K
Kuniaki Nakanishi
Researcher at National Defense Medical College
Publications - 115
Citations - 3592
Kuniaki Nakanishi is an academic researcher from National Defense Medical College. The author has contributed to research in topics: Carcinoma & Transitional cell carcinoma. The author has an hindex of 30, co-authored 114 publications receiving 3344 citations.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Photocrosslinkable chitosan as a dressing for wound occlusion and accelerator in healing process
Masayuki Ishihara,Kuniaki Nakanishi,Katsuaki Ono,Masato Sato,Makoto Kikuchi,Yoshio Saito,Hirofumi Yura,Takemi Matsui,Hidemi Hattori,Maki Uenoyama,Akira Kurita +10 more
TL;DR: The chitosan hydrogel due to its accelerating healing ability is considered to become an excellent dressing for wound occlusion and tissue adhesive in urgent hemostasis situations.
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Rapid ventricular induction of brain natriuretic peptide gene expression in experimental acute myocardial infarction
Norio Hama,Hiroshi Itoh,Gotaro Shirakami,Osamu Nakagawa,Shin Ichi Suga,Yoshihiro Ogawa,Izuru Masuda,Kuniaki Nakanishi,Takaaki Yoshimasa,Yukiya Hashimoto,Masayuki Yamaguchi,Ryouhei Hori,Hirofumi Yasue,Kazuwa Nakao +13 more
TL;DR: The results demonstrate the rapid induction of ventricular BNP gene expression in rats with AMI compared with ANP and suggest that BNPGene expression in the ventricle is regulated distinctively from ANP gene expression against acute ventricular overload.
Journal ArticleDOI
New criteria for histologic grading of colorectal cancer.
Hideki Ueno,Yoshiki Kajiwara,Hideyuki Shimazaki,Eiji Shinto,Yojiro Hashiguchi,Kuniaki Nakanishi,Kazunari Maekawa,Yuka Katsurada,Takahiro Nakamura,Hidetaka Mochizuki,Junji Yamamoto,Kazuo Hase +11 more
TL;DR: A novel histologic grading system is expected to be less subjective and more informative for prognostic prediction compared with conventional tumor grading systems and TNM staging and could be valuable in determining individualized postoperative CRC treatment.
Journal ArticleDOI
Acceleration of wound contraction and healing with a photocrosslinkable chitosan hydrogel.
Masayuki Ishihara,Katsuaki Ono,Masato Sato,Kuniaki Nakanishi,Yoshio Saito,Hirofumi Yura,Takemi Matsui,Hidemi Hattori,Masanori Fujita,Makoto Kikuchi,Akira Kurita +10 more
TL;DR: Application of the chitosan hydrogel significantly induced wound contraction and accelerated wound closure and healing compared with the untreated controls and may become accepted as an occlusive dressing for wound management.
Journal ArticleDOI
In vivo targeted gene transfer in skin by the use of laser-induced stress waves.
Makoto Ogura,Shunichi Sato,Kuniaki Nakanishi,Maki Uenoyama,Tetsuro Kiyozumi,Daizo Saitoh,Tomosumi Ikeda,Hiroshi Ashida,Minoru Obara +8 more
TL;DR: The aim of this study was to demonstrate in vivo gene transfer by the use of laser‐induced stress waves (LISWs) to demonstrate the spatial characteristics of laser light.