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Featured researches published by Satoshi Nakai.


Urologia Internationalis | 2002

Habitual Intake of Lactic Acid Bacteria and Risk Reduction of Bladder Cancer

Yasuo Ohashi; Satoshi Nakai; Taiji Tsukamoto; Naoya Masumori; Hideyuki Akaza; Naoto Miyanaga; Tadaichi Kitamura; Kazuki Kawabe; Toshihiko Kotake; Masao Kuroda; Seiji Naito; Hirofumi Koga; Yutaka Saito; Koichiro Nomata; Motoaki Kitagawa; Yoshio Aso

Introduction: A kind of lactic acid bacteria, Lactobacillus casei strain Shirota, shows antitumor activity in experimental animals. One clinical trial using L. casei showed a significant decrease in the recurrence of superficial bladder cancer. So, to assess the preventive effect of the intake of L. casei, widely taken as fermented milk products in Japan, against bladder cancer, we conducted a case-control study. Methods: A total of 180 cases (mean age: 67 years, SD 10) were selected from 7 hospitals, and 445 population-based controls matched by gender and age were also selected. Interviewers asked them 81 items. The conditional logistic regression was used to estimate adjusted odds ratios (OR). Results: The OR of smoking was 1.61 (95% confidence interval: 1.10–2.36). Those of previous (10–15 years ago) intake of fermented milk products were 0.46 (0.27–0.79) for 1–2 times/week and 0.61 (0.38–0.99) for 3–4 or more times/week, respectively. Conclusion: It was strongly suggested that the habitual intake of lactic acid bacteria reduces the risk of bladder cancer.


Journal of Epidemiology | 2008

Effects of airborne particulate matter on respiratory morbidity in asthmatic children.

Ma L; Masayuki Shima; Yoshiko Yoda; Hirono Yamamoto; Satoshi Nakai; Kenji Tamura; Hiroshi Nitta; Hiroko Watanabe; Toshiyuki Nishimuta

Background The effects of airborne particulate matter (PM) are a major human health concern. In this panel study, we evaluated the acute effects of exposure to PM on peak expiratory flow (PEF) and wheezing in children. Methods Daily PEF and wheezing were examined in 19 asthmatic children who were hospitalized in a suburban city in Japan for approximately 5 months. The concentrations of PM less than 2.5 µm in diameter (PM2.5) were monitored at a monitoring station proximal to the hospital. Moreover, PM2.5 concentrations inside and outside the hospital were measured using the dust monitor with a laser diode (PM2.5(LD)). The changes in PEF and wheezing associated with PM concentration were analyzed. Results The changes in PEF in the morning and evening were significantly associated with increases in the average concentration of indoor PM2.5(LD) 24 h prior to measurement (-2.86 L/min [95%CI: -4.12, -1.61] and -3.59 L/min [95%CI: -4.99, -2.20] respectively, for 10-µg/m3 increases). The change in PEF was also significantly associated with outdoor PM2.5(LD) concentrations, but the changes were smaller than those observed for indoor PM2.5(LD). Changes in PEF and concentration of stationary-site PM2.5 were not associated. The prevalence of wheezing in the morning and evening were also significantly associated with indoor PM2.5(LD) concentrations (odds ratios = 1.014 [95%CI: 1.006, 1.023] and 1.025 [95%CI: 1.013, 1.038] respectively, for 10-µg/m3 increases). Wheezing in the evening was significantly associated with outdoor PM2.5(LD) concentration. The effects of indoor and outdoor PM2.5(LD) remained significant even after adjusting for ambient nitrogen dioxide concentrations. Conclusion Indoor and outdoor PM2.5(LD) concentrations were associated with PEF and wheezing among asthmatic children. Indoor PM2.5(LD) had a more marked effect than outdoor PM2.5(LD) or stationary-site PM2.5.


Landscape and Ecological Engineering | 2005

A guideline for ecological risk management procedures

Axel G. Rossberg; Hiroyuki Matsuda; Fumito Koike; Takashi Amemiya; Mitsutaku Makino; Mari Morino; Takashi Kubo; Shinji Shimode; Satoshi Nakai; Mineo Katoh; Tadayoshi Shigeoka; Kohei Urano

A practical guideline for community-level ecological risk management is proposed, with particular emphasis on the mutual interdependencies of the scientific analysis, public consensus building, and an adaptive management. The procedure we recommend spans the screening of potential ecological risks, the involvement of related stakeholders, the conceptual development from the “undesired event” over assessment endpoints to measures of effect and stress factors, the risk assessment for the no-action case, the planning phase from the public decision to become active and the setting of goals over a specification of monitoring and control methods to an assessment of feasibility and a public approval of the management plan and finally the adaptive management from initiation over continued monitoring to revisions of the plan, if required. The procedure contains several checkpoints, alternative routes, and possibilities to correct previous decisions.


International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health | 2007

Effects of Cooking Fuels on Acute Respiratory Infections in Children in Tanzania

James H. Kilabuko; Satoshi Nakai


Journal of Food Composition and Analysis | 2009

Simulated impact of a change in fish consumption on intake of n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids

Ying Zhang; Satoshi Nakai; Shigeki Masunaga


Regulatory Toxicology and Pharmacology | 2007

Pediatric susceptibility to 18 industrial chemicals: a comparative analysis of newborn with young animals.

Ryuichi Hasegawa; Mutsuko Hirata-Koizumi; Michael Dourson; Ann Parker; Akihiko Hirose; Satoshi Nakai; Eiichi Kamata; Makoto Ema


Journal of Japan Society for Atmospheric Environment / Taiki Kankyo Gakkaishi | 2008

Indoor and outdoor levels of particulate matter concentration in a district of Tokyo in the late 1980s

Masaji Ono; Kenji Tamura; Hiroshi Nitta; Satoshi Nakai


Archive | 2006

Theoretical Determination of the Sampling Rates of Diffusion Samplers for Volatile Organic Compounds

Jun Kohzaki; Satoshi Nakai; Yuichro Shirasuna; Koichiro Hirano


Indoor Environment | 2008

A questionnaire survey on the usage of air samplers for VOCs and aldehydes

Jun Kohzaki; Koichiro Hirano; Yuichro Shirasuna; Satoshi Nakai


Archive | 2005

EXPOSURE ASSESSMENT OF CHEMICAL SENSITIVITY PATIENTS

Satoshi Nakai; M Hirukawa; Y Fujima; Kou Sakabe; Satoshi Ishikawa

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Hiroshi Nitta

National Institute for Environmental Studies

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Jun Kohzaki

Tokyo Institute of Technology

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Kenji Tamura

National Institute for Materials Science

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Fumito Koike

Yokohama National University

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Hirono Yamamoto

Yokohama National University

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Hiroyuki Matsuda

Yokohama National University

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James H. Kilabuko

Yokohama National University

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