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1.
The Journal of The Japanese Society of Balneology, Climatology and Physical Medicine ; : 109-121, 2010.
Article in Japanese | WPRIM | ID: wpr-375047

ABSTRACT

 By using a simplified model for cardiovascular system which consists of the cardiac resistance <i>R</i><sub>h</sub>, the artery <i>C</i><sub>a</sub>, the vein <i>C</i><sub>b</sub> and the peripheral vessel <i>R</i><sub>s</sub>, the ratio of the arteriovenous pressure difference Δ<i>p</i> to the maximum arteriovenous pressure difference Δ<i>p</i><sub>M</sub> was defined as the circulatory ratio θ ≡Δ<i>p</i> ⁄ Δ<i>p</i><sub>M</sub>. It was shown that the circulatory ratio θ was θ=1 ⁄ 2 regardless of the exercise. It was revealed that this regulation is done by keeping <i>R</i><sub>h</sub> ⁄ <i>R</i><sub>s</sub> constant and the ratio is equal to the arterial compliance fraction <i>k</i><sub>a</sub>.

2.
The Journal of The Japanese Society of Balneology, Climatology and Physical Medicine ; : 102-109, 2005.
Article in Japanese | WPRIM | ID: wpr-372923

ABSTRACT

We evaluated the clinical effect of acupuncture treatment on 21 patients with Arteriosclerosis Obliterans (ASO). Severity of ASO was grade I in one case, II in 17 cases, III in two cases, and IV in one case (Fontaine classification). Mainly low-frequency electroacupuncture was applied to inpatients two to four times per week and to outpatients, once or twice a week. Effects on claudication distance (ICD), pain, coldness, and Ankle Brachial Pressure Index (ABPI) were assessed on inpatients by comparing the status before starting treatment with that before the acupuncture treatment at the 17th visit. We also assessed the thermograph and plasma calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) of the lower extremities.<br>Improved warmth, increased intermittent limping distance, and relief of pain during walking were observed in patients of grade I and II (Fontaine classification of severity). No improvement of symptoms was observed in patients of grade III and IV. No change in ABPI was observed in any patient. Surface temperatures in the peripheral extremities were significantly elevated from 15 minutes after insertion of the needles until 15 minutes after removal. A significant increase in plasma CGRP was observed immediately after the treatment.<br>These findings suggest that acupuncture treatment may be effective for some symptoms of grade I and II ASO and that improvement of peripheral circulation via vascular dilatation may be involved in the mechanism of action.

3.
The Journal of The Japanese Society of Balneology, Climatology and Physical Medicine ; : 225-236, 2004.
Article in English | WPRIM | ID: wpr-372918

ABSTRACT

The effect of electroacupuncture (EA) stimulation on tissue circulation in the human ocular fundus (choroidal blood flow) was studied in 11 adult healthy volunteers (6 males and 5 females, age 31.5±5.7y) who had no physical or ocular disease. Using the laser speckle method, normalized blur (NB) values, a quantitative index for tissue blood flow, were measured over an area of choroid between the macula and the optic nerve papilla with no discrete visible vessel. The EA stimulation was applied between BL 10 and GB 20 and between GB 21 and SI 13 on the right side for 15 minutes at 1Hz with an intensity which cause slight muscle contraction. The NB value and intraocular pressure (IOP) in both side eyes, blood pressure (BP) and pulse rate (PR) were measured at baseline time, immediately after EA, and every 5 minutes after EA up to 15 minutes. These procedures were repeated on the same subjects as a control trial on another day. The NB value of choroid on the stimulated side significantly increased following EA stimulation compared with the control value, while that in the unstimulated side showed no significant change. No significant change was observed in BP, IOP or ocular perfusion pressure throughout the experimental period.

4.
The Journal of The Japanese Society of Balneology, Climatology and Physical Medicine ; : 137-146, 2002.
Article in Japanese | WPRIM | ID: wpr-372859

ABSTRACT

Poor circulation is considered to be a cause of stiff shoulders, but there have been no studies on deep hemodynamics and the subjective estimation/palpation of stiff shoulders. We evaluated the relationship between deep hemodynamics and the degree of the subjective estimation/palpation of stiff shoulders by near-infrared spectrophotometry.<br>The subjects were 146 patients who visited our center and 23 healthy volunteers. Deep hemodynamics (tissue oxygen saturation: StO<sub>2</sub>, total hemoglobin concentration: total Hb) was measured in the scapular region of the bilateral shoulders using a deep hemodynamics measurement system (PSA-IIIN, Biomedical Science), and its relationship with the severity of the subjective estimation of stiff shoulders (5-grade rating) and that of palpation (4-grade rating) was evaluated. Deep hemodynamic values were affected by the body mass index (BMI) that is highly correlated with subcutaneous fat thickness. Therefore, analysis was performed in 70 patients and 8 healthy volunteers with BMI of 20-24 that does not affect hemodynamic values. Compared with the healthy volunteers, patients who reported marked shoulder stiffness showed a significant decrease in total Hb, and that who reported shoulder stiffness showed a significant decrease in StO<sub>2</sub>. On the other hand, compared with the healthy volunteers, patients with marked shoulder stiffness observed by palpation showed significant decreases in both StO<sub>2</sub> and total Hb; the decreases were more marked with more marked stiffness. These results suggested that deep hemodynamics is a diagnostic parameter of stiff shoulders.

5.
The Journal of The Japanese Society of Balneology, Climatology and Physical Medicine ; : 128-136, 2002.
Article in Japanese | WPRIM | ID: wpr-372858

ABSTRACT

Hemiplegia after a cerebrovascular event is a complication that causes problems in daily life such as difficulty of walking and may lead to social disadvantages. Furthermore, various subsequent health issues that accompany hemiplegia tend to hinder rehabilitation. In particular, Shoulder-Hand Syndrome (SHS) is an intractably painful disease with primary symptoms of pain and swelling in the upper limbs of patients. We investigated the effect of the acupuncture treatment on those patients with hemiplegia after a cerebrovascular event who are suspected to have SHS because of such symptoms as pain, swelling, and paresthesia in the upper limb of the affected side by measuring the changes in the numerical scale (NS), Gibbons' RSD score, and range of motion (ROM) in upper extremities.<br>The present study consisted of 13 hemiplegic subjects (eight males, five females) with pain, swelling, and paresthesia in the upper limbs. Acupuncture treatment was applied twice a week for over two months. Specifically electrical acupuncture and/or the retaining needle technique was applied to the upper extremities for 20 minutes in each session. Of 13 participants, 10 showed a significant decrease in NS (reduced by five or more points), eight showed improvement of the swelling in the upper limbs, and nine showed reduction in paresthesia.<br>From these results, we concluded that the acupuncture treatment was effective for SHS that accompanies hemiplegia after a cerebrovascular event and that the improvement of the peripheral blood flow might play an important role in generating treatment effects.

6.
Journal of the Japan Society of Acupuncture and Moxibustion ; : 91-97, 2001.
Article in English | WPRIM | ID: wpr-370969

ABSTRACT

The present experiment aimed to determine what kinds of afferent nerve fibers in dorsal roots are stimulated during manual stimulation with an acupuncture needle by using single nerve unit recording techniques in bullfrogs. An acupuncture needle was inserted into a hind limb via the skin to the muscles, and was manually twisted right and left at a frequency of about 1Hz. Dorsal roots of the 8th and 9th spinal nerves were cut close to their entrance into the spinal cord and dissected to record single unitary afferent activity. The conduction velocity of the single nerve fiber was measured. A total of 30 units were successfully dissected, and all of those responded to manual twisting stimulation of the acupuncture needle in a hind limb. All of the dissected fibers had their receptive fields only at the unilateral side ipsilateral, to the recording site never contralateral. The conduction velocities of all 30 units ranged between 5.3 - 40.7 m/s. The reports by Erlanger et al.<SUP>1, 2) </SUP> which showed the maximum conduction velocities of Aa, β, δand C afferent fibers in bullfregs to be about 48.2m/s, 28.7m/s, 13.6m/s and 0.7m/s, respectively, indicated that all 30 units dissected at the dorsal roots and responding to manual acupuncture stimulation were Aα, β, δ fibers. We could not record single nerve unitary activity of C fibers, probably because of technical difficulties. We conclude that manual acupuncture needle stimulation to the hind limbs excites single unitary afferent fibers of Aα, β, and δ fibers in the dorsal roots of bull frogs.

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