The purpose of this study was to investigate the relationship between residential environments and atopic dermatitis (AD).Subjects were 1378 elementary school children from 4 dementary schools in Hirosaki City, Aomori Prefecture located in the northeastern of Japan. Physical examinations, which adhered to the diagnostic criteria set by the Japanese Dermatological Association, were given by dermatological specialists in October 1994 (first series) and April 1995 (second series). Half of the children with AD showed symptoms in only one of two seasons, either the autumn or spring, so the drifting of symptoms of AD occurred largely by seasons. The data on residential environments was gathered by questionnaire. Multiple logistic regression analysis showed that more children who were diagnosed positive as AD twice (AD(+,+)), lived in damp and moldy homes than did children who were diagnosed negative as AD twice (AD(-,-)). Moreover AD(+,+) were more likely to live in homes built between 1984 and 1989 than did AD(-,-). In addition, most AD(+,+) children frequently lived in homes in which the bedrooms were vacuumed 3-5 times or more in a week. Then damp and moldy houses or houses built between 1984 and 1989 may be risk factors for the outbreak of AD.
The aim of this study was to investigate the longitudinal effect of mobility and daily activity, in the form of exercise and everyday activities, on the bones of 102 elderly female nursing home residents who had physical disabilities as well as marked postmenopausal bone loss, using calcaneal ultrasound apparatus for bone evaluation.Of the 102 subjects initially measured, 74 (mean age, 83.5H6.55 years; range, 64 99 years) could be measured again approximately one year later. The osteo sono-assessment index (OSI) in this study was determined using an ultrasound bone evaluation device. This device measures the speed of sound (SOS) and transmission index (TI) as ultrasound passes through the calcaneus. The OSI is calculated by computer analysis (OSI=TI`SOS 2 ). For mobility, the OSI decreased significantly by an average of 1.8% after 11.8 months in all of the residents who were using a wheelchair (n=41, p<0.01). In contrast, the OSI rose significantly by a mean of 1.9% in the ambulatory group (n=33, p<0.01).The OSI increased significantly in residents who exercised every day, were out of bed for at least seven hours per day, and walked on a regular basis, suggesting that exercise, mainly in the form of walking, may increase the calcaneal OSI.
The purpose of this study was to estimate daily energy expenditure (EE) and daily activity factor (DAF: EE/basal metabolism -1) of junior high school students in Japan using heart rate (HR) monitoring method. Daily activity recording and 24 hour HR monitoring were measured in all the subjects. The relational formulas between HR and oxygen consumption were obtained from bicycle ergometer test. Subjects were 112 junior high school students (68 male and 44 female) from the 1st to the 3rd year. The averages ofEE (kcal/kg) of the 1st, 2nd, and 3rd year students were 54.3, 46.7, and 44.5 (kcal/kg) for males and 50.1, 44.4, and 40.5 (kcal/kg) for females respectively. In the same way DAF were 0.80, 0.61, and 0.59 for males and 0.77, 0.65, and 0.51 for females. It was shown that EE (kcal/kg) and DAF have a tendency to decrease as school year increases in both male and female students.
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