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Dive into the research topics where Kohta Suzuki is active.

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Featured researches published by Kohta Suzuki.


Journal of Epidemiology | 2008

Is Maternal Smoking during Early Pregnancy a Risk Factor for All Low Birth Weight Infants

Kohta Suzuki; Taichiro Tanaka; Naoki Kondo; Junko Minai; Miri Sato; Zentaro Yamagata

Background Low birth weight (LBW) infants do not form a homogeneous group; LBW can be caused by prematurity or poor fetal growth manifesting as small for gestational age (SGA) infants or intrauterine growth retardation. We aimed to clarify the relationship of maternal smoking with both SGA and preterm LBW infants. Methods The study population comprised pregnant women who registered at the Koshu City between January 1, 1995, and December 31, 2000, and their children. We performed multivariate analyses using multiple logistic regression models to clarify the relationship of maternal smoking during pregnancy with the SGA outcome and preterm birth in LBW infants. Results In this study period, 1,329 pregnant women responded to questionnaires, and infant data were collected from 1,100 mothers (follow-up rate: 82.8%). The number of LBW infants was 81 (7.4%). In this cohort, maternal smoking during early pregnancy was associated with LBW and the SGA outcome. Maternal smoking during early pregnancy was a risk factor for LBW with SGA outcome and for LBW with full-term birth. However, it was not a risk factor for LBW with appropriate weight for gestational age (AGA) and LBW with preterm birth. Conclusion These results suggested that LBW with AGA and LBW with preterm birth were associated with other risk factors that were not considered in this study, such as periodontal disease. For the prevention of LBW, not only abstinence from smoking during pregnancy but also other methods such as establishing a clinical setting should be adopted.


Obesity | 2007

Association of maternal lifestyles including smoking during pregnancy with childhood obesity.

Takashi Mizutani; Kohta Suzuki; Naoki Kondo; Zentaro Yamagata

Objective: To examine the extent to which maternal smoking during early pregnancy and other prepregnancy lifestyle habits are associated with obesity and overweight in 5‐year‐old Japanese children.


Appetite | 2009

Confirmatory factor analysis of the Child Feeding Questionnaire (CFQ) in Japanese elementary school children.

Guozhu Geng; Zhixia Zhu; Kohta Suzuki; Taichiro Tanaka; Daisuke Ando; Miri Sato; Zentaro Yamagata

The validity of the Child Feeding Questionnaire (CFQ), one of the measures used to assess parental child feeding practices and attitudes, has been confirmed in American populations. We used confirmatory factor analysis to test the validity and factor structure of the translated version of the CFQ among parents of Japanese elementary school children. The structural equation modelling software Linear Structural Relationships (LISREL) was applied to explore the validity of the translated CFQ to examine child feeding behaviours and attitudes in a sample of 920 parents of Japanese elementary schoolchildren from schools in Koshu City in Yamanashi prefecture (grades 4-6), Japan. The confirmatory factor analysis suggested that after dropping the items with a low factor loading and adding three error covariances between items, the 7-factor model displayed acceptable fit and most items loaded as expected. Of the 24 direct factor-item correlations, 22 were greater than 0.50. Our study confirmed the validity of the translated CFQ to assess child feeding practices and attitudes among parents of elementary schoolchildren brought up in a Japanese eating culture.


Journal of Epidemiology | 2009

The Association between Maternal Smoking during Pregnancy and Childhood Obesity Persists to the Age of 9-10 Years

Kohta Suzuki; Daisuke Ando; Miri Sato; Taichiro Tanaka; Naoki Kondo; Zentaro Yamagata

Background We previously reported that a number of factors related to maternal lifestyle during early pregnancy, including smoking, are associated with childhood obesity at 5 years of age. In the present study, we investigated whether the association with maternal smoking persisted to the age of 9–10 years. Methods The study population comprised children born between April 1, 1991 and March 31, 1999, and their mothers. The dependent variables—childhood overweight and obesity at 5 and 9–10 years of age—were defined according to internationally acknowledged cut-off values. Maternal smoking during early pregnancy was used as the independent variable. Results Mothers who completed a specifically designed questionnaire gave birth to a total of 1644 infants during the study period. Anthropometric data were collected from 1302 of these children during medical checkups at 9–10 years of age (follow-up rate: 79.2%). Maternal smoking during early pregnancy was associated with obesity in 9- to 10-year-old children (adjusted odds ratio, 1.91; 95% confidence interval, 1.03–3.53). However, the point estimates at the age of 9–10 years were considerably lower than those at the age of 5 years. Conclusions Our results suggest that fetal environment, including exposure to maternal smoking, continues to be associated with childhood obesity at the age of 9–10 years.


Preventive Medicine | 2008

Impact of mental health on daily living activities of Japanese elderly

Naoki Kondo; Mari Kazama; Kohta Suzuki; Zentaro Yamagata

OBJECTIVE We investigated the impact of mental health on the decline in higher activities of daily living (ADL) defined in terms of social role performance (SR, the highest ADL), intellectual activity (IA), and instrumental ADL (IADL), as well as the onset of basic ADL disability. METHODS Six hundred older adults were randomly selected from Yamanashi prefecture, Japan. An interview survey collected baseline information from 581 people (97%) in 2003. Of those, 93% were followed for 25 months by mail. Coxs proportional hazard model was used. RESULTS Among people aged 75+ years, those with severe depressive symptoms had a relative risk (95% confidence intervals) of 3.22 (1.35-7.71), 3.11 (1.38-6.98), and 2.41 (1.07-5.40) for subsequent decline in SR, IA, and IADL, respectively, compared to those without depressive symptoms. The excess risk of IADL decline among people aged 65-74 years was also statistically significant. Social inactivity partly explained the excess risk. CONCLUSIONS Severe depressive symptoms in older adults may accelerate the progression of higher ADL decline. The adverse effect of depressive symptoms is more pronounced in senior elderly. By screening depressive symptoms and higher ADL, and promoting social activities of people at high risk, their risk for basic ADL disability could be reduced.


Pediatric Allergy and Immunology | 2011

Maternal psychosocial factors determining the concentrations of transforming growth factor-beta in breast milk

Naoki Kondo; Yuki Suda; Atsuhito Nakao; Kyoko Oh-oka; Kohta Suzuki; Kayoko Ishimaru; Miri Sato; Taichiro Tanaka; Akiko Nagai; Zentaro Yamagata

To cite this article: Kondo N, Suda Y, Nakao A, Oh‐Oka K, Suzuki K, Ishimaru K, Sato M, Tanaka T, Nagai A, Yamagata Z. Maternal psychosocial factors determining the concentrations of transforming growth factor‐beta in breast milk. Pediatr Allergy Immunology 2011: 22: 853–861.


Journal of Epidemiology | 2012

Maternal Smoking During Pregnancy and Childhood Growth Trajectory: A Random Effects Regression Analysis

Kohta Suzuki; Naoki Kondo; Miri Sato; Taichiro Tanaka; Daisuke Ando; Zentaro Yamagata

Background Although maternal smoking during pregnancy has been reported to have an effect on childhood overweight/obesity, the impact of maternal smoking on the trajectory of the body mass of their offspring is not very clear. Previously, we investigated this effect by using a fixed-effect model. However, this analysis was limited because it rounded and categorized the age of the children. Therefore, we used a random-effects hierarchical linear regression model in the present study. Methods The study population comprised children born between 1 April 1991 and 31 March 1999 in Koshu City, Japan and their mothers. Maternal smoking during early pregnancy was the exposure studied. The body mass index (BMI) z-score trajectory of children born to smoking and non-smoking mothers, by gender, was used as the outcome. We modeled BMI trajectory using a 2-level random intercept and slope regression. Results The participating mothers delivered 1619 babies during the study period. For male children, there was very strong evidence that the effect of age in months on the increase in BMI z-score was enhanced by maternal smoking during pregnancy (P < 0.0001). In contrast, for female children, there was only weak evidence for an interaction between age in months and maternal smoking during pregnancy (P = 0.054), which suggests that the effect of maternal smoking during pregnancy on the early-life BMI trajectory of offspring differed by gender. Conclusions These results may be valuable for exploring the mechanism of fetal programming and might therefore be clinically important.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Developmental Trajectories of Body Mass Index Among Japanese Children and Impact of Maternal Factors during Pregnancy

Chiyori Haga; Naoki Kondo; Kohta Suzuki; Miri Sato; Daisuke Ando; Hiroshi Yokomichi; Taichiro Tanaka; Zentaro Yamagata

Background The aims of this study were to 1) determine the distinct patterns of body mass index (BMI) trajectories in Japanese children, and 2) elucidate the maternal factors during pregnancy, which contribute to the determination of those patterns. Methodology/Principal Findings All of the children (1,644 individuals) born in Koshu City, Japan, between 1991 and 1998 were followed in a longitudinal study exploring the subjects’ BMI. The BMI was calculated 11 times for each child between birth and 12 years of age. Exploratory latent class growth analyses were conducted to identify trajectory patterns of the BMI z-scores. The distribution of BMI trajectories were best characterized by a five-group model for boys and a six-group model for girls. The groups were named “stable thin,” “stable average,” “stable high average,” “progressive overweight,” and “progressive obesity” in both sexes; girls were allocated to an additional group called “progressive average.” Multinomial logistic regression found that maternal weight, smoking, and skipping breakfast during pregnancy were associated with children included in the progressive obesity pattern rather than the stable average pattern. These associations were stronger for boys than for girls. Conclusions/Significance Multiple developmental patterns in Japanese boys and girls were identified, some of which have not been identified in Western countries. Maternal BMI and some unfavorable behaviors during early pregnancy may impact a child’s pattern of body mass development. Further studies to explain the gender and regional differences that were identified are warranted, as these may be important for early life prevention of weight-associated health problems.


Journal of Epidemiology | 2016

Association Between Maternal Smoking During Pregnancy and Birth Weight: An Appropriately Adjusted Model From the Japan Environment and Children’s Study

Kohta Suzuki; Ryoji Shinohara; Miri Sato; Sanae Otawa; Zentaro Yamagata

Background There has been no large nationwide population-based study to examine the effects of maternal smoking status during pregnancy on birth weight that simultaneously controlled for clinical information, socioeconomic status, and maternal weight. Thus, this study aimed to determine the association between maternal smoking status during pregnancy and birth weight, while taking these confounding factors into consideration. Methods This study examined the first-year fixed dataset from a large nationwide birth cohort study that commenced in 2011. The dataset consisted of information on 9369 singleton infants born before December 31, 2011. Children were divided into 4 groups for statistical analysis: those born to mothers who did not smoke (NS), who quit smoking before pregnancy, who quit smoking during early pregnancy, and who smoked (SM). Multiple linear regression models were conducted for each sex to examine the association between maternal smoking status during early pregnancy and fetal growth. Birth weight was estimated using the least-squares method after controlling for covariates. Results After controlling for potential confounding factors, maternal smoking status during pregnancy was significantly associated with birth weight. There was a significant difference in birth weight between NS and SM for both male and female infants (male infants, 3096.2 g [NS] vs 2959.8 g [SM], P < 0.001; female infants, 3018.2 g [NS] vs 2893.7 g [SM], P < 0.001). Conclusions Using data from a large nationwide birth cohort study in Japan, we have shown that maternal smoking during pregnancy may reduce birth weight by 125–136 g.


Journal of Epidemiology | 2012

Positive and negative effects of finance-based social capital on incident functional disability and mortality: an 8-year prospective study of elderly Japanese.

Naoki Kondo; Kohta Suzuki; Junko Minai; Zentaro Yamagata

Background Rotating savings and credit associations (ROSCAs) involve group financial self-help activities. These voluntary financial cooperative associations—mujin in Japanese—are found in some rural areas of Japan. Cross-sectional evidence suggests that active participation in mujin correlates with rich social capital and better functional capacities among older adults. However, the effect of mujin on subsequent health outcomes is unknown. Methods In 2003, we conducted a baseline interview survey of 583 functionally independent adults randomly selected from Yamanashi Prefecture residents aged 65 years or older. They were followed up until 2011. We used proportional hazards models, and factor analysis of 8 mujin-related questions identified 2 components: the “intensity and attitude” and “financing” aspects of mujin. Results The hazard ratios (HRs) for incident functional disability—identified by using the public long-term care insurance database—per 1-SD increase in factor scores were 0.82 (95% CI: 0.68–0.99) for the intensity and attitude score and 1.21 (1.07–1.38) for financing score. Adjustments for age, sex, marital status, household composition, physical health, education, income, and other factor scores only slightly attenuated these HRs. The results for mortality models were very similar to those for incident functional disability. Conclusions ROSCA-type activities in Japan could have beneficial effects on the health of older adults if used primarily for the purpose of friendship. Mujin for aggressively financial purposes might be somewhat harmful, as such activities might reflect the “dark side” of social capital, ie, overly demanding expectations of group conformity.

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Miri Sato

University of Yamanashi

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Naoki Kondo

University of Yamanashi

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Daisuke Ando

National Defense Academy of Japan

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Wei Zheng

University of Yamanashi

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Junko Minai

University of Yamanashi

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