著者
Jun Miyata Hirotomo Yamanashi Shin-Ya Kawashiri Sakiko Soutome Kazuhiko Arima Mami Tamai Fumiaki Nonaka Yukiko Honda Masayasu Kitamura Koji Yoshida Yuji Shimizu Naomi Hayashida Shigeru Kawakami Noboru Takamura Takashi Sawase Atsutoshi Yoshimura Yasuhiro Nagata Mayumi Ohnishi Kiyoshi Aoyagi Atsushi Kawakami Toshiyuki Saito Takahiro Maeda
出版者
Japan Epidemiological Association
雑誌
Journal of Epidemiology (ISSN:09175040)
巻号頁・発行日
pp.JE20230079, (Released:2023-07-29)
参考文献数
42
被引用文献数
1

In an aging society, it is important to visualize the conditions of people living with diseases or disabilities, such as frailty and sarcopenia, and determine the environmental and genetic factors underlying such conditions. Atherosclerosis and arterial stiffness are key conditions between these factors and noncommunicable diseases. In 2014, we launched a population-based prospective open-cohort study, the Nagasaki Islands Study (NaIS), which was conducted in Goto City, located in the remote islands of Nagasaki Prefecture, Japan, mostly involving middle-aged and older residents. We conducted our own health checkups along with the annual standardized checkups organized by the municipality; recruited study participants; and started to follow-up with them for vital status (death), migration, and occurrence of diseases such as myocardial infarction, stroke, fracture, and human T-cell leukemia virus type 1 (HTLV-1) -associated uveitis. Our checkups were conducted as baseline surveys in different areas of Goto City during the fiscal years 2014–2016, secondary surveys during 2017–2019, and tertiary surveys since 2021, consisting of medical interviews, physical examinations, blood and urine tests, body composition measurements, osteoporosis screening, arterial stiffness measurements, carotid ultrasonography, and dental examination. A total of 4,957 residents participated in either the baseline or secondary surveys and were followed-up; and 3,594 and 3,364 residents (aged 27–96 and 28–98 years) participated in the baseline and secondary surveys, respectively. In conclusion, the NaIS has been undertaken to reveal the influence of aging and risk factors of noncommunicable diseases and disabilities, with an aim to contribute towards better healthcare in the future.
著者
Shota Kondo Yuko Nakamura Toru Higaki Takashi Nishihara Masahiro Takizawa Toru Shirai Motoshi Fujimori Yoshitaka Bito Keigo Narita Takahiro Sueoka Yukiko Honda Chihiro Tani Kazuo Awai
出版者
Japanese Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicine
雑誌
Magnetic Resonance in Medical Sciences (ISSN:13473182)
巻号頁・発行日
pp.mp.2022-0041, (Released:2022-06-01)
参考文献数
26

Purpose: The wavelet denoising with geometry factor weighting (g-denoising) method can reduce the image noise by adapting to spatially varying noise levels induced by parallel imaging. The aim of this study was to investigate the clinical applicability of g-denoising on hepatobiliary-phase (HBP) images with gadoxetic acid.Methods: We subjected 53 patients suspected of harboring hepatic neoplastic lesions to gadoxetic acid-enhanced HBP imaging with and without g-denoising (g+HBP and g–HBP). The matrix size was reduced for g+HBP images to avoid prolonging the scanning time. Two radiologists calculated the SNR, the portal vein-, and paraspinal muscle contrast-to-noise ratio (CNR) relative to the hepatic parenchyma (liver-to-portal vein- and liver-to-muscle CNR). Two other radiologists independently graded the sharpness of the liver edge, the visibility of intrahepatic vessels, the image noise, the homogeneity of liver parenchyma, and the overall image quality using a 5-point scale. Differences between g–HBP and g+HBP images were determined with the two-sided Wilcoxon signed-rank test.Results: The liver-to-portal- and liver-to-muscle CNR and the SNR were significantly higher on g+HBP- than g–HBP images (P < 0.01), as was the qualitative score for the image noise, homogeneity of liver parenchyma, and overall image quality (P < 0.01). Although there were no significant differences in the scores for the sharpness of the liver edge or the score assigned for the visibility of intrahepatic vessels (P = 0.05, 0.43), with g+HBP the score was lower in three patients for the sharpness of the liver edge and in six patients for the visibility of intrahepatic vessels.Conclusion: At gadoxetic acid-enhanced HBP imaging, g-denoising yielded a better image quality than conventional HBP imaging although the anatomic details may be degraded.