10 results on '"Ya-Ching Hsu"'
Search Results
2. Follicular Lymphoma in Bilateral Submandibular Glands and Thyroid Gland
- Author
-
Ya-Ching Hsu, Yi-Tsen Lin, Da-Wei Yeh, and Cheng-Ping Wang
- Subjects
follicular lymphoma ,salivary gland ,submandibular gland ,thyroid gland ,ultrasound ,Medical technology ,R855-855.5 - Abstract
Ultrasound is a great tool to evaluate lumps in the neck region; whether focusing on the single image, or seeing the whole picture of different parts, all information and characters of the image allow us to conclude the possible cause. Ultrasound-guided procedures, such as fine needle aspiration biopsy or core needle biopsy, help to conform the diagnosis. We present a 42-year-old man with right submandibular mass. A right submandibular tumor was found by ultrasound examination; in addition, nonpalpable lesions in the left submandibular gland and thyroid gland were found at the same time. Similar cytology reports suggested similar origins of these tumors. The final diagnosis of the right submandibular gland after excisional biopsy was follicular lymphoma. Information from the image is sometimes not enough to make a diagnosis, therefore invasive procedures like fine needle aspiration are essential. If the cytology report is beyond expectation, further management is required.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Decompression for thyroid eye disease: An evolving trend of multidisciplinary approach
- Author
-
Chih-Feng Lin, Yi-Tsen Lin, Ya-Ching Hsu, and Te-Huei Yeh
- Subjects
Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Tongue base hamartoma in a child
- Author
-
Ya-ching Hsu and Wei-Chung Hsu
- Subjects
Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Direct Injection LC–MS-MS Analysis of Opiates, Methamphetamine, Buprenorphine, Methadone and Their Metabolites in Oral Fluid from Substitution Therapy Patients
- Author
-
Hsiu-Chuan Liu, Dong-Liang Lin, Tai-Jui Chen, Ray H. Liu, Ya-Ching Hsu, Mei-Han Huang, and Hsi-Tzu Lee
- Subjects
Narcotics ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Taiwan ,Pharmacology ,Toxicology ,Analytical Chemistry ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Tandem Mass Spectrometry ,Opiate Substitution Treatment ,medicine ,Humans ,Environmental Chemistry ,Sample preparation ,Norbuprenorphine ,Saliva ,Chromatography, Reverse-Phase ,Chemical Health and Safety ,Opiate Alkaloids ,Codeine ,Substance Abuse Detection ,chemistry ,Morphine ,Central Nervous System Stimulants ,Opiate ,Chromatography, Liquid ,medicine.drug ,Methadone ,Buprenorphine - Abstract
A rapid and sensitive liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS-MS) method was developed, validated and applied to simultaneous analysis of oral fluid samples for the following 10 analytes: methadone, 2-ethylidene-1,5-dimethyl-3,3-diphenylpyrrolidine (EDDP), buprenorphine, norbuprenorphine, morphine, codeine, 6-acetylmorphine, 6-acetylcodeine, amphetamine, and methamphetamine. The oral fluid sample was briefly centrifuged and the supernatant was directly injected into the LC-MS-MS system operated under reverse-phase chromatography and electrospray ionization (ESI). Deuterated analogs of the analytes were adopted as the internal standards and found to be effective (except for buprenorphine) to compensate for potential matrix effects. Each analytical run took10 min. Linearity range (r(2)0.99) established for buprenorphine and the other nine analytes were 5-100 and 1-100 ng/mL. Intra- and interday precision (% CV) ranges for the 10 analytes were 0.87-12.2% and 1.27-12.8%, while the corresponding accuracy (%) ranges were 91.8-113% and 91.9-111%. Limits of detection and quantitation established for these 10 analytes were in the ranges of 0.1-1.0 and 0.25-1.0 ng/mL (5 ng/mL for buprenorphine). The method was successfully applied to the analysis of 62 oral fluid specimens collected from patients participating in methadone and buprenorphine substitution therapy programs. Analytical results of methadone and buprenorphine were compared with data derived from GC-MS analysis and found to be compatible. Overall, the direct injection LC-MS-MS method performed well, permitting rapid analysis of oral fluid samples for simultaneous quantification of methadone, buprenorphine, opiate and amphetamine drug categories without extensive sample preparation steps.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Analysis of Oblique Aerial Images for Land Cover and Point Cloud Classification in an Urban Environment
- Author
-
Ya Ching Hsu, Jyun Ping Jhan, and Jiann Yeou Rau
- Subjects
Computer science ,business.industry ,Point cloud ,Oblique case ,Land cover ,Spectral bands ,Object (computer science) ,Photogrammetry ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,RGB color model ,Computer vision ,Artificial intelligence ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,business ,Remote sensing ,Feature detection (computer vision) - Abstract
In addition to aerial imagery, point clouds are important remote sensing data in urban environment studies. It is essential to extract semantic information from both images and point clouds for such purposes; thus, this study aims to automatically classify 3-D point clouds generated using oblique aerial imagery (OAI)/vertical aerial imagery (VAI) into various urban object classes, such as roof, facade, road, tree, and grass. A multicamera airborne imaging system that can simultaneously acquire VAI and OAI is suggested. The acquired small-format images contain only three RGB spectral bands and are used to generate photogrammetric point clouds through a multiview-stereo dense matching technique. To assign each 3-D point cloud to a corresponding urban object class, we first analyzed the original OAI through object-based image analyses. A rule-based hierarchical semantic classification scheme that utilizes spectral information and geometry- and topology-related features was developed, in which the object height and gradient features were derived from the photogrammetric point clouds to assist in the detection of elevated objects, particularly for the roof and facade. Finally, the photogrammetric point clouds were classified into the aforementioned five classes. The classification accuracy was assessed on the image space, and four experimental results showed that the overall accuracy is between 82.47% and 91.8%. In addition, visual and consistency analyses were performed to demonstrate the proposed classification scheme's feasibility, transferability, and reliability, particularly for distinguishing elevated objects from OAI, which has a severe occlusion effect, image-scale variation, and ambiguous spectral characteristics.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Methadone concentrations in blood, plasma, and oral fluid determined by isotope-dilution gas chromatography–mass spectrometry
- Author
-
Shiao-Ping Huang, Yu-Shan Wang, Dong-Liang Lin, A. Wayne Jones, Ya-Ching Hsu, Mei-Han Huang, Hsu-Chun Liu, Shu-Ching Yang, Tai-Jui Chen, Bud-Gen Chen, and Ray H. Liu
- Subjects
Pyrrolidines ,Chromatography ,Metabolite ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Poison control ,Pharmacology ,Isotope dilution ,Biochemistry ,Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry ,Analytical Chemistry ,Analgesics, Opioid ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Limit of Detection ,Blood plasma ,medicine ,Humans ,Distribution (pharmacology) ,Gas chromatography–mass spectrometry ,Saliva ,Saline ,Methadone ,Whole blood - Abstract
Methadone (MTD) is widely used for detoxification of heroin addicts and also in pain management programs. Information about the distribution of methadone between blood, plasma, and alternative specimens, such as oral fluid (OF), is needed in clinical, forensic, and traffic medicine when analytical results are interpreted. We determined MTD and its metabolite 2-ethylidene-1,5-dimethyl-3,3-diphenylpyrrolidine (EDDP) in blood, plasma, blood cells, and OF by gas chromatography–mass spectrometry (GC-MS) after adding deuterium-labeled internal standards. The analytical limits of quantitation for MTD and EDDP by this method were 20 and 3 ng/mL, respectively. The amounts of MTD and EDDP were higher in plasma (80.4 % and 76.5 %) compared with blood cells (19.6 % and 23.5 %) and we found that repeated washing of blood cells with phosphate–buffered saline increased the amounts in plasma (93.6 % and 88.6 %). Mean plasma/blood concentration ratios of MTD and EDDP in spiked samples (N = 5) were 1.27 and 1.21, respectively. In clinical samples from patients (N = 46), the concentrations of MTD in plasma and whole blood were highly correlated (r = 0.92, p
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Application of Ultrasound-Guided Core Biopsy to Minimal-Invasively Diagnose Supraclavicular Fossa Tumors and Minimize the Requirement of Invasive Diagnostic Surgery
- Author
-
Fan-Hsiang Chi, Tsung-Lin Yang, Yen-Lin Kuo, Ya-Ching Hsu, Pei-Jen Lou, Tzu-Yu Hsiao, Tseng-Cheng Chen, Chen-Han Chou, Chih-Feng Lin, Chun-Nan Chen, Che-Yi Lin, Jenq-Yuh Ko, and Cheng-Ping Wang
- Subjects
Adult ,Image-Guided Biopsy ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Open biopsy ,Adolescent ,Operative Time ,Diagnostic Accuracy Study ,03 medical and health sciences ,Cicatrix ,Young Adult ,0302 clinical medicine ,Biopsy ,Medicine ,Humans ,Medical diagnosis ,030223 otorhinolaryngology ,Pathological ,Ultrasonography, Interventional ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Ultrasound guided ,Surgery ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Head and Neck Neoplasms ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Female ,Biopsy, Large-Core Needle ,business ,Core biopsy ,Supraclavicular fossa ,Neck ,Research Article - Abstract
Tumors of the supraclavicular fossa (SC) is clinically challenging because of anatomical complexity and tumor pathological diversity. Because of varied diseases entities and treatment choices of SC tumors, making the accurate decision among numerous differential diagnoses is imperative. Sampling by open biopsy (OB) remains the standard procedure for pathological confirmation. However, complicated anatomical structures of SC always render surgical intervention difficult to perform. Ultrasound-guided core biopsy (USCB) is a minimally invasive and office-based procedure for tissue sampling widely applied in many diseases of head and neck. This study aims to evaluate the clinical efficacy and utility of using USCB as the sampling method of SC tumors. From 2009 to 2014, consecutive patients who presented clinical symptoms and signs of supraclavicular tumors and were scheduled to receive sampling procedures for diagnostic confirmation were recruited. The patients received USCB or OB respectively in the initial tissue sampling. The accurate diagnostic rate based on pathological results was 90.2% for USCB, and 93.6% for OB. No significant difference was noted between USCB and OB groups in terms of diagnostic accuracy and the percentage of inadequate specimens. All cases in the USCB group had the sampling procedure completed within 10 minutes, but not in the OB group. No scars larger than 1 cm were found in USCB. Only patients in the OB groups had the need to receive general anesthesia and hospitalization and had scars postoperatively. Accordingly, USCB can serve as the first-line sampling tool for SC tumors with high diagnostic accuracy, minimal invasiveness, and low medical cost.
- Published
- 2016
9. Application of Ultrasound-Guided Core Biopsy to Minimal-Invasively Diagnose Supraclavicular Fossa Tumors and Minimize the Requirement of Invasive Diagnostic Surgery.
- Author
-
Chun-Nan Chen, Che-Yi Lin, Fan-Hsiang Chi, Chen-Han Chou, Ya-Ching Hsu, Yen-Lin Kuo, Chih-Feng Lin, Tseng-Cheng Chen, Cheng-Ping Wang, Pei-Jen Lou, Jenq-Yuh Ko, Tzu-Yu Hsiao, Tsung-Lin Yang, Chen, Chun-Nan, Lin, Che-Yi, Chi, Fan-Hsiang, Chou, Chen-Han, Hsu, Ya-Ching, Kuo, Yen-Lin, and Lin, Chih-Feng
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Analysis of Oblique Aerial Images for Land Cover and Point Cloud Classification in an Urban Environment.
- Author
-
Jiann-Yeou Rau, Jyun-Ping Jhan, and Ya-Ching Hsu
- Subjects
REMOTE sensing by radar ,SPACE-based radar ,IMAGE analysis ,CLASSIFICATION algorithms ,AERIAL photography in geography - Abstract
In addition to aerial imagery, point clouds are important remote sensing data in urban environment studies. It is essential to extract semantic information from both images and point clouds for such purposes; thus, this study aims to automatically classify 3-D point clouds generated using oblique aerial imagery (OAI)/vertical aerial imagery (VAI) into various urban object classes, such as roof, facade, road, tree, and grass. A multicamera airborne imaging system that can simultaneously acquire VAI and OAI is suggested. The acquired small-format images contain only three RGB spectral bands and are used to generate photogrammetric point clouds through a multiview-stereo dense matching technique. To assign each 3-D point cloud to a corresponding urban object class, we first analyzed the original OAI through object-based image analyses. A rule-based hierarchical semantic classification scheme that utilizes spectral information and geometry- and topology-related features was developed, in which the object height and gradient features were derived from the photogrammetric point clouds to assist in the detection of elevated objects, particularly for the roof and facade. Finally, the photogrammetric point clouds were classified into the aforementioned five classes. The classification accuracy was assessed on the image space, and four experimental results showed that the overall accuracy is between 82.47% and 91.8%. In addition, visual and consistency analyses were performed to demonstrate the proposed classification scheme's feasibility, transferability, and reliability, particularly for distinguishing elevated objects from OAI, which has a severe occlusion effect, image-scale variation, and ambiguous spectral characteristics. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.