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39


Tolerable and Effective Combination of Full-Dose Crizotinib and Osimertinib Targeting MET Amplification Sequentially Emerging after T790M Positivity in EGFR-Mutant Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer [Case Report]

York, Emily R; Varella-Garcia, Marileila; Bang, Tami J; Aisner, Dara L; Camidge, D Ross
PMID: 28274743
ISSN: 1556-1380
CID: 5927582

Ultrasound-Guided Percutaneous Management of Splenic Ectopic Pregnancy [Case Report]

Python, Johanne L; Wakefield, Brian W; Kondo, Kimi L; Bang, Tami J; Stamm, Elizabeth R; Hurt, K Joseph
Splenic ectopic pregnancies are a rare cause of abdominal pain in reproductive-age women. A 21-year-old woman with worsening abdominal pain and a positive pregnancy test presented with hemoperitoneum and no intrauterine pregnancy on transvaginal ultrasound. After 2 nondiagnostic laparoscopies, a splenic pregnancy was diagnosed by computed tomography scan and abdominal ultrasound. Currently, diagnosis and treatment of splenic pregnancies involve exploratory surgery and splenectomy. We report the successful treatment of this splenic ectopic pregnancy with combined intramuscular plus ultrasound-guided percutaneous methotrexate injection, with preservation of the patient's spleen. Abdominal implantation must be considered in patients with pregnancy of unknown location, and in carefully selected patients splenic ectopic pregnancy can be successfully managed by minimally invasive methods.
PMID: 27221066
ISSN: 1553-4669
CID: 5927572

CT findings of human Fasciola hepatica infection: case reports and review of the literature [Case Report]

Patel, Nayana U; Bang, Tami J; Dodd, Gerald D
Due to increasing rates of international travel, hepatic fascioliasis is appearing in nonendemic areas, where diagnosis can be difficult. We present two confirmed cases of hepatic fascioliasis in a nonendemic region. The purposes of this report are to discuss computed tomography (CT) findings of hepatic fascioliasis and to review the literature. While travel history is most important, characteristic findings of hypoattenuating tracts extending from liver capsule into the parenchyma on contrast-enhanced CT scan strongly suggest hepatic fascioliasis.
PMID: 26995582
ISSN: 1873-4499
CID: 5927562

University of Colorado radiologist adult contrast reaction smartcard

Bang, Tami J; Suby-Long, Thomas; Borgstede, James P; Quaife, Robert; Pritchard, Nancy; Street, Denise; Restauri, Nicole
PMID: 23499402
ISSN: 1558-349x
CID: 5927552

Identification of malpositioned tubes and lines in ICU patients: an automated solution utilizing the electronic medical record

Bang, Tami J; Borgstede, James P; Cain, Michael; Wallman, Leslie Stephens; Sachs, Peter B
PMID: 23374694
ISSN: 1558-349x
CID: 5927542

Prevention of Contrast-Induced Nephropathy (CIN) in Interventional Radiology Practice

Gupta, Rajan K; Bang, Tami J
Contrast-induced nephropathy (CIN) is a widely recognized and clinically significant problem in patients undergoing an increasing number of minimally invasive procedures that require contrast administration. Contrast-induced nephropathy is the third most common cause of hospital-acquired renal failure and has significant prognostic implications on patient outcomes. Interventional practitioners are faced with challenging decisions regarding prophylaxis and patient management. The major risk factor for developing CIN is preexisting renal dysfunction, particularly in association with diabetes. Patients are considered to be at risk when estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) or estimated creatinine clearance (eC(Cr)) is less than 60. The cornerstone of prevention of CIN is appropriate risk stratification, intravenous hydration with normal saline or sodium bicarbonate, appropriate withholding of nephrotoxic medications, use of low or iso-osmolar contrast media, and various intraprocedural methods for iodinated contrast dose reduction. Although N-acetylcysteine administration is popular, it remains unproven. Practitioners must be familiar with prevention strategies and diagnosis of CIN to minimize its clinical impact.
PMCID:3324211
PMID: 22550376
ISSN: 1098-8963
CID: 5927532

May-Thurner syndrome complicating left-sided renal transplant [Letter]

Campsen, Jeffrey; Bang, Tami J; Kam, Igal; Gupta, Rajan
PMID: 20386299
ISSN: 1534-6080
CID: 5927522

Does walking in a virtual environment induce unstable gait? An examination of vertical ground reaction forces

Hollman, John H; Brey, Robert H; Bang, Tami J; Kaufman, Kenton R
Virtual reality (VR) can induce postural instability in standing and walking, as quantified with kinematic parameters. This study examines the effect of a VR environment on kinetic gait parameters. Ten healthy volunteers walked on an instrumented treadmill in a VR environment and a non-VR environment. In the VR environment, a corridor with colored vertical stripes comprising the walls was projected onto a concave screen placed in front of the treadmill. The speed of the moving image was perceptually equivalent to the speed of the treadmill, creating an illusion that subjects walked through the corridor. Vertical ground reaction forces were sampled. Kinetic parameters that reflect gait stability (weight acceptance peak force, weight acceptance rate, push-off peak force and push-off rate) were compared between the VR and non-VR environments. Subjects walked in the VR environment with increased magnitudes and rates of weight acceptance force and with increased rates of push-off force. Variability in weight acceptance rates and peak forces, and variability in push-off peak forces, were also increased in the VR environment. The gait deviations reflect a compensatory response to visual stimulation that occurs in the VR environment, suggesting that walking in a VR environment may induce gait instability in healthy subjects.
PMID: 17056258
ISSN: 0966-6362
CID: 5927512

Spatiotemporal gait deviations in a virtual reality environment

Hollman, John H; Brey, Robert H; Robb, Richard A; Bang, Tami J; Kaufman, Kenton R
Previous research suggests that postural sway in standing increases in virtual reality (VR) environments. This study was conducted to examine whether gait instability is prevalent when people walk in a VR environment. Ten healthy adults participated in the study. Subjects walked on a treadmill in a VR environment and a non-VR environment at each of three walking speeds: 0.9, 1.1, and 1.3 m/s. In the VR environment, an endless corridor with colored vertical stripes comprising the walls was projected onto a hemispherical screen placed in front of the treadmill. The speed of the moving corridor image was matched to the speed of the treadmill to create the illusion that subjects were walking through the endless corridor. Spatiotemporal data during gait were collected with an instrumented treadmill housing two piezoelectric force platforms. Gait parameters reflective of gait instability (stride length, step width, variability in stride velocity, and variability in step width) were compared between the VR and non-VR environments. Subjects walked in the VR environment with reduced stride lengths (p = 0.001), increased step widths (p = 0.001), and with increased variability in stride velocity (p < 0.001) and step width (p = 0.002). The gait deviations suggest that walking in a VR environment may induce gait instability in healthy subjects.
PMID: 16095905
ISSN: 0966-6362
CID: 5927502