increased the basal (prefeeding) concentrations of GH, insulin and glucose in plasma, whereas feeding of concentrate and hay in 12-week-old animals did not cause a significant change in these traits. However, in the animals maintained on a milk-replacer diet until 12 weeks of age, postprandial plasma GH concentrations and AUC (area under the curve) were not different from those in the age-matched weaned group.

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Histological abnormalities of the atherosclerotic lesion are closely related to the stability of the plaque. Specifically, the plaque is likely to be unstable if the fibrous cap is thin. However, ultrasonic characterization of the atherosclerotic lesion has not been done from this viewpoint.

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Little attention has been paid to carbonic anhydrase VI (CA VI), a secretory type isozyme, in the bovine mammary gland, although the gland is an important exocrine gland and CA VI is known to localize in exocrine glands such as salivary and lacrimal glands in various animal species. In the present study mRNA expression and protein localization of CA VI in isolated gland tissues and in cloned epithelial cells from the mammary gland of Holstein cows (Bos taurus) were observed by reverse transcript polymerase chain reaction and immunocytochemistry. Also, changes of CA VI concentrations in milk were measured for 2 months postpartum by an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay.

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Thirty-two male Holstein calves were used to investigate the effects of nutritional conditions around weaning and aging on carbonic anhydrase (CA) activity in the parotid gland and epithelium from the rumen and abomasum. We fed calf starter and lucerne hay as well as milk replacer (group N) or fed milk replacer either with (group S) or without (group M) administration of short-chain fatty acids (SCFA) through polypropylene tubing into the forestomach until 13 weeks of age. The diets were fed at 1000 hours and 1600 hours, and SCFA were administrated after milk replacer feeding at 1600 hours.

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In order to know the effects of weaning and volatile fatty acid feeding on gastric leptin expression, we investigated the expression of leptin and CCK receptor mRNA in the bovine rumen, abomasum and duodenum using RT-PCR in 3-week-old pre-weaning, 13-week-old post-weaning and adult animals. Leptin mRNA was expressed in the rumen and abomasum of 3-week-old pre-weaning animals, but it was abolished in 13-week-old and adult animals. In the duodenum, leptin expression was observed in the 3-, 13-week-old and adult animals.

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Immunohistochemical study was carried out in patients with collagen vascular disease associated with interstitial pneumonia. The subjects were 16 patients, consisting of seven rheumatoid arthritis (RA), five dermatomyositis (DM) and four progressive systemic sclerosis (PSS), in whom the pathological findings were consistent with usual interstitial pneumonia. Immunohistochemical examinations were performed by the ABC method using antibodies to vimentin (vim), alpha-smooth muscle actin (alpha-SMA), and S-100 protein.

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A 85-year-old man was admitted to our hospital because of semicomatous status. Laboratory data on admission showed elevation of blood sugar (823 mg/dl) and serum osmotic pressure (345 mOsm/l), but ketonuria was not detected. Non-ketotic hyperosmolar diabetic coma was diagnosed.

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"Postoperative erythroderma", the pathogenesis of this disease have solved as graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) due to blood transfusion, is fatal and impossible to cure for the time being. Therefore the prevention against the disease is very important. One woman and three men who underwent an operation and blood transfusion at our department died of this disease.

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