11 results on '"Shiroishi, Mark"'
Search Results
2. Growth hormone secreting pituitary adenomas show distinct extrasellar extension patterns compared to nonfunctional pituitary adenomas.
- Author
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Pangal, Dhiraj J., Wishart, Danielle, Shiroishi, Mark S., Ruzevick, Jacob, Carmichael, John D., and Zada, Gabriel
- Abstract
Purpose: Patterns of extension of pituitary adenomas (PA) may vary according to PA subtype. Understanding extrasellar extension patterns in growth hormone PAs (GHPA) vis-a-vis nonfunctional PAs (NFPAs) may provide insights into the biology of GHPA and future treatment avenues. Methods: Preoperative MR imaging (MRI) in 179 consecutive patients treated surgically for NFPA (n = 139) and GHPA (n = 40) were analyzed to determine patterns of extrasellar growth. Extension was divided into two principal directions: cranio-caudal (measured by infrasellar/suprasellar extension), and lateral cavernous sinus invasion (CSI) determined by Knosp grading score of 3–4. Suprasellar extension was defined as tumor extension superior to the tuberculum sellae- dorsum sellae line, and inferior extension as invasion through the sellar floor into the sphenoid sinus or clivus. Categorical analysis was performed using Fisher's exact test. Results: GHPAs were overall more likely to remain purely intrasellar compared to NFPA (50% vs 26%, p < 0.001). GHPAs, however, were 7 times more likely to exhibit isolated infrasellar extension compared to NFPA (20% vs 2.8%, p = 0.001). Conversely, NFPAs were twice as likely to exhibit isolated suprasellar extension compared to GHPA (60% vs 28%, p < 0.001), as well as combined suprasellar/infrasellar extension (25% vs 3%, p = 0.011). There were no overall differences in CSI between the two subgroups. Discussion: GHPA and NFPA demonstrate distinct extrasellar extension patterns on MRI. GHPAs show proclivity for inferior extension with bony invasion, whereas NFPAs are more likely to exhibit suprasellar extension through the diaphragmatic aperture. These distinctions may have implications into the biology and future treatment of PAs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Ultra-high field magnetic resonance imaging for localization of corticotropin-secreting pituitary adenomas.
- Author
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Patel, Vishal, Liu, Chia-Shang J., Shiroishi, Mark S., Hurth, Kyle, Carmichael, John D., Zada, Gabriel, and Toga, Arthur W.
- Subjects
CUSHING'S syndrome diagnosis ,CUSHING'S syndrome ,DIAGNOSTIC imaging ,MAGNETIC fields ,MAGNETIC resonance imaging - Abstract
Cushing's disease manifests as symptoms of glucocorticoid excess secondary to the increased secretion of corticotropin by a corticotroph adenoma in the pituitary gland. Unfortunately, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) performed at conventional clinical field strengths of 1.5 or 3 Tesla has limited sensitivity for the detection of these pituitary tumors, and radiologic uncertainty often necessitates more invasive workup to confirm diagnosis and guide resection. It has been postulated that higher static magnetic field strengths may increase the adenoma detection rate and thus the utility of MRI for this clinical application. In this report, we describe our initial experience using ultra-high field 7 Tesla (7 T) MRI in patients with suspected Cushing's disease and negative or equivocal imaging at conventional field strengths. We performed contrast-enhanced 7 T pituitary MRI in 10 patients with up to three different T1-weighted sequences and correlated the imaging abnormalities identified with results of histologic evaluation in patients who subsequently underwent resection. We found that 7 T MRI enabled the identification of previously undetected areas of focal pituitary hypoenhancement in 9 patients (90%), of which 7 corresponded histologically to corticotroph adenomas. These early findings suggest an important adjunctive role for ultra-high field MR imaging in the noninvasive clinical workup of suspected Cushing's disease. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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4. Mental Illness Is Not Associated with Adherence to Colorectal Cancer Screening: Results from the California Health Interview Survey.
- Author
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Siantz, Elizabeth, Wu, Brian, Shiroishi, Mark, Vora, Hita, and Idos, Gregory
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MENTAL illness ,COLON cancer diagnosis ,CANCER-related mortality ,PREVENTIVE health services ,COLONOSCOPY ,PSYCHIATRIC epidemiology ,RECTUM tumors ,COLON tumors ,FECAL occult blood tests ,HEALTH services accessibility ,HEALTH status indicators ,MEDICAL protocols ,MULTIVARIATE analysis ,PATIENT compliance ,RESEARCH funding ,SEX distribution ,SIGMOIDOSCOPY ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,CROSS-sectional method ,EARLY detection of cancer ,DIAGNOSIS - Abstract
Background: Colorectal cancer is the second leading cause of cancer-specific death in the USA. Evidence suggests people with mental illness are less likely to receive preventive health services, including cancer screening. We hypothesized that mental illness is a risk factor for non-adherence to colorectal cancer-screening guidelines.Methods: We analyzed results of the 2007 California Health Interview Survey to test whether mental illness is a risk factor for non-adherence to colorectal cancer-screening recommendations among individuals age 50 or older (N = 15,535). This cross-sectional dataset is representative of California. Screening was defined as either fecal occult blood testing during the preceding year, sigmoidoscopy, or colonoscopy during the preceding 5 years. Mental illness was identified using the Kessler K6 screening tool. Associations were evaluated using weighted multivariate logistic regressions.Results: Mental illness was not associated with colorectal cancer-screening adherence (OR 0.89; 95% CI 0.63-1.25). Risk factors for non-adherence included being female (OR 1.25; 95% CI 1.09-1.44), delaying accessing health care during the previous year (OR 1.89; 95% CI 1.56-2.29).Conclusion: Unlike previous studies, this study did not find a relationship between mental illness and colorectal cancer-screening adherence. This could be due to differences in study populations. State-specific healthcare policies involving care coordination for individuals with mental illness could also influence colorectal cancer-screening adherence in California. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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5. Combined MRI and MRS improves pre-therapeutic diagnoses of pediatric brain tumors over MRI alone.
- Author
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Shiroishi, Mark, Panigrahy, Ashok, Moore, Kevin, Nelson, Marvin, Gilles, Floyd, Gonzalez-Gomez, Ignacio, and Blüml, Stefan
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BRAIN tumors , *MAGNETIC resonance imaging , *NUCLEAR magnetic resonance spectroscopy , *PROBABILITY theory , *RESEARCH , *RETROSPECTIVE studies , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,BRAIN tumor diagnosis ,DIAGNOSIS of tumors in children ,DIAGNOSIS of brain abnormalities - Abstract
Introduction: The specific goal of this study was to determine whether the inclusion of MRS had a measureable and positive impact on the accuracy of pre-surgical MR examinations of untreated pediatric brain tumors over that of MRI alone in clinical practice. Methods: Final imaging reports of 120 pediatric patients with newly detected brain tumors who underwent combined MRI/MRS examinations were retrospectively reviewed. Final pathology was available in all cases. Group A comprised 60 subjects studied between June 2001 and January 2005, when MRS was considered exploratory and radiologists utilized only conventional MRI to arrive at a diagnosis. For group B, comprising 60 subjects studied between January 2005 and March 2008, the radiologists utilized information from both MRI and MRS. Furthermore, radiologists revisited group A (blind review, time lapse >4 years) to determine whether the additional information from MRS would have altered their interpretation. Results: Sixty-three percent of patients in group A were diagnosed correctly, whereas in 10 % the report was partially correct with the final tumor type mentioned (but not mentioned as most likely tumor), while in 27 % of cases the reports were wrong. For group B, the diagnoses were correct in 87 %, partially correct in 5 %, and incorrect in 8 % of the cases, which is a significant improvement ( p < 0.005). Re-review of combined MRI and MRS of group A resulted 87 % correct, 7 % partially correct, and 7 % incorrect diagnoses, which is a significant improvement over the original diagnoses ( p < 0.05). Conclusion: Adding MRS to conventional MRI significantly improved diagnostic accuracy in preoperative pediatric patients with untreated brain tumors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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6. MR Perfusion Imaging: ASL, T2*-Weighted DSC, and T1-Weighted DCE Methods.
- Author
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Shiroishi, Mark S., Jones, Jesse G. A., Muradyan, Naira, Lacerda, Saulo, Chen, Bihong T., Go, John L., and Law, Meng
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- 2014
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7. Clinical Applications of Dynamic Contrast-Enhanced (DCE) Permeability Imaging.
- Author
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Lacerda, Saulo, Shiroishi, Mark S., and Law, Meng
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- 2012
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8. Physical Principles of MR Perfusion and Permeability Imaging: Gadolinium Bolus Technique.
- Author
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Shiroishi, Mark S., Lacerda, Saulo, Tang, Xiaoli, Muradyan, Naira, Roberts, Timothy P. L., and Law, Meng
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- 2012
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9. Image Coregistration: Quantitative Processing Framework for the Assessment of Brain Lesions.
- Author
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Huhdanpaa, Hannu, Hwang, Darryl, Gasparian, Gregory, Booker, Michael, Cen, Yong, Lerner, Alexander, Boyko, Orest, Go, John, Kim, Paul, Rajamohan, Anandh, Law, Meng, and Shiroishi, Mark
- Subjects
DIAGNOSIS of brain diseases ,ALGORITHMS ,MAGNETIC resonance imaging ,DICOM (Computer network protocol) ,DATA analysis software - Abstract
The quantitative, multiparametric assessment of brain lesions requires coregistering different parameters derived from MRI sequences. This will be followed by analysis of the voxel values of the ROI within the sequences and calculated parametric maps, and deriving multiparametric models to classify imaging data. There is a need for an intuitive, automated quantitative processing framework that is generalized and adaptable to different clinical and research questions. As such flexible frameworks have not been previously described, we proceeded to construct a quantitative post-processing framework with commonly available software components. Matlab was chosen as the programming/integration environment, and SPM was chosen as the coregistration component. Matlab routines were created to extract and concatenate the coregistration transforms, take the coregistered MRI sequences as inputs to the process, allow specification of the ROI, and store the voxel values to the database for statistical analysis. The functionality of the framework was validated using brain tumor MRI cases. The implementation of this quantitative post-processing framework enables intuitive creation of multiple parameters for each voxel, facilitating near real-time in-depth voxel-wise analysis. Our initial empirical evaluation of the framework is an increased usage of analysis requiring post-processing and increased number of simultaneous research activities by clinicians and researchers with non-technical backgrounds. We show that common software components can be utilized to implement an intuitive real-time quantitative post-processing framework, resulting in improved scalability and increased adoption of post-processing needed to answer important diagnostic questions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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10. Contralateral hemimicrencephaly in neonatal hemimegalencephaly.
- Author
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Shiroishi, Mark, Jackson, Hollie, Nelson, Marvin, Bluml, Stefan, and Panigrahy, Ashok
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CEREBRAL hemispheres , *MAGNETIC resonance imaging , *CEREBRAL circulation , *BLOOD volume , *PATIENTS , *DIFFUSION tensor imaging , *BRAIN diseases , *DISEASES - Abstract
Identification of abnormalities in the contralateral hemisphere in patients with hemimegalencephaly is critical in their management. In this report, we present a 5-day-old neonate with hemimegalencephaly who demonstrated an enlarged ipsilateral cerebral hemisphere and diffuse volume loss in the contralateral hemisphere on conventional MR imaging sequences. The ipsilateral frontal white matter demonstrated relatively increased NAA, fractional anistropy, and cerebral blood volume values compared to published normative data. In addition, the white matter of the contralateral hemisphere demonstrated elevated lactate and increased mean diffusivity compared to published normative data, supporting the abnormal conventional MR findings. Advanced MR neuroimaging techniques may help further confirm and characterize abnormalities in the smaller contralateral hemisphere in neonatal hemimegalencephaly. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
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11. Lymphomatosis cerebri: a rare variant of primary central nervous system lymphoma and MR imaging features.
- Author
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Yu H, Gao B, Liu J, Yu YC, Shiroishi MS, Huang MM, Yang WX, and Guan ZZ
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- Adult, Brain pathology, Central Nervous System Neoplasms pathology, Female, Humans, Lymphoma pathology, Male, Middle Aged, Retrospective Studies, Central Nervous System Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Lymphoma diagnostic imaging, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods
- Abstract
Background: Lymphomatosis cerebri (LC) is a rare variant of primary central nervous system lymphoma (PCNSL), characterized by diffuse infiltration without the formation of a discrete mass. The diagnosis of LC is a challenge because the imaging findings are atypical for lymphoma. The purpose of present study is to investigate MRI characteristics and clinical features of LC and potentially facilitate an early and accurate diagnosis of this often-missed disease., Methods: Seven patients (average 44 years, 19-58 years) with LC proved basing on MRI and histology were retrospectively reviewed the clinical data and cerebral MR imaging findings., Results: The common presenting symptoms were cognitive decline, behavioral disturbance, gait disturbance. All patients had both deep and lobar lesion distribution, and two of them had infratentorial involvement. Lack of contrast enhancement and subtle patchy enhanced pattern were observed in two and three patients, respectively. The remaining two patients presented multiple patchy enhancement. Most of the lesions were slightly hyperintense to normal brain on DWI as well as hyperintense on ADC maps. Three patients presented a pattern of marked decrease of NAA/Cr, increase of Cho/Cr, and two of the three cases showed increased Lip/Cr and Lac/Cr on MRS., Conclusions: We conclude that diffuse bilateral lesions especially in deep and lobar region including white and gray matter, without enhancement or with patchy enhancement, marked decrease of NAA/Cr and increase of Cho/Cr, and increased Lip/Cr and Lac/Cr are suggestive of LC. Prompt recognition of these imaging patterns may lead to early diagnosis of LC and brain biopsy with improved prognosis.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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