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Featured researches published by Kiyomi Harada.


Clinical and Experimental Hypertension | 2013

Dietary Intervention with Cooking Instructions and Self-monitoring of the Diet in Free-Living Hypertensive Men

Kaori Kitaoka; Junko Nagaoka; Tomomi Matsuoka; Chieko Shigemura; Kiyomi Harada; Wataru Aoi; Sayori Wada; Hiroaki Asano; Naoki Sakane; Akane Higashi

The control of blood pressure (BP) is important in the prevention of cardiovascular diseases. This study was conducted to evaluate the effect of a dietary educational program for free-living, high-normal, and stage 1 or 2 hypertensive men. The participants were volunteers aged 40–75 years who agreed to the intervention. They were divided into two groups: 39 men for the intervention group and 32 men for the control group. BP, urinary sodium and potassium excretion, dietary and lifestyle data, and nonfasting venous blood sample were collected at baseline and after the intervention period. The intervention was designed to decrease sodium level with an emphasis on a decrease in the consumption of salted foods and to increase potassium level with an emphasis on an increase in the consumption of fruit and vegetables through cooking instructions and self-monitoring of the diet. At the baseline, there were no significant differences observed between the groups, except the diastolic BP. In the intervention group, a greater decrease in the urinary sodium-to-potassium excretion ratio was observed, compared with the control group (net difference 0.6, P = .029). The systolic and diastolic BP (mm Hg) decreased in the intervention group (149.0–143.0, P = .073; 93.0–87.0, P = .002), but no changes were observed in the control group (145.0–143.0, P = .231; 84.9–85.3, P = .381). In the intervention group, the urinary sodium-to-potassium excretion ratio was significantly improved by focusing on cooking instructions and self-monitoring of the diet.


Tohoku Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2015

Maternal Body Mass Index Correlates with the Neonatal Physique of Male Infants.

Sayuri Fukuda; Yurika Tanaka; Kiyomi Harada; Ayako Saruwatari; Kaori Kitaoka; Kiyoko Odani; Wataru Aoi; Sayori Wada; Tatsuya Oguni; Hiroaki Asano; Nobuko Hagiwara; Akane Higashi

Recently, in Japan, the percentage of leanness has risen in young women, and the average birth weight has decreased. An increase in the risk of low birth weight has been reported in lean expectant mothers. In this study, we aimed to clarify the relationship between mothers physique at the beginning of pregnancy and the infants physique, by focusing on sex differences. The participants were 3,722 mothers who attended health checkups for 18-month-old infants in an urban Japanese city. The participants were limited to those with full-term births, thereby excluding the influence of gestational length. A total of 1,287 mothers, with 621 boys and 666 girls, were analyzed. Public health professionals interviewed the mothers, and transferred the required information from their maternity passbooks. We examined the physical characteristics of the mothers and their infants. Partial correlation analysis, adjusted by gestational length and the mothers age at delivery, was applied to study the association between the mothers BMI and the infants physique at birth. In the primipara group, only the boys showed significant positive correlation between the mothers BMI and the birth weight (P = 0.025) and the Kaup index (P = 0.035). In the pluripara group, only the boys showed significant positive correlation between the mothers BMI and the head circumference (P = 0.035). Thus, mothers physique may have a stronger influence on the physique of male infants, compared to female infants. The growth-promoting effect of the mothers physique is more apparent in the infants born to the pluripara.


Tohoku Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2017

High Maternal Age and Low Pre-Pregnancy Body Mass Index Correlate with Lower Birth Weight of Male Infants.

Sayuri Fukuda; Yurika Tanaka; Kiyomi Harada; Ayako Saruwatari; Kaori Kitaoka; Kiyoko Odani; Wataru Aoi; Sayori Wada; Yukari Nishi; Tatsuya Oguni; Hiroaki Asano; Nobuko Hagiwara; Akane Higashi

In Japan, the percentage of leanness has been increasing in young women, and the percentage of low birth weight infants (< 2,500 g) has increased. Moreover, the average age of primiparas rose 3.5 years during the last 30 years. The purpose of this study was to clarify the relationship between maternal age and the influence of maternal pre-pregnancy physique on the neonatal physique of infants. Questionnaires were issued to the participants and collected when they submitted their gestational notifications at their local ward office in Kyoto Prefecture. After delivery, we obtained information on the course of the pregnancy and the neonatal physique of the infants from the participants maternal passbooks. A total of 454 mothers (age 20 ≥) were analyzed: 161 young mothers (aged 20 to 29 years), 185 mothers (aged 30 to 34 years), and 108 older mothers (age ≥ 35). Overall, the mean rate of leanness (pre-pregnancy BMI < 18.5) was 23.8%. We found that birth weight was significantly lower in female infants, born to lean young mothers, compared to non-lean young mothers, whereas no significant difference was detected in other mothers (age ≥ 30), irrespective of pre-pregnancy BMI. By contrast, male infants, born to older lean mothers (age ≥ 35), showed significantly lower birth weight. Thus, maternal pre-pregnancy BMI exerts differential effects on the fetal growth (neonatal physique), depending on the maternal age and the sex of infants. We need to improve BMI in pre-pregnancy women, especially those in the twenties and 35 years old or over.


The Journal of Medical Investigation | 2017

Validity of the Short Nutritional Assessment Questionnaire for Japanese Patients with Cancer Undergoing Outpatient Chemotherapy

Kiyomi Harada; Kiyo Ochi; Tetsuya Taguchi; Terukazu Nakamura; Motohiro Kanazawa; Naohisa Yoshida; Hiroko Neriya; Masami Okagaki; Naoko Nishida; Yukie Takishita; Yoko Yamamoto; Sayori Wada; Masashi Kuwahata; Isao Yokota; Keiko Sekido; Akane Higashi

PURPOSE To investigate the utility of the Short Nutritional Assessment Questionnaire (SNAQ) in the nutritional evaluation of patients with cancer undergoing outpatient chemotherapy. METHODS We included 229 patients with cancer who were undergoing outpatient chemotherapy between October 2015 and April 2016. The SNAQ and the revised SNAQ (addition of age and body mass index) were implemented, and their relationships with Controlling Nutritional Status (CONUT), an indicator of bionutritional assessment, were examined. RESULTS The cutoff value of the SNAQ score corresponding to moderate-to-severe undernourishment in CONUT values was 0.5, with a sensitivity of 87.5% and a specificity of 65.9%, and the corresponding values for the revised SNAQ score were 2.5, 91.7%, and 62.9%, respectively. This cutoff value and the corresponding positive prediction value for the revised SNAQ were superior to those of SNAQ. Binary logistic regression analysis with the revised SNAQ and sex as independent variables and the CONUT value as the dependent variable revealed that the higher the SNAQ score, the more likely it was that CONUT moderate-to-severe undernourishment would be identified (odds ratio, 1.48;, 1.34-1.96). CONCLUSION Nutritional evaluation with the revised SNAQ can predict moderate-to-severe undernourishment according to CONUT in patients with cancer undergoing outpatient chemotherapy. J. Med. Invest. 64: 117-121, February, 2017.


The Journal of Medical Investigation | 2015

Relationship between physique and food avoidance in infants : A study conducted in a community setting in Japan

Ayako Saruwatari; Takashi Kusunoki; Yurika Tanaka; Kiyomi Harada; Kiyoko Odani; Sayuri Fukuda; Yukari Nishi; Hiroaki Asano; Akane Higashi

The relationship between food avoidance during infancy and the growth of Japanese infants in a community health setting has not been well evaluated. In order to assess the growth of infants who avoided either of the three major allergen foods in Japan, eggs, milk or wheat, we employed the results of 4 physical checkups recorded in maternity passbooks and administrated a questionnaire on allergic diseases, height and weight at birth to the guardians of 1,132 infants at the age of 3.5 years. Data was obtained from 890 subjects (78.6%) and 662 subjects (58.5%) who met the inclusion criteria were analyzed. The height, weight and body mass index percentile scores of each subject were calculated. Subjects who avoided either of the three foods at 3.5 years had lower weight percentile scores at 1.5 years, lower height and weight percentile scores at 3.5 years, and lower weight growth rates, compared with the subjects who did not avoid any of the three foods at 3.5 years (P=0.02, 0.03, 0.03, 0.01). The results suggested that there was a negative relationship between physique and food avoidance in infants, and that physical and nutritional assessments are important for food avoiders.


Nutrition Research and Practice | 2015

Lifestyle intervention might easily improve blood pressure in hypertensive men with the C genotype of angiotensin II type 2 receptor gene.

Kaori Kitaoka; Azusa Kitade; Junko Nagaoka; Kokoro Tsuzaki; Kiyomi Harada; Wataru Aoi; Sayori Wada; Hiroaki Asano; Naoki Sakane; Akane Higashi

BACKGROUND/OBJECTIVES Recent studies have reported an association of the angiotensin II type 2 receptor (AT2R) 3123Cytosine/Adenine (3123C/A) polymorphism with essential hypertension and cardiovascular diseases. The purpose of the study was to investigate whether the AT2R 3123C/A polymorphism affects blood pressure for free-living hypertensive men during a 5-month intervention period. SUBJECTS/METHODS The subjects were free-living hypertensive Japanese men aged 40 to 75 years who agreed to intervention in the period from 2004 to 2011. Detection of the AT2R 3123C/A polymorphism was determined by polymerase chain reaction. The dietary intervention was designed to decrease salt level and to increase potassium level through cooking instructions and self-monitoring of the diet. The exercise session consisted of activities such as stretching, resistance training, and walking. Blood pressure, urinary sodium and potassium excretion, dietary and lifestyle data, and non-fasting venous blood sample were collected at baseline and after the intervention period. RESULTS Thirty nine subjects were eligible for participation and the follow-up rate was 97.4%. The C allele proportion was 57.9%. AT2R 3123C/A polymorphism was X-chromosome-linked, therefore we analyzed the C and A genotypes. At baseline, no significant differences were observed between the genotype groups. After the intervention, there were no significant differences in lifestyle habit between the groups. Nevertheless, the estimated salt excretion (g/day) was significantly decreased only in the C genotype (13.0-10.3, P = 0.031). No significant change was observed in systolic blood pressure (SBP) (mmHg) in the A genotype, but a significant decrease was observed in the C genotype (150.0-141.5, P = 0.024). CONCLUSTIONS In the C genotype, it might be easy to improve SBP through lifestyle intervention in free-living hypertensive Japanese men, however generalization could not be achieved by the small sample size.


Journal of Gastroenterology | 2011

Lifestyle and psychological factors related to irritable bowel syndrome in nursing and medical school students

Yukiko Okami; Takako Kato; Gyozen Nin; Kiyomi Harada; Wataru Aoi; Sayori Wada; Akane Higashi; Yusuke Okuyama; Susumu Takakuwa; Hiroshi Ichikawa; Motoyori Kanazawa; Shin Fukudo


Nutrition Journal | 2013

Fermented milk improves glucose metabolism in exercise-induced muscle damage in young healthy men

Masayo Iwasa; Wataru Aoi; Keitaro Mune; Haruka Yamauchi; Kaori Furuta; Shota Sasaki; Kazuya Takeda; Kiyomi Harada; Sayori Wada; Yasushi Nakamura; Kenji Sato; Akane Higashi


Tohoku Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2012

Association between Low Birth Weight and High Adult Waist-to-Height Ratio in Non-Obese Women: A Cross-sectional Study in a Japanese Population

Kiyomi Harada; Sayuki Torii; Ayako Saruwatari; Yurika Tanaka; Kaori Kitaoka; Junpei Takaaki; Wataru Aoi; Sayori Wada; Takayoshi Ohkubo; Katsuyuki Miura; Yoshiyuki Watanabe; Akane Higashi


Open Journal of Gastroenterology | 2013

Irritable bowel syndrome in Chinese nursing and medical school students—Related lifestyle and psychological factors

Yukiko Okami; Gyozen Nin; Kiyomi Harada; Sayori Wada; Tomiko Tsuji; Yusuke Okuyama; Susumu Takakuwa; Motoyori Kanazawa; Shin Fukudo; Akane Higashi

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Akane Higashi

Kyoto Prefectural University

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Sayori Wada

Kyoto Prefectural University

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Wataru Aoi

Kyoto Prefectural University

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Kaori Kitaoka

Kyoto Prefectural University

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Ayako Saruwatari

Kyoto Prefectural University

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Hiroaki Asano

Kyoto Prefectural University of Medicine

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Yurika Tanaka

Kyoto Prefectural University

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Gyozen Nin

Kyoto Prefectural University

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Kiyoko Odani

Kyoto Prefectural University

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