Toshikazu Kondo
Wakayama Medical University
202 Papers
682 Citations
Toshikazu Kondo is an academic researcher from Wakayama Medical University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Chemokine. The author has an hindex of 40, co-authored 178 publications. Previous affiliations of Toshikazu Kondo include Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich & Osaka City University.
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Papers
Traumatic Tear of the Basilar Artery Associated With Vertebral Column Injuries
TL;DR: Findings indicate that when the man fell into the ditch, severe hyperextension occurred as a result of minor blunt forces to the face, and that the traumatic tear of the basilar artery was mechanically caused by overstretching due to hype rextension of the head.
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Temporal expression of immediate early gene mRNA during the supravital reaction in mouse brain and lung after mechanical asphyxiation
TL;DR: Examining the gene expression of immediate early genes including c-fos, fos-B and c-jun in mechanically asphyxiated mouse brain and lung after somatic death and to identify the IEGs expressed at the point of supravital reaction suggests that there is a specific pattern of gene expression following asphyxia.
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A fatal case of pontine hemorrhage related to methamphetamine abuse
Tomoko Miyashita,Takahito Hayashi,Yuko Ishida,Kouichi Tsuneyama,Akihiko Kimura,Toshikazu Kondo +5 more
TL;DR: The pontine hemorrhage seemingly resulted from methamphetamine-induced angiitis, with an acute elevation of blood pressure after methamphetamine abuse, according to a medico-legal autopsy carried out on a 54-year-old male found dead in his parents' house.
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The expression of '150-kDa oxygen regulated protein (ORP-150)' in human brain and its relationship with duration time until death.
Kazuya Ikematsu,Ryouichi Tsuda,Toshikazu Kondo,Hisayoshi Kondo,Kentaro Ozawa,Satoshi Ogawa,Ichiro Nakasono +6 more
TL;DR: The immunohistochemical and morphometrical analysis of ORP-150 in the brain may be very useful to determine the duration of brain ischemia before death in forensic autopsy cases.
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Cholinesterase inhibitor donepezil dilates cerebral parenchymal arterioles via the activation of neuronal nitric oxide synthase.
Katsutoshi Nakahata,Hiroyuki Kinoshita,Keiko Hama-Tomioka,Yuko Ishida,Naoyuki Matsuda,Noboru Hatakeyama,Masanori Haba,Toshikazu Kondo,Yoshio Hatano +8 more
TL;DR: Donepezil produces acute vasodilation induced by a selective activation of neuronal nitric oxide synthase in the cerebral parenchymal arterioles, which is capable of enhancing this enzymatic activity directly or via acetylcholinesterase existing on the arteriolar wall.
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