Initial Experience (initial + experience)

Distribution by Scientific Domains
Distribution within Medical Sciences


Selected Abstracts


HIGH-INTENSITY FOCUSED ULTRASOUND FOR LOCALIZED PROSTATE CANCER: INITIAL EXPERIENCE WITH A 2-YEAR FOLLOW-UP

BJU INTERNATIONAL, Issue 11 2009
J. Barua
No abstract is available for this article. [source]


HIGH-INTENSITY FOCUSED ULTRASOUND FOR LOCALIZED PROSTATE CANCER: INITIAL EXPERIENCE WITH A 2-YEAR FOLLOW-UP

BJU INTERNATIONAL, Issue 8 2009
Tim Dudderidge
No abstract is available for this article. [source]


Evaluation of Right Ventricular Fibrosis in Adult Congenital Heart Disease Using Gadolinium-enhanced Magnetic Resonance Imaging: Initial Experience in Patients with Right Ventricular Loading Conditions

CONGENITAL HEART DISEASE, Issue 5 2006
Lopa P. Hartke MD
ABSTRACT Objective., Gadolinium-enhanced cardiac magnetic resonance imaging has been used to show myocardial fibrosis, a finding that appears as late gadolinium enhancement. Its role in the evaluation of right ventricular fibrosis in congenital heart disease is unclear. The purpose of this study was to demonstrate late gadolinium enhancement of the right ventricle in adult and adolescent congenital heart disease and to investigate the relationship between this enhancement and clinical and pathophysiological data. Design., In total, 24 patients, 16 patients with congenital heart disease and right ventricular loading conditions and 8 controls, underwent gadolinium-enhanced viability imaging. Diagnoses varied and included repaired, palliated, and unrepaired lesions. The presence and extent of right ventricular late gadolinium enhancement was compared with patient clinical and hemodynamic data. Exact Wilcoxon tests, Fisher's exact tests, and Spearman's rank correlation were used to compare variables. Results., Nine of 16 patients (56%) were found to have right ventricular late gadolinium enhancement, ranging from 5% to 80% of right ventricular myocardium affected (mean 36.1%, SD 29.7). The combination of right ventricular systolic pressure ,98 mm Hg and systemic oxygen saturation ,93% strongly suggested the presence of right ventricular late gadolinium enhancement (positive predictive value 100%), but no single variable or combination of variables could reliably predict its absence (negative predictive values ,75%). Extent of right ventricular late gadolinium enhancement did not correlate with degree of either hypoxia or right ventricular hypertension. Conclusions., Gadolinium-enhanced cardiac magnetic resonance demonstrates right ventricular late gadolinium enhancement in some patients with congenital heart disease and right ventricular loading conditions. Clinical variables were associated with the presence of fibrosis but did not reliably predict severity. Myocardial preservation is likely a multifactorial process that may affect the right and left ventricles differently. [source]


Initial Experience in the Use of Integrated Electroanatomic Mapping with Three-Dimensional MR/CT Images to Guide Catheter Ablation of Atrial Fibrillation

JOURNAL OF CARDIOVASCULAR ELECTROPHYSIOLOGY, Issue 5 2006
JUN DONG M.D.
Introduction: No prior studies have reported the use of integrated electroanatomic mapping with preacquired magnetic resonance/computed tomographic (MR/CT) images to guide catheter ablation of atrial fibrillation (AF) in a series of patients. Methods and Results: Sixteen consecutive patients with drug-refractory AF underwent catheter ablation under the guidance of a three-dimensional (3D) electroanatomic mapping system (Carto, Biosense Webster, Inc., Diamond Bar, CA, USA). Gadolinium-enhanced MR (n = 8) or contrast-enhanced high-resolution CT (n = 8) imaging was performed within 1 day prior to the ablation procedures. Using a novel software package (CartoMerge, Biosense Webster, Inc.), the left atrium (LA) with pulmonary veins (PVs) was segmented and extracted for image registration. The segmented 3D MR/CT LA reconstruction was accurately registered to the real-time mapping space with a combination of landmark registration and surface registration. The registered 3D MR/CT LA reconstruction was successfully used to guide deployment of RF applications encircling the PVs. Upon completion of the circumferential lesions around the PVs, 32% of the PVs were electrically isolated. Guided by a circular mapping catheter, the remaining PVs were disconnected from the LA using a segmental approach. The distance between the surface of the registered 3D MR/CT LA reconstruction and multiple electroanatomic map points was 3.05 ± 0.41 mm. No complications were observed. Conclusions: Three-dimensional MR/CT images can be successfully extracted and registered to anatomically guided clinical AF ablations. The display of detailed and accurate anatomic information during the procedure enables tailored RF ablation to individual PV and LA anatomy. [source]


Initial Experience with Norepinephrine Infusion in Hypotensive Critically III Foals

JOURNAL OF VETERINARY EMERGENCY AND CRITICAL CARE, Issue 4 2000
BVMSm, Kevin T. Corley BSc, MRCVS
Summary Seven critically ill foals that continued to be hypotensive despite fluid resuscitation and the infusion of dobutamine and/or dopamine were treated with an infusion of norepinephrine (noradrenaline). The norepinephrine was administered concurrently with dobutamine, and the combination therapy was titrated by use of indirect mean arterial pressure measurements. The highest dose of norepinephrine used was 1.5 mcg/kg/min. In six foals the administration of norepinephrine was associated with an increase in blood pressure. In one foal the mean arterial pressure did not increase in response to the doses of norepinephrine administered. All of the foals experienced an increase in urine output coincident with the start of the norepinephrine infusion. Three of the foal survived to hospital discharge. [source]


Initial Experience of Pacing with a Lumenless Lead System in Patients with Congenital Heart Disease

PACING AND CLINICAL ELECTROPHYSIOLOGY, Issue 11 2009
SANTABHANU CHAKRABARTI M.D.
Background: Long-term pacing is frequently necessary in patients with congenital heart disease (CHD). Preservation of ventricular function and avoidance of venous occlusion is important in these patients. Site-selective pacing with a smaller diameter lead is achievable with the model 3830 lead (SelectSecure®, Medtronic Inc., Minneapolis, MN, USA), which was specifically designed to target these complications. We describe our initial experience with the Model 3830 lead in patients with CHD. Methods: Retrospective analysis of all patients undergoing site-selective implantation of a Model 3830 lead(s) from two congenital heart centers (Bristol, UK, and Dublin, Ireland) from October 2004 until February 2008. Results: We implanted 139 SelectSecure® leads (atrial n = 70; ventricular n = 69) in 90 patients (57 male) with CHD. Median age at implantation: 13.4 years (1.1,59.2 years), median weight: 43 kg. Sixty-nine patients (76%) were children (<18 years). Indications for lead implantation included atrioventricular block (n = 55), sinus node disease (n = 18), implantable cardiac defibrillator (n = 12), antitachycardia pacing (n = 4), and cardiac resynchronization (n = 1). Twenty-two patients underwent pre-existing lead extraction during the same procedure. All the attempted procedures resulted in successful pacing. One patient had a significantly raised threshold at implantation. There was no procedural mortality. There were two procedural complications. Three patients required lead repositioning for increasing thresholds early postprocedure (<6 weeks). Four leads (2.9%) had displaced on median follow-up of 21.8 months (0.5,42 months). Conclusions: The Model 3830 lead is safe and effective in patients with CHD. This is a technically challenging patient group yet procedural complication and lead displacement rates are acceptable. [source]


Initial Experience with an Active-Fixation Defibrillation Electrode and the Presence of Nonphysiological Sensing

PACING AND CLINICAL ELECTROPHYSIOLOGY, Issue 12 2001
RAHUL N. DOSHI
DOSHI, R.N., et al.: Initial Experience with an Active-Fixation Defibrillation Electrode and the Presence of Nonphysiological Sensing. Nonphysiological sensing by a pacing and defibrillation electrode may result in inappropriate defibrillator discharges and/or inhibition of pacing. Active-fixation electrodes may be more likely to sense diaphragmatic myopotentials because of the protrusion of the screw for fixation. In addition, the movement of the fixation screw in an integrated bipolar lead system could also result in inappropriate sensing. This may be increasingly important in patients who are pacemaker dependent because the dynamic range of the autogain feature of these devices is much more narrow. Five of 15 consecutive patients who received a CPI model 0154 or 0155 active-fixation defibrillation electrode with an ICD system (CPI Ventak AV3DR model 1831 or CPI Ventak VR model 1774 defibrillator) are described. In 2 of the 15 patients, nonphysiological sensing appearing to be diaphragmatic myopotentials resulted in inappropriate defibrillator discharges. Both patients were pacemaker dependent. Changes in the sensitivity from nominal to less sensitive prevented inappropriate discharges. In one patient, discreet nonphysiological sensed events with the electrogram suggestive of ventricular activation was noted at the time of implantation. This was completely eliminated by redeployment of the active-fixation lead in the interventricular septum. In two other patients, discreet nonphysiological sensed events resulted in intermittent inhibition of ventricular pacing after implantation. These were still seen in the least sensitive autogain mode for ventricular amplitude. These were not seen on subsequent interrogation 1 month after implantation. Increased awareness of nonphysiological sensing is recommended. The CPI 0154 and 0155 leads seem to be particularly prone to this abnormality. Particular attention should be made when deploying an active-fixation screw for an integrated bipolar lead. This increased awareness is more important when a given individual is pacemaker dependent, which may warrant DFT testing in a least or less sensitive mode in these patients. [source]


Initial Experience with a New Right Ventricular Support Device for Beating Heart Surgery

ARTIFICIAL ORGANS, Issue 1 2004
Ferdinand Kuhn-Régnier
Abstract:, Objective: Device supported beating heart surgery has been advocated to extend patient selection criteria for off-pump surgery. This article reports the initial experimental and clinical results with a novel paracardial right ventricular support device. Methods: Preclinical experiments were performed in two pigs. Ten elective patients with triple vessel disease were subjected to beating heart coronary artery bypass grafting surgery during right ventricular support by the paracardial device. Measurements included intraoperative hemodynamics during cardiac tilting, perioperative left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF), hemolysis parameters, mortality and major morbidity events. Results: A mean of 3.2 ± 0.2 distal anastomoses per patient were performed. Mean arterial pressure and central venous oxygen saturation remained stable during cardiac tilting. Perioperative LVEF did not vary significantly. Sixty-day mortality and postoperative infarction rate were 0%. Functional Canadian Cardiovascular Society class at 6 days after surgery was 1.2 ± 0.1 vs. 3.3 ± 0.2 pre-operatively. Conclusion: In this initial clinical experience, application of the novel paracardial right ventricular support device proved ,to be safe and efficient. [source]


Editorial Comment to laparoendoscopic single-site urological surgery: Initial experience in Japan

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF UROLOGY, Issue 3 2010
Sashi S Kommu mbbs bsc(antsci) mrcsed mrcseng
No abstract is available for this article. [source]


Editorial Comment to laparoendoscopic single-site urological surgery: Initial experience in Japan

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF UROLOGY, Issue 3 2010
Abhay Rane ms frcs (Urol)
No abstract is available for this article. [source]


Retroperitoneoscopic heminephroureterectomy for children with duplex anomaly: Initial experience

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF UROLOGY, Issue 1 2004
AKIHIRO KAWAUCHI
Abstract Objectives:, To evaluate the feasibility of retroperitoneoscopic heminephroureterectomy for children with duplex anomaly. Methods:, Retroperitoneoscopic heminephroureterectomy was performed in five children (four girls and one boy) with complete duplication of the ureter, of whom four (age range 1,5 years; mean age 3.3 years) had upper pole ectopic megaureters and one (3 years old) had an upper pole megaureter with ureterocele. In the patient with ureterocele, distal ureterectomy and ureterocelectomy were performed by Pfannenstiel incision. Results:, The mean operation time was 346 min (range 270,450 min) in the four patients with ectopic megaureter and 420 min (330 min for heminephroureterectomy) in the patient with ureterocele. The mean estimated blood loss was 43 mL (range 5,100 mL) in the four patients with ectopic megaureter and 40 mL in the patient with ureterocele. No postoperative complications were observed. Postoperative intravenous pyelography showed normal pyelogram and renal function of the preserved lower pole in all cases. Conclusions:, Retroperitoneoscopic heminephroureterectomy for children is feasible, safe and has good postoperative results, including cosmetic results. However, the operation time needs to be reduced. [source]


Hand-assisted retroperitoneoscopic radical nephrectomy: Initial experience

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF UROLOGY, Issue 9 2002
AKIHIRO KAWAUCHI
Abstract Objectives: To report our initial experience of hand-assisted retroperitoneoscopic radical nephrectomy for stage T1 renal tumors. Methods: The clinical data on 22 consecutive patients who had undergone hand-assisted retroperitoneoscopic radical nephrectomy and 22 who had undergone open radical nephrectomy were reviewed. The operation was performed with a hand placed retroperitoneally through a pararectal longitudal 7,7.5 cm incision using a LAP DISC. Results: The total operating time was between 2.3 and 5.8 h (mean: 3.4 h). The estimated blood loss was between 15 and 650 mL (mean: 170 mL). The complication rate was 9% (2/22). No conversions to open procedure occurred. In comparison to open radical nephrectomy, the operating time was similar (3.4 vs 3.9 h) whereas the estimated blood loss was significantly less in this procedure (170 vs 495 mL). During the convalescence period the patients revealed significantly less postoperative pain, shorter intervals to resuming oral intake and more rapid return to normal activities compared to the open radical nephrectomy patients. Conclusion: Hand-assisted retroperitoneoscopic radical nephrectomy is an effective and safe procedure for T1 renal tumors. [source]


Increased volume of coverage for abdominal contrast-enhanced MR angiography with two-dimensional autocalibrating parallel imaging: Initial experience at 3.0 Tesla

JOURNAL OF MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGING, Issue 5 2009
Darren P. Lum MD
Abstract Purpose: To assess the feasibility and the quality of abdominal three-dimensional (3D) contrast enhanced MR angiograms acquired at 3.0 Tesla (T) using a new 2D-accelerated autocalibrating parallel reconstruction method for Cartesian sampling (2D-ARC). Materials and Methods: With institutional review board approval and written informed consent, a prospective trial in 6 normal healthy volunteers and 23 patients referred for evaluation of suspected renovascular disease was performed. The volunteers underwent abdominal MRA with and without 2D-ARC acceleration. Images were evaluated independently by two blinded vascular radiologists in randomized order. Vessel conspicuity was rated on a five-point scale. Evaluation for significant differences between the scores for each technique was performed using a Wilcoxon signed-rank test. Results: In the series of six volunteers, no statistical significance was found between the image quality scores for 2D-ARC accelerated and nonaccelerated exams. A high proportion of the 23 clinical 2D-ARC exams were graded as diagnostic (vessel conspicuity score ,2; Reader 1, 96%; Reader 2, 100%) for overall image quality. Conclusion: Subjective image quality of 2D-ARC accelerated MRA was equivalent to the conventional MRA method. However, the 2D-ARC accelerated sequence provided a 3.5-fold increase in imaging volume, complete abdominal coverage, and a 30% reduction in voxel volume, all within the same acquisition time. J. Magn. Reson. Imaging 2009;30:1093,1100. © 2009 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source]


Assessment of tumor microcirculation with dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI in patients with esophageal cancer: Initial experience

JOURNAL OF MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGING, Issue 6 2008
Katja Oberholzer MD
Abstract Purpose To investigate the feasibility and impact of dynamic contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (DCE-MRI) on tumor characterization and response to radiochemotherapy (RCT) in patients with esophageal cancer. Materials and Methods A total of 48 patients underwent DCE-MRI to assess tumor microcirculation based on a two-compartment model function. Effects of RCT on kinetic parameters were studied in 12 patients with squamous cell carcinoma. Results Tumor microcirculation differs with respect to histological subtype: squamous cell carcinomas showed lower values of amplitude A (leakage space, P = 0.015) and higher contrast agent exchange rates (k21, P = 0.225) compared with adenocarcinomas. RCT led to a significant decrease of the contrast agent exchange rate (P = 0.005), while amplitude A increased moderately after therapy (P = 0.136). Conclusion DCE-MRI is feasible in patients with esophageal cancer, reveals therapeutic effects, and may thus be useful in therapy management and monitoring. J. Magn. Reson. Imaging 2008;27:1296,1301. © 2008 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source]


Contrast-enhanced peripheral MR angiography at 3.0 Tesla: Initial experience with a whole-body scanner in healthy volunteers

JOURNAL OF MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGING, Issue 5 2003
Tim Leiner MD
Abstract Purpose To report preliminary experience with contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance angiography (CE-MRA) of the peripheral arteries on a 3.0 T whole-body scanner equipped with a prototype body coil. Materials and Methods Four healthy volunteers were imaged on the 3.0 T system and, for comparative purposes, two of the subjects were also imaged on a commercially available 1.5 T whole-body system. To investigate field strength influence on objective image quality, signal-to-noise (SN) and contrast-to-noise (CN) ratios were calculated for named vessels from the infrarenal aorta to the ankles at both field strengths. Comparable imaging protocols were used at both field strengths. In addition, two reviewers, blinded for field strength, gave subjective image quality scores (three-point scale). Results SN and CN ratios were approximately equal on both systems (variation ,9%) for the iliac and proximal upper leg stations. For the popliteal and lower leg stations SN ratios were 36% and 97% higher, and CN ratios were 44% and 127% higher, at 3.0 T. Subjective image quality at 3.0 T was substantially better for the distal upper and lower legs. Conclusion Contrast-enhanced peripheral MRA is possible at 3.0 T when an imaging protocol similar to a current state-of-the-art 1.5 T protocol is used. Objective and subjective image quality at 3.0 T is comparable for the iliac and upper legs but better for the popliteal and lower leg arteries. J. Magn. Reson. Imaging 2003;17:609,614. © 2003 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source]


Initial experience with factor-Xa inhibition in percutaneous coronary intervention: the XaNADU-PCI Pilot

JOURNAL OF THROMBOSIS AND HAEMOSTASIS, Issue 2 2004
J. H. Alexander
Summary.,Background:,Direct factor (F)Xa inhibition is an attractive method to limit thrombotic complications during percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI). Objectives:,To investigate drug levels achieved, effect on coagulation markers, and preliminary efficacy and safety of several doses of DX-9065a, an intravenous, small molecule, direct, reversible FXa inhibitor during PCI. Patients and methods:,Patients undergoing elective, native-vessel PCI (n = 175) were randomized 4 : 1 to open-label DX-9065a or heparin in one of four sequential stages. DX-9065a regimens in stages I,III were designed to achieve concentrations of >,100 ng mL,1, >,75 ng mL,1, and >,150 ng mL,1. Stage IV used the stage III regimen but included patients recently given heparin. Results:,At 15 min median (minimum) DX-9065a plasma levels were 192 (176), 122 (117), 334 (221), and 429 (231) ng mL,1 in stages I,IV, respectively. Median whole-blood international normalized ratios (INRs) were 2.6 (interquartile range 2.5, 2.7), 1.9 (1.8, 2.0), 3.2 (3.0, 4.1), and 3.8 (3.4, 4.6), and anti-FXa levels were 0.36 (0.32, 0.38), 0.33 (0.26, 0.39), 0.45 (0.41, 0.51), and 0.62 (0.52, 0.65) U mL,1, respectively. Stage II enrollment was stopped (n = 7) after one serious thrombotic event. Ischemic and bleeding events were rare and, in this small population, showed no clear relation to DX-9065a dose. Conclusions:,Elective PCI is feasible using a direct FXa inhibitor for anticoagulation. Predictable plasma drug levels can be rapidly obtained with double-bolus and infusion DX-9065a dosing. Monitoring of DX-9065a may be possible using whole-blood INR. Direct FXa inhibition is a novel and potentially promising approach to anticoagulation during PCI that deserves further study. [source]


Initial experience with the air-Q as a conduit for fiberoptic tracheal intubation in infants

PEDIATRIC ANESTHESIA, Issue 2 2010
John E. Fiadjoe
No abstract is available for this article. [source]


RE: Initial experience with cultured epithelial autografts in massively burnt patients

ANZ JOURNAL OF SURGERY, Issue 3 2004
Peter Haertsch FRACS
No abstract is available for this article. [source]


Initial experience of abdominal aortic aneurysm repairs in Borneo

ANZ JOURNAL OF SURGERY, Issue 10 2003
Ming Kon Yii
Background: Abdominal aortic aneurysms (AAA) repairs are routineoperations with low mortality in the developed world. There arefew studies on the operative management of AAA in the Asian population. This study reports the initial results from a unit with no previousexperience in this surgery by a single surgeon on completion oftraining. Methods: All patients with AAA repair from a prospective databasebetween 1996 and 1999 in the south-east Asian state of Sarawak inBorneo Island were analyzed. Three groups were identified on presentationaccording to clinical urgency of surgery. Elective surgery was offeredto all good risk patients with AAA of , 5 cm. All symptomatic patients were offered surgery unless contraindicatedmedically. Results: AAA repairs were performed in 69 patients: 32 (46%)had elective repairs of asymptomatic AAA; 20 (29%) hadurgent surgery for symptomatic non-ruptured AAA; and 17 (25%)had surgery for ruptured AAA. The mortality rate for elective surgery was6%; the two deaths occurred early in the series with thesubsequent 25 repairs recorded no further mortality. The mortalityrates for the urgent, symptomatic non-ruptured AAA repair and rupturedAAA repair were 20% and 35%, respectively. Cardiacand res­piratory complications were the main morbidities. Sixty-three patients seen during this period had no surgery; threepresented and died of ruptured AAA, 34 had AAA of , 5 cmin diameter, and 26 with AAA of , 5 cmdiameter had either no consent for surgery or serious medical contraindications. Conclusion: This study showed that AAA can be repaired safely byhighly motivated and adequately trained surgeons in a hospital withlittle previous experience. [source]


Initial experience of vocal cord evaluation using grey-scale, real-time, B-mode ultrasound

ANZ JOURNAL OF SURGERY, Issue 12 2001
Stan Sidhu
Background:, To evaluate whether grey-scale, real-time, B-mode ultrasound (US) is a reliable alternative to nasopharyngoscopy for assessing vocal cord function post-thyroid and post-parathyroid surgery. Methods:, A prospective validation study was undertaken comparing grey-scale, real-time, B-mode vocal cord US with the standard of nasopharyngoscopy in 100 consecutive patients undergoing thyroid and parathyroid surgery between 1 February 1999 and 31 August 1999, with seven patients with known cord palsy. The sensitivity and specificity of grey-scale, real-time vocal cord US for the detection of vocal cord palsy when compared to the standard of nasopharyngoscopy was analysed. Results:, In the postsurgical group, there were six nerves (3.2% of the nerves at risk) transient and no permanent vocal cord palsies. US identified four of six transient palsies and reported two false negatives and three false positives. US identified four of seven cord palsies in the non-surgical group with known cord palsy. Analysis of the 107 combined patients showed US had sensitivity of 62% (8/13), specificity of 97% (91/94), a positive predictive value of 73% (8/11) and a negative predictive value of 95% (91/96) for detecting cord paralysis compared to the standard of nasopharyngoscopy. Conclusion:, Despite the enthusiasm of earlier reports, our initial experience with grey-scale, real-time, B-mode US suggests it is not a reliable alternative to nasopharyngoscopy for assessing vocal cord function post-thyroid and post-parathyroid surgery. Further recruitment of patients with known vocal cord palsy is required to confirm or refute these initial impressions. [source]


Initial experience in laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy for Japanese morbid obesity

ASIAN JOURNAL OF ENDOSCOPIC SURGERY, Issue 3 2009
M Ohta
Abstract Introduction: We evaluated the safety and efficacy of laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy (LSG) in Japanese patients with morbid obesity. Materials and Methods: Between June 2006 and March 2009, seven morbidly obese Japanese patients (four women, three men; mean age 36±12 years; mean body mass index (BMI) 51±3 kg/m2) underwent LSG at our institute. The inclusion criteria were morbid obesity (BMI>35 kg/m2), the presence of obesity-related disorders, and failure to lose weight while using other medical therapies for at least 6 months. The criteria also included contraindications for laparoscopic adjustable gastric banding or super-obesity (BMI>50 kg/m2). LSG was carried out using endoscopic linear staplers from the greater curvature of the antrum 6,7 cm proximal to the pyloric ring to the angle of His alongside a 32-Fr endoscope or a 45-Fr overtube of the endoscope. Results: In all of the patients, LSG was successfully performed without open conversion. There were no serious postoperative complications and there was no mortality. The mean weight loss and percent excess weight loss after LSG were 33±8 kg and 47±16% at 6 months, and then 44±16 kg and 63±30% at 12 months. Due to the weight loss, the resolution and improvement rates of comorbidities in the five patients followed up for >3 months were 100% and 100% in type 2 diabetes, 67% and 100% in hypertension, 60% and 100% in dyslipidemia, and 100% and 100% in metabolic syndrome. Discussion: Although further long-term studies are necessary with regard to weight maintenance, LSG is a feasible and safe treatment for Japanese patients with morbid obesity. [source]


Real-time accelerated interactive MRI with adaptive TSENSE and UNFOLD,

MAGNETIC RESONANCE IN MEDICINE, Issue 2 2003
Michael A. Guttman
Abstract Reduced field-of-view (FOV) acceleration using time-adaptive sensitivity encoding (TSENSE) or unaliasing by Fourier encoding the overlaps using the temporal dimension (UNFOLD) can improve the depiction of motion in real-time MRI. However, increased computational resources are required to maintain a high frame rate and low latency in image reconstruction and display. A high-performance software system has been implemented to perform TSENSE and UNFOLD reconstructions for real-time MRI with interactive, on-line display. Images were displayed in the scanner room to investigate image-guided procedures. Examples are shown for normal volunteers and cardiac interventional experiments in animals using a steady-state free precession (SSFP) sequence. In order to maintain adequate image quality for interventional procedures, the imaging rate was limited to seven frames per second after an acceleration factor of 2 with a voxel size of 1.8 × 3.5 × 8 mm. Initial experiences suggest that TSENSE and UNFOLD can each improve the compromise between spatial and temporal resolution in real-time imaging, and can function well in interactive imaging. UNFOLD places no additional constraints on receiver coils, and is therefore more flexible than SENSE methods; however, the temporal image filtering can blur motion and reduce the effective acceleration. Methods are proposed to overcome the challenges presented by the use of TSENSE in interactive imaging. TSENSE may be temporarily disabled after changing the imaging plane to avoid transient artifacts as the sensitivity coefficients adapt. For imaging with a combination of surface and interventional coils, a hybrid reconstruction approach is proposed whereby UNFOLD is used for the interventional coils, and TSENSE with or without UNFOLD is used for the surface coils. Magn Reson Med 50:315,321, 2003. Published 2003 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source]


Pacemaker Stored Electrograms: Teaching Us What Is Really Going On in Our Patients

PACING AND CLINICAL ELECTROPHYSIOLOGY, Issue 5 2002
BERND NOWAK
NOWAK, B.: Pacemaker Stored Electrograms: Teaching Us What Is Really Going On in Our Patients. Stored electrograms (EGMs), well-known diagnostic tools in implantable cardioverter defibrillators, have now been incorporated in pacemakers as well, thereby increasing their diagnostic capabilities. The clinician can detect and diagnose patient arrhythmias with EGMs and directly validate diagnostic data stored by the devices. The appropriateness of detection algorithms can also be judged. Initial experiences with pacemaker EGMs reveals their potential to detect and diagnose sensing or detection algorithm problems. These so-called "false-positive" EGMs help to optimize pacemaker programming. Date and time stamp can correlate an event to patient symptoms. Recent advances, like onset recordings and marker annotation, have further increased the effectiveness of stored EGMs. The use of patient-triggered magnet-stored EGMs facilitates diagnostic workups in symptomatic pacemaker patients and reveals nondevice related symptoms in a considerable number of cases. Stored EGMs in pacemakers will soon be a standard diagnostic tool that can illustrate what is really going on in our patients. [source]


The braun thermoscan thermometer: validation of normal ranges in a paediatric practice

PEDIATRIC ANESTHESIA, Issue 9 2002
C.A. Streets
Introduction Pyrexia is a common cause of operative cancellation in paediatric practice, and so the accurate determination of temperature is of paramount importance. Recently the Braun ThermoScan infrared aural thermometer has been introduced to Derriford Hospital as a safe and non-invasive technique for measuring temperature. Initially the published upper limits of normal for this technique appeared to be higher than expected. Initial experiences with the thermometer in Derriford Hospital produced high temperature readings in children who were otherwise clinically well. The aim of this study was to compare the manufacturer's published normal ranges with those obtained from a general paediatric population. Methods Ethics Committee approval was obtained. The study was conducted between July and November 2001. Patients less than 16 years of age, and admitted to either the Day Surgical Unit or the general paediatric wards for elective surgery were included. Each child had its temperature measured on admission using the Braun ThermoScan aural thermometer. The ages and temperatures were recorded, and the values compared with the manufacturer's normal ranges using standard error of the means. Results Preliminary data are reported from 248 children: 1,2 years (n = 30), 3,10 years (n = 159), and 11,15 years (n = 59). The table demonstrates that there is no significant statistical difference between the manufacturer's ranges and those of the Derriford Hospital paediatric elective surgical population. Discussion The Braun ThermoScan infrared aural thermometer is considered to be a safe, hygienic, and convenient technique for measuring temperature. Despite initial misgivings that a temperature approaching 38°C could not be considered normal, this study has confirmed that the manufacturer's published normal ranges are indeed compatible with those obtained from a district general hospital paediatric population. Conclusion This study validates the manufacturer's published normal range for the Braun ThermoScan thermometer. This therefore leaves a clinical dilemma , does a child with a temperature of 37.9°C have a pyrexia or not? [source]


First experience of compressible gas dynamics simulation on the Los Alamos roadrunner machine

CONCURRENCY AND COMPUTATION: PRACTICE & EXPERIENCE, Issue 17 2009
Paul R. Woodward
Abstract We report initial experience with gas dynamics simulation on the Los Alamos Roadrunner machine. In this initial work, we have restricted our attention to flows in which the flow Mach number is less than 2. This permits us to use a simplified version of the PPM gas dynamics algorithm that has been described in detail by Woodward (2006). We follow a multifluid volume fraction using the PPB moment-conserving advection scheme, enforcing both pressure and temperature equilibrium between two monatomic ideal gases within each grid cell. The resulting gas dynamics code has been extensively restructured for efficient multicore processing and implemented for scalable parallel execution on the Roadrunner system. The code restructuring and parallel implementation are described and performance results are discussed. For a modest grid size, sustained performance of 3.89 Gflops,1 CPU-core,1 is delivered by this code on 36 Cell processors in 9 triblade nodes of a single rack of Roadrunner hardware. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


Design and implementation of a high-performance CCA event service,

CONCURRENCY AND COMPUTATION: PRACTICE & EXPERIENCE, Issue 9 2009
Ian Gorton
Abstract Event services based on publish,subscribe architectures are well-established components of distributed computing applications. Recently, an event service has been proposed as part of the common component architecture (CCA) for high-performance computing (HPC) applications. In this paper we describe our implementation, experimental evaluation, and initial experience with a high-performance CCA event service that exploits efficient communications mechanisms commonly used on HPC platforms. We describe the CCA event service model and briefly discuss the possible implementation strategies of the model. We then present the design and implementation of the event service using the aggregate remote memory copy interface as an underlying communication layer for this mechanism. Two alternative implementations are presented and evaluated on a Cray XD-1 platform. The performance results demonstrate that event delivery latencies are low and that the event service is able to achieve high-throughput levels. Finally, we describe the use of the event service in an application for high-speed processing of data from a mass spectrometer and conclude by discussing some possible extensions to the event service for other HPC applications. Published in 2009 by John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


CMR2009: 3.03: Oral manganese-based contrast agent CMC-001 for liver MR imaging in patients with hepatic metastases: initial experience of a phase II trial

CONTRAST MEDIA & MOLECULAR IMAGING, Issue 6 2009
M. Rief
No abstract is available for this article. [source]


Evaluation of a Pediatric-sedation Service for Common Diagnostic Procedures

ACADEMIC EMERGENCY MEDICINE, Issue 6 2006
Wendalyn K. King MD
Abstract Background: Pediatric patients often require sedation for diagnostic procedures such as magnetic resonance imaging and computed tomography scanning. In October 2002, a dedicated sedation service was started at a tertiary care pediatric facility as a joint venture between pediatric emergency medicine and pediatric critical care medicine. Before this service, sedation was provided by the department of radiology by using a standard protocol, with high-risk patients and failed sedations referred for general anesthesia. Objectives: To describe the initial experience with a dedicated pediatric-sedation service. Methods: This was a retrospective analysis of quality-assurance data collected on all sedations in the radiology department for 23-month periods before and after sedation-service implementation. Study variables were number and reasons for canceled or incomplete procedures, rates of referral for general anesthesia, rates of hypoxia, prolonged sedation, need for assisted ventilation, apnea, emesis, and paradoxical reaction to medication. Results are reported in odds ratios (OR) with 95% confidence intervals (95% CI). Results: Data from 5,444 sedations were analyzed; 2,148 before and 3,296 after sedation-service activation. Incomplete studies secondary to inadequate sedation decreased, from 2.7% before the service was created to 0.8% in the post,sedation-service period (OR, 0.29; 95% CI = 0.18 to 0.47). There also were decreases in cancellations caused by patient illness (3.8% vs. 0.6%; OR, 0.16; 95% CI = 0.10 to 0.27) and rates of hypoxia (8.8% vs. 4.6%; OR, 0.50; 95% CI = 0.40 to 0.63). There were no significant differences between the groups in rates of apnea, need for assisted ventilation, emesis, or prolonged sedation. The implementation of the sedation service also was associated with a decrease in both the number of patients referred to general anesthesia without a trial of sedation (from 2.1% to 0.1%; OR, 0.33; 95% CI = 0.06 to 1.46) and the total number of general anesthesia cases in the radiology department (from 7.5% to 4.4% of all patients requiring either sedation or anesthesia; OR, 0.56; 95% CI = 0.45 to 0.71). Conclusions: The implementation of a dedicated pediatric-sedation service resulted in fewer incomplete studies related to inadequate sedation, in fewer canceled studies secondary to patient illness, in fewer referrals for general anesthesia, and in fewer recorded instances of sedation-associated hypoxia. These findings have important implications in terms of patient safety and resource utilization. [source]


Use of point-of-care ultrasound by a critical care retrieval team

EMERGENCY MEDICINE AUSTRALASIA, Issue 6 2007
Stefan M Mazur
Abstract Point-of-care ultrasound in the prehospital and retrieval environments has now become possible owing to decreased size and weight, and increasing robustness of some ultrasound machines. This report describes the initial experience of point-of-care ultrasound by an Australian critical care retrieval service using a portable ultrasound machine. [source]


Complete robotic-assistance during laparoscopic living donor nephrectomies: An evaluation of 38 procedures at a single site

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF UROLOGY, Issue 11 2007
Jacques Hubert
Objective: To evaluate our initial experience with entirely robot-assisted laparoscopic live donor (RALD) nephrectomies. Methods: From January 2002 to April 2006, we carried out 38 RALD nephrectomies at our institution, using four ports (three for the robotic arms and one for the assistant). The collateral veins were ligated, and the renal arteries and veins clipped, after completion of ureteral and renal dissection. The kidney was removed via a suprapubic Pfannenstiel incision. A complementary running suture was carried out on the arterial stump to secure the hemostasis. Results: Mean donor age was 43 years. All nephrectomies were carried out entirely laparoscopically, without complications and with minimal blood loss. Mean surgery time was 181 min. Average warm ischemia and cold ischemia times were 5.84 min and 180 min, respectively. Average donor hospital stay was 5.5 days. None of the transplant recipients had delayed graft function. Conclusions: Robot-assisted laparoscopic live donor nephrectomy can be safely carried out. Robotics enhances the laparoscopist's skills, enables the surgeon to dissect meticulously and to prevent problematic bleeding more easily. Donor morbidity and hospitalization are reduced by the laparoscopic approach and the use of robotics allows the surgeon to work under better ergonomic conditions. [source]