Tetsuro Naruo
Kagoshima University
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Featured researches published by Tetsuro Naruo.
Psychoneuroendocrinology | 2003
Muneki Tanaka; Tetsuro Naruo; Daisuke Yasuhara; Yoshiki Tatebe; Nobuatsu Nagai; Tomomi Shiiya; Masamitsu Nakazato; Shigeru Matsukura; Shin-ichi Nozoe
Ghrelin has a role in regulating eating behavior and energy metabolism in the central nervous system, and has been reported to play an important role in the pathophysiology of anorexia nervosa (AN). The aim of the present study was to compare fasting plasma ghrelin levels in different subtypes of untreated AN patients. The subjects included 39 female AN patients and 11 female controls. The patients were then divided into two subtypes as follows: 19 AN patients with restricting (AN-R) and 20 AN patients with binge-eating/purging (AN-BP) form of the illness. Blood samples from subjects after an overnight fast were used to analyze plasma ghrelin concentrations. Plasma ghrelin concentrations in both AN-R and AN-BP were negatively correlated with body mass index (BMI). The mean plasma ghrelin levels in both AN-R and AN-BP were significantly higher than that in controls. The mean ghrelin level in AN-BP was significantly higher than that in AN-R. However, mean BMI and serum potassium in both groups were not significantly different. These results suggest that both BMI and the presence of binge-eating/purging may have some influence on fasting plasma ghrelin levels in patients with AN.
Peptides | 2007
Shinya Kojima; Naohiko Ueno; Akihiro Asakawa; Kenichirou Sagiyama; Tetsuro Naruo; Shigeto Mizuno; Akio Inui
PP administration induces negative energy balance by suppressing food intake and gastric emptying while increasing energy expenditure in rodents. The mechanism of PP actions involves the changes in the expression of hypothalamic feeding-regulatory peptides and the activity of the vago-vagal and vago-sympathetic reflex arc. PP-overexpressing mice we developed exhibited the thin phenotype with decreased food intake and gastric emptying rate. Plasma cholecystokinin (CCK) concentrations were increased in the transgenic mice and CCK-1 receptor antagonist improved the anorexia of the animals. These results, together with the previous notion of PP as an anti-CCK hormone in pancreatic exocrine secretion and gallbladder contraction, indicate that PP-CCK interactions may be either antagonistic or synergistic and the transgenic mice may exhibit the mixed phenotype by overproduction of PP and CCK.
Journal of Psychiatric Research | 2003
Muneki Tanaka; Tetsuro Naruo; Nobuatsu Nagai; Nobutaka Kuroki; Tomomi Shiiya; Masamitsu Nakazato; Shigeru Matsukura; Shin-ichi Nozoe
Previous studies have reported that fasting plasma ghrelin concentrations play an important role in the pathophysiology of eating disorders. The purpose of this study was to examine the relationship between plasma ghrelin levels and frequency of abnormal eating behaviors, nutritional parameters in eating disorders. Fasting blood samples were obtained in 40 female anorexia nervosa (AN) patients, 21 restricting type (AN-R) and 19 binge-eating/purging type (AN-BP), in 31 bulimia nervosa (BN) patients, 18 purging type (BN-P) and 13 non-purging type (BN-NP), in 15 female healthy volunteers (control) before the initiation of active treatment. The fasting plasma ghrelin concentrations in all subjects were negatively correlated with nutritional parameters such as body mass index, percent body fat and serum cholinesterase concentration. The mean plasma ghrelin level in BN-P was higher than that in both BN-NP and controls despite similar nutritional parameters. The plasma ghrelin levels in both AN-R and AN-BP did not differ from BN-P despite difference of nutritional parameters. For both AN-BP and BN-P patients with habitual binge/purge behavior, there were significant correlations among plasma ghrelin values, frequencies of binge/purge cycles and serum amylase values. In BN-NP, there were no significant correlations among plasma ghrelin values, frequencies of binge-eating episodes and serum amylase values. These results suggest that habitual binge/purge behavior may have some influence on circulating plasma ghrelin levels in both BN-P and AN-BP. Habitual binge/purge cycles with vomiting as opposed to binge-eating episodes without vomiting may have a greater influence on fasting plasma ghrelin concentration in eating disorders.
Clinical Endocrinology | 2005
Shinya Kojima; Toshihiro Nakahara; Nobuatsu Nagai; Tetsuro Muranaga; Muneki Tanaka; Daisuke Yasuhara; Akinori Masuda; Yukari Date; Hiroaki Ueno; Masamitsu Nakazato; Tetsuro Naruo
Objective In recent years great advances have been made in our understanding of the peripheral signals produced within the gastrointestinal tract that regulate appetite, such as ghrelin and peptide YY (PYY). While ghrelin elicites hunger signals, PYY elicites satiety. Therefore, alterations in hormone physiology may play a role in the pathogenesis of bulimia nervosa (BN). In this study, we investigated the postprandial profile of ghrelin and PYY levels in patients with BN.
Biological Psychiatry | 2008
Toshiro Harada; Toshihiro Nakahara; Daisuke Yasuhara; Shinya Kojima; Ken-ichiro Sagiyama; Haruka Amitani; Alessandro Laviano; Tetsuro Naruo; Akio Inui
BACKGROUND Obestatin is a recently identified peptide encoded by the same ghrelin gene. It has been reported that obestatin has anorexigenic and antigastroprokinetic activities as opposed to ghrelin. We investigated simultaneously obestatin, acyl ghrelin, and des-acyl ghrelin in the restricting type of anorexia nervosa (AN-R) patients. METHODS Three hormonal responses to the oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) were measured in 10 AN-R patients and 10 healthy women. RESULTS Plasma obestatin, acyl ghrelin, and des-acyl ghrelin levels were significantly higher in AN-R patients than in control subjects throughout the OGTT. All of the three hormones decreased after the OGTT in both groups. CONCLUSIONS We found that AN-R patients exhibited increased plasma levels of obestatin, acyl ghrelin, and des-acyl ghrelin throughout the OGTT compared with control subjects. The hormonal differences between groups are statistically most significant in obestatin, suggesting obestatin may serve as a marker reflecting both acute and chronic changes of the nutritional state in AN-R patients.
Psychiatry Research-neuroimaging | 2005
Shinya Kojima; Nobuatshu Nagai; Yoshiaki Nakabeppu; Tetsuro Muranaga; Daisuke Deguchi; Masayuki Nakajo; Akinori Masuda; Shin-ichi Nozoe; Tetsuro Naruo
We investigated changes in regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) before and after weight gain in patients with restrictive anorexia nervosa (AN-R) in comparison with findings in normal subjects. We assessed resting rCBF using single photon emission computed tomography with technetium-99m hexamethylpropylene amine oxime in 12 AN-R patients and 11 controls. Each patient was examined at two time points, at the beginning of treatment and after weight gain (average examination interval=88+/-26 days). Control subjects were examined only once. Before treatment, the AN-R group had lower rCBF in the bilateral anterior lobes, including the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC), and in the right parietal lobe, the insula, and the occipital lobes. After weight gain, the patients showed significant increases in the right parietal lobe and decreases in the basal ganglia and cerebellum in accordance with significant improvement in body weight and eating attitudes. However, they showed persistent decreases in the ACC area even after weight gain compared with findings in the controls. A significant positive correlation was observed between body mass index and rCBF in the occipital lobes in the patients. These results suggest that weight gain is associated with a normalization of rCBF in a number of brain areas, but that the low level of rCBF in the ACC at baseline is unaffected by treatment in AN-R.
BMC Psychiatry | 2001
Tetsuro Naruo; Yoshiaki Nakabeppu; Daisuke Deguchi; Nobuatsu Nagai; Junko Tsutsui; Masayuki Nakajo; Shin-ichi Nozoe
BackgroundIt is possible that psychopathological differences exist between the restricting and bulimic forms of anorexia nervosa. We investigated localized differences of brain blood flow of anorexia nervosa patients using SPECT image analysis with statistic parametric mapping (SPM) in an attempt to link brain blood flow patterns to neurophysiologic characteristics.MethodsThe subjects enrolled in this study included the following three groups: pure restrictor anorexics (AN-R), anorexic bulimics (AN-BP), and healthy volunteers (HV). All images were transformed into the standard anatomical space of the stereotactic brain atlas, then smoothed. After statistical analysis of each brain image, the relationships among images were evaluated.ResultsSPM analysis of the SPECT images revealed that the blood flow of frontal area mainly containing bilateral anterior cingulate gyri (ACC) was significantly decreased in the AN-R group compared to the AN-BP and HV groups.ConclusionsThese findings suggest that some localized functions ofthe ACCare possibly relevant to the psychopathological aspects of AN-R.
Regulatory Peptides | 2004
Muneki Tanaka; Toshihiro Nakahara; Shinya Kojima; Tamotsu Nakano; Tetsuro Muranaga; Nobuatsu Nagai; Hiroaki Ueno; Masamitsu Nakazato; Shin-ichi Nozoe; Tetsuro Naruo
Circulating ghrelin and growth hormone (GH) are up-regulated in anorexia nervosa (AN) as a consequence of prolonged starvation. The current study examines the effect of nutritional rehabilitation with improvement of eating behavior on ghrelin and GH levels in AN patients during the course of inpatient treatment. The subjects included 34 female AN patients and 9 age-matched female controls. Fasting blood samples were collected before, during and after treatment. For data analysis, AN subjects were divided into three subtypes. The first group included seven patients with emergent hospitalization (E-AN), who were accompanied by severe emaciation due to their inability for food intake for more than a month. The other two groups included 14 AN with restricting (AN-R) and 13 AN with binge-eating/purging (AN-BP) patients. There were significant correlations between ghrelin, GH and body mass index (BMI) before treatment in all subjects. However, ghrelin levels were not significantly correlated with BMI and GH although there was a relationship between GH and BMI after treatment. Before treatment, E-AN patients had the highest levels of ghrelin and GH with the lowest glucose levels and liver dysfunction. The AN-BP group had a higher level of ghrelin than the AN-R group. During treatment, comparing with the controls group only the AN-R group showed higher level of ghrelin. Contrarily, the ghrelin levels in the E-AN group, who showed improved glucose levels, and the AN-BP group, who stopped vomiting behavior due to our treatment, decreased ghrelin levels. After treatment, only the AN-BP group showed a higher ghrelin level as compared to the controls. Although GH levels of the three AN groups decreased gradually according to our treatment progress, it still showed the higher value than the control group at the end of the treatment because every AN patients could not reach to more than 80% of their ideal body weight at discharge. These findings suggest that (1) severe emaciation with abnormal fasting hypoglycemia in AN patients may cause very high levels of GH and ghrelin, (2) that GH levels in AN patients may relate to nutritional status and (3) that ghrelin may be influenced by not only nutritional status but also the eating behavior of the patients.
American Journal of Medical Genetics | 2006
Tetsuya Ando; Gen Komaki; Tetsuro Naruo; Kenjiro Okabe; Masato Takii; Keisuke Kawai; Fujiko Konjiki; Michiko Takei; Takakazu Oka; Kaori Takeuchi; Akinori Masuda; Norio Ozaki; Hiroyuki Suematsu; Kenzo Denda; Nobuo Kurokawa; Kotarou Itakura; Chikara Yamaguchi; Masaki Kono; Tatsuyo Suzuki; Yoshikatsu Nakai; Aya Nishizono-Maher; Masanori Koide; Ken Murakami; Kiyohide Nagamine; Yuichiro Tomita; Kazuyoshi Ookuma; Kazumi Tomita; Eita Tonai; Akira Ooshima; Toshio Ishikawa
Previous investigations have suggested that ghrelin, an endogenous orexigenic peptide, is involved in the pathology of eating disorders. We conducted a study to determine whether any preproghrelin gene polymorphisms are associated with eating disorders. Three hundred thirty‐six eating disorder patients, including 131 anorexia nervosa (AN)‐restricting types (AN‐R), 97 AN‐binge eating/purging types (AN‐BP) and 108 bulimia nervosa (BN)‐purging types (BN‐P), and 300 healthy control subjects participated in the study. Genotyping was performed to determine the polymorphisms present, and with this information, linkage disequilibrium (LD) between the markers was analyzed and the distributions of the genotypes, the allele frequencies, and the haplotype frequencies were compared between the groups. The Leu72Met (408 C > A) (rs696217) polymorphism in exon 2 and the 3056 T > C (rs2075356) polymorphism in intron 2 were in LD (D′ = 0.902, r2 = 0.454). Both polymorphisms were significantly associated with BN‐P (allele‐wise: P = 0.0410, odds ratio (OR) = 1.48; P = 0.0035, OR = 1.63, for Leu72Met and 3056 T > C, respectively). In addition, we observed a significant increase in the frequency of the haplotype Met72‐3056C in BN‐P patients (P = 0.0059, OR = 1.71). Our findings suggest that the Leu72Met (408 C > A) and the 3056 T > C polymorphisms of the preproghrelin gene are associated with susceptibility to BN‐P.
Clinical Endocrinology | 2003
Muneki Tanaka; Yoshiki Tatebe; Toshihiro Nakahara; Daisuke Yasuhara; Ken-ichiro Sagiyama; Tetsuro Muranaga; Hiroaki Ueno; Masamitsu Nakazato; Shin-ichi Nozoe; Tetsuro Naruo
objective Ghrelin is thought to be involved in the regulation of eating behaviour and energy metabolism in acute and chronic feeding states. Circulating plasma ghrelin levels in healthy humans have been found to decrease significantly after oral glucose administration. Because it is suggested that eating behaviour may influence the secretion of ghrelin and insulin in anorexia nervosa (AN), we examined the effect of oral glucose on ghrelin and insulin secretion in subtypes of AN patients.