Curriculum Vitaes
Profile Information
- Affiliation
- Professor Emeritus, School of Medicine, Fujita Health University
- Degree
- DMSc(Keio University)
- J-GLOBAL ID
- 200901019328012929
- researchmap Member ID
- 1000228177
Physiatrist since 1985
President, Fujita Health University Nanakuri Memorial Hospital since 2003
President, Fujita Health University Nanakuri Memorial Hospital since 2003
Research Interests
4Research Areas
1Research History
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Apr, 2024 - Present
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Dec, 2000 - Mar, 2024
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Apr, 2000 - Nov, 2000
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Apr, 1985 - Mar, 2000
Education
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Apr, 1979 - Mar, 1985
Papers
216-
Japanese Journal of Comprehensive Rehabilitation Science, 15 42-48, Oct 16, 2024
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JMIR formative research, 8 e51546, May 29, 2024BACKGROUND: Motor impairments not only lead to a significant reduction in patient activity levels but also trigger a further deterioration in motor function due to deconditioning, which is an issue that is particularly pronounced during hospitalization. This deconditioning can be countered by sustaining appropriate activity levels. Activities that occur outside of scheduled programs, often overlooked, are critical in this context. Wearable technology, such as smart clothing, provides a means to monitor these activities. OBJECTIVE: This study aimed to observe activity levels in patients who had strokes during the subacute phase, focusing on both scheduled training sessions and other nontraining times in an inpatient rehabilitation environment. A smart clothing system is used to simultaneously measure heart rate and acceleration, offering insights into both the amount and intensity of the physical activity. METHODS: In this preliminary cohort study, 11 individuals undergoing subacute stroke rehabilitation were enrolled. The 48-hour continuous measurement system, deployed at admission and reassessed 4 weeks later, monitored accelerometry data for physical activity (quantified with a moving SD of acceleration [MSDA]) and heart rate for intensity (quantified with percent heart rate reserve). The measurements were performed using a wearable activity monitoring system, the hitoe (NTT Corporation and Toray Industries, Inc) system comprising a measuring garment (wear or strap) with integrated electrodes, a data transmitter, and a smartphone. The Functional Independence Measure was used to assess the patients' daily activity levels. This study explored factors such as differences in activity during training and nontraining periods, correlations with activities of daily living (ADLs) and age, and changes observed after 4 weeks. RESULTS: A significant increase was found in the daily total MSDA after the 4-week program, with the average percent heart rate reserve remaining consistent. Physical activity during training positively correlated with ADL levels both at admission (ρ=0.86, P<.001) and 4 weeks post admission (ρ=0.96, P<.001), whereas the correlation between age and MSDA was not significant during training periods at admission (ρ=-0.41, P=.21) or 4 weeks post admission (ρ=-0.25, P=.45). Conversely, nontraining activity showed a negative correlation with age, with significant negative correlations with age at admission (ρ=-0.82, P=.002) and 4 weeks post admission (ρ=-0.73, P=.01). CONCLUSIONS: Inpatient rehabilitation activity levels were positively correlated with ADL levels. Further analysis revealed a strong positive correlation between scheduled training activities and ADL levels, whereas nontraining activities showed no such correlation. Instead, a negative correlation between nontraining activities and age was observed. These observations suggest the importance of providing activity opportunities for older patients, while it may also suggest the need for adjusting the activity amount to accommodate the potentially limited fitness levels of this demographic. Future studies with larger patient groups are warranted to validate and further elucidate these findings.
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International journal of rehabilitation research. Internationale Zeitschrift fur Rehabilitationsforschung. Revue internationale de recherches de readaptation, Apr 9, 2024Practicing walking in a safety suspension device allows patients to move freely and without excessive reliance on a therapist, which requires correcting errors and may facilitate motor learning. This opens the possibility that patients with subacute stroke may improve their walking ability more rapidly. Therefore, we tested the hypothesis that overground gait training in a safety suspension device will result in achieving faster supervision-level walking than gait training without the suspension device. Twenty-seven patients with stroke admitted to the rehabilitation ward with functional ambulation categories (FAC) score of 2 at admission were randomly allocated to safety suspension-device group (SS group) or conventional assisted-gait training group (control group). In addition to regular physical therapy, each group underwent additional gait training for 60 min a day, 5 days a week for 4 weeks. We counted the days until reaching a FAC score of 3 and assessed the probability using Cox regression models. The median days required to reach a FAC score of 3 were 7 days for the SS group and 17.5 days for the control group, which was significantly different between the groups (P < 0.05). The SS group had a higher probability of reaching a FAC score of 3 after adjusting for age and admission motor impairment (hazard ratio = 3.61, 95% confidence interval = 1.40-9.33, P < 0.01). The gait training with a safety suspension device accelerates reaching the supervision-level walking during inpatient rehabilitation. We speculate that a safety suspension device facilitated learning by allowing errors to be experienced and correct in a safe environment.
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JMIR formative research, 7 e42219, Feb 8, 2023BACKGROUND: There is an extensive library of language tests, each with excellent psychometric properties; however, many of the tests available take considerable administration time, possibly bearing psychological strain on patients. The Short and Tailored Evaluation of Language Ability (STELA) is a simplified, tablet-based language ability assessment system developed to address this issue, with a reduced number of items and automated testing process. OBJECTIVE: The aim of this paper is to assess the administration time, internal consistency, and validity of the STELA. METHODS: The STELA consists of a tablet app, a microphone, and an input keypad for clinician's use. The system is designed to assess language ability with 52 questions grouped into 2 comprehension modalities (auditory comprehension and reading comprehension) and 3 expression modalities (naming and sentence formation, repetition, and reading aloud). Performance in each modality was scored as the correct answer rate (0-100), and overall performance expressed as the sum of modality scores (out of 500 points). RESULTS: The time taken to complete the STELA was significantly less than the time for the WAB (mean 16.2, SD 9.4 vs mean 149.3, SD 64.1 minutes; P<.001). The STELA's total score was strongly correlated with the WAB Aphasia Quotient (r=0.93, P<.001), supporting the former's concurrent validity concerning the WAB, which is a gold-standard aphasia assessment. Strong correlations were also observed at the subscale level; STELA auditory comprehension versus WAB auditory comprehension (r=0.75, P<.001), STELA repetition versus WAB repetition (r=0.96, P<.001), STELA naming and sentence formation versus WAB naming and word finding (r=0.81, P<.001), and the sum of STELA reading comprehension or reading aloud versus WAB reading (r=0.82, P<.001). Cronbach α obtained for each modality was .862 for auditory comprehension, .872 for reading comprehension, .902 for naming and sentence formation, .787 for repetition, and .892 for reading aloud. Global Cronbach α was .961. The average of the values of item-total correlation to each subscale was 0.61 (SD 0.17). CONCLUSIONS: Our study confirmed significant time reduction in the assessment of language ability and provided evidence for good internal consistency and validity of the STELA tablet-based aphasia assessment system.
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Journal of infection and chemotherapy : official journal of the Japan Society of Chemotherapy, 29(1) 95-97, Jan, 2023Healthcare-associated COVID-19 among vulnerable patients leads to disproportionate morbidity and mortality. Early pharmacologic intervention may reduce negative sequelae and improve survival in such settings. This study aimed to describe outcome of patients with healthcare-associated COVID-19 who received early short-course remdesivir therapy. We reviewed the characteristics and outcome of hospitalized patients who developed COVID-19 during an outbreak that involved two wards at a non-acute care hospital in Japan and received short-course remdesivir. Forty-nine patients were diagnosed with COVID-19, 34 on a comprehensive inpatient rehabilitation ward and 15 on a combined palliative care and internal medicine ward. Forty-seven were symptomatic and 46 of them received remdesivir. The median age was 75, and the median Charlson comorbidity index was 6 among those who received it. Forty-one patients had received one or two doses of mRNA vaccines, while none had received a third dose. Most patients received 3 days of remdesivir. Of the patients followed up to 14 and 28 days from onset, 41/44 (95.3%) and 35/41(85.4%) were alive, respectively. Six deaths occurred by 28 days in the palliative care/internal medicine ward and two of them were possibly related to COVID-19. Among those who survived, the performance status was unchanged between the time of onset and at 28 days.
Misc.
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The Japanese Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine, 51(Suppl.) S441-S441, May, 2014
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The Japanese Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine, 51(Suppl.) S462-S462, May, 2014
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NEUROLOGICAL SCIENCES, 35(1) 53-59, Jan, 2014 Peer-reviewed
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SOMATOSENSORY AND MOTOR RESEARCH, 31(2) 72-77, 2014 Peer-reviewed
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BIOMEDICAL ENGINEERING ONLINE, 12 104, Oct, 2013 Peer-reviewed
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JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE METHODS, 219(1) 162-168, Sep, 2013 Peer-reviewed
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The Japanese Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine, 50(Suppl.) S257-S257, May, 2013
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The Japanese Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine, 50(Suppl.) S398-S398, May, 2013
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日本摂食嚥下リハビリテーション学会学術大会抄録集(Web), 19th SO1-4-1-9 (WEB ONLY), 2013
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Bulletin of the Japanese Society of Prosthetic and Orthotic Education, Research and Development, 29(2) 90-97, 2013Japan is entering the era of the unprecedented super-aged society. We will have many elderly and disabled people. In this situation, the emergence of rehabilitation robotics is highly anticipated. Fujita Health University is developing five kinds of rehabilitation robots ; (1) WPAL is a new gait-assist robot which reconstructs practical walking in paraplegics. (2) Independent Gait Assist is designed to assist patients with hemiplegia or lower extremity monoplegia to walk safely and comfortably. (3) Gait Exercise Assist is the robot which provides new and effective gait exercise for stroke patients with hemiplegia. (4) Balance Exercise Assist produces new balance exercises which have a lot of merits from the viewpoint of motor-learning. (5) Transfer Care Assist is aimed at reducing the physical load of caregivers, assisting the transfer and toileting of patients. Rehabilitation robots are just being realized.
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Jpn J Compr Rehabil Sci, 4 7-13, 2013 Peer-reviewed
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Keitai Kino, 11 92-100, 2013 Peer-reviewed
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J Anal Bio-Sci, 36 186-192, 2013 Peer-reviewed
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Keitai Kino, 12 10-18, 2013 Peer-reviewed
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Asian Pacific Journal of Cancer Prevention, 14(7) 4435-4440, 2013 Peer-reviewed
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Jpn J Compr Rehabil Sci, 4 84-87, 2013 Peer-reviewed
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日本高次脳機能障害学会学術総会プログラム・講演抄録, 36th 188, Oct 17, 2012
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The Japanese Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine, 49(Suppl.) S249-S249, May, 2012
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The Japanese Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine, 49(Suppl.) S200-S200, May, 2012
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Japanese Journal of Comprehensive Rehabilitation Science, 2 77-81, 2012
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46(3) 286-291, 2012 Peer-reviewed
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Rigakuryoho Kagaku, 27(1) 1-5, 2012 Peer-reviewed
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Bulletin of the Japanese Society of Prosthetic and Orthotic Education, Research and Development, 28(2) 87-92, 2012
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46(12) 1577-1581, 2012 Peer-reviewed
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Jpn J Compr Rehabil Sci, 3 26-31, 2012 Peer-reviewed
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Jpn J Compr Rehabil Sci, 3 32-36, 2012 Peer-reviewed
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Jpn J Compr Rehabil Sci, 3 51-58, 2012 Peer-reviewed
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J Appl Glycosci, 59 97-103, 2012 Peer-reviewed
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ASIAN PACIFIC JOURNAL OF CANCER PREVENTION, 13(5) 1983-1988, 2012 Peer-reviewed
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BRAIN RESEARCH, 1416 61-68, Oct, 2011 Peer-reviewed
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GAIT & POSTURE, 34(3) 295-299, Jul, 2011 Peer-reviewed
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NEUROREHABILITATION AND NEURAL REPAIR, 25(6) 540-547, Jul, 2011 Peer-reviewed
Books and Other Publications
4Presentations
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3th Korea-Japan NeuroRehabilitation Conference, 2014
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3th Korea-Japan NeuroRehabilitation Conference, 2014
Professional Memberships
6Research Projects
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科学研究費助成事業, 日本学術振興会, Apr, 2024 - Mar, 2028
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Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research, Japan Society for the Promotion of Science, Apr, 2023 - Mar, 2028
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Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research, Japan Society for the Promotion of Science, Apr, 2016 - Mar, 2019
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Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research, Japan Society for the Promotion of Science, Apr, 2014 - Mar, 2017
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Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research, Japan Society for the Promotion of Science, Apr, 2013 - Mar, 2017