M
Miki Fujimura
Researcher at Tohoku University
Publications - 338
Citations - 13058
Miki Fujimura is an academic researcher from Tohoku University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Moyamoya disease & Cerebral blood flow. The author has an hindex of 50, co-authored 289 publications receiving 11341 citations. Previous affiliations of Miki Fujimura include Stanford University.
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Journal Article
Asymptomatic intracerebral hemorrhage under strict blood pressure control due to postoperative cerebral hyperperfusion in a patient with moyamoya disease
TL;DR: A 35-year-old man initially suffered from right upper quadrantanopsia and was found to have cerebral infarction in the left occipital lobe due to moyamoya disease, and manifested preoperatively a small intracerebral hemorrhage at the left caudate nucleus.
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Unilateral moyamoya syndrome involving the ipsilateral anterior and posterior circulation associated with paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria
TL;DR: Although predominant involvement of the ipsilateral ICA and PCA was associated with underlying disease (moyamoya syndrome) in the present case, it is a characteristic finding of moyamoy disease.
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Application of neuro-endoscopic target aspiration of the necrotic core for cerebral contusion with delayed progression: technical note.
TL;DR: Progression of contusional edema can be caused by the accumulation of water into the necrotic core due to the rapid increase in osmolality, and neuro-endoscopic aspiration could be an optional treatment strategy for cerebral contusion with delayed progression in a minimally invasive manner.
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A case of bilateral giant internal carotid artery aneurysms at the cavernous portion managed by 2-stage extracranial-intracranial bypass with parent artery occlusion: consideration for bypass selection and timing of surgeries.
TL;DR: High-flow EC-IC bypass with PAO is recommended in the first stage of surgery on a unilaterally symptomatic side to minimize postoperative hemodynamic stress to the contralateral aneurysm.
Journal Article
Ruptured aneurysm at the anterior wall of the internal carotid artery in a patient with systemic lupus erythematosus and secondary antiphospholipid syndrome
TL;DR: Early surgical intervention is recommended in patients with aneurysmal SAH associated with SLE, while intrinsic pathologies of SLE such as fragile vascular structure and the risk for ischemic complication should be considered.