Yukio Takizawa
Akita University
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Photochemical and Photobiological Sciences | 2008
Anthony Andrady; Pieter J. Aucamp; A. F. Bais; Carlos L. Ballaré; Lars Olof Björn; Janet F. Bornman; Martyn M. Caldwell; Anthony P. Cullen; David J. Erickson; Frank R. de Gruijl; Donat-P. Häder; Mohammad Ilyas; G. Kulandaivelu; H. D. Kumar; Janice Longstreth; Richard McKenzie; Mary Norval; Nigel D. Paul; Halim Hamid Redhwi; Raymond C. Smith; Keith P. Solomon; Barbara Sulzberger; Yukio Takizawa; Xiaoyan Tang; Alan H. Teramura; Ayaiko Torikai; Jan C. van der Leun; Stephen R. Wilson; Robert C. Worrest; Richard G. Zepp
The Environmental Effects Assessment Panel (EEAP) is one of three Panels that regularly informs the Parties (countries) to the Montreal Protocol on the effects of ozone depletion and the consequences of climate change interactions with respect to human health, animals, plants, biogeochemistry, air quality, and materials. The Panels provide a detailed assessment report every four years. The most recent 2014 Quadrennial Assessment by the EEAP was published as a special issue of seven papers in 2015 (Photochem. Photobiol. Sci., 2015, 14, 1-184). The next Quadrennial Assessment will be published in 2018/2019. In the interim, the EEAP generally produces an annual update or progress report of the relevant scientific findings. The present progress report for 2015 assesses some of the highlights and new insights with regard to the interactive nature of the effects of UV radiation, atmospheric processes, and climate change.
Photochemical and Photobiological Sciences | 2003
Frank R. de Gruijl; Janice Longstreth; Mary Norval; Anthony P. Cullen; Harry Slaper; Margaret L. Kripke; Yukio Takizawa; Jarv C. van der Leun
The potential health effects of elevated levels of ambient UV-B radiation are diverse, and it is difficult to quantify the risks, especially as they are likely to be considerably modified by human behaviour. Nevertheless epidemiological and experimental studies have confirmed that UV radiation is a definite risk factor for certain types of cataract, with peak efficacy in the UV-B waveband. The causal link between squamous cell carcinoma and cumulative solar UV exposure has been well established. New findings regarding the genetic basis of skin cancer, including studies on genetically modified mice, have confirmed the epidemiological evidence that UV radiation contributes to the formation of basal cell carcinomas and cutaneous melanomas, For the latter, animal models have demonstrated that UV exposure at a very young age is more detrimental than exposure in adulthood. Although suppression of certain immune responses has been recognised following UV exposure, the impact of this suppression on the control of infectious and autoimmune diseases is largely unknown. However, studies on several microbial infections have indicated significant consequences in terms of symptoms or reactivation of disease. The possibility that the immune response to vaccination could be depressed by UV-B exposure is of considerable concern. Newly emerging possibilities regarding interactions between ozone depletion and global climate change further complicate the risk assessments for human health but might result in an increased incidence of cataracts and skin cancer, plus alterations in the patterns of certain categories of infectious and other diseases.
Journal of Radioanalytical and Nuclear Chemistry | 1994
Masayoshi Yamamoto; Toyohiko Abe; J. Kuwabara; Kazuhisa Komura; K. Ueno; Yukio Takizawa
The concentrations of210Po and210Pb were determined in about 30 species of marine organisms collected mainly from the north-easterm region of Japan to know the levels and distributions of these radionuclides and to estimate their intake levels from marine foods.210Po and210Pb showed a wide range of concentration in species: 0.6–26 and 0.04–0.54 Bq/kg (wet wt) in fishes, 0.5–220 and 0.2–43 Bq/kg (wet wt) in molluscs, echinoderms and chordatas, and 2.8–4.3 and 0.4–1.3 Bq/kg (wet wt) in algae, respectively. Higher accumulation of210Po relative to210Pb was found in all of the samples analyzed. The intake levels of210Po and210Pb by marine foods consumption were roughly estimated to be 0.48–0.69 and 0.022–0.042 Bq/d per person, respectively, on the basis of the statistical data on the consumption of seafood and/or production rates of marine foods.
Analytica Chimica Acta | 1980
Koei Minagawa; Yukio Takizawa; Ikuei Kifune
Abstract Inorganic and organic mercury at ng l−1 levels in fresh waters are collected simultaneously on a column of a dithiocarbamate-treated resin and quantitatively eluted with slightly acidic aqueous thiourea solution. Mercury vapor is generated from inorganic mercury by reduction with alkaline SnCl2 solution, and from inorganic and organic mercury with a CdCl2SnCl2 solution, for determination by cold-vapor atomic absorption spectrometry. The range of determination is 0.2–5,000 ppt (ng l−1) for 20-l water samples.
Molecular and Chemical Neuropathology | 1992
Komyo Eto; Shinsaku Oyanagi; Yaeko Itai; Hidehiro Tokunaga; Yukio Takizawa; Ikuo Suda
Our knowledge concerning the pathology of fetal cases of human Minamata disease (methylmercury poisoning) is relatively limited. We report here a case with description of the distribution of mercury in the systemic organs, and the ultrastructural changes of the nervous system after a survival of 29 yr. The patient was a female born in 1957, with a body wt of 3000 g, who died in 1987. She carried a diagnosis of cerebral palsy, and had a convulsion at age 3 yr. Mercury levels in her mothers hair were 101 micrograms/g at the time of examination in 1959. At autopsy, the body measured 43 cm and weighed 23 kg. The brain weighed 920 g and showed marked cerebral atrophy, mild neuronal loss in the calcarine, postcentral and precentral cortices, cerebellar atrophy, and segmental demyelination of peripheral nerves. Mercury granules were present in the brain, kidney, and liver. Ultrastructural examination of the calcarine, post- and precentral cortices, and cerebellar cortices, showed severe atrophy of nerve cells, with a decrease in rough ER and an increase in nuclear chromatin and preservation of mitochondria. Autophagosomes were increased in number. In addition, high electron density, globular and dense bodies, measuring 0.3-1.8 microns in diameter, were found, surrounded by limited membrane, within both cerebral and cerebellar neurons. In the cellebellum, synapses were well-preserved.
Photochemical and Photobiological Sciences | 2015
Robyn M. Lucas; Mary Norval; Rachel E. Neale; Antony R. Young; F.R. de Gruijl; Yukio Takizawa; J.C. van der Leun
Due to the implementation of the Montreal Protocol, which has limited, and is now probably reversing, the depletion of the stratospheric ozone layer, only modest increases in solar UV-B radiation at the surface of the Earth have occurred. For many fair-skinned populations, changing behaviour with regard to exposure to the sun over the past half century - more time in the sun, less clothing cover (more skin exposed), and preference for a tan - has probably contributed more to greater levels of exposure to UV-B radiation than ozone depletion. Exposure to UV-B radiation has both adverse and beneficial effects on human health. This report focuses on an assessment of the evidence regarding these outcomes that has been published since our previous report in 2010. The skin and eyes are the organs exposed to solar UV radiation. Excessive solar irradiation causes skin cancer, including cutaneous malignant melanoma and the non-melanoma skin cancers, basal cell carcinoma and squamous cell carcinoma, and contributes to the development of other rare skin cancers such as Merkel cell carcinoma. Although the incidence of melanoma continues to increase in many countries, in some locations, primarily those with strong sun protection programmes, incidence has stabilised or decreased over the past 5 years, particularly in younger age-groups. However, the incidence of non-melanoma skin cancers is still increasing in most locations. Exposure of the skin to the sun also induces systemic immune suppression that may have adverse effects on health, such as through the reactivation of latent viral infections, but also beneficial effects through suppression of autoimmune reactivity. Solar UV-B radiation damages the eyes, causing cataracts and pterygium. UV-B irradiation of the skin is the main source of vitamin D in many geographic locations. Vitamin D plays a critical role in the maintenance of calcium homeostasis in the body; severe deficiency causes the bone diseases, rickets in children and osteomalacia in adults. Although many studies have implicated vitamin D deficiency in a wide range of diseases, such as cancer and cardiovascular disease, more recent evidence is less compelling, with meta-analyses of supplementation trials failing to show a beneficial effect on the health outcomes that have been tested. It continues to be difficult to provide public health messages to guide safe exposure to the sun that are accurate, simple, and can be used by people with different skin types, in different locations, and for different times of the year or day. There is increasing interest in relating sun protection messages to the UV Index. Current sun protection strategies are outlined and assessed. Climatic factors affect the amount of UV radiation received by the skin and eyes, separately from the effect of ozone depletion. For example, cloud cover can decrease or increase the intensity of UV radiation at Earths surface and warmer temperatures and changes in precipitation patterns may alter the amount of time people spend outdoors and their choice of clothing. The combination of changes in climate and UV radiation may affect the number of pathogenic microorganisms in surface waters, and could have an impact on food security through effects on plant and aquatic systems. It remains difficult to quantify these effects and their possible importance for human health.
Toxicologic Pathology | 1999
Komyo Eto; Yukio Takizawa; Hirokatsu Akagi; Koichi Haraguchi; Shigeyuki Asano; Naohiko Takahata; Hidehiro Tokunaga
Differences in pathology were found between acute and chronic exposure to methylmercury, mercury vapor, and inorganic mercury. Characteristic pathologic changes produced by organic mercury in the brain have previously been described in patients with Minamata disease. The brains of patients who presented with acute onset of symptoms and died within 2-mo showed loss of neurons with reactive proliferation of glial cells, microcavitation, vascular congestion, petechial hemorrhage, and edema in the cerebral cortices, predominantly in the calcarine, pre- and postcentral, and transverse temporal cortices and in the cerebellar cortex. The neuropathologic changes in the patients with acute onset of symptoms who survived for a long period (> 10 yr) were also included neuronal loss with reactive proliferation of glial cells in similar anatomic locations. The neuropathologic changes in patients with inorganic mercury poisoning are quite different. Autopsies performed on 3 individuals with fatal cases of acute inorganic mercury poisoning who were exposed to mercury vapor for about 2 wk revealed diffuse organized pneumonia, renal cortical necrosis, disseminated intravascular coagulopathy, and infarctions in the brain and kidneys. In 2 other patients who worked in mercury mines for about 10 yr and who suffered from chronic inorganic poisoning, no specific lesions were demonstrated in the brain. However, the assay and the histochemistry of mercury revealed that inorganic mercury was present in the brain in all 3 groups irrespective of the brain lesions and the duration of clinical signs.
Health Physics | 1987
Shunʼichi Hisamatsu; Yukio Takizawa; Touru Abe; Teiʼichi Katsumata
To study fallout 3H ingestion in Japan, 16 separate food group samples were collected from Akita during 1985. The 3H concentration in free water and that in a tissue-bound form were determined separately. The average 3H concentration in the tissue-bound form was 2.2 Bq L-1, 1.7 times higher than in the free water of the food. The ingestions of 3H in the tissue-bound form and as free water in the diet were 0.60 Bq d-1 and 1.0 Bq d-1, respectively. Cereals represented the food group that contributed the most to the ingestion of tissue-bound 3H. Total 3H ingestion was estimated to be 4.1 Bq d-1. The contribution of the tissue-bound form to the total ingestion was 15%, considerably lower than reported for Italian diets. The ratio of 3H ingestion in the tissue-bound form to the free water form in the diet was similar to the ratio reported for New York City.
Social Science & Medicine | 1987
Toshitaka Omura; Shun'ichi Hisamatsu; Yukio Takizawa; Masumi Minowa; Hiroshi Yanagawa; Itsuzo Shigematsu
The present study focuses on an analysis of the relationship between cerebrovascular disease mortality and food intake. For this purpose, standardized mortality ratios(SMRs) from cerebrovascular disease were calculated for 3341 basic administrative units (wards, cities, towns and villages) between 1969 and 1978 in Japan. The major nutrient intakes and 30 selected food items were obtained from the 1974-1974 Ministry of Health and Welfare, National Nutrition Surveys in 1040 randomly sampled census tracts in 600 areas (18% of the nation). Our analysis demonstrates that the geographical pattern of cerebrovascular disease SMRs in Japan vary from higher in East Japan to lower in the West, and higher in the less urbanized areas, and lower in the more urban ones. Foods positively associated with cerebrovascular disease were rice and other starchy foods, pork, algae (seaweed), and salty foods such as miso (soybean paste), pickled vegetables, soy sauce and salted fish. All of these foods, with the exception of pork, are part of the traditional Japanese diet. On the contrary, mortality was negatively associated with intakes of wheat, butter and margarine, beef and eggs, items considered to be representative of a European diet. Using a stepwise multiple regression analysis, miso and salted fish were selected as positive, and beef and eggs as negative correlates of cerebrovascular disease mortality. According to these results, it is suggested that these four foods are useful as negative and positive indicators of improvement in dietary intakes as related to the reduction in the occurrence of cerebrovascular disease.
Bulletin of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology | 1980
K. Minagawa; T. Sasaki; Yukio Takizawa; R. Tamura; T. Oshina
Some papers were published on several species of fungi having more accumulating abilities of mercury than other land plants and a relatively small part of mercury being present as methylmercury in most species (Stegnar et al. 1973, Stijve and Roschnik 1974). But, little information is available regarding the routes of mercury in fungi, and also no report on mercury speciation (chemical form and complexation) in them have been published, apart from methylmercury. In order to evaluate accurately their biological characteristics such as absorption, excretion, accumulation and toxicity (The Task Group on Metal Interaction 1978), the mercury speciation present in mushrooms, regardless of edible or nonedible, should be identified. In this report, we present (1) contents of total and methylmercury in mushrooms near the acetaldehyde factory which had the mounds of sludge containing mercury, (2) data or exposure experiment of mercury vapor to raw mushrooms (Shiitake) on the market, and (3) data on mercury speciation of mercury other than methylmercury.