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      • Dietary Problems among Middle-Aged Japanese Men

        Yoshita, Katsushi,Miura, Katsuyuki,Nishijo, Muneko,Morikawa, Yuko,Yoshiike, Nobuo,Nakagawa, Hideaki The Korean Society of Community Nutrition 2003 Journal of community nutrition Vol.5 No.2

        Balanced intake of appropriate nutrients is the key to sustaining and promoting health as well as preventing and treating diseases. It is not always easy, however, to take balanced nutrition and various related factors must be taken into consideration. This report provides a summary of studies that have examined the nutrient intakes of Japanese middle-aged men and the relationship of this intake to drinking, job-related separation from families, and health practices. The alcohol consumption of Japanese middle-aged men has more than tripled in the last forty years. When nutrient intake was examined in relation to alcohol consumption, it was discovered that the maximum acceptable alcohol consumption was approximately 23 grams (about two drinks) of pure alcohol, provided the level of nutrient intake for drinkers was equal to that of non-drinkers. The alcohol energy ratio was approximately 5%. It was also discovered that middle-aged men's eating habits deteriorate when they relocate to new posts without their families and live by themselves. Compared to those living with their families, a higher proportion of those living alone have unfavorable eating habits including skipping breakfast or lunch, having a late lunch, and eating and drinking after dinner until bedtime. When Breslow's seven health practices, nutrient intake, and consumption weight by food group were examined, it was discovered that the group that had many beneficial eating and living habits consumed plenty of legume, pulses, fruit, green yellow vegetables and milk products. Their intake of vitamins and minerals was high and the results of a physical examination proved to be excellent. According to nutrition surveys conducted in Japan, China, the United Kingdom and the United States using a 24-hour recall method with common protocols and strict controls to ensure high levels of accuracy and cross-study validity, the Japanese had the highest cholesterol intake and the lowest dietary fiber intake among the four countries. Also, the alcohol energy ratio of the Japanese exceeded 8%, the highest among the four countries, while their intake of magnesium and iron was the lowest These results indicate that it is necessary to enhance nutritional education for middle-aged men and to reinforce the social environments in which they live and work in order to promote proper diet and nutrition in Japan. (J Community Nutrition 5(2) : 105-111, 2003)

      • Design of MgAl₂O₄ Spinel-Oxide-Based Tunnel Barriers for Advanced Spintronics Devices

        Kenji Nawa,Keisuke Masuda,Shinto Ichikawa,Hiroaki Sukegawa,Tsuyoshi Suzuki,Katsuyuki Nakada,Seiji Mitani,Yoshio Miura 한국자기학회 2021 한국자기학회 학술연구발표회 논문개요집 Vol.31 No.2

        Tunnel magnetoresistance (TMR) in magnetic tunnel junctions (MTJs) is one of the central properties to develop high-performance spintronics devices. MgO(001) with bcc-Fe or CoFe electrodes has been mostly studied as a tunnel barrier of MTJs for the last decades because of its giant TMR ratio originating from the spin-filtering effect of Δ₁-symmetric evanescent states (s, pz, d3z²-r² orbitals), as predicted in 2001. However, the TMR ratio of MgO-MTJs reduces significantly by bias voltage applications, indicating a limitation of the output voltage of the MTJ. Recent experiments show that the use of a (001)-oriented spinel-type oxide, MgAl₂O₄, as a tunnel barrier improves the robustness of the TMR ratio under bias applications, but a theoretical TMR limit in Fe/MgAl₂O₄/Fe(001) MTJs is very small compared to the MgO-MTJs. This is because the in-plane lattice periodicity of Fe electrode is half of that of MgAl₂O₄ and a band-folding effect is induced in the two-dimensional Brillouin zone of the in-plane wave vector in the Fe electrode. This effect provides additional conductive states at the Δ line in MgAl₂O₄-MTJ, contributing to the reduction of the TMR ratio. In this talk, we propose a combined trilayer tunnel barrier, MgO/MgAl₂O₄/MgO, to overcome the above issue of the small TMR limit of MgAl₂O₄-MTJs on the basis of the first-principles calculations. We performed ballistic-conductance calculations in an Fe/MgO(n)/MgAl₂O₄/MgO(n)/Fe(001) MTJ using the non-equilibrium Green’s functions method to clarify the TMR ratio under bias voltage application. Here, number of MgO layers (n-ML) is changed as n = 1, 2, 3. In the case of n = 1, a large TMR ratio of 1184% is obtained at a zero-bias voltage and this large value is almost maintained up to V = 1.2 V (see blue in Fig. 1), leading to a large voltage output. In contrast, a single barrier MgAl₂O₄ shows only a small TMR ratio (~125%), which is constant below V = 1.6 V (see orange in Fig. 1). These results indicate that both the models have a similar tendency in bias voltage dependence of TMR, except for the magnitude of a TMR ratio. Moreover, we clarified that the presence of an MgO interlayer between Fe and MgAl₂O₄ plays an important role in retaining (blocking) the Δ1 evanescent state for majority (minority) spin. The former leads to the robustness of the TMR ratio against bias voltage as observed in single MgAl₂O₄ MTJs, while the latter does to the large TMR ratio as in single MgO MTJs. 〈그림 본문참조〉

      • KCI등재

        Long-Term Survival after Stroke in 1.4 Million Japanese Population: Shiga Stroke and Heart Attack Registry

        Naoyuki Takashima,Hisatomi Arima,Yoshikuni Kita,Takako Fujii,Sachiko Tanaka-Mizuno,Satoshi Shitara,Akihiro Kitamura,Yoshihisa Sugimoto,Makoto Urushitani,Katsuyuki Miura,Kazuhiko Nozaki 대한뇌졸중학회 2020 Journal of stroke Vol.22 No.3

        Background and Purpose Although numerous measures for stroke exist, stroke remains one of the leading causes of death in Japan. In this study, we aimed to determine the long-term survival rate after first-ever stroke using data from a large-scale population-based stroke registry study in Japan. Methods Part of the Shiga Stroke and Heart Attack Registry, the Shiga Stroke Registry is an ongoing population-based registry study of stroke, which covers approximately 1.4 million residents of Shiga Prefecture in Japan. A total 1,880 patients with non-fatal first-ever stroke (among 29-day survivors after stroke onset) registered in 2011 were followed up until December 2016. Five-year cumulative survival rates were estimated using the Kaplan-Meier method, according to subtype of the index stroke. Cox proportional hazards models were used to assess predictors of subsequent allcause death. Results During an average 4.3-year follow-up period, 677 patients died. The 5-year cumulative survival rate after non-fatal first-ever stroke was 65.9%. Heterogeneity was present in 5-year cumulative survival according to stroke subtype: lacunar infarction, 75.1%; large-artery infarction, 61.5%; cardioembolic infarction, 44.9%; intracerebral hemorrhage, 69.1%; and subarachnoid hemorrhage, 77.9%. Age, male sex, Japan Coma Scale score on admission, and modified Rankin Scale score before stroke onset were associated with increased mortality during the chronic phase of ischemic and hemorrhagic stroke. Conclusions In this study conducted in a real-world setting of Japan, the 5-year survival rate after non-fatal first-ever stroke remained low, particularly among patients with cardioembolic infarction and large-artery infarction in the present population-based stroke registry.

      • KCI등재

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