Try a new search

Format these results:

Searched for:

person:lotane01

in-biosketch:true

Total Results:

31


Preliminary Findings Associate Hippocampal 1H-MR Spectroscopic Metabolite Concentrations with Psychotic and Manic Symptoms in Patients with Schizophrenia

Malaspina, D; Lotan, E; Rusinek, H; Perez, S A; Walsh-Messinger, J; Kranz, T M; Gonen, O
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE/OBJECTIVE:Previous hippocampal proton MR spectroscopic imaging distinguished patients with schizophrenia from controls by elevated Cr levels and significantly more variable NAA and Cho concentrations. This goal of this study was to ascertain whether this metabolic variability is associated with clinical features of the syndrome, possibly reflecting heterogeneous hippocampal pathologies and perhaps variability in its "positive" (psychotic) and "negative" (social and emotional deficits) symptoms. MATERIALS AND METHODS/METHODS:, we examined the association of NAA and Cho levels with research diagnostic interviews and clinical symptom ratings of the patients. Metabolite concentrations were previously obtained with 3D proton MR spectroscopic imaging at 3T, a technique that facilitates complete coverage of this small, irregularly shaped, bilateral, temporal lobe structure. RESULTS: ≥  .055). CONCLUSIONS:These preliminary findings suggest that NAA and Cho variations reflect different pathophysiologic processes, consistent with microgliosis/astrogliosis and/or lower vitality (reduced NAA) and demyelination (elevated Cho). In particular, the active state-related symptoms, including psychosis and mania, were associated with demyelination. Consequently, their deviations from the means of healthy controls may be a marker that may benefit precision medicine in selection and monitoring of schizophrenia treatment.
PMID: 33184071
ISSN: 1936-959x
CID: 4673542

Emerging Artificial Intelligence Imaging Applications for Stroke Interventions

Lotan, E
PMID: 33384290
ISSN: 1936-959x
CID: 4732172

Medical Imaging and Privacy in the Era of Artificial Intelligence: Myth, Fallacy, and the Future

Lotan, E; Tschider, C; Sodickson, D K; Caplan, A; Bruno, M; Zhang, B; Lui, Yvonne W
PMID: 32360449
ISSN: 1558-349x
CID: 4439052

Vigabatrin Toxicity in a Patient with Infantile Spasms Treated with Concomitant Hormonal Therapy

Lotan, Eyal; Bluvstein, Judith; Zan, Elcin
PMID: 33236576
ISSN: 1565-1088
CID: 4680722

Vigabatrin Toxicity in a Patient with Infantile Spasms Treated with Concomitant Hormonal Therapy [Case Report]

Lotan, Eyal; Bluvstein, Judith; Zan, Elcin
PMID: 32692506
ISSN: 1565-1088
CID: 4693232

Brain 18F-FDG-PET: Utility in the Diagnosis of Dementia and Epilepsy

Lotan, Eyal; Friedman, Kent P; Davidson, Tima; Shepherd, Timothy M
BACKGROUND:The authors reviewed the two most common current uses of brain 18F-labeled fluoro-2-deoxyglucose positron emission tomography (FDG-PET) at a large academic medical center. For epilepsy patients considering surgical management, FDG-PET can help localize epileptogenic lesions, discriminate between multiple or discordant EEG or MRI findings, and predict prognosis for post-surgical seizure control. In elderly patients with cognitive impairment, FDG-PET often demonstrates lobar-specific patterns of hypometabolism that suggest particular underlying neurodegenerative pathologies, such as Alzheimer's disease. FDG-PET of the brain can be a key diagnostic modality and contribute to improved patient care.
PMID: 32147984
ISSN: 1565-1088
CID: 4348652

Selective atrophy of the connected deepest cortical layers following small subcortical infarct

Lotan, Eyal; Tavor, Ido; Barazany, Daniel; Ben-Amitay, Shani; Hoffmann, Chen; Tsarfaty, Galia; Assaf, Yaniv; Tanne, David
OBJECTIVE:To explore whether in patients with chronic small subcortical infarct the cortical layers of the connected cortex are differentially affected and whether these differences correlate with clinical symptomatology. METHODS:Twenty patients with a history of chronic small subcortical infarct affecting the corticospinal tracts and 15 healthy controls were included. Connected primary motor cortex was identified with tractography starting from infarct. T1-component probability maps were calculated from T1 relaxation 3T MRI, dividing the cortex into 5 laminar gaussian classes. RESULTS:< 0.001). No differences were found in the laminar thickness pattern of the bilateral primary motor cortices or in the microstructural integrity of the bilateral corticospinal tracts in the healthy controls. CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:Our results support the concept of secondary neurodegeneration of connected primary motor cortex after a small subcortical infarct affecting the corticospinal tract, with observations that the main cortical thinning occurs in the deepest cortex and that the clinical symptomatology is correlated with this cortical atrophy pattern. Our findings may contribute to a better understanding of structural reorganization and functional outcomes after stroke.
PMID: 30635479
ISSN: 1526-632x
CID: 3681932

State of the Art: Machine Learning Applications in Glioma Imaging

Lotan, Eyal; Jain, Rajan; Razavian, Narges; Fatterpekar, Girish M; Lui, Yvonne W
OBJECTIVE:Machine learning has recently gained considerable attention because of promising results for a wide range of radiology applications. Here we review recent work using machine learning in brain tumor imaging, specifically segmentation and MRI radiomics of gliomas. CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:We discuss available resources, state-of-the-art segmentation methods, and machine learning radiomics for glioma. We highlight the challenges of these techniques as well as the future potential in clinical diagnostics, prognostics, and decision making.
PMID: 30332296
ISSN: 1546-3141
CID: 3368562

Incorporation of relative cerebral blood flow into CT perfusion maps reduces false 'at risk' penumbra

Peretz, Shlomi; Orion, David; Last, David; Mardor, Yael; Kimmel, Yotam; Yehezkely, Shelly; Lotan, Eyal; Itsekson-Hayosh, Ze'ev; Koton, Sylvia; Guez, David; Tanne, David
PURPOSE/OBJECTIVE:The region defined as 'at risk' penumbra by current CT perfusion (CTP) maps is largely overestimated. We aimed to quantitate the portion of true 'at risk' tissue within CTP penumbra and to determine the parameter and threshold that would optimally distinguish it from false 'at risk' tissue, that is, benign oligaemia. METHODS:Among acute stroke patients evaluated by multimodal CT (NCCT/CTA/CTP) we identified those that had not undergone endovascular/thrombolytic treatment and had follow-up NCCT. Maps of absolute and relative CBF, CBV, MTT, TTP and Tmax as well as summary maps depicting infarcted and penumbral regions were generated using the Intellispace Portal (Philips Healthcare, Best, Netherlands). Follow-up CT was automatically co-registered to the CTP scan and the final infarct region was manually outlined. Perfusion parameters were systematically analysed - the parameter that resulted in the highest true-negative-rate (ie, proportion of benign oligaemia correctly identified) at a fixed, clinically relevant false-negative-rate (ie, proportion of 'missed' infarct) of 15%, was chosen as optimal. It was then re-applied to the CTP data to produce corrected perfusion maps. RESULTS:Forty seven acute stroke patients met selection criteria. Average portion of infarcted tissue within CTP penumbra was 15%±2.2%. Relative CBF at a threshold of 0.65 yielded the highest average true-negative-rate (48%), enabling reduction of the false 'at risk' penumbral region by ~half. CONCLUSIONS:Applying a relative CBF threshold on relative MTT-based CTP maps can significantly reduce false 'at risk' penumbra. This step may help to avoid unnecessary endovascular interventions.
PMID: 28965105
ISSN: 1759-8486
CID: 3067022

Prevalence of Cerebral Microhemorrhage following Chronic Blast-Related Mild Traumatic Brain Injury in Military Service Members Using Susceptibility-Weighted MRI

Lotan, E; Morley, C; Newman, J; Qian, M; Abu-Amara, D; Marmar, C; Lui, Y W
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE/OBJECTIVE:Cerebral microhemorrhages are a known marker of mild traumatic brain injury. Blast-related mild traumatic brain injury relates to a propagating pressure wave, and there is evidence that the mechanism of injury in blast-related mild traumatic brain injury may be different from that in blunt head trauma. Two recent reports in mixed cohorts of blunt and blast-related traumatic brain injury in military personnel suggest that the prevalence of cerebral microhemorrhages is lower than in civilian head injury. In this study, we aimed to characterize the prevalence of cerebral microhemorrhages in military service members specifically with chronic blast-related mild traumatic brain injury. MATERIALS AND METHODS/METHODS:Participants were prospectively recruited and underwent 3T MR imaging. Susceptibility-weighted images were assessed by 2 neuroradiologists independently for the presence of cerebral microhemorrhages. RESULTS:Our cohort included 146 veterans (132 men) who experienced remote blast-related mild traumatic brain injury (mean, 9.4 years; median, 9 years after injury). Twenty-one (14.4%) reported loss of consciousness for <30 minutes. Seventy-seven subjects (52.7%) had 1 episode of blast-related mild traumatic brain injury; 41 (28.1%) had 2 episodes; and 28 (19.2%) had >2 episodes. No cerebral microhemorrhages were identified in any subject, as opposed to the frequency of SWI-detectable cerebral microhemorrhages following blunt-related mild traumatic brain injury in the civilian population, which has been reported to be as high as 28% in the acute and subacute stages. CONCLUSIONS:Our results may reflect differences in pathophysiology and the mechanism of injury between blast- and blunt-related mild traumatic brain injury. Additionally, the chronicity of injury may play a role in the detection of cerebral microhemorrhages.
PMID: 29794235
ISSN: 1936-959x
CID: 3192142