Publications by authors named "Yuichi Matsubara"

Background: Current microbiological tests fail to identify the causative microorganism in more than half of all pneumonia cases. We explored biomarkers that could be used for differentiating between bacterial and viral pneumonia in patients with community-acquired pneumonia (CAP).

Methods: In this prospective cohort study conducted in Japan, data obtained from adult patients with bacterial pneumonia, including bacterial and viral coinfections (bacterial pneumonia [BP] group), and purely viral pneumonia (VP group) at diagnosis were analyzed using multivariate logistic regression analysis to identify predictors of bacterial pneumonia.

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Article Synopsis
  • Histoplasmosis is an often asymptomatic fungal infection caused by Histoplasma capsulatum, now seeing increased cases in Japan, particularly among workers returning from endemic regions like Mexico.
  • In a case study of three Japanese workers, all developed severe symptoms including high fever, fatigue, and elevated sIL-2R levels, which had not been previously reported in histoplasmosis cases.
  • Treatment with antifungals led to improvement and normalization of sIL-2R levels, suggesting that monitoring sIL-2R could be helpful in assessing recovery from this infection.
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A priori, a common receptor induced in tumor microvessels, cancer cells and cancer stem-like cells (CSCs) that is involved in tumor angiogenesis, invasiveness, and CSC anoikis resistance and survival, could underlie contemporaneous coordination of these events rather than assume stochasticity. Here we show that functional analysis of the dual endothelin1/VEGFsignal peptide receptor, DEspR, (formerly named Dear, Chr.4q31.

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Objectives: Salt-sensitive hypertension is highly prevalent in postmenopausal women, with approximately 75% of postmenopausal women found to be hypertensive in the US. Insight from surgical menopause (ovariectomized) patients directly links the loss of endogenous estrogens to salt-sensitive hypertension in previously healthy, salt-resistant women. However, controversial benefit of hormone replacement therapy in postmenopausal women raises the hypothesis that the loss of endogenous estrogens alters genetic susceptibility determinants per se, resulting in hypertension mechanisms beyond correction by hormone replacement.

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Unlabelled: In the field of athletics, acupuncture has been used for treatment of injury, reduction of fatigue and management of physical condition. However, there is little information on the effect of acupuncture on the immune function in response to exercise.

Purpose: The aim of this study was to examine the effect of acupuncture treatment on the mucosal immune function after a single period of intense exercise by measuring salivary immunoglobulin A (SIgA).

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Unlabelled: Post high-intensity exercise lymphocytopenia is well documented, but its underlying mechanisms have not been fully elucidated. A possible mechanism is a reactive oxygen species-induced DNA damage after high-intensity exercise. Furthermore, lymphocyte apoptosis related to DNA damage might contribute to exercise-induced lymphocytopenia.

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Sex-specific differences in polygenic (essential) hypertension are commonly attributed to the role of sex steroid hormone-receptor systems attenuating sex-common disease mechanisms in premenopausal women. However, emerging observations indicate sex-specific genetic susceptibility in various traits, thus requiring systematic study. Here we report a comparative analysis of independent total genome scans for salt-sensitive hypertension susceptibility quantitative trait loci (QTLs) in male and female F2 [Dahl R/jrHS x S/jrHS] intercross rats exposed to high-salt (8% NaCl) rat diets.

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The concentrations of telithromycin, a new ketolide antimicrobial agent, in alveolar macrophages (AMs) and bronchoalveolar epithelial lining fluid (ELF) were determined in order to investigate the transfer of the drug into target tissue, relative to plasma, following multiple oral doses of telithromycin. Twenty-four healthy male Japanese volunteers were randomly allocated to four groups. Each subject was given 600 or 800 mg of telithromycin once daily for 5 days, followed by bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) 2 or 8 h after the last dose (group A and B: 600 mg, 2 and 8 h BAL time point; group C and D: 800 mg, 2 and 8 h BAL time point).

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