Publications by authors named "Kuriki S"

The use of left ventricular assist device (LVAD) implantation has increased in recent years. Here, we report the first case of gastric endoscopic submucosal dissection (ESD) following LVAD implantation. A 69-year-old man who previously underwent LVAD implantation for severe heart failure underwent esophagogastroduodenoscopy, which revealed a 15-mm flat-elevated cancerous lesion at the greater curvature of the gastric angle.

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  • A study analyzed 609 hospitalized Japanese COVID-19 patients to understand the prevalence and severity of gastrointestinal (GI) symptoms.
  • Among the patients, 36% exhibited GI symptoms, with diarrhea being the most common, though the severity of GI issues did not correlate with the severity of COVID-19 infection.
  • Timing of symptoms showed that in patients with both GI and respiratory symptoms, about half had respiratory symptoms first, while others experienced simultaneous or GI symptoms before respiratory ones.
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  • Predicting malignant transformation in pancreatic cyst patients is tough, prompting a study on risk factors.
  • The study reviewed 479 patients from 2008 to 2021, revealing that 9.2% experienced significant changes and 1.7% developed pancreatic cancer.
  • Key predictive factors identified include cyst diameter, main pancreatic duct diameter, multilocular cysts, and inconsistent duct caliber, allowing risk stratification into low, medium, and high-risk groups for better monitoring.
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Electrophysiological studies have demonstrated that theta-band activity is useful for investigating neural mechanisms of memory. However, mechanisms specifically driving memory performance remain poorly understood. In sequential memory, performance can be artificially attenuated by shortening the inter-stimulus interval (ISI) between memory item presentations.

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  • Right-ear advantage is the phenomenon where listeners more accurately identify speech sounds presented to the right ear compared to the left due to the predominance of the left auditory cortex in processing speech.
  • This study used magnetoencephalography to examine how attention affects this advantage while participants listened to pairs of Japanese words presented separately to each ear with varying frequencies.
  • Results showed that exercises requiring attention enhanced the auditory response amplitude, reinforcing the connection between attention allocation and the right-ear advantage, as well as demonstrating increased neural activity in the left auditory cortex.
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  • The study examined the connection between acute colonic diverticulitis and colorectal cancer (CRC) to understand if colonoscopy is necessary to rule out cancer in patients with diverticulitis.
  • Researchers compared the rates of colorectal neoplasia between patients with diverticulitis and asymptomatic patients who had positive fecal immunochemical tests (FITs), analyzing data from 282 diverticulitis patients and 1819 FIT-positive patients.
  • Results showed that while the CRC rates were low and similar after matching the groups by age and sex, the adenoma detection rate (ADR) and polyp detection rate (PDR) were significantly higher in the FIT-positive group, indicating that diverticulitis patients may have fewer adenomas and polyps.
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Fluoroscopy-guided gastrointestinal procedures (FGPs) are increasingly common. However, the radiation exposure (RE) to patients undergoing FGPs is still unclear. We examined the actual RE of FGPs.

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Gaming disorder, which is characterized by multiple cognitive and behavioral symptoms, often has comorbid psychiatric conditions such as depression and attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder. Neurobiological effects of the comorbid disorders so far reported are not converging, exhibiting positive and negative alterations of the connectivity in brain networks. In this study, we conducted resting-state functional magnetic-resonance imaging and whole brain functional connectivity analyses for young participants consisting of 40 patients diagnosed with the gaming disorder, with and without comorbid conditions, and 29 healthy controls.

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Speech-induced suppression is the normal, relative amplitude reduction of the auditory evoked potential for self-, compared to externally-generated, auditory stimulation. It remains controversial as to whether adults who stutter exhibit expected auditory modulation during speech; some studies have reported a significant difference between stuttering and fluent groups in speech-induced suppression during speech movement planning, while others have not. We compared auditory evoked potentials (N1 component) for auditory feedback arising from one's own voice (Speaking condition) with passive listening to a recording of one's own voice (Listening condition) in 24 normally-fluent speakers and 16 adults who stutter under various delayed auditory feedback (DAF) time conditions (100 ms, 200 ms, 500 ms, and 1,000 ms).

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Background: Locomotion, which is one of the most basic motor functions, is critical for performing various daily-life activities. Despite its essential function, assessment of brain activity during lower-limb movement is still limited because of the constraints of existing brain imaging methods.

New Method: Here, we describe an MR-compatible, cylindrical treadmill device that allows participants to perform stepping movements on an MRI scanner table.

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Group musical improvisation is thought to be akin to conversation, and therapeutically has been shown to be effective at improving communicativeness, sociability, creative expression, and overall psychological health. To understand these therapeutic effects, clarifying the nature of brain activity during improvisational cognition is important. Some insight regarding brain activity during improvisational music cognition has been gained via functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) and electroencephalography (EEG).

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Affective states, such as anticipatory anxiety, critically influence speech communication behavior in adults who stutter. However, there is currently little evidence regarding the involvement of the limbic system in speech disfluency during interpersonal communication. We designed this neuroimaging study and experimental procedure to sample neural activity during interpersonal communication between human participants, and to investigate the relationship between the amygdala activity and speech disfluency.

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The auditory "octave illusion" arises when dichotic tones, presented one octave apart, alternate rapidly between the ears. This study aimed to explore the link between the perception of illusory pitches and brain activity during presentation of dichotic tones. We conducted a behavioral study of how participants perceived binaural dichotic tones of octave illusions and classified them, based on the reported percepts, in an illusion (ILL) group, without an illusion (non-ILL) group, and others.

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Exposure of humans to unusual spaces is effective to observe the adaptive strategy for an environment. Though adaptation to such spaces has been typically tested with vision, little has been examined about adaptation to left-right reversed audition, partially due to the apparatus for adaptation. Thus, it is unclear if the adaptive effects reach early auditory processing.

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Alpha-band rhythm is thought to be involved in memory processes, similarly to other spontaneous brain rhythms. Ten right-handed healthy volunteers participated in our proposed sequential short-term memory task that provides a serial position effect in accuracy rate. We recorded alpha-band rhythms by magnetoencephalography during performance of the task and observed that the amplitude of the rhythm was suppressed dramatically in the memory recall period.

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The auditory illusory perception "scale illusion" occurs when ascending and descending musical scale tones are delivered in a dichotic manner, such that the higher or lower tone at each instant is presented alternately to the right and left ears. Resulting tone sequences have a zigzag pitch in one ear and the reversed (zagzig) pitch in the other ear. Most listeners hear illusory smooth pitch sequences of up-down and down-up streams in the two ears separated in higher and lower halves of the scale.

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People with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) exhibit impairments in the perception of and orientation to social information related to humans, and some people with ASD show higher preference toward human-like robots than other humans. We speculated that this behavioural bias in people with ASD is caused by a weakness in their perception of humanness. To address this issue, we investigated whether people with ASD detect a subtle difference between the same song sung by human and artificial voices even when the lyrics, melody and rhythm are identical.

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Significant correlation exists in the blood-oxygen-level-dependent (BOLD) signals of resting-state fMRI across different regions in the brain. These regions form the default mode network (DMN), salience network (SN), sensory networks, and others. Among these, the DMN is widely investigated in relation to various mental diseases.

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Objective: This study aimed to capture the neuronal frequency characteristics, as indexed by the auditory steady-state response (ASSR), relative to physical characteristics of constant sound pressure levels (SPLs). Relationship with perceptual characteristics (loudness model) was also examined.

Methods: Neuromagnetic 40-Hz ASSR was recorded in response to sinusoidally amplitude-modulated sweep tones with carrier frequency covering the frequency range of 0.

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A subtle difference between a real human and an artificial object that resembles a human evokes an impression of a large qualitative difference between them. This suggests the existence of a neural mechanism that processes the sense of humanness. To examine the presence of such a mechanism, we compared the behavioral and brain responses of participants who listened to human and artificial singing voices created from vocal fragments of a real human voice.

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The neural mechanisms underlying stuttering are not well understood. It is known that stuttering appears when persons who stutter speak in a self-paced manner, but speech fluency is temporarily increased when they speak in unison with external trigger such as a metronome. This phenomenon is very similar to the behavioral improvement by external pacing in patients with Parkinson's disease.

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Recent genetic studies have shown that genetic loci with significant effects in whole-genome quantitative trait loci (QTL) analyses were lost or weakened in congenic strains. Characterisation of the genetic basis of this attenuated QTL effect is important to our understanding of the genetic mechanisms of complex traits. We previously found that a consomic strain, B6-Chr6C(MSM), which carries chromosome 6 of a wild-derived strain MSM/Ms on the genetic background of C57BL/6J, exhibited lower home-cage activity than C57BL/6J.

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This paper presents systematic methods for the detection of influential individuals that affect the log odds (LOD) score curve. We derive general formulas of influence functions for profile likelihoods and introduce them into two standard quantitative trait locus detection methods-the interval mapping method and single marker analysis. Besides influence analysis on specific LOD scores, we also develop influence analysis methods on the shape of the LOD score curves.

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Detection of a collision risk and avoiding the collision are important for survival. We have been investigating neural responses when humans anticipate a collision or intend to take evasive action by applying collision-simulating images in a predictable manner. Collision-simulating images and control images were presented in random order to 9 healthy male volunteers.

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