Hiroyuki Nakase
Nara Medical University
399 Papers
1.7K Citations
Hiroyuki Nakase is an academic researcher from Nara Medical University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Cerebral blood flow. The author has an hindex of 34, co-authored 344 publications. Previous affiliations of Hiroyuki Nakase include University of Mainz.
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Papers
Sequential changes in content of excitatory amino acids in the focus of epilepsy in seizure induction.
Hiroyuki Nakase,Takaoki Tada,Takahiko Eguchi,Hidehiro Hirabayashi,Tetsuya Morimoto,Toshisuke Sakaki +5 more
TL;DR: Examination of the sequential changes in the content of excitatory amino acids in the focus of epilepsy by the microdialysis system in a cat amygdaloid kindling model finds that L-Glutamate and L-Aspartate are involved in seizure susceptibility and seizure induction.
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Thoracic ossification of ligamentum flavum manifesting holocord syringomyelia: case report.
TL;DR: A 59-year-old woman with right shoulder pain, dysesthesia of the right hand, and gait disturbance is presented, speculated that holocord syringomyelia might have developed due to craniospinal pressure dissociation caused by focal compression of dural sac from extradural degenerative change.
3
Lateral approach for anterior thoracic spinal lesions.
Hiroyuki Nakase,Hideyuki Ohnishi,Yasuharu Watabe,Hajime Touho,Jun Karasawa,Shoichiro Kawaguchi +5 more
TL;DR: A lateral approach, consisting of a modified transversectomy, hemilaminectomy, and adequate transverseCTomy with costectomy of 7-8 cm, was used to treat four cases of anterior or anterolateral thoracic lesions, including two cases ofThoracic disc herniations, one of thorACic meningioma, and one of hypertrophic pachymeningitis.
3
•Journal Article
Clinicopathological diagnosis of gliomas by genotype analysis
TL;DR: This article suggests that more biological and molecular approaches to brain tumor classification will provide improved means to treat these tumors.
3
Pituitary adenoma invading the skull base--a strategy for skull base surgery.
Hiroyuki Nakase,Hideyuki Ohnishi,Hajime Touho,Makoto Takaoka,Jun Karasawa,Masahiko Kawaguchi,Takanori Sakamoto +6 more
TL;DR: Five patients with pituitary adenoma invading the skull base were treated, including two primary and three recurrent cases, and all symptoms improved, but temporary oculomotor nerve disturbance occurred in three patients and anosmia in one.
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