3 results match your criteria: "Kamazawa University[Affiliation]"
Environ Health Prev Med
July 2006
Division of Health Sciences, Graduate School of Medical Science, Kamazawa University, 6-11-80 Kodatsuno, 920-0942, Kanazawa, Ishikawa, Japan,
Objective: In this study, we evaluated postpartum stress using a postpartum depression scale and by measuring the level of a stress-related substance, to clarify the relationship between the stresscoping capabilities of women in the final stage of pregnancy and their postpartum stress reactions.
Methods: Between April 2004 and October 2004, 54 women participated in a question naire survey and the measurement of their secretory immunoglobulin A (s-IgA) level as a stress-related substance two times in the final stage of their pregnancy (prepartum) and in their early puerperium (postpartum) was carried out. The questionnaire used in the prepartum stage included the following parameters: "basic features", "Sense of Coherence (SOC)" and "Japanese version of the self-assessment depression scale" of Zung.
Psychiatry Clin Neurosci
June 1998
Department of Neuropsychiatry, Kamazawa University School of Medicine, Japan.
We reported an necropsy finding of a patient with Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) who showed photo-stimulated giant spikes that simultaneously suppressed periodic synchronous discharges (PSD) and the loss of pupillary light reflex during the course of the illness. The necropsy revealed extensive gray and white matter lesions, and both the lateral geniculate body (LGB) and pregeniculate body were primarily affected. The superior colliculus, optic nerve and tracts were not affected.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBrain Res Dev Brain Res
August 1996
Department of Anatomy, School of Medicine, Kamazawa University, Japan.
The present study examined in the lateral superior olive (LSO) of the rat whether LSO neurons projecting to the ipsilateral inferior colliculus (IC) might be generated later than those projecting to the contralateral IC. Rat fetuses were exposed in utero to 5-bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU), a thymidine analogue, to label neurons proliferating at different embryonic stages from day E11 through to E20. Upon reaching adulthood, the rats were given unilateral injections of fluoro-gold (FG), a retrograde fluorescent tracer, into the IC.
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