Yoshio Shino
Toho University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Yoshio Shino.
Clinica Chimica Acta | 2000
Hiroshi Ihara; Nobuaki Matsumoto; Yoshio Shino; Yutaka Aoki; Naotaka Hashizume; Shunji Nanba; Tsutomu Urayama
We developed a novel, cost-effective, and automated assay for ascorbic acid (AsA) in serum using a COBAS MIRA S analyzer (Roche Diagnostic System). Our method has a wide dynamic range and covers AsA concentrations from well below the lower reference interval to well above it. AsA is oxidized by 4-hydroxy-2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidinyloxy, free radical (TEMPO) to dehydroascorbic acid (DAsA). The latter condenses with o-phenylenediamine (OPDA) to form a quinoxaline derivative that absorbs light at 340 nm. The change in absorbance at 340 nm is proportional to the concentration of AsA in the specimen. The automated system permitted the assay of 65 specimens per hour at a cost of approximately US
Journal of Clinical Laboratory Analysis | 2008
Hiroshi Ihara; Takayuki Matsumoto; Takashi Kakinoki; Yoshio Shino; Reiko Hashimoto; Naotaka Hashizume
0.01 per specimen for reagents. The assay can be applied directly to serum specimens (direct method) and also to sera with a prior deproteinization step with metaphosphoric acid. The detection limit for the direct serum assays is 0.8 vs. 0.4 mg/l with the deproteinization method. The recovery of AsA from a supplemented serum pool was of >95% for both procedures. We used four distinct methods on 66 patients sera. The direct method for AsA correlated well with an HPLC method (r=0.964, P<0.001); the direct method also correlated well with a method that uses AsA oxidase (r=0.975, P<0. 001). The deproteinization method correlated well with HPLC (r=0.981, P<0.001), and with the AsA oxidase procedure (r=0.994, P<0.001). Ten within-day determinations on a serum pool gave a C.V. <4.3% for both the direct and deproteinization procedures. The between-day assays of the same serum pool over 10 days gave a C.V. of <6.7% by both methods.
Annals of Clinical Biochemistry | 2003
Hiroshi Ihara; Yoshio Shino; Naotaka Hashizume; Norikazu Shimizu; Tsugutoshi Aoki; Mitsutaka Yoshida
Urinary B1 (vitamin B1) excretion is commonly determined in 24‐hr urine specimens to obtain an estimate of nutritional status. The aim of our study was to investigate whether B1 in random urine specimens, corrected for the urine creatinine (Cr), can be substituted for B1 in 24‐hr urines. Collection of such hour urines is often fraught with errors; an alternative method is described here. All urine specimens voided over 24 hr were collected from 32 healthy adults as were the first‐morning urines from 30 healthy Japanese women. The B1 excretion was expressed as the ratio of B1 to Cr. Although the B1 excretion was expressed as the B1/Cr ratio, the B1 excretion varied with the urine volume and the time of urine collection. The B1/Cr ratio in random urine specimens not collected at a fixed time may mislead the evaluation of the nutritional status. We found that the B1/Cr ratio in the first‐morning urine correlated significantly with the ratio in 24‐hr urines (r=0.970, P<0.001) and also with the concentration of total B1 (B1 plus its phosphate esters) in whole blood (r=0.733, P<0.001). We conclude that the B1/Cr ratio in 24‐hr urines could be estimated by measuring the ratio in the first‐morning urine. J. Clin. Lab. Anal. 22:291‐294, 2008.
Journal of Clinical Laboratory Analysis | 2001
Hiroshi Ihara; Yoshio Shino; Yoshikazu Morita; Emiko Kawaguchi; Naotaka Hashizume; Mitsutaka Yoshida
Background: Patients with Crigler-Najjar syndrome, type I (CNS-I) have an inherited absence of hepatocellular bilirubin uridine diphosphate-glucuronosyltransferase activity, which results in severe unconjugated hyperbilirubinaemia, often causing kernicterus and death in infancy or childhood. Methods: Our patient is a 19-year-old Japanese man with CNS-I diagnosed by the complete absence of the hepatocellular enzyme in a liver biopsy and genotyping. The efficacies of the removal of protein-bound (PBB) and unbound (UB) unconjugated bilirubin by phototherapy, plasma perfusion and liver transplantation were compared in the patient. Results: At the age of 5 years, phototherapy treatment reduced the patients PBB by 21% and UB by 34%, and 98% of the bilirubin produced daily was removed. At the age of 16 years, plasma perfusion combined with nightly phototherapy completely removed the daily production of bilirubin; however, by 24 h post-treatment, the PBB and UB were again increased. Apparently, these treatments were effective in reducing PBB and UB, but the effect was only temporary. Following liver transplantation, PBB and UB decreased to normal concentrations. Conclusions: Liver transplantation as a potential cure should be performed at a younger age, particularly in confirmed CNS-I cases for which reliable effects of phototherapy cannot be guaranteed.
Journal of Nutritional Science and Vitaminology | 2000
Hiroshi Ihara; Yoshio Shino; Yutaka Aoki; Naotaka Hashizume; Nobuchika Minegishi
Journal of Clinical Laboratory Analysis | 2005
Hiroshi Ihara; Takayuki Matsumoto; Yoshio Shino; Naotaka Hashizume
Journal of Clinical Laboratory Analysis | 2003
Hiroshi Ihara; Takayuki Matsumoto; Yoshio Shino; Naotaka Hashizume; Makoto Takase; Jiro Nagao; Yoshinobu Sumiyama
Journal of Nutritional Science and Vitaminology | 2000
Hiroshi Ihara; Hiroko Ishigaki; Yoshio Shino; Naotaka Hashizume; Makoto Takase; Jiro Nagao; Yoshinobu Sumiyama
Journal of Nutritional Science and Vitaminology | 1998
Hiroshi Ihara; Yoshio Shino; Naotaka Hashizume; Tsugutoshi Aoki; Yasuyuki Suzuki; Yasuko Igarasi; Chikayuki Naito
Journal of Clinical Laboratory Analysis | 2004
Hiroshi Ihara; Yoshio Shino; Naotaka Hashizume
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National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology
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