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Dive into the research topics where Teiji Kimura is active.

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Featured researches published by Teiji Kimura.


Journal of Biomechanics | 2011

Analysis of pelvic movement in the elderly during walking using a posture monitoring system equipped with a triaxial accelerometer and a gyroscope

Norio Ishigaki; Teiji Kimura; Yuki Usui; Kaoru Aoki; Nobuyo Narita; Masayuki Shimizu; Kazuo Hara; Nobuhide Ogihara; Koichi Nakamura; Hiroyuki Kato; Masayoshi Ohira; Yoshiharu Yokokawa; Kei Miyoshi; Narumichi Murakami; Shinpei Okada; Tomokazu Nakamura; Naoto Saito

The incidence of falls in the elderly is increasing with the aging of society and is becoming a major public health issue. From the viewpoint of prevention of falls, it is important to evaluate the stability of the gait in the elderly people. The pelvic movement, which is a critical factor for walking stability, was analyzed using a posture monitoring system equipped with a triaxial accelerometer and a gyroscope. The subjects were 95 elderly people over 60 years of age. The criteria for instability were open-eye standing on one leg for 15s or less, and 11s or more on 3m timed up and go test. Forty subjects who did not meet both of these criteria comprised the stable group, and the remaining 55 subjects comprised the unstable group. Pelvic movement during walking was compared between the two groups. The angle, angular velocity, and acceleration were analyzed based on the wave shape derived from the device worn around the second sacral. The results indicated that pelvic movement was lower in all three directions in the unstable group compared to the stable group, and the changes in the pelvic movement during walking in unstable elderly people were also reduced. This report is the first to evaluate pelvic movement by both a triaxial accelerometer and a triaxial gyroscope simultaneously. The characteristics of pelvic movement during walking can be applied in screening to identify elderly people with instability, which is the main risk factor associated with falls.


Archives of Orthopaedic and Trauma Surgery | 2003

Property analysis of ectopic calcification in the carpal tunnel identification of apatite crystals: a case report

Kunihiro Sensui; Satoru Saitoh; Kiyokazu Kametani; Kuniaki Makino; Masayoshi Ohira; Teiji Kimura; Goh Ah Cheng; Yukihiko Hata

IntroductionA 64-year-old woman presented with symptoms of subacute exacerbation of a year-long carpal tunnel syndrome that was caused by a large calcified mass in the tunnel.ConclusionThe resected mass consisted of very tiny rods, and x-ray diffraction analysis, as well as the component analysis using energy dispersive x-ray microanalysis, revealed the mass to be most compatible with apatite. The back-scattered electron images suggested that precipitation might be a mechanism for development of the calcified mass.


British Journal of Sports Medicine | 2004

Deep cutting injury from the edges of a snowboard

T. Matsunaga; Satoru Saitoh; H. Tanikawa; Miwa Hayashi; Masayoshi Ohira; Teiji Kimura

A laceration deep enough to reach the bone occurs very rarely in skiing or snowboarding. Two such cases are presented here. In one case, the popliteal fossa of a skier was cut during a collision with a snowboarder. All structures posterior to the knee were severed and the leg became ischaemic. The other case was of a snowboarder who sustained a deep cut to the distal forearm during landing after a jump, resulting in a “spaghetti wrist”.


Journal of Physical Therapy Science | 2015

The effect of different imitation models on theaccuracy and speed of imitation of movement.

Hitomi Nishizawa; Teiji Kimura; Ah-Cheng Goh

[Purpose] The purpose of this study was to compare the accuracy, speed and subjective ease of imitation of movement using three different imitation models. [Subjects] Thirty-four right-handed healthy males participated in this study. [Methods] The imitation task chosen for this study was an asymmetric combined motion of the upper and lower limbs. Three kinds of imitation models were displayed on a screen as follows: a) third person perspective mirror imitation (3PM), b) third person perspective anatomical imitation (3PA), and c) first person perspective ipsilateral imitation (1PI). Subjects were instructed to imitate the movement shown on a screen as quickly and as accurately as possible. They executed four sets of the movement with each set consisting of one trial of each of the three imitation models. [Results] 3PM was the most accurate, and 1PI was the fastest in speed and subjective ease of imitation, compared with the other two imitation models. [Conclusion] These results suggest that 1PI and 3PM, which do not require mental rotation of the movement task as required by 3PA, should be considered more suitable imitation models for teaching healthy subjects how to move.


Spine | 2015

Characteristics of trunk control during crook-lying unilateral leg raising in different types of chronic low back pain patients.

Atsushi Ohe; Teiji Kimura; Ah-Cheng Goh; Akemi Oba; Jun Takahashi; Yuji Mogami

Study Design. Cross-sectional observational study. Objective. To quantitatively clarify the characteristics of trunk control during unilateral leg-raising movement in different types of nonspecific chronic low back pain (NS-CLBP) patients who were identified by aggravation of symptoms during trunk movement. Summary of Background Data. Although there is a need to classify NS-CLBP patients for clinical decision making in physical therapy, the characteristics of trunk control during unilateral leg-raising movement in different types of NS-CLBP patients have not been quantitatively analyzed in previous studies by simultaneously measuring the lumbar spine movement, trunk muscle activity, and leg movement. Methods. Thirty NS-CLBP patients, of whom 13 were aggravated by trunk flexion (flexion group) and 17 were aggravated by trunk extension (extension group), and 30 healthy controls performed crook-lying unilateral leg-raising movement on the painful side in patient group and the dominant leg in controls. During the unilateral leg-raising movement, pressure changes produced by the movement of the lumbar lordotic curve, measured by a custom-made recording device, were used as indices of the lumbar spine movement. Trunk muscle activities were recorded by surface electromyography and diagnostic ultrasonography. The pressure changes and trunk muscle activities were statistically compared among the 3 groups. Results. At foot-off during unilateral leg-raising movement, the extension group demonstrated increase in pressure changes, whereas the flexion group and controls demonstrated decrease in pressure changes. Bilateral external obliques muscle activities in the extension group were significantly larger than those in the flexion group and controls (P < 0.05). Conclusion. This study demonstrated that the characteristics of trunk control during unilateral leg-raising movement were different depending on the types of NS-CLBP patients. These results indicate that patients with NS-CLBP might select compensatory trunk control strategies subconsciously to prevent the manifestation of LBP. These results also suggest the importance of the different characteristics of trunk control during active limb movement in the clinical reasoning process for the management of different types of NS-CLBP patients. Level of Evidence: N/A


Journal of Physical Therapy Science | 2017

Enhancement of motor skill learning by a combination of ideal model-observation and self-observation

Hitomi Nishizawa; Teiji Kimura

[Purpose] In sports physical therapy, video of a patient’s movement or of a skilled model’s movement has been used as observational learning methods for injury prevention and movement modification. Positive effects of model video observation have been reported. This study aimed to clarify the effect on motor skill learning using a combination of model-observation and self-observation, which is thought to act as an enhanced method for active error detection by comparing model-observation and self-observation alone for acquisition of correct sports movement. [Subjects and Methods] Forty-five healthy females were randomly allocated into three groups comprising model- and self-observation, model-observation, and self-observation. The motor task performed was a half golf swing using an elastic club. Shoulder grip angle between both shoulder lines and the acromia grip strength were measured as an index of body rotation using a three-dimensional motion analyzer. Change in the shoulder grip angle in the three groups was analyzed at pre-, immediate delayed retention, and delayed retention tests. [Results] A significant difference in shoulder grip angle was observed among the three groups for the immediate delayed retention test. The combined model and self-observation group had a value closer to 90 degrees compared to the other two groups. [Conclusion] Observation combining model and self-observation exerted a positive effect on short-term motor skill learning.


International Journal of Biometeorology | 1997

Physiological and psychological assessment of sound

Ryuya Yanagihashi; Masayoshi Ohira; Teiji Kimura; Takayuki Fujiwara


Journal of Physical Therapy Science | 2005

Effect of Ageing on Quadriceps Muscle Strength and on the Forward Shift of Center of Pressure during Sit-to-stand Movement from a Chair

Kei Miyoshi; Teiji Kimura; Yoshiharu Yokokawa; Goh Ah Cheng; Takayuki Fujiwara; Iwao Yamamoto; Yoshiyuki Kondo


Journal of Physical Therapy Science | 2006

Relationship between Balance Performance and Leg Muscle Strength in Elite and Non-Elite Junior Speed Skaters

Katsushi Akahane; Teiji Kimura; Goh Ah Cheng; Takayuki Fujiwara; Iwao Yamamoto; Akira Hachimori


Journal of The Japanese Physical Therapy Association | 2013

Analysis of Lumbar Movement under Different Muscle Activation Strategies During Active Leg Raise in Normal Subjects

Atsushi Ohe; Akemi Oba; Teiji Kimura; Goh Ah Cheng; Hirotaka Tanikawa; Yuji Mogami

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