4 results match your criteria: "Tottori Prefecture Kousei Hospital[Affiliation]"
Brain Dev
May 2015
Division of Child Neurology, Faculty of Medicine, Tottori University, Yonago, Japan.
Background: Early predictors of status epilepticus (SE)-associated mortality and morbidity have not been systematically studied in children, considerably impeding the identification of patients at risk.
Objectives: To determine reliable early predictors of SE-associated mortality and morbidity and identify the etiology of SE-associated sequelae in Japanese children.
Methods: We conducted a prospective multicenter study of clinical findings and initial laboratory data acquired at SE onset, and assessed outcomes at the last follow-up examination.
Kyobu Geka
May 2001
Department of Surgery, Tottori Prefecture Kousei Hospital, Kurayoshi, Japan.
The patient was a 38-years-old woman. A chest X-ray film demonstrated the presence of an abnormal lesion. Her past history included osteosarcoma on the left tibia for which she received amputation of the left inferior limb at 17 years of age without any relapse thereafter.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFKyobu Geka
March 2001
Department of Surgery, Tottori Prefecture Kousei Hospital, Kurayoshi, Japan.
We clinically examined patients who had undergone resection of two or more lobes for lung cancer. The subjects were 50 patients (25 who underwent pneumonectomy and 25 bilobectomy) who underwent lobectomy of two or more lobes from among those with primary non-small cell lung cancers in our hospital between 1975 and 1999; these individuals were assigned to Group A, and compared with 166 patients with lobectomy in Group B. The five-year survival rate was 27.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNihon Kyobu Geka Gakkai Zasshi
June 1997
Department of Surgery, Tottori Prefecture Kousei Hospital, Kurayoshi, Japan.
We experienced a case of giant localized fibrous pleural mesothelioma accompanying lung metastasis. The patient was a 26-year-old woman, who was pointed out elevation of the left diaphragma by the chest roentgenogram in 1992 but left it as it was. In 1995, a giant tumor occupying 1/2 or more of the left thoracic cavity was detected by chest CT and MRI.
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