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1.
Nutrition Research and Practice ; : 480-487, 2019.
Article in English | WPRIM | ID: wpr-760640

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND/OBJECTIVES: Osteoarthritis (OA) is a major public health issue in Japan and other countries, and foods that prevent or treat OA are in strong demand. Proteins and peptides in chicken meat and bones are known for being rich in functional and nutritional ingredients for the improvement of osteoporosis. We speculated that chicken legs, a food consumed in many regions of the world, may also contain such ingredients. In this study, we aim to (i) evaluate the effect of chicken leg extract (CLE) on the promotion of cartilage matrix production and (ii) identify the active ingredient in CLE that contributes to this function. MATERIALS/METHODS: Artificial CLE digest was prepared, and the acid mucopolysaccharide production-promoting activity of the CLE digest was evaluated by alcian blue staining of ATDC5 cells. CLE was orally administered to rabbits with burr holes in the knee joint of the femur, and the degree of regeneration of cartilage matrix was evaluated. Furthermore, we investigated orally administered CLE-derived peptides in human plasma using LC-MS. From measuring the acid mucopolysaccharide production-promotion activity of these peptides, a molecule considered to be an active ingredient in the CLE digest was identified. RESULTS: CLE digest promoted acid mucopolysaccharide production and facilitated regeneration of cartilage matrix in in vitro and in vivo experiments. Four peptides including phenylalanyl-hydroxyproline (Phe-Hyp) were detected as CLE-derived peptides in human plasma. The effect of CLE was inferred to be due to Phe-Hyp, which was confirmed to be present in the CLE digest. CONCLUSIONS: It was shown that CLE stimulated the production of articular cartilage matrix both in vitro and in vivo, and that CLE could be an effective food for preventing or treating OA. Furthermore, only Phe-Hyp was confirmed as the active compound in the CLE digest, suggesting that the activity of CLE was due to Phe-Hyp.


Subject(s)
Humans , Rabbits , Alcian Blue , Cartilage , Cartilage, Articular , Chickens , Femur , In Vitro Techniques , Japan , Knee Joint , Leg , Meat , Osteoarthritis , Osteoporosis , Peptides , Plasma , Public Health , Regeneration
2.
General Medicine ; : 25-28, 2006.
Article in English | WPRIM | ID: wpr-376333

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: The purposes of this study were to assess the clinical features of cardiac auscultatory events in outpatients in general internal medicine, and to make teaching suggestions for education on cardiac auscultatory skills in primary care medicine.<BR>METHODS: The subjects included 104 consecutive outpatients with chest symptoms, and cardiac auscultatory findings were assessed prospectively.<BR>RESULTS: Cardiac auscultatory events were found in 32 (30.8%) among the 104 subjects. The subjects with cardiac auscultatory events were significantly older than those without cardiac auscultatory events (p<0.05) . The cardiac auscultatory events of the 32 subjects were as follows; splitting of the first heart sound in 2 subjects, mid-systolic click in 2 subjects, fourth heart sound in 3 subjects, systolic murmur in 24 subjects (including one subject with both systolic and diastolic murmurs), and diastolic murmur in 2 subjects. Aortic stenosis was diagnosed in 2 subjects, and mitral regurgitation was diagnosed in one subject of the 24 subjects with a systolic murmur. One subject with both systolic and diastolic murmurs was considered to have a relative systolic murmur with aortic regurgitation. The other 20 subjects with a systolic murmur were considered to have innocent murmurs. The 2 subjects with a diastolic murmur were diagnosed as having aortic regurgitation.<BR>CONCLUSIONS: We suggest that the following cardiac ausculatory events should be given educational priority in primary care; 1) Fourth heart sounds as an extra heart sound. 2) Innocent murmurs: characteristics of innocent murmurs and discrimination from systolic murmurs caused by organic heart disease. 3) Systolic murmurs caused by aortic stenosis or mitral regurgitation. 4) Diastolic high-pitched murmurs caused by aortic regurgitation.

3.
General Medicine ; : 37-39, 2004.
Article in English | WPRIM | ID: wpr-376319

ABSTRACT

We describe our experience with a left atrial (LA) myxoma in a 15-year-old female who experienced abdominal symptoms so prominent that she was initially thought to have an inflammatory enterocolitis.<BR>The patient's young age and predominant abdominal symptoms in the absence of any cardiac symptoms made it difficult to diagnose the LA myxoma early in the present case. This experience underscores the need for an intensive search for cardiac myxomas in patients with findings suggestive of inflammatory diseases or collagen disorders.

4.
Medical Education ; : 289-295, 2003.
Article in Japanese | WPRIM | ID: wpr-369847

ABSTRACT

Although postgraduate training in an ambulatory care setting is recognized as beneficial in Japan, such training has not been widely implemented. In April 2001 we surveyed all 389 accredited teaching hospitals in Japan about their ambulatory care training. We asked 1) whether they provide a postgraduate training program in ambulatory care, particularly for problems commonly encountered in primary care settings, 2) if such a program was provided, how it was organized, and 3) if such a program was not provided, what the reasons were. One hundred eighty physicians responsible for the residency programs of 120 hospitals replied (response rate, 87%). Most residents at these hospitals see patients in outpatient clinics regularly during their training. Many faculty members supervise their residents at the outpatient clinic and also see their own patients. Sixty-eight percent of the respondents did not set teaching objectives for ambulatory care training. Frequently mentioned barriers to providing ambulatory care training were limited space and tight outpatient schedules. To promote postgraduate ambulatory care training in accredited teaching hospitals, adequate resource allocation and a national policy are needed.

5.
Medical Education ; : 245-249, 2003.
Article in Japanese | WPRIM | ID: wpr-369842

ABSTRACT

Teaching ambulatory-care medicine is essential for primary-care education. However, few studies of ambulatory-care training have been done in the past decade. We performed a nationwide survey to examine whether and how ambulatory medicine is taught to medical students and residents. We sent questionnaires to all medical schools (n=80) and accredited teaching hospitals (n=389) in February 2001. The response rates were 83.3% and 79.2%, respectively. Fifty-one (78.5%) of the 65 medical schools provided ambulatory-care education, although the programs varied considerably from school to school. Only 104 teaching hospitals (26.7%) had an ambulatory-care training program.

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