Ryusei Ohno
4 Papers
Ryusei Ohno is an academic researcher. The author has contributed to research in topics: Internal medicine & Diabetes mellitus. The author has an hindex of 1, co-authored 2 publications.
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Papers
High-density lipoprotein cholesterol and clinical outcomes in diabetes mellitus.
Takuma Ishibashi,Hidehiro Kaneko,Satoshi Matsuoka,Yuta Suzuki,K. Ueno,Ryusei Ohno,Akira Okada,Katsuhito Fujiu,Nobuaki Michihata,Taisuke Jo,Norifumi Takeda,Hiroyuki Morita,Koichi Node,Hideo Yasunaga,Issei Komuro +14 more
TL;DR: In this article , the authors examined whether fasting plasma glucose modifies the U-shaped association between HDL-C level and clinical outcomes and found that the relationship of high LDL-C with CV outcome was prominent only in people with diabetes mellitus, and a similar relationship was observed in individual subgroups and in each CV outcome.
18
Association of Body Mass Index and Its Change with Incident Diabetes Mellitus.
Ryusei Ohno,Hidehiro Kaneko,K. Ueno,Hiroyuki Aoki,Akira Okada,Kenji Kamiya,Yuta Suzuki,Satoshi Matsuoka,Katsuhito Fujiu,Norifumi Takeda,Taisuke Jo,Junya Ako,Hiroyuki Morita,Koichi Node,Hideo Yasunaga,Issei Komuro +15 more
TL;DR: In this article , the association of body mass index (BMI) and its change with incident diabetes mellitus (DM) was clarified by conducting a retrospective observational cohort study using JMDC Claims Database between 2005 and 2021.
7
Subjective Gait Speed and Risk of Developing Cardiovascular Events in 56,589 Cancer Survivors.
Ryusei Ohno,Hidehiro Kaneko,K. Ueno,Kenji Kamiya,Akira Okada,Yuta Suzuki,Satoshi Matsuoka,Katsuhito Fujiu,Nobuaki Michihata,Taisuke Jo,Norifumi Takeda,Hiroyuki Morita,Koichi Node,Hideo Yasunaga,Issei Komuro +14 more
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that subjective slow gait speed was associated with a greater risk of CVD development among cancer survivors, which suggests the potential value of gaitspeed assessment for the CVD risk stratification of cancer patients as well as the clinical importance of maintaining exercise capacity among patients living with cancer.
4
Association of Metabolic Dysfunction-Associated Fatty Liver Disease With Risk of HF and AF
Ryusei Ohno,Hidehiro Kaneko,Yuta Suzuki,Akira Okada,Satoshi Matsuoka,K. Ueno,Katsuhito Fujiu,Nobuaki Michihata,Taisuke Jo,Norifumi Takeda,Hiroyuki Morita,Koichi Node,H. Yasunaga,Issei Komuro +13 more
- 01 Oct 2023
TL;DR: MAFLD was associated with a greater risk of developing HF and AF, suggesting the clinical importance of this novel hepatic disease concept.