T
Tomohiro Ogawa
Researcher at Imperial College London
Publications - 28
Citations - 310
Tomohiro Ogawa is an academic researcher from Imperial College London. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Internal medicine. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 14 publications receiving 222 citations. Previous affiliations of Tomohiro Ogawa include Fukushima Medical University.
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Journal Article
Venous hemodynamic changes in lower limb venous disease : the UIP consensus according to scientific evidence
Byung-Boong Lee,Andrew N. Nicolaides,Kenneth Myers,Mark H. Meissner,Evi Kalodiki,C. Allegra,Pier Luigi Antignani,Niels Bækgaard,Kirk W. Beach,G Belcaro,Stephen Black,Lena Blomgren,Eliete Bouskela,Massimo Cappelli,Joseph A. Caprini,Patrick H. Carpentier,A. Cavezzi,Sylvain Chastanet,Jan T. Christenson,Demetris Christopoulos,Heather Clarke,Alun H. Davies,Marianne De Maeseneer,Bo Eklof,S. Ermini,Fidel Fernandez,Claude Franceschi,Antonios P. Gasparis,George Geroulakos,Sergio Gianesini,Athanasios D. Giannoukas,Peter Gloviczki,Ying Huang,Veronica Ibegbuna,Stavros K. Kakkos,Robert L. Kistner,Tilo Kölbel,Ralph L. M. Kurstjens,Nicos Labropoulos,James Laredo,Christopher R. Lattimer,Marzia Lugli,Fedor Lurie,O Maleti,Jovan N. Markovic,Erika Mendoza,Javier L. Monedero,Gregory L. Moneta,H M Moore,Nick Morrison,G. Mosti,Olle Nelzen,A. Obermayer,Tomohiro Ogawa,Kurosh Parsi,Hugo Partsch,Fausto Passariello,Michel Perrin,Paul Pittaluga,Seshadri Raju,Stefano Ricci,Antonio Rosales,Angelo Scuderi,Carl-Erik Slagsvold,Anders Thurin,Tomasz Urbanek,Andre M. van Rij,Michael Vasquez,Cees H. A. Wittens,Paolo Zamboni,Steven Zimmet,Santiago Zubicoa Ezpeleta +71 more
TL;DR: The aim was to confirm or dispel long-held hemodynamic principles and to provide a comprehensive review of venous hemodynamic concepts underlying the pathophysiology of lower limb venous disorders, their usefulness for investigating patients and the relevant hemodynamic changes associated with various forms of treatment.
Journal Article
Venous hemodynamic changes in lower limb venous disease: the UIP consensus according to scientific evidence
Byung Boong Lee,Andrew N. Nicolaides,Kenneth Myers,Mark H. Meissner,Evi Kalodiki,C. Allegra,Pier Luigi Antignani,Niels Bækgaard,Kirk W. Beach,G Belcaro,Stephen Black,Lena Blomgren,Eliete Bouskela,Massimo Cappelli,Joseph A. Caprini,Patrick Carpentier,A. Cavezzi,Sylvain Chastanet,Jan T. Christenson,Demetris Christopoulos,Heather Clarke,Alun H. Davies,Marianne De Maeseneer,Bo Eklof,S. Ermini,Fidel Fernandez,Claude Franceschi,Antonios Gasparis,George Geroulakos,Sergio Gianesini,Athanasios D. Giannoukas,Peter Gloviczki,Ying Huang,Veronica Ibegbuna,Stavros K. Kakkos,Robert L. Kistner,Tilo Kölbel,Ralph L. M. Kurstjens,Nicos Labropoulos,James Laredo,Christopher R Latt Imer,Marzia Lugli,Fedor Lurie,O Maleti,Jovan N. Markovic,Erika Mendoza,Javier L. Monedero,Gregory L. Moneta,H M Moore,Nick Morrison,G. Mosti,Olle Nelzen,A. Obermayer,Tomohiro Ogawa,Kurosh Parsi,Hugo Part Sch,Fausto Passariello,Michel R. Perrin,Paul Pittaluga,Seshadri Raju,Stefano Ricci,Antonio Rosales,Angelo Scuderi,Carl Erik Slagsvold,Anders Thurin,Tomasz Urbanek,Andre Van Rij,Michael Vasquez,Cees H. A. Wittens,Paolo Zamboni,Steven Zimmet,Santiago Zubicoa Ezpeleta +71 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors provide a comprehensive review of venous hemodynamic concepts underlying the pathophysiology of lower limb venous disorders, their usefulness for investigating patients and the relevant hemodynamic changes associated with various forms of treatment.
Journal ArticleDOI
Intermittent pneumatic compression of the foot and calf improves the outcome of catheter-directed thrombolysis using low-dose urokinase in patients with acute proximal venous thrombosis of the leg
TL;DR: This pilot study showed that adding IPC to CDT using low-dose urokinase for DVT treatment of the leg resulted in better early and late outcomes compared with CDT alone and was not associated with an increased risk of symptomatic PEs.
Journal ArticleDOI
Intravascular imaging methods for venous disorders
Hirono Satokawa,Shunichi Hoshino,Fumio Iwaya,Tsuguo Igari,Hirofumi Midorikawa,Tomohiro Ogawa +5 more
TL;DR: The intravascular imaging method of angioscopy is more suitable for observing valves and intraluminal views compared with IVUS, whereas IVUS is more suited for observing the cross-sectional venous wall.
Journal ArticleDOI
Clinical Results of Radiofrequency Endovenous Obliteration for Varicose Veins
TL;DR: Radiofrequency endovenous obliteration is as effective as, but less invasive than other treatments for saphenous varicose veins.