Joichi Oyamada
Nagasaki University
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Featured researches published by Joichi Oyamada.
Archives of Oral Biology | 1997
Yoshitaka Manabe; Rei Ito; Yoshikazu Kitagawa; Joichi Oyamada; Atsushi Rokutanda; Shinya Nagamoto; Shigeru Kobayashi; Katsutomo Kato
A survey was made of Thai tribe members, who cultivate rice paddies in the flatlands of northern Thailand, and of the Aka and Yao tribes, who farm with the slash-and-burn method in a mountainous region of northern Thailand. Plaster casts of the upper and lower jaws of tribe members were taken. Seventeen non-metric traits of their tooth crowns were classified and compared with other Mongoloid populations in various regions and periods. It was observed that the Thai tribe had the Sundadont characteristics, typical of South-East Asians, but the Aka and Yao tribe had more Sinodont than Sundadont characteristics, typical of North-East Asians. The regional and temporal variations of crown morphology in South-East Asia suggest earlier setting of the Thai tribe than the Aka and Yao tribes in this region. Moreover, comparison of the tooth morphological and linguistic classifications contradicts the traditional theory of the genealogy of the Thai language family. On the subject of the origin of modern South-East Asians, it is suggested that there has not been a gene flow of Sinodonty into Sundadonty of the principal ethnic groups in Neolithic South-East Asia.
Archives of Oral Biology | 1996
Yoshikazu Kitagawa; Yoshitaka Manabe; Joichi Oyamada; Atsushi Rokutanda
The crown and root morphology, and bilateral occurrence of human deciduous lower first molars that exhibited a triangular occlusal outline, taken from excavated samples of Japanese, Jomonese and Iraqi origin, were investigated. The crowns of triangular teeth had smaller mesiodistal and larger buccolingual diameters than normally shaped deciduous lower first molars. An elongated buccolingual diameter was derived from the buccal projection of the distobuccal cusp and lingual projection of the portion between the metaconid and distolingual cusp. In this analysis, all triangular deciduous lower first molars in which root morphology could be observed were accompanied by additional distolingual roots. Correlation between the right- and left-hand sides of this trait was high.
Journal of Human Genetics | 2009
Kazunari Igawa; Yoshitaka Manabe; Joichi Oyamada; Yoshikazu Kitagawa; Katsutomo Kato; Kazuya Ikematsu; Ichiro Nakasono; Takayuki Matsushita; Atsushi Rokutanda
We analyzed the mitochondrial DNA extracted from 14 human skeletal remains from the Doigahama site in Japan to clarify the genetic structure of the Doigahama Yayoi population and the relationship between burial style and kinship among individuals. The sequence types obtained in this study were compared with those of the modern Japanese, northern Kyushu Yayoi and ancient Chinese populations. We found that the northern Kyushu Yayoi populations belonged to the groups that include most of the modern Japanese population. In contrast, most of the Doigahama Yayoi population belonged to the group that includes a small number of the modern Japanese population. These results suggest that the Doigahama Yayoi population might have contributed less to the formation of the modern Japanese population than the northern Kyushu Yayoi populations. Moreover, when we examined the kinship between individuals in the Doigahama site, we found that the vicinal burial of adult skeletons indicated a maternal kinship, although that of juvenile skeletons did not. The vicinal burial style might have been influenced by many factors, such as paternal lineages, periods and geographical regions, as well as maternal lineages. In addition, skeletons considered to be those of shamans or leaders had the same sequence types. Their crucial social roles may have been inherited through maternal lineage.
Journal of Anatomy | 2018
Keita Nishi; Toshiyuki Tsurumoto; Keishi Okamoto; Keiko Ogami-Takamura; Takashi Hasegawa; Takefumi Moriuchi; Junya Sakamoto; Joichi Oyamada; Toshio Higashi; Yoshitaka Manabe; Kazunobu Saiki
The sacroiliac joint (SIJ) is responsible for weight transmission between the spine and lower extremity. However, details of the structure and function of the SIJ remain unclear. In a previous study, we devised a method of quantitatively evaluating the level of degeneration of the SIJ using an age estimation procedure for the auricular surface of the ilium. Our results in that study suggested that the degree of degeneration of the joint surface may be associated with the morphology of the auricular surface of the ilium. In that study, however, the morphology of the auricular surface of the ilium was simplified for analysis, meaning that more detailed investigations were required in future. In the present study, we focused on individual differences in the shape of SIJ and carried out three‐dimensional quantitative evaluation of the morphology of the auricular surface of the ilium to ascertain its association with joint degeneration. We produced three‐dimensional images of the right auricular surfaces of the ilium of 100 modern Japanese men (age 19–83), and obtained the three‐dimensional rectangular coordinates of 11 defined measurement points. We then calculated 16 parameters indicating the morphological characteristics of the auricular surfaces of the ilium from the three‐dimensional rectangular coordinates of these measurement points, and used these to perform principal component analysis to investigate trends in the morphology of the auricular surface of the ilium. We found that the morphology of the auricular surface of the ilium could be characterized in terms of (i) size, (ii) concavity of the posterior border and (iii) amount of undulation. An investigation of the correlation between these parameters and age suggested that the amount of undulation of the auricular surface of the ilium tends to diminish with advancing age. In an investigation of the association between morphology of the auricular surface of the ilium and degeneration of the articular surface when the subjects were divided into a high‐degeneration group (n = 55) and a low‐degeneration group (n = 45) and the 16 parameters were compared, there was a significant difference in the amount of undulation of the auricular surface of the ilium. In an investigation limited to older subjects aged ≥ 60 (n = 47) at the time of death, there were significant differences between the high‐degeneration group (n = 27) and low‐degeneration group (n = 20) in terms not only of the parameters indicating the amount of undulation of the auricular surface of the ilium but also of those indicating the amount of the concavity of the posterior border. These results suggested that the amount of undulation of the auricular surface of the ilium may affect the degree of degeneration of the articular surface. In addition, in older subjects, the degree of concavity of the posterior border of the SIJ may also affect the degree of degeneration of the articular surface. It is thus likely that differences in the morphology of the auricular surface of the ilium may affect degenerative changes in the SIJ.
Clinical Anatomy | 2018
Junya Sakamoto; Yoshitaka Manabe; Joichi Oyamada; Hideki Kataoka; Jiro Nakano; Kazunobu Saiki; Keishi Okamoto; Toshiyuki Tsurumoto; Minoru Okita
Introduction: Referred pain in the anterior knee joint is the most common symptom in hip disease patients. The development of referred pain is considered to be related to dichotomizing peripheral sensory fibers. However, no gross anatomical findings identify any dichotomizing fibers innervating both the hip and knee joints. We dissected the femoral and obturator nerves in human cadavers to investigate the distribution of the articular branches in the hip and knee joints. Fourteen embalmed left lower limbs from 14 Japanese adult cadavers (five from females, nine from males, average age 73.8 ± 14.1 years) were observed macroscopically. The articular branches of the femoral and obturator nerves were dissected at the anterior margin of the groin toward the thigh region. After dissections of the articular nerves of the hip joints, the femoral and obturator nerves were exposed from proximally to distally to identify the articular nerves of the knee joints. The branching pattern of the articular branches in the hip and knee joints was recorded. In six of 14 limbs (42.9%), the femoral nerve supplied articular branches to the anteromedial aspect of both the hip and knee joints. These articular branches were derived from the same bundle of femoral nerve. These gross anatomical findings suggested that dichotomizing peripheral sensory fibers innervate the hip and knee joints and these could relate to the referred pain confirmed in the anterior knee joints of patients with hip disease. Clin. Anat. 31:705–709, 2018.
Odontology | 2017
Joichi Oyamada; Yoshikazu Kitagawa; Masahito Hara; Junya Sakamoto; Takayuki Matsushita; Toshiyuki Tsurumoto; Yoshitaka Manabe
So-called “Ohaguro”, teeth blackening, in the married females was a general custom regardless of class in the early modern period. As a result, Ohaguro was thought to have enhanced the acid resistance of tooth substance and tightened gingiva and prevented tooth morbidity due to periodontal disease. For investigation into the influence of Ohaguro, the skeletal remains of early modern samurai and commoners at Kokura were examined for differences in the dental pathology based on sex. Though females from archeological sites have significantly more carious teeth and antemortem tooth loss (AMTL) than males in the previous studies, the prevalence of caries and AMTL in males was higher than in females among the early modern samurai and commoners in Kokura. The efficacies of Ohaguro may influence the good dental health of females. On the other hand, as females were considered inferior to males under the feudal system in Japan, males, including children, might tend to consume more nutritious foods compared to females. However, those foods are certainly not better with regard to dental health, since those foods are more highly cariogenic. These factors may have caused higher caries and AMTL prevalence among males compared to females in early modern Kokura.
Anthropological Science | 2004
Joichi Oyamada; Yoshikazu Kitagawa; Yoshitaka Manabe; Atsushi Rokutanda
American Journal of Physical Anthropology | 1995
Yoshikazu Kitagawa; Yoshitaka Manabe; Joichi Oyamada; Atsushi Rokutanda
Journal of Human Evolution | 2003
Yoshitaka Manabe; Joichi Oyamada; Yoshikazu Kitagawa; Atsushi Rokutanda; Katsutomo Kato; Takayuki Matsushita
Anthropological Science | 2003
Yoshiaki Todaka; Joichi Oyamada; Yoshitaka Manabe; Yoshikazu Kitagawa; Katsutomo Kato; Atsushi Rokutanda