PROFILE
FUJIWARA Toshiyuki, M.D., Ph.D.
Department of Rehabilitation Medicine
Short Biography
- 1993
- M.D. Fukui Medical School
- 1993-1996
- Resident, Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, Keio University School of Medicine
- 1996-1997
- Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, National Murayama Hospital
- 1997-1999
- Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, Keio University Tsukigase Rehabilitation Center
- 2000-2002
- Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, Saitama General Rehabilitation Center
- 2002
- Ph. D. titled from Keio University
- 2002-2003
- Research Fellow Sobell Department of Motor Neuroscience and Movement Disorders, Institute of Neurology, London, UK
- 2003-2004
- Chairman, Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, National Higashisaitama Hospital
- 2005-2014
- Assistant Professor, Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, Keio University School of Medicine
- 2014-2016
- Associate Professor, Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, Tokai University
- 2017-Present
- Professor and Chairman, Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, Juntendo University Faculty of Medicine
Keywords
- Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation
- Clinical Physiology
- Noninvasive brain and nerve stimulation
- Functional recovery
- Neural plasticity
Main Research Topics and Interests
- Hybrid Assistive Neuromuscular Dynamic Stimulation (HANDS) therapy
- Brain Machine Interface
- Transcutaneous spinal stimulation
- Transcranial Magnetic stimulation
- Clinical Neurophysiology
Publications (in English)
-
Original Articles: 69
-
h-index: 24 (Scopus)
-
Sum of Times Cited: 1,363 (Scopus)
Recent Main Publications
-
Ishiwatari M, Honaga K, Tanuma A, Takakura T, Hatori K, Kurosu A,
Fujiwara T. Trunk impairment as a predictor of activities of daily
living in acute stroke. Front Neurol 12: 665592, 2021
-
Fujiwara T: Mini-review article: the role of spinal reciprocal
inhibition and intracortical inhibition in functional recovery from
stroke. Exp Brain Res: 238: 1701-1705, 2020
-
Yamaguchi T, Fujiwara T, Lin SC, Takahashi Y, Hatori K, Liu M, Huang
YZ: Priming with intermittent theta burst transcranial magnetic
stimulation promotes spinal plasticity induced by peripheral patterned
electrical stimulation. Frontiers in Neuroscience : 10.3389201800508,
2018.
- More
Other Specific Comments
Board Certification
- Board Certification of Japanese society of Rehabilitation Medicine, March, 1999
- Board Certification of Clinical Neurophysiology (EMG & Nerve conduction study)
Societies
- The Japanese Association of Rehabilitation Medicine
- Japanese Society of Clinical Neurophysiology
- The Japan Medical Society of Paraplegia
- Japanese Society of Prothetics and Orthotics
- The Japan Neuroscience Society
- Society of Biomechanism Japan
- Japanese Stroke Society
- American Society for Neurorehabilitation
- The World Federation for Neurorehabilitation
- Society for Neuroscience
Link