Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Hitomi Takeuchi is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Hitomi Takeuchi.


Chronobiology International | 2001

Parental enforcement of bedtime during childhood modulates preference of Japanese junior high school students for eveningness chronotype.

Hitomi Takeuchi; Mitsuaki Inoue; Naoko Watanabe; Yasuhiro Yamashita; Michio Hamada; Gonshiro Kadota; Tetsuo Harada

We examined the effect of home bedtime discipline during childhood on morningness and eveningness (M-E) preference by Japanese junior high school students. M-E was assessed by the M-E Questionnaire (MEQ) of Torsvall and Åkerstedt (the higher the score, the greater the preference for morningness), and parental determination of bedtime during childhood was ascertained using an original questionnaire. The average M-E score of adolescents living in urban Kochi City (mean ± SD; 15.10 ± 3.42) was significantly lower (P <. 01) than the score of those in suburban districts (16.14 ± 3.44). Overall, 43.1% of the junior high school students in Kochi City compared to 53.0% of the students living in suburban districts had their bedtime decided during childhood by parents (P <. 01). In Kochi City, the M-E score for boys (14.62 ± 3.51) was lower (P <. 01) than girls (15.53 ± 3.28). During childhood, parents decided the bedtime for 49% of the girls compared to 36.6% of the boys (P <. 01). Boys whose bedtime was not decided by parents during childhood had a somewhat stronger preference for eveningness (14.20 ± 3.53) (P <. 05) compared to those whose bedtime was decided by parents (15.12 ± 3.36). The results suggest bedtime discipline at home during childhood has an effect on adolescent chronotype, modulating the extent of shift to eveningness in Japanese junior high school boys in particular. (Chronobiology International, 18(5), 823–829, 2001)


Journal of Physiological Anthropology | 2012

Can breakfast tryptophan and vitamin B6 intake and morning exposure to sunlight promote morning-typology in young children aged 2 to 6 years?

Miyo Nakade; Osami Akimitsu; Kai Wada; Milada Krejci; Teruki Noji; Nozomi Taniwaki; Hitomi Takeuchi; Tetsuo Harada

This study tried to examine, from epidemiological and physiologic anthropological (Japanese culture on breakfast) points of view, the integrated effects of the amount of tryptophan and vitamin B6 intake and the following exposure to sunlight on the circadian typology and sleep habits in young Japanese children aged 2 to 6 years, using the newly-evaluated calculating system of tryptophan (Tryptophan Index 2009) and vitamin B6 intake (VitaminB6 Index 2009) at breakfast. The positive and significant correlation was shown between the Morningness-Eveningness (M-E) score and the Tryptophan Index and also the Vitamin B6 Index. This positive correlation between M-E score and amount of tryptophan intake was shown only by children who were exposed to sunlight for longer than 10min after breakfast. These results might support the following hypothesis: higher tryptophan and vitamin B6 intake at breakfast could promote the synthesis of serotonin via light stimulation in the morning in children.


Psychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences | 2002

Morningness–eveningness preference and mood in Japanese junior high school students

Hitomi Takeuchi; Hiromi Morisane; Akira Iwanaga; Natsumi Hino; Aya Matsuoka; Tetsuo Harada

Abstract The relationship between morningness–eveningness (M‐E) preference and mood in Japanese students aged 12–15 years (690 boys and 649 girls) was investigated. No significant difference in M‐E preference was seen between genders. Girls became gloomy more frequently than boys, whereby the girls who experienced melancholy more frequently tended to prefer evening. The correlation between mood and M‐E preference, which was demonstrated only by girls, might be linked to a rapid shift to evening preference by girls in the past couple of years.


Chronobiology International | 2005

Association Between Moringness‐Eveningness Preference and Mental/Physical Premenstrual Symptoms in Japanese Females 12 to 31 Years of Age

Hitomi Takeuchi; Tadashi Oishi; Tetsuo Harada

This study investigates the relationship between circadian typology, i.e., morningness‐eveningness (M‐E) preference, and the occurrence and severity of premenstrual mental and physical symptoms among 154 young Japanese female university students (range, 18 to 31 yrs; mean±S.D., 20.69±3.69 yrs) and 417 junior high school students (range, 12 to 15 yrs; mean±S.D., 14.29±0.67 yrs) living in an urban or suburban area of Kochi prefecture. Female university students experienced melancholy mood more frequently than did males, and the female university students who frequently became melancholy were more evening‐typed than those who did not experience melancholy. Female university students who experienced frequent fluctuations in mood and/or menstrual pain were more evening‐typed than those who were not so affected. M‐E preference of junior high school students was not correlated with stability of mood or frequency of menstrual pain. In urban areas, however junior high school students who had very stable menstrual cycles were significantly more morning‐typed than those whose menstrual cycles were not stable. In suburban areas, the bedtimes of female junior high students who had stable menstrual cycles were significantly earlier than those whose menstrual cycle duration was not stable. A physiological relationship between the circadian system, M‐E, and attributes of the menstrual cycle seems to be present in adolescent female Japanese junior high school students.


Journal of Circadian Rhythms | 2013

A tryptophan-rich breakfast and exposure to light with low color temperature at night improve sleep and salivary melatonin level in Japanese students

Kai Wada; Shota Yata; Osami Akimitsu; Milada Krejci; Teruki Noji; Miyo Nakade; Hitomi Takeuchi; Tetsuo Harada

Background Epidemiological studies in Japan have documented an association between morning type and a tryptophan-rich breakfast followed by exposure to sunlight in children. The association may be mediated by enhanced melatonin synthesis, which facilitates sleep at night. However, melatonin is inhibited by artificial light levels with high color-temperature common in Japanese homes at night. In this study, we investigated whether a combination of tryptophan-rich breakfast and light with low color-temperature at night could enhance melatonin secretion and encourage earlier sleep times. Methods The intervention included having breakfast with protein- and vitamin B6 - rich foods and exposure to sunlight after breakfast plus exposure to incandescent light (low temperature light) at night (October-November, 2010). The participants were 94 members of a university soccer club, who were divided into 3 groups for the intervention (G1: no intervention; G2: asked to have protein-rich foods such as fermented soybeans and vitamin B6-rich foods such as bananas at breakfast and sunlight exposure after breakfast; G3: the same contents as G2 and incandescent light exposure at night). Salivary melatonin was measured around 11:00 p.m. on the day before the beginning, a mid-point and on the day before the last day a mid-point and on the last day of the 1 month intervention. Results In G3, there was a significantly positive correlation between total hours the participants spent under incandescent light at night and the frequency of feeling sleepy during the last week (p = 0.034). The salivary melatonin concentration of G3 was significantly higher than that of G1 and G2 in combined salivary samplings at the mid-point and on the day before the last day of the 1 month intervention (p = 0.018), whereas no such significant differences were shown on the day just before the start of the intervention (p = 0.63). Conclusion The combined intervention on breakfast, morning sunlight and evening-lighting seems to be effective for students including athletes to keep higher melatonin secretion at night which seems to induce easy onset of the night sleep and higher quality of sleep.


Chronobiology International | 2011

Effect of Birth Season on Circadian Typology Appearing in Japanese Young Children Aged 2 to 12 Years Disappears in Older Students Aged 18 to 25 Years

Tetsuo Harada; Ryo Kobayashi; Kai Wada; Risa Nishihara; Aska Kondo; Osami Akimitsu; Teruki Noji; Nozomi Taniwaki; Miyo Nakade; Milada Krejci; Hitomi Takeuchi

Several studies suggest that season of birth differentially affects the physiological characteristics of humans. Those living at relatively high latitude, such as Canada, Spain, and Italy (44°N–45°N), and born in the fall tended to be “morning-type” persons in comparison to those born in other seasons. There are relatively little data on the affect of season of birth on people residing at low latitude. Here the authors show that at low latitude, Kochi, Japan (33°N), the effect of season of birth on the morningness chronotype is confined to young children aged 1–12 yrs, disappearing in elderly persons. Only female participants aged 2–12 yrs born in the fall, especially in November, were significantly morning-typed (p < .001) in comparison to those born in the other seasons, whereas there were no such significant season-of-birth differences in morningness-eveningness preference among male participants. Moreover, both female and male participants aged 13–25 yrs showed no significant seasonal differences in morningness-eveningness preference. The small effects detected in this study might be due to smaller seasonal change in day length at the relatively lower latitude of Kochi. (Author correspondence: [email protected])


Archive | 2012

Mental Health of Children from a Chronobiological and Epidemiological Point of View

Tetsuo Harada; Miyo Nakade; Kai Wada; Aska Kondo; Mari Maeda; Teruki Noji; Hitomi Takeuchi

In 24-hour society seen especially in developed countries including Japan, fluctuations in the environmental conditions that act as zeitgebers for the circadian clock, such as light, meals and even social activities (e.g. “flextime”) tend to become irregular and with decreasing amplitudes. Using mobile phones, playing video games, and frequenting 24-hour stores may accelerate this irregularity of environmental diurnal rhythms. These circumstances lead to weaker zeitgebers for entraining circadian clocks in children and promote a shift to the evening-typed diurnal rhythms in daily life. This evening-typed life style may potentially cause a decline in mental health in children via these three physiological mechanisms:


Archive | 2013

Tryptophan and sleep: breakfast tryptophan content and sleep

Tetsuo Harada; Miyo Nakade; Kai Wada; Osami Akimitsu; Teruki Noji; Milada Krejci; Hitomi Takeuchi

The breakfast tryptophan intake affects circadian typology and sleep habits for children and students aged 2–25 yrs. Breakfast tryptophan and vitamin B6 intakes and sunlight-exposure can promote morning-typology in young children aged 2–6 yrs based on the results of questionnaire studies and in university soccer team members aged 18–25 yrs based on intervention studies. Tryptophan intake effects can be abolished by evening exposure to a fluorescent lamp; for example, salivary melatonin level of the soccer team members was suppressed by exposure to lights from fluorescent lamps. Evening typology correlated positively with body mass index both of young children aged 2–6 yrs and their mothers.


Journal of Physiological Anthropology | 2013

The relationship between consumption of tyrosine and phenylalanine as precursors of catecholamine at breakfast and the circadian typology and mental health in Japanese infants aged 2 to 5 years

Osami Akimitsu; Kai Wada; Teruki Noji; Nozomi Taniwaki; Milada Krejci; Miyo Nakade; Hitomi Takeuchi; Tetsuo Harada

BackgroundThis study aims to examine the relationship between tyrosine and phenylalanine intake at breakfast as precursors of dopamine, and scores on the Torsvall-Åkerstedt Diurnal Type Scale and of mental health in Japanese infants aged 2 to 5 years.ResultsAn integrated questionnaire was administered to parents of 1,367 infants attending one of ten nursery schools governed by Kochi City or a kindergarten affiliated with the Faculty of Education at Kochi University (775 answers for analysis: 56.7%) in May and June 2008. Questionnaires included the Torsvall-Åkerstedt Diurnal Type Scale and questions on sleep habits (onset, offset, quality, quantity, and so on), meal habits (content and regularity of timing), and mental health (depressive states). Amount of tyrosine and phenylalanine intake was calculated based on a breakfast content questionnaire and data on the components of amino acids in foods. Infants who ingested more than 800 mg of tyrosine or phenylalanine at breakfast per meal were more morning-type than those who ingested less than 800 mg (ANOVA: P= 0.005). However, this relationship disappeared in the ANCOVA analysis (with the covariance of tryptophan intake, P= 0.894). Infants who ingested more than 800 mg of the two amino acids at breakfast showed significantly higher mental health scores (lower frequency of depressive states) than those who ingested less than 800 mg (ANOVA: P = 0.004). This relationship remained significant when ANCOVA analysis was performed with the covariance of tryptophan (ANCOVA: P= 0.017).ConclusionsThese results suggest that tyrosine and phenylalanine ingested at breakfast are not related with circadian phase, but are relate with mental health in infants.


Biological Rhythm Research | 2015

Effects of chronotype and environmental factors upon sleep and mental health in Japanese students aged 18–40 yrs

Hitomi Takeuchi; Yumiko Yamazaki; Kotaro Oki; Kai Wada; Teruki Noji; Takahiro Kawada; Miyo Nakade; Milada Krejci; Tetsuo Harada

An integrated questionnaire was administered to a total of 4142 (2137 women, 2005 men; answer rate: 94.4%) university students and medical training schools students aged 18–40 years. The survey was carried out between May and October, 2004–2013. This questionnaire consisted of assessment of diurnal type, questions on sleep habits, mental health (upset emotionally, irritated, angered by small triggers, and suppressed), frequency of watching TV at night, use of mobile phone and playing TV games between 21:00 and 03:00 h, and questions on lighting conditions during the daytime and night. Sleep length in evening-type students (E-type; diurnal-type scores = 7–12) was shorter than in intermediate-types (I-type; diurnal-type scale (DTS) = 13–16) and morning-types (M-type; DTS = 17–28) on weekdays (p < 0.001), whereas sleep length in evening-types was shorter than intermediate- and morning-type students at weekends (p < 0.001). Mental health index scores of the E-type students were significantly lower than those of I-type and M-type students in both sexes (p < 0.001). Seventy-three percent of E-type women students watched TV after 23:00 h, significantly higher than 65.0 and 52.5% of I-type and M-type females, respectively (p < 0.001), and 70.4% of E-type male students watched the TV after 23:00 h, significantly higher than 66.1 and 59.7% of I-type and M-type males, respectively (p = 0.001). With regard to lighting conditions in the room in the afternoon, a slightly lower, but significantly so, percentage of the E-type students used the sunlight coming through the window than did the other types (p < 0.001). The frequency of having three nutritionally rich meals (especially breakfast) – including carbohydrates, proteins, vitamins, and minerals – was significantly higher in M-type than I-types and E-types (p < 0.001). Premenstrual syndrome (PMS) was significantly more severe in E-type than I-type and M-type females (p = 0.002). Lighting conditions throughout the 24 h and at breakfast can act as a strong zeitgeber for students and exert a great influence on their mental and physical health and can also affect PMS in women students.

Collaboration


Dive into the Hitomi Takeuchi's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Miyo Nakade

Tokai Gakuen University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge