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Featured researches published by Ryumon Honda.


Archives of Environmental Health | 1988

Progress of renal dysfunction in inhabitants environmentally exposed to cadmium

Teruhiko Kido; Ryumon Honda; Ikiko Tsuritani; Haruki Yamaya; Masao Ishizaki; Yuichi Yamada; Koji Nogawa

The reversibility of beta 2-microglobulinuria, glucosuria, and aminoaciduria was examined in 74 inhabitants (32 males and 42 females) over 50 yr of age, who lived in a cadmium-polluted area. The subjects participated in two examinations conducted just after the cessation of cadmium exposure and 5 yr later. All urinary parameters did not show reversible changes. During the 5 yr the geometric mean concentrations of beta 2-microglobulinuria, glucosuria, and aminoaciduria indicated significant increases in excretion. In cases where greater than 1,000 micrograms/g creatinine of beta 2-microglobulinuria was observed (at the time cadmium exposure ended), almost all individuals exposed to cadmium showed deterioration of beta 2-microglobulinuria, whereas in the case of less than 1,000 micrograms/g creatinine of beta 2-microglobulinuria, no significant changes were observed. The present study indicates that cadmium-induced renal dysfunction in individuals environmentally exposed to cadmium is irreversible.


Environmental Research | 1989

A dose-response analysis of cadmium in the general environment with special reference to total cadmium intake limit

Koji Nogawa; Ryumon Honda; Teruhiko Kido; Ikiko Tsuritani; Yuichi Yamada; Masao Ishizaki; Haruki Yamaya

An epidemiological study on the dose-response relationship of cadmium was performed on 1850 Cd-exposed and 294 nonexposed inhabitants of the Kakehashi River basin in Ishikawa Prefecture. beta 2-microglobulinuria was used as an index of the effect of cadmium on health and the average cadmium concentration in locally produced rice was employed as an indicator of cadmium exposure. Cadmium exposure was found to affect health in a dose-related manner when the subjects were classified according to the average cadmium concentration in their village rice and their length of residence in the polluted area. Based on the available data, the total cadmium intake that produced an adverse effect on health was calculated as approximately 2000 mg for both men and women.


International Archives of Occupational and Environmental Health | 1987

Mechanism for bone disease found in inhabitants environmentally exposed to cadmium: decreased serum 1α, 25-dihydroxyvitamin D level

Koji Nogawa; Ikiko Tsuritani; Ternhiko Kido; Ryumon Honda; Yuichi Yamada; Masao Ishizaki

SummaryTo investigate the mechanism for bone disease caused by exposure to cadmium serum samples were collected from 5 itai-itai disease patients, 36 Cd-exposed residents with renal tubular damage and 17 non-exposed individuals and analyzed for 1α,25-dihydroxyvitamin D[1α, 25(OH)2D], parathyroid hormone, β2-microglobulin, calcium and inorganic phosphorus. Measurement of percentage tubular reabsorption of phosphate (%TRP) were performed only on the Cd-exposed subjects. Serum 1α, 25(OH)2D], levels were lower in itai-itai disease patients and cadmium-exposed subjects with renal damage than in non-exposed subjects. Parathyroid hormone and β2-microglobulin concentrations in serum were higher in the Cd-exposed subjects. Decrease in serum 1α,25(OH)2D levels were closely related to serum concentrations of parathyroid hormone, β2-microglobulin and %TRP. This study suggests that cadmium-induced bone effects were mainly due to a disturbance in vitamin D and parathyroid hormone metabolism, which was caused by the cadmium-induced kidney damage.


Molecular and Cellular Biochemistry | 2004

The gender differences in health effects of environmental cadmium exposure and potential mechanisms

Muneko Nishijo; Soisungwan Satarug; Ryumon Honda; Ikiko Tsuritani; Keiko Aoshima

On a viewpoint of gender differences in Cd body burden and its health effects, we reviewed the population-based research including our own which conducted in Japan, Thailand, Australia, Poland, Belgium and Sweden to assess health effects of human exposure to environmental cadmium and their potential mechanisms. As a result, six risk factors in Cd health effects in women have been identified; (1) more serious type of renal tubular dysfunction, (2) difference in calcium metabolism and its regulatory hormones, (3) kidney sensitivity; difference in P450 phenotype, (4) pregnancy, (5) body iron store status, and (6) genetic factors. Further studies of Cd toxicity targeted to women would now appear necessary.


Maturitas | 2002

Impact of obesity on musculoskeletal pain and difficulty of daily movements in Japanese middle-aged women.

Ikiko Tsuritani; Ryumon Honda; Yuka Noborisaka; Masaaki Ishida; Masao Ishizaki; Yuichi Yamada

OBJECTIVE To investigate the impact of obesity on musculoskeletal pain and disability, which impairs well-being, associations between body mass index (BMI), frequency of musculoskeletal pain and difficulty of daily movements were assessed in middle-aged women. METHODS Subjects were 709 Japanese women in a community, aged 40-69. Measured BMI, current smoking habits, frequency of pain (pain score)(rarely (0), occasionally (1) or frequently (2)) during the last 1 month at shoulders, neck, upper back, lower back and legs, difficulty of three daily movements: walking continually for more than a half hour, climbing stairs and sitting on the floor with ones legs bent beneath one another, (score for each movement) (rarely (0), occasionally (1) or frequently (2)) by a questionnaire. The summed score was defined as the difficulty score of daily movements (DS) (0-6). RESULTS BMI increased significantly with age. Lower back pain (occasionally or frequently) was the most common symptom (40.3%) in the subjects. There was a peak in prevalence of frequent pain of shoulders at age 50. Pain score for legs and DS increased significantly with age. Higher BMI was related to increased prevalence of frequent leg pain and DS (>or=3), but there were no significant associations between age or BMI, and scores of back pain. DS was correlated significantly with pain scores at shoulders, upper back, lower back and legs. After adjustment for age and smoking habit using a logistic regression analysis, odds ratios for frequent pain at legs and DS (>or=3) were 4.02 (CI: 1.83-8.80) and 2.92 (CI: 1.56-5.47), respectively, in the obese women (BMI>or=26.4, n=61), compared with 401 women with normal BMI (20-24). CONCLUSION Obesity tended to impair well-being through musculoskeletal pain at legs and difficulty of daily movements in Japanese middle-aged women.


Environmental Research | 2003

Urinary cadmium excretion is correlated with calcaneal bone mass in Japanese women living in an urban area.

Ryumon Honda; Ikiko Tsuritani; Yuka Noborisaka; Hisa Suzuki; Masao Ishizaki; Yuichi Yamada

Nine hundred eight women aged 40-88 years living in a non-Cd-polluted area in Japan were analyzed for urinary cadmium (Cd), N-acetyl-beta-D-glucosaminidase (NAG) activity, beta(2)-microglobulin (B2MG) concentration, and for the stiffness index (STIFF) of calcaneal bone using an ultrasound method. The urinary Cd in the subjects, with a mean and range of 2.87 and 0.25-11.4 microg/g creatinine, respectively, showed a significant correlation with NAG but not with B2MG. STIFF was significantly inversely correlated with urinary Cd, and the association remained significant after adjusting for age, body weight, and menstrual status, suggesting a significant effect of Cd on the bone loss in these subjects without signs of Cd-induced kidney damage. A two-fold increase in urinary Cd was accompanied by a decrease in STIFF corresponding to a 1.7-year rise in age. These results emphasize the need for reassessment of the significance of Cd exposure in the general Japanese population.


Toxicology | 2003

Cadmium exposure and trace elements in human breast milk.

Ryumon Honda; Kenji Tawara; Muneko Nishijo; Hideaki Nakagawa; Kyoko Tanebe; Shigeru Saito

The interrelations of the seven elements, calcium (Ca), magnesium (Mg), sodium (Na), potassium (K), phosphorus (P), copper (Cu), zinc (Zn), and cadmium (Cd) in human breast milk were examined in Japanese mothers to clarify the effects of Cd exposure on these important elements for infant growth. Breast milk and urine samples were obtained from 68 mothers, aged 19-38 years, at 5-8 days postpartum. The concentrations were determined by inductively-coupled plasma atomic emission spectrometry for Ca, Mg, Na, K, P, by flame atomic absorption spectrophotometry for Cu and Zn, and by flameless atomic absorption spectrophotometry for Cd. Geometrical mean Cd concentrations were 0.28 (geometrical standard deviation=1.82) microg/l in breast milk and 1.00 (1.93) microg/g creatinine in urine. Among the above elements only Cd concentration in breast milk was significantly correlated with urinary Cd concentration (r=0.451, P<0.001). Significant positive correlations were found between Cu and Ca (r=0.500, P<0.001), Cu and Mg (r=0.378, P<0.01), and Zn and Mg (r=0.355, P<0.01) in breast milk. Cd concentration in breast milk showed an inverse relationship with Ca concentration in breast milk (r=-0.248, P<0.05). These results indicate that the Cd concentration in breast milk closely reflects Cd body burden, with increased Cd in breast milk possibly affecting Ca secretion in breast milk.


Hypertension | 1991

Alcohol, high blood pressure, and serum gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase level.

Yuichi Yamada; Masao Ishizaki; Teruhiko Kido; Ryumon Honda; Ikiko Tsuritani; Eriko Ikai; Haruki Yamaya

The influence of the level of serum gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase, a biological marker of alcohol consumption, on elevations of blood pressure and on the development of hypertension related to increases in alcohol consumption was determined in a cross-sectional study of 1,492 middle-aged male workers and in a subsequent 5-year follow-up study of 1,393 workers. Blood pressure levels, as well as the prevalence and incidence of hypertension, were higher in the subjects with serum gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase levels above 50 units/l than in those with normal levels. These differences were more marked in drinkers who consumed 30 ml or more of alcohol per day. Thus, elevated serum gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase activity may identify drinkers at higher risk for the development of alcohol-related hypertension.


Toxicology Letters | 2010

Cadmium induced renal dysfunction among residents of rice farming area downstream from a zinc-mineralized belt in Thailand

Ryumon Honda; Witaya Swaddiwudhipong; Muneko Nishijo; Pranee Mahasakpan; Wimonrat Teeyakasem; Werawan Ruangyuttikarn; Soisungwan Satarug; Chantana Padungtod; Hideaki Nakagawa

High levels of cadmium (Cd) in paddy soil and rice, and a concurrent increase in urinary Cd of inhabitants in the Mae Sot District, Tak Province, Thailand first emerged in 2003. Risk factors such as occupation, sources of staple food and drinking water as well as biomarkers of adverse renal effects of the increased body burden of Cd were investigated in 795 residents, 30 years or older, whose urinary Cd levels were between 0.02 and 106mug/g creatinine. Farmers who consumed their own rice and residents who sourced drinking water from wells and/or the river demonstrated increased urinary Cd. Age-adjusted mean urinary cadmium for male and female subjects who consumed well water was 5.7mug/g vs. 6.1mug/g creatinine while the corresponding value for male and female subjects who did not consume well water was 3.7mug/g vs. 4.8mug/g creatinine, respectively. Increased urinary levels of beta(2)-microglobulin and N-acetyl-beta-d-glucosaminidase were observed with the increase in urinary Cd, indicating tubular dysfunction and renal damage associated with increase in Cd body burden. Consumption of well water and rice grown in the contaminated area increase the body burden of Cd. Cessation of exposure is essential to prevent and possibly recover from Cd toxicity, especially among the residents whose kidney damage and malfunction may be reversible.


Environmental Research | 1990

The association between renal dysfunction and osteopenia in environmental cadmium-exposed subjects.

Teruhiko Kido; Koji Nogawa; Ryumon Honda; Ikiko Tsuritani; Masao Ishizaki; Yuichi Yamada; Hideaki Nakagawa

Two hundred and three cadmium (Cd)-exposed subjects with renal dysfunction and 80 non-exposed subjects were examined to reveal the relationship between Cd-induced renal dysfunction and osteopenia. As biological indicators of renal function, urinary beta 2-microglobulin (beta 2-mg), and serum creatinine, calcium, and phosphorus were selected. Cd in the urine and blood was also measured. The results indicated that significant differences exist between both sexes in Cd-exposed as well as nonexposed subjects. To evaluate the degree of osteopenia, a microdensitometrical (MD) method was used. The relationships between biological parameters and each index of the MD method were analyzed using multivariate analysis. Age, urinary beta 2-mg, and serum creatinine were significantly associated with indices of osteopenia in Cd-exposed men. In contrast, age showed the most significant association with MD indices in women of both groups. However, urinary beta 2-mg was significantly associated with MD indices only in Cd-exposed women. In Cd-exposed subjects, after the number of predictor variables was increased, urinary beta 2-mg was also strongly associated with osteopenia. These results suggest a causal relationship between renal dysfunction and osteopenia in Cd-exposed subjects.

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Yuichi Yamada

Kanazawa Medical University

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Masao Ishizaki

Kanazawa Medical University

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Ikiko Tsuritani

Kanazawa Medical University

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Hideaki Nakagawa

Kanazawa Medical University

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Muneko Nishijo

Kanazawa Medical University

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Hiroshi Sasaki

Kanazawa Medical University

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