Publications by authors named "Yasumasa Okada"

Article Synopsis
  • The sympathetic nervous system reacts to psychological stress by raising blood pressure, a condition that can persist even after the stress is gone, potentially contributing to hypertension.
  • Researchers investigated how astrocytes, a type of brain cell, influence this ongoing rise in blood pressure using arundic acid, an inhibitor of astrocytes.
  • The study found that arundic acid reduced the blood pressure increase caused by stress in rats, indicating that both neurons and astrocytes are important in understanding stress-related hypertension.
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Proteinase-activated receptor-1 (PAR1) is expressed in astrocytes of various brain regions, and its activation is involved in the modulation of neuronal activity. Here, we report effects of PAR1 selective agonist TFLLR on respiratory rhythm generation in brainstem-spinal cord preparations. Preparations were isolated from newborn rats (P0-P4) under deep isoflurane anesthesia and were transversely cut at the rostral medulla.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study analyzed the effectiveness of a new asthma treatment combining fluticasone furoate, vilanterol, and umeclidinium, approved in Japan on February 18, 2021, by evaluating lung function in asthma patients.
  • Researchers conducted a before-after study with 114 asthma outpatients (mostly Japanese), finding significant improvements in lung function tests and asthma control after switching to the new treatment.
  • While 66% of subjects wanted to continue with the new treatment, mild local adverse effects were reported in 30% of patients, with no serious side effects observed, marking a promising advancement in asthma management.
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Severe hypoxia induces seizures, which reduces ventilation and worsens the ictal state. It is a health threat to patients, particularly those with underlying hypoxic respiratory pathologies, which may be conducive to a sudden unexpected death in epilepsy (SUDEP). Recent studies provide evidence that brain microglia are involved with both respiratory and ictal processes.

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Background: The oxidized high-density lipoprotein (oxHDL) is a possible marker for cardiovascular diseases. This study investigated the effects of smoking cessation with varenicline (a partial agonist of nicotinic acetylcholine receptors) on the levels of oxHDL in the serum of subjects compared with those of high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C).

Methods: Data of 99 nicotine-dependent adult subjects who visited the smoking cessation outpatient services at International University of Health and Welfare Shioya Hospital were reviewed.

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Background: Smoking and depression are closely related and form a vicious cycle. Yokukansan (YiganSan) is a polyherbal remedy that has the effect of calming neuropsychiatric symptoms such as anger and irritation. To examine the efficacy of Yokukansan during smoking cessation (SC) therapy in smokers with depressive tendencies but without major depressive disorders requiring pharmacotherapy.

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Microglia modulate cardiorespiratory activities during chronic hypoxia. It has not been clarified whether microglia are involved in the cardiorespiratory responses to acute hypoxia. Here we investigated this issue by comparing cardiorespiratory responses to two levels of acute hypoxia (13% O for 4 min and 7% O for 5 min) in conscious unrestrained rats before and after systemic injection of minocycline (MINO), an inhibitor of microglia activation.

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Chronic intermittent hypoxia (CIH) has been used as a model to mimic nocturnal apnea, which is associated with hypertension. One of the mechanisms for hypertension in patients with nocturnal apnea is an enhancement of the plasma membrane response to acute hypoxia in carotid body glomus cells. Hypoxia is known to induce depolarization via inhibiting TWIK-related acid-sensitive K (TASK) channels, one type of leak K channels, in glomus cells.

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Suvorexant (Belsomra(R)), a dual orexin receptor antagonist widely used in the treatment of insomnia, inhibits the arousal system in the brain. However, the drug's ventilatory effects have not been fully explored. This study aims to investigate the expression of orexin receptors in respiratory neurons and the effects of suvorexant on ventilation.

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Article Synopsis
  • As blood oxygen levels drop (hypoxemia), mammals adjust their breathing and heart functions to supply oxygen to critical organs, primarily using carotid bodies as sensors.
  • New research highlights that spinal thoracic sympathetic preganglionic neurons act as additional oxygen sensors, responding to low oxygen levels and influencing respiratory and cardiovascular activity even when traditional sensors are absent.
  • These spinal oxygen sensors utilize a specific mechanism involving neuronal nitric oxide synthase 1 (NOS1) and NADPH oxidase (NOX), which plays a crucial role in managing the body's response to low oxygen situations and could have implications for various health conditions and crises.
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Astrocytes are thought to play a crucial role in providing structure to the spinal cord and maintaining efficient synaptic function and metabolism because their fine processes envelop the synapses of neurons and form many neuronal networks within the central nervous system (CNS). To investigate whether putative astrocytes and putative neurons distributed on the ventral horn play a role in the modulation of lumbar locomotor central pattern generator (CPG) networks, we used extracellular recording and optical imaging techniques and recorded the neural output from the left L5 ventral root and the calcium activity of putative astrocytes and neurons in the L5 ventral horn at the same time when activating an isolated L1-L5 spinal cord preparation from rats aged 0-2 days. Optical measurements detected cells that showed a fluorescence intensity change under all experimental conditions, namely, (1) 5-HT + NMDA, (2) TTX, and (3) TTX + Low K.

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Acute hypoxia increases ventilation. After cessation of hypoxia loading, ventilation decreases but remains above the pre-exposure baseline level for a time. However, the mechanism of this post-hypoxic persistent respiratory augmentation (PHRA), which is a short-term potentiation of breathing, has not been elucidated.

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In the field of respiratory clinical practice, the importance of measuring carbon dioxide (CO) concentrations cannot be overemphasized. Within the body, assessment of the arterial partial pressure of CO (PaCO) has been the gold standard for many decades. Non-invasive assessments are usually predicated on the measurement of CO concentrations in the air, usually using an infrared analyzer, and these data are clearly important regarding climate changes as well as regulations of air quality in buildings to ascertain adequate ventilation.

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It is supposed that the nucleus of the solitary tract (NTS) in the dorsal medulla includes gas sensor cells responsive to hypercapnia or hypoxia in the central nervous system. In the present study, we analyzed cellular responses to hypercapnia and hypoxia in the NTS region of newborn rat preparation. The brainstem and spinal cord were isolated from newborn rat (P0-P4) and were transversely cut at the level of the rostral area postrema.

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Ophiocordyceps sinensis (OCS), an entomopathogenic fungus, is known to exert antiproliferative and antitissue remodeling effects. Vascular remodeling and vasoconstriction play critical roles in the development of pulmonary hypertension (PH). The therapeutic potential of OCS for PH was investigated using rodent PH models, and cultured pulmonary artery endothelial and smooth muscle cells (PAECs and PASMCs), with a focus on the involvement of TRPM7.

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Dyspnea is defined as a subjective experience of breathing discomfort that consists of qualitatively distinct sensations that vary in intensity. It is a common symptom among patients with respiratory diseases that reduces daily activities, induces deconditioning, and is self-perpetuating. Although clinical interventions are needed to reduce dyspnea, its underlying mechanism is poorly understood depending on the intertwined peripheral and central neural mechanisms as well as emotional factors.

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Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) patients are at risk for increased blood pressure and carotid intima-media thickness (IMT), with pulmonary hypertension and right-sided heart failure potentially developing as well. Chronic intermittent hypoxia (IH) has been used as an OSA model in animals, but its effects on vascular beds have not been evaluated using objective unbiased tools. Previously published and current experimental data in mice exposed to IH were evaluated for IMT in aorta and pulmonary artery (PA) after IH with or without normoxic recovery using software for meta-analysis, Review Manager 5.

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Psychological stress activates the hypothalamus, augments the sympathetic nervous output, and elevates blood pressure via excitation of the ventral medullary cardiovascular regions. However, anatomical and functional connectivity from the hypothalamus to the ventral medullary cardiovascular regions has not been fully elucidated. We investigated this issue by tract-tracing and functional imaging in rats.

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Hypoxia sensors are essential for regulating local oxygen (O) homeostasis within the body. This is especially pertinent within the CNS, which is particularly vulnerable to O deprivation due to high energetic demand. Here, we reveal hypoxia-monitoring function exerted by astrocytes through an O-regulated protein trafficking mechanism within the CNS.

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Background: Usual clinical practice for arterial blood gas analysis (BGA) in conscious patients involves a one-time arterial puncture to be performed after a resting period of 20-30 min. The aim of this study was to evaluate the use of transcutaneous BGA for estimating this gold standard arterial BGA.

Methods: Spontaneously breathing Asian adults (healthy volunteers and respiratory patients) were enrolled (n = 295).

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Seizures are induced when subjects are exposed to severe hypoxia. It is followed by ventilatory fall-off and eventual respiratory arrest, which may underlie the pathophysiology of death in patients with epilepsy and severe respiratory disorders. However, the mechanisms of hypoxia-induced seizures have not been fully understood.

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Background And Objective: Body weight of patients with obstructive sleep apnea after initiation of nasal continuous positive airway pressure appears to increase. We hypothesized that intermittent hypoxia (IH) will decrease energy expenditure (EE), and that normoxic recovery will lead to body weight gains.

Methods: C57BL/6 J male mice were exposed to either 12 h/day of mild IH (alternating FO-10-11% and 21%; 640 s cycle), or severe IH (FO-6-7%-21%; 180 s cycle) or sham IH daily for 4 or 8 weeks.

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The diaphragm is driven by phrenic motoneurons that are located in the cervical spinal cord. Although the anatomical location of the phrenic nucleus and the function of phrenic motoneurons at a single cellular level have been extensively analyzed, the spatiotemporal dynamics of phrenic motoneuron group activity have not been fully elucidated. In the present study, we analyzed the functional and structural characteristics of respiratory neuron population in the cervical spinal cord at the level of the phrenic nucleus by voltage imaging, together with histological analysis of neuronal and astrocytic distribution in the cervical spinal cord.

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The hypothalamus is a higher center of the autonomic nervous system and maintains essential body homeostasis including respiration. The paraventricular nucleus, perifornical area, dorsomedial hypothalamus, and lateral and posterior hypothalamus are the primary nuclei of the hypothalamus critically involved in respiratory control. These hypothalamic nuclei are interconnected with respiratory nuclei located in the midbrain, pons, medulla and spinal cord.

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