Hiroshi Nobusawa
Showa University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Hiroshi Nobusawa.
Journal of Computer Assisted Tomography | 2001
Takehiko Gokan; Toshi Hashimoto; Seishi Matsui; Tamio Kushihashi; Hiroshi Nobusawa; Hirotsugu Munechika
Purpose The purpose of this work was to demonstrate the appearance of the right inferior phrenic artery (RIPA) on CT in patients with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Method We assessed the biphasic helical CT scans using 10 mm collimation in 16 patients with arteriographically proven HCCs supplied by the RIPAs. Size of the right and left inferior phrenic arteries and origin of the RIPA were evaluated and correlated with arteriographic images. Results Helical CT showed dilated RIPAs on the right diaphragmatic crus as foci of high attenuation on arterial-phase images in all patients. Diameter of the RIPA (average 3.3 mm) was larger than that of the left inferior phrenic artery (average 1.5 mm). The origin of the RIPAs was correctly predicted in 13 of 16 (celiac artery 6, abdominal aorta 5, right renal artery 2) patients. Conclusion Asymmetric dilatation of the RIPA as an indicator of extrahepatic collateral of HCC can be demonstrated on the right diaphragmatic crus with arteriographic images of biphasic helical CT.
Radiographics | 2007
Masanori Hirose; Hiroshi Nobusawa; Takehiko Gokan
Nipple discharge is a common symptom that mostly results from benign conditions. The most significant cause is carcinoma, which accounts for 1%-45% of cases. Therefore, identification of intraductal lesions is important. Conventional ductography, the recommended method of identifying lesions, is invasive and has inherent limitations. Magnetic resonance (MR) ductography is performed with heavily T2-weighted sequences; it is noninvasive and requires neither radiation nor contrast media. Like conventional ductography, MR ductography shows the dilated ducts as tubular structures with high signal intensity. Intraductal lesions appear as a signal defect, duct wall irregularity, or ductal obstruction. No specific conventional ductographic or MR ductographic finding allows differentiation between benign and malignant disease, and neither technique can demonstrate the extent of disease. MR mammography with intravenous injection of contrast material reveals the extent of disease, and a dynamic study may help distinguish between malignant and benign lesions. Fusion imaging with MR ductography and MR mammography demonstrates not only the presence of an intraductal abnormality but also the extent of the lesion on one image, thus clearly showing the relationship between the dilated duct and the intraductal lesion.
Journal of Computer Assisted Tomography | 2001
Takehiko Gokan; Tamio Kushihashi; Hiroshi Nobusawa; Toshi Hashimoto; Seishi Matsui; Takashi Kitanosono; Hirotsugu Munechika
Purpose The purpose of this work was to assess CT demonstration of the enlarged gonadal vein as a portosystemic shunt of mesenteric varices. Method The clinical records and CT images of eight patients with angiographically confirmed mesenteric varices were studied retrospectively. We measured the size of the right gonadal vein of these eight patients and also measured the size of the right gonadal vein in 60 patients without mesenteric varices. Results In all eight patients, CT demonstrated that the mesenteric varices drained into the inferior vena cava through the dilated right gonadal vein (diameter 6–10 mm) in all and that the left gonadal vein was not dilated (diameter 2–3 mm). In 60 patients without mesenteric varices, the diameter of the right gonadal vein was 1–5 mm. Conclusion CT demonstrates the dilated gonadal vein as a portosystemic shunt of the mesenteric varices. Awareness of a dilated gonadal vein in patients with portal hypertension may be helpful to consider the possibility of mesenteric varices.
Magnetic Resonance in Medical Sciences | 2016
Yoshimitsu Ohgiya; Hiroshi Nobusawa; Noritaka Seino; Osamu Miyagami; Naomi Yagi; Sasamori Hiroto; Jiro Munechika; Masanori Hirose; Nobuyuki Takeyama; Nobuyuki Ohike; Ryu Matsuoka; Akihiko Sekizawa; Takehiko Gokan
Purpose: To evaluate morphological and signal intensity (SI) changes of placental insufficiency on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and to assess morphological changes and decreased flow voids (FVs) on T2-weighted rapid acquisition with relaxation enhancement (RARE) images for diagnosing placental insufficiency. Methods: Fifty singleton fetuses underwent MRI using a 1.5-T MR scanner. Placental thickness, area, volume, SI, amniotic fluid SI, and size of FVs between the uterus and the placenta were measured on MR images. Two radiologists reviewed T2-weighted RARE images for globular appearance of the placenta and FVs between the uterus and the placenta. Data were analyzed using t-tests, McNemar’s tests, and areas under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUCs) at 5% level of significance. Results: Twenty-five of the 50 pregnancies were categorized as having an insufficient placenta. Significant differences were observed between insufficient and normal placentas in mean placental thickness, area, volume, placenta to amniotic fluid SI ratio, and size of FVs (49.0 mm vs. 36.9 mm, 1.62 × 104 mm2 vs. 2.67 × 104 mm2, 5.13 × 105 mm3 vs. 6.56 × 105 mm3, 0.549 vs. 0.685, and 3.4 mm vs. 4.3 mm, respectively). The sensitivity and accuracy using globular appearance plus decreased FVs were greater than those using decreased FVs (P < 0.01). There was no significant difference among AUCs using globular appearance and decreased FVs, and globular appearance plus decreased FVs. Conclusions: Placental insufficiency was associated with placental thickness, area, volume, placenta to amniotic fluid SI ratio, and size of FVs. Evaluating FVs on T2-weighted RARE images can be useful for detecting placental insufficiency, particularly in placentas without globular appearance on MR images.
American Journal of Roentgenology | 2005
Yoshimitsu Ohgiya; Toshi Hashimoto; Takehiko Gokan; Shouji Watanabe; Masayoshi Kuroda; Masanori Hirose; Seishi Matsui; Hiroshi Nobusawa; Takashi Kitanosono; Hirotsugu Munechika
Radiology | 2003
Yoshimitsu Ohgiya; Takehiko Gokan; Hiroshi Nobusawa; Masanori Hirose; Noritaka Seino; Hidefumi Fujisawa; Maiko Baba; Kyoko Nagai; Keisuke Tanno; Nobuyuki Takeyama; Hirotsugu Munechika
Radiation Medicine | 2002
Takehiko Gokan; Yoshimitsu Ohgiya; Hirotsugu Munechika; Hiroshi Nobusawa; Masanori Hirose
Current Problems in Diagnostic Radiology | 2007
Masanori Hirose; Takashi Hashizume; Nobutaka Seino; Hayato Kubota; Hiroshi Nobusawa; Takehiko Gokan
Journal of medical imaging | 2002
Hirotsugu Munechika; Takehiko Gokan; Hiroshi Nobusawa; Masanori Hirose; Seishi Matsui; Akira Shinozaka; Maiko Baba; Kyoko Hamamizu; Miki Kushima
胸部放射線研究会 : 日本医学放射線学会秋季臨床大会 = Annual meeting of the Japanese Society of Thoracic Radiology | 2000
Hidefumi Fujisawa; Tamio Kushihashi; Ryutaro Ukisu; Hiroshi Nobusawa; Takehiko Gokan; Hirotsugu Munechika; Daisuke Kataoka; Shigeru Yamamoto; Makoto Nonaka; Mitsutaka Kadokura; Toshihiko Takaba; Miki Kushima; Toshiaki Kunimura; Toshio Morohoshi