H
Hisanobu Kaiya
Researcher at Gifu University
Publications - 129
Citations - 2227
Hisanobu Kaiya is an academic researcher from Gifu University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Panic disorder & Anxiety disorder. The author has an hindex of 25, co-authored 124 publications receiving 2062 citations.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Cerebral glucose metabolism associated with a fear network in panic disorder.
Yojiro Sakai,Hiroaki Kumano,Masami Nishikawa,Yuji Sakano,Hisanobu Kaiya,Etsuko Imabayashi,Takashi Ohnishi,Hiroshi Matsuda,Asako Yasuda,Atsushi Sato,Mirko Diksic,Tomifusa Kuboki +11 more
TL;DR: These results provided the first functional neuroimaging support in human patients for the neuroanatomical hypothesis of panic disorder focusing on the amygdala-based fear network.
Journal ArticleDOI
Genome-wide association study of panic disorder in the Japanese population.
Takeshi Otowa,Eiji Yoshida,Nagisa Sugaya,Shin Yasuda,Yukika Nishimura,Ken Inoue,Mamoru Tochigi,Tadashi Umekage,Taku Miyagawa,Nao Nishida,Katsushi Tokunaga,Hisashi Tanii,Tsukasa Sasaki,Hisanobu Kaiya,Yuji Okazaki +14 more
TL;DR: Seven SNPs were significantly associated with PD, which were located in or adjacent to genes including PKP1, PLEKHG1, TMEM16B, CALCOCO1, SDK2 and CLU (or APO-J).
Journal ArticleDOI
Presenile dementia combined with amyotrophy: a review of 34 Japanese cases
TL;DR: Thirty-four Japanese cases exhibiting presenile dementia combined with amyotrophy were reviewed and it was concluded that the disease under discussion might be a new disease entity.
Journal ArticleDOI
Comorbidity of irritable bowel syndrome, panic disorder, and agoraphobia in a Japanese representative sample.
Hiroaki Kumano,Hisanobu Kaiya,Kazuhiro Yoshiuchi,Gaku Yamanaka,Tadashi Sasaki,Tomifusa Kuboki +5 more
TL;DR: The prevalence of IBS and its comorbidity with PD and agoraphobia in Japan were demonstrated to be similar to those reported in Western industrialized countries.
Journal ArticleDOI
Replication and meta-analysis of TMEM132D gene variants in panic disorder
Angelika Erhardt,Nirmala Akula,Johannes Schumacher,Darina Czamara,Nazanin Karbalai,Bertram Müller-Myhsok,Ole Mors,Anders D. Børglum,Ann Suhl Kristensen,David P.D. Woldbye,Pernille Koefoed,Elias Eriksson,Eduard Maron,Eduard Maron,Andres Metspalu,Andres Metspalu,John I. Nurnberger,Robert A. Philibert,James L. Kennedy,Katharina Domschke,Andreas Reif,Juergen Deckert,Takeshi Otowa,Yoshiya Kawamura,Hisanobu Kaiya,Yuji Okazaki,Hisashi Tanii,Katsushi Tokunaga,Tsukasa Sasaki,John P. A. Ioannidis,Francis J. McMahon,Elisabeth B. Binder +31 more
TL;DR: The present results support the initial finding that TMEM132D gene contributes to genetic susceptibility for PD in individuals of EA and indicate that patient ascertainment and genetic background could be important sources of heterogeneity modifying this association signal in different populations.