Keishi Kubo
Shinshu University
391 Papers
3.2K Citations
Keishi Kubo is an academic researcher from Shinshu University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Lung & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 50, co-authored 391 publications.
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Papers
Regulation of body weight by leptin, with special reference to hypoxia-induced regulation.
TL;DR: New ideas were highlighted after studies by Grosfeld et al and Ambrosini et al on the obese gene under Hypoxia condition and suggested that enhancement of leptin secretion in vivo under hypoxia environment may be one of the potential therapeutic methods for obesity treatment.
Sputum eosinophilia and bronchial responsiveness in patients with chronic non-productive cough responsive to anti-asthma therapy
TL;DR: The objective was to examine airway inflammation and bronchial responsiveness in patients with chronic non‐productive cough responsive to anti‐asthma therapy.
Bronchoalveolar lavage fluid findings in patients with chronic hepatitis C virus infection.
Keishi Kubo,Shinji Yamaguchi,Keisaku Fujimoto,Masayuki Hanaoka,Muneharu Hayasaka,Takayuki Honda,T Sodeyama,K Kiyosawa +7 more
TL;DR: The numbers of lymphocytes and eosinophils in BAL fluid are increased in patients with chronic hepatitis C, suggesting that HCV infection may trigger alveolitis.
Direct hemoperfusion using a polymyxin B immobilized column improves acute respiratory distress syndrome.
Kenji Tsushima,Keishi Kubo,Tomonobu Koizumi,Hiroshi Yamamoto,Keisaku Fujimoto,Kazuhiko Hora,Yutaka Kan-nou +6 more
TL;DR: In ARDS patients, PMX‐DHP improved circulatory disturbance and oxygenation despite the underlying diseases, and the mortality improved compared with that before induction of PMX-DHP.
Thymic Squamous Cell Carcinoma Producing Parathyroid Hormone-related Protein and CYFRA 21-1
Fumiaki Yoshiike,Tomonobu Koizumi,Ayako Yoneyama,Michiharu Komatu,Shinji Yamaguchi,Masayuki Hanaoka,Keishi Kubo,Seiichirou Eda +7 more
TL;DR: Thymic carcinoma is rare, but this case indicates that thymic squamous cell carcinoma can be identified in terms of paraneoplastic hypercalcemia.