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Dive into the research topics where Yoshiro Sugita is active.

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Featured researches published by Yoshiro Sugita.


Electroencephalography and Clinical Neurophysiology | 1985

Marked episodic elevation of cerebrospinal fluid pressure during nocturnal sleep in patients with sleep apnea hypersomnia syndrome

Yoshiro Sugita; Susami Iijima; Yoshio Teshima; Tetsuo Shimizu; Nobuya Nishimura; Toshihito Tsutsumi; Hideaki Hayashi; Hirao Kaneda; Yasuo Hishikawa

The CSF pressure was measured continuously at the lumbar level during nocturnal sleep in 3 patients with sleep apnea hypersomnia syndrome. Nocturnal sleep was very unstable with frequent episodes of obstructive sleep apnea. When the patients were awake and relaxed in the supine position, their CSF pressure was stable and within the normal range. Episodic marked elevations of CSF pressure occurred frequently during sleep, and each elevation was preceded and accompanied by an episode of sleep apnea or hypopnea. Significant correlations were found between the duration of apneic episodes and increase of CSF pressure, and between decrease of SaO2 or TcPO2 and increase of CSF pressure. The duration of sleep apnea was longer, increase of CSF pressure was greater, and decreases of SaO2 and TcPO2 were more marked during REM sleep than during NREM sleep. It is suggested that the frequent marked episodic elevations of CSF pressure are caused by an increase in the intracranial vascular volume occurring mainly in response to transient hypercapnia and hypoxia, which are induced by pulmonary hypoventilation during the episodes of sleep apnea.


Neuroreport | 1999

Different neural substrates for Kanji and Kana writing: a PET study.

Hiromasa Tokunaga; Takashi Nishikawa; Yoshitaka Ikejiri; Yoshitsugu Nakagawa; Fumihiko Yasuno; Kazuo Hashikawa; Tsunehiko Nishimura; Yoshiro Sugita; Masatoshi Takeda

To investigate the neural substrate underlying the mechanisms of Kanji and Kana writing, we conducted a PET activation study during mental writing task in eight right-handed normal Japanese subjects. During scans subjects were required to mentally write a Kanji or three Kana letters with their right hand, for each stimulant word presented auditorily. The direct comparisons between Kanji writing and Kana writing revealed that the left posterior inferior temporal gyrus was activated in Kanji writing while the left angular gyrus was activated in Kana writing. In addition, more extensive areas were activated in Kanji writing compared with Kana writing. These results suggest that different respective neural substrates are involved in Kanji and Kana writing respectively.


Electroencephalography and Clinical Neurophysiology | 1976

Sleep satiation in narcoleptic patients

Yasuo Hishikawa; Haruhiko Wakamatsu; Eiji Furuya; Yoshiro Sugita; S Masaoka; H Kaneda; M Sato; Hisashige Nan'no; Ziro Kaneko

UNLABELLED Polygraphic sleep recording was performed in 20 narcoleptics with one or more of the auxiliary symptoms, 4 narcoleptics with only sleep attacks and 10 normals during one night and into the following day. Total sleep time in the narcoleptics did not differ significantly from that in the normals. Sleep of the narcoleptics with auxiliary symptoms was unstable with frequent awakening. The temporal organization of the REM--NREM sleep cycle was irregular in the narcoleptics with auxiliary symptoms, compared with those in the other two groups. Percentage of Stage 1 was significantly larger in the narcoleptics with auxiliary symptoms than in the other two groups and percentage of Stage 2 was smaller. Percentage of Stage 4 was smaller in the narcoleptics with auxiliary symptoms than in those with only sleep attacks. Percentages of Stages 3 and REM did not differentiate the three groups. Spindle density during Stage 2 did not differentiate the three groups. Sleep onset Stage REM was frequently observed exclusively in the narcoleptics with auxiliary symptoms. Excluding the instances showing sleep onset Stage REM, mean latency of initial episodes of REM sleep in the three groups was shorter after daytime sleep onset than after nighttime sleep onset. In the narcoleptics with auxiliary symptoms, no significant correlation was found between the percentage of Stage REM and clinical findings. CONCLUSIONS the sleep attacks in narcoleptics are due to an ill-timed, strong tendency to fall asleep (including both REM and NREM sleep), and it is therefore suggested that they are manifestations of their disturbed circadian rhythm of sleep--wakefulness cycle.


Psychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences | 2001

Association of gastroesophageal reflux disease with weight gain and apnea, and their disturbance on sleep

Nakamori Suganuma; Yoshihisa Shigedo; Hiroyoshi Adachi; Takuya Watanabe; Takayuki Kumano-go; Kiyoji Terashima; Akira Mikami; Yoshiro Sugita; Masatoshi Takeda

Obesity is a common predisposition to gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) and obstructive sleep apnea syndrome (OSAS). By statistical analysis of the respondents to a questionnaire that was distributed to members of the Kansai Rugby Association, we examined whether weight gain increased the incidence of these diseases and whether GERD alone disturbs sleep. Prevalence distribution of GERD by age differed from another survey, which suggests that predispositions other than age may contribute to GERD. Weight gain tended to increase the incidence of GERD. In our epidemiological study, both GERD (particularly nocturnal reflux) and OSAS significantly contributed to sleep disturbance. Although GERD alone seemed to be one of several independent factors of sleep disturbance, it was not a weak factor.


Journal of Affective Disorders | 1991

MULTI-CENTER STUDY OF SEASONAL AFFECTIVE DISORDERS IN JAPAN : A PRELIMINARY REPORT

Kiyohisa Takahashi; Y. Asano; Masako Kohsaka; Masako Okawa; Mitsuo Sasaki; Yutaka Honda; T. Higuchi; Jun Yamazaki; Y. Ishizuka; K. Kawaguchi; Tatsuro Ohta; Koichi Hanada; Yoshiro Sugita; Kiyoshi Maeda; Haruo Nagayama; Tatayu Kotorii; K. Egashira; Saburo Takahashi

A multi-center study on seasonal affective disorder (SAD) was conducted from the autumn of 1988 to the spring of 1989 with the cooperation of 16 facilities in Japan. Forty-six SAD patients were identified among 1104 respondents to our advertisements in mass media, or patients seen at the outpatient clinics. Essentially similar findings to other previous reports were obtained in terms of onset age of the first episode, duration of episode, high proportion of depression in first-degree relatives and atypical vegetative symptoms. However, a nearly equal sex ratio, together with a high proportion of unipolar depression, is characteristic of the present study. Increased appetite and carbohydrate craving were predominant only in female patients, whereas hypersomnia was prominent in both sexes. Effective response to light therapy was found in 17 SAD patients. However, a controlled study on a large number of patients is required to allow final conclusions on the efficacy of light therapy in Japanese SAD patients.


Psychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences | 2002

Short naps and exercise improve sleep quality and mental health in the elderly

Hideki Tanaka; Kazuhiko Taira; Masashi Arakawa; Chisae Urasaki; Yukari Yamamoto; Hiromi Okuma; Eiko Uezu; Yoshiro Sugita; Shuichiro Shirakawa

Abstract The effects of short naps and exercise on the sleep quality and mental health of elderly people was investigated. ‘Interventions’ by short naps after lunch and exercise of moderate intensity in the evening were carried out for 4 weeks. After the ‘intervention’, awake time after sleep onset decreased significantly and sleep efficiency increased significantly, demonstrating that sleep quality had improved. Also, the frequency of nodding in the evening decreased significantly. These results demonstrate that proper awakening maintenance in the evening was effective in improving sleep quality. After the ‘intervention’, mental health and volition and physical health had also improved with improving sleep quality.


Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry | 1999

Retrograde temporal order amnesia resulting from damage to the fornix

Fumihiko Yasuno; Masayuki Hirata; Hiroshi Takimoto; Masaaki Taniguchi; Yoshitsugu Nakagawa; Yoshitaka Ikejiri; Takashi Nishikawa; Kazuhito Shinozaki; Hirotaka Tanabe; Yoshiro Sugita; Masatoshi Takeda

Some amnesic patients show an impairment of temporal order memory that cannot be accounted for by content memory deficits. The performance of an amnesic patient on memory tasks assessing the patient’s content and temporal memories for remotely acquired material is described, after a lesion including the bilateral anterior fornix and adjacent anterior thalamus. The patient displayed a deficit in the temporal order tasks for remotely acquired information. Neither frontal cognitive deficits nor recognition deficits can account for this patient’s poor temporal memory. This retrograde temporal order memory impairment without content memory deficits were not seen in previously reported thalamic amnesic patients. Accordingly, the present patient’s poor retrograde temporal memory could hardly be explained by only a thalamic lesion. It is concluded that the patient’s impairment of temporal order memory for the retrograde material is probably due to the direct disconnection between the frontal lobe and the hippocampus by disruption of the fornix.


Cardiovascular Diabetology | 2007

Abdominal obesity exhibits distinct effect on inflammatory and anti-inflammatory proteins in apparently healthy Japanese men

Makoto Nishida; Toshiki Moriyama; Yoshiro Sugita; Keiko Yamauchi-Takihara

BackgroundSince visceral fat tissue is known to release various inflammatory and anti-inflammatory cytokines, abdominal obesity may play a key role in the inflammation associated with metabolic syndrome (MetS). However, few studies have determined precise relationships of abdominal obesity with inflammatory markers in MetS. To clarify the importance of abdominal obesity in sub-clinical inflammation, we examined the changes of inflammatory markers in clustering of MetS components with or without abdominal obesity.MethodsSubjects consisted of 326 apparently healthy Japanese men (age: 30 to 59 years) who underwent health examination in the Osaka University Health Care Center. MetS components were assessed and serum levels of high sensitive C-reactive protein (hs-CRP), interleukin (IL)-6 and adiponectin were examined in all subjects.ResultsSubjects with abdominal obesity (waist circumference ≥ 85 cm) showed higher serum hs-CRP and IL-6 levels and a lower adiponectin level than those without abdominal obesity. Serum levels of hs-CRP and IL-6 significantly increased in association with clustering of MetS components in the subjects with abdominal obesity, but not in those without abdominal obesity. On the other hand, serum adiponectin level exhibited a little change with clustering of MetS components in the subjects with abdominal obesity. Significant negative correlation between adiponectin and hs-CRP was observed in the subjects with abdominal obesity, however this correlation was not detected in obese subjects defined by body mass index ≥ 25.ConclusionInflammatory status is not exaggerated by clustering of MetS components in the subjects without abdominal obesity. Abdominal obesity may exhibit distinct effect on inflammatory and anti-inflammatory proteins and modulate inflammatory network in MetS.


Journal of Affective Disorders | 1991

Atypical depressive symptoms possibly predict responsiveness to phototherapy in seasonal affective disorder

Haruo Nagayama; Mitsuo Sasaki; Sadaaki Ichii; Koichi Hanada; Masako Okawa; Tatsuro Ohta; Yutaka Asano; Yoshiro Sugita; Jun Yamazaki; Masako Kohsaka; Tatayu Kotorii; Kiyoshi Maeda; Norio Okamoto; Yoshikazu Ishizuka; Kiyohisa Takahashi; Yutaka Honda; Saburo Takahashi

Phototherapy was administered to 24 depressed patients with seasonal affective disorder (SAD), of which 62%, 24%, and 14%, respectively, showed improvements of greater than or equal to 50%, 25-50%, and less than 25% based on the Hamilton rating scale for depression for SAD (HAMSAD). No patients showed aggravation or side effects. Although the improvement rate in HAMSAD correlated significantly with the pretreatment severity of atypical symptoms of depression, it did not correlate with that of typical symptoms. This suggests that phototherapy is a useful treatment in SAD and that responsiveness to phototherapy in SAD can possibly be predicted by the atypical depressive symptoms before treatment.


Electroencephalography and Clinical Neurophysiology | 1984

Potential distribution of vertex sharp wave and saw-toothed wave on the scalp

Aki Yasoshima; Hideaki Hayashi; Susami Iijima; Yoshiro Sugita; Yoshio Teshima; Tetsuo Shimizu; Yasuo Hishikawa

Potential distribution of vertex sharp wave characterizing stages 1 and 2 of NREM sleep and saw-toothed wave recorded in REM sleep were studied in 6 healthy young adults. Like the vertex sharp wave, saw-toothed wave appeared in a wide area on the scalp with the maximal amplitude at Cz and its equipotential lines showed concentric circles with their center at Cz, its amplitude decreasing with distance from Cz. The main component of saw-toothed wave was a positive wave with longer duration (about 250 msec) and lower amplitude than vertex sharp wave (about 200 msec in duration), the main component of which was a negative wave.

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