https://www.selleckchem.com/products/YM155.html This review will highlight WFC-based therapeutic strategies in disrupting progress to gastric cancer and provide more information on the pharmacological mechanisms of WFC and its clinical application for the treatment of precancerous gastric lesions. After a distal radius fracture (DRF), severe pain, disabilities, and pain-related psychological problems can arise and sometimes remain ~1 year later. DRF-related disabilities have been assessed with questionnaires but not by kinematic evaluations; the kinematic features of DRF patients are unknown. Here, we investigated the kinematic characteristics of DRF patients and explored the relationship between their clinical assessments and kinematic characteristics. We analyzed 20 patients with DRFs after their surgeries. We recorded their finger-tapping using a magnetic sensor, and we calculated the velocity, magnitude, and movement-initiation hesitation. The patients' pain intensity and fear of movement were assessed by a visual analogue scale and the Disabilities of the Arm, Shoulder, and Hand Questionnaire (DASH). To investigate the features of the patients who achieved only slight improvement, we compared the kinematic characteristics of the DRF patients in 2 subgroups the "good improvement group" and the "slight improvement group" based on a cutoff value of the DASH score (>40) at 1 month postsurgery. The DASH score at 30 days postsurgery was significantly correlated with hesitation at 1 day postsurgery (  = .66, < .0071) and with velocity at 7 days ( = -.54, < .0071). Our kinematic analyses revealed significant differences in velocity at 7 days postsurgery ( < .05) and in hesitation at 1 day postsurgery ( < .05) between the subgroups. Since assessments using range-of-motion measurements or a questionnaire are not sufficient to evaluate a patient's movement disorder, a kinematic analysis should be conducted for quantitative assessments. Since assessments using range-of-mot