Affiliation |
Hospital Orthopedic Surgery |
Graduating School 【 display / non-display 】
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-1999.03
Akita University Faculty of Medicine Graduated
Graduate School 【 display / non-display 】
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-2006.09
Akita University Graduate School,Division of Medicine Doctor's Course Completed
Campus Career 【 display / non-display 】
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2022.05-Now
Akita University Hospital Orthopedic Surgery Assistant Professor
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2011.12-2022.04
Akita University Hospital Rehabilitation Medicine Assistant Professor
Thesis for a degree 【 display / non-display 】
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Location of the Glenoid Defect in Shoulders With Recurrent Anterior Dislocation
Hidetomo Saito, Eiji Itoi, Hiroyuki Sugaya, Hiroshi Minagawa, Nobuyuki Yamamoto, and Yilihamu Tuoheti,
2006.09
Domestic Co-author
Research Achievements 【 display / non-display 】
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Study of surgical intervention for quadriceps tendon rupture
ASAKA Yasuhito, KIMURA Ryota, KOBAYASHI Takashi, SAITO Hidetomo, MIYAKOSHI Naohisa
Journal of the Eastern Japan Association of Orthopaedics and Traumatology ( The Eastern Japan Association of Orthopaedics and Traumatology ) 34 ( 2 ) 116 - 118 2022 [Refereed]
Research paper (journal)
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Tsukamoto Hiroaki, Saito Kimio, Matsunaga Toshiki, Iwami Takehiro, Saito Hidetomo, Kijima Hiroaki, Akagawa Manabu, Komatsu Akira, Miyakoshi Naohisa, Shimada Yoichi
Progress in Rehabilitation Medicine ( 公益社団法人 日本リハビリテーション医学会 ) 6 ( 0 ) n/a 2021 [Refereed]
Research paper (journal)
<p><b>Objectives: </b>The purpose of this study was to clarify the diagnostic accuracy of the mobile assessment of varus thrust using inertial measurement units (IMUs).</p><p><b>Methods: </b>A total of 80 knees in 49 patients were enrolled in this study. On visual analysis of gait to determine the presence or absence of varus thrust, 23 knees were assigned to the Present group, 17 to the Ambiguous group, and 40 to the Absent group. The peak knee varus angular velocities (PVVs), measured by quantitative gait analysis using nine-axis IMUs, were compared between these three groups. A receiver operating characteristic curve for the relationship between the visual assessment of varus thrust (Present and Ambiguous) and the measured PVV was created, and the cut-off PVV for visualized varus thrust was determined as the highest point for both sensitivity and specificity.</p><p><b>Results: </b>The mean PVVs were significantly different between the three groups (Present, 47.7 ± 8.2 degree/s, Ambiguous, 34.1 ± 10.5 degree/s, and Absent, 28.1 ± 8.3 degree/s, respectively, ANOVA P=0.000). The PVV cut-off value for visualized varus thrust was 28.1 degree/s, yielding a sensitivity of 0.957 and a specificity of 0.579.</p><p><b>Conclusions: </b>A PVV <28.1 degree/s is useful for ruling out varus thrust during gait. This quantitative varus thrust assessment method using IMUs has clinical utility as a screening test.</p>
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Saito H.
Journal of Experimental Orthopaedics ( Journal of Experimental Orthopaedics ) 7 ( 1 ) 2020.12 [Refereed]
Research paper (journal)
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Nozaka K.
BMC Musculoskeletal Disorders ( BMC Musculoskeletal Disorders ) 21 ( 1 ) 2020.09 [Refereed]
Research paper (journal)
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Short-Term Results of Hybrid Closed-Wedge High Tibial Osteotomy: A Case Series with a Minimum 3-Year Follow-up
Hidetomo Saito, Kimio Saito, MD, Yoichi Shimada, Toshiaki Yamamura, Shin Yamada, Takahiro Sato, Koji Nozaka, Hiroaki Kijima, and Naohisa Miyakoshi
Knee Surgery and Related Research20180400 2018.04 [Refereed]
Research paper (journal) Domestic Co-author
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Kijima Hiroaki, Fujii Masashi, Kawano Tetsuya, Saito Hidetomo, Miyakoshi Naohisa
The Journal of Physical Fitness and Sports Medicine ( 一般社団法人日本体力医学会 ) 12 ( 2 ) 35 - 44 2023.03
<p>Medical checkups for adolescent athletes aim to prevent or detect sports injuries and manage them before they hamper future sports activities and daily life. However, effective items for evaluation, as well as the areas of intervention to prevent sports injuries, remain unclear. We aimed to clarify the checkup items and intervention areas to prevent sports injuries in adolescent athletes. This is a cross-sectional observational study that investigated the presence or absence of pain in adolescent athletes and associated factors at the time of checkup. We investigated joint laxity, range of motion (ROM), finger-floor distance (FFD), heel–buttock distance (HBD), straight leg raising (SLR) angle, too many toes sign, and presence or absence of low back pain during lumbar extension in 301 junior high school athletes. Additionally, after confirming the developmental stage of the tibial tuberosity using ultrasonography, ultrasound elastography was used to quantify the elasticity of the quadriceps femoris, and items related to pain during sports activities were extracted. Items related to pain included the too many toes sign, low back pain during lumbar extension, and elasticity of the quadriceps femoris. Athletes with a positive too many toes sign were less likely to experience pain; conversely, the harder the quadriceps femoris, the more likely they were to experience pain. Medical checkups focusing on these items are effective for adolescent athletes who are prone to knee pain.</p>
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SAITO Hidetomo, SAITO Kimio, SHIMADA Yoichi, AKAGAWA Manabu, TSUKAMOTO Hiroaki, MIYAKOSHI Naohisa
Journal of the Eastern Japan Association of Orthopaedics and Traumatology ( The Eastern Japan Association of Orthopaedics and Traumatology ) 30 ( 2 ) 155 - 163 2018
<p>Around knee osteotomy (AKO), Uni-compartmental Knee Arthroplasty (UKA) and Total Knee Arthroplasty (TKA) were well-established procedure to treat medial osteoarthritis. Physiological joint orientation was re-acquired by Double Level Osteotomy. Depressed medial tibial plateau could be reduced by Tibial Condylar Valgus Osteotomy. Thus, deformity created by medial knee osteoarthritis (OA) could be reduced if use of these procedures even if severely advanced knee OA. We compared the clinical results between TKA and AKO. The subjects were surveyed clinical scores (New KSS, KOOS, Oxford knee score, JOA score) at 36 knees (average age: 71.9 years, follow-up period: 22.4 months) and compared with AKO group (14 knees) and TKA (22 knees). In the New KSS, the AKO group was significantly higher in postoperative functional activity and advanced activity. The subscale pain of KOOS was significantly higher in the TKA group. AKO was supposed to be one of procedures to treat advanced knee OA.</p>
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AKAGAWA Manabu, SAITO Hidetomo, SAITO Kimio, SASAKI Kana, MIYAKOSHI Naohisa, SHIMADA Yoichi
Journal of the Eastern Japan Association of Orthopaedics and Traumatology ( The Eastern Japan Association of Orthopaedics and Traumatology ) 30 ( 1 ) 86 - 88 2018
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The relation between bone marrow lesions of knee osteoarthritis and bone strength parameters
FUJII Masashi, KIJIMA Hiroaki, SAITO Hidetomo, NOZAKA Koji, MIYAKOSHI Naohisa, SHIMADA Yoichi
Journal of the Eastern Japan Association of Orthopaedics and Traumatology ( The Eastern Japan Association of Orthopaedics and Traumatology ) 30 ( 1 ) 52 - 56 2018
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Evaluation of Trunk Stability in the Sitting Position Using a New Device
Saito Kimio, Takahashi Yasuhiro, Chida Satoaki, Hatakeyama Kazutoshi, Watanabe Motoyuki, Ishikawa Junki, Takahashi Yusuke, Suzuki Masamichi, Murata Shu, Shimada Yoichi, Miyakoshi Naohisa, Matsunaga Toshiki, Iwami Takehiro, Hongo Michio, Kasukawa Yuji, Saito Hidetomo, Masutani Norimitsu
The Japanese Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine ( The Japanese Association of Rehabilitation Medicine ) 54 ( 1 ) 31 - 35 2017