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Yukako Yagi

Researcher at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

Publications -  105
Citations -  4476

Yukako Yagi is an academic researcher from Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center. The author has contributed to research in topics: Digital pathology & Telepathology. The author has an hindex of 30, co-authored 98 publications receiving 3628 citations. Previous affiliations of Yukako Yagi include Harvard University & University of Pittsburgh.

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Imaging the subcellular structure of human coronary atherosclerosis using micro–optical coherence tomography

TL;DR: It is shown that μOCT images of cadaver coronary arteries provide clear pictures of cellular and subcellular features associated with atherogenesis, thrombosis and responses to interventional therapy, and suggests that μ OCT can complement existing diagnostic techniques for investigating atherosclerotic specimens, and may eventually become a useful tool for cellular andSubcellular characterization of the human coronary wall in vivo.
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Overview of telepathology, virtual microscopy, and whole slide imaging: prospects for the future

TL;DR: The field of telepathology has now reached a tipping point at which major corporations now investing in the technology will insist that standards be created for pathology digital imaging as a value added business proposition.
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Use of whole slide imaging in surgical pathology quality assurance: design and pilot validation studies.

TL;DR: A retrospective comparative study in which 24 full genitourinary cases were independently reviewed with traditional microscopy and whole slide digital images, it is agreed that automated WSI is a viable potential modality for surgical pathology QA, especially in multifacility health systems that would like to establish interfacility QA.
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Primary histologic diagnosis using automated whole slide imaging: a validation study

TL;DR: The results indicated that the image information contained in current whole slide images is sufficient for pathologists to make reliable diagnostic decisions and compose complex diagnostic reports, but this does not mean that WSI is as good as a microscope.