296 research outputs found
Comparative outcomes of various transplantation platforms, highlighting haploidentical transplants with post‐transplantation cyclophosphamide for adult T‐cell leukaemia/lymphoma
Citation: Makoto Yoshimitsu, Takashi Tanaka, Nobuaki Nakano, Koji Kato, Hiroyuki Muranushi, Masahito Tokunaga, Ayumu Ito, Jun Ishikawa, Tetsuya Eto, Satoko Morishima, Toshiro Kawakita, Hidehiro Itonaga, Naoyuki Uchida, Masatsugu Tanaka, Keiichi Akizuki, Kenji Ishitsuka, Hiroyuki Ohigashi, Shuichi Ota, Toshihiko Ando, Yoshinobu Kanda, Takahiro Fukuda, Yoshiko Atsuta, Shigeo Fuji, Comparative outcomes of various transplantation platforms, highlighting haploidentical transplants with post‐transplantation cyclophosphamide for adult T‐cell leukaemia/lymphoma, British Journal of Haematology, 206(1), 235-249, 2024-10-19, https://doi.org/10.1111/bjh.1983
Statistical analysis of Hydrographs of the Fuji Lakes (2nd Report)
We have studied the statistical property of the water-level of the Fuji lakes. In this paper, the author explained that the changes of the waterlevel had some continuity, that is, the changes were more continuous than the stochastic expectation, and the distribution of water-level between Motosu and Saiko has much correlation, but between Yamanaka and the others there is no correlation
STATISTICAL ADJUSTMENT OF HYDROGRAPH OF THE FUJI LAKES
Some of the five lakes around Mt. Fuji, it is said, are connected with other. The author made scatter diagrams, control charts and time series diagrams by means of the rate of amplitude with statistical method, and proved that the western three lakes and the other two make respective groups and between these two groups there is no connection but there is much correlation among the western three but there are few between the easten two. These results coincide with the traditional legends
Influencing factors of acute mountain sickness on Mount Fuji - A pilot study
The present study investigated influencing factors of acute mountain sickness (AMS) on Mount Fuji using questionnaires, and also complementary experimental study. In survey study, 395 people participated and the data of 376 participants were used for further analysis. Univariate analysis revealed that risk factors for developing AMS include; women (P=0.007, compared to men); less experience with climbing Mt. Fuji (P<0.001, compared to many experiences); overnight mountain climbers (P=0.035 compared to single-day climbers); and incidence participant with greater numbers of toilet break (P=0.013). Moreover, multiple analyses demonstrated that less experience was extracted to explain both the incidence (P=0.002) and the severity of AMS (P<0.001). In experimental study, arterial oxygen content was evaluated using a finger pulse oximeter (SpO2). SpO2 decreased gradually in accordance with increasing altitude, however, changes in SpO2 were not associated with the severity of AMS. Fluid inbalance, that is, the ratio between fluid intake and urine output, was associated with the severity of AMS obtained by quadratic curve regression (y=0.008x2+0.524x+9.733, r=0.841, n=9, P=0.025). Collectively, these preliminary data suggest that, in addition to less experience, fluid balance may also accentuate the severity of AMS.journal articl
<i>Journey to See Fuji</i> (1567) by Satomura Jōha: About the Author, Circumstances of Creation, and Main Features of the Diary
At a time when many provincial daimyō were at war with their neighbors, and Oda Nobunaga was gradually becoming a central figure in the political arena, the renga poet Satomura Jōha and his disciples made a journey to Suruga province to see Mt. Fuji. Jōha described this journey in his travel diary, Journey to See Fuji. The diary clearly shows both the features of medieval travel diaries, such as the inclusion of renga and some waka, the strong influence of Ise Monogatari, references to Genji Monogatari and the diaries of Jōha’s predecessors, other renga poets. Journey to See Fuji also bears the characteristics of early modern travel diaries: the absence of a sense of forcedness and hardness of the journey (instead, Jōha is enjoying his travel), a detailed listing of the names of people met on the way, realistic depiction of places he visited, and descriptions of military hostilities.It is curious that, despite stating seeing Mt. Fuji as the main reason for his journey, Jōha writes about it very little. This diary is interesting not only for its literary and poetic part but also as a historical source from which it is possible to reconstruct the network of relationships between famous figures of the sixteenth century
Characteristics of salt inclusions in polar ice from Dome Fuji, East Antarctica
We studied the depth profile of the chemical properties, number concentration and average diameter of micro-inclusions in Antarctic ice from Dome Fuji. Analysis of the data indicated that the distribution of inclusions was not significantly modified during ice sheet flow, although a main constituent Na2SO4 center dot 10H(2)O changed into another solid phase in the deep ice. In the chemical form, sodium sulfate and magnesium sulfate were dominant in the interglacial and early-glacial ice, but were not detected in the glacial-maximum ice. Instead, the sulfate in the glacial-maximum ice was mainly in the form of calcium sulfate. This is strong support for the hypothesis that the neutralization regime of acid aerosols in the atmosphere and snowpack dramatically changed from chemical reaction with sea salt to that with dust during glacial maxima
Four-Dimensional Painlevé-Type Equations Associated with Ramified Linear Equations III: Garnier Systems and Fuji-Suzuki Systems
This is the last part of a series of three papers entitled ''Four-dimensional Painlevé-type equations associated with ramified linear equations''. In this series of papers we aim to construct the complete degeneration scheme of four-dimensional Painlevé-type equations. In the present paper, we consider the degeneration of the Garnier system in two variables and the Fuji-Suzuki system.The author would like to thank Professor Kazuki Hiroe for his helpful suggestions. The author
would also like to thank Professors Hidetaka Sakai and Akane Nakamura who provided invaluable
comments and continual encouragement
Dairy Farming System on the West Slope Area of Mt. Fuji with Reference to Pasture Utilization
At the 15th International Grassland Congress held in 1985, the author presented a paper on the production and utilization of pasture and forage crops and land development programs currently in effect on the west slope of Mt. Fuji. Import of large amounts of concentrate and roughages from foreign countries was pointed out as a major problem. In the present study, farming was surveyed and analyzed to determine how dairy farming should best be conducted in the future. Particular attention is directed to pasture productivity and feed self-supply expressed in terms of UTDN for the conduct of farm business
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