Publications by authors named "Y Yokoo"

Objective: Two-jaw surgery corrects jaw deformities by adjusting occlusion and reshaping the jaw. This technique carries a high risk of pharyngolaryngeal injury due to frequent head and neck movements during intraoperative maneuvers and prolonged intubation, although the details remain unclear. This study explored the frequency and causes of postoperative pharyngeal complications following maxillary translocation.

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Open axillary arterial injury is life-threatening, and upper-extremity reperfusion must be performed within approximately 6 h. We present the case of a patient who underwent reperfusion of the upper limb and nerve reconstruction of the post-ganglionic brachial plexus injury in one stage while maintaining stable vital signs. The injury was an avulsion with no fracture.

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Steviol glycosides obtained from leaves are increasingly used in the food industry as natural low-calorie sweeteners. Among them, the sweetness of major glycosides composed of glucose residues (e.g.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study aimed to compare the effectiveness of O-arm navigation versus conventional fluoroscopy for corrective posterior fixation in cervical spinal injuries in 11 patients from February 2016 to May 2021.
  • Results showed that patients in the O-arm group had a significantly higher number of pedicle screws used compared to those in the fluoroscopy group (6.4 vs 2.7) without any significant breaches in screw placement accuracy.
  • The conclusion suggests that O-arm navigation enhances the accuracy of screw insertion, potentially allowing for a broader application of pedicle screws in complex cervical spinal surgeries compared to traditional methods.
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The taste stimulus glucose comprises approximately half of the commercial sugar sweeteners used today, whether in the form of the di-saccharide sucrose (glucose-fructose) or half of high-fructose corn syrup (HFCS). Therefore, oral glucose has been presumed to contribute to the sweet taste of foods when combined with fructose. In light of recent rodent data on the role of oral metabolic glucose signaling, we examined psychopharmacologically whether oral glucose detection may also involve an additional pathway in humans to the traditional sweet taste transduction via the class 1 taste receptors T1R2/T1R3.

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