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Featured researches published by Tetsuhiro Yoshino.


Evidence-based Complementary and Alternative Medicine | 2012

Usage and Attitudes of Physicians in Japan Concerning Traditional Japanese Medicine (Kampo Medicine): A Descriptive Evaluation of a Representative Questionnaire-Based Survey

E. C. Moschik; C. Mercado; Tetsuhiro Yoshino; K. Matsuura; Kenji Watanabe

Kampo medicine has been the primary medical model in Japan until the mid 1800s, regained a prominent role in todays Japanese medical system. Today, 148 herbal Kampo formulas can be prescribed under the national health insurance system, allowing physicians to integrate Kampo in their daily practice. This article aims to provide information about the extent to which Kampo is now used in clinics throughout Japan and about physicians current attitudes toward Kampo. We used the results of a 2008 survey that was administered to physicians throughout Japan (n = 684). The data showed that 83.5% of physicians currently use Kampo in the clinic, although the distribution of physicians who use Kampo differ widely depending on the specialty and provided a breakdown of Kampo usage by specialty. It will be interesting to see how each specialty incorporates Kampo into its respective field as Kampo continues to play a pertinent role in Japanese medical system.


Evidence-based Complementary and Alternative Medicine | 2013

Prescription of Kampo Drugs in the Japanese Health Care Insurance Program

Kotoe Katayama; Tetsuhiro Yoshino; Kaori Munakata; Rui Yamaguchi; Seiya Imoto; Satoru Miyano; Kenji Watanabe

Kampo medicine or traditional Japanese medicine has been used under Japans National Health Insurance scheme for 46 years. Recent research has shown that more than 80% of physicians use Kampo in daily practice. However, the use of Kampo from the patient perspective has received scant attention. To assess the current use of Kampo drugs in the National Health Insurance Program, we analysed a total of 67,113,579 health care claim records, which had been collected by Japans Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare in 2009. We found that Kampo drugs were prescribed for 1.34% of all patients. Among these, 92.2% simultaneously received biomedical drugs. Shakuyakukanzoto was the most frequently prescribed Kampo drug. The usage of frequently prescribed Kampo drugs differed between the youth and the elderly, males and females, and inpatients and outpatients. Kampo medicine has been employed in a wide variety of conditions, but the prescription rate was highest for disorders associated with pregnancy, childbirth, and the puerperium (4.08%). Although the adoption of Kampo medicine by physicians is large in a variety of diseases, the prescription rate of Kampo drugs is very limited.


Upsala Journal of Medical Sciences | 2012

A case of hypoglycemic hemiparesis and literature review

Tetsuhiro Yoshino; Shu Meguro; Yukie Soeda; Arata Itoh; Toshihide Kawai; Hiroshi Itoh

Abstract An 89-year-old man with diabetes treated with metformin 500 mg/day and glimepiride 4 mg/day was hospitalized because of hypoglycemic right hemiparesis and dysarthria (casual glucose value 1.8 mmol/L), which resolved quickly following administration of 40 mL of 40% dextrose. Hemiparesis is a rare symptom (4.2%) of hypoglycemia. There are about 200 case reports of hypoglycemic hemiparesis. The average glucose level at which hemiparesis developed was 1.8 mmol/L. Right-sided hemiparesis predominated (R 66%; L 34%). On imaging studies, abnormal findings were frequently observed in the internal capsule or splenium of the corpus callosum. The mechanism of hemiparesis is not fully understood. The existence of cases in which hypoglycemia cannot be distinguished from stroke on imaging studies suggests the importance of measurement of the blood glucose level when the symptoms of stroke are first recognized.


Evidence-based Complementary and Alternative Medicine | 2016

The Difference between the Two Representative Kampo Formulas for Treating Dysmenorrhea: An Observational Study

Tetsuhiro Yoshino; Kotoe Katayama; Yuko Horiba; Kaori Munakata; Rui Yamaguchi; Seiya Imoto; Satoru Miyano; Hideki Mima; Kenji Watanabe; Masaru Mimura

In Kampo medicine, two different formulas are effective for treating dysmenorrhea—tokishakuyakusan and keishibukuryogan; however, the criteria by which specialists select the appropriate formula for each patient are not clear. We compared patients treated with tokishakuyakusan and those with keishibukuryogan and proposed a predictive model. The study included 168 primary and secondary dysmenorrhea patients who visited the Kampo Clinic at Keio University Hospital. We collected clinical data from 128 dysmenorrhea patients, compared the two patient groups and selected significantly different factors as potential predictors, and used logistic regression to establish a model. An external validation was performed using 40 dysmenorrhea patients. Lightheadedness, BMI < 18.5, and a weak abdomen were significantly more frequent in the tokishakuyakusan group; tendency to sweat, heat intolerance, leg numbness, a cold sensation in the lower back, a strong abdomen, and paraumbilical tenderness and resistance were more frequent in the keishibukuryogan group. The final model fitted the data well. Internally estimated accuracy was 81.2%, and a leave-one-out cross-validation estimate of accuracy was 80.5%. External validation accuracy was 85.0%. We proposed a model for predicting the use of two Kampo formulas for dysmenorrhea, which should be validated in prospective trials.


Journal of Alternative and Complementary Medicine | 2014

Risk factors for pseudoaldosteronism with rhabdomyolysis caused by consumption of drugs containing licorice and differences between incidence of these conditions in Japan and other countries: case report and literature review.

Tetsuhiro Yoshino; Tatsuo Yanagawa; Kenji Watanabe

BACKGROUND The pathogenesis of licorice-induced pseudoaldosteronism is thought to involve the inhibition of 11β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase type 2 by glycyrrhetinic acid. Some risk factors have been reported, but differences between Japan and other countries have not been reported. CASE PRESENTATION A 79-year-old woman was hospitalized because of pseudoaldosteronism with rhabdomyolysis caused by ingestion of herbal medicines containing licorice. She had been prescribed shakuyakukanzobushito (decocted, 3 g of licorice) and keishikajutsubuto (decocted, 2 g of licorice) for the treatment of lower back pain and had been taking antihypertensive agents for the treatment of essential hypertension. After taking the herbal medicines for 2 weeks, the patient developed weakness of the extremities and pain in both thighs. On admission, she had hypertension, oliguria, an elevated serum creatine kinase level, hypokalemia, alkalemia associated with metabolic alkalosis, low plasma renin activity, and low plasma aldosterone levels. Intravenous and oral potassium supplementation and the administration of spironolactone resulted in the normalization of her condition within approximately 2 weeks. DISCUSSION An analysis of case reports of pseudoaldosteronism with rhabdomyolysis revealed that in Japan, most cases occurred in elderly women with essential hypertension and were caused by drugs such as herbal medicines. In contrast, in other countries, many cases involved younger men, and the dominant causes were foods containing licorice. The use of herbal medicines is increasing all over the world, and when a patient with risk factors is prescribed an herbal medicine containing licorice, careful follow-up is required.


Traditional & Kampo Medicine | 2016

National cost estimation of maoto, a Kampo medicine, compared with oseltamivir for the treatment of influenza in Japan

Ryutaro Arita; Tetsuhiro Yoshino; Yosuke Hotta; Yoshihisa Miyamoto; Ichiro Osawa; Osamu Takemoto; Kenji Watanabe

Millions of Japanese people suffer from influenza every year. Many of these patients are treated with neuraminidase inhibitors, particularly with oseltamivir. In traditional Japanese herbal medicine (Kampo medicine), maoto is effective against influenza; it can be administered to children and adolescents, and is much cheaper than oseltamivir or other neuraminidase inhibitors. We estimated the annual savings in medical costs (ASMC) at a national level when oseltamivir was partly replaced with maoto in influenza treatment.


Journal of Alternative and Complementary Medicine | 2016

Goshajinkigan for Low Back Pain: An Observational Study

Takuya Hamaguchi; Tetsuhiro Yoshino; Yuko Horiba; Kenji Watanabe

OBJECTIVES Low back pain (LBP) is a chronic condition. Although Western treatments are available, Kampo (traditional Japanese) medicine is widely prescribed and covered by health insurance in Japan. Goshajinkigan (GJG), a Kampo formula, is commonly used to treat LBP. However, cases we have occasionally been encountered in which GJG did not show the expected effects. Hence, the purpose of this retrospective study was to investigate patient factors important in developing the effects of GJG. METHODS This was a retrospective observational study based at the Center for Kampo Medicine, Keio University Hospital. Data were retrieved from the medical records of 28 patients who visited our hospital between May 2008 and March 2013 and who received GJG for LBP. The patients were divided into responders and non-responders based on whether their LBP improved post treatment. The groups were compared with respect to daily GJG dose, incidence of spine disease, and side effects. RESULTS Ten patients (responders) reported an improvement in LBP within 6 months. One patient experienced decreased appetite as a side effect. Nine patients reported no improvement (non-responders). The number of patients prescribed the usual daily dose of GJG (7.5 g) was significantly higher among responders than it was among non-responders (p = 0.023), and the number of patients with spine disease was significantly greater among non-responders than it was among responders (p = 0.020). The number of patients with spinal stenosis was significantly higher among non-responders than it was among responders (p = 0.011). Therefore, the usual daily dose of GJG provided significant relief of LBP, particularly in patients without any spine disease. CONCLUSIONS Routine daily administration of GJG in patients without spine disease seems to lead to the effects of the product. However, further investigations using the above-mentioned parameters are needed to confirm these findings.


Global advances in health and medicine : improving healthcare outcomes worldwide | 2013

Kampo Extract of Shinbuto Improved Refractory Diarrhea in Milroy's Disease

Yuko Horiba; Tetsuhiro Yoshino; Kenji Watanabe

Milroys disease is a hereditary congenital lymphedema caused by lymphatic obstruction. The legs are most commonly affected, but impaired intestinal lymphatic flow can cause loose bowel movements. Here, we report the use of the Kampo extract of shinbuto for successful treatment of and abdominal pain in a patient with Milroys disease. Milroys disease was diagnosed because of left leg lymphedema with onset at birth. Conservative therapy with a compression bandage was applied. However, when the patient moved to Manila at 35 years of age, she was exposed to drastic temperature changes between the air-conditioned cold environment in her room and the hot and humid environment outside. She developed a constitutional state of coldness as in hiesho. Then sudden lower abdominal pain and diarrhea began to occur 3 times per week and lasted at least 1 hour, sometimes accompanied by vomiting. It happened particularly when she was exposed to the cold environment and was not related to meals. Conventional anti-cholinergic or antidiarrhetic drugs had no therapeutic effect. These attacks continued in the same frequency for 3 years, so the patient visited a Kampo (traditional Japanese medicine) clinic, where her diagnosis of Milroys disease-associated diarrhea and abdominal pain was augmented by the Kampo diagnosis of hiesho, suitai (body fluid retention). She was prescribed 7.5 g of shinbuto extract per day (TJ-30; Tsumura Co, Tokyo, Japan). The shinbuto extract significantly reduced abdominal pain and refractory diarrhea to about 2 days per month, and it tapered of completely in 3 months. Shinbuto is usually used against cold-induced diarrhea. Rewarming and water movement by shinbuto resulted in significant improvement in symptoms induced by hiesho and suitai triggered by the cold environment, though the patients leg swelling did not change.


Traditional &amp; Kampo Medicine | 2016

Elevated direct bilirubin: Possible predictors for pseudoaldosteronism: Case–control study

Tetsuhiro Yoshino; Haruka Nakamura; Megumi Sano; Yuko Horiba; Tomonori Nakamura; Kenji Watanabe

Pseudoaldosteronism is a known side‐effect of licorice, and Japanese traditional Kampo medicine is one of the major areas of use of licorice in Japan. Multidrug resistance protein 2 (Mrp2) dysfunction is important for pseudoaldosteronism. Congenital deficiency of Mrp2 causes constitutional jaundice with elevated direct bilirubin. Hence, elevated direct bilirubin can be a biomarker of Mrp2 dysfunction. The relationship between pseudoaldosteronism and elevated direct bilirubin, however, has not been studied as yet. The aim of the present study was therefore to evaluate the relationship between elevated direct bilirubin and hypokalemia, an important characteristic of pseudoaldosteronism.


Case Reports in Medicine | 2015

Daisaikoto for menstrual pain: a lesson from a case with menstrual pain successfully treated with daisaikoto.

Yuko Horiba; Tetsuhiro Yoshino; Kenji Watanabe

Menstrual pain is one of the common symptoms among women. It is estimated that 5–14% of women are sometimes absent from school or work because of pain. Usually gynecologists prescribe analgesics and/or low-dose oral contraceptives. However, such treatment is not always effective and sometimes causes an adverse effect, such as stomach pain or low body temperature. Kampo medicine is one of the choices for the menstrual pain in Japan. Tokishakuyakusan, kamishoyosan, or keishibukuryogan is commonly used for the treatment of menstrual pain. Here we report a case of menstrual pain successfully treated with daisaikoto which is not commonly used for such a case. Twenty-five-year-old woman suffered from severe menstrual pain and stress at company. She also had constipation and abdominal distension. We prescribed daisaikoto extract 7.5 g per day. Not only menstrual pain but also constipation and abdominal distension improved within 6 months. Here we propose that daisaikoto is one of the choices for the treatment of menstrual pain with mental stress.

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Kenji Watanabe

National Institute for Materials Science

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