Searched for: Department/Unit:Otolaryngology
CT-based assessment of acute stroke: CT, CT angiography, and xenon-enhanced CT cerebral blood flow
Kilpatrick, M M; Yonas, H; Goldstein, S; Kassam, A B; Gebel, J M Jr; Wechsler, L R; Jungreis, C A; Fukui, M B
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Only a small percentage of acute-stroke patients receive thrombolytic therapy because of time constraints and the risks associated with thrombolytic therapy. We sought to determine whether xenon-enhanced CT (XeCT) cerebral blood flow (CBF) and/or CT angiography (CTA) in conjunction with CT can distinguish subgroups of acute ischemic stroke victims and thereby better predict the subgroups most likely to benefit and not to benefit from thrombolytic therapy. METHODS: An analysis of 51 patients who had a CT, CTA, and stable XeCT CBF examination within 24 hours of stroke symptom onset was conducted. These initial radiographic studies and National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale score on admission were assessed to determine whether they could predict new infarction on follow-up CT or discharge disposition by use of the Fisher exact test to determine statistical significance. RESULTS: Patients with no infarction on initial CT and normal XeCT CBF had significantly fewer new infarctions and were discharged home more often than those with compromised CBF. The same held true for patients with an open internal carotid artery and middle cerebral artery by CTA and normal CT compared with those with an occluded internal carotid artery and/or middle cerebral artery by CTA. Either was superior to CT and the National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale in prediction of outcome. Both enable the selection of a group of patients not identifiable by CT alone that would do well without being exposed to the risks of thrombolytic therapy. This study included too few patients to statistically assess the role of combining CTA and XeCT CBF information. CONCLUSIONS: The combination of CT, CTA, and Xe/CT CBF does define potentially significant subgroups of patients. The utility of this classification is supported by the observation that CTA and XeCT CBF are superior to CT alone in predicting infarction on follow-up CT and clinical outcome. This information may be useful in selecting patients for acute-stroke treatment
PMID: 11692014
ISSN: 1524-4628
CID: 146376
Mathematical Studies of the Information in the Stimulus-Response Matrix
Sagi E; Wong W; Norwich KH
This paper considers the information transmitted in absolute judgments as encoded in a stimulus-response matrix (e.g., see Garner and Hake, 1951). When transmitted information is plotted against the number of stimulus categories in the matrix, one obtains a curve that increases monotonically toward a plateau, which is the maximum information transmittable per stimulus for the particular range of stimuli employed. We demonstrate that although the maximum information transmitted is an attribute of the stimulus continuum itself, the shape of the curve is an empirical property of the stimulus-response matrix, which is determined, in part, by maintaining a constant stimulus category width. Therefore, in principle, each curve of information transmitted vs number of stimulus categories can be determined by a single point: the rightmost point on the graph.
PMID: 11178924
ISSN: 0022-2496
CID: 147978
Update on renal disease for the dental practitioner
Kerr, A R
PMID: 11458240
ISSN: 1079-2104
CID: 152145
17O-decoupled (1)H spectroscopy and imaging with a surface coil: STEAM decoupling
Charagundla, S R; Duvvuri, U; Noyszewski, E A; Dandora, R; Stolpen, A H; Leigh, J S; Reddy, R
(17)O-decoupled (1)H spin-echo imaging has been reported as a means of indirect (17)O detection, with potential application to measurement of blood flow and metabolism. In its current form, (17)O decoupling requires large RF amplitudes and a 180 degrees refocusing pulse, complicating its application in volume and surface coils, respectively. To overcome this problem, we have developed an (17)O-decoupled proton stimulated echo sequence ("STEAM decoupling") to allow (17)O detection with a surface coil. A high B(1) amplitude is easily generated, allowing complete decoupling of (17)O and (1)H. Slice-selective, (17)O-decoupled (1)H imaging is readily performed and the sequence is easily adapted for localized spectroscopy. Intrinsic correction for variations in B(1) and further compensation for B(1) inhomogeneity are discussed.
PMID: 10698645
ISSN: 1090-7807
CID: 5487852
Endoscopic neck dissection in an animal model: comparison of nodal yield with open-neck dissection
Dulguerov, P; Vaezi, A E; Belenger, J; Wang, D; Kurt, A M; Allal, A S; Lehmann, W
OBJECTIVE:To evaluate the possibility, complications, and efficacy of endoscopic neck dissection (END) in a porcine model. DESIGN/METHODS:Experimental self-controlled study. SUBJECTS/METHODS:Minipigs. INTERVENTION/METHODS:Endoscopic neck dissection was performed using general anesthesia with techniques adapted from laparoscopic surgery. The tissue specimens removed were divided according to porcine equivalents of human neck groups. After the completion of END, open-neck dissection was performed using standard surgical techniques, and the remaining tissue within each neck group was retrieved. A pathologist evaluated each specimen without knowing its exact origin in terms of neck group or side and the type of surgical technique used. For each specimen, the number of retrieved lymph nodes and their anatomical integrity were analyzed. RESULTS:Ten neck dissections were performed in 8 minipigs without any major complications. The number of retrieved lymph nodes by END was 18.4 +/- 7.4 (mean +/- SD). Completed open-neck dissection retrieved an additional 3.3 +/- 1.8 lymph nodes. The efficacy rate of END was 88% +/- 10% (+/ -SD). The majority of retrieved lymph nodes were intact, with less than 5% of nodes exhibiting crushing artifacts. CONCLUSIONS:Endoscopic neck dissection in a porcine model seems to be free of major complications and able to retrieve the majority of neck lymph nodes. A larger number of animals and their survival need to be studied before human studies can begin.
PMID: 10722020
ISSN: 0886-4470
CID: 4108182
Recurrence of clival chordoma along the surgical pathway [Case Report]
Fischbein, N J; Kaplan, M J; Holliday, R A; Dillon, W P
Chordomas are locally aggressive malignant tumors of notochordal origin whose metastatic potential is increasingly recognized. Surgical pathway recurrence has been noted only rarely in the literature. We present three patients with clival chordomas whose sole or initial recurrence was along the pathway of prior surgical access. A characteristic mass found along the pathway of prior surgical access for resection of a chordoma should suggest recurrent chordoma.
PMID: 10730655
ISSN: 0195-6108
CID: 3777802
Development of the nervous system
Sanes, Dan Harvey; Reh, Thomas A; Harris, William A
San Diego, Calif. : Academic Press, 2000
Extent: xiv, 500 p. ; 27 cm
ISBN: 9780123003300
CID: 3050192
p53 and WAF1 polymorphisms in Jewish-Israeli women with epithelial ovarian cancer and its association with BRCA mutations
Yair, D; Ben Baruch, G; Chetrit, A; Friedman, T; Hirsh Yechezkel, G; Gotlieb, W H; Fishman, A; Beller, U; Bar-Am, A; Friedman, E
OBJECTIVE: To investigate whether polymorphic p53 and WAF1 alleles are associated with clinical, demographic and histopathological features and BRCA mutation in women with ovarian cancer. DESIGN: A cross-sectional study. POPULATION: Two hundred and twenty-one nonselected Israeli women with epithelial ovarian cancer. METHODS: DNA was analysed for known polymorphisms in intron 3 (a 16 nucleotide single repeat) and intron 6 (a G to A change at nucleotide 13,494) of the p53 gene, the S31R polymorphism in the WAF1 gene, and for three predominant Jewish mutations in the BRCA genes (185delAG and 5382insC in BRCA1, and 6174delT in BRCA2). MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE: The rate of polymorphic p53 and WAF1 alleles and their association with BRCA mutation, ethnic origin, age and stage at diagnosis, and family history of cancer. RESULTS: Of the tested women, 72 (32.6%) were either BRCA1 (n = 57) or BRCA2 (n = 15) mutation carriers. Sixty-eight of 213 (31.9%) were heterozygous for intron 3 polymorphism, 67/193 (34.7%) for intron 6 polymorphism, and 22/154 (14.3%) for S31R of the WAF1 gene. The p53 and WAF1 polymorphism rate did not differ between BRCA mutation carriers and noncarriers. No significant association between specific p53 or WAF1 genotypes, and clinical, histopathological or demographic variables was observed. CONCLUSION: In Jewish-Israeli women with sporadic and familial ovarian cancer, p53 or WAF1 polymorphisms do not seem to affect the phenotype.
PMID: 10901555
ISSN: 1470-0328
CID: 2375372
Patients with double primary tumors in the breast and ovary- clinical characteristics and BRCA1-2 mutations status
Fishman, A; Dekel, E; Chetrit, A; Lerner-Geva, L; Bar-Am, A; Beck, D; Beller, U; Ben-Baruch, G; Piura, B; Friedman, E; Struewing, J P; Modan, B
OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to define the prevalence, clinical characteristics, and BRCA1-2 mutation carrier status of ovarian cancer (OvC) patients with a previous primary malignancy in the breast (PPMBr). METHODS: The study population comprised 1240 consecutive Jewish Israeli women with pathologically confirmed epithelial OvC diagnosed between March 1, 1994, and December 31, 1997. Demographic and clinical data were obtained from medical files and from a detailed questionnaire taken through a nationwide epidemiological case-control study on OvC. Blood samples and tumor tissues were collected for analysis of the three predominant germline BRCA1-2 Jewish founder mutations (185delAG, 5382insC, and 6174delT). RESULTS: Fifty nine (4.7%) patients with OvC had a PPMBr. The median age at diagnosis of OvC was 60 years. The mean interval between the two diagnoses was 104 months (range 0-363 months). In the majority of the patients (n = 53), the diagnosis of breast cancer (BrC) preceded the OvC by more than 1 year. The ovarian tumors were diagnosed in 47% of the cases following investigation of patients' symptoms. In 41%, diagnosis was made as a consequence of check-up exams performed during the routine follow-up of BrC survivors. Patients with PPMBr were more likely to present with FIGO ovarian stage III-IV, compared to women with solitary OvC (73% vs 60. 3%, P < 0.05), and less likely to have borderline tumors (3.4% vs 17. 9%, P = 0.007). Family history of OvC/BrC was recorded in 26% of this group of patients compared to 10.5% among patients with solitary OvC (P = 0.003). Patients with PPMBr had an exceptionally high prevalence of BRCA1-2 mutations (57%), irrespective of family history. CONCLUSIONS: Patients with PPMBr present with more advanced disease and invasive-type epithelial ovarian tumors when compared to cases associated with solitary OvC. The rate of BRCA1-2 mutations in Jewish women with OvC who had PPMBr is at least twice as high as in Jewish women with OvC as the solitary disease.
PMID: 11006035
ISSN: 0090-8258
CID: 2375352
The effect of hyperoxia on ocular and cerebral blood flow in glauocma patients and normal controls [Meeting Abstract]
Zarfati, D; Chung, HS; Kagemann, L; Biller, J; Nowacki, EA; Yung, R; Harris, A
ISI:000086246703031
ISSN: 0146-0404
CID: 2217862