Hiroo Yabe
Keio University
51 Papers
414 Citations
Hiroo Yabe is an academic researcher from Keio University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Sarcoma & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 20, co-authored 51 publications.
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Papers
Clear cell sarcoma of tendons and aponeuroses : A study of 75 patients
Akira Kawai,Ako Hosono,Robert Nakayama,Akihiko Matsumine,Seiichi Matsumoto,Takafumi Ueda,Hiroyuki Tsuchiya,Yasuo Beppu,Hideo Morioka,Hiroo Yabe +9 more
TL;DR: The objective of this study was to determine the clinical features, prognostic factors, and optimal treatment policy for patients with clear cell sarcoma.
The origin of the osteoclast.
TL;DR: Electron micrographic studies revealed that osteocytes and preosteoblasts can merge with pre-existing osteoclasts or osteoclast, and an alternative interpretation of the experimental results of Crelin and Koch supports the concept of skeletal origin.
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Long-Term Follow-up After Limb Salvage in Skeletally Immature Children with a Primary Malignant Tumor of the Distal End of the Femur
TL;DR: Endoprosthetic or biological reconstructions as limb salvage provided good functional outcome in skeletally immature children with a malignant bone tumor of the distal aspect of the femur despite a high rate of revisions and limb-lengthening procedures.
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Clinical outcome of patients with Ewing sarcoma family of tumors of bone in Japan: the Japanese Musculoskeletal Oncology Group cooperative study.
Hideto Obata,Takafumi Ueda,Akira Kawai,Takeshi Ishii,Toshifumi Ozaki,Satoshi Abe,Kazuhiro Tanaka,Hiroyuki Tsuchiya,Akihiko Matsumine,Hiroo Yabe +9 more
TL;DR: The objective of the current study was to assess the clinical outcome and prognostic factors of patients with ESFT of bone in Japan and to compare them between Euro‐American and Japanese populations.
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Osteoclasts in human osteopetrosis contain viral-nucleocapsid-like nuclear inclusions.
TL;DR: Supporting a possible viral association with benign osteopetrosis is the observation of the presence of antigens of respiratory syncytial virus, measles virus, and/or mumps virus in the cells of all five patients whose paraffin‐embedded bone specimens were tested.
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