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Planar Images (planar + image)
Selected AbstractsLymphoscintigraphy for sentinel node mapping using a hybrid single photon emission CT (SPECT)/CT system in oral cavity squamous cell carcinomaHEAD & NECK: JOURNAL FOR THE SCIENCES & SPECIALTIES OF THE HEAD AND NECK, Issue 10 2006Avi Khafif MD Abstract Background. We assessed the added clinical value of fused single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) and low-dose CT images compared with planar images for sentinel node (SN) mapping in patients with oral cavity squamous cell carcinoma (SCC). Methods. Twenty consecutive patients with newly diagnosed biopsy-proven SCC of the oral cavity were enrolled. Scintigraphy was performed using a hybrid gamma-camera/low-dose CT system. Planar images and fused SPECT/CT images were interpreted separately. All patients underwent a sentinel node biopsy (SNB) followed by a neck dissection. All SNs underwent meticulous pathologic examination and immunohistochemistry staining (cytokeratin complex) in addition to routine pathologic examinations of the neck dissection specimen. Results. The sensitivity for the detection of nodal metastases was 87.5%. SPECT/CT improved SN identification and/or localization compared with planar images in 6 patients (30%). Conclusions. SPECT/CT SN mapping provides additional preoperative data of clinical relevance to SNB in patients with oral cavity SCC. © 2006 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Head Neck, 2006 [source] Sex Assessment from the Sacral Base by Means of Image ProcessingJOURNAL OF FORENSIC SCIENCES, Issue 2 2009Stefano Benazzi Ph.D. Abstract:, To help improve sex assessment from skeletal remains, the present study considers the diagnostic value of the sacral base (basis osseus sacri) based on its planar image and related metric data. For this purpose, 114 adult sacra of known sex and age from two early 20th century Italian populations were examined, the first from Bologna, northern Italy (n = 76), and the second from Sassari, Sardinia (n = 38). Digital photos of the sacral base were taken with each bone in a standardized orientation. Technical drawing software was used to trace its profile and to measure related dimensions (area, perimeter, and breadth of S1 and total breadth of the sacrum). The measurements were subjected to discriminant and classification function analyses. The sex prediction success of 93.2% for the Bolognese sample, 81.6% for the Sassarese sample, and 88.3% for the pooled sample indicates that the first sacral vertebra is a good character for sex determination. [source] Simultaneous echo refocusing in EPIMAGNETIC RESONANCE IN MEDICINE, Issue 1 2002David A. Feinberg Abstract A method to encode multiple two-dimensional Fourier transform (2D FT) images within a single echo train is presented. This new method, simultaneous echo refocusing (SER), is a departure from prior echo planar image (EPI) sequences which use repeated single-shot echo trains for multislice imaging. SER simultaneously acquires multiple slices in a single-shot echo train utilizing a shared refocusing process. The SER technique acquires data faster than conventional multislice EPI since it uses fewer gradient switchings and fewer preparation pulses such as diffusion gradients. SER introduces a new capability to simultaneously record multiple spatially separated sources of physiologic information in subsecond image acquisitions, which enables several applications that are dependent on temporal coherence in MRI data including velocity vector field mapping and brain activation mapping. Magn Reson Med 48:1,5, 2002. © 2002 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source] Lymphoscintigraphy for sentinel node mapping using a hybrid single photon emission CT (SPECT)/CT system in oral cavity squamous cell carcinomaHEAD & NECK: JOURNAL FOR THE SCIENCES & SPECIALTIES OF THE HEAD AND NECK, Issue 10 2006Avi Khafif MD Abstract Background. We assessed the added clinical value of fused single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) and low-dose CT images compared with planar images for sentinel node (SN) mapping in patients with oral cavity squamous cell carcinoma (SCC). Methods. Twenty consecutive patients with newly diagnosed biopsy-proven SCC of the oral cavity were enrolled. Scintigraphy was performed using a hybrid gamma-camera/low-dose CT system. Planar images and fused SPECT/CT images were interpreted separately. All patients underwent a sentinel node biopsy (SNB) followed by a neck dissection. All SNs underwent meticulous pathologic examination and immunohistochemistry staining (cytokeratin complex) in addition to routine pathologic examinations of the neck dissection specimen. Results. The sensitivity for the detection of nodal metastases was 87.5%. SPECT/CT improved SN identification and/or localization compared with planar images in 6 patients (30%). Conclusions. SPECT/CT SN mapping provides additional preoperative data of clinical relevance to SNB in patients with oral cavity SCC. © 2006 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Head Neck, 2006 [source] Chronological analysis of physiological T2* signal change in the cerebrum during breath holdingJOURNAL OF MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGING, Issue 3 2001Kazuyoshi Nakada MD Abstract The purpose of this study was to examine which physiological factors affect cerebral T2* signal intensity (SI) during breath holding (BH) (apnea after inspiration and breathing after expiration) in normal volunteers. We examined SI changes caused by anoxic gas inhalation, by respiratory movements, and by BH. High-speed echo planar images (EPI) showed changes in SI that could be divided into five phases. Reports indicate that SI changes induced by BH are due to the effects on the magnetic susceptibility of deoxygenated hemoglobin (deoxyhemoglobin (dHb)) and to hypercapnia, but these reports could not fully explain the observed five phases. In addition to deoxyhemoglobin susceptibility and hypercapnia, we found that respiratory movements play a third critical role in modifying SI by affecting blood flow into the region of interest (ROI), as judged from right carotid artery flow. Consequently, we propose that the physiological SI changes induced by BH are derived from blood oxygenation, hypercapnia, and respiratory movements. J. Magn. Reson. Imaging 2001;13:344,351. © 2001 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source] Intragastric distribution of a standardized meal in health and functional dyspepsia: correlation with specific symptomsNEUROGASTROENTEROLOGY & MOTILITY, Issue 5 2003H Piessevaux Abstract, In functional dyspepsia, abnormal intragastric distribution of a test meal has been identified but has never been correlated to any symptom pattern. The aim of this study was to compare the intragastric distribution of a meal between functional dyspepsia patients and controls, and to correlate distribution with symptom patterns, using scintigraphic gastric emptying studies. In forty patients with functional dyspepsia and 29 healthy volunteers, scintigraphic planar images were obtained immediately after ingestion of a mixed radiolabelled test meal and every 20 min for 2 h. The images of the stomach were divided into proximal and distal compartments. The mean intragastric distribution was similar in patients and controls. Over the whole test, 18 (45%) and 20 (50%) patients had a distal redistribution of the solid and liquid phase of the meal, respectively, while proximal retention of these phases was found in 13 (33%) and 9 (23%) patients. Early satiety was associated with early distal redistribution of the liquid phase and fullness was associated with late proximal retention. This study shows similar intragastric distribution of a test meal in health and functional dyspepsia. Within the patient group, an association between abnormal intragastric distribution patterns and symptom profiles was found, which might be related to different pathophysiological mechanisms. [source] |