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Nobuyuki Tanaka
Researcher at Tokyo Medical and Dental University
Publications - 43
Citations - 381
Nobuyuki Tanaka is an academic researcher from Tokyo Medical and Dental University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Oral and maxillofacial surgery & Cyst. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 41 publications receiving 364 citations. Previous affiliations of Nobuyuki Tanaka include Sapporo University.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Oral malignant melanoma in Japan.
Nobuyuki Tanaka,Teruo Amagasa,Hiroshi Iwaki,Shigetoshi Shioda,Masamune Takeda,Kennichi Ohashi,Steven F. Reck +6 more
TL;DR: The results of this study revealed that the clinical course of malignant melanoma in the oral region is worse than oral squamous cell carcinoma and that treatment by radiotherapy is effective in prolonging the life of these patients.
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Maxillofacial fractures in children
Nobuyuki Tanaka,Naori Uchide,Kazuhiko Suzuki,Takayuki Tashiro,Kenichi Tomitsuka,Yutaka Kimijima,Teruo Amagasa +6 more
TL;DR: A clinico-statistical and long-term follow-up study on 81 pediatric fractures seen during the 14 years between 1977 and 1990 revealed that 5 out of 21 patients with alveolar fractures complained of malocclusion and it is suggested that a longer duration of intramaxillary fixation andLong-termFollow-up might be needed for alveolars fractures in children.
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Transferrin receptor in oral tumors.
TL;DR: Results suggest that TfR expression may be useful as a prognostic marker in cancer patients after an anticancer drug treatment.
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Malignant melanomas of the oral cavity: heterogeneity of pathological and clinical features.
TL;DR: Although 77.1% of the cases depicted similar pathological patterns to acral lentiginous melanomas of the skin, oral malignant melanomas demonstrated heterogeneity in morphological features, developmental process and biological behaviour.
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A study of the clinical characteristics and treatment of oral carcinoma in situ
TL;DR: Erythroplakic lesions of oral carcinoma in situ were more aggressive than the other two types and the most suitable therapy for this lesion is prompt surgical treatment.