Journal of UOEH
Online ISSN : 2187-2864
Print ISSN : 0387-821X
ISSN-L : 0387-821X
Volume 40, Issue 4
Displaying 1-9 of 9 articles from this issue
  • Alice HEINRICH, Anna WASSERKAMPF, Alina SCHÄFER, Rolf ELLEGAST, Jens K ...
    Article type: [Original]
    2018Volume 40Issue 4 Pages 277-286
    Published: December 01, 2018
    Released on J-STAGE: December 19, 2018
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    Dynamic office workstations present a promising way to address the problem of inactivity at work, as they combine light physical activity with office tasks. In order to overcome the lack of structured implementation of such devices in office environments and the difficulty of stimulating employees to engage in healthy behaviors, the aim of this study was to investigate employees’ motivation and perceived usability (e.g. operability) regarding the use of dynamic office workstations. Two different types of devices were made available to 30 employees (13 females, 17 males, mean ± SD = 43 ± 11.51 years) for 6 weeks. Motivation to the use of the workstations was assessed pre- and post-intervention, and usability was assessed post-intervention. Descriptive statistics and Wilcoxon tests were conducted. Employees reported the usability of the workstations to be acceptable, as they did not impede their work activities, whilst they were autonomously motivated towards using either workstation. Dynamic office workstations are suitable for daily use, although a flexible use of such devices should be guaranteed, depending on the task at hand.
    Download PDF (677K)
  • Hiroko MORI, Yosuke OKADA, Mayuko KAWAGUCHI, Takashi OTSUKA, Megumi MI ...
    Article type: [Original]
    2018Volume 40Issue 4 Pages 287-297
    Published: December 01, 2018
    Released on J-STAGE: December 19, 2018
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    The purpose of this study was to determine the glycemic profiles of drug-naïve type 2 diabetes patients according to hemoglobin A1c (HbA1c) level using continuous glucose monitoring. We aimed to clarify factors associated with HbA1c and average blood glucose level. Patients were divided into three groups according to their HbA1c level (< 7.0% n=23, 7.0% ≤ HbA1c < 8.0% n=17 and ≥ 8.0% n=31), and the factors associated with HbA1c and average glucose of each group were evaluated. Pre-meal glucose levels were the highest before lunch, and the 2 hour postprandial blood glucose level was the lowest after lunch. The pre-meal and postprandial blood glucose levels increased after each meal with increases in HbA1c. Average glucose level was the most significant determinant of HbA1c, whereas pre-meal glucose level at dinner was the most significant determinant of average glucose level, and the range of increase in glucose from pre-meal at dinner was the most significant determinant of standard deviation (SD) of 24 hour glucose levels. HbA1c subgroup analysis indicated that pre-meal glucose level at lunch significantly correlated with average glucose level in the HbA1c < 8.0% group, while pre-meal glucose level at dinner significantly correlated with average glucose level in the HbA1c ≥ 8.0% group. The range of increase in glucose from pre-meal in the morning significantly correlated with SD of 24 hour glucose levels in the HbA1c < 8.0% group, and the postprandial peak glucose level at lunch significantly correlated with SD of 24 hour glucose levels in the HbA1c ≥ 8.0% group. The results suggest that improvement of the average glucose level is necessary to improve the HbA1c levels. For patients with HbA1c < 7.0%, it is important to improve blood glucose level after breakfast and before lunch to decrease the average glucose level. For patients with 7.0% ≤ HbA1c < 8.0%, it is important to improve blood glucose level before lunch and after dinner to decrease the average glucose level. For patients with HbA1c ≥ 8.0%, it is important to improve blood glucose levels after lunch and before dinner to decrease the average glucose level.
    Download PDF (765K)
  • Masayuki CHONO, Junko TERUYAMA, Miki FUKUMOTO, Tomomi WATANABE, Mikako ...
    Article type: [Report]
    2018Volume 40Issue 4 Pages 299-305
    Published: December 01, 2018
    Released on J-STAGE: December 19, 2018
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    Traumatic brain injury (TBI) often causes behavioral problems and difficulties with school work, but the specific factors associated with difficulty in returning to school after TBI still remain unclear. The purpose of this study was to investigate factors associated with difficulty in returning to school within 1 year of injury in students with traumatic brain injury. This study is a secondary analysis of existing data sets. We recruited patients aged 16 years in the United States with a primary rehabilitation diagnosis of TBI registered in the Traumatic Brain Injury Model Systems National Database. We compared variables between the students who returned to school and those who did not return to school. In addition, subgroup analyses were performed focused on traumatic brain injury severity. We excluded those were received <10 years of schooling, and 309 eligible students were identified for the analysis. Of these, 246 (80%) did not return to school within 1 year of injury. There were fewer cases of severe TBI in the group of students who returned to school than in the group who did not return to school (29% vs 44%, P = 0.03). The duration of rehabilitation was significantly longer in the group who returned to school than in the group who did not return to school (mean days 40 vs 29, P = 0.001), and a subgroup analysis showed in the severe traumatic brain injury group (mean days 46 vs 29; P = 0.02) and the non-severe traumatic brain injury group (mean days 37 vs 26; P = 0.02) similar results. Insufficient amount of rehabilitation was associated with difficulty in returning to school in students after TBI, regardless of the severity of the injury.
    Download PDF (685K)
  • Daishi HAMADA, Toshiharu MORI, Manabu TSUKAMOTO, Yoshiaki YAMANAKA, So ...
    Article type: [Case Report]
    2018Volume 40Issue 4 Pages 307-312
    Published: December 01, 2018
    Released on J-STAGE: December 19, 2018
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    We report a case of rapidly progressive osteolysis and a very large cystic lesion that destroyed the inner table of the iliac bone following cementless total hip arthroplasty (THA). A 59-year-old female patient developed left hip pain at 11 years after THA. Osteolysis surrounding the acetabular cup was pointed out. She was brought to our hospital by ambulance due to severe left hip pain at 12 years after THA. Computed tomography (CT) showed that a cystic lesion in the pelvic cavity had destroyed the inner table of the iliac bone. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) showed a high signal intensity area of the hemorrhagic cystic lesion in the iliac bone in both T1-weighted and T2-weighted images. She underwent a liner and femoral head exchange, and required bone grafting and revision of the cup. The cystic lesion was removed and block-like allograft bone grafts were stuffed into the bone defects. If osteolysis and cystic lesions occur at the same time, not only the bone area around the implant but also a distant area like the inner table of the iliac bone may be destroyed. Additional tests such as CT or MRI may be useful to detect the presence of distant or cystic lesions. Early diagnosis and treatment are important because severe complications may occur in cases where osteolysis and cystic lesions coexist after THA.
    Download PDF (1146K)
  • Koichiro NANDATE
    Article type: [Report]
    2018Volume 40Issue 4 Pages 313-321
    Published: December 01, 2018
    Released on J-STAGE: December 19, 2018
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    The safety system for medicine in Washington State in the United States of America (USA) consists of three systems, namely, hospital-based risk management, county-based death investigation, and state-based quality assurance for the license system. Risk managers in hospitals, medical examiners in counties and medical quality assurance commission in the state government represent those three systems. It has been revealed that each of the three organizational systems functions independently within their own jurisdiction without knowledge or information sharing other than via medical records or death certification for the same event. I also reviewed the re-education program for medical practitioners who committed serious misconducts. There are well organized re-education programs such as the physician assessment and clinical program in California, but the number of re-education programs are very limited all over the USA. It is very important to recognize that the safety system of medical practice is closely linked to the management of medical licenses by the state government to assure a high quality of medicine for patients.
    Download PDF (863K)
  • Hiroyuki MIYAUCHI, Makiko NAKANO, Miyuki HIRATA, Akiyo TANAKA, Satoko ...
    Article type: [Report]
    2018Volume 40Issue 4 Pages 323-329
    Published: December 01, 2018
    Released on J-STAGE: December 19, 2018
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    Surface grinding workers of Indium Tin Oxide target material are exposed to an indium compound with high toxicity. We divided individual exposure workers into similar exposure groups (SEG) and examined the effectiveness of the classification of SEG. Sampling was carried out twice a day for a total of 10 times, in 9 of which a work environment measurement in unit work area was performed at the same time. The classification examined two methods. One method was to set all the workers in the work place as one group (SEG1), and the other was to classify them depending on whether the workers handled the target material contained indium or not (SEG2). The group handled indium-contained material was SEG2(+) n=9, and the other was SEG2(–) n=9. Only the arithmetic mean value (AM) of four groups 2.8–27.4 µg/m3 in the SEG2(+) was lower than the measurement B value of the work environment measurement, but the AM of all the groups in SEG2(+) 2.8–276.8 µg/m3 was higher than the geometric mean value of measurement A 0.4–12.3 µg/m3. The concentration range of 100 μg/m3 or more of SEG2(+) AM was 20% of the total. This range was not recognized in the other items, and the variation of SEG2(+) was small. Even though the evaluation of SEG1 is control class 2, if revaluated on SEG2(+), 50% of the SEG2(+) were evaluated as control class 3. It is possible to efficiently manage chemical substances by establishing specific SEG properly stratified.
    Download PDF (1383K)
  • Hiroshi ASAI, Rie SHIRAYAMA, Koichi OSHIDA, Yuko HONDA, Tetsuji SATO, ...
    Article type: [Case Report]
    2018Volume 40Issue 4 Pages 331-337
    Published: December 01, 2018
    Released on J-STAGE: December 19, 2018
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    Acquired hemophilia A (AHA), a bleeding disorder caused by autoantibodies against FVIII, has the potential for life-threatening bleeding. The annual onset rate is said to be one in 4 million people, but diagnosis examples increase in adults because a disorder concept penetrated. AHA is quite rare in children, with an incidence rate of 0.045 per 1 million, but early detection is crucial because serious bleeding can happen, as in adults. We report a pediatric case who received an early diagnosis of AHA by an activated partial thromboplastin time (APTT) cross-mixing test. The 12-year-old girl had neither a past history nor a family history of bleeding episodes. She presented with intramuscular bleeding and epistaxis without trauma or medication. At diagnosis, her blood test showed prolonged APTT. Other hemostatic tests, such as the platelet count, prothrombin time and fibrinogen concentration, were within the normal range. We administered an APTT cross-mixing test that detected an inhibitor pattern and inhibitory antibodies against factors VIII. As a result, we administered prednisolone and the inhibitor disappeared after 1.5 months. In conclusion, AHA is a bleeding disorder which should be considered even in children due to the potential for life-threatening bleeding. Furthermore, the APTT cross-mixing test is useful for screening coagulation factor deficiencies and inhibitors.
    Download PDF (1259K)
  • 2018Volume 40Issue 4 Pages 339-
    Published: 2018
    Released on J-STAGE: December 19, 2018
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    Download PDF (224K)
  • 2018Volume 40Issue 4 Pages 341-350
    Published: 2018
    Released on J-STAGE: December 19, 2018
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    Download PDF (645K)
feedback
Top