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Stent-supported aneurysm coiling: a literature survey of treatment and follow-up

Shapiro, M; Becske, T; Sahlein, D; Babb, J; Nelson, P K
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Stent-supported aneurysm coiling has been utilized with increasing frequency over the past few years, particularly for addressing treatment of complex and wide-neck aneurysms. A sizable body of literature describing various experiences with stent-supported coiling now exists. The purpose of this research was to carry out a comprehensive literature survey of stent-supported aneurysm coiling. MATERIALS AND METHODS: A survey of papers reporting results with stent-assisted aneurysm coiling through January 2011 was conducted to identify the prevalence of stent-related and other complications, occlusion rates, and clinical and angiographic follow-up data. RESULTS: Thirty-nine articles with 1517 patients met inclusion criteria for initial analysis, follow-up analysis, or both. Overall, 9% of cases were confounded by a technical stent-related issue, including 4% failure of deployment. The overall procedure complication rate was 19%, with periprocedural mortality of 2.1%. Approximately 45% of aneurysms were completely occluded at first treatment session, increasing to 61% on follow-up. Approximately 3.5% in-stent stenosis and 0.6% stent occlusion were observed at angiographic follow-up. Delayed stroke or transient ischemic attack was reported in 3% of subjects. Within a subset of articles, the incidence of stent-related issues in the first 10 patients was significantly higher than in subsequent subjects, supporting the notion of a procedural "learning curve." CONCLUSIONS: In experienced hands, the morbidity of stent-supported coiling is somewhat higher compared with "traditional" coiling. As might be expected, execution of the procedure appears improved with experience. Complete occlusion rates remain somewhat low. More and longer term angiographic follow-up information is needed to understand delayed stent-related issues and to better define the durability of treatment.
PMID: 22033717
ISSN: 0195-6108
CID: 157668

Cerebral atrophy is associated with development of chronic subdural haematoma

Yang, Andrew Il; Balser, David S; Mikheev, Artem; Offen, Shani; Huang, Jason H; Babb, James; Rusinek, Henry; Samadani, Uzma
Objective: To test that cerebral atrophy is associated with increased risk for development of chronic subdural haematoma (cSDH), this study performed volumetric analysis of computed tomography (CT) brain scans from patients who were diagnosed with cSDH on subsequent CT scans and their age-matched controls. Methods: Volumetric analysis was performed on CT scans acquired a mean of 209 days prior to cSDH diagnosis in 19 patients. Cerebral atrophy present on these scans was then compared to 76 age-matched control patients randomly selected from cSDH-free subjects. Results: There was a higher degree of atrophy in cSDH patients (n = 19, 14.3% +/- 5.4%) than in age-matched control patients (n = 76, 11.9% +/- 5.5%; p = 0.044). Logistical regression demonstrated that atrophy was found to be a significant predictor of cSDH at all ages (OR = 1.11, 95% CI = [1.01, 1.23], p = 0.05). For younger subjects
PMCID:5189658
PMID: 22759238
ISSN: 0269-9052
CID: 179986

Objective non-angiographic endpoint of uterine artery embolization as defined by parametric uterine artery blood pressure differences [Meeting Abstract]

Charles, H; Song, C; Kovacs, S; Babb, J S; Gross, J; Aquino, T
Purpose: Various endpoints of embolization have been advocated by investigators during uterine artery embolization (UAE) for the treatment of symptomatic uterine fibroids. Described endpoints are based on angiographic appearance. Our intent is to objectively define a non-imaging endpoint of embolization in patients undergoing UAE. Materials and Methods: 55 consecutive patients with symptomatic uterine fibroids underwent UAE using an outer 5- and inner 3-Fr. catheters. Prior to and following embolization, systolic, diastolic, and mean intra-arterial blood pressures (BP) were measured within the ipsilateral internal iliac and the uterine (UA) arteries. For uniformity, the fluoroscopic endpoint was defined as the clearing of contrast within the main UA in or after 5 cardiac cycles. The mean+/-standard deviation of the within-subject percentage change in BPs from pre- to post-embolization were measured. p values, statistically significant at <=0.05, were assigned from a paired sampled t and Wilcoxon matched-pairs signed rank tests to assess whether the percentage change in BP was relevant. Results: Mean changes (pre- and post-embolization) in systolic, diastolic, and mean left UA BP measurements were: 17.74+/-17.87, 9.15+/-12.39, and 13.24+/-12.98, respectively. In the right UA, 29.76+/-24.05, 13.44+/-11.33, and 20.88+/-15.66. All assigned p values were <0.0001. Conclusion: In this study, parametric differences in uterine artery blood pressures before and after UAE were shown to correlate to an accepted angiographic endpoint. UA BP measurements can be used as an equivalent parametric non-imaging endpoint to UAE. A non-angiographic endpoint may lead to the reduction of radiation dosage to the patient and the interventional radiologist when performing UAE. (Table Presented)
EMBASE:70682027
ISSN: 1051-0443
CID: 2664502

TGFbeta1 Inhibition Increases the Radiosensitivity of Breast Cancer Cells In Vitro and Promotes Tumor Control by Radiation In Vivo

Bouquet, Fanny; Pal, Anupama; Pilones, Karsten A; Demaria, Sandra; Hann, Byron; Akhurst, Rosemary J; Babb, Jim S; Lonning, Scott M; Dewyngaert, J Keith; Formenti, Silvia C; Barcellos-Hoff, Mary Helen
PURPOSE: To determine whether inhibition of TGFbeta signaling prior to irradiation sensitizes human and murine cancer cells in vitro and in vivo. EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN: TGFbeta-mediated growth and Smad phosphorylation of MCF7, Hs578T, MDA-MB-231, and T47D human breast cancer cell lines were examined and correlated with clonogenic survival following graded radiation doses with and without pretreatment with LY364947, a small molecule inhibitor of the TGFbeta type I receptor kinase. The DNA damage response was assessed in irradiated MDA-MB-231 cells pretreated with LY364947 in vitro and LY2109761, a pharmacokinetically stable inhibitor of TGFbeta signaling, in vivo. The in vitro response of a syngeneic murine tumor, 4T1, was tested using a TGFbeta neutralizing antibody, 1D11, with single or fractionated radiation doses in vivo. RESULTS: Human breast cancer cell lines pretreated with TGFbeta small molecule inhibitor were radiosensitized, irrespective of sensitivity to TGFbeta growth inhibition. Consistent with increased clonogenic cell death, radiation-induced phosphorylation of H2AX and p53 was significantly reduced in MDA-MB-231 triple-negative breast cancer cells when pretreated in vitro or in vivo with a TGFbeta type I receptor kinase inhibitor. Moreover, TGFbeta neutralizing antibodies increased radiation sensitivity, blocked gammaH2AX foci formation, and significantly increased tumor growth delay in 4T1 murine mammary tumors in response to single and fractionated radiation exposures. CONCLUSION: These results show that TGFbeta inhibition prior to radiation attenuated DNA damage responses, increased clonogenic cell death, and promoted tumor growth delay, and thus may be an effective adjunct in cancer radiotherapy. Clin Cancer Res; 17(21); 6754-65. (c)2011 AACR
PMCID:3724539
PMID: 22028490
ISSN: 1078-0432
CID: 140531

Multivoxel Proton MR Spectroscopy Used to Distinguish Anterior Cingulate Metabolic Abnormalities in Patients with Schizophrenia

Hardy, Caitlin J; Tal, Assaf; Babb, James S; Perry, Nissa N; Messinger, Julie W; Antonius, Daniel; Malaspina, Dolores; Gonen, Oded
Purpose: To test the hypothesis that anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) subregions in patients with schizophrenia are metabolically different from those in healthy control subjects. Materials and Methods: This institutional review board-approved study was HIPAA compliant, and all participants provided written informed consent. Twenty-two patients with schizophrenia (13 male, nine female; 39.4 years +/- 10.6 [standard deviation]) and 11 age- and sex-matched control subjects (seven male, four female; 35.5 years +/- 10.7) underwent magnetic resonance (MR) imaging and three-dimensional 3-T voxel proton MR spectroscopy to measure absolute rostral and caudal ACC N-acetylaspartate (NAA), creatine (Cr), and choline (Cho) concentrations. Exact Mann-Whitney test was used to compare patient data with control data, paired-sample Wilcoxon signed rank test was used to compare subregions within groups, and receiver operating characteristic curve analysis was used to assess sensitivity and specificity in diagnosis of schizophrenia. Results: There were no significant metabolic differences between patients and control subjects or between ACC subregions in control subjects. In patients, rostral ACC NAA and Cr concentrations were significantly lower than those in caudal ACC (6.2 mM +/- 1.3 vs 7.1 mM +/- 1.3, P < .01; 5.7 mmol/L +/- 1.4 vs 6.3 mmol/L +/- 1.6, P < .01; respectively); however, this did not hold true for Cho concentrations (1.7 mmol/L +/- 0.5 vs 1.8 mmol/L +/- 0.5). For individual differences between caudal and rostral measurements, only NAA in patients was different from that in control subjects (0.9 mmol/L +/- 1.3 vs -0.1 mmol/L +/- 0.5, P < .01), enabling prediction of schizophrenia with 68% sensitivity and 91% specificity, for a difference of more than 0.4. Conclusion: Significant differences between caudal and rostral NAA concentration are found in ACC of patients with schizophrenia but not in ACC of healthy control subjects, indicating that neuronal density or integrity differences between ACC subregions may be characteristic of the disease. (c) RSNA, 2011
PMCID:3198217
PMID: 21900615
ISSN: 1527-1315
CID: 139474

Brain iron quantification in mild traumatic brain injury: a magnetic field correlation study

Raz, E; Jensen, J H; Ge, Y; Babb, J S; Miles, L; Reaume, J; Grossman, R I; Inglese, M
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Experimental studies have suggested a role for iron accumulation in the pathology of TBI. Magnetic field correlation MR imaging is sensitive to the presence of non-heme iron. The aims of this study are to 1) assess the presence, if any, and the extent of iron deposition in the deep gray matter and regional white matter of patients with mTBI by using MFC MR imaging; and 2) investigate the association of regional brain iron deposition with cognitive and behavioral performance of patients with mTBI. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We prospectively enrolled 28 patients with mTBI. Eighteen healthy subjects served as controls. The subjects were administered the Stroop color word test, the Verbal Fluency Task, and the Post-Concussion Symptoms Scale. The MR imaging protocol (on a 3T imager) consisted of conventional brain imaging and MFC sequences. After the calculation of parametric maps, MFC was measured by using a region of interest approach. MFC values across groups were compared by using analysis of covariance, and the relationship of MFC values and neuropsychological tests were evaluated by using Spearman correlations. RESULTS: Compared with controls, patients with mTBI demonstrated significant higher MFC values in the globus pallidus (P = .002) and in the thalamus (P = .036). In patients with mTBI, Stroop test scores were associated with the MFC value in frontal white matter (r = -0.38, P = .043). CONCLUSIONS: MFC values were significantly elevated in the thalamus and globus pallidus of patients with mTBI, suggesting increased accumulation of iron. This supports the hypothesis that deep gray matter is a site of injury in mTBI and suggests a possible role for iron accumulation in the pathophysiological events after mTBI
PMCID:3848044
PMID: 21885717
ISSN: 1936-959x
CID: 141487

Pelvic ultrasound immediately following MDCT in female patients with abdominal/pelvic pain: is it always necessary?

Yitta, Silaja; Mausner, Elizabeth V; Kim, Alice; Kim, Danny; Babb, James S; Hecht, Elizabeth M; Bennett, Genevieve L
To determine the added value of reimaging the female pelvis with ultrasound (US) immediately following multidetector CT (MDCT) in the emergent setting. CT and US exams of 70 patients who underwent MDCT for evaluation of abdominal/pelvic pain followed by pelvic ultrasound within 48 h were retrospectively reviewed by three readers. Initially, only the CT images were reviewed followed by evaluation of CT images in conjunction with US images. Diagnostic confidence was recorded for each reading and an exact Wilcoxon signed rank test was performed to compare the two. Changes in diagnosis based on combined CT and US readings versus CT readings alone were identified. Confidence intervals (95%) were derived for the percentage of times US reimaging can be expected to lead to a change in diagnosis relative to the diagnosis based on CT interpretation alone. Ultrasound changed the diagnosis for the ovaries/adnexa 8.1% of the time (three reader average); the majority being cases of a suspected CT abnormality found to be normal on US. Ultrasound changed the diagnosis for the uterus 11.9% of the time (three reader average); the majority related to the endometrial canal. The 95% confidence intervals for the ovaries/adnexa and uterus were 5-12.5% and 8-17%, respectively. Ten cases of a normal CT were followed by a normal US with 100% agreement across all three readers. Experienced readers correctly diagnosed ruptured ovarian cysts and tubo-ovarian abscesses (TOA) based on CT alone with 100% agreement. US reimaging after MDCT of the abdomen and pelvis is not helpful: (1) following a normal CT of the pelvic organs or (2) when CT findings are diagnostic and/or characteristic of certain entities such as ruptured cysts and TOA. Reimaging with ultrasound is warranted for (1) less-experienced readers to improve diagnostic confidence or when CT findings are not definitive, (2) further evaluation of suspected endometrial abnormalities. A distinction should be made between the need for immediate vs. follow-up imaging with US after CT
PMID: 21638034
ISSN: 1438-1435
CID: 137438

Free-Breathing Radial 3D Fat-Suppressed T1-Weighted Gradient Echo Sequence: A Viable Alternative for Contrast-Enhanced Liver Imaging in Patients Unable to Suspend Respiration

Chandarana H; Block TK; Rosenkrantz AB; Lim RP; Kim D; Mossa DJ; Babb JS; Kiefer B; Lee VS
OBJECTIVE:: To compare free-breathing radially sampled 3D fat suppressed T1-weighted gradient-echo acquisitions (radial volumetric interpolated breath-hold examination [VIBE]) with breath-hold (BH) and free-breathing conventional (rectilinearly sampled k-space) VIBE acquisitions for postcontrast imaging of the liver. MATERIALS AND METHODS:: Eighteen consecutive patients referred for clinically indicated liver magnetic resonance imaging were imaged at 3 T. Three minutes after a single dose of gadolinium contrast injection, free-breathing radial VIBE, BH VIBE, and free-breathing VIBE with 4 averages were acquired in random order with matching sequence parameters. Radial VIBE was acquired with the 'stack-of-stars' scheme, which uses conventional sampling in the slice direction and radial sampling in-plane.All image data sets were evaluated independently by 3 radiologists blinded to patient and sequence information. Each reader scored the following parameters: overall image quality, respiratory motion artifact, pulsation artifact, liver edge sharpness, and hepatic vessel clarity using a 5-point scale, with the highest score indicating the most optimum examination. Mixed model analysis of variance was used to compare sequences in terms of each measure of image quality. RESULTS:: When scores were averaged over readers, there was no statistically significant difference between radial VIBE and BH VIBE regarding overall image quality (P = 0.1015), respiratory motion artifact (P = 1.0), and liver edge sharpness (P = 0.2955). Radial VIBE demonstrated significantly lower pulsation artifact (P < 0.0001), but had lower hepatic vessel clarity (P = 0.0176), when compared with BH VIBE. Radial VIBE had significantly higher image quality scores for all parameters when compared with free-breathing VIBE (P < 0.0001). Acquisition time for BH VIBE was 14 seconds and that of free-breathing radial VIBE and conventional VIBE with multiple averages was 56 seconds each. CONCLUSION:: Radial VIBE can be performed during free breathing for contrast-enhanced imaging of the liver with comparable image quality to BH VIBE. However, further work is necessary to shorten the acquisition time to perform dynamic imaging
PMID: 21577119
ISSN: 1536-0210
CID: 135367

Development of the jugular bulb: a radiologic study

Friedmann, David R; Eubig, Jan; McGill, Megan; Babb, James S; Pramanik, Bidyut K; Lalwani, Anil K
OBJECTIVE: : Jugular bulb (JB) abnormalities such as JB diverticulum and high-riding JBs of the temporal bone can erode into the inner ear and present with hearing loss, vestibular disturbance, and pulsatile tinnitus. Their cause and potential to progress remain to be studied. This comprehensive radiologic study investigates the postnatal development of the venous system from transverse sinus to internal jugular vein (IJV). SETTING: : Academic medical center. PATIENTS, INTERVENTION, MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE:: Measurements of the transverse and sigmoid sinus, the JB, IJV, and carotid artery were made from computed tomographic scans of the neck with intravenous contrast in infants (n = 5), children (n = 13), adults (n = 35), and the elderly (n = 15). RESULTS: : Jugular bulbs were not detected in patients younger than 2 years, enlarged in adulthood, and remained stable in the elderly. The venous system was larger in men than in women. From transverse sinus to IJV, the greatest variation in size was just proximal and distal to the JB with greater symmetry observed as blood returned to the heart. Right-sided venous dominance was most common occurring in 70% to 80% of cases. CONCLUSION: : The JB is a dynamic structure that forms after 2 years, and its size stabilizes in adulthood. The determinants in its exact position and size are multifactorial and may be related to blood flow. Improved understanding of this structure's development may help to better understand the cause of the high-riding JB and JB diverticulum, both of which may cause clinical symptoms
PMID: 21921860
ISSN: 1537-4505
CID: 137845

Bisphosphonate-related complete atypical subtrochanteric femoral fractures: diagnostic utility of radiography

Rosenberg, Zehava Sadka; La Rocca Vieira, Renata; Chan, Sarah S; Babb, James; Akyol, Yakup; Rybak, Leon D; Moore, Sandra; Bencardino, Jenny T; Peck, Valerie; Tejwani, Nirmal C; Egol, Kenneth A
OBJECTIVE: The objective of our study was to evaluate the diagnostic utility of conventional radiography for diagnosing bisphosphonate-related atypical subtrochanteric femoral fractures. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Retrospective interpretation of 38 radiographs of complete subtrochanteric and diaphyseal femoral fractures in two patient groups-one group being treated with bisphosphonates (19 fractures in 17 patients) and a second group not being treated with bisphosphonates (19 fractures in 19 patients)-was performed by three radiologists. The readers assessed four imaging criteria: focal lateral cortical thickening, transverse fracture, medial femoral spike, and fracture comminution. The odds ratios and the sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy of each imaging criterion as a predictor of bisphosphonate-related fractures were calculated. Similarly, the interobserver agreement and the sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy of diagnosing bisphosphonate-related fractures (i.e., atypical femoral fractures) were determined for the three readers. RESULTS: Among the candidate predictors of bisphosphonate-related fractures, focal lateral cortical thickening and transverse fracture had the highest odds ratios (76.4 and 10.1, respectively). Medial spike and comminution had odd ratios of 3.8 and 0.63, respectively. Focal lateral cortical thickening and transverse fracture were also the most accurate factors for detecting bisphosphonate-related fractures for all readers. The sensitivity, specificity, and overall accuracy for diagnosing bisphosphonate-related fractures were 94.7%, 100%, and 97.4% for reader 1; 94.7%, 68.4%, and 81.6% for reader 2; and 89.5%, 89.5%, and 89.5% for reader 3, respectively. The interobserver agreement was substantial (kappa > 0.61). CONCLUSION: Radiographs are reliable for distinguishing between complete femoral fractures related to bisphosphonate use and those not related to bisphosphonate use. Focal lateral cortical thickening and transverse fracture are the most dependable signs, showing high odds ratios and the highest accuracy for diagnosing these fractures
PMID: 21940585
ISSN: 1546-3141
CID: 137889