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Dive into the research topics where Yoshiki Maeda is active.

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Featured researches published by Yoshiki Maeda.


European Archives of Psychiatry and Clinical Neuroscience | 1993

A quantitative magnetic resonance imaging study of patients with schizophrenia.

Yasuhiroi Kawasaki; Yoshiki Maeda; Katsumi Urata; Masato Higashima; Nariyoshi Yamaguchi; Masayuki Suzuki; Tsutomu Takashima; Yoshihiko Ide

SummaryTwenty patients with schizophrenia and ten normal control subjects underwent magnetic resonance imaging of the brain. The volumes of several brain structures were measured using a computer image analysing system. The schizophrenic patients had significantly smaller left parahippocampal volume and larger left temporal horn volume than the control subjects. A larger body of the right lateral ventricle could be estimated in the schizophrenics, but this difference was not significant. In the patient group a non-significant negative corrlation was established between the presence of positive symptoms and the left temporal horn volume. There was no signieficant correlation between the temporal horn and temporal lobe or medial temporal structures. Our results indicate that the left medial temporal structure or left temporal lobe may be involved in schizophrenia and that temporal horn enlargement does not simply represent volume loss of the surrounding tissue.


Schizophrenia Research | 1993

SPECT analysis of regional cerebral blood flow changes in patients with schizophrenia during the Wisconsin card sorting test

Yasuhiro Kawasaki; Yoshiki Maeda; Michio Suzuki; Katsumi Urata; Masato Higashima; Kiyoko Kiba; Nariyoshi Yamaguchi; Hiroshi Matsuda; Kinichi Hisada

Single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) images were obtained in 10 right-handed neuroleptic-treated schizophrenic patients and 10 healthy volunteers using Tc-99m-hexamethyl-propylenamine oxime (Tc99m-HMPAO) during performance of the Wisconsin Card Sorting Test (WCST) and at rest. None of the patients showed severe impairment on the WCST. The patient group showed a statistically insignificant trend to incur more unique errors. In both the patient and control groups, the left lateral prefrontal blood flow significantly increased during the WCST, as compared to during resting conditions. Only during the WCST, the patient group showed a significant regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) decline in the left medial prefrontal cortex, as well as in the right side under both the test and resting conditions. This left medial prefrontal rCBF during the WCST correlated positively with the number of unique errors, although this correlation was statistically insignificant. The right fronto-parietal rCBF was significantly increased in the patient group under both the test and resting conditions. Moreover, in the left hippocampal region, the patient group showed a significant rCBF increase under resting conditions.


Biological Psychiatry | 1998

P300 and the thought disorder factor extracted by factor-analytic procedures in schizophrenia

Masato Higashima; Katsumi Urata; Yasuhiro Kawasaki; Yoshiki Maeda; Naoto Sakai; Chikako Mizukoshi; Tatsuya Nagasawa; Takahiro Kamiya; Nariyoshi Yamaguchi; Yoshifumi Koshino

BACKGROUND In order to clarify the clinical significance of P300 as a biologic marker that can reflect schizophrenic symptomatology, many previous studies have evaluated the relationship of P300 with the symptoms on the basis of a positive/negative dichotomy, but yielded inconsistent conclusions. Such a dichotomy has been criticized as being too reductionistic. Recently, most studies with factor-analytic procedures have extracted some symptom factors outside this dichotomy. Therefore, it is important to examine associations of P300 with the symptom factors extracted by these statistical analyses. METHODS In the present study, the amplitudes of P300 were measured by using an auditory oddball paradigm for 73 schizophrenics whose psychopathology was assessed with the Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale (PANSS). RESULTS The principal component analysis of the PANSS items revealed five factors labeled the thought disorder, negative, hostile/excitable, delusional/hallucinatory, and depressive factors. The score for the thought disorder factor correlated negatively with the amplitude of P300 recorded at Pz T5, and T6, but that for the other factors did not. CONCLUSIONS These findings suggest that the reduction of P300 amplitudes recorded at the midline parietal and bilateral temporoparietal regions may be one of the electrophysiologic indices representing the thought disorder clinically observed in schizophrenia.


European Archives of Psychiatry and Clinical Neuroscience | 1992

Regional cerebral blood flow in patients with schizophrenia : a preliminary report

Yasuhiro Kawasaki; Michio Suzuki; Yoshiki Maeda; Katsumi Urata; Nariyoshi Yamaguchi; Hiroshi Matsuda; Kinichi Hisada; Masayuki Suzuki; Tsutomu Takashima

SummaryRegional cerebral blood flow was evaluated using Tc99m-HMPAO SPECT in 10 medicated patients with schizophrenia and 9 healthy volunteers. There were no prefrontal regions in the patient group with lower regional indices than in the control group. However, in the left hippocampal region, relative blood flow was significantly increased in the patient group compared with the control group. Furthermore, there was a relative increase in blood flow in the left basal ganglia of the patient group. A negative correlation coefficient was calculated between the relative blood flow in the left middle prefrontal cortex and the severity of the blunted affect, as well as between the relative blood flow in the left basal ganglia and the severity of the anhedonia-asociality. These findings indicate that prefrontal hypoactivity is not invariably present in all schizophrenics and that left basal ganglial hyperactivity may be associated with the effects of antipsychotic treatment and clinical improvement. Moreover, the left hippocampal hyperactivity may correspond to left limbic dysfunction in schizophrenia.


Schizophrenia Research | 1997

Reduced auditory P300 amplitude, medial temporal volume reduction and psychopathology in schizophrenia

Yasuhiro Kawasaki; Yoshiki Maeda; Masato Higashima; Tatuya Nagasawa; Yoshifumi Koshino; Masayuki Suzuki; Yoshihiko Ide

Twenty-five schizophrenic patients diagnosed by DSM-III-R underwent event-related potentials and magnetic resonance imaging scans. Latency and amplitude of P300 waveform were measured using an auditory odd-ball paradigm. Anterior and posterior volumes of the superior temporal gyrus and medial temporal structure were measured from contiguous coronal images using the level of the mammillary body as an anatomical landmark. Principal component analysis of P300 latency and amplitude disclosed two orthogonal independent factors each: overall latency and residual, and amplitudes from posterior and anterior recordings, respectively. Structural volumes consisted of four orthogonally independent factors: left superior temporal volume, anterior medial temporal volume, right superior temporal volume, and posterior medial temporal volume. The factor score of the P300 amplitude from posterior recordings correlated with the factor score of volumetric changes in the anterior medial temporal structures. The present study failed to replicate a previously reported association between auditory P300 amplitude and superior temporal volume. Furthermore, the factor score of the P300 amplitude was correlated with the severity of clinical ratings of attentional impairments and positive thought disorder. These findings demonstrate that the information processing dysfunction of schizophrenia indicated by reduced P300 amplitude is associated with structural abnormality in the medial temporal lobe.


Psychiatry Research-neuroimaging | 1996

Regional cerenral blood flow in patients with schizophrenia: relevance to symptom structures

Yasuhiro Kawasaki; Yoshiki Maeda; Naoto Sakai; Masato Higashima; Nariyoshi Yamaguchi; Yoshifumi Koshino; Kinichi Hisada; Masayuki Suzuki; Hiroshi Matsuda

Regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) was measured with technetium-99m hexamethylpropyleneamine oxime single photon emission computed tomography in 38 neuroleptic-treated schizophrenic patients. To improve the validity of the evaluation of symptomatology, we applied findings previously derived in a principal component analysis (PCA) of the Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale. The PCA had disclosed five orthogonal independent symptom structures (i.e., negative, hostile/excited, thought disordered, delusional/hallucinatory, and depressive components), and obtained factor scores for 70 schizophrenic subjects, including the present sample. Stepwise regression analysis elucidated some of the cortical regions in which relative rCBF predicted the severity of symptoms--namely, lateral and orbital prefrontal, lateral temporal, inferior parietal, and medial temporal regions. Findings suggested that symptom structures derived from PCA could prove helpful in elucidating the pathophysiology of neural mechanisms.


Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica | 1994

Evaluation and interpretation of symptom structures in patients with schizophrenia

Yasuhiro Kawasaki; Yoshiki Maeda; Naoto Sakai; Masato Higashima; Katsumi Urata; Nariyoshi Yamaguchi; M. Kurachi

Seventy Japanese DSM‐III‐R schizophrenic patients were assessed for 30 clinical symptoms using the Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale (PANSS) of Kay et al. Principal component analysis was applied to the full item set of this scale and disclosed 5 orthogonal independent symptom groups: negative, hostile/excited, thought‐disordered, delusional/hallucinatory and depressive components. Our results provided further support of the contention that more than 2 (i.e., positive and negative) dimensions are required to account for structures of the schizophrenic symptoms.


Psychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences | 1999

Comparative studies on sleep disturbance in the elderly based on questionnaire assessments in 1983 and 1996.

Nariyoshi Yamaguchi; Saburo Matsubara; Fumio Momonoi; Keiichi Morikawa; Masashi Takeyama; Yoshiki Maeda

We made an attempt to compare the complaints about sleep disturbance in the elderly based on the questionnaires using self‐rating scales carried out in 1983 and 1996. It was noted that the score of awakening frequency from the course of sleep was the highest of all the items in men and women in both the 1983 and 1996 inquiries. The scores of insomnia nights per week and the difficulty in falling asleep were slightly higher in women than in men in both inquiries.


Neuropsychobiology | 1990

Effects of Mianserin on Human Sleep

Yoshiki Maeda; T. Hayashi; Hisakazu Furuta; Y. Kim; K. Morikawa; N.I. Ishiguro; Katsuhiko Ueno; J. Sano; Nariyoshi Yamaguchi

Sleep EEG and nocturnal penile tumescence (NPT) were investigated in 6 healthy men during placebo and mianserin administration and after mianserin withdrawal. The results were assessed in a historical comparison with those previously obtained with clomipramine. With mianserin, REM sleep was suppressed slightly. However, the suppressive effect of mianserin on REM sleep--based on the historical comparison--was significantly weaker than that of clomipramine throughout all the drug nights. Accordingly, a rebound increase in REM sleep was not observed after withdrawal. Less suppressive effects on NPT and disturbance of sexual function with mianserin than with clomipramine were observed. We suggest that a correlation between the prolonging effect on REM latency and the clinical antidepressant effect is limited to some antidepressants.


Psychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences | 1998

An attempt of radar chart expression of a self‐rating scale for sleep disturbance

Nariyoshi Yamaguchi; Saburo Matsubara; Fumio Momonoi; Keiichi Morikawa; Masashi Takeyama; Yoshiki Maeda

Abstract We made an attempt to express a complaint of sleep disturbance by a self‐rating scale of radar chart mode. The questionnaire for sleep disturbance is made up of eight items. Each item was scored from grade 1 to 4. The score of each item was projected to the MY radar chart, designed by us. It is noted that this method is useful in following the effect of hypnotics on sleep disturbance.

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Yasuhiro Kawasaki

Kanazawa Medical University

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