H
Hideo Tohgi
Researcher at Iwate Medical University
Publications - 132
Citations - 5227
Hideo Tohgi is an academic researcher from Iwate Medical University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cerebral infarction & Gene expression. The author has an hindex of 38, co-authored 132 publications receiving 5024 citations.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Cilostazol stroke prevention study: A placebo-controlled double-blind trial for secondary prevention of cerebral infarction.
Fumio Gotoh,Hideo Tohgi,Shunsaku Hirai,Akiro Terashi,Yasuo Fukuuchi,Eiichi Otomo,Yukito Shinohara,Eiichi Itoh,Tamotsu Matsuda,Tohru Sawada,Takenori Yamaguchi,Katsuya Nishimaru,Yasuo Ohashi +12 more
TL;DR: Long-term administration of cilostazol was effective and safe in the secondary prevention of cerebral infarction and a significant relative-risk reduction was shown in the recurrence of cerebralinfarction.
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Selective reduction of diffusion anisotropy in white matter of Alzheimer disease brains measured by 3.0 Tesla magnetic resonance imaging.
TL;DR: The values of fractional anisotropy were significantly lower in the temporal subcortical white matter, posterior part of the corpus callosum, and anterior and posterior cingulate bundles in patients with AD compared with controls, suggesting selective impairments in the white matter with pathological changes in the posterior cerebral cortices and hippocampus.
Journal ArticleDOI
Importance of the hematocrit as a risk factor in cerebral infarction.
TL;DR: High hematocrit values are associated with a higher risk of cerebral infarction in deep subcortical structures of the brain than for cortical infarctions.
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Effects of low-to-high doses of aspirin on platelet aggregability and metabolites of thromboxane A2 and prostacyclin.
TL;DR: The findings suggest that different doses of aspirin may be necessary to prevent thrombogenesis induced by different triggers of different strengths and that 40 mg/day aspirin is able to inhibit a large proportion of maximum thromboxane A2 release provoked acutely, with the prostaglandin I2 synthesis being little affected.
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Cerebellar infarction. Clinical and neuroimaging analysis in 293 patients. The Tohoku Cerebellar Infarction Study Group.
TL;DR: It is indicated that not only in situ thrombosis but also cardiogenic or artery-to-artery embolism and the insufficiency of collateral circulation play important roles in the pathogenesis of cerebellar infarction.