Curriculum Vitaes

Yasuo Niki

  (二木 康夫)

Profile Information

Affiliation
professor, Fujita medial innovation center Tokyo, Fujita Health University
Degree
PhD(Jul, 2002, Keio University)

Researcher number
10276298
J-GLOBAL ID
200901051691546332
researchmap Member ID
5000105016

Papers

 480
  • Sasaki R, Niki Y, Kaneda K, Yamada Y, Nagura T, Nakamura M, Jinzaki M
    Knee. 2024;12;48:14-21. doi: 10.1016/j. knee. 2024.02.015. Online ahead of print.PMID: 38479077, Dec, 2024  
  • Nishizawa K, Harato K, Kobayashi S, Niki Y, Nagura T
    Knee. 2024;11;48:8-13. doi: 10.1016/j.knee.2024.02.008. Online ahead of print., Nov, 2024  
  • Udagawa K, Yamamoto R, Shimatani N, Nishida Y, Ono S, Niki Y, Sasaki J
    Injury. 2024;55(6):111117., Jun, 2024  
  • Ji-Yeon Lee, Akihito Oya, Osahiko Tsuji, Taro Umezu, Arihiko Kanaji, Yasuo Niki, Masaya Nakamura, Morio Matsumoto
    Journal of medical case reports, 17(1) 216-216, May 25, 2023  
    BACKGROUND: Occult proximal femoral fractures do not appear as fracture lines in radiographs, causing misdiagnosis and delayed diagnosis unless additional imaging studies, such as computed tomography or magnetic resonance imaging, are performed. Here, we present a 51-year-old male with an occult proximal femoral fracture who experienced radiating unilateral leg pain that took 3 months to be diagnosed because his symptoms mimicked lumbar spine disease. CASE PRESENTATION: A 51-year-old Japanese male experienced persistent lower back and left thigh pain after falling off a bicycle, and was referred to our hospital 3 months thereafter. Whole-spine computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging revealed minute ossification of the ligamentum flavum at T5/6 without spinal nerve compression, but this did not explain his leg pain. Additional magnetic resonance imaging of the hip joint revealed a fresh left proximal femoral fracture without displacement. He underwent surgery for in situ fixation using a compression hip screw. Post-surgical pain relief was immediate. CONCLUSIONS: Misdiagnosis of occult femoral fractures as lumbar spinal disease may occur if distally radiating referred pain is present. Hip joint disease should be considered as a differential diagnosis in cases of sciatica-like pain with an unknown spinal origin and no specific findings on spinal computed tomography or magnetic resonance imaging accounting for the leg pain, especially following trauma.
  • 増山友二, 原藤健吾, 小林秀, 二木康夫, 中村雅也, 松本守雄
    関東整形災害外科学会雑誌 54(2):58-62,2023., Feb, 2023  

Misc.

 20

Presentations

 462

Teaching Experience

 4

Research Projects

 4