SUZUKI Shoken

写真a

Affiliation

Graduate School of Medicine  Doctorial Course in Medicine  Organ Function-Oriented Medicine  Department of Oral and Maxillo-Facial Surgery

Research Interests 【 display / non-display

  • 法医学

  • 口腔外科学

  • 法歯科医学

Graduating School 【 display / non-display

  •  
    -
    2018.03

    Nihon University   Faculty of Dentistry   Graduated

Graduate School 【 display / non-display

  •  
    -
    2024.03

    Akita University  Graduate School, Division of Medicine  Doctor's Course  Completed

Campus Career 【 display / non-display

  • 2026.04
    -
    Now

    Akita University   Graduate School of Medicine   Doctorial Course in Medicine   Organ Function-Oriented Medicine   Department of Oral and Maxillo-Facial Surgery   Assistant Professor  

  • 2025.11
    -
    2026.03

    Akita University   Hospital   Dentistry and Oral Surgery   Assistant Professor  

 

Research Achievements 【 display / non-display

    ◆Original paper【 display / non-display

  • AGE ESTIMATION USING THE HOUNSFIELD UNIT VALUES OF THE PALATE AND MANDIBULAR CONDYLE, AND EVALUATING OCCLUSAL SUPPORT IN POSTMORTEM COMPUTED TOMOGRAPHY

    Shoken Suzuki, Maki Ohtani, Yuhei Matsuo, Sohtaro Mimasaka

    AKITA JOURNAL OF MEDICINE     2023.03  [Refereed]

    Research paper (journal)   Single author

  • ◆Other【 display / non-display

  • A case of intranasal supernumerary tooth with a rhinolith

    SUZUKI Shoken, TAKANO Hiroshi, ARIMA Misaki, ITO Keisuke, SUZUKI Kenichiro, FUKUDA Masayuki

    Japanese Journal of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery ( Japanese Society of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgeons )  71 ( 1 ) 21 - 26   2025.01

    An intranasal ectopic tooth is a rare clinical entity, and can present as a cause for nasal obstruction and chronic rhinosinusitis. Surgical removal is recommended to eliminate the symptoms. On the other hand, calcareous concretions in the nasal cavity are called rhinoliths. They are generally considered to occur due to inorganic salts accumulating around a nidus over time. However, there are also cases not involving niduses. Chronic inflammation occurring around the nidus and bacterial infections are factors that cause formation of rhinoliths. The symptoms of rhinoliths are nasal obstruction, rhinorrhea, nasal malodor, and nosebleeds. There are few reports of nasal tooths with a rhinolith. We describe a case of intranasal supernumerary tooth with a rhinolith. A-61-year-old a man was admitted to otorhinolaryngology with the chief complaint of nasal odor. A rhinolith was observed near the inferior turbinate in a nasopharyngeal endoscopy, and CT images showed a supernumerary tooth in contact with the rhinolith. The rhinolith was extracted with a nasal endoscope, and the supernumerary tooth was extracted via an oral approach under general anesthesia. One year has passed since the operation, and no rhinolith recurrence has occurred.

    DOI CiNii Research