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Dive into the research topics where Yoshie Iwasaki is active.

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Featured researches published by Yoshie Iwasaki.


Surgical Neurology | 1999

Preoperative embolization of meningiomas with pial supply: successful treatment of two cases

Tatsumi Kaji; Yukihiro Hama; Yoshie Iwasaki; Y. Kyoto; Shoichi Kusano

BACKGROUND The efficacy of preoperative embolization for hypervascular meningiomas fed by the pial branches of the internal carotid artery was evaluated. METHODS Two cases of hypervascular meningiomas fed by the cortical branches of the internal carotid arteries are presented. In the first patient, the left anterior frontal internal artery was embolized with gelatin sponge (Gelfoam) as a preoperative treatment using a microcatheter. The tumor was totally resected with 1,000 ml of blood loss. In the second patient, the right sulcal artery was embolized with Gelfoam. The patient subsequently underwent surgical resection with 100 mL of blood loss. RESULTS No neurological deficit appeared after the embolization or the surgery in either case. CONCLUSION Preoperative embolization of hypervascular meningiomas, mainly fed by the cortical branches of the internal carotid arteries, may be possible and effective.


Acta Radiologica | 1999

Transcatheter embolization of a superior mesenteric artery pseudoaneurysm. A case report.

Yukihiro Hama; Tatsumi Kaji; Yoshie Iwasaki; Y. Kyoto; N. Kawarabayashi; Kazuo Hatsuse; Shoichi Kusano

A 61-year-old man, with pseudoaneurysm of the superior mesenteric artery presenting with gastrointestinal bleeding, was successfully treated by transcatheter embolization using interlocking detachable coils. During the following observation time of 10 months, the patient had no sign of gastrointestinal bleeding. We underline the importance and feasibility of transcatheter embolization as the first-line treatment in such pseudoaneurysms.


Acta Radiologica | 2000

Hard-copy versus soft-copy with and without simple image manipulation for detection of pulmonary nodules and masses.

Shigeru Kosuda; Tatsumi Kaji; Hideo Kobayashi; Masumi Watanabe; Yoshie Iwasaki; Shoichi Kusano

PURPOSE To compare interpretation performance on soft-copy presentations, with and without simple image manipulation, and on unmodified hard-copy presentations with regard to detection of pulmonary nodules and masses. MATERIAL AND METHODS Fifty chest digital radiograph combinations of patients with a total of 60 nodules, 32 of which were 2.0 cm in diameter, were selected for the study. Three readers evaluated three separate image formats: unmodified hard- and soft-copies, and soft-copies with simple image manipulation of lung and mediastinum window settings, and zooming. The screen display was 1600 x 1200 pixels with 8 bits/pixel. RESULTS The sensitivity, accuracy, detectability, and Az value of the soft-copy systems were clearly inferior to hard-copy evaluation. The mean Az values were 0.921 for unmodified hard-copy, 0.820 for image-manipulated soft-copy, and 0.781 for unmodified soft-copy. CONCLUSION Soft-copy interpretations were not as sensitive in detecting pulmonary nodules and masses as hard-copy evaluation.


Radiation Medicine | 2006

Pulmonary spread of laryngeal papillomatosis: radiological findings.

Katsumi Abe; Yoshiaki Tanaka; Motoichiro Takahashi; Shigeru Kosuda; Katsumi Hayashi; Tetsuya Tanabe; Yoshie Iwasaki; Shinsuke Aida; Toshio Kawauchi; Masayoshi Yamamoto; Tamotsu Kita; Tatsumi Kaji

Laryngeal papillomatosis is a rare benign disease seen in children and young adults. The spread of laryngeal papillomas throughout the respiratory tract occurs rarely; and involvement of the distal bronchi, bronchioles, and lung parenchyma is very rare. We report a case of pulmonary spread of laryngeal papillomatosis in a 34-year-old man, focusing on the radiological evidence. Chest radiographs showed pulmonary nodules, but computed tomography scans more clearly demonstrated multiple small nodules showing cavitations and distributed centrilobularly. Pulmonary nodules and cavitations progressed gradually through the 6-year follow-up. The combination of clinical and characteristic radiological features suggests a diagnosis of pulmonary spread of laryngeal papillomatosis.


Annals of Nuclear Medicine | 2005

Should mediastinoscopy actually be incorporated into the FDG PET strategy for patients with non-small cell lung carcinoma?

Katsumi Hayashi; Katsumi Abe; Fuzuki Yano; Sadahiro Watanabe; Yoshie Iwasaki; Shigeru Kosuda

BackgroundIncorporating mediastinoscopy (MS) into the PET-based strategy for non-small cell lung carcinoma (NSCLC) patients might be cost-effective because MS can allow unnecessary thoracotomies to be avoided. The objective of our study was to assess the cost-effectiveness of incorporating MS into a PET strategy for NSCLC patients.MethodsTo determine life expectancy (LE), quality adjusted life years (QALY), and the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER), a decision-tree sensitivity analysis was designed for histopathologically confirmed NSCLC patients with M0 disease, based on the three competing strategies of chest CT only vs. PET + CT vs. PET + CT + MS. A simulation of 1,000 NSCLC patients was created using baselines of other relevant variables in regard to sensitivity, specificity, mortality, LE, utilities and cost from published data. One-way sensitivity analyses were performed to determine the influences of mediastinal metastasis prevalence on LE, QALY and ICER.ResultsThe LE and QALY per patient in the CT only strategy, PET + CT strategy and PET + CT + MS strategy were 4.79 and 4.35, 5.33 and 4.93 and 5.68 and 5.33 years, respectively, with a 20% prevalence of mediastinal metastasis. The ICERs were ¥906.6 x 103 (US


Yonsei Medical Journal | 2005

Small Left Atrium: An Adjunctive Sign of Hemodynamically Compromised Massive Pulmonary Embolism.

Yukihiro Hama; Tadayuki Yakushiji; Yoshie Iwasaki; Tatsumi Kaji; Naoei Isomura; Shoichi Kusano

7,555)/QALY/patient at a 20% mediastinal metastasis prevalence, and ¥2,194 x 103 (US


Radiation Medicine | 2006

Intradiploic epidermoid cyst with focal internal enhancement.

Atsushi Nambu; Yoshimasa Imanishi; Yoshie Iwasaki; Mitsuhiro Fujikawa; Tatsuo Hayashi; Toshihito Shinagawa; Tsutomu Araki

18,282)/QALY/patient at a 50% prevalence, but exceeded ¥5,280 x 103 (US


Abdominal Imaging | 2001

Gastrointestinal fistulas: treatment with covered stents

Y. Kyoto; Yoshie Iwasaki; Tatsumi Kaji; Shoichi Kusano; Y. Hoshikawa; Yasuo Nakajima

44,000)/QALY/ patient at 80%.ConclusionsOur study quantitatively showed the CT + PET + MS strategy in place of the PET + CT strategy in managing NSCLC patients to be cost-effective. MS should be incorporated into the PET + CT strategy for NSCLC patients except in those highly suspected of having mediastinal disease on chest CT or PET.


CardioVascular and Interventional Radiology | 2010

Selective CT Angiography and Embolization of the Inferior Mesenteric Artery for Massive Bladder Hemorrhage Secondary to Locally Advanced Prostate Cancer

Yukihiro Hama; Yoshie Iwasaki; Tatsumi Kaji

Pulmonary embolism (PE) is a common disease with a high mortality rate due to right ventricular dysfunction and underfilling of the left ventricle. We present a case of a 33-year-old man with hemodynamically compromised massive PE. His left atrium was collapsed with marked dilatation of the right atrium and ventricle on multi-detector-row CT scans. The patient was treated with an intracatheter injection of a mutant tissue-type plasminogen activator and subsequently showed clinical and radiological improvements. The small left atrial size in combination with a right ventricular pressure overload was considered to be an adjunctive sign of hemodynamically compromised massive PE.


Journal of Vascular and Interventional Radiology | 2000

Percutaneous treatment of brachiocephalic ischemic complications of a Stanford type A aortic dissection with use of endovascular stents.

Yukihiro Hama; Tatsumi Kaji; Yoshie Iwasaki; Nobuo Hatori; Shoichi Kusano

We report a case of intradiploic epidermoid cyst with focal internal enhancement. The patient was a 55-year-old woman presenting with right temporal head protrusion and head heaviness. Skull radiography and computed tomography demonstrated an expansile mass in the right diploic space. On magnetic resonance imaging, the mass showed makedly high signal T2-weighted images (T2WI) and intermediate to low signal on T1WI. On contrast-enhanced T1WI, there was nodular internal enhancement, which corresponded to neovascularity on pathology, as well as rim-like enhancement. It should be noted that internal enhancement, an indicator of malignant transformation, may be seen even in a benign epidermoid cyst.

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Yukihiro Hama

National Institutes of Health

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Tatsumi Kaji

National Defense Medical College

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Shigeru Kosuda

National Defense Medical College

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Y. Kyoto

National Defense Medical College

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Katsumi Abe

National Defense Medical College

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Katsumi Hayashi

National Defense Medical College

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Kazuo Hatsuse

National Defense Medical College

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Fuzuki Yano

National Defense Medical College

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Masayoshi Yamamoto

National Defense Medical College

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