Kenichi Tamura
Nihon University
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Featured researches published by Kenichi Tamura.
Central European Journal of Engineering | 2013
Kenichi Tamura; Tatsushi Fujita; Yuriko Morisaki
We produced regenerative artificial bone material and bone parts using vacuum-sintered bodies of a novel apatite called “Titanium medical apatite (TMA®)” for biomedical applications. TMA was formed by chemically connecting a Ti oxide molecule with the reactive [Ca10(PO4)6] group of Hydroxyapatite (HAp). The TMA powders were kneaded with distilled water, and solid cylinders of compacted TMA were made by compression molding at 10 MPa using a stainless-steel vessel. The TMA compacts were dried and then sintered in vacuum (about 10−3 Pa) or in air using a resistance heating furnace in the temperature range 1073–1773 K. TMA compacts were sintered at temperatures greater than 1073 K, thus resulting in recrystallization. The TMA compact bodies sintered in the range 1273-1773 K were converted into mixtures composed of three crystalline materials: α-TCP (tricalcium phosphate), β-TCP, and Perovskite-CaTiO3. The Perovskite crystals were stable and hard. In vacuum-sintering, the Perovskite crystals were transformed into fibers (approximately 1 µm in diameter × 8 µm in length), and the fiber distribution was uniform in various directions. We refer to the TMA vacuum-sintered bodies as a ”reinforced composite material with Perovskite crystal fibers.” However, in atmospheric sintering, the Perovskite crystals were of various sizes and were irregularly distributed as a result of the effect of oxygen. After sintering temperature at 1573 K, the following results were obtained: the obtained TMA vacuum-sintered bodies (1) were white, (2) had a density of approximately 2300 kg/m3 (corresponding to that of a compact bone or a tooth), and had a thermal conductivity of approximately 31.3 W/(m·K) (corresponding to those of metal or ceramic implants). Further, it was possible to cut the TMA bodies into various forms with a cutting machine. An implant made of TMA and inserted into a rabbit jaw bone was covered by new bone tissues after just one month because of the high biocompatibility of the TMA implant. TMA vacuum-sintered bodies are promising biomaterials for use as artificial bone materials to regenerate bone parts and produce bone reinforcement structures that are used for bone junctions in dental and orthopedic surgery.
British Journal of Radiology | 2016
Yohei Ono; Rina Kashihara; Nobutoshi Yasojima; Hideki Kasahara; Yuka Shimizu; Kenichi Tamura; Kaori Tsutsumi; Kenneth Sutherland; Takao Koike; Tamotsu Kamishima
OBJECTIVE Accurate evaluation of joint space width (JSW) is important in the assessment of rheumatoid arthritis (RA). In clinical radiography of bilateral hands, the oblique incidence of X-rays is unavoidable, which may cause perceptional or measurement error of JSW. The objective of this study was to examine whether tomosynthesis, a recently developed modality, can facilitate a more accurate evaluation of JSW than radiography under the condition of oblique incidence of X-rays. METHODS We investigated quantitative errors derived from the oblique incidence of X-rays by imaging phantoms simulating various finger joint spaces using radiographs and tomosynthesis images. We then compared the qualitative results of the modified total Sharp score of a total of 320 joints from 20 patients with RA between these modalities. RESULTS A quantitative error was prominent when the location of the phantom was shifted along the JSW direction. Modified total Sharp scores of tomosynthesis images were significantly higher than those of radiography, that is to say JSW was regarded as narrower in tomosynthesis than in radiography when finger joints were located where the oblique incidence of X-rays is expected in the JSW direction. CONCLUSION Tomosynthesis can facilitate accurate evaluation of JSW in finger joints of patients with RA, even with oblique incidence of X-rays. ADVANCES IN KNOWLEDGE Accurate evaluation of JSW is necessary for the management of patients with RA. Through phantom and clinical studies, we demonstrate that tomosynthesis may achieve more accurate evaluation of JSW.
Journal of Oral Science | 1999
Shuji Mezawa; Takayuki Kawato; Kiyoshi Yoshida; Hiroaki Nozaki; Tsuyoshi Saito; Kenichi Tamura; Motohisa Onozawa
Archive | 2004
Tatsushi Fujita; Kenichi Tamura; Yuriko Morisaki
Radiological Physics and Technology | 2016
Yohei Ono; Tamotsu Kamishima; Nobutoshi Yasojima; Kenichi Tamura; Kaori Tsutsumi
The Proceedings of the JSME Conference on Frontiers in Bioengineering | 2004
Kenichi Tamura; Tatsushi Fujita; Yuriko Morisaki
Journal of Japan Foundry Engineering Society | 1998
Hideyuki Yamamoto; Kenichi Tamura; Motohisa Onozawa
Journal of Biomaterials and Nanobiotechnology | 2015
Kenichi Tamura
Journal of Biomechanics | 2012
Kenichi Tamura; Tatsushi Fujita; Yuriko Morisaki
The Proceedings of the Bioengineering Conference Annual Meeting of BED/JSME | 2010
Kenichi Tamura; Tatsushi Fujita; Yuriko Morisaki