Publications by authors named "Tamaki Mikami"

Background: High prevalence of sleep problems in not only children with neurodevelopmental disorders (NDS) but also non NDS has been established. However, there are few studies that have looked into population-based and age-specific prevalence of sleep problems of children. Moreover, there are even fewer studies that have investigated the correlation of demographic and lifestyle-related factors affecting sleep problems in children.

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Objective: Although autism spectrum disorder (ASD) occurs worldwide, most genomic studies on ASD were performed on those of Western ancestry. We hypothesized ASD-related copy number variations (CNVs) of Japanese individuals might be different from those of Western individuals.

Methods: Subjects were recruited from the Hirosaki 5-year-old children's developmental health check-up (HFC) between 2013 and 2016 (ASD group; n = 68, control group; n = 124).

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Split notochord syndrome is a group of developmental abnormalities caused by abnormal splitting or deviation of the notochord, clinically resulting in the duplicated bowel associated with vertebral anomalies. In this syndrome, initial presentations due to duplicated bowel, vomiting, abdominal pain, and failure to thrive, usually occur before 1 year of age. We here report a 12-year-old boy with intermittent vomiting, previously diagnosed with cyclic vomiting syndrome.

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Adenovirus pneumonia is uncommon but its severe infection has a mortality as high as 10%, and survivors may have residual airway damages, manifested by bronchiectasis, bronchiolitis obliterans, or pulmonary fibrosis. We report a case of adenovirus pneumonia demonstrating fatal respiratory distress. Adenovirus was isolated from pharyngeal specimens using cell culture and typed as serotype 3 by a combination of polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis.

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Acid sphingomyelinase (ASM) is the lysosomal enzyme responsible for the hydrolysis of sphingomyelin to ceramide and phosphocholine. An inherited deficiency of this enzymatic activity results in the Type A and B forms of Niemann-Pick disease (NPD). ASM is also readily secreted from cultured cells and can rapidly move from lysosomes to the cell surface upon stimulation by cytokines and other factors.

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Inherited antithrombin deficiency generally causes a predisposition toward vascular thrombus above the age of 15 years. A 1-year-old boy developed renal hypertension caused by renal artery obstruction due to thrombus formation. This thrombus formation was attributed to antithrombin deficiency caused by a novel SERPINCI gene mutation (AT III Akita, M352R).

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Deficient activity of human lysosomal hydrolase, acid sphingomyelinase (ASM), results in the neuronopathic (type A) and non-neuronopathic (type B) forms of Niemann-Pick disease (NPD). A deficiency of ASM is known to deprive lymphoblasts of their response to apoptotic induction by X-ray irradiation. To elucidate the genetic heterogeneity of apoptotic induction in NPD cells, we investigated radiation-induced apoptosis of lymphoblasts in patients with type A (genotype: IVS3-2A-G/IVS3-2A-G) and type B (genotype: S436R/S436R) NPD.

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