Publications by authors named "Yasuo Nakae"

Cerebral perfusion computed tomography (CT) has been widespread, but abdominal perfusion CT has not been very popular because there has been a problem with regard to the limit of irradiation range and respiratory effects. Recently, it became easy to perform perfusion of abdominal organs because the use of multi detector row CT (MDCT) has been extensive. Along with it, the number of hospitals that perform liver perfusion CT has increased.

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Super paramagnetic iron oxide (SPIO) is taken up in the bone marrow and lymph nodes, as well as by the liver. Focusing on the intervertebral disks, which are unaffected by contrast effects, we examined the relationship between magnetic resonance image (MRI) signal intensity after SPIO uptake in the vertebral body and intervertebral disks and investigated MRI signal intensity in bone marrow metastases and osteomyelitic (inflammatory) lesions after SPIO uptake by bone marrow. The lumbar spine was imaged in 5 healthy volunteers (age range, 26-48 years).

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To evaluate the clinical usefulness of gantry tilt scanning as an image reconstruction technique for avoiding artifacts caused by metallic dental fillings. Gantry tilt scanning was used with multidetector-row computed tomography for imaging in patients with dental fillings. Using a novel PC-based program, the oblique images obtained were reconstructed to transverse images using nearest neighbor and bilinear interpolation methodologies in order to avoid metallic streak artifacts.

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Article Synopsis
  • Intensity-modulated radiation therapy (IMRT) requires precise treatment planning, which is often affected by metal artifacts from dental structures in CT images at the oropharynx region.
  • These artifacts hinder the visualization of tumors and lymph nodes, leading to inaccurate CT values that can impact radiation treatment.
  • To address this, researchers simulated treatment planning using both normal and artifact-affected CT images and found that using CT images without artifacts leads to more accurate target volume measurements and improved dose distribution.
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Medical irradiation dosage has been increasing with the development of new radiological equipment and new techniques like interventional radiology. It is fair to say that patient dose has been increased as a result of the development of multi-slice CT. A number of studies on the irradiation dose of CT have been reported, and the computed tomography dose index (CTDI) is now used as a general means of determining CT dose.

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