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Fumihiko Matsuda

Researcher at Kyoto University

Publications -  454
Citations -  28863

Fumihiko Matsuda is an academic researcher from Kyoto University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Genome-wide association study. The author has an hindex of 69, co-authored 414 publications receiving 24471 citations. Previous affiliations of Fumihiko Matsuda include Massachusetts Institute of Technology & Kanazawa University.

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Evaluation of elevated plasma fatty acids as relevant factors for adult-onset asthma: The Nagahama Study.

TL;DR: In this paper , the relationship between plasma fatty acids and new-onset asthma was investigated using targeted partial least squares discriminant analysis (PLS-DA), and the results showed that higher levels of FFA, palmitoleic acid, or oleic acid were associated with new-onset asthma, independent of other confounding factors.
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A novel germline mutation in a patient with nevoid basal cell carcinoma syndrome showing cystic lesion in the lung

TL;DR: A novel frameshift mutation (c.1207dupT) of PTCH1 in a NBCCS patient is identified, which might explain multiple cystic lesions and neoplastic growth in the patient.
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Genome-wide association analysis identifies ancestry-specific genetic variation associated with acute response to metformin and glipizide in SUGAR-MGH

Laura N. Brenner, +1059 more
- 26 May 2023 - 
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Pos0354 identification of somatic mutations in patients with anca-associated vasculitis

TL;DR: Yizhak et al. as mentioned in this paper performed RNA sequencing (RNA-seq) on the obtained cells and whole genome sequencing (WGS) on DNA extracted from the whole blood, and identified 108 somatic mutations across 16 patients in active-disease status.
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Risk analyses of nocturia on incident poor sleep and vice versa: the Nagahama study

TL;DR: In this article , the Nagahama study in Japan was used to evaluate the associations between nocturia and self-reported, sleep-related problems (poor sleep) cross-sectionally, and the causal effects on each new-onset case were analyzed longitudinally after 5 years.